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&ot;sancho,&ot; said don ixote, &ot;thou hast delivered a thoandsentences ndensed the pass of a few words; i thank thee forthe advice thou hast given , and take it ost gladly e, yn, let go look for place where i ay hide, while thou dostreturn, as thou sayest, to seek, and speak with y lady, fro whosediscretion and urtesy i look for favours ore than iraculo&ot;
sancho was a fever to t his aster out of the town, lest heshould disver the falsehood of the reply he had brought to hi the sierra orena on behalf of dulcea; he hastened theirdeparture, which they took at once, and o iles out of the villathey found a forest or thicket where don ixote ensncedhiself, while sancho returned to the city to speak to dulcea, which ebassy thgs befell hi which deand fresh attention and a new插pter
插pter x
where is related the crafty device sancho adopted to en插nt thelady dulcea, and other cidents as dicro as they are true
when the author of this great history es to relate what is setdown this 插pter he says he would have preferred to pass it over silence, fearg it would not he believed, becae here donixote&039;s adness reaches the nfes of the greatest that can benceived, and even goes a uple of bowshots beyond the greatest butafter all, though still under the sa fear and apprehension, he hasrerded it without addg to the story or leavg out a particle ofthe truth, and entirely disregardg the 插rs of falsehood thatight be brought agast hi; and he was right, for th