Canto

  1   Int|     defeat Argalia in combat. The two most stricken by her are
  2   Int|           the consequences if his two best knights kill each other
  3   Int|      Angelica to whichever of the two fights the best against
  4     1|          as either of the cousins two;~As bold, as if his brows
  5     1|         stirs.~ ~ XVIII~After the two had struggled long to throw~
  6     1|         which blows.~Through this two clear and murmuring rivers
  7     1|         such deadly will~As those two knights, the stranger and
  8     1|           in safer seat.~ ~ LXXII~Two miles they had not rode
  9     1|     courser understands our need!~Two riders ill a foundered jade
 10     1|           LXXVIII~And this effect two different fountains wrought,~
 11     2|       means of hollow sprite,~The two redoubted rivals' dangerous
 12     2|         thee so, perfidious lord,~Two hearts should with a different
 13     2|          may well agree."~ ~ V~As two fierce dogs will somtimes
 14     2|       aspire,~I saw a dwarf guide two of goodly strain;~Whose
 15     2|           Extends a little plain, two bow-shots long.~ ~ XLVIII~"
 16     2|      beneath the craggy keep, the two~Contend which warrior shall
 17     2|       smites.~ ~ LIV~"Between the two on earth and him o' the
 18     3|        Troy,~Mingling in thee its two most glorious streams,~Shall
 19     3|         With its fair fields; and two great chiefs this while~(
 20     3|           the father and his boy.~Two Guelphs: the first fair
 21     3|           round enclose,~And Po's two currents threat with double
 22     3|  perpetual death.~ ~ LI~"In these two princes' excellent affection,~
 23     3|         gallies steers.~ ~ LVIII~"Two Sigismonds, the first, the
 24     3|       third comes next; the other two~Alphonsos both; -- but yet
 25     4|       castle more; or free~One or two captive friends, the rest
 26     4|      spurred;~And viewed, between two grisly ruffians there,~A
 27     5|         other were those ruffians two,~Whom good Rinaldo from
 28     5|           assured how evermore~We two have loved; -- was never
 29     5|   Polinesso) and so went his way.~Two nights were scarecly passed,
 30     5|         the ruined row:~Hence the two brothers, posted in that
 31     5|         held hard by;~And gave me two to bear me company.~ ~ LXXII~"
 32     5|        pursued his way,~Where the two made that fell exchange
 33     5|          Since whichsoever of the two falls dead,~Know, that you
 34     6|         in fight;~Cousin I was to two of boundless fame,~Orlando
 35     6|         And such the distance his two ends between)~We all are
 36     6|         behind,~Leaving the other two beside the bay.~The obedient
 37     6|         born,~And for those other two false sisters were~(So well-instructed
 38     6|           and unloving at a heat:~Two months, I reigned not more,
 39     6|        was vain)~Nor by the beach two miles his way pursued,~Ere
 40     6|         like shining gold I said,~Two youthful dames, not born
 41     6|       sight,~To judge between the two. With such a mien~Embodied
 42     6|           with shame,~Thanked the two damsels for their gentle
 43     6|      which divides~The plain into two parts: A cruel dame~A bridge
 44     7|           poisonous toad.~Her the two damsels to the cavalier~
 45     7|           a fitting bound.~ ~ XII~Two black and slender arches
 46     7|         slender arches rise above~Two clear black eyes, say suns
 47     7|      amend.~ ~ XIII~As if between two vales, which softly curl,~
 48     7|           glow:~Within are strung two rows of orient pearl,~Which
 49     7|            Where, fresh and firm, two ivory apples grow,~Which
 50     7|   proclaim.~And in conclusion the two lovers plight~Their word,
 51     7|           the yellow round~Depend two precious pearls; not such
 52     8|          she sent; the bands were two:~She at the port embarked
 53     8|          reported! or those other two,~Duped by a post, dispatched
 54     8|        with native red;~And those two stars of pure transparency,~
 55     8|           shall tell you of these two,~More bent Anglantes' champion
 56     9|      offspring (for beside~Myself two brothers were) to him so
 57     9|           the new:~A hollow iron, two yards long, whose small~
 58     9|        father's service, I~Select two brothers fitted for my view,~
 59     9|     myself grown up; the brothers two~So wholly bound to me, they
 60    10|       Last night in thee~Together two found shelter," did she
 61    10|           did she say;~"Alas! why two together are not we~At rising?
