Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|    employments in Andalusia is absurd. What had he done to distinguish
 2   I,  TransPre|        laughable incidents and absurd situations, very amusing,
 3   I,  TransPre|    books; and therefore, it is absurd to speak of him in the gushing
 4   I,  TransPre|       make an absurdity doubly absurd, and give plausibility to
 5   I,         V| village, very sad to hear what absurd stuff Don Quixote was talking.~ ~ ~
 6   I,        VI|       been poets, so droll and absurd a book as this has never
 7   I,       XIV|   being detestable, it is very absurd to say, "I love thee because
 8   I,    XXXIII|        sprung up in thee is so absurd and remote from everything
 9   I,       XLV|    does not tell me that it is absurd to say that this is the
10   I,     XLVII|      silly in their arguments, absurd in their travels, and, in
11   I,    XLVIII|      the rules of art, than by absurd ones, they are so thoroughly
12   I,      XLIX|        as are written in those absurd books of chivalry are really
13  II,         I|      are either impossible, or absurd, or injurious to the King
14  II,         I|      is neither impossible nor absurd, but the easiest, the most
15  II,         I|    word that was incoherent or absurd, but, on the contrary, spoke
16  II,        XV|     Don Quixote a thrashing is absurd; and it is not any wish
17  II,      XVII|    expressed, and what he did, absurd, rash, and foolish; and
18  II,    XXXIII|    that you have said anything absurd," said Sancho; "I have seen
19  II,       LIX|    would you have us read that absurd stuff, Don Juan, when it
20  II,       LXX|      lovers pining to death is absurd; they may talk of it, but
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