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e bachelor i will go for hi a klg&ot;
&ot;thou wilt do a great pleasure, y friend,&ot; said don ixote,&ot;for what thou hast told has aazed , and i shall not eat aorsel that will agree with until i have heard all about it&ot;
&ot;then i a off for hi,&ot; said sancho; and leavg his aster he went est of the bachelor, with who he returned a short ti,and, all three tother, they had a very droll lloy
插pter iii
of the laughable nversation that passed beeen don ixote,sancho panza, and the bachelor san carras
don ixote reaed very deep thought, waitg for thebachelor carras, fro who he was to hear how he hiself had beenput to a book as sancho said; and he uld not persuade hiself thatany such history uld be existence, for the blood of the eneie射 had sn was not yet dry on the blade of his sword, and now theywanted to ake out that his ighty achievents were gog about prt for all that, he fancied sa, either a friend or aneney, ight, by the aid of agic, have given the to the press; ifa friend, order to agnify and exalt the above the ost faoever achieved by any knight-errant; if an eney, to brg the tonaught and degrade the below the anest ever rerded of any lowsire, though as he said to hiself, the achievents of siresnever were rerded if, however, it were the fact that such a historywere existence, it t necessarily, beg the story of aknight-errant, be grandiloent, lofty, iposg, grand and true withthis he forted hiself what, though it ade hi unforta
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