Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,   Commend|         erudition to bestow,~ Or black Latino's gift of tongues,~
 2   I,        II|          and a piece of bread as black and mouldy as his own armour;
 3   I,      VIII|        ever been seen, for those black bodies we see there must
 4   I,      XIII|         six shepherds dressed in black sheepskins and with their
 5   I,      XIII|        all clad in sheepskins of black wool, and crowned with garlands
 6   I,       XIX|         litter covered over with black and followed by six more
 7   I,        XX|         master by as much as the black of his nail; to escape doing
 8   I,     XXIII|         was unclad, with a thick black beard, long tangled hair,
 9   I,     XXVII|       him a cloth petticoat with black velvet stripes a palm broad,
10   I,     XXVII|         forehead with a strip of black silk, while with another
11   I,      XXIX|         for vassals would be all black; but for this he soon found
12   I,      XXIX|          and let them be ever so black I'll turn them into white
13   I,      XXIX|         of his own he gave him a black cloak, leaving himself in
14   I,      XXXI|       may be able to ship off my black vassals and deal with them
15   I,     XXXVI|       and bucklers, and all with black veils, and with them there
16   I,       XLV|       being one as white is from black, and truth from falsehood;
17   I,         L|       Fays that lie beneath this black expanse;' and then the knight,
18   I,         L| beautiful goat, spotted all over black, white, and brown, spring
19   I,       LII|          that an image draped in black they had with them was some
20   I,       LII|        and releasing the lady in black that he did not hear a word;
21  II,         I|           with a handsome though black beard, of a countenance
22  II,        II|         own shoes and darn their black stockings with green silk."~ ~"
23  II,        IV|        not try to make out white black, and black white; for each
24  II,        IV|        make out white black, and black white; for each of us is
25  II,         X|       for another, and white for black, and black for white, as
26  II,         X|         and white for black, and black for white, as was seen when
27  II,         X|          with a white stone or a black?"~ ~"Your worship," replied
28  II,       XIV|         rather hooked, and large black drooping moustaches; he
29  II,       XXI|        what seemed to be a loose black coat garnished with crimson
30  II,     XXIII|          and covering his head a black Milanese bonnet, and his
31  II,     XXIII|       seemed to be, also clad in black, with a white veil so long
32  II,      XXIV|        free and get rid of their black slaves when they are old
33  II,     XXXIV|   plodding oxen all covered with black housings; on each horn they
34  II,     XXXIV|        dressed in a long robe of black buckram; for as the cart
35  II,      XXXV|          head was covered with a black veil. But the instant the
36  II,     XXXVI|         others will say they are black. I shall leave this in a
37  II,     XXXVI|          were likewise draped in black, and beside them came the
38  II,     XXXVI|       them came the fife player, black and sombre like the others.
39  II,     XXXVI|         in a gown of the deepest black, the skirt of which was
40  II,     XXXVI|     broad baldric which was also black, and from which hung a huge
41  II,     XXXVI|      hung a huge scimitar with a black scabbard and furniture.
42  II,     XXXVI|       covered with a transparent black veil, through which might
43  II,   XXXVIII|      clad in the finest unnapped black baize, such that, had it
44  II,   XXXVIII|         faces being covered with black veils, not transparent ones
45  II,     XXXIX|      with beards, some red, some black, some white, and some grizzled,
46  II,     XLIII|        on the spot; for the mere black of the nail of my soul is
47  II,    XLVIII|    behind him on a stout mule as black as jet! for in those days
48  II,       LII|        the matter, the ladies in black withdrew, and the duchess
49  II,       LIV|    sucking. They also put down a black dainty called, they say,
50  II,    LXVIII|         leaves the mountains all black and the valleys in darkness.
51  II,      LXIX|          by an immense canopy of black velvet, and on the steps
52  II,      LXIX|         threw over him a robe of black buckram painted all over
53  II,       LXX|     leaning upon a staff of fine black ebony. Don Quixote, disconcerted
54  II,       LXX|         not the woman to let the black of my nail suffer for such
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