Canto

 1    18|    lance,~Desired to prove the paladins of France;~ ~ CXXXIV~And
 2    20|       Her strength against the paladins of France."~Not only was
 3    26|        in thought~To prove the paladins of Charles, and who~To France
 4    27|       his head,~And, girt with paladins, his faithful stay,~Arrived
 5    27|   success of that emprize:~The paladins no longer are their fear;~
 6    27|      Ogier hight the Dane,~The paladins are prisoners to the Moor:~
 7    36| accompanied;~So stout she many paladins had quelled;~And how, in
 8    38|   except the good and few.~The Paladins and lords remain; without,~
 9    39|      every part,~Are mixed the paladins, those barons bold,~Glittering
10    40|        must be one~That as the paladins of France are known.~ ~
11    42|        victors, he, of all~The paladins, remained Love's captive
12    43|      Charlemagne,~How will his paladins lament the blow!~How will
13    44|      and cheerful brow,~Lords, paladins and people, kinsmen, friends,~
14    44|       before;~When first those paladins set foot ashore.~ ~ XXXII~
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License