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Nor was Don Quixote less so, for ith blows and bruises he could not
sit upright on the ass, and frohs to heaven,
so that once more he drove the peasant to ask what ailed him And it
could have been only the devil himself that put into his head tales to
Baldwin, he bethought
himself of the Moor Abindarraez, when the Alcaide of Antequera, Rodrigo
de Narvaez, took him prisoner and carried hiain asked hiave
him for reply the saave to Rodrigo de Narvaez, just as he had read the story in the "Diana"
of Jorge de Monte it to his own case
so aptly that the peasant went along cursing his fate that he had to
listen to such a lot of nonsense; frohbour was e to escape the wearisoue of Don Quixote's;
who, at the end of it, said, "Senor Don Rodrigo de Narvaez, your worship
must know that this fair Xarifa I have mentioned is now the lovely
Dulcinea del Toboso, for who, and will do the most
famous deeds of chivalry that in this world have been seen, are to be
seen, or ever shall be seen"
To this the peasant answered, "Senor--sinner that I ao de Narvaez nor the Marquis of
Mantua, but Pedro Alonso your neighbour, and that your worship is neither