LXII
  The horrid darkness, and the shadows dun
  Dispersed he with his eternal wings,
  The flames which from his heavenly eyes outrun
  Beguiled the earth and all her sable things;
  After a storm so spreadeth forth the sun
  His rays and binds the clouds in golden strings,
  Or in the stillness of a moonshine even
  A falling star so glideth down from Heaven.

  LXIII
  But when the infernal troop he 'proached near,
  That still the Pagans' ire and rage provoke,
  The angel on his wings himself did bear,
  And shook his lance, and thus at last he spoke:
  "Have you not learned yet to know and fear
  The Lord's just wrath, and thunder's dreadful stroke?
  Or in the torments of your endless ill,
  Are you still fierce, still proud, rebellious still?

  LXIV
  "The Lord hath sworn to break the iron bands
  The brazen gates of Sion's fort which close,
  Who is it that his sacred will withstands?
  Against his wrath who dares himself oppose?
  Go hence, you cursed, to your appointed lands,
  The realms of death, of torments, and of woes,
  And in the deeps of that infernal lake
  Your battles fight, and there your triumphs make.

  LXV
  "There tyrannize upon the souls you find
  Condemned to woe, and double still their pains;
  Where some complain, where some their teeth do grind,
  Some howl, and weep, some clank their iron chains:"
  This said they fled, and those that stayed behind,
  With his sharp lance he driveth and constrains;
  They sighing left the lands, his silver sheep
  Where Hesperus doth lead, doth feed, and keep.

  LXVI
  And toward hell their lazy wings display,
  To wreak their malice on the damned ghosts;
  The birds that follow Titan's hottest ray,
  Pass not in so great flocks to warmer coasts,
  Nor leaves in so great numbers fall away
  When winter nips them with his new-come frosts;
  The earth delivered from so foul annoy,
  Recalled her beauty, and resumed her joy.

  LXVII
  But not for this in fierce Argantes' breast
  Lessened the rancor and decreased the ire,
  Although Alecto left him to infest
  With the hot brands of her infernal fire,
  Round his armed head his trenchant blade he blest,
  And those thick ranks that seemed moist entire
  He breaks; the strong, the high, the weak, the low,
  Were equalized by his murdering blow.

  LXVIII
  Not far from him amid the blood and dust,
  Heads, arms, and legs, Clorinda strewed wide
  Her sword through Berengarius' breast she thrust,
  Quite through the heart, where life doth chiefly bide,
  And that fell blow she struck so sure and just,
  That at his back his life and blood forth glide;
  Even in the mouth she smote Albinus then,
  And cut in twain the visage of the man.

  LXIX
  Gernier's right hand she from his arm divided,
  Whereof but late she had received a wound;
  The hand his sword still held, although not guided,
  The fingers half alive stirred on the ground;
  So from a serpent slain the tail divided
  Moves in the grass, rolleth and tumbleth round,
  The championess so wounded left the knight,
  And gainst Achilles turned her weapon bright.

  LXX
  Upon his neck light that unhappy blow,
  And cut the sinews and the throat in twain,
  The head fell down upon the earth below,
  And soiled with dust the visage on the plain;
  The headless trunk, a woful thing to know,
  Still in the saddle seated did remain;
  Until his steed, that felt the reins at large,
  With leaps and flings that burden did discharge.

  LXXI
  While thus this fair and fierce Bellona slew
  The western lords, and put their troops to flight,
  Gildippes raged mongst the Pagan crew,
  And low in dust laid many a worthy knight:
  Like was their sex, their beauty and their hue,
  Like was their youth, their courage and their might;
  Yet fortune would they should the battle try
  Of mightier foes, for both were framed to die.

  LXXII
  Yet wished they oft, and strove in vain to meet,
  So great betwixt them was the press and throng,
  But hardy Guelpho gainst Clorinda sweet
  Ventured his sword to work her harm and wrong,
  And with a cutting blow so did her greet,
  That from her side the blood streamed down along;
  But with a thrust an answer sharp she made,
  And 'twixt his ribs colored somedeal her blade.

  LXXIII
  Lord Guelpho struck again, but hit her not,
  For strong Osmida haply passed by,
  And not meant him, another's wound he got,
  That cleft his front in twain above his eye:
  Near Guelpho now the battle waxed hot,
  For all the troops he led gan thither hie,
  And thither drew eke many a Paynim knight,
  That fierce, stern, bloody, deadly waxed the fight.

  LXXIV
  Meanwhile the purple morning peeped o'er
  The eastern threshold to our half of land,
  And Argillano in this great uproar
  From prison loosed was, and what he fand,
  Those arms he hent, and to the field them bore,
  Resolved to take his chance what came to hand,
  And with great acts amid the Pagan host
  Would win again his reputation lost.

  LXXV
  As a fierce steed 'scaped from his stall at large,
  Where he had long been kept for warlike need,
  Runs through the fields unto the flowery marge
  Of some green forest where he used to feed,
  His curled mane his shoulders broad doth charge
  And from his lofty crest doth spring and spreed,
  Thunder his feet, his nostrils fire breathe out,
  And with his neigh the world resounds about.

  LXXVI
  So Argillan rushed forth, sparkled his eyes,
  His front high lifted was, no fear therein,
  Lightly he leaps and skips, it seems he flies,
  He left no sign in dust imprinted thin,
  And coming near his foes, he sternly cries,
  As one that forced not all their strength a pin,
  "You outcasts of the world, you men of naught
  What hath in you this boldness newly wrought?

  LXXVII
  "Too weak are you to bear a helm or shield
  Unfit to arm your breast in iron bright,
  You run half-naked trembling through the field,
  Your blows are feeble, and your hope in flight,
  Your facts and all the actions that you wield,
  The darkness hides, your bulwark is the night,
  Now she is gone, how will your fights succeed?
  Now better arms and better hearts you need."

  LXXVIII
  While thus he spoke, he gave a cruel stroke
  Against Algazel's throat with might and main;
  And as he would have answered him, and spoke,
  He stopped his words, and cut his jaws in twain;
  Upon his eyes death spread his misty cloak,
  A chilling frost congealed every vein,
  He fell, and with his teeth the earth he tore,
  Raging in death, and full of rage before.

  LXXIX
  Then by his puissance mighty Saladine,
  Proud Agricalt and Muleasses died,
  And at one wondrous blow his weapon fine,
  Did Adiazel in two parts divide,
  Then through the breast he wounded Ariadine,
  Whom dying with sharp taunts he gan deride,
  He lifting up uneath his feeble eyes,
  To his proud scorns thus answereth, ere he dies:

  LXXX
  "Not thou, whoe'er thou art, shall glory long
  Thy happy conquest in my death, I trow,
  Like chance awaits thee from a hand more strong,
  Which by my side will shortly lay thee low:"
  He smiled, and said, "Of mine hour short or long
  Let heaven take care; but here meanwhile die thou,
  Pasture for wolves and crows," on him his foot
  He set, and drew his sword and life both out.

  LXXXI
  Among this squadron rode a gentle page,
  The Soldan's minion, darling, and delight,
  On whose fair chin the spring-time of his age
  Yet blossomed out her flowers, small or light;
  The sweat spread on his cheeks with heat and rage
  Seemed pearls or morning dews on lilies white,
  The dust therein uprolled adorned his hair,
  His face seemed fierce and sweet, wrathful and fair.

  LXXXII
  His steed was white, and white as purest snow
  That falls on tops of aged Apennine,
  Lightning and storm are not so 'swift I trow
  As he, to run, to stop, to turn and twine;
  A dart his right hand shaked, prest to throw;
  His cutlass by his thigh, short, hooked, fine,
  And braving in his Turkish pomp he shone,
  In purple robe, o'erfret with gold and stone.

  LXXXIII
  The hardy boy, while thirst of warlike praise
  Bewitched so his unadvised thought,
  Gainst every band his childish strength assays,
  And little danger found, though much he sought,
  Till Argillan, that watched fit time always
  In his swift turns to strike him as he fought,
  Did unawares his snow-white courser slay,
  And under him his master tumbling lay:

  LXXXIV
  And gainst his face, where love and pity stand,
  To pray him that rich throne of beauty spare,
  The cruel man stretched forth his murdering hand,
  To spoil those gifts, whereof he had no share:
  It seemed remorse and sense was in his brand
  Which, lighting flat, to hurt the lad forbare;
  But all for naught, gainst him the point he bent
  That, what the edge had spared, pierced and rent.

  LXXXV
  Fierce Solyman that with Godfredo strived
  Who first should enter conquest's glorious gate,
  Left off the fray and thither headlong drived,
  When first he saw the lad in such estate;
  He brake the press, and soon enough arrived
  To take revenge, but to his aid too late,
  Because he saw his Lesbine slain and lost,
  Like a sweet flower nipped with untimely frost.

  LXXXVI
  He saw wax dim the starlight of his eyes,
  His ivory neck upon his shoulders fell,
  In his pale looks kind pity's image lies,
  That death even mourned, to hear his passing bell.
  His marble heart such soft impression tries,
  That midst his wrath his manly tears outwell,
  Thou weepest, Solyman, thou that beheld
  Thy kingdoms lost, and not one tear could yield.

  LXXXVII
  But when the murderer's sword he hapt to view
  Dropping with blood of his Lesbino dead,
  His pity vanished, ire and rage renew,
  He had no leisure bootless tears to shed;
  But with his blade on Argillano flew,
  And cleft his shield, his helmet, and his head,
  Down to his throat; and worthy was that blow
  Of Solyman, his strength and wrath to show:

  LXXXVIII
  And not content with this, down from his horse
  He lights, and that dead carcass rent and tore,
  Like a fierce dog that takes his angry course
  To bite the stone which had him hit before.
  Oh comfort vain for grief of so great force,
  To wound the senseless earth that feels no sore!
  But mighty Godfrey 'gainst the Soldan's train
  Spent not, this while, his force and blows in vain.

  LXXXIX
  A thousand hardy Turks affront he had
  In sturdy iron armed from head to foot,
  Resolved in all adventures good or bad,
  In actions wise, in execution stout,
  Whom Solyman into Arabia lad,
  When from his kingdom he was first cast out,
  Where living wild with their exiled guide
  To him in all extremes they faithful bide;

  XC
  All these in thickest order sure unite,
  For Godfrey's valor small or nothing shrank,
  Corcutes first he on the face did smite,
  Then wounded strong Rosteno in the flank,
  At one blow Selim's head he stroke off quite,
  Then both Rossano's arms, in every rank
  The boldest knights, of all that chosen crew,
  He felled, maimed, wounded, hurt and slew.

  XCI
  While thus he killed many a Saracine
  And all their fierce assaults unhurt sustained,
  Ere fortune wholly from the Turks decline,
  While still they hoped much, though small they gained,
  Behold a cloud of dust, wherein doth shine
  Lightning of war in midst thereof contained,
  Whence unawares burst forth a storm of swords,
  Which tremble made the Pagan knights and lords.
  XCII
  These fifty champions were, mongst whom there stands,
  In silver field, the ensign of Christ's death,
  If I had mouths and tongues as Briareus hands,
  If voice as iron tough, if iron breath,
  What harm this troop wrought to the heathen bands,
  What knights they slew, I could recount uneath
  In vain the Turks resist, the Arabians fly;
  If they fly, they are slain; if fight, they die.

  XCIII
  Fear, cruelty, grief, horror, sorrow, pain,
  Run through the field, disguised in divers shapes,
  Death might you see triumphant on the plain,
  Drowning in blood him that from blows escapes.
  The king meanwhile with parcel of his train
  Comes hastily out, and for sure conquest gapes,
  And from a bank whereon he stood, beheld
  The doubtful hazard of that bloody field.

  XCIV
  But when he saw the Pagans shrink away,
  He sounded the retreat, and gan desire
  His messengers in his behalf to pray
  Argantes and Clorinda to retire;
  The furious couple both at once said nay,
  Even drunk with shedding blood, and mad with ire,
  At last they went, and to recomfort thought
  And stay their troops from flight, but all for nought.

  XCV
  For who can govern cowardice or fear?
  Their host already was begun to fly,
  They cast their shields and cutting swords arrear,
  As not defended but made slow thereby,
  A hollow dale the city's bulwarks near
  From west to south outstretched long doth lie,
  Thither they fled, and in a mist of dust,
  Toward the walls they run, they throng, they thrust.

  XCVI
  While down the bank disordered thus they ran,
  The Christian knights huge slaughter on them made;
  But when to climb the other hill they gan,
  Old Aladine came fiercely to their aid:
  On that steep brae Lord Guelpho would not than
  Hazard his folk, but there his soldiers stayed,
  And safe within the city's walls the king .
  The relics small of that sharp fight did bring:

  XCVII
  Meanwhile the Soldan in this latest charge
  Had done as much as human force was able,
  All sweat and blood appeared his members large,
  His breath was short, his courage waxed unstable,
  His arm grew weak to bear his mighty targe,
  His hand to rule his heavy sword unable,
  Which bruised, not cut, so blunted was the blade
  It lost the use for which a sword was made.

  XCVIII
  Feeling his weakness, he gan musing stand,
  And in his troubled thought this question tossed,
  If he himself should murder with his hand,
  Because none else should of his conquest boast,
  Or he should save his life, when on the land
  Lay slain the pride of his subdued host,
  "At last to fortune's power," quoth he, "I yield,
  And on my flight let her her trophies build.
  XCIX
  "Let Godfrey view my flight, and smile to see
  This mine unworthy second banishment,
  For armed again soon shall he hear of me,
  From his proud head the unsettled crown to rent,
  For, as my wrongs, my wrath etern shall be,
  At every hour the bow of war new bent,
  I will rise again, a foe, fierce, bold,
  Though dead, though slain, though burnt to ashes cold."

TENTH BOOK

  THE ARGUMENT.
  Ismen from sleep awakes the Soldan great,
  And into Sion brings the Prince by night
  Where the sad king sits fearful on his seat,
  Whom he emboldeneth and excites to fight;
  Godfredo hears his lords and knights repeat
  How they escaped Armida's wrath and spite:
  Rinaldo known to live, Peter foresays
  His Offspring's virtue, good deserts, and praise.

  I
  A gallant steed, while thus the Soldan said,
  Came trotting by him, without lord or guide,
  Quickly his hand upon the reins he laid,
  And weak and weary climbed up to ride;
  The snake that on his crest hot fire out-braid
  Was quite cut off, his helm had lost the pride,
  His coat was rent, his harness hacked and cleft,
  And of his kingly pomp no sign was left.

  II
  As when a savage wolf chased from the fold,
  To hide his head runs to some holt or wood,
  Who, though he filled have while it might hold
  His greedy paunch, yet hungreth after food,
  With sanguine tongue forth of his lips out-rolled
  About his jaws that licks up foam and blood;
  So from this bloody fray the Soldan hied,
  His rage unquenched, his wrath unsatisfied.

  III
  And, as his fortune would, he scaped free
  From thousand arrows which about him flew,
  From swords and lances, instruments that be
  Of certain death, himself he safe withdrew,
  Unknown, unseen, disguised, travelled he,
  By desert paths and ways but used by few,
  And rode revolving in his troubled thought
  What course to take, and yet resolved on naught.

  IV
  Thither at last he meant to take his way,
  Where Egypt's king assembled all his host,
  To join with him, and once again assay
  To win by fight, by which so oft he lost:
  Determined thus, he made no longer stay,
  But thitherward spurred forth his steed in post,
  Nor need he guide, the way right well he could,
  That leads to sandy plains of Gaza old.

  V
  Nor though his smarting wounds torment him oft,
  His body weak and wounded back and side,
  Yet rested he, nor once his armor doffed,
  But all day long o'er hills and dales doth ride:
  But when the night cast up her shade aloft
  And all earth's colors strange in sables dyed,
  He light, and as he could his wounds upbound,
  And shook ripe dates down from a palm he found.

  VI
  On them he supped, and amid the field
  To rest his weary limbs awhile he sought,
  He made his pillow of his broken shield
  To ease the griefs of his distempered thought,
  But little ease could so hard lodging yield,
  His wounds so smarted that he slept right naught,
  And, in his breast, his proud heart rent in twain,
  Two inward vultures, Sorrow and Disdain.

  VII
  At length when midnight with her silence deep
  Did heaven and earth hushed, still, and quiet make,
  Sore watched and weary, he began to steep
  His cares and sorrows in oblivion's lake,
  And in a little, short, unquiet sleep
  Some small repose his fainting spirits take;
  But, while he slept, a voice grave and severe
  At unawares thus thundered in his ear:

  VIII
  "O Solyman! thou far-renowned king,
  Till better season serve, forbear thy rest;
  A stranger doth thy lands in thraldom bring,
  Nice is a slave, by Christian yoke oppressed;
  Sleepest thou here, forgetful of this thing,
  That here thy friends lie slain, not laid in chest,
  Whose bones bear witness of thy shame and scorn!
  And wilt thou idly here attend the morn?"

  IX
  The king awoke, and saw before his eyes
  A man whose presence seemed grave and old,
  A writhen staff his steps unstable guies,
  Which served his feeble members to uphold.
  "And what art thou?" the prince in scorn replies,
  "What sprite to vex poor passengers so bold,
  To break their sleep? or what to thee belongs
  My shame, my loss, my vengeance or my wrongs."

  X
  "I am the man of thine intent," quoth he,
  "And purpose new that sure conjecture hath,
  And better than thou weenest know I thee:
  I proffer thee my service and my faith.
  My speeches therefore sharp and biting be,
  Because quick words the whetstones are of wrath, —
  Accept in gree, my lord, the words I spoke,
  As spurs thine ire and courage to provoke.

  XI
  "But now to visit Egypt's mighty king,
  Unless my judgment fall, you are prepared,
  I prophesy, about a needless thing
  You suffer shall a voyage long and hard:
  For though you stay, the monarch great will bring
  His new assembled host to Juda-ward,
  No place of service there, no cause of fight,
  Nor gainst our foes to use your force and might.

  XII
  "But if you follow me, within this wall
  With Christian arms hemmed in on every side,
  Withouten battle, fight, or stroke at all,
  Even at noonday, I will you safely guide,
  Where you delight, rejoice, and glory shall
  In perils great to see your prowess tried.
  That noble town you may preserve and shield,
  Till Egypt's host come to renew the field."

  XIII
  While thus he parleyed, of this aged guest
  The Turk the words and looks did both admire,
  And from his haughty eyes and furious breast
  He laid apart his pride, his rage and ire,
  And humbly said, "I willing am and prest
  To follow where thou leadest, reverend sire,
  And that advice best fits my angry vein
  That tells of greatest peril, greatest pain."