 62    10|       contend for mastery, of the two,~'Tis hard to judge where
 63    10|      think upon this need,~And in two days the pair will expedite."~
 64    10|           Eastern main;~Where the two fairies strove with hostile
 65    10| Gloucester's blazon is the third,~Two antlers of a stag, and demi-front;~
 66    10|            In Essex's, conjoined, two snakes are shown:~By yonder
 67    10|           LXXXIV~"The lion 'twixt two unicorns behold~Upon the
 68    10|     flanks are torn by deerhounds two.~See there the Duke of Albany,
 69    10|         next the level land,~Into two squadrons ordered for the
 70    10|      loosed one knot, he fastened two.~But, sir, too long continued
 71    11|        pace~'Twixt tree and tree, two furious champions found,~
 72    11|           and that following, the two~Kept a close path which
 73    11|          twice embraced the noble two,~To Oberto Roland told the
 74    11|        the touch: above were seen~Two rounding paps, like new-pressed
 75    12|         end of her lament tore up two pines,~ ~ II~And lit at
 76    12|          in either hand,~Drawn by two dragons, in her chariot
 77    12|        doubts withal~Which of the two to take, and long revolves~
 78    12|         countenance, to the other two~Turned him about, and shouted "
 79    12|          if we~Were known for the two basest whores that pull~
 80    12|          Twas thus those warriors two, with faulchions bare,~Turning
 81    12|      fearful sight, and marks the two.~ ~  LI~For, during this,
 82    12|        far away~Ere either of the two had marked the feat;~So
 83    12|         his head,~Till he between two bridges laid him dead.~ ~
 84    12|    wounded in mid breast,~Between two dead companions on the ground,~
 85    12|      mighty worth appear.~ ~ LXIX~Two squadrons he encountered;
 86    13|         it, and makes me descend:~Two follow, and a troop would
 87    13|        table in mid cavern stood,~Two palms in thickness, in its
 88    13|        But from a thousand I some two or three~Will choose, because
 89    13|         greenwood shade~More than two miles in narrow path had
 90    13|         path had rode,~Before, by two fierce giants overlaid,~
 91    14|              CANTO 14~ ~ ARGUMENT~Two squadrons lack of those
 92    14|          his leaders lost,~So the two kings who Spain and Afric
 93    14|       Mulga and Arzilla's legions two.~The first beneath their
 94    14|          die in any way,~And near two thirds were now already
 95    14|         cooling shade,~They found two warriors and a damsel laid.~ ~
 96    14|         and from city's reach.~By two fair hills o'ershadowed
 97    14|           on their way.~The other two (three separate quarters
 98    14|         by the assailants shored,~Two mannered each round; the
 99    14|         the Provencal is cleft in two;~Arnold of Thoulouse through
100    15|           Duke, King Salamon, the two~Guidos are seen, and either
101    15|      makes a single sea appear as two;~Who, scouring in their
102    15|      which stout Alcides cleft in two,~And in the manner of the
103    15|      appeared in sight;~For 'twas two months complete, a third
104    15|          LXVII~He here Orrilo and two knights in mail~Found at
105    15|       Found at fierce strife: the two ill held their own~Against
106    15|       slaughtered by the brethren two,~Upon the sand beside the
107    15|     Orrilo does deride,~While the two baffled warriors rage for
108    15|        regains the brim.~ ~ LXXII~Two ladies, meetly clad in fair
109    15|    forlorn~They from the claws of two huge birds had torn.~ ~
110    15|       Orrilo will he slay,~If the two brethren nought the intent
111    15|    returns where he the champions two~And dames had left, the
112    15|         together with the warlike two,~Turns to the right, resolved
113    15|    warrior found;~And with a wall two miles in length, the mount~
114    16|        plays a slavish part,~Whom two bright eyes and lovely tresses
115    16|          in evil customs were the two,~Like stalk and flower:
116    16| embroidered, and with azure dyed.~Two ready knaves, who serve
117    16|          will return again to see~Two hundred thousand wretched
118    16|     practised warriors every one;~Two Angelines, two Guidos, Angelier,~
119    16|         every one;~Two Angelines, two Guidos, Angelier,~Avino,
120    16|            And sped, with Ariman, two thousand horse~Of lightest
121    16|           little pain.~ ~ XXXIII~"Two princes, by your means,
122    16|     England's horse and foot, the two between,~Led by the Duke
123    16|        knight, escaped the former two;~The others were left dead
124    17|        end were nursed,~Rome with two Neros and a Caius cursed;~ ~
125    17|  intercepts its early ray.~ ~ XIX~Two crystal streams the wealthy
126    17|          doe;~And, following him, two servants bear his bow.~ ~
