  Chapter XXVIII
Of matters that Benengeli says he who reads them
will know, if he reads them with attention
When the brave man flees, treachery is manifest and it is for wise
men to reserve themselves for better occasions. This proved to be the case with
Don Quixote, who, giving way before the fury of the townsfolk and the hostile
intentions of the angry troop, took to flight and, without a thought of Sancho
or the danger in which he was leaving him, retreated to such a distance as he
thought made him safe. Sancho, lying across his ass, followed him, as has been
said, and at length came up, having by this time recovered his senses, and on
joining him let himself drop off Dapple at Rocinante's feet, sore, bruised, and
belaboured. Don Quixote dismounted to examine his wounds, but finding him whole
from head to foot, he said to him, angrily enough, "In an evil hour didst thou
take to braying, Sancho! Where hast thou learned that it is well done to
mention the rope in the house of the man that has been hanged? To the music of
brays what harmonies couldst thou expect to get but cudgels? Give thanks to
God, Sancho, that they signed the cross on thee just now with a stick, and did
not mark thee per signum crucis with a cutlass."
"I'm not equal to answering," said Sancho, "for I feel as if I was
speaking through my shoulders; let us mount and get away from this; I'll keep
from braying, but not from saying that knights-errant fly and leave their good
squires to be pounded like privet, or made meal of at the hands of their
enemies."
"He does not fly who retires," returned Don Quixote; "for I would
have thee know, Sancho, that the valour which is not based upon a foundation of
prudence is called rashness, and the exploits of the rash man are to be
attributed rather to good fortune than to courage; and so I own that I retired,
but not that I fled; and therein I have followed the example of many valiant
men who have reserved themselves for better times; the histories are full of
instances of this, but as it would not be any good to thee or pleasure to me, I
will not recount them to thee now."
Sancho was by this time mounted with the help of Don Quixote, who
then himself mounted Rocinante, and at a leisurely pace they proceeded to take
shelter in a grove which was in sight about a quarter of a league off. Every
now and then Sancho gave vent to deep sighs and dismal groans, and on Don
Quixote asking him what caused such acute suffering, he replied that, from the
end of his back-bone up to the nape of his neck, he was so sore that it nearly
drove him out of his senses.
"The cause of that soreness," said Don Quixote, "will be, no
doubt, that the staff wherewith they smote thee being a very long one, it
caught thee all down the back, where all the parts that are sore are situated,
and had it reached any further thou wouldst be sorer still."
"By God," said Sancho, "your worship has relieved me of a great
doubt, and cleared up the point for me in elegant style! Body o' me! is the
cause of my soreness such a mystery that there's any need to tell me I am sore
everywhere the staff hit me? If it was my ankles that pained me there might be
something in going divining why they did, but it is not much to divine that I'm
sore where they thrashed me. By my faith, master mine, the ills of others hang
by a hair; every day I am discovering more and more how little I have to hope
for from keeping company with your worship; for if this time you have allowed
me to be drubbed, the next time, or a hundred times more, we'll have the
blanketings of the other day over again, and all the other pranks which, if
they have fallen on my shoulders now, will be thrown in my teeth by-and-by. I
would do a great deal better (if I was not an ignorant brute that will never do
any good all my life), I would do a great deal better, I say, to go home to my
wife and children and support them and bring them up on what God may please to
give me, instead of following your worship along roads that lead nowhere and
paths that are none at all, with little to drink and less to eat. And then when
it comes to sleeping! Measure out seven feet on the earth, brother squire, and
if that's not enough for you, take as many more, for you may have it all your
own way and stretch yourself to your heart's content. Oh that I could see burnt
and turned to ashes the first man that meddled with knight-errantry or at any
rate the first who chose to be squire to such fools as all the knights-errant
of past times must have been! Of those of the present day I say nothing,
because, as your worship is one of them, I respect them, and because I know
your worship knows a point more than the devil in all you say and think."
"I would lay a good wager with you, Sancho," said Don Quixote,
"that now that you are talking on without anyone to stop you, you don't feel a
pain in your whole body. Talk away, my son, say whatever comes into your head
or mouth, for so long as you feel no pain, the irritation your impertinences
give me will he a pleasure to me; and if you are so anxious to go home to your
wife and children, God forbid that I should prevent you; you have money of
mine; see how long it is since we left our village this third time, and how
much you can and ought to earn every month, and pay yourself out of your own
hand."
