Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,      XIII|     arm and person to the most perilous that fortune may offer me
 2   I,      XIII|      engage in some mighty and perilous adventure in which there
 3   I,       XVI|     uneasy and to consider the perilous risk which his virtue was
 4   I,      XVII|     battle, or combat, however perilous it might be.~ ~Sancho Panza,
 5   I,       XIX|      will be a most mighty and perilous adventure, in which it will
 6   I,       XIX|     Senor, you have ended this perilous adventure more safely for
 7   I,        XX|    should end his days in that perilous adventure. He again repeated
 8   I,        XX| fulling hammers, had been some perilous adventure, have I not, think
 9   I,       XXI|        where, even if the most perilous are victoriously achieved,
10   I,       XXV|     famous."~ ~"And is it very perilous, this achievement?"~ ~"No,"
11  II,      VIII|        happy termination every perilous adventure; for nothing in
12  II,        XI|        believing that some new perilous adventure was presenting
13  II,      XIII|        to deliver me from this perilous calling of squire into which
14  II,      XVII|     and mountains, in quest of perilous adventures, bent on bringing
15  II,      XXII|      in this to all appearance perilous and untried adventure, and
16  II,       LVI|       people eager to see this perilous and unparalleled encounter.
17  II,      LXIV|      Rocinante to the earth, a perilous fall. He sprang upon him
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