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the other on the cantle that he held his aster&039;sleft thigh his ebrace, not darg to separate a fr&039;s widthfro hi; uch afraid was he of the strokes which still reundedwith a regular beat don ixote bade hi tell story to ae hias he had proposed, to which sancho replied that he would if his dreadof what he heard would let hi; &ot;still,&ot; said he, &ot;i will strive totell a story which, if i can ana to relate it, and nobodyterferes with the tellg, is the best of stories, and let yourworship give your attention, for here i beg what was, was; anday the good that is to e be for all, and the evil for hi who goesto look for it -your worship t know that the begng the old folked to put to their tales was not jt as each one pleased; it wasa axi of cato zonzoro the roan, that says &039;the evil for hithat goes to look for it,&039; and it es as pat to the purpose now asrg to fr, to show that your worship should keep iet and not golookg for evil any arter, and that we should go back by other road, sce nobody forces to follow this which anyterrors affright &ot;
&ot;go on with thy story, sancho,&ot; said don ixote, &ot;and leave thechoice of our road to y care&ot;
&ot;i say then,&ot; ntued sancho, &ot;that a villa of estreadurathere was a goat-射pherd -that is to say, one who tended goats- which射pherd or goatherd, as y story goes, was called lope ruiz, and thislope ruiz was love with a 射pherdess called torralva, which射pherdess called torralva was the daughter o
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