  XIV
  The old man praised his words, and for the air
  His late received wounds to worse disposes,
  A quintessence therein he poured fair,
  That stops the bleeding, and incision closes:
  Beholding then before Apollo's chair
  How fresh Aurora violets strewed and roses,
  "It's time," he says, "to wend, for Titan bright
  To wonted labor summons every wight."

  XV
  And to a chariot, that beside did stand,
  Ascended he, and with him Solyman,
  He took the reins, and with a mastering hand
  Ruled his steeds, and whipped them now and than,
  The wheels or horses' feet upon the land
  Had left no sign nor token where they ran,
  The coursers pant and smoke with lukewarm sweat
  And, foaming cream, their iron mouthfuls eat.

  XVI
  The air about them round, a wondrous thing,
  Itself on heaps in solid thickness drew,
  The chariot hiding and environing,
  The subtle mist no mortal eye could view;
  And yet no stone from engine cast or sling
  Could pierce the cloud, it was of proof so true;
  Yet seen it was to them within which ride,
  And heaven and earth without, all clear beside.

  XVII
  His beetle brows the Turk amazed bent,
  He wrinkled up his front, and wildly stared
  Upon the cloud and chariot as it went,
  For speed to Cynthia's car right well compared:
  The other seeing his astonishment
  How he bewondered was, and how he fared,
  All suddenly by name the prince gan call,
  By which awaked thus he spoke withal:

  XVIII
  "Whoe'er thou art above all worldly wit
  That hast these high and wondrous marvels brought,
  And know'st the deep intents which hidden sit
  ]n secret closet of man's private thought,
  If in thy skilful heart this lot be writ,
  To tell the event of things to end unbrought;
  Then say, what issue and what ends the stars
  Allot to Asia's troubles, broils and wars.

  XIX
  "But tell me first thy name, and by what art
  Thou dost these wonders strange, above our skill;
  For full of marvel is my troubled heart,
  Tell then and leave me not amazed still."
  The wizard smiled and answered, "In some part
  Easy it is to satisfy thy will,
  Ismen I hight, called an enchanter great,
  Such skill have I in magic's secret feat;

  XX
  "But that I should the sure events unfold
  Of things to come, or destinies foretell,
  Too rash is your desire, your wish too bold,
  To mortal heart such knowledge never fell;
  Our wit and strength on us bestowed I hold,
  To shun the evils and harms, mongst which we dwell,
  They make their fortune who are stout and wise,
  Wit rules the heavens, discretion guides the skies.

  XXI
  "That puissant arm of thine that well can rend
  From Godfrey's brow the new usurped crown,
  And not alone protect, save and defend
  From his fierce people, this besieged town,
  Gainst fire and sword with strength and courage bend,
  Adventure, suffer, trust, tread perils down,
  And to content, and to encourage thee,
  Know this, which as I in a cloud foresee:

  XXII
  "I guess, before the over-gliding sun
  Shall many years mete out by weeks and days,
  A prince that shall in fertile Egypt won,
  Shall fill all Asia with his prosperous frays,
  I speak not of his acts in quiet done,
  His policy, his rule, his wisdom's praise,
  Let this suffice, by him these Christians shall
  In fight subdued fly, and conquered fall.

  XXIII
  "And their great empire and usurped state
  Shall overthrown in dust and ashes lie,
  Their woful remnant in an angle strait
  Compassed with sea themselves shall fortify,
  From thee shall spring this lord of war and fate."
  Whereto great Solyman gan thus reply:
  "0 happy man to so great praise ybore!"
  Thus he rejoiced, but yet envied more;

  XXIV
  And said, "Let chance with good or bad aspect
  Upon me look as sacred Heaven's decree,
  This heart to her I never will subject,
  Nor ever conquered shall she look on me;
  The moon her chariot shall awry direct
  Ere from this course I will diverted be."
  While thus he spake, it seemed he breathed fire,
  So fierce his courage was, so hot his ire.

  XXV
  Thus talked they, till they arrived been
  Nigh to the place where Godfrey's tents were reared,
  There was a woful spectacle yseen,
  Death in a thousand ugly forms appeared,
  The Soldan changed hue for grief and teen,
  On that sad book his shame and loss he lead,
  Ah, with what grief his men, his friends he found;
  And standards proud, inglorious lie on ground!

  XXVI
  And saw one visage of some well-known friend.
  In foul despite, a rascal Frenchman tread,
  And there another ragged peasant rend
  The arms and garments from some champion dead,
  And there with stately pomp by heaps they wend,
  And Christians slain roll up in webs of lead;
  Lastly the Turks and slain Arabians, brought
  On heaps, he saw them burn with fire to naught.

  XXVII
  Deeply he sighed, and with naked sword
  Out of the coach he leaped in the mire,
  But Ismen called again the angry lord,
  And with grave words appeased his foolish ire.
  The prince content remounted at his sword,
  Toward a hill on drove the aged sire,
  And hasting forward up the bank they pass,
  Till far behind the Christian leaguer was.

  XXVIII
  There they alight and took their way on foot,
  The empty chariot vanished out of sight,
  Yet still the cloud environed them about.
  At their left hand down went they from the height
  Of Sion's Hill, till they approached the route
  On that side where to west he looketh right,
  There Ismen stayed, and his eyesight bent
  Upon the bushy rocks, and thither went.

  XXIX
  A hollow cave was in the craggy stone,
  Wrought out by hand a number years tofore,
  And for of long that way had walked none,
  The vault was hid with plants and bushes hoar,
  The wizard stooping in thereat to gone,
  The thorns aside and scratching brambles bore,
  His right hand sought the passage through the cleft,
  And for his guide he gave the prince his left:

  XXX
  "What," quoth the Soldan, "by what privy mine,
  What hidden vault behoves it me to creep?
  This sword can find a better way than thine,
  Although our foes the passage guard and keep."
  "Let not," quoth he, "thy princely foot repine
  To tread this secret path, though dark and deep;
  For great King Herod used to tread the same,
  He that in arms had whilom so great fame.

  XXXI
  "This passage made he, when he would suppress
  His subjects' pride, and them in bondage hold;
  By this he could from that small forteress
  Antonia called, of Antony the bold,
  Convey his folk unseen of more and less
  Even to the middest of the temple old,
  Thence, hither; where these privy ways begin,
  And bring unseen whole armies out and in.

  XXXII
  "But now saye I in all this world lives none
  That knows the secret of this darksome place,
  Come then where Aladine sits on his throne,
  With lords and princes set about his grace;
  He feareth more than fitteth such an one,
  Such signs of doubt show in his cheer and face;
  Fitly you come, hear, see, and keep you still,
  Till time and season serve, then speak your fill."

  XXXIII
  This said, that narrow entrance passed the knight,
  So creeps a camel through a needle's eye,
  And through the ways as black as darkest night
  He followed him that did him rule and guie;
  Strait was the way at first, withouten light,
  But further in, did further amplify;
  So that upright walked at ease the men
  Ere they had passed half that secret den,

  XXXIV
  A privy door Ismen unlocked at last,
  And up they clomb a little-used stair,
  Thereat the day a feeble beam in cast,
  Dim was the light, and nothing clear the air;
  Out of the hollow cave at length they passed
  Into a goodly hall, high, broad and fair,
  Where crowned with gold, and all in purple clad
  Sate the sad king, among his nobles sad.

  XXXV
  The Turk, close in his hollow cloud imbarred,
  Unseen, at will did all the prease behold,
  These heavy speeches of the king he heard,
  Who thus from lofty siege his pleasure told;
  "My lords, last day our state was much impaired,
  Our friends were slain, killed were our soldiers bold,
  Great helps and greater hopes are us bereft,
  Nor aught but aid from Egypt land is left:

  XXXVI
  "And well you see far distant is that aid,
  Upon our heels our danger treadeth still,
  For your advice was this assembly made,
  Each what he thinketh speak, and what he will."
  A whisper soft arose when this was said,
  As gentle winds the groves with murmur fill,
  But with bold face, high looks and merry cheer,
  Argantes rose, the rest their talk forbear.

  XXXVII
  "0 worthy sovereign," thus began to say
  The hardy young man to the tyrant wise,
  "What words be these? what fears do you dismay?
  Who knows not this, you need not our advice!
  But on your hand your hope of conquest lay,
  And, for no loss true virtue damnifies,
  Make her our shield, pray her us succors give,
  And without her let us not wish to live.

  XXXVIII
  "Nor say I this for that I aught misdeem
  That Egypt's promised succors fail us might,
  Doubtful of my great master's words to seem
  To me were neither lawful, just, nor right!
  I speak these words, for spurs I them esteem
  To waken up each dull and fearful sprite,
  And make our hearts resolved to all assays,
  To win with honor, or to die with praise."

  XXXIX
  Thus much Argantes said, and said no more,
  As if the case were clear of which he spoke.
  Orcano rose, of princely stem ybore,
  Whose presence 'mongst them bore a mighty stroke,
  A man esteemed well in arms of yore,
  But now was coupled new in marriage yoke;
  Young babes he had, to fight which made him loth,
  He was a husband and a father both.

  XL
  "My lord," quoth he, "I will not reprehend
  The earnest zeal of this audacious speech,
  From courage sprung, which seld is close ypend
  In swelling stomach without violent breach:
  And though to you our good Circassian friend
  In terms too bold and fervent oft doth preach,
  Yet hold I that for good, in warlike feat
  For his great deeds respond his speeches great.

  XLI
  "But if it you beseem, whom graver age
  And long experience hath made wise and sly,
  To rule the heat of youth and hardy rage,
  Which somewhat have misled this knight awry,
  In equal balance ponder then and gauge
  Your hopes far distant, with your perils nigh;
  This town's old walls and rampires new compare
  With Godfrey's forces and his engines rare.

  XLII
  "But, if I may say what I think unblamed,
  This town is strong, by nature, site and art,
  But engines huge and instruments are framed
  Gainst these defences by our adverse part,
  Who thinks him most secure is eathest shamed;
  I hope the best, yet fear unconstant mart,
  And with this siege if we be long up pent,
  Famine I doubt, our store will all be spent.

  XLIII
  "For all that store of cattle and of grain
  Which yesterday within these walls you brought,
  While your proud foes triumphant through the plain
  On naught but shedding blood, and conquest thought,
  Too little is this city to sustain,
  To raise the siege unless some means be sought;
  And it must last till the prefixed hour
  That it be raised by Egypt's aid and power.

  XLIV
  "But what if that appointed day they miss?
  Or else, ere we expect, what if they came?
  The victory yet is not ours for this,
  Oh save this town from ruin, us from shame!
  With that same Godfrey still our warfare is,
  These armies, soldiers, captains are the same
  Who have so oft amid the dusty plain
  Turks, Persians, Syrians and Arabians slain.

  XLV
  "And thou Argantes wotest what they be;
  Oft hast thou fled from that victorious host,
  Thy shoulders often hast thou let them see,
  And in thy feet hath been thy safeguard most;
  Clorinda bright and I fled eke with thee,
  None than his fellows had more cause to boast,
  Nor blame I any; for in every fight
  We showed courage, valor, strength and might.

  XLVI
  "And though this hardy knight the certain threat
  Of near-approaching death to hear disdain;
  Yet to this state of loss and danger great,
  From this strong foe I see the tokens plain;
  No fort how strong soe'er by art or seat,
  Can hinder Godfrey why he should not reign:
  This makes me say, — to witness heaven I bring,
  Zeal to this state, love to my lord and king —

  XLVII
  "The king of Tripoli was well advised
  To purchase peace, and so preserve his crown:
  But Solyman, who Godfrey's love despised,
  Is either dead or deep in prison thrown;
  Else fearful is he run away disguised,
  And scant his life is left him for his own,
  And yet with gifts, with tribute, and with gold,
  He might in peace his empire still have hold."

  XLVIII
  Thus spake Orcanes, and some inkling gave
  In doubtful words of that he would have said;
  To sue for peace or yield himself a slave
  He durst not openly his king persuade:
  But at those words the Soldan gan to rave,
  And gainst his will wrapt in the cloud he stayed,
  Whom Ismen thus bespake, "How can you bear
  These words, my lord? or these reproaches hear?"

  XLIX
  "Oh, let me speak," quoth he, "with ire and scorn
  I burn, and gains, my will thus hid I stay!"
  This said. the smoky cloud was cleft and torn,
  Which like a veil upon them stretched lay,
  And up to open heaven forthwith was borne,
  And left the prince in view of lightsome day,
  With princely look amid the press he shined,
  And on a sudden, thus declared his mind.

  L
  "Of whom you speak behold the Soldan here,
  Neither afraid nor run away for dread,
  And that these slanders, lies and fables were,
  This hand shall prove upon that coward's head,
  I, who have shed a sea of blood well near,
  And heaped up mountains high of Christians dead,
  I in their camp who still maintained the fray,
  My men all murdered, I that run away.

  LI
  "If this, or any coward vile beside,
  False to his faith and country, dares reply;
  And speak of concord with yon men of pride,
  By your good leave, Sir King, here shall he die,
  The lambs and wolves shall in one fold abide,
  The doves and serpents in one nest shall lie,
  Before one town us and these Christians shall
  In peace and love unite within one wall."

  LII
  While thus he spoke, his broad and trenchant sword
  His hand held high aloft in threatening guise;
  Dumb stood the knights, so dreadful was his word;
  A storm was in his front, fire in his eyes,
  He turned at last to Sion's aged lord,
  And calmed his visage stern in humbler wise:
  "Behold," quoth he, "good prince, what aid I bring,
  Since 5olyman is joined with Juda's king."

  LIII
  King Aladine from his rich throne upstart
  And said, "Oh how I joy thy face to view,
  My noble friend! it lesseneth in some part
  My grief, for slaughter of my subjects true;
  My weak estate to stablish come thou art,
  And mayest thine own again in time renew,
  If Heavens consent:" with that the Soldan bold
  In dear embracements did he long enfold.

  LIV
  Their greetings done, the king resigned his throne
  To Solyman, and set himself beside,
  In a rich seat adorned with gold and stone,
  And Ismen sage did at his elbow bide,
  Of whom he asked what way they two had gone,
  And he declared all what had them betide:
  Clorinda bright to Solyman addressed
  Her salutations first, then all the rest.

  LV
  Among them rose Ormusses' valiant knight,
  Whom late the Soldan with a convoy sent,
  And when most hot and bloody was the fight,
  By secret paths and blind byways he went,
  Till aided by the silence and the night
  Safe in the city's walls himself he pent,
  And there refreshed with corn and cattle store
  The pined soldiers famished nigh before.

  LVI
  With surly countenance and disdainful grace,
  Sullen and sad, sat the Circassian stout,
  Like a fierce lion grumbling in his place,
  His fiery eyes that turns and rolls about;
  Nor durst Orcanes view the Soldan's face,
  But still upon the floor did pore and tout:
  Thus with his lords and peers in counselling,
  The Turkish monarch sat with Juda's king.

  LVII
  Godfrey this while gave victory the rein,
  And following her the straits he opened all;
  Then for his soldiers and his captains slain,
  He celebrates a stately funeral,
  And told his camp within a day or twain
  He would assault the city's mighty wall,
  And all the heathen there enclosed doth threat,
  With fire and sword, with death and danger great.

  LVIII
  And for he had that noble squadron known,
  In the last fight which brought him so great aid,
  To be the lords and princes of his own
  Who followed late the sly enticing maid,
  And with them Tancred, who had late been thrown
  In prison deep, by that false witch betrayed,
  Before the hermit and some private friends,
  For all those worthies, lords and knights, he sends;

  LIX
  And thus he said, "Some one of you declare
  Your fortunes, whether good or to be blamed,
  And to assist us with your valors rare
  In so great need, how was your coming framed?"
  They blush, and on the ground amazed stare,
  For virtue is of little guilt ashamed,
  At last the English prince with countenance bold,
  The silence broke, and thus their errors told:

  LX
  "We, not elect to that exploit by lot,
  With secret flight from hence ourselves withdrew,
  Following false Cupid, I deny it not,
  Enticed forth by love and beauty's hue;
  A jealous fire burnt in our stomachs hot,
  And by close ways we passed least in view,
  Her words, her looks, alas I know too late,
  Nursed our love, our jealousy, our hate.

  LXI
  "At last we gan approach that woful clime,
  Where fire and brimstone down from Heaven was sent
  To take revenge for sin and shameful crime
  Gainst kind commit, by those who nould repent;
  A loathsome lake of brimstone, pitch and lime,
  O'ergoes that land, erst sweet and redolent,
  And when it moves, thence stench and smoke up flies
  Which dim the welkin and infect the skies.

  LXII
  "This is the lake in which yet never might
  Aught that hath weight sink to the bottom down,
  But like to cork or leaves or feathers light,
  Stones, iron, men, there fleet and never drown;
  Therein a castle stands, to which by sight
  But o'er a narrow bridge no way is known,
  Hither us brought, here welcomed us the witch,
  The house within was stately, pleasant, rich.

  LXIII
  "The heavens were clear, and wholsome was the air,
  High trees, sweet meadows, waters pure and good;
  For there in thickest shade of myrtles fair
  A crystal spring poured out a silver flood;
  Amid the herbs, the grass and flowers rare,
  The falling leaves down pattered from the wood,
  The birds sung hymns of love; yet speak I naught
  Of gold and marble rich, and richly wrought.

  LXIV
  "Under the curtain of the greenwood shade,
  Beside the brook upon the velvet grass,
  In massy vessel of pure silver made,
  A banquet rich and costly furnished was,
  All beasts, all birds beguiled by fowler's trade,
  All fish were there in floods or seas that pass,
  All dainties made by art, and at the table
  An hundred virgins served, for husbands able.

  LXV
  "She with sweet words and false enticing smiles,
  Infused love among the dainties set,
  And with empoisoned cups our souls beguiles,
  And made each knight himself and God forget:
  She rose and turned again within short whiles,
  With changed looks where wrath and anger met,
  A charming rod, a book with her she brings,
  On which she mumbled strange and secret things.

  LXVI
  "She read, and change I felt my will and thought,
  I longed to change my life, and place of biding,
  That virtue strange in me no pleasure wrought,
  I leapt into the flood myself there hiding,
  My legs and feet both into one were brought,
  Mine arms and hands into my shoulders sliding,
  My skin was full of scales, like shields of brass,
  Now made a fish, where late a knight I was.

  LXVII
  "The rest with me like shape, like garments wore,
  And dived with me in that quicksilver stream,
  Such mind, to my remembrance, then I bore,
  As when on vain and foolish things men dream;
  At last our shade it pleased her to restore,
  Then full of wonder and of fear we seem,
  And with an ireful look the angry maid
  Thus threatened us, and made us thus afraid.

