Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|           who had just uttered so beautiful a sentiment as that "it
 2   I,      VIII|       captive to the peerless and beautiful lady Dulcinea del Toboso:
 3   I,       XII|          God that had made her so beautiful, and the greater number
 4   I,       XII|           over these and all, the beautiful Marcela triumphs free and
 5   I,       XIV|           shepherdess Marcela, so beautiful that her beauty exceeded
 6   I,       XIV|          has made me, so you say, beautiful, and so much so that in
 7   I,       XIV|         me I know that everything beautiful attracts love, but I cannot
 8   I,       XIV|        the lover of that which is beautiful may be ugly, and ugliness
 9   I,       XIV|        love thee because thou art beautiful, thou must love me though
10   I,       XIV|           there is an infinity of beautiful objects there must be an
11   I,       XIV|           ugly, as it has made me beautiful, could I with justice complain
12   I,       XIV|        deserve reproach for being beautiful; for beauty in a modest
13   I,       XIV|          has no right to pass for beautiful; but if modesty is one of
14   I,       XIV|     condition, dare to follow the beautiful Marcela, under pain of incurring
15   I,      XVII|           is the most elegant and beautiful damsel that could be found
16   I,     XVIII|         Pentapolin, who is a very beautiful and moreover gracious lady,
17   I,       XXI|           will be one of the most beautiful and accomplished damsels
18   I,       XXI|        pagan, is at war and has a beautiful daughter; but there will
19   I,       XXI|           who is at war and has a beautiful daughter, and that I have
20   I,      XXIV|           parents, and herself so beautiful, modest, discreet, and virtuous,
21   I,      XXIV|        declare her to be the most beautiful and the most intelligent
22   I,       XXV|           besides being extremely beautiful, she was very wise, and
23   I,     XXVII|          the hour of noon, a very beautiful lady called to him from
24   I,     XXVII|        also unable to resist that beautiful lady's tears, I resolved
25   I,    XXVIII|           he had done bathing his beautiful feet, he wiped them with
26   I,    XXVIII|        lovely woman, nay the most beautiful the eyes of two of them
27   I,    XXVIII|          to hear ourselves called beautiful) but that my own sense of
28   I,      XXIX|          great eagerness who this beautiful lady was, and what she wanted
29   I,    XXXIII|         love with a high-born and beautiful maiden of the same city,
30   I,    XXXIII|        whom heaven had bestowed a beautiful wife should consider as
31   I,    XXXIII|           the house of a woman so beautiful as Camilla, should be regarded
32   I,    XXXIII|           the more so if they are beautiful, however chaste they may
33   I,    XXXVII|          Dorothea she seemed more beautiful than Luscinda, and to Luscinda
34   I,    XXXVII|    Luscinda, and to Luscinda more beautiful than Dorothea, and all the
35   I,        XL|         gentleman. I am young and beautiful, and have plenty of money
36   I,        XL|        city that she was the most beautiful woman in Barbary, and that
37   I,       XLI|       adorned she would have been beautiful or not, and what she must
38   I,       XLI|          splendour, and supremely beautiful; at any rate, she seemed
39   I,       XLI|         she seemed to me the most beautiful object I had ever seen;
40   I,       XLI|        there."~ ~"And is the lady beautiful to whom thou hast given
41   I,       XLI|          it?" said Zoraida.~ ~"So beautiful," said I, "that, to describe
42   I,       XLI|       Christian, she must be very beautiful if she is like my daughter,
43   I,       XLI|         daughter, who is the most beautiful woman in all this kingdom:
44   I,       XLI|         herself before us all, so beautiful and so richly attired that
45   I,       XLI|         that there was not a more beautiful creature in the world-at
46   I,      XLII|          such a high-bred air, so beautiful and so graceful, that all
47   I,      XLII|      would rescue thee thence! Oh beautiful and generous Zoraida, that
48   I,         L|           instant they observed a beautiful goat, spotted all over black,
49   I,        LI|           her. As a child she was beautiful, she continued to grow in
50  II,       VII|        then, my lord Don Quixote, beautiful and brave, let your worship
51  II,       XII|          to confess thee the most beautiful in the world?"~ ~"Not so,"
52  II,       XIV|          that my Casildea is more beautiful than his Dulcinea; and in
53  II,        XX|          dress, mounted on twelve beautiful mares with rich handsome
54  II,       XXI|          he had never seen a more beautiful woman. The fair Quiteria
55  II,     XXIII|          in the midst of the most beautiful, delightful meadow that
56  II,     XXIII|   somewhat ill-favoured or not so beautiful as fame reported her, it
57  II,      XXVI| satisfaction with the gallant and beautiful burden he bears in his lord
58  II,       XXX|       Dulcinea del Toboso is very beautiful; but the hare jumps up where
59  II,     XXXII|      famous throughout the world, beautiful without blemish, dignified
60  II,     XXXII|          is in the highest degree beautiful as you have described her
61  II,     XXXII|           to-day, and that she is beautiful and nobly born and deserves
62  II,      XXXV|   something more than exceedingly beautiful; and with a masculine freedom
63  II,      XXXV|       what I thought, that she is beautiful after all. It must be a
64  II,      XLIV|            four of my damsels, as beautiful as flowers, shall wait upon
65  II,      XLIV|       window that looked out on a beautiful garden, and as he did so
66  II,      XLIV|          For me Dulcinea alone is beautiful, wise, virtuous, graceful,
67  II,      XLIX|      report says she is extremely beautiful."~ ~"It is true," said the
68  II,      XLIX|         and might pass for a very beautiful young girl), to-night, about
69  II,       LVI|        she struck him as the most beautiful woman he had ever seen all
70  II,     LVIII|      clearly enough that I am not beautiful, but at the same time I
71  II,      LXII|        what shall I do to be very beautiful?" and the answer she got
72  II,     LXIII|           a woman, be she ever so beautiful. The king immediately ordered
73  II,      LXIX|        she made death itself look beautiful. She lay with her head resting
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