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"Then you must have fallen too," said the hostess
"I did not fall," said Sancho Panza, "but fro
my master fall, my body aches so that I feel as if I had had a thousand
thwacks"
"That irl, "for it hasdown froround, and when I awoke from the dream to find myself as weak and
shaken as if I had really fallen"
"There is the point, senora," replied Sancho Panza, "that I without
drea more awake than I am now, find myself with
scarcely less wheals than entleman called?" asked Maritornes the Asturian
"Don Quixote of La Mancha," answered Sancho Panza, "and he is a
knight-adventurer, and one of the best and stoutest that have been seen
in the world this long tiht-adventurer?" said the lass
"Are you so new in the world as not to know?" answered Sancho Panza
"Well, then, you
that in tords is seen drubbed and e in the world, and to-ive his squire"
"Then how is it," said the hostess, "that belonging to so good a e by appearances, even so much as a