"When I worked for Tom Carrasco, the father of the bachelor Samson
Carrasco that your worship knows," replied Sancho, "I used to earn two ducats a
month besides my food; I can't tell what I can earn with your worship, though I
know a knight-errant's squire has harder times of it than he who works for a
farmer; for after all, we who work for farmers, however much we toil all day,
at the worst, at night, we have our olla supper and sleep in a bed, which I
have not slept in since I have been in your worship's service, if it wasn't the
short time we were in Don Diego de Miranda's house, and the feast I had with
the skimmings I took off Camacho's pots, and what I ate, drank, and slept in
Basilio's house; all the rest of the time I have been sleeping on the hard
ground under the open sky, exposed to what they call the inclemencies of
heaven, keeping life in me with scraps of cheese and crusts of bread, and
drinking water either from the brooks or from the springs we come to on these
by-paths we travel."
"I own, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "that all thou sayest is true;
how much, thinkest thou, ought I to give thee over and above what Tom Carrasco
gave thee?"
"I think," said Sancho, "that if your worship was to add on two
reals a month I'd consider myself well paid; that is, as far as the wages of my
labour go; but to make up to me for your worship's pledge and promise to me to
give me the government of an island, it would be fair to add six reals more,
making thirty in all."
"Very good," said Don Quixote; "it is twenty-five days since we
left our village, so reckon up, Sancho, according to the wages you have made
out for yourself, and see how much I owe you in proportion, and pay yourself,
as I said before, out of your own hand."
"O body o' me!" said Sancho, "but your worship is very much out in
that reckoning; for when it comes to the promise of the island we must count
from the day your worship promised it to me to this present hour we are at
now."
"Well, how long is it, Sancho, since I promised it to you?" said
Don Quixote.
"If I remember rightly," said Sancho, "it must be over twenty
years, three days more or less."
Don Quixote gave himself a great slap on the forehead and began to
laugh heartily, and said he, "Why, I have not been wandering, either in the
Sierra Morena or in the whole course of our sallies, but barely two months, and
thou sayest, Sancho, that it is twenty years since I promised thee the island.
I believe now thou wouldst have all the money thou hast of mine go in thy
wages. If so, and if that be thy pleasure, I give it to thee now, once and for
all, and much good may it do thee, for so long as I see myself rid of such a
good-for-nothing squire I'll be glad to be left a pauper without a rap. But
tell me, thou perverter of the squirely rules of knight-errantry, where hast
thou ever seen or read that any knight-errant's squire made terms with his
lord, 'you must give me so much a month for serving you'? Plunge, scoundrel,
rogue, monster- for such I take thee to be- plunge, I say, into the mare magnum
of their histories; and if thou shalt find that any squire ever said or thought
what thou hast said now, I will let thee nail it on my forehead, and give me,
over and above, four sound slaps in the face. Turn the rein, or the halter, of
thy Dapple, and begone home; for one single step further thou shalt not make in
my company. O bread thanklessly received! O promises ill-bestowed! O man more
beast than human being! Now, when I was about to raise thee to such a position,
that, in spite of thy wife, they would call thee 'my lord,' thou art leaving
me? Thou art going now when I had a firm and fixed intention of making thee
lord of the best island in the world? Well, as thou thyself hast said before
now, honey is not for the mouth of the ass. Ass thou art, ass thou wilt be, and
ass thou wilt end when the course of thy life is run; for I know it will come
to its close before thou dost perceive or discern that thou art a beast."
Sancho regarded Don Quixote earnestly while he was giving him this
rating, and was so touched by remorse that the tears came to his eyes, and in a
piteous and broken voice he said to him, "Master mine, I confess that, to be a
complete ass, all I want is a tail; if your worship will only fix one on to me,
I'll look on it as rightly placed, and I'll serve you as an ass all the
remaining days of my life. Forgive me and have pity on my folly, and remember I
know but little, and, if I talk much, it's more from infirmity than malice; but
he who sins and mends commends himself to God."
"I should have been surprised, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "if thou
hadst not introduced some bit of a proverb into thy speech. Well, well, I
forgive thee, provided thou dost mend and not show thyself in future so fond of
thine own interest, but try to be of good cheer and take heart, and encourage
thyself to look forward to the fulfillment of my promises, which, by being
delayed, does not become impossible."
Sancho said he would do so, and keep up his heart as best he
could. They then entered the grove, and Don Quixote settled himself at the foot
of an elm, and Sancho at that of a beech, for trees of this kind and others
like them always have feet but no hands. Sancho passed the night in pain, for
with the evening dews the blow of the staff made itself felt all the more. Don
Quixote passed it in his never-failing meditations; but, for all that, they had
some winks of sleep, and with the appearance of daylight they pursued their
journey in quest of the banks of the famous Ebro, where that befell them which
will be told in the following chapter.
