Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,   Commend|         Latin let thy pages show.~ Ape not philosophy or wit,~
 2  II,       XXV|        DIVINATIONS OF THE DIVINING APE~ ~ ~Don Quixote's bread
 3  II,       XXV|          room? Here's the divining ape and the show of the Release
 4  II,       XXV|       landlord; "but where are the ape and the show, for I don'
 5  II,       XXV|            landlord; "bring in the ape and the show; there's company
 6  II,       XXV|          and the cleverness of the ape." "So be it by all means,"
 7  II,       XXV|         hurry on the cart with the ape and the show;" and with
 8  II,       XXV|          the show and what was the ape he had with him; which the
 9  II,       XXV|            he has also with him an ape with the most extraordinary
10  II,       XXV| extraordinary gift ever seen in an ape or imagined in a human being;
11  II,       XXV|          for every question if the ape answers; I mean if his master
12  II,       XXV|         all by his tongue, and his ape, and his show."~ ~Master
13  II,       XXV|            but he answered for the ape and said, "Senor, this animal
14  II,       XXV|        tell me, most excellent sir ape, what is my wife Teresa
15  II,       XXV|            and with one spring the ape perched himself upon it,
16  II,       XXV|           page, "I would ask senor ape what will happen me in the
17  II,       XXV|        with the divinations of the ape, as he did not think it
18  II,       XXV|            think it proper that an ape should divine anything,
19  II,       XXV|       seriously thinking over this ape's extraordinary gift, and
20  II,       XXV|         infuse this power into the ape, that he may get his living,
21  II,       XXV|      believe by observing that the ape only answers about things
22  II,       XXV|          is, it is clear that this ape speaks by the spirit of
23  II,       XXV|         because it is certain this ape is not an astrologer; neither
24  II,       XXV|          make Master Pedro ask his ape whether what happened your
25  II,       XXV|          and begged him to ask his ape at once to tell him whether
26  II,       XXV|             went back to fetch the ape, and, having placed it in
27  II,       XXV|             said: "See here, senor ape, this gentleman wishes to
28  II,       XXV|          making the usual sign the ape mounted on his left shoulder
29  II,       XXV|           Pedro said at once, "The ape says that the things you
30  II,      XXVI|         thrown into confusion, the ape fled to the roof of the
31  II,      XXVI|           and above all without my ape, for, by my faith, my teeth
32  II,      XXVI|            trouble in catching the ape.~ ~"Let him have them, Sancho,"
33  II,      XXVI|         Quixote; "not to catch the ape, but to get drunk; and two
34  II,      XXVI|        tell us that better than my ape," said Master Pedro; "but
35  II,      XXVI|            his show and caught his ape, he too went off to seek
36  II,     XXVII|           WHO MASTER PEDRO AND HIS APE WERE, TOGETHER WITH THE
37  II,     XXVII|          and what was the divining ape that astonished all the
38  II,     XXVII|            happened, he bought the ape, which he taught to mount
39  II,     XXVII|        bound with his show and his ape, he used to inform himself
40  II,     XXVII|         the accomplishments of his ape, assuring the public that
41  II,     XXVII|         would make the sign to the ape and then declare that it
42  II,     XXVII|        pressed him to tell how his ape divined, he made fools of
43  II,     XXVII|           for Master Pedro and his ape; and now to return to Don
44  II,      XXIX|          for though Master Pedro's ape had told him that of those
45  II,     XXXIX|          she being changed into an ape of brass, and he into a
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