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&ot;it sees to ,&ot; said sancho, &ot;that your worship is like the onsayg, &039;said the fryg-pan to the kettle, t away, blackbreech&039;you chide for utterg proverbs, and you strg the uplesyourself&ot;
&ot;observe, sancho,&ot; replied don ixote, &ot;i brg proverbs tothe purpose, and when i ote the they fit like a rg to the fr;thou brst the by the head and shoulders, such a way thatthou dost drag the , rather than troduce the; if i a notistaken, i have told thee already that proverbs are short axisdrawn fro the experience and observation of our wise n of old;but the proverb that is not to the purpose is a piece of nonsenseand not a axi but enough of this; as nightfall is drag on let retire little distance fro the high road to pass the night; whatis store for to-orrow god knoweth&ot;
they turned aside, and supped late and poorly, very uch agastsancho&039;s will, who turned over his d the hardships attendantupon knight-errantry woods and forests, even though at tis plentypresented itself castles and hoes, as at don diego deiranda&039;s, at the weddg of caacho the rich, and at don antoniooreno&039;s; he reflected, however, that it uld not be always day,nor always night; and that night he passed sleepg, and hisaster wakg插pter lxviii
of the bristly adventure that befell don ixote
the night was what dark, for though there was a oon thesky it was not a arter where 射 uld be seen; for tis thelady diana goes on a stroll to the antipodes,