Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|           to receive two thousand blows of the stick, a number which
 2   I,        IV|           as a setoff against the blows you have given him without
 3   I,         V|     already battered to pieces by blows, he wiped his face, which
 4   I,         V|    Quixote less so, for what with blows and bruises he could not
 5   I,      VIII|         in suspense the result of blows such as threatened to fall,
 6   I,        IX|         two such furious slashing blows that if they had fallen
 7   I,        XV| uneasiness, which the pain of the blows does, for they will remain
 8   I,       XVI|         this had more the look of blows than of a fall.~ ~It was
 9   I,       XVI|           of a fall.~ ~It was not blows, Sancho said, but that the
10   I,        XX|            the din and clatter of blows, which still continued without
11   I,        XX|           of the water and of the blows, but quieting him Don Quixote
12   I,        XX|       pike and smote him two such blows that if, instead of catching
13   I,        XX|         know what they give after blows, unless it be that knights-errant
14   I,        XX|         that knights-errant after blows give islands, or kingdoms
15   I,      XXII|           it struck three or four blows on his shoulders, and as
16   I,     XXIII|           it from them by dint of blows; but when he is in his senses
17   I,       XXX|          returned, "because those blows just now were more because
18   I,     XXXII|         what furious and terrible blows the knights deliver, I am
19   I,     XXXII|     hearing it; but it is not the blows that my father likes that
20   I,    XXXIII|      hammer, and by mere force of blows and strength of arm try
21   I,    XXXIII|           What you cannot mend to blows; What you can't make whole
22  II,         V|         the favouring breeze that blows upon us."~ ~It is this sort
23  II,        XI|           than by the pain of the blows, made him fly across the
24  II,        XI|         would have rather had the blows fall on the apples of his
25  II,      XIII|         except with the wind that blows."~ ~"All that," said he
26  II,       XIV|          and we will fight at bag blows with equal arms."~ ~"If
27  II,      XVII|       think it prudent to come to blows with a madman, for such
28  II,      XXVI|         fury began to shower down blows on the puppet troop of Moors,
29  II,     XLVII|          a cudgel, and by dint of blows, beginning with him, I'll
30  II,      XLIX|         this island?"~ ~"Where it blows."~ ~"Good! your answers
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