Canto

 1     8|         levy men and steeds;~And ships prepared, and warlike ammunition,~
 2    10|      from the strand,~A fleet of ships, which all towards him steer.~
 3    10|          wind and swell,~Of many ships and stout, a squadron lay;~
 4    10|       from her shore,~But out of ships, even now so numberless,~
 5    39|       LXXIII~Meanwhile his heavy ships of deepest draught~King
 6    39|              LXXX~`Twas so those ships, by England's peer supplied~
 7    39|          s intent,~Those weighty ships so shocked the paynim foe,~
 8    39| Christians shent;~Which on their ships in such wide ruin pour,~
 9    40|      That twice as many were the ships he fought,~As his own Moorish
10    40|       Nor in the port nor offing ships espied,~Nor Saracens save
11    40|         flight,~With their seven ships had yielded to the foe,~
12    40|        Rogero, when from far the ships he spied,~Believed they
13    44|          waters ride~Sir Dudon's ships which did the paynims rout;~
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