Of the Interview the Curate and the Barber had with Don Quixote About His Malady
Which Treats of the Notable Altercation Which Sancho Panza had with Don Quixote’s Niece, and Housekeeper, Together with Other Droll Matters Of the Laughable Conversation That Passed Between Don Quixote, Sancho Panza, and the Bachelor Samson Carrasco In Which Sancho Panza Gives a Satisfactory Reply to the Doubts and Questions of the Bachelor Samson Carrasco, Together with Other Matters WOrth Knowing and Telling Of the Shrewd and Droll Conversation That Passed Between Sancho Panza and His Wife Teresa Panza, and Other Matters Worthy of Being Duly Recorded Of What Took Place Between Don Quixote and His Niece and Housekeeper; One of the Most Important Chapters in the Whole History Of What Passed Between Don Quixote and His Squire, Together With Other Very Notable Incidents Wherein is Related What Befell Don Quixote on His Way to See His Lady Dulcinea Del Toboso Wherein is Related What Will Be Seen There Wherein is Related the Crafty Device Sancho Adopted to Enchant the Lady Dulcinea, and Other Incidents as Ludicrous as They are True Of the Strange Adventure Which the Valiant Don Quixote had with the Car or Cart of “The Cortes of Death” Of the Strange Adventure Which Befell the Valiant Don Quixote with the Bold Knight of the Mirrors In which is Continued the Adventure of the Knight of the Grove, Together with the Sensible, Original, and TranquiL Colloquy That Passed Between the Two Squires Wherein is Continued the Adventure of the Knight of the Grove Wherein it is Told and Known Who the Knight of the Mirrors and His Squire Were Of What Befell Don Quixote with a Discreet Gentleman of La Mancha Wherein is Shown the Furthest and Highest Point Which the Unexampled Courage of Don Quixote Reached or Could Reach; Together with the Happily Achieved Adventure of the Lions Of What Happened Don Quixote in the Castle or House of the Knight of the Green Gaban, Together With Other Matters Out of the Common In Which is Related the Adventure of the Enamoured Shepherd, Together With Other Truly Droll Incidents Wherein an Account is Given of the Wedding of Camacho the Rich, Together With the Incident of Basilio the Poor In Which Camacho’s Wedding is Continued, With Other Delightful Incidents Wherin is Related the Grand Adventure of the Cave of Montesinos in the Heart of La Mancha, Which the Valiant Don Quixote Brought to a Happy Termination Of the Wonderful Things the Incomparable Don Quixote Said He Saw in the Profound Cave of Montesinos, the Impossibility and Magnitude of Which Cause This Adventure to be Deemed Apocryphal Wherein are Related a Thousand Trifling Matters, as Trivial as They are Necessary to the Right Understanding of This Great History Wherein is Set Down the Braying ADventure, and the Droll One of the Puppet-Showman, Together With the Memorable Divinations of the Divining Ape Wherein is Continued the Droll Adventure of the Puppet-Showman, Together With Other Things in Truth Right Good Wherein it is Shown Who Master Pedro and his Ape Were, Together With the Mishap Don Quixote had in the Braying Adventure, Which He Did Not Conclude as He Would Have Liked or as He had Expected Of Matters That Benengeli Says He Who Reads Them Will Know, If He Reads Them With Attention Of the Famous Adventure of the Enchanted Bark Of Don Quixote’s Adventure With a Fair Huntress Which Treats of Many and Great Matters Of the Reply Don Quixote Gave His Censurer, With Other Incidents, Grave and Droll Of the Delectable Discourse Which the Duchess and Her Damsels Held With Sancho Panza, Well Worth Reading and Noting Chapter XXXIV Which Relates How They Learned the Way in Which They Were to Disenchant the Peerless Dulcinea Del Toboso, Which is One of the Rarest Adventures in This Book Chapter XXXV Wherein is Continued the Instruction Given to Don Quixote Touching the Disenchantment of Dulcinea, Together With Other Marvellous