127    17|           of sight,~Their sockets two small bones like berries
128    17|           having ended~His quest, two wretches for his supper
129    17|           Which had begun between two cavaliers,~To wait, retiring
130    17|          the plain.~ ~  XCVI~Here two good brothers of Apamia
131    17|         Salinterno's foe.~ ~ XCIX~Two of Damascus next Sir Gryphon
132    17|        divided, at his call,~Into two troops, whom, ranked by
133    17|          Ere yet the troop beyond two miles had gone,~At the first
134    17|      unawares,~He, softly, 'twixt two bridges, takes the peer;~
135    17|         sight;~Harnessed to which two sluggish cows are seen,~
136    18|       rises from the crowd.~ ~ VI~Two nimble Gryphon seizes, mid
137    18|      certain mode to enrage these two is won;~And other means
138    18|           valiant were the twain;~Two stunned, one wounded, the
139    18|         the sanguine smear~Of his two wounds, bade seek a leech
140    18|    recreant such a blow,~He drove two grinders down his throat;
141    18|          with suffering, drag the two,~Till he his brother find;
142    18|        what penance to the wicked two,~So fallen into their hands,
143    18|         upon the day of joust the two~Might in Damascus-town set
144    18|         in warlike weed,~Who seem two valiant warriors in her
145    18|           steed.~When, eyeing the two warriors, now more near,~
146    18|         Astolpho and the brethren two,~And bold Marphisa, best
147    18|  Slaughtered or put to flight are two for one~Who 'scapes, --
148    18|       they deem in store.~ ~ CLXV~Two Moors amid the paynim army
149    18|        the skies.~ ~ CLXVII~These two were posted on a rampart'
150    18|           securely sleeps between two steeds.~ ~ CLXXVI~Next came
151    18|            A Greek and German, at two thrusts he gored,~Who in
152    18|    monarch had beheld the valiant two~With crimsoned staves, returning
153    18|         train,~That from afar the two companions spy.~Expecting
154    18|       might well be said)~To lose two living men, to save one
155    18|           with intent to make the two~Yield themselves prisoners
156    19|       wight~A heifer, missing for two days, pursued.~Him she with
157    19|         hest.~She hastened 'twixt two stones the herb to pound,~
158    19|           shepherd dwelt, between two mountains hoar,~In goodly
159    19|          the vessel's deck survey~Two castles, which the port
160    19|     custom of the town,~-- One of two evils they must choose, --
161    19|            with broken spine, the two~She drove at once. So fell
162    19|         cleaves, I say,~Where the two haunches and the ribs confine:~
163    19|          and obedient to his hest~Two spears, say rather heavy
164    19|          conqueror of the warlike two.~Marphisa the black champion
165    19|          bestow.~He who would see two daring spirits weighed,~
166    19|          spirits weighed,~To seek two fiercer need no further
167    19|         praises, as the worthiest two~That are, where'er the sea'
168    19|        the better champion of the two,~To both the brothers and
169    20|      famous for their lore,~Shine two illustrious light, to set
170    20|          deprive.~ ~ LX~"They for two thousand years nigh past
171    20|        late so furious? -- of the two~Young sons of Olivier, that
172    20|           Guido, and the brethren two,~With Sansonetto, pale and
173    21|   whistling rockets speed,~As the two coursers bear the cavaliers~
174    21|            As sometimes vessel by two winds which blow~From different
175    21|       Philander, so distraught by two designs,~Takes what he pregnant
176    21|         his grassy bed.~Meanwhile two squires, who served him
177    21|          Of deadly hatred set him two for one.~Her face was with
178    22|             IV~He entered, 'twixt two hills, a narrow way,~From
179    22|        delighted are those lovers two,~Their joys are ill contained
180    22|           it, and then spoke with two,~Those two with more, till
181    22|        then spoke with two,~Those two with more, till to the king '
182    22|       word exchanged, the warlike two~Divide the ground, and short
183    22|          stubborn native oak, and two palms thick.~ ~ LXVI~Sansonet,
184    22|           bade his followers bear~Two of them hither, destined
185    23|         and one loose) the twain.~Two were the steeds; for she
186    23|          Journeying the twain, at two miles' distance spy:~There
187    23|         In a streight way between two mountains wrought.~Zerbino
188    23|        feet and him adored,~As to two lives at once by him restored.~ ~
189    23|         Alzirdo and Manilard, the two~Whom good Orlando's valour
190    23|         river's right,~Armed with two clubs, maintain a cruel
191    23|           astray,~Made Roland for two days, with fruitless pain,~