  LXVIII
  "'You see,' quoth she, 'my sacred might and skill,
  How you are subject to my rule and power,
  In endless thraldom damned if I will
  I can torment and keep you in this tower,
  Or make you birds, or trees on craggy hill,
  To bide the bitter blasts of storm and shower;
  Or harden you to rocks on mountains old,
  Or melt your flesh and bones to rivers cold:

  LXIX
  "'Yet may you well avoid mine ire and wrath,
  If to my will your yielding hearts you bend,
  You must forsake your Christendom and faith,
  And gainst Godfredo false my crown defend.'
  We all refused, for speedy death each prayeth,
  Save false Rambaldo, he became her friend,
  We in a dungeon deep were helpless cast,
  In misery and iron chained fast.

  LXX
  "Then, for alone they say falls no mishap,
  Within short while Prince Tancred thither came,
  And was unwares surprised in the trap:
  But there short while we stayed, the wily dame
  In other folds our mischiefs would upwrap.
  From Hidraort an hundred horsemen came,
  Whose guide, a baron bold to Egypt's king,
  Should us disarmed and bound in fetters bring.

  LXXI
  "Now on our way, the way to death we ride,
  But Providence Divine thus for us wrought,
  Rinaldo, whose high virtue is his guide
  To great exploits, exceeding human thought,
  Met us, and all at once our guard defied,
  And ere he left the fight to earth them brought.
  And in their harness armed us in the place,
  Which late were ours, before our late disgrace.

  LXXII
  "I and all these the hardy champion knew,
  We saw his valor, and his voice we heard;
  Then is the rumor of his death untrue,
  His life is safe, good fortune long it guard,
  Three times the golden sun hath risen new,
  Since us he left and rode to Antioch-ward;
  But first his armors, broken, hacked and cleft,
  Unfit for service, there he doft and left."

  LXXIII
  Thus spake the Briton prince, with humble cheer
  The hermit sage to heaven cast up his eyne,
  His color and his countenance changed were,
  With heavenly grace his looks and visage shine,
  Ravished with zeal his soul approached near
  The seat of angels pure, and saints divine,
  And there he learned of things and haps to come,
  To give foreknowledge true, and certain doom.

  LXXIV
  At last he spoke, in more than human sound,
  And told what things his wisdom great foresaw,
  And at his thundering voice the folk around
  Attentive stood, with trembling and with awe:
  "Rinaldo lives," he said, "the tokens found
  From women's craft their false beginnings draw,
  He lives, and heaven will long preserve his days,
  To greater glory, and to greater praise.

  LXXV
  "These are but trifles yet, though Asia's kings
  Shrink at his name, and tremble at his view,
  I well foresee he shall do greater things,
  And wicked emperors conquer and subdue;
  Under the shadow of his eagle's wings
  Shall holy Church preserve her sacred crew,
  From Caesar's bird he shall the sable train
  Pluck off, and break her talons sharp in twain.

  LXXVI
  "His children's children at his hardiness
  And great attempts shall take example fair,
  From emperors unjust in all distress
  They shall defend the state of Peter's chair,
  To raise the humble up, pride to suppress,
  To help the innocents shall be their care.
  This bird of east shall fly with conquest great,
  As far as moon gives light or sun gives heat;

  LXXVII
  "Her eyes behold the truth and purest light,
  And thunders down in Peter's aid she brings,
  And where for Christ and Christian faith men fight,
  There forth she spreadeth her victorious wings,
  This virtue nature gives her and this might;
  Then lure her home, for on her presence hings
  The happy end of this great enterprise,
  So Heaven decrees, and so command the skies."

  LXXVIII
  These words of his of Prince Rinaldo's death
  Out of their troubled hearts, the fear had rased;
  In all this joy yet Godfrey smiled uneath.
  In his wise thought such care and heed was placed.
  But now from deeps of regions underneath
  Night's veil arose, and sun's bright lustre chased,
  When all full sweetly in their cabins slept,
  Save he, whose thoughts his eyes still open kept.

ELEVENTH BOOK

  THE ARGUMENT.
  With grave procession, songs and psalms devout
  Heaven's sacred aid the Christian lords invoke;
  That done, they scale the wall which kept them out:
  The fort is almost won, the gates nigh broke:
  Godfrey is wounded by Clorinda stout,
  And lost is that day's conquest by the stroke;
  The angel cures him, he returns to fight,
  But lost his labor, for day lost his light.

  I
  The Christian army's great and puissant guide,
  To assault the town that all his thoughts had bent,
  Did ladders, rams, and engines huge provide,
  When reverend Peter to him gravely went,
  And drawing him with sober grace aside,
  With words severe thus told his high intent;
  "Right well, my lord, these earthly strengths you move,
  But let us first begin from Heaven above:

  II
  "With public prayer, zeal and faith devout,
  The aid, assistance, and the help obtain
  Of all the blessed of the heavenly rout,
  With whose support you conquest sure may gain;
  First let the priests before thine armies stout
  With sacred hymns their holy voices strain.
  And thou and all thy lords and peers with thee,
  Of godliness and faith examples be."

  III
  Thus spake the hermit grave in words severe:
  Godfrey allowed his counsel, sage, and wise,
  "Of Christ the Lord," quoth he, "thou servant dear,
  I yield to follow thy divine advice,
  And while the princes I assemble here,
  The great procession, songs and sacrifice,
  With Bishop William, thou and Ademare,
  With sacred and with solemn pomp prepare."

  IV
  Next morn the bishops twain, the heremite,
  And all the clerks and priests of less estate,
  Did in the middest of the camp unite
  Within a place for prayer consecrate,
  Each priest adorned was in a surplice white,
  The bishops donned their albes and copes of state,
  Above their rochets buttoned fair before,
  And mitres on their heads like crowns they wore.

  V
  Peter alone, before, spread to the wind
  The glorious sign of our salvation great,
  With easy pace the choir come all behind,
  And hymns and psalms in order true repeat,
  With sweet respondence in harmonious kind
  Their humble song the yielding air doth beat,
  "Lastly, together went the reverend pair
  Of prelates sage, William and Ademare,

  VI
  The mighty duke came next, as princes do,
  Without companion, marching all alone,
  The lords and captains then came two and two,
  With easy pace thus ordered, passing through
  The trench and rampire, to the fields they gone,
  No thundering drum, no trumpet shrill they hear,
  Their godly music psalms and prayers were.

  VII
  To thee, O Father, Son, and sacred Sprite,
  One true, eternal, everlasting King;
  To Christ's dear mother, Mary, vlrgin bright,
  Psalms of thanksgiving and of praise they sing;
  To them that angels down from heaven to fight
  Gainst the blasphemous beast and dragon bring;
  To him also that of our Saviour good,
  Washed the sacred font in Jordan's flood.

  VIII
  Him likewise they invoke, called the Rock
  Whereon the Lord, they say, his Church did rear,
  Whose true successors close or else unlock
  The blessed gates of grace and mercy dear;
  And all the elected twelve the chosen flock,
  Of his triumphant death who witness bear;
  And them by torment, slaughter, fire and sword
  Who martyrs died to confirm his word;

  IX
  And them also whose books and writings tell
  What certain path to heavenly bliss us leads;
  And hermits good, and ancresses that dwell
  Mewed up in walls, and mumble on their beads,
  And virgin nuns in close and private cell,
  Where, but shrift fathers, never mankind treads:
  On these they called, and on all the rout
  Of angels, martyrs, and of saints devout.

  X
  Singing and saying thus, the camp devout
  Spread forth her zealous squadrons broad and wide';
  Toward mount Olivet went all this route,
  So called of olive trees the hills which hide,
  A mountain known by fame the world throughout,
  Which riseth on the city's eastern side,
  From it divided by the valley green
  Of Josaphat, that fills the space between.

  XI
  Hither the armies went, and chanted shrill,
  That all the deep and hollow dales resound;
  From hollow mounts and caves in every hill,
  A thousand echoes also sung around,
  It seemed some clever, that sung with art and skill,
  Dwelt in those savage dens and shady ground,
  For oft resounds from the banks they hear,
  The name of Christ and of his mother dear.

  XII
  Upon the walls the Pagans old and young
  Stood hushed and still, amated and amazed,
  At their grave order and their humble song,
  At their strange pomp and customs new they gazed:
  But when the show they had beholden long,
  An hideous yell the wicked miscreants raised,
  That with vile blasphemies the mountain hoar,
  The woods, the waters, and the valleys roar.

  XIII
  But yet with sacred notes the hosts proceed,
  Though blasphemies they hear and cursed things;
  So with Apollo's harp Pan tunes his reed,
  So adders hiss where Philomela sings;
  Nor flying darts nor stones the Christians dreed,
  Nor arrows shot, nor quarries cast from slings;
  But with assured faith, as dreading naught,
  The holy work begun to end they brought.

  XIV
  A table set they on the mountain's height
  To minister thereon the sacrament,
  In golden candlesticks a hallowed light
  At either end of virgin wax there brent;
  In costly vestments sacred William dight,
  With fear and trembling to the altar went,
  And prayer there and service loud begins,
  Both for his own and all the army's sins.

  XV
  Humbly they heard his words that stood him nigh,
  The rest far off upon him bent their eyes,
  But when he ended had the service high,
  "You servants of the Lord depart," he cries:
  His hands he lifted then up to the sky,
  And blessed all those warlike companies;
  And they dismissed returned the way they came,
  Their order as before, their pomp the same.

  XVI
  Within their camp arrived, this voyage ended,
  Toward his tent the duke himself withdrew,
  Upon their guide by heaps the bands attended,
  Till his pavilion's stately door they view,
  There to the Lord his welfare they commended,
  And with him left the worthies of the crew,
  Whom at a costly and rich feast he placed,
  And with the highest room old Raymond graced.

  XVII
  Now when the hungry knights sufficed are
  With meat, with drink, with spices of the best,
  Quoth he, "When next you see the morning star,
  To assault the town be ready all and prest:
  To-morrow is a day of pains and war,
  This of repose, of quiet, peace, and rest;
  Go, take your ease this evening, and this night,
  And make you strong against to-morrow's fight."

  XVIII
  They took their leave, and Godfrey's heralds rode
  To intimate his will on every side,
  And published it through all the lodgings broad,
  That gainst the morn each should himself provide;
  Meanwhile they might their hearts of cares unload,
  And rest their tired limbs that eveningtide;
  Thus fared they till night their eyes did close,
  Night friend to gentle rest and sweet repose.

  XIX
  With little sign as yet of springing day
  Out peeped, not well appeared the rising morn,
  The plough yet tore not up the fertile lay,
  Nor to their feed the sheep from folds return,
  The birds sate silent on the greenwood spray
  Amid the groves unheard was hound and horn,
  When trumpets shrill, true signs of hardy fights,
  Called up to arms the soldiers, called the knights:

  XX
  "Arm, arm at once!" an hundred squadrons cried,
  And with their cry to arm them all begin.
  Godfrey arose, that day he laid aside
  His hauberk strong he wonts to combat in,
  And donned a breastplate fair, of proof untried,
  Such one as footmen use, light, easy, thin.
  Scantly the warlord thus clothed had his gromes,
  When aged Raymond to his presence comes.

  XXI
  And furnished to us when he the man beheld,
  By his attire his secret thought he guessed,
  "Where is," quoth he, "your sure and trusty shield?
  Your helm, your hauberk strong? where all the rest?
  Why be you half disarmed? why to the field
  Approach you in these weak defences dressed?
  I see this day you mean a course to run,
  Wherein may peril much, small praise be won.

  XXII
  "Alas, do you that idle prise expect,
  To set first foot this conquered wall above?
  Of less account some knight thereto object
  Whose loss so great and harmful cannot prove;
  My lord, your life with greater care protect,
  And love yourself because all us you love,
  Your happy life is spirit, soul, and breath
  Of all this camp, preserve it then from death."

  XXIII
  To this he answered thus, "You know," he said,
  "In Clarimont by mighty Urban's hand
  When I was girded with this noble blade,
  For Christ's true faith to fight in every land,
  To God even then a secret vow I made,
  Not as a captain here this day to stand
  And give directions, but with shield and sword
  To fight, to win, or die for Christ my Lord.

  XXIV
  "When all this camp in battle strong shall be
  Ordained and ordered, well disposed all,
  And all things done which to the high degree
  And sacred place I hold belongen shall;
  Then reason is it, nor dissuade thou me,
  That I likewise assault this sacred wall,
  Lest from my vow to God late made I swerve:
  He shall this life defend, keep and preserve."

  XXV
  Thus he concludes, and every hardy knight
  His sample followed, and his brethren twain,
  The other princes put on harness light,
  As footmen use: but all the Pagan train
  Toward that side bent their defensive might
  Which lies exposed to view of Charles's wain
  And Zephyrus' sweet blasts, for on that part
  The town was weakest, both by side and art.

  XXVI
  On all parts else the fort was strong by site,
  With mighty hills defenced from foreign rage,
  And to this part the tyrant gan unite
  His subjects born and bands that serve for wage,
  From this exploit he spared nor great nor lite,
  The aged men, and boys of tender age,
  To fire of angry war still brought new fuel,
  Stones, darts, lime, brimstone and bitumen cruel.

  XXVII
  All full of arms and weapons was the wall,
  Under whose basis that fair plain doth run,
  There stood the Soldan like a giant tall,
  So stood at Rhodes the Coloss of the sun,
  Waist high, Argantes showed himself withal,
  At whose stern looks the French to quake begun,
  Clorinda on the corner tower alone,
  In silver arms like rising Cynthia shone.

  XXVIII
  Her rattling quiver at her shoulders hung,
  Therein a flash of arrows feathered weel.
  In her left hand her bow was bended strong,
  Therein a shaft headed with mortal steel,
  So fit to shoot she singled forth among
  Her foes who first her quarries' strength should feel,
  So fit to shoot Latona's daughter stood
  When Niobe she killed and all her brood.

  XXIX
  The aged tyrant tottered on his feet
  From gate to gate, from wall to wall he flew,
  He comforts all his bands with speeches sweet,
  And every fort and bastion doth review,
  For every need prepared in every street
  New regiments he placed and weapons new.
  The matrons grave within their temples high
  To idols false for succors call and cry,

  XXX
  "O Macon, break in twain the steeled lance
  On wicked Godfrey with thy righteous hands,
  Against thy name he doth his arm advance,
  His rebel blood pour out upon these sands;"
  These cries within his ears no enterance
  Could find, for naught he hears, naught understands.
  While thus the town for her defence ordains,
  His armies Godfrey ordereth on the plains;

  XXXI
  His forces first on foot he forward brought,
  With goodly order, providence and art,
  And gainst these towers which to assail he thought,
  In battles twain his strength he doth depart,
  Between them crossbows stood, and engines wrought
  To cast a stone, a quarry, or a dart,
  From whence like thunder's dint or lightnings new
  Against the bulwark stones and lances flew.

  XXXII
  His men at arms did back his bands on foot,
  The light horse ride far off and serve for wings,
  He gave the sign, so mighty was the rout
  Of those that shot with bows and cast with slings,
  Such storms of shafts and stones flew all about,
  That many a Pagan proud to death it brings,
  Some died, some at their loops durst scant outpeep,
  Some fled and left the place they took to keep.

  XXXIII
  The hardy Frenchmen, full of heat and haste,
  Ran boldly forward to the ditches large,
  And o'er their heads an iron pentice vast
  They built, by joining many a shield and targe,
  Some with their engines ceaseless shot and cast,
  And volleys huge of arrows sharp discharge,
  Upon the ditches some employed their pain
  To fill the moat and even it with the plain.

  XXXIV
  With slime or mud the ditches were not soft,
  But dry and sandy, void of waters clear,
  Though large and deep the Christians fill them oft,
  With rubbish, fagots, stones, and trees they bear:
  Adrastus first advanced his crest aloft,
  And boldly gan a strong scalado rear,
  And through the falling storm did upward climb
  Of stones, darts, arrows, fire, pitch and lime:

  XXXV
  The hardy Switzer now so far was gone
  That half way up with mickle pain he got,
  A thousand weapons he sustained alone,
  And his audacious climbing ceased not;
  At last upon him fell a mighty stone,
  As from some engine great it had been shot,
  It broke his helm, he tumbled from the height,
  The strong Circassian cast that wondrous weight;

  XXXVI
  Not mortal was the blow, yet with the fall
  On earth sore bruised the man lay in a swoon.
  Argantes gan with boasting words to call,
  "Who cometh next? this first is tumbled down,
  Come, hardy soldiers, come, assault this wall,
  I will not shrink, nor fly, nor hide my crown,
  If in your trench yourselves for dread you hold,
  There shall you die like sheep killed in their fold."

  XXXVII
  Thus boasted he; but in their trenches deep,
  The hidden squadrons kept themselves from scath,
  The curtain made of shields did well off keep
  Both darts and shot, and scorned all their wrath.
  But now the ram upon the rampiers steep,
  On mighty beams his head advanced hath,
  With dreadful horns of iron tough tree great,
  The walls and bulwarks trembled at his threat.

  XXXVIII
  An hundred able men meanwhile let fall
  The weights behind, the engine tumbled down
  And battered flat the battlements and wall:
  So fell Taigetus hill on Sparta town,
  It crushed the steeled shield in pieces small,
  And beat the helmet to the wearers' crown,
  And on the ruins of the walls and stones,
  Dispersed left their blood their brains and bones.

  XXXIX
  The fierce assailants kept no longer close
  Undcr the shelter of their target fine,
  But their bold fronts to chance of war expose,
  And gainst those towers let their virtue shine,
  The scaling ladders up to skies arose,
  The ground-works deep some closely undermine,
  The walls before the Frenchmen shrink and shake,
  And gaping sign of headlong falling make:

  XL
  And fallen they had, so far the strength extends
  Of that fierce ram and his redoubted stroke,
  But that the Pagan's care the place defends
  And saved by warlike skill the wall nigh broke:
  For to what part soe'er the engine bends,
  Their sacks of wool they place the blow to choke,
  Whose yielding breaks the strokes thereon which light,
  So weakness oft subdues the greatest might.

  XLI
  While thus the worthies of the western crew
  Maintained their brave assault and skirmish hot,
  Her mighty bow Clorinda often drew,
  And many a sharp and deadly arrow shot;
  And from her bow no steeled shaft there flew
  But that some blood the cursed engine got,
  Blood of some valiant knight or man of fame,
  For that proud shootress scorned weaker game.

