Youngsters
Beyond thinking about the reading reading men enas, Axe limited between these ' ' leitores' ' the priests, napassagem where he speaks of its custom to promise conjuncts and not to fulfill: ' ' Priest you read that me, pardons this resource; it was the last time that oempreguei.' ' 8; the youngsters, in the called chapter ' ' You love, Youngsters! ' ' 9 But the person that more we admire to have imagined it lendoseu book was D. Sancha. Yes, it made a chapter for D. Sancha, the CAP. CXXIX: ' ' The D. Sancha' ' , that it starts thus: D. Sancha, I ask for to it that it does not read this book; or, if the houverlido one until here, abandons the remaining portion.
It is enough closes it; better it will be to burn it, paralhe not to give to temptation and abriz it another time. If although the acknowledgment, to want to go until ofim, the guilt is its; I do not answer for the evil that to receive. This is one of the chapters most interesting in this exercciode to dialogue with probable readers, or better it would be, to advise Sancha. Already I pointed that at the beginning of the book the narrator speaks leitorpara to explain the name of the book and the reason to it to have written it. In the Cap.II, we locate plus one speaks to the reader. It is in the last paragraph: ' ' Eia, let us start aevocao for one celebrates ' late; '. Here it invites reader participarde its reminiscncias, and for the confection of the resulted book of this interaoescritor-reader. Soon more in the CAP. VIII, he initiates the chapter thus: ' ' But tempo to become that afternoon of November ' ' , and this text has funode to retake with the reading anarrao of history, after a digresso.
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