Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,   Commend| Latino's gift of tongues,~ No Latin let thy pages show.~ Ape
 2   I,   AuthPre|    any sentences or scraps of Latin you may happen to have by
 3   I,   AuthPre|   these and such like bits of Latin they will take you for a
 4   I,       XIX|      I do not understand that Latin," answered Don Quixote, "
 5   I,      XXII|     talker and a very elegant Latin scholar.~ ~Behind all these
 6   I,       XXV|    past, Greek, Barbarian, or Latin; and let each say what he
 7   I,    XLVIII|      two princes of Greek and Latin poetry are in verse."~ ~"
 8  II,       XVI|       our mother tongue, some Latin, some of them history, others
 9  II,       XVI|     six at Salamanca studying Latin and Greek, and when I wished
10  II,       XVI|   poet Homer did not write in Latin, because he was a Greek,
11  II,       XVI|       Greek, because he was a Latin; in short, all the ancient
12  II,     XXVII|    great discretion who knows Latin and his mother tongue like
13  II,      XXIX|    thou art not bound to know Latin, like some who pretend to
14  II,     XLIII|      have had recourse to the Latin, and instead of belch say
15  II,        LI|   amica veritas. I quote this Latin to thee because I conclude
16  II,      LXII|  languages, the Greek and the Latin, is like looking at Flemish
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