  XLII
  The first she hit among the Christian peers
  Was the bold son of England's noble king,
  Above the trench himself he scantly rears,
  But she an arrow loosed from the string,
  The wicked steel his gauntlet breaks and tears,
  And through his right hand thrust the piercing sting;
  Disabled thus from fight, he gan retire,
  Groaning for pain, but fretting more for ire.

  XLIII
  Lord Stephen of Amboise on the ditch's brim,
  And on a ladder high, Clotharius died,
  From back to breast an arrow pierced him,
  The other was shot through from side to side:
  Then as he managed brave his courser trim,
  On his left arm he hit the Flemings' guide,
  He stopped, and from the wound the reed out-twined,
  But left the iron in his flesh behind.

  XLIV
  As Ademare stood to behold the fight
  High on the bank, withdrawn to breathe a space,
  A fatal shaft upon his forehead light,
  His hand he lifted up to feel the place,
  Whereon a second arrow chanced right,
  And nailed his hand unto his wounded face,
  He fell, and with his blood distained the land,
  His holy blood shed by a virgin's hand.

  XLV
  While Palamede stood near the battlement,
  Despising perils all, and all mishap,
  And upward still his hardy footings bent,
  On his right eye he caught a deadly clap,
  Through his right eye Clorinda's seventh shaft went,
  And in his neck broke forth a bloody gap;
  He underneath that bulwark dying fell,
  Which late to scale and win he trusted well.

  XLVI
  Thus shot the maid: the duke with hard assay
  And sharp assault, meanwhile the town oppressed,
  Against that part which to his campward lay
  An engine huge and wondrous he addressed,
  A tower of wood built for the town's decay
  As high as were the walls and bulwarks best,
  A turret full of men and weapons pent,
  And yet on wheels it rolled, moved, and went.

  XLVII
  This rolling fort his nigh approaches made,
  And darts and arrows spit against his foes,
  As ships are wont in fight, so it assayed
  With the strong wall to grapple and to close,
  The Pagans on each side the piece invade,
  And all their force against this mass oppose,
  Sometimes the wheels, sometimes the battlement
  With timber, logs and stones, they broke and rent,

  XLVIII
  So thick flew stones and darts, that no man sees
  The azure heavens, the sun his brightness lost,
  The clouds of weapons, like to swarms of bees,
  Move the air, and there each other crossed:
  And look how falling leaves drop down from trees,
  When the moist sap is nipped with timely frost,
  Or apples in strong winds from branches fall;
  The Saracens so tumbled from the wall.

  XLIX
  For on their part the greatest slaughter light,
  They had no shelter gainst so sharp a shower,
  Some left on live betook themselves to flight,
  So feared they this deadly thundering tower:
  But Solyman stayed like a valiant knight,
  And some with him, that trusted in his power,
  Argantes with a long beech tree in hand,
  Ran thither, this huge engine to withstand:

  L
  With this he pushed the tower, and back it drives
  The length of all his tree, a wondrous way,
  The hardy virgin by his side arrives,
  To help Argantes in this hard assay:
  The band that used the ram, this season strives
  To cut the cords, wherein the woolpacks lay,
  Which done, the sacks down in the trenches fall,
  And to the battery naked left the wall.

  LI
  The tower above, the ram beneath doth thunder,
  What lime and stone such puissance could abide?
  The wall began, new bruised and crushed asunder,
  Her wounded lap to open broad and wide,
  Godfrey himself and his brought safely under
  The shattered wall, where greatest breach he spied,
  Himself he saves behind his mighty targe,
  A shield not used but in some desperate charge.

  LII
  From hence he sees where Solyman descends,
  Down to the threshold of the gaping breach,
  And there it seems the mighty prince intends
  Godfredo's hoped entrance to impeach:
  Argantes, and with him the maid, defends
  The walls above, to which the tower doth reach,
  His noble heart, when Godfrey this beheld,
  With courage new with wrath and valor swelled.

  LIII
  He turned about and to good Sigiere spake,
  Who bare his greatest shield and mighty bow,
  "That sure and trusty target let me take,
  Impenetrable is that shield I know,
  Over these ruins will I passage make,
  And enter first, the way is eath and low,
  And time requires that by some noble feat
  I should make known my strength and puissance great."

  LIV
  He scant had spoken, scant received the charge,
  When on his leg a sudden shaft him hit,
  And through that part a hole made wide and large,
  Where his strong sinews fastened were and knit.
  Clorinda, thou this arrow didst discharge,
  And let the Pagans bless thy hand for it,
  For by that shot thou savedst them that day
  From bondage vile, from death and sure decay.

  LV
  The wounded duke, as though he felt no pain,
  Still forward went, and mounted up the breach
  His high attempt at first he nould refrain,
  And after called his lords with cheerful speech;
  But when his leg could not his weight sustain,
  He saw his will did far his power outreach,
  And more he strove his grief increased the more,
  The bold assault he left at length therefore:

  LVI
  And with his hand he beckoned Guelpho near,
  And said, "I must withdraw me to my tent,
  My place and person in mine absence bear,
  Supply my want, let not the fight relent,
  I go, and will ere long again be here;
  I go and straight return: "this said, he went,
  On a light steed he leaped, and o'er the green
  He rode, but rode not, as he thought, unseen.

  LVII
  When Godfrey parted, parted eke the heart, .
  The strength and fortune of the Christian bands,.
  Courage increased in their adverse part,
  Wrath in their hearts, and vigor in their hands:
  Valor, success, strength, hardiness and art,
  Failed in the princes of the western lands,
  Their swords were blunt, faint was their trumpet's blast,
  Their sun was set, or else with clouds o'ercast.

  LVIII
  Upon the bulwarks now appeared bold
  That fearful band that late for dread was fled!
  The women that Clorinda's strength behold,
  Their country's love to war encouraged,
  They weapons got, and fight like men they would,
  Their gowns tucked up, their locks were loose and spread,
  Sharp darts they cast, and without dread or fear,
  Exposed their breasts to save their fortress dear.

  LIX
  But that which most dismayed the Christian knights,
  And added courage to the Pagans most,
  Was Guelpho's sudden fall in all men's sights,
  Who tumbled headlong down, his footing lost,
  A mighty stone upon the worthy lights,
  But whence it came none wist, nor from what coast;
  And with like blow, which more their hearts dismayed,
  Beside him low in dust old Raymond laid:

  LX
  And Eustace eke within the ditches large,
  To narrow shifts and last extremes they drive,
  Upon their foes so fierce the Pagans charge,
  And with good-fortune so their blows they give,
  That whom they hit, in spite of helm or targe,
  They deeply wound, or else of life deprive.
  At this their good success Argantes proud,
  Waxing more fell, thus roared and cried aloud:

  LXI
  "This is not Antioch, nor the evening dark
  Can help your privy sleights with friendly shade,
  The sun yet shines, your falsehood can we mark,
  In other wise this bold assault is made;
  Of praise and glory quenched is the spark
  That made you first these eastern lands invade,
  Why cease you now? why take you not this fort?
  What! are you weary for a charge so short?"

  LXII
  Thus raged he, and in such hellish sort
  Increased the fury in the brain-sick knight,
  That he esteemed that large and ample fort
  Too strait a field, wherein to prove his might,
  There where the breach had framed a new-made port,
  Himself he placed, with nimble skips and light,
  He cleared the passage out, and thus he cried
  To Solyman, that fought close by his side:

  LXIII
  "Come, Solyman, the time and place behold,
  That of our valors well may judge the doubt,
  What sayest thou? amongst these Christians bold,
  First leap he forth that holds himself most stout:"
  While thus his will the mighty champion told,
  Both Solyman and he at once leaped out,
  Fury the first provoked, disdain the last,
  Who scorned the challenge ere his lips it passed.

  LXIV
  Upon their foes unlooked-for they flew,
  Each spited other for his virtue's sake,
  So many soldiers this fierce couple slew,
  So many shields they cleft and helms they break,
  So many ladders to the earth they threw,
  That well they seemed a mount thereof to make,
  Or else some vamure fit to save the town,
  Instead of that the Christians late beat down.

  LXV
  The folk that strove with rage and haste before
  Who first the wall and rampire should ascend,
  Retire, and for that honor strive no more,
  Scantly they could their limbs and lives defend,
  They fled, their engines lost the Pagans tore
  In pieces small, their rams to naught they rend,
  And all unfit for further service make
  With so great force and rage their beams they brake.

  LXVI
  The Pagans ran transported with their ire,
  Now here, now there, and woful slaughters wrought,
  At last they called for devouring fire,
  Two burning pines against the tower they brought,
  So from the palace of their hellish sire,
  When all this world they would consume to naught,
  The fury sisters come with fire in hands,
  Shaking their snaky locks and sparkling brands:

  LXVII
  But noble Tancred, who this while applied
  Grave exhortations to his bold Latines,
  When of these knights the wondrous acts he spied,
  And saw the champions with their burning pines,
  He left his talk, and thither forthwith hied,
  To stop the rage of those fell Saracines.
  And with such force the fight he there renewed,
  That now they fled and lost who late pursued.

  LXVIII
  Thus changed the state and fortune of the fray,
  Meanwhile the wounded duke, in grief and teen,
  Within his great pavilion rich and gay,
  Good Sigiere and Baldwin stood between;
  His other friends whom his mishap dismay,
  With grief and tears about assembled been:
  He strove in haste the weapon out to wind,
  And broke the reed, but left the head behind.

  LXIX
  He bade them take the speediest way they might,
  Of that unlucky hurt to make him sound,
  And to lay ope the depth thereof to sight,
  He willed them open, search and lance the wound,
  "Send me again," quoth he, "to end this fight,
  Before the sun be sunken under ground;"
  And leaning on a broken spear, he thrust
  His leg straight out, to him that cure it must.

  LXX
  Erotimus, born on the banks of Po,
  Was he that undertook to cure the knight,
  All what green herbs or waters pure could do,
  He knew their power, their virtue, and their might,
  A noble poet was the man also,
  But in this science had a more delight,
  He could restore to health death-wounded men,
  And make their names immortal with his pen.

  LXXI
  The mighty duke yet never changed cheer,
  But grieved to see his friends lamenting stand;
  The leech prepared his cloths and cleansing gear,
  And with a belt his gown about him band,
  Now with his herbs the steely head to tear
  Out of the flesh he proved, now with his hand,
  Now with his hand, now with his instrument
  He shaked and plucked it, yet not forth it went.

  LXXII
  His labor vain, his art prevailed naught,
  His luck was ill, although his skill were good,
  To such extremes the wounded prince he brought,
  That with fell pain he swooned as he stood:
  But the angel pure, that kept him, went and sought
  Divine dictamnum, out of Ida wood,
  This herb is rough, and bears a purple flower,
  And in his budding leaves lies all his power.

  LXXIII
  Kind nature first upon the craggy clift
  Bewrayed this herb unto the mountain goat,
  That when her sides a cruel shaft hath rift,
  With it she shakes the reed out of her coat;
  This in a moment fetched the angel swift,
  And brought from Ida hill, though far remote,
  The juice whereof in a prepared bath
  Unseen the blessed spirit poured hath.

  LXXIV
  Pure nectar from that spring of Lydia than,
  And panaces divine therein he threw,
  The cunning leech to bathe the wound began,
  And of itself the steely head outflew;
  The bleeding stanched, no vermile drop outran,
  The leg again waxed strong with vigor new:
  Erotimus cried out, "This hurt and wound
  No human art or hand so soon makes sound:

  LXXV
  "Some angel good I think come down from skies
  Thy surgeon is, for here plain tokens are
  Of grace divine which to thy help applies,
  Thy weapon take and haste again to war."
  In precious cloths his leg the chieftain ties,
  Naught could the man from blood and fight debar;
  A sturdy lance in his right hand he braced,
  His shield he took, and on his helmet laced:

  LXXVI
  And with a thousand knights and barons bold,
  Toward the town he hasted from his camp,
  In clouds of dust was Titan's face enrolled,
  Trembled the earth whereon the worthies stamp,
  His foes far off his dreadful looks behold,
  Which in their hearts of courage quenched the lamp,
  A chilling fear ran cold through every vein,
  Lord Godfrey shouted thrice and all his train:

  LXXVII
  Their sovereign's voice his hardy people knew,
  And his loud cries that cheered each fearful heart;
  Thereat new strength they took and courage new,
  And to the fierce assault again they start.
  The Pagans twain this while themselves withdrew
  Within the breach to save that battered part,
  And with great loss a skirmish hot they hold
  Against Tancredi and his squadron bold.

  LXXVIII
  Thither came Godfrey armed round about
  In trusty plate, with fierce and dreadful look;
  At first approach against Argantes stout
  Headed with poignant steel a lance he shook,
  No casting engine with such force throws out
  A knotty spear, and as the way it took,
  It whistled in the air, the fearless knight
  Opposed his shield against that weapon's might.

  LXXIX
  The dreadful blow quite through his target drove,
  And bored through his breastplate strong and thick,
  The tender skin it in his bosom rove,
  The purple-blood out-streamed from the quick;
  To wrest it out the wounded Pagan strove
  And little leisure gave it there to stick;
  At Godfrey's head the lance again he cast,
  And said, "Lo, there again thy dart thou hast."

  LXXX
  The spear flew back the way it lately came,
  And would revenge the harm itself had done,
  But missed the mark whereat the man did aim,
  He stepped aside the furious blow to shun:
  But Sigiere in his throat received the same,
  The murdering weapon at his neck out-run,
  Nor aught it grieved the man to lose his breath,
  Since in his prince's stead he suffered death.

  LXXXI
  Even then the Soldan struck with monstrous main
  The noble leader of the Norman band,
  He reeled awhile and staggered with the pain,
  And wheeling round fell grovelling on the sand:
  Godfrey no longer could the grief sustain
  Of these displeasures, but with flaming brand,
  Up to the breach in heat and haste he goes,
  And hand to hand there combats with his foes;

  LXXXII
  And there great wonders surely wrought he had,
  Mortal the fight, and fierce had been the fray,
  But that dark night, from her pavilion sad,
  Her cloudy wings did on the earth display,
  Her quiet shades she interposed glad
  To cause the knights their arms aside to lay;
  Godfrey withdrew, and to their tents they wend,
  And thus this bloody day was brought to end.

  LXXXIII
  The weak and wounded ere he left the field,
  The godly duke to safety thence conveyed,
  Nor to his foes his engines would he yield,
  In them his hope to win the fortress laid;
  Then to the tower he went, and it beheeld,
  The tower that late the Pagan lords dismayed
  But now stood bruised, broken, cracked and shivered,
  From some sharp storm as it were late delivered.

  LXXXIV
  From dangers great escaped, but late it was,
  And now to safety brought well-nigh it seems,
  But as a ship that under sail doth pass
  The roaring billows and the raging streams,
  And drawing nigh the wished port, alas,
  Breaks on some hidden rocks her ribs and beams;
  Or as a steed rough ways that well hath passed,
  Before his inn stumbleth and falls at last:

  LXXXV
  Such hap befell that tower, for on that side
  Gainst which the Pagans' force and battery bend,
  Two wheels were broke whereon the piece should ride,
  The maimed engine could no further wend,
  The troop that guarded it that part provide
  To underprop with posts, and it defend
  Till carpenters and cunning workmen came
  Whose skill should help and rear again the same.

  LXXXVI
  Thus Godfrey bids, and that ere springing-day,
  The cracks and bruises all amend they should,
  Each open passage, and each privy way
  About the piece, he kept with soldiers bold:
  But the loud rumor, both of that they say,
  And that they do, is heard within the hold,
  A thousand lights about the tower they view,
  And what they wrought all night both saw and knew.

TWELFTH BOOK

  THE ARGUMENT.
  Clorinda hears her eunuch old report
  Her birth, her offspring, and her native land;
  Disguised she fireth Godfrey's rolling fort.
  The burned piece falls smoking on the sand:
  With Tancred long unknown in desperate sort
  She fights, and falls through pierced with his brand:
  Christened she dies; with sighs, with plaints and tears.
  He wails her death; Argant revengement swears.

  I
  Now in dark night was all the world embarred;
  But yet the tired armies took no rest,
  The careful French kept heedful watch and ward,
  While their high tower the workmen newly dressed,
  The Pagan crew to reinforce prepared
  The weakened bulwarks, late to earth down kest,
  Their rampiers broke and bruised walls to mend,
  Lastly their hurts the wounded knights attend.

  II
  Their wounds were dressed, part of the work was brought
  To wished end, part left to other days,
  A dull desire to rest deep midnight wrought,
  His heavy rod sleep on their eyelids lays:
  Yet rested not Clorinda's working thought,
  Which thirsted still for fame and warlike praise,
  Argantes eke accompanied the maid
  From place to place, which to herself thus said:

  III
  "This day Argantes strong, and Solyman,
  Strange things have done, and purchased great renown,
  Among our foes out of the walls they ran,
  Their rams they broke and rent their engines down:
  I used my bow, of naught else boast I can,
  My self stood safe meanwhile within this town,
  And happy was my shot, and prosperous too,
  But that was all a woman's hand could do.

  IV
  "On birds and beasts in forests wild that feed
  It were more fit mine arrows to bestow,
  Than for a feeble maid in warlike deed
  With strong and hardy knights herself to show.
  Why take I not again my virgin's weed,
  And spend my days in secret cell unknow?"
  Thus thought, thus mused, thus devised the maid,
  And turning to the knight, at last thus said:

  V
  "My thoughts are full, my lord, of strange desire
  Some high attempt of war to undertake,
  Whether high God my mind therewith inspire
  Or of his will his God mankind doth make,
  Among our foes behold the light and fire,
  I will among them wend, and burn or break
  The tower, God grant therein I have my will
  And that performed, betide me good or ill.

  VI
  "But if it fortune such my chance should be,
  That to this town I never turn again,
  Mine eunuch, whom I dearly love, with thee
  I leave my faithful maids, and all my train,
  To Egypt then conducted safely see
  Those woful damsels and that aged swain,
  Help them, my lord, in that distressed case,
  Their feeble sex, his age, deserveth grace."

  VII
  Argantes wondering stood, and felt the effect
  Of true renown pierce through his glorious mind,
  "And wilt thou go," quoth he, "and me neglect,
  Disgraced, despised, leave in this fort behind?
  Shall I while these strong walls my life protect
  Behold thy flames and fires tossed in the wind,
  No, no, thy fellow have I been in arms,
  And will be still, in praise, in death, in harms.

  VIII
  "This heart of mine death's bitter stroke despiseth,
  For praise this life, for glory take this breath."
  "My soul and more," quoth she, "thy friendship prizeth,
  For this thy proffered aid required uneath,
  I but a woman am, no loss ariseth
  To this besieged city by my death,
  But if, as God forbid, this night thou fall,
  Ah! who shall then, who can, defend this wall!"