  Chapter XXIX
Of the famous adventure of the enchanted bark
By stages as already described or left undescribed, two days after
quitting the grove Don Quixote and Sancho reached the river Ebro, and the sight
of it was a great delight to Don Quixote as he contemplated and gazed upon the
charms of its banks, the clearness of its stream, the gentleness of its current
and the abundance of its crystal waters; and the pleasant view revived a
thousand tender thoughts in his mind. Above all, he dwelt upon what he had seen
in the cave of Montesinos; for though Master Pedro's ape had told him that of
those things part was true, part false, he clung more to their truth than to
their falsehood, the very reverse of Sancho, who held them all to be downright
lies.
As they were thus proceeding, then, they discovered a small boat,
without oars or any other gear, that lay at the water's edge tied to the stem
of a tree growing on the bank. Don Quixote looked all round, and seeing nobody,
at once, without more ado, dismounted from Rocinante and bade Sancho get down
from Dapple and tie both beasts securely to the trunk of a poplar or willow
that stood there. Sancho asked him the reason of this sudden dismounting and
tying. Don Quixote made answer, "Thou must know, Sancho, that this bark is
plainly, and without the possibility of any alternative, calling and inviting
me to enter it, and in it go to give aid to some knight or other person of
distinction in need of it, who is no doubt in some sore strait; for this is the
way of the books of chivalry and of the enchanters who figure and speak in
them. When a knight is involved in some difficulty from which he cannot be
delivered save by the hand of another knight, though they may be at a distance
of two or three thousand leagues or more one from the other, they either take
him up on a cloud, or they provide a bark for him to get into, and in less than
the twinkling of an eye they carry him where they will and where his help is
required; and so, Sancho, this bark is placed here for the same purpose; this
is as true as that it is now day, and ere this one passes tie Dapple and
Rocinante together, and then in God's hand be it to guide us; for I would not
hold back from embarking, though barefooted friars were to beg me."
"As that's the case," said Sancho, "and your worship chooses to
give in to these- I don't know if I may call them absurdities- at every turn,
there's nothing for it but to obey and bow the head, bearing in mind the
proverb, 'Do as thy master bids thee, and sit down to table with him;' but for
all that, for the sake of easing my conscience, I warn your worship that it is
my opinion this bark is no enchanted one, but belongs to some of the fishermen
of the river, for they catch the best shad in the world here."
As Sancho said this, he tied the beasts, leaving them to the care
and protection of the enchanters with sorrow enough in his heart. Don Quixote
bade him not be uneasy about deserting the animals, "for he who would carry
themselves over such longinquous roads and regions would take care to feed
them."
"I don't understand that logiquous," said Sancho, "nor have I ever
heard the word all the days of my life."
"Longinquous," replied Don Quixote, "means far off; but it is no
wonder thou dost not understand it, for thou art not bound to know Latin, like
some who pretend to know it and don't."
"Now they are tied," said Sancho; "what are we to do next?"
"What?" said Don Quixote, "cross ourselves and weigh anchor; I
mean, embark and cut the moorings by which the bark is held;" and the bark
began to drift away slowly from the bank. But when Sancho saw himself somewhere
about two yards out in the river, he began to tremble and give himself up for
lost; but nothing distressed him more than hearing Dapple bray and seeing
Rocinante struggling to get loose, and said he to his master, "Dapple is
braying in grief at our leaving him, and Rocinante is trying to escape and
plunge in after us. O dear friends, peace be with you, and may this madness
that is taking us away from you, turned into sober sense, bring us back to
you." And with this he fell weeping so bitterly, that Don Quixote said to him,
sharply and angrily, "What art thou afraid of, cowardly creature? What art thou
weeping at, heart of butter-paste? Who pursues or molests thee, thou soul of a
tame mouse? What dost thou want, unsatisfied in the very heart of abundance?
Art thou, perchance, tramping barefoot over the Riphaean mountains, instead of
being seated on a bench like an archduke on the tranquil stream of this
pleasant river, from which in a short space we shall come out upon the broad
sea? But we must have already emerged and gone seven hundred or eight hundred
leagues; and if I had here an astrolabe to take the altitude of the pole, I
could tell thee how many we have travelled, though either I know little, or we
have already crossed or shall shortly cross the equinoctial line which parts
the two opposite poles midway."
"And when we come to that line your worship speaks of," said
Sancho, "how far shall we have gone?"
"Very far," said Don Quixote, "for of the three hundred and sixty
degrees that this terraqueous globe contains, as computed by Ptolemy, the
greatest cosmographer known, we shall have travelled one-half when we come to
the line I spoke of."
"By God," said Sancho, "your worship gives me a nice authority for
what you say, putrid Dolly something transmogrified, or whatever it is."
