Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|     1580, after a captivity of five years all but a week, Cervantes
 2   I,        II|  sounded his reed pipe four or five times, and thereby completely
 3   I,      VIII|      coach attended by four or five persons on horseback and
 4   I,      XIII|    balconies of the east, when five of the six goatherds came
 5   I,     XVIII|             I say four, if not five," answered Don Quixote, "
 6   I,       XXI|        for I mean, with all my five senses, to keep myself from
 7   I,       XXI|  property, and entitled to the five hundred sueldos mulct; and
 8   I,      XXII| unconcernedly, "I am going for five years to their ladyships
 9   I,     XXIII| exchange ordering three out of five ass-colts that he had at
10   I,       XXV|        understand with all thy five senses that everything I
11   I,       XXV|        my squire, three of the five I left at home in your charge:
12   I,      XXVI|       ass-colts out of four or five he had at home;" and he
13   I,     XXXII|     single backstroke he cleft five giants asunder through the
14   I,     XXXII|     did not know how many make five, and where my shoe pinches
15   I,        XL|      at once gave the renegade five hundred crowns to buy the
16   I,       XLI|       I had given one thousand five hundred zoltanis for me;
17  II,        IV|         and if he made them of five, what they called decimas
18  II,         V|      me in my seven senses, or five, or whatever number I have,
19  II,     XVIII|         But first of all, with five or six buckets of water (
20  II,     XXIII|         and although more than five hundred have gone by, not
21  II,      XXVI|       be much if I were to ask five reals and a quarter."~ ~"
22  II,      XXVI|          make it even, and say five reals."~ ~"Let him have
23  II,      XXVI|         Let him have the whole five and a quarter," said Don
24  II,     XXVII|        one's country. To these five, as it were capital causes,
25  II,      XXIX|    eyes that we have not moved five yards away from the bank,
26  II,     XXXII|      habit of sleeping four or five hours in the heat of the
27  II,     XXXVI|     had, and had given himself five lashes overnight.~ ~The
28  II,     XXXVI|     three hundred lashes, less five, that I'm to give myself,
29  II,        XL|     the Distressed One, "it is five thousand leagues, a couple
30  II,       XLI|     give thyself if it be only five hundred lashes on account
31  II,       XLV|         until we got as far as five. He has just this moment
32  II,       XLV|      worship make him show the five caps he has made me?"~ ~"
33  II,       XLV|      under his cloak he showed five caps stuck upon the five
34  II,       XLV|       five caps stuck upon the five fingers of it, and said, "
35  II,      XLVI|       so dear, for it cost him five days of confinement to his
36  II,    XLVIII|       serves me, sixteen years five months and three days, one
37  II,       LIV|       might have vied with the five others. They then began
38  II,        LX|      he had only given himself five lashes, a number paltry
39  II,       LXV|        would not take any save five which Don Antonio lent him
40  II,    LXVIII|       on horseback and four or five on foot. Don Quixote's heart
41  II,      LXIX|    were burning, besides above five hundred lamps in the corridors,
42  II,      LXXI|      these I have given myself five, the rest remain; let the
43  II,      LXXI|       the rest remain; let the five go for the odd ones, and
44  II,      LXXI|      thousand are one thousand five hundred half reals, which
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