  IX
  "Too late these 'scuses vain," the knight replied,
  "You bring; my will is firm, my mind is set,
  ! follow you whereso you list me guide,
  Or go before if you my purpose let."
  This said, they hasted to the palace wide
  About their prince where all his lords were met,
  Clorinda spoke for both, and said, "Sir king,
  Attend my words, hear, and allow the thing:

  X
  "Argantes here, this bold and hardy knight,
  Will undertake to burn the wondrous tower,
  And I with him, only we stay till night
  Bury in sleep our foes at deadest hour."
  The king with that cast up his hands on height,
  The tears for joy upon his cheeks down pour.
  "Praised," quoth he, "be Macon whom we serve,
  This land I see he keeps and will preserve:

  XI
  "Nor shall so soon this shaken kingdom fall,
  While such unconquered hearts my state defend:
  But for this act what praise or guerdon shall
  I give your virtues, which so far extend?
  Let fame your praises sound through nations all,
  And fill the world therewith to either end,
  Take half my wealth and kingdom for your meed?
  You are rewarded half even with the deed."

  XII
  Thus spake the prince, and gently 'gan distrain,
  Now him, now her, between his friendly arms:
  The Soldan by, no longer could refrain
  That noble envy which his bosom warms,
  "Nor I," quoth he, "bear this broad sword in vain,
  Nor yet am unexpert in night alarms,
  Take me with you: ah." Quoth Clorinda, "no!
  Whom leave we here of prowess if you go?"

  XIII
  This spoken, ready with a proud refuse
  Argantes was his proffered aid to scorn,
  Whom Aladine prevents, and with excuse
  To Solyman thus gan his speeches torn:
  "Right noble prince, as aye hath been your use
  Your self so still you bear and long have borne,
  Bold in all acts, no danger can affright
  Your heart, nor tired is your strength with fight.

  XIV
  "If you went forth great things perform you would,
  In my conceit yet far unfit it seems
  That you, who most excel in courage bold,
  At once should leave this town in these extremes,
  Nor would I that these twain should leave this hold,
  My heart their noble lives far worthier deems,
  If this attempt of less importance were,
  Or weaker posts so great a weight could bear.
  XV
  "But for well-guarded is the mighty tower
  With hardy troops and squadrons round about,
  And cannot harmed be with little power,
  Nor fit the time to send whole armies out,
  This pair who passed have many a dreadful stowre,
  And proffer now to prove this venture stout,
  Alone to this attempt let them go forth,
  Alone than thousands of more price and worth.

  XVI
  "Thou, as it best beseems a mighty king,
  With ready bands besides the gate attend,
  That when this couple have performed the thing,
  And shall again their footsteps homeward bend,
  From their strong foes upon them following
  Thou may'st them keep, preserve, save and defend:"
  Thus said the king, "The Soldan must consent,"
  Silent remained the Turk, and discontent.

  XVII
  Then Ismen said, "You twain that undertake
  This hard attempt, awhile I pray you stay,
  Till I a wildfire of fine temper make,
  That this great engine burn to ashes may;
  Haply the guard that now doth watch and wake,
  Will then lie tumbled sleeping on the lay;"
  Thus they conclude, and in their chambers sit,
  To wait the time for this adventure fit.

  XVIII
  Clorinda there her silver arms off rent,
  Her helm, her shield, her hauberk shining bright,
  An armor black as jet or coal she hent,
  Wherein withouten plume herself she dight;
  For thus disguised amid her foes she meant
  To pass unseen, by help of friendly night,
  To whom her eunuch, old Arsetes, came,
  That from her cradle nursed and kept the dame.

  XIX
  This aged sire had followed far and near,
  Through lands and seas, the strong and hardy maid,
  He saw her leave her arms and wonted gear,
  Her danger nigh that sudden change foresaid:
  By his white locks from black that changed were
  In following her, the woful man her prayed,
  By all his service and his taken pain,
  To leave that fond attempt, but prayed in vain.

  XX
  "At last," quoth he, "since hardened to thine ill,
  Thy cruel heart is to thy loss prepared,
  That my weak age, nor tears that down distil,
  Not humble suit, nor plaint, thou list regard;
  Attend awhile, strange things unfold I will,
  Hear both thy birth and high estate declared;
  Follow my counsel, or thy will that done,"
  She sat to hear, the eunuch thus begun:

  XXI
  "Senapus ruled, and yet perchance doth reign
  In mighty Ethiop, and her deserts waste,
  The lore of Christ both he and all his train
  Of people black, hath kept and long embraced,
  To him a Pagan was I sold for gain,
  And with his queen, as her chief eunuch, placed;
  Black was this queen as jet, yet on her eyes
  Sweet loveliness, in black attired, lies.

  XXII
  "The fire of love and frost of jealousy,
  Her husband's troubled soul alike torment,
  The tide of fond suspicion flowed high,
  The foe to love and plague to sweet content,
  He mewed her up from sight of mortal eye,
  Nor day he would his beams on her had bent:
  She, wise and lowly, by her husband's pleasure,
  Her joy, her peace, her will, her wish did measure.

  XXIII
  "Her prison was a chamber, painted round
  With goodly portraits and with stories old,
  As white as snow there stood a virgin bound,
  Besides a dragon fierce, a champion bold
  The monster did with poignant spear through wound,
  The gored beast lay dead upon the mould;
  The gentle queen before this image laid.
  She plained, she mourned, she wept, she sighed, she prayed:

  XXIV
  "At last with child she proved, and forth she brought,
  And thou art she, a daughter fair and bright,
  In her thy color white new terror wrought,
  She wondered on thy face with strange affright,
  But yet she purposed in her fearful thought
  To hide thee from the king, thy father's sight,
  Lest thy bright hue should his suspect approve,
  For seld a crow begets a silver dove.

  XXV
  "And to her spouse to show she was disposed
  A negro's babe late born, in room of thee,
  And for the tower wherein she lay enclosed,
  Was with her damsels only wond and me,
  To me, on whose true faith she most reposed,
  She gave thee, ere thou couldest christened be,
  Nor could I since find means thee to baptize,
  In Pagan lands thou knowest it's not the guise.

  XXVI
  "To me she gave thee, and she wept withal,
  To foster thee in some far distant place.
  Who can her griefs and plaints to reckoning call,
  How oft she swooned at the last embrace:
  Her streaming tears amid her kisses fall,
  Her sighs, her dire complaints did interlace?
  And looking up at last, ' O God,' quoth she,
  'Who dost my heart and inward mourning see,

  XXVII
  "'If mind and body spotless to this day,
  If I have kept my bed still undefiled,
  Not for myself a sinful wretch I pray,
  That in thy presence am an abject vilde,
  Preserve this babe, whose mother must denay
  To nourish it, preserve this harmless child,
  Oh let it live, and chaste like me it make,
  But for good fortune elsewhere sample take.

  XXVIII
  "'Thou heavenly soldier which delivered hast
  That sacred virgin from the serpent old,
  If on thine altars I have offerings placed,
  And sacrificed myrrh, frankincense and gold,
  On this poor child thy heavenly looks down cast,
  With gracious eye this silly babe behold;'
  This said, her strength and living sprite was fled,
  She sighed, she groaned, she swooned in her bed.

  XXIX
  "Weeping I took thee, in a little chest,
  Covered with herbs and leaves, I brought thee out
  So secretly, that none of all the rest
  Of such an act suspicion had or doubt,
  To wilderness my steps I first addressed,
  Where horrid shades enclosed me round about,
  A tigress there I met, in whose fierce eyes
  Fury and wrath, rage, death and terror lies:

  XXX
  "Up to a tree I leaped, and on the grass,
  Such was my sudden fear, I left thee lying,
  To thee the beast with furious course did pass,
  With curious looks upon thy visage prying,
  All suddenly both meek and mild she was,
  With friendly cheer thy tender body eying:
  At last she licked thee, and with gesture mild
  About thee played, and thou upon her smiled.

  XXXI
  "Her fearful muzzle full of dreadful threat,
  In thy weak hand thou took'st withouten dread;
  The gentle beast with milk-outstretched teat,
  As nurses' custom, proffered thee to feed.
  As one that wondereth on some marvel great,
  I stood this while amazed at the deed.
  When thee she saw well filled and satisfied,
  Unto the woods again the tigress hied.

  XXXII
  "She gone, down from the tree I came in haste,
  And took thee up, and on my journey wend,
  Within a little thorp I stayed at last,
  And to a nurse the charge of thee commend,
  And sporting with thee there long time I passed,
  Till term of sixteen months were brought to end,
  And thou begun, as little children do,
  With half clipped words to prattle, and to go.

  XXXIII
  "But having passed the August of mine age,
  When more than half my tap of life was run,
  Rich by rewards given by your mother sage,
  For merits past, and service yet undone,
  I longed to leave this wandering pilgrimage,
  And in my native soil again to won,
  To get some seely home I had desire,
  Loth still to warm me at another's fire.

  XXXIV
  "To Egypt-ward, where I was born, I went,
  And bore thee with me, by a rolling flood,
  Till I with savage thieves well-nigh was hent;
  Before the brook, the thieves behind me stood:
  Thee to forsake I never could consent,
  And gladly would I 'scape those outlaws wood,
  Into the flood I leaped far from the brim,
  My left hand bore thee, with the right I swim.

  XXXV
  "Swift was the current, in the middle stream
  A whirlpool gaped with devouring jaws,
  The gulf, on such mishap ere I could dream,
  Into his deep abyss my carcass draws,
  There I forsook thee, the wild waters seem
  To pity thee, a gentle wind there blows
  Whose friendly puffs safe to the shore thee drive,
  Where wet and weary I at last arrive:

  XXXVI
  "I took thee up, and in my dream that night,
  When buried was the world in sleep and shade,
  I saw a champion clad in armor bright
  That o'er my head shaked a flaming blade,
  He said, 'I charge thee execute aright,
  That charge this infant's mother on thee laid,
  Baptize the child, high Heaven esteems her dear,
  And I her keeper will attend her near:

  XXXVII
  "'I will her keep, defend, save and protect,
  I made the waters mild, the tigress tame,
  O wretch that heavenly warnings dost reject!'
  The warrior vanished having said the same.
  I rose and journeyed on my way direct
  When blushing morn from Tithon's bed forth came,
  But for my faith is true and sure I ween,
  And dreams are false, you still unchristened been.

  XXXVIII
  "A Pagan therefore thee I fostered have,
  Nor of thy birth the truth did ever tell,
  Since you increased are in courage brave,
  Your sex and nature's-self you both excel,
  Full many a realm have you made bond and slave,
  Your fortunes last yourself remember well,
  And how in peace and war, in joy and teen,
  I have your servant, and your tutor been.

  XXXIX
  "Last morn, from skies ere stars exiled were,
  In deep and deathlike sleep my senses drowned,
  The self-same vision did again appear,
  With stormy wrathful looks, and thundering sound,
  'Villain,' quoth he, 'within short while thy dear
  Must change her life, and leave this sinful ground,
  Thine be the loss, the torment, and the care,'
  This said, he fled through skies, through clouds and air.

  XL
  "Hear then my joy, my hope, my darling, hear,
  High Heaven some dire misfortune threatened hath,
  Displeased pardie, because I did thee lere
  A lore repugnant to thy parents' faith;
  Ah, for my sake, this bold attempt forbear;
  Put off these sable arms, appease thy wrath."
  This said, he wept, she pensive stood and sad,
  Because like dream herself but lately had.

  XLI
  With cheerful smile she answered him at last,
  "I will this faith observe, it seems me true,
  Which from my cradle age thou taught me hast;
  I will not change it for religion new,
  Nor with vain shows of fear and dread aghast
  This enterprise forbear I to pursue,
  No, not if death in his most dreadful face
  Wherewith he scareth mankind, kept the place."

  XLII
  Approachen gan the time, while thus she spake,
  Wherein they ought that dreadful hazard try;
  She to Argantes went, who should partake
  Of her renown and praise, or with her die.
  Ismen with words more hasty still did make
  Their virtue great, which by itself did fly,
  Two balls he gave them made of hollow brass,
  Wherein enclosed fire, pitch, and brimstone was.

  XLIII
  And forth they went, and over dale and hill
  They hasted forward with a speedy pace,
  Unseen, unmarked, undescried, until
  Beside the engine close themselves they place,
  New courage there their swelling hearts did fill,
  Rage in their breasts, fury shown in their face,
  They yearned to blow the fire, and draw the sword.
  The watch descried them both, and gave the word.

  XLIV
  Silent they passed on, the watch begun
  To rear a huge alarm with hideous cries,
  Therewith the hardy couple forward run
  To execute their valiant enterprise:
  So from a cannon or a roaring gun
  At once the noise, the flame, and bullet flies,
  They run, they give the charge, begin the fray,
  And all at once their foes break, spoil and slay.

  XLV
  They passed first through thousand thousand blows,
  And then performed their designment bold,
  A fiery ball each on the engine throws,
  The stuff was dry, the fire took quickly hold,
  Furious upon the timber-work it grows,
  How it increased cannot well be told,
  How it crept up the piece, and how to skies
  The burning sparks and towering smoke upflies.

  XLVI
  A mass of solid fire burning bright
  Rolled up in smouldering fumes, there bursteth out,
  And there the blustering winds add strength and might
  And gather close the sparsed flames about:
  The Frenchmen trembled at the dreadful light,
  To arms in haste and fear ran all the rout,
  Down fell the piece dreaded so much in war,
  Thus what long days do make one hour doth mar.

  XLVII
  Two Christian bands this while came to the place
  With speedy haste, where they beheld the fire,
  Argantes to them cried with scornful grace,
  "Your blood shall quench these flames, and quench mine ire:"
  This said, the maid and he with sober pace
  Drew back, and to the banks themselves retire,
  Faster than brooks which falling showers increase
  Their foes augment, and faster on them press.

  XLVIII
  The gilden port was opened, and forth stepped
  With all his soldiers bold, the Turkish king,
  Ready to aid the two his force he kept,
  When fortune should them home with conquest bring,
  Over the bars the hardy couple leapt
  And after them a band of Christians fling,
  Whom Solyman drove back with courage stout,
  And shut the gate, but shut Clorinda out.

  XLIX
  Alone was she shut forth, for in that hour
  Wherein they closed the port, the virgin went,
  And full of heat and wrath, her strength and power
  Gainst Arimon, that struck her erst, she bent,
  She slew the knight, nor Argant in that stowre
  Wist of her parting, or her fierce intent,
  The fight, the press, the night, and darksome skies
  Care from his heart had ta'en, sight from his eyes.

  L
  But when appeased was her angry mood,
  Her fury calmed, and settled was her head,
  She saw the gates were shut, and how she stood
  Amid her foes, she held herself for dead;
  While none her marked at last she thought it good,
  To save her life, some other path to tread,
  She feigned her one of them, and close her drew
  Amid the press that none her saw or knew:

  LI
  Then as a wolf guilty of some misdeed
  Flies to some grove to hide himself from view,
  So favored with the night, with secret speed
  Dissevered from the press the damsel flew:
  Tancred alone of her escape took heed,
  He on that quarter was arrived new,
  When Arimon she killed he thither came,
  He saw it, marked it, and pursued the dame.

  LII
  He deemed she was some man of mickle might,
  And on her person would he worship win,
  Over the hills the nymph her journey dight
  Toward another port, there to get in:
  With hideous noise fast after spurred the knight,
  She heard and stayed, and thus her words begin,
  "What haste hast thou? ride softly, take thy breath,
  What bringest thou?" He answered, "War and death."

  LIII
  "And war and death," quoth she, "here mayest thou get
  If thou for battle come," with that she stayed:
  Tancred to ground his foot in haste down set,
  And left his steed, on foot he saw the maid,
  Their courage hot, their ire and wrath they whet,
  And either champion drew a trenchant blade,
  Together ran they, and together stroke,
  Like two fierce bulls whom rage and love provoke.

  LIV
  Worthy of royal lists and brightest day,
  Worthy a golden trump and laurel crown,
  The actions were and wonders of that fray
  Which sable knight did in dark bosom drown:
  Yet night, consent that I their acts display
  And make their deeds to future ages known,
  And in records of long enduring story
  Enrol their praise, their fame, their worth and glory.

  LV
  They neither shrunk, nor vantage sought of ground,
  They traverse not, nor skipped from part to part,
  Their blows were neither false nor feigned found,
  The night, their rage would let them use no art,
  Their swords together clash with dreadful sound,
  Their feet stand fast, and neither stir nor start,
  They move their hands, steadfast their feet remain,
  Nor blow nor loin they struck, or thrust in vain.

  LVI
  Shame bred desire a sharp revenge to take,
  And vengeance taken gave new cause of shame:
  So that with haste and little heed they strake,
  Fuel enough they had to feed the flame;
  At last so close their battle fierce they make,
  They could not wield their swords, so nigh they came,
  They used the hilts, and each on other rushed,
  And helm to helm, and shield to shield they crushed.

  LVII
  Thrice his strong arms he folds about her waist,
  And thrice was forced to let the virgin go,
  For she disdained to be so embraced, .
  No lover would have strained his mistress so:
  They took their swords again, and each enchased
  Deep wounds in the soft flesh of his strong foe,
  Till weak and weary, faint, alive uneath,
  They both retired at once, at once took breath.

  LVIII
  Each other long beheld, and leaning stood
  Upon their swords, whose points in earth were pight,
  When day-break, rising from the eastern flood,
  Put forth the thousand eyes of blindfold night;
  Tancred beheld his foe's out-streaming blood,
  And gaping wounds, and waxed proud with the sight,
  Oh vanity of man's unstable mind,
  Puffed up with every blast of friendly wind!

  LIX
  Why joy'st thou, wretch? Oh, what shall be thy gain?
  What trophy for this conquest is't thou rears?
  Thine eyes shall shed, in case thou be not slain,
  For every drop of blood a sea of tears:
  The bleeding warriors leaning thus remain,
  Each one to speak one word long time forbears,
  Tancred the silence broke at last, and said,
  For he would know with whom this fight he made:

  LX
  "Evil is our chance and hard our fortune is
  Who here in silence, and in shade debate,
  Where light of sun and witness all we miss
  That should our prowess and our praise dilate:
  If words in arms find place, yet grant me this,
  Tell me thy name, thy country, and estate;
  That I may know, this dangerous combat done,
  Whom I have conquered, or who hath me won."

