To > [Bound to: the verb is understood from line 7]

312.31

And her before the vile Enchaunter sate,
2 Figuring straunge characters of his art,
With liuing bloud he those characters wrate,
4 Dreadfully dropping from her dying hart,
Seeming transfixed with a cruell dart,
6 And all perforce to make her him to loue.
Ah who can loue the worker of her smart?
8 A thousand charmes he formerly did proue;
Yet thousand charmes could not her stedfast heart remoue.

1 And her before the vile enchanter sat,

her before > [before her]

2 Figuring strange characters of his art:

Figuring > Shaping

3 With living blood he those characters wrote, 4 Dreadfully dropping from her dying heart, 5 Seeming transfixed with a cruel dart,

dart > arrow (as 312.21:3)

6 And all perforce to make her him to love.