Don Quixote laughed at the interpretation Sancho put upon
"computed," and the name of the cosmographer Ptolemy, and said he, "Thou must
know, Sancho, that with the Spaniards and those who embark at Cadiz for the
East Indies, one of the signs they have to show them when they have passed the
equinoctial line I told thee of, is, that the lice die upon everybody on board
the ship, and not a single one is left, or to be found in the whole vessel if
they gave its weight in gold for it; so, Sancho, thou mayest as well pass thy
hand down thy thigh, and if thou comest upon anything alive we shall be no
longer in doubt; if not, then we have crossed."
"I don't believe a bit of it," said Sancho; "still, I'll do as
your worship bids me; though I don't know what need there is for trying these
experiments, for I can see with my own eyes that we have not moved five yards
away from the bank, or shifted two yards from where the animals stand, for
there are Rocinante and Dapple in the very same place where we left them; and
watching a point, as I do now, I swear by all that's good, we are not stirring
or moving at the pace of an ant."
"Try the test I told thee of, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "and
don't mind any other, for thou knowest nothing about colures, lines, parallels,
zodiacs, ecliptics, poles, solstices, equinoxes, planets, signs, bearings, the
measures of which the celestial and terrestrial spheres are composed; if thou
wert acquainted with all these things, or any portion of them, thou wouldst see
clearly how many parallels we have cut, what signs we have seen, and what
constellations we have left behind and are now leaving behind. But again I tell
thee, feel and hunt, for I am certain thou art cleaner than a sheet of smooth
white paper."
Sancho felt, and passing his hand gently and carefully down to the
hollow of his left knee, he looked up at his master and said, "Either the test
is a false one, or we have not come to where your worship says, nor within many
leagues of it."
"Why, how so?" asked Don Quixote; "hast thou come upon aught?"
"Ay, and aughts," replied Sancho; and shaking his fingers he
washed his whole hand in the river along which the boat was quietly gliding in
midstream, not moved by any occult intelligence or invisible enchanter, but
simply by the current, just there smooth and gentle.
They now came in sight of some large water mills that stood in the
middle of the river, and the instant Don Quixote saw them he cried out, "Seest
thou there, my friend? there stands the castle or fortress, where there is, no
doubt, some knight in durance, or ill-used queen, or infanta, or princess, in
whose aid I am brought hither."
"What the devil city, fortress, or castle is your worship talking
about, senor?" said Sancho; "don't you see that those are mills that stand in
the river to grind corn?"
"Hold thy peace, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "though they look like
mills they are not so; I have already told thee that enchantments transform
things and change their proper shapes; I do not mean to say they really change
them from one form into another, but that it seems as though they did, as
experience proved in the transformation of Dulcinea, sole refuge of my hopes."
By this time, the boat, having reached the middle of the stream,
began to move less slowly than hitherto. The millers belonging to the mills,
when they saw the boat coming down the river, and on the point of being sucked
in by the draught of the wheels, ran out in haste, several of them, with long
poles to stop it, and being all mealy, with faces and garments covered with
flour, they presented a sinister appearance. They raised loud shouts, crying,
"Devils of men, where are you going to? Are you mad? Do you want to drown
yourselves, or dash yourselves to pieces among these wheels?"
"Did I not tell thee, Sancho," said Don Quixote at this, "that we
had reached the place where I am to show what the might of my arm can do? See
what ruffians and villains come out against me; see what monsters oppose me;
see what hideous countenances come to frighten us! You shall soon see,
scoundrels!" And then standing up in the boat he began in a loud voice to hurl
threats at the millers, exclaiming, "Ill-conditioned and worse-counselled
rabble, restore to liberty and freedom the person ye hold in durance in this
your fortress or prison, high or low or of whatever rank or quality he be, for
I am Don Quixote of La Mancha, otherwise called the Knight of the Lions, for
whom, by the disposition of heaven above, it is reserved to give a happy issue
to this adventure;" and so saying he drew his sword and began making passes in
the air at the millers, who, hearing but not understanding all this nonsense,
strove to stop the boat, which was now getting into the rushing channel of the
wheels. Sancho fell upon his knees devoutly appealing to heaven to deliver him
from such imminent peril; which it did by the activity and quickness of the
millers, who, pushing against the boat with their poles, stopped it, not,
however, without upsetting and throwing Don Quixote and Sancho into the water;
and lucky it was for Don Quixote that he could swim like a goose, though the
weight of his armour carried him twice to the bottom; and had it not been for
the millers, who plunged in and hoisted them both out, it would have been Troy
town with the pair of them. As soon as, more drenched than thirsty, they were
landed, Sancho went down on his knees and with clasped hands and eyes raised to
heaven, prayed a long and fervent prayer to God to deliver him evermore from
the rash projects and attempts of his master. The fishermen, the owners of the
boat, which the mill-wheels had knocked to pieces, now came up, and seeing it
smashed they proceeded to strip Sancho and to demand payment for it from Don
Quixote; but he with great calmness, just as if nothing had happened him, told
the millers and fishermen that he would pay for the bark most cheerfully, on
condition that they delivered up to him, free and unhurt, the person or persons
that were in durance in that castle of theirs.
