Parte,  Chap.

1   I,        IV|        gone far, when out of a thicket on his right there seemed
2   I,      XXIV|       do."~ ~The Knight of the Thicket, hearing him of the Rueful
3   I,       XLI|  marvellous swiftness into the thicket in front of him, he began
4   I,         L|       brown, spring out of the thicket with a goatherd after it,
5  II,        IV|       ensconced ourselves in a thicket, and there, my master leaning
6  II,        IX| village they found a forest or thicket wherein Don Quixote ensconced
7  II,         X|       as he had got out of the thicket, and looking round saw that
8  II,     XXXIX|       countenace turned into a thicket? Oh duennas, companions
9  II,        LX|        overtaken by night in a thicket of oak or cork trees; for
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