tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">XLIII
Of the Second Set of Counsels Don Quixote Gave Sancho Panza |
255 |
| XLIV |
How Sancho Panza Was Conducted to His Government; and of the Strange Adventure That Befell Don Quixote in the Castle |
257 |
| XLV |
Of How the Great Sancho Panza Took Possession of His Island; and of How He Made a Beginning in Governing |
259 |
| XLVI |
Of the Terrible Bell and Cat Fright That Don Quixote Got in the Course of the Enamored Altisidora's Wooing |
260 |
| XLVII |
Wherein Is Continued the Account of How Sancho Panza Conducted Himself in His Government |
263 |
| XLVIII-XVIX |
Of What Happened to Sancho in Making the Round of His Island |
265 |
| L |
Wherein Is Set Forth How Governor Sancho Panza's Wife Received a Message and a Gift from the Duchess; and Also What Befell the Page Who Carried the Letter to Teresa Panza |
267 |
| LI |
Of the Progress of Sancho's Government; and Other Such Entertaining Matters |
271 |
| LII |
Wherein Three Delectable Epistles Are Read By the Duchess |
273 |
| LIII |
Of the Troublous End and Termination of Sancho Panza's Government |
275 |
| LIV-LV |
Of What Befell Sancho on the Road; and Other Things That Cannot Be Surpassed |
280 |
| LVI-LVII |
Which Treats of How Don Quixote Again Felt the Calling of Knight-errantry and How He Took Leave of the Duke, and of What Followed with the Witty and Impudent Altisidora, One of the Duchess' Damsels |
284 |
| LVIII |
Which Tells How Adventures Came Crowding on Don Quixote in Such Numbers That They Gave One Another No Breathing-Time |
286 |
| LIX |
Wherein Is Related the Strange Thing, Which May Be Regarded as an Adventure, That Happened to Don Quixote |
292 |
| LX |
Of What Happened to Don Quixote on His Way to Barcelona |
297 |
| LXI |
Of What Happened to Don Quixote on Entering Barcelona, Together with Other Matters That Partake of the True Rather Than the Ingenious |
303 |
| LXII |
Which Deals with the Adventure of the Enchanted Head, Together with Other Trivial Matters Which Cannot Be Left Untold |
305 |
| LXIII |
The Mishap That Befell Sancho Panza Through the Visit to the Galleys |
310 |
| LXIV |
Treating of the Adventure Which Gave Don Quixote More Unhappiness Than All That Had Hitherto Befallen Him |
313 |
| LXV |
Wherein Is Made Known Who the Knight of the White Moon Was; Likewise Other Events |
316 |
| LXVI-LXVII |
Of the Resolution Which Don Quixote Formed to Turn Shepherd and Take to a Life in the Fields While the Year for Which He Had Given His Word Was Running Its Course; with Other Events Truly Delectable and Happy |
317 |
| LXVIII |
Of the Bristly Adventure That Befell Don Quixote |
319 |
| LXIX |
Of the Strangest and Most Extraordinary Adventure That Befell Don Quixote in the Whole Course of This Great History |
323 |
| LXX |
Which Follows Chapter Sixty-Nine and Deals with Matters Indispensable for the Clear Comprehension of This History |
328 |
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