  LXI
  "What I nill tell, you ask," quoth she, "in vain,
  Nor moved by prayer, nor constrained by power,
  But thus much know, I am one of those twain
  Which late with kindled fire destroyed the tower."
  Tancred at her proud words swelled with disdain,
  "That hast thou said," quoth he, "in evil hour;
  Thy vaunting speeches, and thy silence both,
  Uncivil wretch, hath made my heart more wroth."

  LXII
  Ire in their chafed breasts renewed the fray,
  Fierce was the fight, though feeble were their might,
  Their strength was gone, their cunning was away,
  And fury in their stead maintained the fight,
  Their swords both points and edges sharp embay
  In purple blood, whereso they hit or light,
  And if weak life yet in their bosoms lie,
  They lived because they both disdained to die.

  LXIII
  As Aegean seas when storms be calmed again
  That rolled their tumbling waves with troublous blasts,
  Do yet of tempests past some shows retain,
  And here and there their swelling billows casts;
  So, though their strength were gone and might were vain,
  Of their first fierceness still the fury lasts,
  Wherewith sustained, they to their tackling stood,
  And heaped wound on wound, and blood on blood.

  LXIV
  But now, alas, the fatal hour arrives
  That her sweet life must leave that tender hold,
  His sword into her bosom deep he drives,
  And bathed in lukewarm blood his iron cold,
  Between her breasts the cruel weapon rives
  Her curious square, embossed with swelling gold,
  Her knees grow weak, the pains of death she feels,
  And like a falling cedar bends and reels.

  LXV
  The prince his hand upon her shield doth stretch,
  And low on earth the wounded damsel layeth,
  And while she fell, with weak and woful speech,
  Her prayers last and last complaints she sayeth,
  A spirit new did her those prayers teach,
  Spirit of hope, of charity, and faith;
  And though her life to Christ rebellious were,
  Yet died she His child and handmaid dear.

  LXVI
  "Friend, thou hast won, I pardon thee, nor save
  This body, that all torments can endure,
  But save my soul, baptism I dying crave,
  Come wash away my sins with waters pure:"
  His heart relenting nigh in sunder rave,
  With woful speech of that sweet creature,
  So that his rage, his wrath, and anger died,
  And on his cheeks salt tears for ruth down slide.

  LXVII
  With murmur loud down from the mountain's side
  A little runnel tumbled near the place,
  Thither he ran and filled his helmet wide,
  And quick returned to do that work of grace,
  With trembling hands her beaver he untied,
  Which done he saw, and seeing, knew her face,
  And lost therewith his speech and moving quite,
  Oh woful knowledge, ah unhappy sight!

  LXVIII
  He died not, but all his strength unites,
  And to his virtues gave his heart in guard,
  Bridling his grief, with water he requites
  The life that he bereft with iron hard,
  And while the sacred words the knight recites,
  The nymph to heaven with joy herself prepared;
  And as her life decays her joys increase,
  She smiled and said, "Farewell, I die in peace."

  LXIX
  As violets blue mongst lilies pure men throw,
  So paleness midst her native white begun;
  Her looks to heaven she cast, their eyes I trow
  Downward for pity bent both heaven and sun,
  Her naked hand she gave the knight, in show
  Of love and peace, her speech, alas, was done,
  And thus the virgin fell on endless sleep, —
  Love, Beauty, Virtue, for your darling weep!

  LXX
  But when he saw her gentle soul was went,
  His manly courage to relent began,
  Grief, sorrow, anguish. sadness, discontent,
  Free empire got and lordship on the man,
  His life within his heart they close up pent,
  Death through his senses and his visage ran:
  Like his dead lady, dead seemed Tancred good,
  In paleness, stillness, wounds and streams of blood.

  LXXI
  And his weak sprite, to be unbodied
  From fleshly prison free that ceaseless strived,
  Had followed her fair soul but lately fled
  Had not a Christian squadron there arrived,
  To seek fresh water thither haply led,
  And found the princess dead, and him deprived
  Of signs of life; yet did the knight remain
  On live, nigh dead, for her himself had slain.

  LXXII
  Their guide far off the prince knew by his shield,
  And thither hasted full of grief and fear,
  Her dead, him seeming so, he there beheld,
  And for that strange mishap shed many a tear;
  He would not leave the corpses fair in field
  For food to wolves, though she a Pagan were,
  But in their arms the soldiers both uphent,
  And both lamenting brought to Tancred's tent.

  LXXIII
  With those dear burdens to their camp they pass,
  Yet would not that dead seeming knight awake,
  At last he deeply groaned, which token was
  His feeble soul had not her flight yet take:
  The other lay a still and heavy mass,
  Her spirit had that earthen cage forsake;
  Thus were they brought, and thus they placed were
  In sundry rooms, yet both adjoining near.

  LXXIV
  All skill and art his careful servants used
  To life again their dying lord to bring,
  At last his eyes unclosed, with tears suffused,
  He felt their hands and heard their whispering,
  But how he thither came long time he mused,
  His mind astonished was with everything;
  He gazed about, his squires in fine he knew,
  Then weak and woful thus his plaints out threw:

  LXXV
  "What, live I yet? and do I breathe and see
  Of this accursed day the hateful light?
  This spiteful ray which still upbraideth me
  With that accursed deed I did this night,
  Ah, coward hand, afraid why should'st thou be;
  Thou instrument of death, shame and despite,
  Why should'st thou fear, with sharp and trenchant knife,
  To cut the thread of this blood-guilty life?

  LXXVI
  "Pierce through this bosom, and my cruel heart
  In pieces cleave, break every string and vein;
  But thou to slaughters vile which used art,
  Think'st it were pity so to ease my pain:
  Of luckless love therefore in torments' smart
  A sad example must I still remain,
  A woful monster of unhappy love,
  Who still must live, lest death his comfort prove:

  LXXVII
  "Still must I live in anguish, grief, and care;
  Furies my guilty conscience that torment,
  The ugly shades, dark night, and troubled air
  In grisly forms her slaughter still present,
  Madness and death about my bed repair,
  Hell gapeth wide to swallow up this tent;
  Swift from myself I run, myself I fear,
  Yet still my hell within myself I bear.

  LXXVIII
  "But where, alas, where be those relics sweet,
  Wherein dwelt late all love, all joy, all good?
  My fury left them cast in open street,
  Some beast hath torn her flesh and licked her blood,
  Ah noble prey! for savage beast unmeet,
  Ah sweet! too sweet, and far too precious food,
  Ah, seely nymph! whom night and darksome shade
  To beasts, and me, far worse than beasts, betrayed.

  LXXIX
  "But where you be, if still you be, I wend
  To gather up those relics dear at least,
  But if some beast hath from the hills descend,
  And on her tender bowels made his feast,
  Let that fell monster me in pieces rend,
  And deep entomb me in his hollow chest:
  For where she buried is, there shall I have
  A stately tomb, a rich and costly grave."

  LXXX
  Thus mourned the knight, his squires him told at last,
  They had her there for whom those tears he shed;
  A beam of comfort his dim eyes outcast,
  Like lightning through thick clouds of darkness spread,
  The heavy burden of his limbs in haste,
  With mickle pain, he drew forth of his bed,
  And scant of strength to stand, to move or go,
  Thither he staggered, reeling to and fro.

  LXXXI
  When he came there, and in her breast espied
  His handiwork, that deep and cruel wound,
  And her sweet face with leaden paleness dyed,
  Where beauty late spread forth her beams around,
  He trembled so, that nere his squires beside
  To hold him up, he had sunk down to ground,
  And said, "O face in death still sweet and fair!
  Thou canst not sweeten yet my grief and care:

  LXXXII
  "O fair right hand, the pledge of faith and love?
  Given me but late, too late, in sign of peace,
  How haps it now thou canst not stir nor move?
  And you, dear limbs, now laid in rest and ease,
  Through which my cruel blade this flood-gate rove,
  Your pains have end, my torments never cease,
  O hands, O cruel eyes, accursed alike!
  You gave the wound, you gave them light to strike.

  LXXXIII
  "But thither now run forth my guilty blood,
  Whither my plaints, my sorrows cannot wend."
  He said no more, but, as his passion wood
  Inforced him, he gan to tear and rend
  His hair, his face, his wounds, a purple flood
  Did from each side in rolling streams descend,
  He had been slain, but that his pain and woe
  Bereft his senses, and preserved him so.

  LXXXIV
  Cast on his bed his squires recalled his sprite
  To execute again her hateful charge,
  But tattling fame the sorrows of the knight
  And hard mischance had told this while at large:
  Godfrey and all his lords of worth and might,
  Ran thither, and the duty would discharge
  Of friendship true, and with sweet words the rage
  Of bitter grief and woe they would assuage.

  LXXXV
  But as a mortal wound the more doth smart
  The more it searched is, handled or sought;
  So their sweet words to his afflicted heart
  More grief, more anguish, pain and torment brought
  But reverend Peter that would set apart
  Care of his sheep, as a good shepherd ought,
  His vanity with grave advice reproved
  And told what mourning Christian knights behoved:

  LXXXVI
  "O Tancred, Tancred, how far different
  From thy beginnings good these follies be?
  What makes thee deaf? what hath thy eyesight blent?
  What mist, what cloud thus overshadeth thee?
  This is a warning good from heaven down sent,
  Yet His advice thou canst not hear nor see
  Who calleth and conducts thee to the way
  From which thou willing dost and witting stray:

  LXXXVII
  "To worthy actions and achievements fit
  For Christian knights He would thee home recall;
  But thou hast left that course and changed it,
  To make thyself a heathen damsel's thrall;
  But see, thy grief and sorrow's painful fit
  Is made the rod to scourge thy sins withal,
  Of thine own good thyself the means He makes,
  But thou His mercy, goodness, grace forsakes.

  LXXXVIII
  "Thou dost refuse of heaven the proffered
  And gainst it still rebel with sinful ire,
  Oh wretch! Oh whither doth thy rage thee chase?
  Refrain thy grief, bridle thy fond desire,
  At hell's wide gate vain sorrow doth thee place,
  Sorrow, misfortune's son, despair's foul fire:
  Oh see thine evil, thy plaint and woe refrain,
  The guides to death, to hell, and endless pain."

  LXXXIX
  This said, his will to die the patient
  Abandoned, that second death he feared,
  These words of comfort to his heart down went,
  And that dark night of sorrow somewhat cleared;
  Yet now and then his grief deep sighs forth sent,
  His voice shrill plaints and sad laments oft reared,
  Now to himself, now to his murdered love,
  He spoke, who heard perchance from heaven above.

  XC
  Till Phoebus' rising from his evening fall
  To her, for her, he mourns, he calls, he cries;
  The nightingale so when her children small
  Some churl takes before their parents' eyes,
  Alone, dismayed, quite bare of comforts all,
  Tires with complaints the seas, the shores, the skies,
  Till in sweet sleep against the morning bright
  She fall at last; so mourned, so slept the knight.

  XCI
  And clad in starry veil, amid his dream,
  For whose sweet sake he mourned, appeared the maid,
  Fairer than erst, yet with that heavenly beam.
  Not out of knowledge was her lovely shade,
  With looks of ruth her eyes celestial seem
  To pity his sad plight, and thus she said,
  "Behold how fair, how glad thy love appears,
  And for my sake, my dear, forbear these tears.

  XCII
  "Thine be the thanks, my soul thou madest flit
  At unawares out of her earthly nest,
  Thine be the thanks, thou hast advanced it
  In Abraham's dear bosom long to rest,
  There still I love thee, there for Tancred fit
  A seat prepared is among the blest;
  There in eternal joy, eternal light,
  Thou shalt thy love enjoy, and she her knight;

  XCIII
  "Unless thyself, thyself heaven's joys envy,
  And thy vain sorrow thee of bliss deprive,
  Live, know I love thee, that I nill deny,
  As angels, men: as saints may wights on live:"
  This said, of zeal and love forth of her eye
  An hundred glorious beams bright shining drive,
  Amid which rays herself she closed from sigh,
  And with new joy, new comfort left her knight.

  XCIV
  Thus comforted he waked, and men discreet
  In surgery to cure his wounds were sought,
  Meanwhile of his dear love the relics sweet,
  As best he could, to grave with pomp he brought:
  Her tomb was not of varied Spartan greet,
  Nor yet by cunning hand of Scopas wrought,
  But built of polished stone, and thereon laid
  The lively shape and portrait of the maid.

  XCV
  With sacred burning lamps in order long
  And mournful pomp the corpse was brought to ground
  Her arms upon a leafless pine were hung,
  The hearse, with cypress; arms, with laurel crowned:
  Next day the prince, whose love and courage strong
  Drew forth his limbs, weak, feeble, and unsound,
  To visit went, with care and reverence meet,
  The buried ashes of his mistress sweet:

  XCVI
  Before her new-made tomb at last arrived,
  The woful prison of his living sprite,
  Pale, cold, sad, comfortless, of sense deprived,
  Upon the marble gray he fixed his sight,
  Two streams of tears were from his eyes derived:
  Thus with a sad "Alas!" began the knight,
  "0 marble dear on my dear mistress placed!
  My flames within, without my tears thou hast.

  XCVII
  "Not of dead bones art thou the mournful grave,
  But of quick love the fortress and the hold,
  Still in my heart thy wonted brands I have
  More bitter far, alas! but not more cold;
  Receive these sighs, these kisses sweet receive,
  In liquid drops of melting tears enrolled,
  And give them to that body pure and chaste,
  Which in thy bosom cold entombed thou hast.

  XCVIII
  "For if her happy soul her eye doth bend
  On that sweet body which it lately dressed,
  My love, thy pity cannot her offend,
  Anger and wrath is not in angels blessed,
  She pardon will the trespass of her friend,
  That hope relieves me with these griefs oppressed,
  This hand she knows hath only sinned, not I,
  Who living loved her, and for love now die:

  XCIX
  "And loving will I die, oh happy day
  Whene'er it chanceth! but oh far more blessed
  If as about thy polished sides I stray,
  My bones within thy hollow grave might rest,
  Together should in heaven our spirits stay,
  Together should our bodies lie in chest;
  So happy death should join what life doth sever,
  0 Death, 0 Life! sweet both, both blessed ever."

  C
  Meanwhile the news in that besieged town
  Of this mishap was whispered here and there,
  Forthwith it spread, and for too true was known,
  Her woful loss was talked everywhere,
  Mingled with cries and plaints to heaven upthrown,
  As if the city's self new taken were
  With conquering foes, or as if flame and fire,
  Nor house, nor church, nor street had left entire.

  CI
  But all men's eyes were on Arsetes bent,
  His sighs were deep, his looks full of despair,
  Out of his woful eyes no tear there went,
  His heart was hardened with his too much care,
  His silver locks with dust he foul besprent,
  He knocked his breast, his face he rent and tare,
  And while the press flocked to the eunuch old,
  Thus to the people spake Argantes bold:

  CII
  "I would, when first I knew the hardy maid
  Excluded was among her Christian foes,
  Have followed her to give her timely aid,
  Or by her side this breath and life to lose,
  What did I not, or what left I unsaid
  To make the king the gates again unclose?
  But he denied, his power did aye restrain
  My will, my suit was waste, my speech was vain:

  CIII
  "Ah, had I gone, I would from danger free
  Have brought to Sion that sweet nymph again,
  Or in the bloody fight, where killed was she,
  In her defence there nobly have been slain:
  But what could I do more? the counsels be
  Of God and man gainst my designments plain,
  Dead is Clorinda fair, laid in cold grave,
  Let me revenge her whom I could not save.

  CIV
  "Jerusalem, hear what Argantes saith,
  Hear Heaven, and if he break his oath and word,
  Upon this head cast thunder in thy wrath:
  I will destroy and kill that Christian lord
  Who this fair dame by night thus murdered hath,
  Nor from my side I will ungird this sword
  Till Tancred's heart it cleave, and shed his blood,
  And leave his corpse to wolves and crows for food."

  CV
  This said, the people with a joyful shout
  Applaud his speeches and his words approve,
  And calmed their grief in hope the boaster stout
  Would kill the prince, who late had slain his love.
  O promise vain! it otherwise fell out:
  Men purpose, but high gods dispose above,
  For underneath his sword this boaster died
  Whom thus he scorned and threatened in his pride.

THIRTEENTH BOOK

  THE ARGUMENT.
  Ismeno sets to guard the forest old
  The wicked sprites, whose ugly shapes affray
  And put to flight the men, whose labor would
  To their dark shades let in heaven's golden ray:
  Thither goes Tancred hardy, faithful, bold,
  But foolish pity lets him not assay
  His strength and courage: heat the Christian power
  Annoys, whom to refresh God sends a shower.

  I
  But scant, dissolved into ashes cold,
  The smoking tower fell on the scorched grass,
  When new device found out the enchanter old
  By which the town besieged secured was,
  Of timber fit his foes deprive he would,
  Such terror bred that late consumed mass:
  So that the strength of Sion's walls to shake,
  They should no turrets, rams, nor engines make.

  II
  From Godfrey's camp a grove a little way
  Amid the valleys deep grows out of sight,
  Thick with old trees whose horrid arms display
  An ugly shade, like everlasting night;
  There when the sun spreads forth his clearest ray,
  Dim, thick, uncertain, gloomy seems the light;
  As when in evening, day and darkness strive
  Which should his foe from our horizon drive.

  III
  But when the sun his chair in seas doth steep,
  Night, horror, darkness thick the place invade,
  Which veil the mortal eyes with blindness deep
  And with sad terror make weak hearts afraid,
  Thither no groom drives forth his tender sheep
  To browse, or ease their faint in cooling shade,
  Nor traveller nor pilgrim there to enter,
  So awful seems that forest old, dare venture.

  IV
  United there the ghosts and goblins meet
  To frolic with their mates in silent night,
  With dragons' wings some cleave the welkin fleet,
  Some nimbly run o'er hills and valleys light,
  A wicked troop, that with allurements sweet
  Draws sinful man from that is good and right,
  And there with hellish pomp their banquets brought
  They solemnize, thus the vain Parians thought.

  V
  No twist, no twig, no bough nor branch, therefore,
  The Saracens cut from that sacred spring;
  But yet the Christians spared ne'er the more
  The trees to earth with cutting steel to bring:
  Thither went Ismen old with tresses hoar,
  When night on all this earth spread forth her wing,
  And there in silence deaf and mirksome shade
  His characters and circles vain he made:

  VI
  He in the circle set one foot unshod,
  And whispered dreadful charms in ghastly wise,
  Three times, for witchcraft loveth numbers odd,
  Toward the east he gaped, westward thrice,
  He struck the earth thrice with his charmed rod
  Wherewith dead bones he makes from grave to rise,
  And thrice the ground with naked foot he smote,
  And thus he cried loud, with thundering note:

  VII
  "Hear, hear, you spirits all that whilom fell,
  Cast down from heaven with dint of roaring thunder;
  Hear, you amid the empty air that dwell
  And storms and showers pour on these kingdoms under;
  Hear, all you devils that lie in deepest hell
  And rend with torments damned ghosts asunder,
  And of those lands of death, of pain and fear,
  Thou monarch great, great Dis, great Pluto, hear!

