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he was a some tall trees, chestnuts, which cast a very deep shade; he
perceived likewise that the sound of the strokes did not cease, but could
not discover what caused it, and so without any further delay he let
Rocinante feel the spur, and onceleave of Sancho, he told
him to wait for him there three days at most, as he had said before, and
if he should not have returned by that tiht feel sure it had
been God's will that he should end his days in that perilous adventure
He again repeated the o on
his behalf to his lady Dulcinea, and said he was not to be uneasy as to
the pay home he had made his
will, in which he would find hies in due proportion to the time he had served; but if God delivered
hiht look upon the
proan to weep afresh on
again hearing the affecting words of his good master, and resolved to
stay with him until the final issue and end of the business From these
tears and this honourable resolve of Sancho Panza's the author of this
history infers that he ood birth and at least an old
Christian; and the feeling he displayed touched his but not so much as to
what he felt as well
as he could, he began to move towards that quarter whence the sound of
the water and of the strokes seemed to come