"What persons or what castle art thou talking of, madman? Art thou
for carrying off the people who come to grind corn in these mills?"
"That's enough," said Don Quixote to himself, "it would be
preaching in the desert to attempt by entreaties to induce this rabble to do
any virtuous action. In this adventure two mighty enchanters must have
encountered one another, and one frustrates what the other attempts; one
provided the bark for me, and the other upset me; God help us, this world is
all machinations and schemes at cross purposes one with the other. I can do no
more." And then turning towards the mills he said aloud, "Friends, whoe'er ye
be that are immured in that prison, forgive me that, to my misfortune and
yours, I cannot deliver you from your misery; this adventure is doubtless
reserved and destined for some other knight."
So saying he settled with the fishermen, and paid fifty reals for
the boat, which Sancho handed to them very much against the grain, saying,
"With a couple more bark businesses like this we shall have sunk our whole
capital."
The fishermen and the millers stood staring in amazement at the
two figures, so very different to all appearance from ordinary men, and were
wholly unable to make out the drift of the observations and questions Don
Quixote addressed to them; and coming to the conclusion that they were madmen,
they left them and betook themselves, the millers to their mills, and the
fishermen to their huts. Don Quixote and Sancho returned to their beasts, and
to their life of beasts, and so ended the adventure of the enchanted bark.
  Chapter XXX
Of Don Quixote's adventure with a fair
huntress
They reached their beasts in low spirits and bad humour enough,
knight and squire, Sancho particularly, for with him what touched the stock of
money touched his heart, and when any was taken from him he felt as if he was
robbed of the apples of his eyes. In fine, without exchanging a word, they
mounted and quitted the famous river, Don Quixote absorbed in thoughts of his
love, Sancho in thinking of his advancement, which just then, it seemed to him,
he was very far from securing; for, fool as he was, he saw clearly enough that
his master's acts were all or most of them utterly senseless; and he began to
cast about for an opportunity of retiring from his service and going home some
day, without entering into any explanations or taking any farewell of him.
Fortune, however, ordered matters after a fashion very much the opposite of
what he contemplated.
It so happened that the next day towards sunset, on coming out of
a wood, Don Quixote cast his eyes over a green meadow, and at the far end of it
observed some people, and as he drew nearer saw that it was a hawking party.
Coming closer, he distinguished among them a lady of graceful mien, on a pure
white palfrey or hackney caparisoned with green trappings and a silver-mounted
side-saddle. The lady was also in green, and so richly and splendidly dressed
that splendour itself seemed personified in her. On her left hand she bore a
hawk, a proof to Don Quixote's mind that she must be some great lady and the
mistress of the whole hunting party, which was the fact; so he said to Sancho,
"Run Sancho, my son, and say to that lady on the palfrey with the hawk that I,
the Knight of the Lions, kiss the hands of her exalted beauty, and if her
excellence will grant me leave I will go and kiss them in person and place
myself at her service for aught that may be in my power and her highness may
command; and mind, Sancho, how thou speakest, and take care not to thrust in
any of thy proverbs into thy message."
"You've got a likely one here to thrust any in!" said Sancho;
"leave me alone for that! Why, this is not the first time in my life I have
carried messages to high and exalted ladies."
"Except that thou didst carry to the lady Dulcinea," said Don
Quixote, "I know not that thou hast carried any other, at least in my service."
"That is true," replied Sancho; "but pledges don't distress a good
payer, and in a house where there's plenty supper is soon cooked; I mean
there's no need of telling or warning me about anything; for I'm ready for
everything and know a little of everything."
"That I believe, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "go and good luck to
thee, and God speed thee."
Sancho went off at top speed, forcing Dapple out of his regular
pace, and came to where the fair huntress was standing, and dismounting knelt
before her and said, "Fair lady, that knight that you see there, the Knight of
the Lions by name, is my master, and I am a squire of his, and at home they
call me Sancho Panza. This same Knight of the Lions, who was called not long
since the Knight of the Rueful Countenance, sends by me to say may it please
your highness to give him leave that, with your permission, approbation, and
consent, he may come and carry out his wishes, which are, as he says and I
believe, to serve your exalted loftiness and beauty; and if you give it, your
ladyship will do a thing which will redound to your honour, and he will receive
a most distinguished favour and happiness."