Incidents Wherein is Related the Strange and Undreamt-of Adventure of the Distressed Duenna, Alias the Countess Trifaldi, Together With a Letter Which Sancho Panza Wrote to His Wife, Teresa Panza Wherein is Continued the Notable Adventure of the Distressed Duenna Chapter XXXVIII Wherein is Told the Distressed Duenna’s Tale of Her Misfortunes In Which the Trifaldi Continues Her Marvellous and Memorable Story Of Matters Relating and Belonging to This Adventure and to This Memorable History Of the Arrival of Clavileno and the End of THis Protracted Adventure Of the Counsels Which Don Quixote Gave Sancho Panza Before He Set Out to Govern the Island, Together With Other Well-Considered Matters Chapter XLIII Of the Second Set of Counsels Don Quixote Gave Sancho Panza How Sancho Panza was Conducted to His Government, and of the Strange Adventure That Befell Don Quixote in the Castle Of How the Great Sancho Panza Took Possession of His Island, and of How He Made a Beginning in Governing Of the Terrible Bell and Cat Fright That Don Quixote Got in the Course of the Enamoured Altisidora’s Wooing Wherein is Continued the Account of How Sancho Panza Conducted Himself in His Government Of What Befell Don Quixote With Dona Rodriguez, the Duchess’s Duenna, Together With Other Occurrences Worthy of Record and Eternal Remembrance Of What Happened Sancho in Making the Round of His Island Wherein is Set Forth Who the Enchanters and Executioners Were Who Flogged the Duenna and Pinched Don Quixote, and Also What Befell the Page Who Carried the Letter to Teresa Panza, Sancho Panza’s Wife Of the Progress of Sancho’s Government, and Other Such Entertaining Matters Wherein is Related the Adventure of the Second Distressed or Afflicted Duenna, Otherwise Called Dona Rodriguez Of the Troublous End and Termination Sancho Panza’s Government Came To Chapter LIV Which Deals With Matters Relating to This History and No Other Of What Befell Sancho on the Road, and Other Things That Cannot Be Surpassed Of the Prodigious and Unparalleled Battle That Took Place Between Don Quixote of La Mancha and the Lacquey Tosilos in Defence of the Daughter of Dona Rodriguez Which Treats of How Don Quixote Took Leave of the Duke, and of What Followed With the Witty and Impudent Altisidora, One of the Duchess’s Damsels Which Tells How Adventures Came Crowding on Don Quixote in Such Numbers That They Gave One Another No Breathing-Time Wherein is Related the Strange Thing, Which may be Regarded as an Adventure, That Happened Don Quixote Of What Happened Don Quixote on His Way to Barcelona Of What Happened Don Quixote on Entering Barcelona, Together With Other Matters That Partake of the True Rather Than of the Ingenious Which Deals With the Adventure of the Enchanted Head, Together With Other Trivial Matters Which Cannot Be Left Untold Of the Mishap That Befell Sancho Panza Through the Visit to the Galleys, and the Strange Adventure of the Fair Morisco Treating of the Adventure Which Gave Don Quixote More Unhappiness Than All That Had Hitherto Befallen Him Wherein is Made Known Who the Knight of the White Moon Was; Likewise Don Gregorio’s Release, and Other Events Which Treats of What He Who Reads Will See, or What He Who Has It Read to Him Will Hear Of the Resolution 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 Of the Bristly Adventure That Befell Don Quixote Of the Strangest and Most Extraordinary Adventure That Befell Don Quixote in the Whole Course of This Great History Which Follows Sixty-Nine and Deals With Matters Indispensable for the Clear Comprehension of This History Of What Passed Between Don Quixote and His Squire Sancho on the Way to Their Village Of How Don Quixote and Sancho Reached Their Village Of the Omens Don Quixote had as He Entered His Own Village, and Other Incidents That Embellish and Give a Colour to This Great History Of How Don Quixote Fell Sick, and of the Will He Made, and How He Died |