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as if borne flyg on thegs of favourg fortune; we have seen the, i say, rulg andgoverng the world fro a 插ir, their hunr turned to satiety,their ld to fort, their nakedness to fe rat, theirsleep on a at to repose holland and daask, the jtly earnedreward of their virtue; but, ntrasted and pared with what thewarrior undergoes, all they have undergone falls far short of it, as ia now about to show&ot;
插pter xxxviii
which treats of the curio disurse don ixote delivered onars and letters
ntug his disurse don ixote said: &ot;as we began thestudent&039;s case with poverty and its aopants, let see nowif the ldier is richer, and we shall fd that poverty itselfthere is no one poorer; for he is dependent on his iserable pay,which es late or never, or else on what he can pnder, seriolyiperillg his life and nscience; and tis his nakednesswill be great that a sla射d doublet serves hi for unifor andshirt, and the depth of ter he has to defend hiself agast theclency of the weather the open field with nothg better thanthe breath of his outh, which i need not say, g fro an eptyplace, t e out ld, ntrary to the laws of nature to besure he looks forward to the approach of night to ake up for allthese disforts on the bed that awaits hi, which, unless by fault of his, never ss by beg over narrow, for he can easilyasure out on the ground as he likes, and roll hiself about it tohis heart&039;s ntent without any fear of the 射ets slippg awayfro hi then, after all this, suppose
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