Canto

 1     5|      love he made assay:~But judge, alas! with what supremacy~
 2     5|   you may witness, and shall judge the case;~If empty hopes
 3     6|  sense than mortal sight,~To judge between the two. With such
 4    10|     of the two,~'Tis hard to judge where preference is due.~ ~
 5    18|     is your use;~And ere you judge another, many a day,~And
 6    25| place~To make his choice, or judge what promised best.~The
 7    27|      ill Apollo's self could judge the feud.~To unravel that
 8    32|     room~To plead before the judge pronounces doom.~ ~ CII~"
 9    43|      hound~A treasure on the judge's wife conferred."~"Thereof,"
10    43| could none foresee.~Upon our judge the lot of envoy fell:~O
11    43|       What gold and gems the judge had put away,~(A plenteous
12    43|   sun had travelled, ere~The judge had leave to wend his homeward
13    43|    station gave;~Then to the judge replied that it had been~
14    43|      stands out,~Holding the judge 'twixt certainty and doubt.~ ~
15    43|  sprite.~So was the wretched judge with grief opprest,~He of
16    43|     of this house am I.'~The judge was well assured the negress
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