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nd present to sancho&039;s wife, teresapanza, he got hiself new arour and another horse, and put a whiteoon upon his shield, and to carry his ars he had a ule led by apeasant, not by to cecial his forr sire for fear he should beregnised by sancho or don ixote he ca to the duke&039;s castle, andthe duke rd hi of the road and route don ixote had taken withthe tention of beg present at the jots at saragossa he toldhi, too, of the jokes he had practised upon hi, and of the devicefor the disen插ntnt of dulcea at the expense of sancho&039;sbackside; and fally he gave hi an aount of the trick sancho hadplayed upon his aster, akg hi believe that dulcea was en插ntedand turned to a untry wench; and of how the duchess, his wife, hadpersuaded sancho that it was he hiself who was deceived, asu插s dulcea was really en插nted; at which the bachelor laughed nota little, and arvelled as well at the sharpness and siplicity ofsancho as at the length to which don ixote&039;s adness went theduke begd of hi if he found hi (whether he overca hi or not) toreturn that way and let hi know the result this the bachelor did; heset out est of don ixote, and not fdg hi at saragossa,he went on, and how he fared has been already told he returned to theduke&039;s castle and told hi all, what the nditions of the baere, and how don ixote was now, like a loyal knight-errant,returng to keep his proise of retirg to his villa for a year,by which ti, said the bachelor, he ight perhaps be cured of hisadness; for that was
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