Parte,  Chap.

  1   I,  TransPre|      remark in Chapter III that knights seldom travelled without
  2   I,       III|      this should not occur, the knights of old took care to see
  3   I,       III|       and when it happened that knights had no squires (which was
  4   I,        IV|           there may be Haldudos knights; moreover, everyone is the
  5   I,        VI|         book in the world. Here knights eat and sleep, and die in
  6   I,       VII|       out, "Here, here, valiant knights! here is need for you to
  7   I,       VII|         carelessly to allow the knights of the Court to gain the
  8   I,       VII|         fall to the lot of such knights in ways so unexampled and
  9   I,      VIII|         the forests and deserts knights used to lie sleepless supported
 10   I,      VIII| properly aid me; but if they be knights it is on no account permitted
 11   I,      VIII|     matter of aiding me against knights thou must put a restraint
 12   I,      XIII|        order of chivalry of the Knights of the Round Table was instituted,
 13   I,      XIII|          and what the aforesaid knights professed that same do I
 14   I,      XIII|      world, but we soldiers and knights carry into effect what they
 15   I,        XV|    friend Sancho, these are not knights but base folk of low birth:
 16   I,        XV|        men who where not dubbed knights like myself, and so I believe
 17   I,        XV|     heart's content, and if any knights come to their aid and defence
 18   I,        XV|      the case of many different knights with whose histories I am
 19   I,        XV|       this that there have been knights who have remained two years
 20   I,     XVIII| serviceable and good for dubbed knights only, and as for the squires,
 21   I,     XVIII|       some account of the chief knights who accompany these two
 22   I,     XVIII|      went on naming a number of knights of one squadron or the other
 23   I,     XVIII|         try if he could see the knights and giants his master was
 24   I,     XVIII|      went on shouting out, "Ho, knights, ye who follow and fight
 25   I,       XIX|        voice and said:~ ~"Halt, knights, or whosoever ye may be,
 26   I,       XIX|         distinctive name as all knights of yore did; one being '
 27   I,        XX|         he who is to revive the Knights of the Round Table, the
 28   I,        XX|     thinkest thou, one of those knights that take their rest in
 29   I,       XXI|      What ho! Forth all ye, the knights of my court, to receive
 30   I,     XXIII|       is that the verses of the knights of old have more spirit
 31   I,       XXV|      sun of valiant and devoted knights, whom all we who fight under
 32   I,       XXV|          said Sancho, "that the knights who behaved in this way
 33   I,      XXXI|         and ancient custom with knights and ladies errant to give
 34   I,      XXXI|  tidings of their ladies to the knights, or of their knights to
 35   I,      XXXI|        the knights, or of their knights to the ladies, some rich
 36   I,      XXXI|      take care of those valiant knights; so that, friend Sancho,
 37   I,      XXXI|   willing to accept them as her knights."~ ~"It is with that kind
 38   I,     XXXII|  furious and terrible blows the knights deliver, I am seized with
 39   I,     XXXII|       like, but the laments the knights utter when they are separated
 40   I,     XXXII|      cruel that they call their knights tigers and lions and a thousand
 41   I,     XXXII|     Thrace, or any of the other knights of the same sort, that the
 42   I,     XXXII|       there never were any such knights in the world, and no such
 43   I,     XXXII|      when they say those famous knights roamed about the world."~ ~
 44   I,    XXXIII|    vanquish a squadron of armed knights; judge whether he had good
 45   I,    XXXVII|        found at every turn that knights of less renown than mine
 46   I,     XXXIX|      Maltese galley (only three knights being left alive in it,
 47   I,     XLIII|       loud and imperious tone, "Knights, or squires, or whatever
 48   I,       XLV|   Perhaps as you are not dubbed knights like myself, the enchantments
 49   I,     XLVII|     such things never happen to knights of little renown and fame,
 50   I,     XLVII|   thinks about them; to valiant knights they do, for these are envied
 51   I,     XLVII|       by many princes and other knights who compass the destruction
 52   I,     XLVII|       how a great tower full of knights sails away across the sea
 53   I,      XLIX|        that multitude of famous knights, all those emperors of Trebizond,
 54   I,      XLIX|     Greece, or any other of the knights of whom the books are full."~ ~"