  VIII
  "Keep you this forest well, keep every tree,
  Numbered I give you them and truly told;
  As souls of men in bodies clothed be
  So every plant a sprite shall hide and hold,
  With trembling fear make all the Christians flee,
  When they presume to cut these cedars old:"
  This said, his charms he gan again repeat,
  Which none can say but they that use like feat.

  IX
  At those strange speeches, still night's splendent fires
  Quenched their lights, and shrunk away for doubt,
  The feeble moon her silver beams retires,
  And wrapt her horns with folding clouds about,
  Ismen his sprites to come with speed requires,
  "Why come you not, you ever damned rout?
  Why tarry you so long? pardie you stay
  Till stronger charms and greater words I say.

  X
  "I have not yet forgot for want of use,
  What dreadful terms belong this sacred feat,
  My tongue, if still your stubborn hearts refuse,
  That so much dreaded name can well repeat,
  Which heard, great Dis cannot himself excuse,
  But hither run from his eternal seat,
  O great and fearful!" — More he would have said,
  But that he saw the sturdy sprites obeyed.

  XI
  Legions of devils by thousands thither come,
  Such as in sparsed air their biding make,
  And thousands also which by Heavenly doom
  Condemned lie in deep Avernus lake,
  But slow they came, displeased all and some
  Because those woods they should in keeping take,
  Yet they obeyed and took the charge in hand,
  And under every branch and leaf they stand.

  XII
  When thus his cursed work performed was,
  The wizard to his king declared the feat,
  "My lord, let fear, let doubt and sorrow pass,
  Henceforth in safety stands your regal seat,
  Your foe, as he supposed, no mean now has
  To build again his rams and engines great:"
  And then he told at large from part to part,
  All what he late performed by wondrous art.

  XIII
  "Besides this help, another hap," quoth he,
  "Will shortly chance that brings not profit small.
  Within few days Mars and the Sun I see
  Their fiery beams unite in Leo shall;
  And then extreme the scorching heat will be,
  Which neither rain can quench nor dews that fall,
  So placed are the planets high and low,
  That heat, fire, burning all the heavens foreshow:

  XIV
  "So great with us will be the warmth therefore,
  As with the Garamants or those of Inde;
  Yet nill it grieve us in this town so sore,
  We have sweet shade and waters cold by kind:
  Our foes abroad will be tormented more,
  What shield can they or what refreshing find?
  Heaven will them vanquish first, then Egypt's crew
  Destroy them quite, weak, weary, faint and few:

  XV
  "Thou shalt sit still and conquer; prove no more
  The doubtful hazard of uncertain fight.
  But if Argantes bold, that hates so sore
  All cause of quiet peace, though just and right,
  Provoke thee forth to battle, as before,
  Find means to calm the rage of that fierce knight,
  For shortly Heaven will send thee ease and peace,
  And war and trouble mongst thy foes increase."

  XVI
  The king assured by these speeches fair,
  Held Godfrey's power, his might and strength in scorn,
  And now the walls he gan in part repair,
  Which late the ram had bruised with iron horn,
  With wise foresight and well advised care
  He fortified each breach and bulwark torn,
  And all his folk, men, women, children small,
  With endless toil again repaired the wall.

  XVII
  But Godfrey nould this while bring forth his power
  To give assault against that fort in vain,
  Till he had builded new his dreadful tower,
  And reared high his down-fallen rams again:
  His workmen therefore he despatched that hour
  To hew the trees out of the forest main,
  They went, and scant the wood appeared in sight
  When wonders new their fearful hearts affright:

  XVIII
  As silly children dare not bend their eye
  Where they are told strange bugbears haunt the place,
  Or as new monsters, while in bed they lie,
  Their fearful thoughts present before their face;
  So feared they, and fled, yet wist not why,
  Nor what pursued them in that fearful chase.
  Except their fear perchance while thus they fled,
  New chimeras, sphinxes, or like monsters bred:

  XIX
  Swift to the camp they turned back dismayed,
  With words confused uncertain tales they told,
  That all which heard them scorned what they said
  And those reports for lies and fables hold.
  A chosen crew in shining arms arrayed
  Duke Godfrey thither sent of soldiers bold,
  To guard the men and their faint arms provoke
  To cut the dreadful trees with hardy stroke:

  XX
  These drawing near the wood where close ypent
  The wicked sprites in sylvan pinfolds were,
  Their eyes upon those shades no sooner bent
  But frozen dread pierced through their entrails dear;
  Yet on they stalked still, and on they went,
  Under bold semblance hiding coward fear,
  And so far wandered forth with trembling pace,
  Till they approached nigh that enchanted place:

  XXI
  When from the grove a fearful sound outbreaks,
  As if some earthquake hill and mountain tore,
  Wherein the southern wind a rumbling makes,
  Or like sea waves against the scraggy shore;
  There lions grumble, there hiss scaly snakes,
  There howl the wolves, the rugged bears there roar,
  There trumpets shrill are heard and thunders fell,
  And all these sounds one sound expressed well.

  XXII
  Upon their faces pale well might you note
  A thousand signs of heart-amating fear,
  Their reason gone, by no device they wot
  How to press nigh, or stay still where they were,
  Against that sudden dread their breasts which smote,
  Their courage weak no shield of proof could bear,
  At last they fled, and one than all more bold,
  Excused their flight, and thus the wonders told:

  XXIII
  "My lord, not one of us there is, I grant,
  That dares cut down one branch in yonder spring,
  I think there dwells a sprite in every plant,
  There keeps his court great Dis infernal king,
  He hath a heart of hardened adamant
  That without trembling dares attempt the thing,
  And sense he wanteth who so hardy is
  To hear the forest thunder, roar and hiss."

  XXIV
  This said, Alcasto to his words gave heed,
  Alcasto leader of the Switzers grim,
  A man both void of wit and void of dreed,
  Who feared not loss of life nor loss of limb.
  No savage beasts in deserts wild that feed
  Nor ugly monster could dishearten him,
  Nor whirlwind, thunder, earthquake, storm, or aught
  That in this world is strange or fearful thought.

  XXV
  He shook his head, and smiling thus gan say,
  "The hardiness have I that wood to fell,
  And those proud trees low in the dust to lay
  Wherein such grisly fiends and monsters dwell;
  No roaring ghost my courage can dismay,
  No shriek of birds, beast's roar, or dragon's yell;
  But through and through that forest will I wend,
  Although to deepest hell the paths descend."

  XXVI
  Thus boasted he, and leave to go desired,
  And forward went with joyful cheer and will,
  He viewed the wood and those thick shades admired,
  He heard the wondrous noise and rumbling shrill;
  Yet not one foot the audacious man retired,
  He scorned the peril, pressing forward still,
  Till on the forest's outmost marge he stepped,
  A flaming fire from entrance there him kept.

  XXVII
  The fire increased, and built a stately wall
  Of burning coals, quick sparks, and embers hot,
  And with bright flames the wood environed all,
  That there no tree nor twist Alcasto got;
  The higher stretched the flames seemed bulwarks tall,
  Castles and turrets full of fiery shot,
  With slings and engines strong of every sort; —
  What mortal wight durst scale so strange a fort?

  XXVIII
  Oh what strange monsters on the battlement
  In loathsome forms stood to defend the place?
  Their frowning looks upon the knight they bent,
  And threatened death with shot, with sword and mace:
  At last he fled, and though but slow he went,
  As lions do whom jolly hunters chase;
  Yet fled the man and with sad fear withdrew,
  Though fear till then he never felt nor knew.

  XXIX
  That he had fled long time he never wist,
  But when far run he had discoverd it,
  Himself for wonder with his hand he blist,
  A bitter sorrow by the heart him bit,
  Amazed, ashamed, disgraced, sad, silent, trist,
  Alone he would all day in darkness sit,
  Nor durst he look on man of worth or fame,
  His pride late great, now greater made his shame.

  XXX
  Godfredo called him, but he found delays
  And causes why he should his cabin keep,
  At length perforce he comes, but naught he says,
  Or talks like those that babble in their sleep.
  His shamefacedness to Godfrey plain bewrays
  His flight, so does his sighs and sadness deep:
  Whereat amazed, "What chance is this ?" quoth he.
  "These witchcrafts strange or nature's wonders be.

  XXXI
  "But if his courage any champion move
  To try the hazard of this dreadful spring,
  I give him leave the adventure great to prove,
  Some news he may report us of the thing:"
  This said, his lords attempt the charmed grove,
  Yet nothing back but fear and flight they bring,
  For them inforced with trembling to retire,
  The sight, the sound, the monsters and the fire.

  XXXII
  This happed when woful Tancred left his bed
  To lay in marble cold his mistress dear,
  The lively color from his cheek was fled,
  His limbs were weak his helm or targe to bear;
  Nathless when need to high attempts him led,
  No labor would he shun, no danger fear,
  His valor, boldness, heart and courage brave,
  To his faint body strength and vigor gave.

  XXXIII
  To this exploit forth went the venturous knight,
  Fearless, yet heedful; silent, well advised,
  The terrors of that forest's dreadful sight,
  Storms, earthquakes, thunders, cries, he all despised:
  He feared nothing, yet a motion light,
  That quickly vanished, in his heart arised
  When lo, between him and the charmed wood,
  A fiery city high as heaven up stood.

  XXXIV
  The knight stepped back and took a sudden pause,
  And to himself, "What help these arms?" quoth he,
  "If in this fire, or monster's gaping jaws
  I headlong cast myself, what boots it me?
  For common profit, or my country's cause,
  To hazard life before me none should be:
  But this exploit of no such weight I hold,
  For it to lose a prince or champion bold.

  XXXV
  But if I fly, what will the Pagans say?
  If I retire, who shall cut down this spring?
  Godfredo will attempt it every day.
  What if some other knight perform the thing?
  These flames uprisen to forestall my way
  Perchance more terror far than danger bring.
  But hap what shall;" this said, he forward stepped,
  And through the fire, oh wondrous boldness, leapt!

  XXXVI
  He bolted through, but neither warmth nor heat!
  He felt, nor sign of fire or scorching flame;
  Yet wist he not in his dismayed conceit,
  If that were fire or no through which he came;
  For at first touch vanished those monsters great,
  And in their stead the clouds black night did frame
  And hideous storms and showers of hail and rain;
  Yet storms and tempests vanished straight again.

  XXXVII
  Amazed but not afraid the champion good
  Stood still, but when the tempest passed he spied,
  He entered boldly that forbidden wood,
  And of the forest all the secrets eyed,
  In all his walk no sprite or phantasm stood
  That stopped his way or passage free denied,
  Save that the growing trees so thick were set,
  That oft his sight, and passage oft they let.

  XXXVIII
  At length a fair and spacious green he spied,
  Like calmest waters, plain, like velvet, soft,
  Wherein a cypress clad in summer's pride,
  Pyramid-wise, lift up his tops aloft;
  In whose smooth bark upon the evenest side,
  Strange characters he found, and viewed them oft,
  Like those which priests of Egypt erst instead
  Of letters used, which none but they could read.

  XXXIX
  Mongst them he picked out these words at last,
  Writ in the Syriac tongue, which well he could,
  "Oh hardy knight, who through these woods hast passed:
  Where Death his palace and his court doth hold!
  Oh trouble not these souls in quiet placed,
  Oh be not cruel as thy heart is bold,
  Pardon these ghosts deprived of heavenly light,
  With spirits dead why should men living fight?"

  XL
  This found he graven in the tender rind,
  And while he mused on this uncouth writ,
  Him thought he heard the softly whistling wind
  His blasts amid the leaves and branches knit
  And frame a sound like speech of human kind,
  But full of sorrow grief and woe was it,
  Whereby his gentle thoughts all filled were
  With pity, sadness, grief, compassion, fear.

  XLI
  He drew his sword at last, and gave the tree
  A mighty blow, that made a gaping wound,
  Out of the rift red streams he trickling see
  That all bebled the verdant plain around,
  His hair start up, yet once again stroke he,
  He nould give over till the end he found
  Of this adventure, when with plaint and moan,
  As from some hollow grave, he heard one groan.

  XLII
  "Enough, enough!" the voice lamenting said,
  "Tancred, thou hast me hurt, thou didst me drive
  Out of the body of a noble maid
  Who with me lived, whom late I kept on live,
  And now within this woful cypress laid,
  My tender rind thy weapon sharp doth rive,
  Cruel, is't not enough thy foes to kill,
  But in their graves wilt thou torment them still?

  XLIII
  "I was Clorinda, now imprisoned here,
  Yet not alone within this plant I dwell,
  For every Pagan lord and Christian peer,
  Before the city's walls last day that fell,
  In bodies new or graves I wot not clear,
  But here they are confined by magic's spell,
  So that each tree hath life, and sense each bough,
  A murderer if thou cut one twist art thou."

  XLIV
  As the sick man that in his sleep doth see
  Some ugly dragon, or some chimera new,
  Though he suspect, or half persuaded be,
  It is an idle dream, no monster true,
  Yet still he fears, he quakes, and strives to flee,
  So fearful is that wondrous form to view;
  So feared the knight, yet he both knew and thought
  All were illusions false by witchcraft wrought:

  XLV
  But cold and trembling waxed his frozen heart,
  Such strange effects, such passions it torment,
  Out of his feeble hand his weapon start,
  Himself out of his wits nigh, after went:
  Wounded he saw, he thought, for pain and smart,
  His lady weep, complain, mourn, and lament,
  Nor could he suffer her dear blood to see,
  Or hear her sighs that deep far fetched be.

  XLVI
  Thus his fierce heart which death had scorned oft,
  Whom no strange shape or monster could dismay,
  With feigned shows of tender love made soft,
  A spirit false did with vain plaints betray;
  A whirling wind his sword heaved up aloft,
  And through the forest bare it quite away.
  O'ercome retired the prince, and as he came,
  His sword he found, and repossessed the same,

  XLVII
  Yet nould return, he had no mind to try
  His courage further in those forests green;
  But when to Godfrey's tent he proached nigh,
  His spirits waked, his thoughts composed been,
  "My Lord." quoth he, "a witness true am I
  Of wonders strange, believe it scant though seen,
  What of the fire, the shades, the dreadful sound
  You heard, all true by proof myself have found;

  XLVIII
  "A burning fire, so are those deserts charmed,
  Built like a battled wall to heaven was reared;
  Whereon with darts and dreadful weapons armed,
  Of monsters foul mis-shaped whole bands appeared;
  But through them all I passed, unhurt, unharmed,
  No flame or threatened blow I felt or feared,
  Then rain and night I found, but straight again
  To day, the night, to sunshine turned the rain.

  XLIX
  "What would you more? each tree through all that wood
  Hath sense, hath life, hath speech, like human kind,
  I heard their words as in that grove I stood,
  That mournful voice still, still I bear in mind:
  And, as they were of flesh, the purple blood
  At every blow streams from the wounded rind;
  No, no, not I, nor any else, I trow,
  Hath power to cut one leaf, one branch, one bough."
  L
  While thus he said, the Christian's noble guide
  Felt uncouth strife in his contentious thought,
  He thought, what if himself in perzon tried
  Those witchcrafts strange, and bring those charms to naught,
  For such he deemed them, or elsewhere provide
  For timber easier got though further sought,
  But from his study he at last abraid,
  Called by the hermit old that to him said:

  LI
  "Leave off thy hardy thought, another's hands
  Of these her plants the wood dispoilen shall,
  Now, now the fatal ship of conquest lands,
  Her sails are struck, her silver anchors fall,
  Our champion broken hath his worthless bands,
  And looseth from the soil which held him thrall,
  The time draws nigh when our proud foes in field
  Shall slaughtered lie, and Sion's fort shall yield."

  LII
  This said, his visage shone with beams divine,
  And more than mortal was his voice's sound,
  Godfredo's thought to other acts incline,
  His working brain was never idle found.
  But in the Crab now did bright Titan shine,
  And scorched with scalding beams the parched ground,
  And made unfit for toil or warlike feat
  His soldiers, weak with labor, faint with sweat:

  LIII
  The planets mild their lamps benign quenched out,
  And cruel stars in heaven did signorize,
  Whose influence cast fiery flames about
  And hot impressions through the earth and skies,
  The growing heat still gathered deeper rout,
  The noisome warmth through lands and kingdoms flies,
  A harmful night a hurtful day succeeds,
  And worse than both next morn her light outspreads.

  LIV
  When Phoebus rose he left his golden weed,
  And donned a gite in deepest purple dyed,
  His sanguine beams about his forehead spread,
  A sad presage of ill that should betide,
  With vermeil drops at even his tresses bleed,
  Foreshows of future heat, from the ocean wide
  When next he rose, and thus increased still
  Their present harms with dread of future ill,

  LV
  While thus he bent gainst earth his scorching rays,
  He burnt the flowers, burnt his Clytie dear,
  The leaves grew wan upon the withered sprays,
  The grass and growing herbs all parched were,
  Earth cleft in rifts, in floods their streams decays,
  The barren clouds with lightning bright appear,
  And mankind feared lest Climenes' child again
  Had driven awry his sire's ill-guided wain.

  LVI
  As from a furnace flew the smoke to skies,
  Such smoke as that when damned Sodom brent,
  Within his caves sweet Zephyr silent lies,
  Still was the air, the rack nor came nor went,
  But o'er the lands with lukewarm breathing flies
  The southern wind, from sunburnt Afric sent,
  Which thick and warm his interrupted blasts
  Upon their bosoms, throats, and faces casts.

  LVII
  Nor yet more comfort brought the gloomy night,
  In her thick shades was burning heat uprolled,
  Her sable mantle was embroidered bright
  With blazing stars and gliding fires for gold,
  Nor to refresh, sad earth, thy thirsty sprite,
  The niggard moon let fall her May dews cold,
  And dried up the vital moisture was,
  In trees, in plants, in herbs, in flowers, in grass.

  LVIII
  Sleep to his quiet dales exiled fled
  From these unquiet nights, and oft in vain
  The soldiers restless sought the god in bed,
  But most for thirst they mourned and most complain;
  For Juda's tyrant had strong poison shed,
  Poison that breeds more woe and deadly pain,
  Than Acheron or Stygian waters bring,
  In every fountain, cistern, well and spring:

  LIX
  And little Siloe that his store bestows
  Of purest crystal on the Christian bands,
  The pebbles naked in his channel shows
  And scantly glides above the scorched sands,
  Nor Po in May when o'er his banks he flows,
  Nor Ganges, waterer of the Indian lands,
  Nor seven-mouthed Nile that yields all Egypt drink,
  To quench their thirst the men sufficient think.

