Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,        IV|          but a few paces into the wood, when he saw a mare tied
 2   I,        IV|           that he had cleared the wood and was no longer in sight,
 3   I,         V|         the wounded knight of the wood is said to have uttered:~ ~
 4   I,         X|          the coach, turned into a wood that was hard by. Sancho
 5   I,       XIV|       into the thickest part of a wood that was hard by, leaving
 6   I,        XV|       squire passed into the same wood which they had seen the
 7   I,        XV|          it be in fact a piece of wood, it cannot be said for that
 8   I,       XXV|          all human beauty! Oh, ye wood nymphs and dryads, that
 9   I,      XXXI|        days ago passing through a wood, I heard cries and piteous
10   I,      XXXI|     worship had passed out of the wood and we were alone, he tied
11   I,        XL|           them to work and go for wood, which is no light labour.~ ~
12   I,     XLIII|      looked as if he were made of wood, he could not help giving
13   I,         L|         to get by accident into a wood so thick that they cannot
14  II,         I|         one now, issuing from the wood, penetrates yonder mountains,
15  II,        IX|    Quixote and Sancho quitted the wood and entered El Toboso. The
16  II,         X|         the forest, oak grove, or wood near El Toboso, he bade
17  II,         X|         time they had cleared the wood, and saw the three village
18  II,       XIV|     Quixote and the Knight of the Wood, the history tells us he
19  II,       XXX|        sunset, on coming out of a wood, Don Quixote cast his eyes
20  II,     XXXIV|        and at last they reached a wood that lay between two high
21  II,     XXXIV|      pitched in the middle of the wood, where they found the tables
22  II,     XXXIV|          out of the tent into the wood, and the day was spent in
23  II,     XXXIV|        set in, suddenly the whole wood on all four sides seemed
24  II,     XXXIV|          were passing through the wood. The blaze of the fire and
25  II,     XXXIV|     indeed of all who were in the wood. Then there were heard repeated
26  II,     XXXIV|         to be passing through the wood?"~ ~To which the courier
27  II,     XXXIV|         began to flit through the wood, just as those fiery exhalations
28  II,     XXXIV|          on all four sides of the wood, four encounters or battles
29  II,        XL| accordance with his being made of wood, with the peg he has in
30  II,       XLI|        were more like marble than wood. On this the Trifaldi observed
31  II,       LII|           peck that I went to the wood to gather and pick out one
32  II,     LVIII|        making their way through a wood that lay beyond the road,
33  II,      LXII|         follows. The table was of wood painted and varnished to
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