192    23|        wonted to repeat~-- Of the two lovers -- to each listener
193    24|           by Anglantes' peer;~Nor two miles on his way, I think,
194    24|        they behold.~ ~  XVIII~The two that had Sir Odoric in their
195    24|           couple's fate;~The only two that had deserved his hate.~ ~
196    24|          He seems an Alpine wind, two hills between,~That in the
197    24|       After the fight between the two was done,~Already told by
198    24|           feet.~ ~ XCVII~When the two hostile warriors were so
199    24|          are slain.~ ~ C~Of those two infidels, unmatched in worth,~
200    24|            more puissant than the two,~Equalled of none in lofty
201    25|     erthrew~Than one, and oftener two, upon the plain;~And four,
202    25|      gilded wheels, what time the two,~Valiant Rogero and his
203    25|        difference made between us two till now.~ ~ XXIV~"But since
204    25|         the ill, which one~Of the two garments in her mind had
205    25|     remained concealed between us two;~So that our bliss endured
206    25|          these, by love for those two brethren swayed,~And deeming
207    26|   achieved.~ ~ III~He, with those two of Clermont, as whilere~
208    26|           in arms contend.~ ~ VI~"Two of our own to rescue from
209    26|          VII~"With you a lance or two I would have crost~To prove
210    26|           to every ill.~ ~ IX~The two of Clermont and their bold
211    26|          they knew;~And they upon two sorry jades behold,~I' the
212    26|            Approached the captive two with doleful cheer,~Who
213    26|           victim of those furious two,~Through belly and through
214    26|    pierced by the same weapon, go~Two others to the gloomy realms
215    26|           s worth as well,~Having two such companions in the stower,~
216    26|        that warrior, gave.~ ~ LI~"Two Hercules and two Hippolyti~
217    26|              LI~"Two Hercules and two Hippolyti~Of Este, a Hercules
218    26|          s glorious lineage bred,~Two chiefs that mountain for
219    26|       faulchion stay;~So that the two the battle might maintain,~
220    26|           shall not be between us two;~Nor will accord an hour
221    26|       fire to glow,~Enraged, that two one knight should overlay;~
222    26|           sighed: well know~Those two their coursers they should
223    26|         quarrel in such guise the two~Esteem foul scandal; as
224    26|          and there must rest.~The two first champions towards
225    26|         towards Paris go,~And the two others next pursue that
226    26|          Christian king,~By those two couples of whose worth I
227    27|           the pair.~ ~  IV~So the two lovers, following her who
228    27|      roebuck's trail, the valiant two~Follow upon her track, nor
229    27|         the bone,~Has taken those two shining stars from thee,~
230    27|          Within he takes a day or two's repose;~And, when he finds
231    27|         Atlantes' palace fled the two)~Together to unite their
232    27|       cantonments of those armies two.~Here they short counsel
233    27|         further side, these other two,~Rogero and Marphisa, thither
234    27|        knows the prowess of those two preferred~Will nothing in
235    27|   proportions for that need,~With two capacious gates, as usage
236    27|      daughter of King Stordilane:~Two costly vests -- one red,
237    27|           monarch; of the furious two,~He with grave voice and
238    27|         of King Troyane~Heard the two knights their jarring claims
239    27|          band -- a large array --~Two serjeants only for his service
240    27|     wandered from the beaten way:~Two hundred miles he roved, '
241    27|         good abound,~Where one or two perchance are evil found.~ ~
242    27|         be,~'Mid hundreds, one or two of evil way,~My fortune
243    28|        thee~Will I return ere yet two months are o'er;~Nor by
244    28|            XVIII~"Jocundo was not two miles on his road,~When
245    28|           on their road, with but two squires beside,~He and the
246    28|        for a month, and there for two,~That their own wives are
247    28|     reason could complain:~For if two fell to every other's share,~
248    28|         might she keep faith with two;~Nor haply we such frequent
249    28| whitherward they sped,~And of the two which claimed her as his
250    28|           heard a case surmise~Of two, that ever thus had been
251    28|          all our heed, between us two,~Could not preserve the
252    28|          which he bears to one or two,~Makes him unjustly hate
253    28|  Circassia's peer;~Seeing he, for two days, that horse's might~
254    28|        dame is manifest,~Although two fountains are her streaming
255    29|           short,~Of Graecian wine two barrels had they drained;~
256    29|        travellers seized a day or two before.~ ~  XXII~To Argier'