  LX
  He that the gliding rivers erst had seen
  Adown their verdant channels gently rolled,
  Or falling streams which to the valleys green
  Distilled from tops of Alpine mountains cold,
  Those he desired in vain, new torments been,
  Augmented thus with wish of comforts old,
  Those waters cool he drank in vain conceit,
  Which more increased his thirst, increased his heat.

  LXI
  The sturdy bodies of the warriors strong,
  Whom neither marching far, nor tedious way,
  Nor weighty arms which on their shoulders hung,
  Could weary make, nor death itself dismay;
  Now weak and feeble cast their limbs along,
  Unwieldly burdens, on the burned clay,
  And in each vein a smouldering fire there dwelt,
  Which dried their flesh and solid bones did melt.

  LXII
  Languished the steed late fierce, and proffered grass,
  His fodder erst, despised and from him cast,
  Each step he stumbled, and which lofty was
  And high advanced before now fell his crest,
  His conquests gotten all forgotten pass,
  Nor with desire of glory swelled his breast,
  The spoils won from his foe, his late rewards,
  He now neglects, despiseth, naught regards.

  LXIII
  Languished the faithful dog, and wonted care
  Of his dear lord and cabin both forgot,
  Panting he laid, and gathered fresher air
  To cool the burning in his entrails hot:
  But breathing, which wise nature did prepare
  To suage the stomach's heat, now booted not,
  For little ease, alas, small help, they win
  That breathe forth air and scalding fire suck in.

  LXIV
  Thus languished the earth, in this estate
  Lay woful thousands of the Christians stout,
  The faithful people grew nigh desperate
  Of hoped conquest, shameful death they doubt,
  Of their distress they talk and oft debate,
  These sad complaints were heard the camp throughout:
  "What hope hath Godfrey? shall we still here lie
  Till all his soldiers, all our armies die?

  LXV
  "Alas, with what device, what strength, thinks he
  To scale these walls, or this strong fort to get?
  Whence hath he engines new? doth he not see,
  How wrathful Heaven gainst us his sword doth whet?
  These tokens shown true signs and witness be
  Our angry God our proud attempts doth let,
  And scorching sun so hot his beams outspreads,
  That not more cooling Inde nor Aethiop needs.

  LXVI
  "Or thinks he it an eath or little thing
  That us despised, neglected, and disdained,
  Like abjects vile, to death he thus should bring,
  That so his empire may be still maintained?
  Is it so great a bliss to be a king,
  When he that wears the crown with blood is stained
  And buys his sceptre with his people's lives?
  See whither glory vain, fond mankind drives.

  LXVII
  "See, see the man, called holy, just, and good,
  That courteous, meek, and humble would be thought,
  Yet never cared in what distress we stood
  If his vain honor were diminished naught,
  When dried up from us his spring and flood
  His water must from Jordan streams be brought,
  And how he sits at feasts and banquets sweet
  And mingleth waters fresh with wines of Crete."

  LXVIII
  The French thus murmured, but the Greekish knight
  Tatine, that of this war was weary grown:
  "Why die we here," quoth he, "slain without fight,
  Killed, not subdued, murdered, not overthrown?
  Upon the Frenchmen let the penance light
  Of Godfrey's folly, let me save mine own,"
  And as he said, without farewell, the knight
  And all his comet stole away by night.

  LXIX
  His bad example many a troop prepares
  To imitate, when his escape they know,
  Clotharius his band, and Ademare's,
  And all whose guides in dust were buried low,
  Discharged of duty's chains and bondage snares,
  Free from their oath, to none they service owe,
  But now concluded all on secret flight,
  And shrunk away by thousands every night.

  LXX
  Godfredo this both heard, and saw, and knew,
  Yet nould with death them chastise though he mought,
  But with that faith wherewith he could renew
  The steadfast hills and seas dry up to naught
  He prayed the Lord upon his flock to rue,
  To ope the springs of grace and ease this drought,
  Out of his looks shone zeal, devotion, faith,
  His hands and eyes to heaven he heaves, and saith:

  LXXI
  "Father and Lord, if in the deserts waste
  Thou hadst compassion on thy children dear,
  The craggy rock when Moses cleft and brast,
  And drew forth flowing streams of waters clear,
  Like mercy, Lord, like grace on us down cast;
  And though our merits less than theirs appear,
  Thy grace supply that want, for though they be
  Thy first-born son, thy children yet are we."

  LXXII
  These prayers just, from humble hearts forth sent,
  Were nothing slow to climb the starry sky,
  But swift as winged bird themselves present
  Before the Father of the heavens high:
  The Lord accepted them, and gently bent
  Upon the faithful host His gracious eye,
  And in what pain and what distress it laid,
  He saw, and grieved to see, and thus He said:

  LXXIII
  "Mine armies dear till now have suffered woe,
  Distress and danger, hell's infernal power
  Their enemy hath been, the world their foe,
  But happy be their actions from this hour:
  What they begin to blessed end shall go,
  I will refresh them with a gentle shower;
  Rinaldo shall return, the Egyptian crew
  They shall encounter, conquer, and subdue."

  LXXIV
  At these high words great heaven began to shake,
  The fixed stars, the planets wandering still,
  Trembled the air, the earth and ocean quake,
  Spring, fountain, river, forest, dale and hill;
  From north to east, a lightning flash outbrake,
  And coming drops presaged with thunders shrill:
  With joyful shouts the soldiers on the plain,
  These tokens bless of long-desired rain.

  LXXV
  A sudden cloud, as when Helias prayed,
  Not from dry earth exhaled by Phoebus' beams,
  Arose, moist heaven his windows open laid,
  Whence clouds by heaps out rush, and watery streams,
  The world o'erspread was with a gloomy shade,
  That like a dark mirksome even it seems;
  The crashing rain from molten skies down fell,
  And o'er their banks the brooks and fountains swell.

  LXXVI
  In summer season, when the cloudy sky
  Upon the parched ground doth rain down send,
  As duck and mallard in the furrows dry
  With merry noise the promised showers attend,
  And spreading broad their wings displayed lie
  To keep the drops that on their plumes descend,
  And where the streams swell to a gathered lake,
  Therein they dive, and sweet refreshing take:

  LXXVII
  So they the streaming showers with shouts and cries
  Salute, which heaven shed on the thirsty lands,
  The falling liquor from the dropping skies
  He catcheth in his lap, he barehead stands,
  And his bright helm to drink therein unties,
  In the fresh streams he dives his sweaty hands,
  Their faces some, and some their temples wet,
  And some to keep the drops large vessels set.

  LXXVIII
  Nor man alone to ease his burning sore,
  Herein doth dive and wash, and hereof drinks,
  But earth itself weak, feeble, faint before,
  Whose solid limbs were cleft with rifts and chinks,
  Received the falling showers and gathered store
  Of liquor sweet, that through her veins down sinks,
  And moisture new infused largely was
  In trees, in plants, in herbs, in flowers, in grass.

  LXXIX
  Earth, like the patient was, whose lively blood
  Hath overcome at last some sickness strong,
  Whose feeble limbs had been the bait and food
  Whereon this strange disease depastured long,
  But now restored, in health and welfare stood,
  As sound as erst, as fresh, as fair, as young;
  So that forgetting all his grief and pain,
  His pleasant robes and crowns he takes again.

  LXXX
  Ceased the rain, the sun began to shine,
  With fruitful, sweet, benign, and gentle ray,
  Full of strong power and vigor masculine,
  As be his beams in April or in May.
  0 happy zeal! who trusts in help divine
  The world's afflictions thus can drive away,
  Can storms appease, and times and seasons change,
  And conquer fortune, fate, and destiny strange.

FOURTEENTH BOOK

  THE ARGUMENT.
  The Lord to Godfrey in a dream doth show
  His will; Rinaldo must return at last;
  They have their asking who for pardon sue:
  Two knights to find the prince are sent in haste,
  But Peter, who by vision all foreknew,
  Sendeth the searchers to a wizard, placed
  Deep in a vault, who first at large declares
  Armida's trains, then how to shun those snares.

  I
  Now from the fresh, the soft and tender bed
  Of her still mother, gentle night out flew,
  The fleeting balm on hills and dales she shed,
  With honey drops of pure and precious dew,
  And on the verdure of green forests spread
  The virgin primrose and the violet blue,
  And sweet-breathed Zephyr on his spreading wings,
  Sleep, ease, repose, rest, peace and quiet brings.

  II
  The thoughts and troubles of broad-waking day,
  They softly dipped in mild Oblivion's lake;
  But he whose Godhead heaven and earth doth sway,
  In his eternal light did watch and wake,
  And bent on Godfrey down the gracious ray
  Of his bright eye, still ope for Godfrey's sake,
  To whom a silent dream the Lord down sent.
  Which told his will, his pleasure and intent.

  III
  Far in the east, the golden gate beside
  Whence Phoebus comes, a crystal port there is,
  And ere the sun his broad doors open wide
  The beam of springing day uncloseth this,
  Hence comes the dreams, by which heaven's sacred guide
  Reveals to man those high degrees of his,
  Hence toward Godfrey ere he left his bed
  A vision strange his golden plumes bespread.

  IV
  Such semblances, such shapes, such portraits fair,
  Did never yet in dream or sleep appear,
  For all the forms in sea, in earth or air,
  The signs in heaven, the stars in every sphere
  All that was wondrous, uncouth, strange and rare,
  All in that vision well presented were.
  His dream had placed him in a crystal wide,
  Beset with golden fires, top, bottom, side,

  V
  There while he wondereth on the circles vast,
  The stars, their motions, course and harmony,
  A knight, with shining rays and fire embraced,
  Presents himself unwares before his eye,
  Who with a voice that far for sweetness passed
  All human speech, thus said, approaching nigh:
  "What, Godfrey, knowest thou not thy Hugo here?
  Come and embrace thy friend and fellow dear!"

  VI
  He answered him, "Thy glorious shining light
  Which in thine eyes his glistering beams doth place,
  Estranged hath from my foreknowledge quite
  Thy countenance, thy favor, and thy face:"
  This said, three times he stretched his hands outright
  And would in friendly arms the knight embrace,
  And thrice the spirit fled, that thrice he twined
  Naught in his folded arms but air and wind.

  VII
  Lord Hugo smiled, "Not as you think," quoth he,
  "I clothed am in flesh and earthly mould,
  My spirit pure, and naked soul, you see,
  A citizen of this celestial hold:
  This place is heaven, and here a room for thee
  Prepared is among Christ's champions bold:"
  "Ah when," quoth he, "these mortal bonds unknit,
  Shall I in peace, in ease and rest there sit?"

  VIII
  Hugo replied, "Ere many years shall run,
  Amid the saints in bliss here shalt thou reign;
  But first great wars must by thy hand be done,
  Much blood be shed, and many Pagans slain,
  The holy city by assault be won,
  The land set free from servile yoke again,
  Wherein thou shalt a Christian empire frame,
  And after thee shall Baldwin rule the same.

  IX
  "But to increase thy love and great desire
  To heavenward, this blessed place behold,
  These shining lamps, these globes of living fire,
  How they are turned, guided, moved and rolled;
  The angels' singing hear, and all their choir;
  Then bend thine eyes on yonder earth and mould,
  All in that mass, that globe and compass see,
  Land, sea, spring, fountain, man, beast, grass and tree.
  X
  "How vile, how small, and of how slender price,
  Is their reward of goodness, virtue's gain!
  A narrow room our glory vain upties,
  A little circle doth our pride contain,
  Earth like an isle amid the water lies,
  Which sea sometime is called, sometime the main,
  Yet naught therein responds a name so great,
  It's but a lake, a pond, a marish strait."

  XI
  Thus said the one, the other bended down
  His looks to ground, and half in scorn he smiled,
  He saw at once earth, sea, flood, castle, town,
  Strangely divided, strangely all compiled,
  And wondered folly man so far should drown,
  To set his heart on things so base and vild,
  That servile empire searcheth and dumb fame,
  And scorns heaven's bliss, yet proffereth heaven the same.

  XII
  Wherefore he answered, "Since the Lord not yet
  Will free my spirit from this cage of clay,
  Lest worldly error vain my voyage let,
  Teach me to heaven the best and surest way:"
  Hugo replied, "Thy happy foot is set
  In the true path, nor from this passage stray,
  Only from exile young Rinaldo call,
  This give I thee in charge, else naught at all.

  XIII
  "For as the Lord of hosts, the King of bliss,
  Hath chosen thee to rule the faithful band;
  So he thy stratagems appointed is
  To execute, so both shall win this land:
  The first is thine, the second place is his,
  Thou art this army's head, and he the hand,
  No other champion can his place supply,
  And that thou do it doth thy state deny.

  XIV
  "The enchanted forest, and her charmed treen,
  With cutting steel shall he to earth down hew,
  And thy weak armies which too feeble been
  To scale again these walls reinforced new,
  And fainting lie dispersed on the green,
  Shall take new strength new courage at his view,
  The high-built towers, the eastern squadrons all,
  Shall conquered be, shall fly, shall die, shall fall."

  XV
  He held his peace; and Godfrey answered so:
  "Oh, how his presence would recomfort me!
  You that man's hidden thoughts perceive and know:
  If I say truth, or if I love him, see.
  But say, what messengers shall for him go?
  What shall their speeches, what their errand be?
  Shall I entreat, or else command the man?
  With credit neither well perform I can."

  XVI
  "The eternal Lord," the other knight replied,
  "That with so many graces hath thee blest,
  Will, that among the troops thou hast to guide,
  Thou honored be and feared of most and least:
  Then speak not thou lest blemish some betide
  Thy sacred empire if thou make request;
  But when by suit thou moved art to ruth,
  Then yield, forgive, and home recall the youth.

  XVII
  "Guelpho shall pray thee, God shall him inspire,
  To pardon this offence, this fault commit
  By hasty wrath, by rash and headstrong ire,
  To call the knight again; yield thou to it:
  And though the youth, enwrapped in fond desire,
  Far hence in love and looseness idle sit,
  Year fear it not, he shall return with speed,
  When most you wish him and when most you need.

  XVIII
  "Your hermit Peter, to whose sapient heart
  High Heaven his secrets opens, tells and shews,
  Your messengers direct can to that part,
  Where of the prince they shall hear certain news,
  And learn the way, the manner, and the art
  To bring him back to these thy warlike crews,
  That all thy soldiers, wandered and misgone,
  Heaven may unite again and join in one.

  XIX
  "But this conclusion shall my speeches end:
  Know that his blood shall mixed be with thine,
  Whence barons bold and worthies shall descend,
  That many great exploits shall bring to fine."
  This said, he vanished from his sleeping friend,
  Like smoke in wind, or mist in Titan's shine;
  Sleep fled likewise, and in his troubled thought,
  With wonder, pleasure; joy, with marvel fought.

  XX
  The duke looked up, and saw the azure sky
  With argent beams of silver morning spread,
  And started up, for praise axed virtue lie
  In toil and travel, sin and shame in bed:
  His arms he took, his sword girt to his thigh,
  To his pavilion all his lords them sped,
  And there in council grave the princes sit,
  For strength by wisdom, war is ruled by wit.

  XXI
  Lord Guelpho there, within whose gentle breast
  Heaven had infused that new and sudden thought,
  His pleasing words thus to the duke addressed:
  "Good prince, mild, though unasked, kind, unbesought,
  Oh let thy mercy grant my just request,
  Pardon this fault by rage not malice wrought;
  For great offence, I grant, so late commit,
  My suit too hasty is, perchance unfit.

  XXII
  But since to Godfrey meek benign and kind,
  For Prince Rinaldo bold, I humbly sue,
  And that the suitor's self is not behind
  Thy greatest friends in state or friendship true;
  I trust I shall thy grace and mercy find
  Acceptable to me and all this crew;
  Oh call him home, this trespass to amend,
  He shall his blood in Godfrey's service spend.

  XXIII
  "And if not he, who else dares undertake
  Of this enchanted wood to cut one tree?
  Gainst death and danger who dares battle make,
  With so bold face, so fearless heart as he?
  Beat down these walls, these gates in pieces break,
  Leap o'er these rampires high, thou shalt him see,
  Restore therefore to this desirous band
  Their wish, their hope, their strength, their shield, their hand;

  XXIV
  "To me my nephew, to thyself restore
  A trusty help, when strength of hand thou needs,
  In idleness let him consume no more,
  Recall him to his noble acts and deeds!
  Known be his worth as was his strength of yore
  Wher'er thy standard broad her cross outspreads,
  Oh, let his fame and praise spread far and wide,
  Be thou his lord, his teacher and his guidel"

  XXV
  Thus he entreated, and the rest approve
  His words, with friendly murmurs whispered low.
  Godfrey as though their suit his mind did move
  To that whereon he never thought tell now,
  "How can my heart," quoth he, "if you I love,
  To your request and suit but bend and bow?
  Let rigor go, that right and justice be
  Wherein you all consent and all agree.

  XXVI
  "Rinaldo shall return; let him restrain
  Henceforth his headstrong wrath and hasty ire,
  And with his hardy deeds let him take pain
  To correspond your hope and my desire:
  Guelpho, thou must call home the knight again,
  See that with speed he to these tents retire,
  The messengers appoint as likes thy mind,
  And teach them where they should the young man find."

  XXVII
  Up start the Dane that bare Prince Sweno's brand,
  "I will," quoth he, "that message undertake,
  I will refuse no pains by sea or land,
  To give the knight this sword, kept for his sake."
  This man was bold of courage, strong of hand,
  Guelpho was glad he did the proffer make:
  "Thou shalt," quoth he, "Ubaldo shalt thou have
  To go with thee, a knight, stout, wise, and grave."

  XXVIII
  Ubaldo in his youth had known and seen
  The fashions strange of many an uncouth land,
  And travelled over all the realms between
  The Arctic circle and hot Meroe's strand,
  And as a man whose wit his guide had been,
  Their customs use he could, tongues understand,
  Forthy when spent his youthful seasons were
  Lord Guelpho entertained and held him dear.

  XXIX
  To these committed was the charge and care
  To find and bring again the champion bold,
  Guelpho commands them to the fort repair,
  Where Boemond doth his seat and sceptre hold,
  For public fame said that Bertoldo's heir
  There lived, there dwelt, there stayed; the hermit old,
  That knew they were misled by false report,
  Among them came, and parleyed in this sort: