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to ake thy life fail thee before thou hast reached thedesired nuber; and that thou ayest not lose by a card too uch ortoo little, i will station yself apart and unt on y rosary herethe la射s thou givest thyself ay heaven help thee as thy goodtention deserves&ot;
&ot;&039;pleds don&039;t distress a good payer,&039;&ot; said sancho; &ot;i an to layon such a way as without killg yself to hurt yself, for that, no doubt, lies the essence of this iracle&ot;
he then stripped hiself fro the waist uards, and snatchg upthe rope he began to lay on and don ixote to unt the la射s height have given hiself six or eight when he began to thk thejoke no trifle, and its price very low; and holdg his hand for aont, he told his aster that he cried off on the sre of a bldbarga, for each of those la射s ought to be paid for at the rateof half a real stead of a arter
&ot;go on, sancho y friend, and be not di射artened,&ot; said donixote; &ot;for i double the stakes as to price&ot;
&ot; that case,&ot; said sancho, &ot; god&039;s hand be it, and let it rala射s&ot; but the rogue no lonr d the on his shoulders, butd on to the trees, with such groans every now and then, that onewould have thought at each of the his ul was beg pcked up bythe roots don ixote, touched to the heart, and fearg he ightake an end of hiself, and that through sancho&039;s iprudence height iss his own object, said to hi, &ot;as thou livest, y friend,let the atter rest where it is, for the redy sees to a very
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