Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,    XXXIII|     first few days, those of a wedding being usually days of merry-making,
 2   I,    XXXIII|     way he could; but when the wedding days were over and the succession
 3  II,         V|    harness, for it is not to a wedding we are bound, but to go
 4  II,       XIX|        the student; "it is the wedding of a farmer and a farmer'
 5  II,       XIX|       to make this a memorable wedding than the part which I suspect
 6  II,       XIX| musicians were the life of the wedding, wandering through the pleasant
 7  II,        XX|        ACCOUNT IS GIVEN OF THE WEDDING OF CAMACHO THE RICH, TOGETHER
 8  II,        XX|     than galingale or thyme; a wedding that begins with smells
 9  II,        XX|      preparations made for the wedding were in rustic style, but
10  II,       XXI|      XXI.~ ~IN WHICH CAMACHO'S WEDDING IS CONTINUED, WITH OTHER
11  II,       XXI|       themselves out for their wedding on the morrow. They advanced
12  II,      XXIV|    enough of it. Ah, Camacho's wedding, and plentiful house of
13  II,      LXII|  fallen upon another Camacho's wedding, another house like Don
14  II,     LXVII|     Diego de Miranda's, at the wedding of Camacho the Rich, and
15  II,      LXIX|     always made the cow of the wedding for the cure of other people'
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