Canto

 1     3|  destined young Rogero for thy mate,~Let nothing interpose to
 2     5|      fray,~No male offends his mate. In safety hies~The she
 3    17| Esteemed himself, which on his mate was shed;~And rather than
 4    18|   CLXVIII~Then, turning to his mate, cries: "Cloridane,~I cannot
 5    18|        slumbered with a gentle mate,~Each clasping each so closely
 6    19|     Secure and distant was his mate, that through~The greenwood
 7    21|  honour has been ruined by thy mate,~Who to this body violence
 8    21|      admitted by his faithless mate.~ ~ XXXIX~"Thus every one,
 9    24|     sea, had sought her absent mate,~Through Alpine and through
10    25|        dispersing, leave their mate to die,~And only to their
11    32|         I am well content, his mate shall be,~And do in all
12    39|        and patron, mariner and mate.~ ~ XXIX~Twenty-six thousand
13    41|   Rogero, on beholding master, mate,~And men abandoning the
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