Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,        IV|   proceed. He had gone but a few paces into the wood, when he saw
 2   I,        XX|         had not gone two hundred paces when a loud noise of water,
 3   I,        XX|       hours and at such unwonted paces."~ ~"Then go back three
 4   I,        XX|       went it might be a hundred paces farther, when on turning
 5   I,       XXV|        He had not gone a hundred paces, however, when he returned
 6   I,    XXVIII|      before they had gone twenty paces they discovered behind a
 7   I,    XXVIII|          before she had gone six paces she fell to the ground,
 8   I,     XLIII|     regarding her, either as she paces to and fro some gallery
 9   I,      XLIV|         and let us go back fifty paces to see what Don Luis said
10  II,        IX|          a matter of two hundred paces he came upon the mass that
11  II,       XIV|        had not moved away twenty paces when he heard himself called
12  II,   XXXVIII|         Quixote went some twelve paces forward to meet her. She
13  II,    XLVIII|       and retreating a couple of paces, exclaimed, "Am I safe,
14  II,      XLIX|         to fly; in less than six paces I fell from fright, and
15  II,        LV|    putting Rocinante through his paces or pressing him to the charge,
16  II,      LXVI|          a distance of a hundred paces with equal weights; and
17  II,      LXXI| headstall retreated about twenty paces from his master among some
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