Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,       XVI|    that position. The hard, narrow, wretched, rickety bed of
 2   I,   XXXVIII|    never sins by being over narrow, for he can easily measure
 3   I,   XXXVIII|     struggles to cross that narrow path to the enemy's ship.
 4   I,       XLI|  the sea but that it left a narrow space on which to land conveniently.
 5   I,      XLII|     with part of the host's narrow bed and half of what the
 6  II,        VI|  the path of virtue is very narrow, and the road of vice broad
 7  II,        VI| vice ends in death, and the narrow and toilsome one of virtue
 8  II,     XVIII|   aside out of the somewhat narrow path of poetry and take
 9  II,     XXXII|  led by my star, follow the narrow path of knight-errantry,
10  II,     XXXII| those troughs are as bad as narrow thin-necked jars to him;
11  II,    XXXIII|    the prince travels by as narrow a path as the journeyman,'
12  II,      XLIV|    restricts himself to the narrow limits of the narrative,
13  II,    XLVIII|     Madrid, which is rather narrow, one of the alcaldes of
14  II,      LIII|      as, squeezed into that narrow compass, he lay, sweating
15  II,     LVIII|   restricted as I am by the narrow limits of my power, offer
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