"You have indeed, squire," said the lady, "delivered your message
with all the formalities such messages require; rise up, for it is not right
that the squire of a knight so great as he of the Rueful Countenance, of whom
we have heard a great deal here, should remain on his knees; rise, my friend,
and bid your master welcome to the services of myself and the duke my husband,
in a country house we have here."
Sancho got up, charmed as much by the beauty of the good lady as
by her high-bred air and her courtesy, but, above all, by what she had said
about having heard of his master, the Knight of the Rueful Countenance; for if
she did not call him Knight of the Lions it was no doubt because he had so
lately taken the name. "Tell me, brother squire," asked the duchess (whose
title, however, is not known), "this master of yours, is he not one of whom
there is a history extant in print, called 'The Ingenious Gentleman, Don
Quixote of La Mancha,' who has for the lady of his heart a certain Dulcinea del
Toboso?"
"He is the same, senora," replied Sancho; "and that squire of his
who figures, or ought to figure, in the said history under the name of Sancho
Panza, is myself, unless they have changed me in the cradle, I mean in the
press."
"I am rejoiced at all this," said the duchess; "go, brother Panza,
and tell your master that he is welcome to my estate, and that nothing could
happen me that could give me greater pleasure."
Sancho returned to his master mightily pleased with this
gratifying answer, and told him all the great lady had said to him, lauding to
the skies, in his rustic phrase, her rare beauty, her graceful gaiety, and her
courtesy. Don Quixote drew himself up briskly in his saddle, fixed himself in
his stirrups, settled his visor, gave Rocinante the spur, and with an easy
bearing advanced to kiss the hands of the duchess, who, having sent to summon
the duke her husband, told him while Don Quixote was approaching all about the
message; and as both of them had read the First Part of this history, and from
it were aware of Don Quixote's crazy turn, they awaited him with the greatest
delight and anxiety to make his acquaintance, meaning to fall in with his
humour and agree with everything he said, and, so long as he stayed with them,
to treat him as a knight-errant, with all the ceremonies usual in the books of
chivalry they had read, for they themselves were very fond of them.
Don Quixote now came up with his visor raised, and as he seemed
about to dismount Sancho made haste to go and hold his stirrup for him; but in
getting down off Dapple he was so unlucky as to hitch his foot in one of the
ropes of the pack-saddle in such a way that he was unable to free it, and was
left hanging by it with his face and breast on the ground. Don Quixote, who was
not used to dismount without having the stirrup held, fancying that Sancho had
by this time come to hold it for him, threw himself off with a lurch and
brought Rocinante's saddle after him, which was no doubt badly girthed, and
saddle and he both came to the ground; not without discomfiture to him and
abundant curses muttered between his teeth against the unlucky Sancho, who had
his foot still in the shackles. The duke ordered his huntsmen to go to the help
of knight and squire, and they raised Don Quixote, sorely shaken by his fall;
and he, limping, advanced as best he could to kneel before the noble pair.
This, however, the duke would by no means permit; on the contrary, dismounting
from his horse, he went and embraced Don Quixote, saying, "I am grieved, Sir
Knight of the Rueful Countenance, that your first experience on my ground
should have been such an unfortunate one as we have seen; but the carelessness
of squires is often the cause of worse accidents."
"That which has happened me in meeting you, mighty prince,"
replied Don Quixote, "cannot be unfortunate, even if my fall had not stopped
short of the depths of the bottomless pit, for the glory of having seen you
would have lifted me up and delivered me from it. My squire, God's curse upon
him, is better at unloosing his tongue in talking impertinence than in
tightening the girths of a saddle to keep it steady; but however I may be,
allen or raised up, on foot or on horseback, I shall always be at your service
and that of my lady the duchess, your worthy consort, worthy queen of beauty
and paramount princess of courtesy."
"Gently, Senor Don Quixote of La Mancha," said the duke; "where my
lady Dona Dulcinea del Toboso is, it is not right that other beauties should he
praised."
Sancho, by this time released from his entanglement, was standing
by, and before his master could answer he said, "There is no denying, and it
must be maintained, that my lady Dulcinea del Toboso is very beautiful; but the
hare jumps up where one least expects it; and I have heard say that what we
call nature is like a potter that makes vessels of clay, and he who makes one
fair vessel can as well make two, or three, or a hundred; I say so because, by
my faith, my lady the duchess is in no way behind my mistress the lady Dulcinea
del Toboso."
Don Quixote turned to the duchess and said, "Your highness may
conceive that never had knight-errant in this world a more talkative or a
droller squire than I have, and he will prove the truth of what I say, if your
highness is pleased to accept of my services for a few days."
To which the duchess made answer, "that worthy Sancho is droll I
consider a very good thing, because it is a sign that he is shrewd; for
drollery and sprightliness, Senor Don Quixote, as you very well know, do not
take up their abode with dull wits; and as good Sancho is droll and sprightly I
here set him down as shrewd."
