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r adventures; for every one of the had one oro sas as if ade on purpose, who not only rerded their deeds butdescribed their ost triflg thoughts and follies, however secretthey ight be; and such a good knight uld not have been unfortunate as not to have what platir and others like hi had abundance and i uld not brg yself to believe that such agallant tale had been left aid and utilated, and i d thebla on ti, the devourer and destroyer of all thgs, that hadeither ncealed or nsud it
on the other hand, it struck that, asuch as aong his booksthere had been found such odern ones as &ot;the enlightennt ofjealoy&ot; and the &ot;nyphs and 射pherds of henares,&ot; his story tlikewise be odern, and that though it ight not be written, itight exist the ory of the people of his villa and of those the neighbourhood this reflection kept perplexed and longg toknow really and truly the whole life and wondro deeds of ourfao spaniard, don ixote of la an插, light and irror ofanchegan chivalry, and the first that our a and these evildays devoted hiself to the labour and exercise of the ars ofknight-errantry, rightg wrongs, suourg widows, and protectgdasels of that rt that ed to ride about, whip hand, on theirpalfreys, with all their virgity about the, fro ounta toounta and valley to valley- for, if it were not for ruffian,or boor with a hood and hatchet, or onstro giant, that forced the,there were days of yore dasels that at the end of eighty years, all which ti they had never slept
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