Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,        XI|      houses supported by rude stakes, a protection against the
 2   I,        XV|    came running up armed with stakes, and so belaboured him that
 3   I,        XV|    betook themselves to their stakes, and driving the two into
 4   I,        XV|     may be seen how furiously stakes can pound in angry boorish
 5   I,        XV|       nothing more than their stakes, and not one of them, so
 6   I,      XVII| stretched "in the vale of the stakes," he began calling to him
 7   I,      XVII|      that the drubbing of the stakes was cakes and fancy-bread
 8   I,         L|      to listen."~ ~"I draw my stakes," said Sancho, "and will
 9  II,        IV|   come and prop me up on four stakes, which he put under the
10  II,        IV|      the moment I stirred the stakes gave way and I fell to the
11  II,       XVI|  Yanguesans and the shower of stakes that fell upon him; in short,
12  II,      LXXI|    Quixote; "for I double the stakes as to price."~ ~"In that
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