"And talkative," added Don Quixote.
"So much the better," said the duke, "for many droll things cannot
be said in few words; but not to lose time in talking, come, great Knight of
the Rueful Countenance-"
"Of the Lions, your highness must say," said Sancho, "for there is
no Rueful Countenance nor any such character now."
"He of the Lions be it," continued the duke; "I say, let Sir
Knight of the Lions come to a castle of mine close by, where he shall be given
that reception which is due to so exalted a personage, and which the duchess
and I are wont to give to all knights-errant who come there."
By this time Sancho had fixed and girthed Rocinante's saddle, and
Don Quixote having got on his back and the duke mounted a fine horse, they
placed the duchess in the middle and set out for the castle. The duchess
desired Sancho to come to her side, for she found infinite enjoyment in
listening to his shrewd remarks. Sancho required no pressing, but pushed
himself in between them and the duke, who thought it rare good fortune to
receive such a knight-errant and such a homely squire in their castle.
  Chapter XXXI
Which treats of many and great matters
Supreme was the satisfaction that Sancho felt at seeing himself,
as it seemed, an established favourite with the duchess, for he looked forward
to finding in her castle what he had found in Don Diego's house and in
Basilio's; he was always fond of good living, and always seized by the forelock
any opportunity of feasting himself whenever it presented itself. The history
informs us, then, that before they reached the country house or castle, the
duke went on in advance and instructed all his servants how they were to treat
Don Quixote; and so the instant he came up to the castle gates with the
duchess, two lackeys or equerries, clad in what they call morning gowns of fine
crimson satin reaching to their feet, hastened out, and catching Don Quixote in
their arms before he saw or heard them, said to him, "Your highness should go
and take my lady the duchess off her horse." Don Quixote obeyed, and great
bandying of compliments followed between the two over the matter; but in the
end the duchess's determination carried the day, and she refused to get down or
dismount from her palfrey except in the arms of the duke, saying she did not
consider herself worthy to impose so unnecessary a burden on so great a knight.
At length the duke came out to take her down, and as they entered a spacious
court two fair damsels came forward and threw over Don Quixote's shoulders a
large mantle of the finest scarlet cloth, and at the same instant all the
galleries of the court were lined with the men-servants and women-servants of
the household, crying, "Welcome, flower and cream of knight-errantry!" while
all or most of them flung pellets filled with scented water over Don Quixote
and the duke and duchess; at all which Don Quixote was greatly astonished, and
this was the first time that he thoroughly felt and believed himself to be a
knight-errant in reality and not merely in fancy, now that he saw himself
treated in the same way as he had read of such knights being treated in days of
yore.
Sancho, deserting Dapple, hung on to the duchess and entered the
castle, but feeling some twinges of conscience at having left the ass alone, he
approached a respectable duenna who had come out with the rest to receive the
duchess, and in a low voice he said to her, "Senora Gonzalez, or however your
grace may be called-"
"I am called Dona Rodriguez de Grijalba," replied the duenna;
"what is your will, brother?" To which Sancho made answer, "I should be glad if
your worship would do me the favour to go out to the castle gate, where you
will find a grey ass of mine; make them, if you please, put him in the stable,
or put him there yourself, for the poor little beast is rather easily
frightened, and cannot bear being alone at all."
"If the master is as wise as the man," said the duenna, "we have
got a fine bargain. Be off with you, brother, and bad luck to you and him who
brought you here; go, look after your ass, for we, the duennas of this house,
are not used to work of that sort."
"Well then, in troth," returned Sancho, "I have heard my master,
who is the very treasure-finder of stories, telling the story of Lancelot when
he came from Britain, say that ladies waited upon him and duennas upon his
hack; and, if it comes to my ass, I wouldn't change him for Senor Lancelot's
hack."
"If you are a jester, brother," said the duenna, "keep your
drolleries for some place where they'll pass muster and be paid for; for you'll
get nothing from me but a fig."
"At any rate, it will be a very ripe one," said Sancho, "for you
won't lose the trick in years by a point too little."
"Son of a bitch," said the duenna, all aglow with anger, "whether
I'm old or not, it's with God I have to reckon, not with you, you
garlic-stuffed scoundrel!" and she said it so loud, that the duchess heard it,
and turning round and seeing the duenna in such a state of excitement, and her
eyes flaming so, asked whom she was wrangling with.
"With this good fellow here," said the duenna, "who has
particularly requested me to go and put an ass of his that is at the castle
gate into the stable, holding it up to me as an example that they did the same
I don't know where- that some ladies waited on one Lancelot, and duennas on his
hack; and what is more, to wind up with, he called me old."