 55   I,      XLIX|   Pierres, and a Cid, and other knights like them, of the sort people
 56   I,      XLIX|       achievements of Christian knights of these and foreign realms,
 57   I,      XLIX|         the matter is they were knights chosen by the kings of France,
 58   I,      XLIX|         who take it are valiant knights of distinction and good
 59   I,      XLIX|        of all that multitude of knights they tell us about, nor
 60   I,         L|   performed by such a knight or knights! Hush, sir; utter not such
 61   I,       LII|         is that there should be knights in the world professing
 62  II,         I|         of the humble. With the knights of these days, for the most
 63  II,         I|         Cosmography.' All these knights, and many more that I could
 64  II,         I|       that there ever were such knights in the world, and I have
 65  II,        IV|        win renown above all the knights of Aragon, which would be
 66  II,        IV|        winning it above all the knights of the world. He commended
 67  II,        VI|    Majesty's court are there no knights?"~ ~"There are," replied
 68  II,        VI|          said Don Quixote, "all knights cannot be courtiers, nor
 69  II,        VI|        and though we may be all knights, there is a great difference
 70  II,      VIII|      besides Christians, famous knights. Such, Sancho, are the means
 71  II,      VIII|         and all those venturous knights that you say are now dead-where
 72  II,      VIII|     religion, there are sainted knights in glory."~ ~"Yes," said
 73  II,      VIII|   orders are more numerous than knights."~ ~"The errants are many,"
 74  II,      VIII|         who deserve the name of knights."~ ~With these, and other
 75  II,        XI|        and presented giants and knights of the power of recognising
 76  II,       XII|      kings, emperors, pontiffs, knights, ladies, and divers other
 77  II,       XII|        I have compelled all the knights of Navarre, all the Leonese,
 78  II,       XII| Castilians, and finally all the knights of La Mancha, to confess
 79  II,      XIII|         THE TWO SQUIRES~ ~ ~The knights and the squires made two
 80  II,      XIII|       drunken vagaries of these knights, and go back to my village,
 81  II,       XIV|    entrusted to porters than to knights. Again, she bade me fling
 82  II,       XIV|        there vanquished several knights who have dared to contradict
 83  II,       XIV|       to have conquered all the knights in the world; for this Don
 84  II,       XIV|   having vanquished most of the knights of Spain, or even of the
 85  II,       XIV|       as it is not becoming for knights to perform their feats of
 86  II,       XVI|          that I am one of those knights who, as people say, go seeking
 87  II,      XVII|       tournament, and all those knights show to advantage that entertain,
 88  II,      XVII|      with some city damsel. All knights have their own special parts
 89  II,     XXIII|         true lovers and valiant knights of his time. He is held
 90  II,     XXIII|       and the two nieces to the knights of a very holy order called
 91  II,     XXIII|         even though they be not knights, but especially to those
 92  II,      XXXI|      way as he had read of such knights being treated in days of
 93  II,     XXXII|  squires' beards too as well as knights'. For by God and upon my
 94  II,     XXXII|          they used to treat the knights of old.~ ~ ~ ~
 95  II,      XXXV|         deeds of doughty errant knights,~ Who are, and ever have
 96  II,     XXXVI|       with his own eyes whether knights of the sort are needed in
 97  II,   XXXVIII|       in one, the whole host of knights that have ever borne arms
 98  II,     XXXIX|       are made, so of gentlemen knights, specially if they be errant,
 99  II,       XLI|        which was big with armed knights, who were afterwards the
100  II,      XLVI|       Courtiers gay and gallant knights,~ With the wanton damsels
101  II,       LII|      arms the customary ones of knights, lance and shield and full
102  II,     LVIII|       of the bravest saints and knights the world ever had or heaven
103  II,     LVIII|      have; for these saints and knights were of the same profession
104  II,     LVIII|       travellers and wayfarers, knights, squires, folk on foot or
105  II,      LXIV|    other way out of it, gallant knights, except to confess or die,
106  II,    LXVIII|       the squires of vanquished knights, and lice eat them, and
107  II,    LXVIII|    squires were the sons of the knights we serve, or their very
108  II,     LXXIV|        it is a common thing for knights to upset one another, and
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