257    29|           narrow bridge, and only two yards wide,~He flung across
258    29|         with pain~The narrow pass two coursers can contain;~ ~
259    29|    coursers can contain;~ ~ XXXIV~Two coursers, that abreast have
260    29|     strife to know,~Wherein those two so puissant warriors vied.~
261    29|           encountered in mid road~Two youths, that wood men were,
262    29|         lady fell.~ ~ LXVI~If but two inches short had fallen
263    30|      before~The other, shall upon two quarrels fight:~So he who
264    30|         the battle lose alike for two.~ ~ XXII~"Between Rogero
265    30|           in listed mead.~Thus in two scrolls, inscribed in the
266    30|       beamy lances, rested by the two,~Well warranted the warriors'
267    30|          broke in the career;~For two or three fell flaming from
268    30|      steel cap beneath it; inches two,~Lies buried in the head
269    31|     question, charged the martial two.~Rinaldo with the friendly
270    31|           the youth extends~Above two lances' length beyond his
271    31|           the field, the brethren two;~Although "Halt, halt," (
272    31|        part and that, between the two,~Of interchanged embraces
273    31|           abate their talk, those two~Reached the pavilions where
274    31|         Gryphon and Aquilant, the two that stain~Their virtuous
275    31|          Richardet, and the other two;~Sansonet's sword and horse
276    31|           and banners waving wide~Two kingdoms such as France
277    31|      placed in common, 'twixt the two.~If good Gradasso take his
278    32|       prefixt o'erpast by one,~By two, three, six, by eight, by
279    32|           naked sky.~ ~ LXVII~"If two. three, four, or more, seek
280    32|       mansion stay,~He with those two, or more, a lance must break.~
281    32|         that castellain,~To house two damsels were a thing unmeet;~
282    32|        household crew~Calls, with two elders, in such judgments
283    32|       dames, and bids them of the two~Declare which is most beauteous
284    33|        set fire to Italy;~Who has two kings in two fierce battles
285    33|       Italy;~Who has two kings in two fierce battles slain,~Manfred
286    33|           s bold designs.~You see two marquises, Italia's boast,~
287    33|            the quick and dextrous two.~Already 'gan the champions'
288    33|           LXXX~None e'er by proof two other faulchions chose~For
289    33|       look,~And, like ship-sails, two spreading pinions shook.~ ~
290    33|        much Baiardo distances the two,~Whose tardy feet their
291    33|         royal pile;~Threading the two, where, ranged on either
292    33| Discoursing so, together wend the two,~'Mid barons bold, that
293    34|          surer proof, a stroke or two would smite~With his good
294    34|         was most excessive of the two,~My pride of beauty, could
295    34|           anger waxed between the two,~It urged them from ill
296    35|    conveyed were human lives, the two~Issued upon the stream,
297    35|       lasting praise should gain.~Two swans there are amid those
298    35|          the following sun, those two~At the deep stream arrived
299    35|        stood by chance before the two,~And gained their leave
300    35|         first must be~Which of us two is schooled in warfare best,~
301    36|          much the stronger of the two~As to have flung the maid
302    36|       fiercely closed the furious two:~But when that duel's turn
303    36|   Esteeming him the better of the two,~Break in between and turn
304    36|       pricks her horse behind the two, and gains,~Well nigh as
305    36|     prepared by force to part the two;~Their poniards snatched
306    36|        the Child amazed~And those two damsels mighty marvel raised.~ ~
307    36|       country, sire, and brethren two betrayed,~Hoping he so the
308    36|       kinsmen done;~How Agolant's two furious sons conveyed~Their
309    37|    Attract Rogero and the damsels two.~They find Ulania, with
310    37|         Lewis Alamanni, and those two,~Beloved of Mars and Muses,
311    37|            immortalize.~Had those two damsels in this art been
312    37|          And recognised the other two no less;~From them she saw,
313    37|   comrades by those other damsels two.~ ~ XXXIV~To gentle Bradamant
314    37|      manly visage they beheld not two --~Than here Rogero, and
315    37|          his land, which lies~But two leagues distant thence,
316    37|          by the courtesy~Of those two kindly brothers wholly gained.~
317    37|        none beside could hear the two --~A poison of quick power
318    37|       knight,~Built by her order, two fair pillars rear.~The holy
319    37|      sudden grief and unforeseen.~Two sons he had, and now was
320    37|        Brought to that pass he by two wives had been;~This was
321    37|           s crest;~Who with those two his course so bravely run,~
