Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|        of the goal to which his imagination was leading him. There can
 2   I,  TransPre|         entities to the popular imagination. There was no occasion for
 3   I,       XVI|  misfortune, conjured up to his imagination as extraordinary a delusion
 4   I,       XVI|        drew her portrait in his imagination with the same features and
 5   I,     XVIII|     nevertheless, seeing in his imagination what he did not see and
 6   I,     XVIII|         or the other out of his imagination, and to all he assigned
 7   I,       XIX| opposite with his master, whose imagination immediately conjured up
 8   I,       XXV|         and I picture her in my imagination as I would have her to be,
 9   I,     XXXIV|       to have been only her own imagination, for Lothario now avoided
10   I,     XXXIV|      prudish ideas trouble your imagination, but be assured that Lothario
11   I,      XXXV|         with the giant. For his imagination was so wrought upon by the
12   I,     XLIII|         suggested itself to his imagination that, as on the former occasion,
13   I,       XLV|         castle in Don Quixote's imagination.~ ~All having been now pacified
14   I,      XLVI|         thoughts in thy muddled imagination? Begone from my presence,
15   I,     XLVII|      things that the eye or the imagination brings before it; and nothing
16  II,     XXIII|        or the most lively human imagination conceive. I opened my eyes,
17  II,     XXIII|        down there, stuffed your imagination or your mind with all this
18  II,         L|        a mere ambassador of the imagination or a man of flesh and blood."~ ~"
19  II,     LXIII|         him) may be left to the imagination of those who are separated
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