Chapter III
Quixote asks the landlord of the inn to dub him a knight,
and after Quixote has two altercations with two different muleteers in the yard
of the inn, the landlord knights Quixote that moment so that he can be on his
way before any more complications arise.
Chapter IV
Quixote encounters two adventures: one, in which he
intervenes in the punishment of a servant by his master, thinking he did a good
deed by threatening the countryman for the mistreatment of his servant, and
two, in which he tries to force a band of traders to agree that his lady,
Dulinea, is fairer than the Empress. In
this last encounter, the traders pummel him, although Quixote conveniently
blames his horse for his misfortune.
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