Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre| borrowings from Phillips, whose mode of treatment it adopts.
 2   I,      XXIV|      what seemed to me the best mode of winning my desired and
 3   I,     XXVII|   bringing him back to a better mode of life and inducing him
 4   I,    XXXIII|        holy religion. This same mode of proceeding I shall have
 5   I,       XLV|        understand Don Quixote's mode of speaking, and found themselves
 6   I,        LI|       mountains and adopted our mode of life, and they are so
 7  II,       XVI|    could he discover any means, mode, or way of disenchanting
 8  II,      XXII|         might ask it, as to the mode in which he should seek
 9  II,     XLIII|      say:~ ~"With regard to the mode in which thou shouldst govern
10  II,     XLIII|         never think of this new mode of giving liveries.~ ~"Eat
11  II,     LVIII|     your beauty. I commend your mode of entertainment, and thank
12  II,        LX|         urged them to give up a mode of life so full of peril,
13  II,        LX|    truth I must own there is no mode of life more restless or
14  II,       LXI|    observe and wonder at in his mode of life. At daybreak they
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