Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|       another, apparently, the friendship of his general.~ ~How severely
 2   I,   AuthPre|    Regumque turres.~ ~If it be friendship and the love God bids us
 3   I,        XI|        Then all was peace, all friendship, all concord; as yet the
 4   I,      XIII|   gentle bearing, a phoenix in friendship, generous without limit,
 5   I,      XIII|         and we know, too, your friendship, and the cause of his death,
 6   I,      XIII|        and the loyalty of your friendship, together with the end awaiting
 7   I,      XXIV|        Fernando had grown into friendship, he made all his thoughts
 8   I,      XXIV|       Bound to him as I was by friendship, I strove by the best arguments
 9   I,      XXIV|    that in virtue of the great friendship he bore me I was bound to
10   I,     XXVII|          When heavenward, holy Friendship, thou didst go~ Soaring
11   I,     XXVII|        bright as virtue show.~ Friendship, return to us, or force
12   I,    XXXIII|     account for the reciprocal friendship between them. Anselmo, it
13   I,    XXXIII|        though true and genuine friendship cannot and should not be
14   I,    XXXIII|       injustice to their great friendship in seeking circuitous methods
15   I,    XXXIII|       and with the loyalty our friendship assures me of."~ ~Such were
16   I,    XXXIII|     will not make use of their friendship in things that are contrary
17   I,    XXXIII|        heathen's feeling about friendship, how much more should it
18   I,    XXXIII|      for the sake of any human friendship? And if a friend should
19   I,    XXXIII|     pernicious desire; but the friendship I bear thee, which will
20   I,    XXXIII|       wholly inconsistent with friendship; and not only dost thou
21   I,    XXXIII|        my own position and thy friendship. That thou wouldst have
22   I,    XXXIII|       to be, though I lose thy friendship, the greatest loss that
23   I,    XXXIII|     and the perfection of true friendship thou hast reached; and likewise
24   I,    XXXIII|        wilt have done what our friendship binds thee to do, not only
25   I,     XXXIV|         but what wonder if the friendship of Lothario could not stand
26   I,     XXXIV|       fidelity and their great friendship left no room for fear. Had
27   I,     XXXIV| Lothario, as I expected of thy friendship: I will follow thy advice
28   I,     XXXIV|        the falsest friend that friendship ever saw in the world;"
29   I,     XXXIV|       thou too knowest, of our friendship, that I may not compel myself
30   I,     XXXIV|      and the holy laws of true friendship, now broken and violated
31   I,      XXXV|  seeing the great and intimate friendship that existed between them,
32   I,        XL|     who professed a very great friendship for me, and had given pledges
33   I,     XLVII|        treachery of Sinon, the friendship of Euryalus, the generosity
34  II,       VII|     the latter, as the laws of friendship required. Don Quixote promised
35  II,       XII|      and Rocinante there was a friendship so unequalled and so strong,
36  II,       XII|   record that he likened their friendship to that of Nisus and Euryalus,
37  II,       XII|       of mankind, how firm the friendship must have been between these
38  II,       XII|    astray when he compared the friendship of these animals to that
39  II,       XVI|    bachelor, in order that the friendship I bear him should interpose
40  II,     LXIII|      the voyage he struck up a friendship with my two uncles who were
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