Canto

 1     6|  noisy cheer,~Tells his love sorrows in his comrade's ear.~ ~
 2    16|   hand,~Who, sadder than for sorrows of their own,~Timid, afflicted,
 3    18|   kindred vents;~Some are by sorrows of their own distrest,~As
 4    23| which I expend,~And which my sorrows and my life will end.~ ~
 5    28|    Jocundo cried) let be~Thy sorrows' -- weeping with her evermore --~`
 6    32|    grave.~Nor let me tell my sorrows, lest they move~Him his
 7    36| Beholding her whence all her sorrows flow.~Who shall persuade
 8    42|      chides, pours forth her sorrows, and demands,~With tears
 9    43|     been of thee?~Before the sorrows and the grief begun,~That
10    43|     shall be said)~Began the sorrows that I feel even now.~While
11    44|     known,~Lamented than for sorrows of her own.~ ~ LX~But most,
12    44|      LX~But most, of all the sorrows that were said~To vex Rogero,
13    45| bestow."~Rogero, on whom his sorrows press and prey,~Who loathes
14    46| steers:~He knows that of the sorrows which torment~Love is the
15    46|    the cause from whence thy sorrows flow;~For few such desperate
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