Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,    XXXVII|        yellow buskins and had a Moorish cutlass slung from a baldric
 2   I,    XXXVII|         came a woman dressed in Moorish fashion, with her face veiled
 3   I,    XXXVII|      heard him, to know who the Moorish lady and the captive were,
 4   I,    XXXVII|        lives. Dorothea took the Moorish lady by the hand and leading
 5   I,    XXXVII|  compare with theirs it was the Moorish lady's, and there were even
 6   I,        XL|       and these, as is usual in Moorish houses, were rather loopholes
 7   I,        XL|     here in Spanish is what the Moorish paper contains, and you
 8   I,        XL|         advisable to answer the Moorish lady's letter, and the renegade
 9   I,        XL|      the answer returned to the Moorish lady:~ ~"The true Allah
10   I,        XL|       in order to carry off the Moorish lady and bring us all to
11   I,        XL|        board; especially if the Moorish lady gave, as she said,
12   I,        XL|  Majorca for the vessel, as the Moorish lady suggested, we did not
13   I,       XLI| renegade, together with the two Moorish lads that rowed, used purposely
14   I,       XLI|     been able to do so; for the Moorish women do not allow themselves
15   I,       XLI|     house in the garden, and as Moorish women are by no means particular
16   I,       XLI|    display and adornment of the Moorish women is decking themselves
17   I,       XLI|        to make prisoners of the Moorish rowers who rowed in the
18   I,       XLI|         expedition. We gave the Moorish rowers some food, and the
19   I,       XLI|     Zoraida, and seeing them in Moorish dress he imagined that all
20  II,        II|        Berengena."~ ~"That is a Moorish name," said Don Quixote.~ ~"
21  II,       XVI|         and green. He carried a Moorish cutlass hanging from a broad
22  II,      XXII|      which must be worse than a Moorish dungeon."~ ~"Tie me and
23  II,      XXVI|         that balcony dressed in Moorish fashion is the peerless
24  II,     XXXIV|      hand, and farther away the Moorish lelilies were raised again
25  II,     LXIII|         man, I dressed him as a Moorish woman, and that same afternoon
26  II,     LXIII|     placed in the house of some Moorish ladies of rank who would
27  II,     LXIII|     that bound the hands of the Moorish girl.~ ~But all the while
28  II,      LXIV|       off in spite of the whole Moorish host, as Don Gaiferos carried
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License