322    38|   bargains, that, on either side,~Two knights by strife their
323    38|         not now appaid;~But twice two hundred years will not atone~
324    38|  friendship formed -- the damsels two --~Thither together go where
325    38|          fortune -- by a month or two,~I eithteen years had not
326    38|     Nubian power,~One hundred and two footmen, in a day~To horsemen
327    38|       best should send;~And those two all the warfare wage alone,~
328    38|           the lists; and near~The two pavillions, both, an altar
329    38|          backed, with sable mane;~Two of his legs were pied, his
330    38|           s task;~ ~ LXXX~And, of two axes, hath Duke Namus one,~
331    38|          the paynim clan,~Thither two priests of either sect conveyed~
332    38|           of either sect conveyed~Two books; that, carried by
333    38|           to seek their camps the two divide.~Nor long, therein
334    39|           on spirit preys:~For of two deaths there is no scaping
335    39|      sight.~ ~ VIII~The champions two, that, against all accord,~
336    39|           first victim's breast,~(Two yards beyond his back the
337    39|        his shaggy back lays bare,~Two turbid torrents with like
338    39|       flow,~Which, in their fall, two separate channels wear,~
339    39|       high-minded virgin warriors two,~Scowering the field in
340    39|        intrepid breast,~And those two famous sons of Olivier.~
341    39|      though at the cost~Of one or two good days, in harbour lost.~ ~
342    39|     asunder~The sapling, shorn of two cloth-yards and more,~So
343    39|      aboard his fleet.~ ~ LXIX~As two fair generous pards, that
344    39|        sigh, return those damsels two,~When they the paynim king
345    39|           his navy flee:~He stays two days, while they the stragglers
346    39|               LXXVI~Yet sometimes two or three their lips unclose,~--
347    40|           Washed by the sea, upon two quarters, were~The city
348    40|    quarters, were~The city walls, two stood on the dry shore,~
349    40|    Agramant's possession were the two.~ ~ LVIII~He chose for his
350    41|         directly Africk's strand,~Two or three miles of waste
351    41|     Scarce, with much labour, the two captains led~Her, gazing
352    41|      title of Ateste~Shall of its two first letters lose the sound.~
353    41|     Marphisa hence, those valiant two,~With fire and sword on
354    41|    Sericana's peer)~And the other two -- that from the adverse
355    41|       that girt his helmet round,~Two inches thick, was broke
356    42|           hearing of those armies two,~Upon the Christian and
357    42|       green sward lit the martial two,~While their loose horses
358    42|         from the way diverged the two,~And a great palace fronting
359    42|    portals form a shade;~And each two pillars has for its support:~
360    42|          hidden were,~Showed that two kings' united treasure ne'
361    42|      grace possest.~ ~ LXXXI~Upon two beauteous images below~Each
362    42|          are named: of those fair two,~One is Calandra, one is
363    42|         water quits that octagon,~Two ladies are there, equal
364    43|           As that I could nor for two days abide,~Nay, not an
365    43|          then be gone,~An hour or two before the daylight show.~
366    43|           and Figarolo,~Where his two horns are lowered by angry
367    43|         angry Po.~ ~ LIV~Of those two horns that which t'ward
368    43|           white;~When viewing the two castles of Tealdo,~Again
369    43|           of the talk between the two~Was, that the husband little
370    43|       made an end.~I well believe two winters were not done,~Ere
371    43|      overflows:~For from her eyes two streams their way pursue.~
372    43|       gray,~With other clerks, by two and two arrayed,~Behind
373    43|          other clerks, by two and two arrayed,~Behind in long
374    44|     affinity.~ ~ X~"That from the two bright progenies, which
375    45|          And sometimes is he left two days with none;~And one
376    45|      Bradamant will be.~ ~ LV~But two things must he do; must,
377    45|          spear they fought, those two~Believed that they should
378    45|          day nor on the following two~Appeared, nor news of him
379    46|          monk Severo.~ ~  XIV~Lo! two more Alexanders! of the
380    46|          divine Pietro Aretino.~I two Girolamos amid them see,~
381    46|          Nor she at once can with two husbands wed."~ ~ XXXVIII~
382    46|          he bore~Of gold with its two heads -- of crimson hue~
383    46|      erewhile devised between the two;~And such as in the listed
384    46|            conveyed anew.~ ~ LXXX~Two thousand tedious years were
385    46|     wherewith the gin,~Erected in two barges upon Po,~And raised
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