"That," said the duchess, "I should have considered the greatest
affront that could be offered me;" and addressing Sancho, she said to him, "You
must know, friend Sancho, that Dona Rodriguez is very youthful, and that she
wears that hood more for authority and custom sake than because of her years."
"May all the rest of mine be unlucky," said Sancho, "if I meant it
that way; I only spoke because the affection I have for my ass is so great, and
I thought I could not commend him to a more kind-hearted person than the lady
Dona Rodriguez."
Don Quixote, who was listening, said to him, "Is this proper
conversation for the place, Sancho?"
"Senor," replied Sancho, "every one must mention what he wants
wherever he may be; I thought of Dapple here, and I spoke of him here; if I had
thought of him in the stable I would have spoken there."
On which the duke observed, "Sancho is quite right, and there is
no reason at all to find fault with him; Dapple shall be fed to his heart's
content, and Sancho may rest easy, for he shall be treated like himself."
While this conversation, amusing to all except Don Quixote, was
proceeding, they ascended the staircase and ushered Don Quixote into a chamber
hung with rich cloth of gold and brocade; six damsels relieved him of his
armour and waited on him like pages, all of them prepared and instructed by the
duke and duchess as to what they were to do, and how they were to treat Don
Quixote, so that he might see and believe they were treating him like a
knight-errant. When his armour was removed, there stood Don Quixote in his
tight-fitting breeches and chamois doublet, lean, lanky, and long, with cheeks
that seemed to be kissing each other inside; such a figure, that if the damsels
waiting on him had not taken care to check their merriment (which was one of
the particular directions their master and mistress had given them), they would
have burst with laughter. They asked him to let himself be stripped that they
might put a shirt on him, but he would not on any account, saying that modesty
became knights-errant just as much as valour. However, he said they might give
the shirt to Sancho; and shutting himself in with him in a room where there was
a sumptuous bed, he undressed and put on the shirt; and then, finding himself
alone with Sancho, he said to him, "Tell me, thou new-fledged buffoon and old
booby, dost thou think it right to offend and insult a duenna so deserving of
reverence and respect as that one just now? Was that a time to bethink thee of
thy Dapple, or are these noble personages likely to let the beasts fare badly
when they treat their owners in such elegant style? For God's sake, Sancho,
restrain thyself, and don't show the thread so as to let them see what a
coarse, boorish texture thou art of. Remember, sinner that thou art, the master
is the more esteemed the more respectable and well-bred his servants are; and
that one of the greatest advantages that princes have over other men is that
they have servants as good as themselves to wait on them. Dost thou not see-
shortsighted being that thou art, and unlucky mortal that I am!- that if they
perceive thee to be a coarse clown or a dull blockhead, they will suspect me to
be some impostor or swindler? Nay, nay, Sancho friend, keep clear, oh, keep
clear of these stumbling-blocks; for he who falls into the way of being a
chatterbox and droll, drops into a wretched buffoon the first time he trips;
bridle thy tongue, consider and weigh thy words before they escape thy mouth,
and bear in mind we are now in quarters whence, by God's help, and the strength
of my arm, we shall come forth mightily advanced in fame and fortune."
Sancho promised him with much earnestness to keep his mouth shut,
and to bite off his tongue before he uttered a word that was not altogether to
the purpose and well considered, and told him he might make his mind easy on
that point, for it should never be discovered through him what they were.
Don Quixote dressed himself, put on his baldric with his sword,
threw the scarlet mantle over his shoulders, placed on his head a montera of
green satin that the damsels had given him, and thus arrayed passed out into
the large room, where he found the damsels drawn up in double file, the same
number on each side, all with the appliances for washing the hands, which they
presented to him with profuse obeisances and ceremonies. Then came twelve
pages, together with the seneschal, to lead him to dinner, as his hosts were
already waiting for him. They placed him in the midst of them, and with much
pomp and stateliness they conducted him into another room, where there was a
sumptuous table laid with but four covers. The duchess and the duke came out to
the door of the room to receive him, and with them a grave ecclesiastic, one of
those who rule noblemen's houses; one of those who, not being born magnates
themselves, never know how to teach those who are how to behave as such; one of
those who would have the greatness of great folk measured by their own
narrowness of mind; one of those who, when they try to introduce economy into
the household they rule, lead it into meanness. One of this sort, I say, must
have been the grave churchman who came out with the duke and duchess to receive
Don Quixote.
A vast number of polite speeches were exchanged, and at length,
taking Don Quixote between them, they proceeded to sit down to table. The duke
pressed Don Quixote to take the head of the table, and, though he refused, the
entreaties of the duke were so urgent that he had to accept it.
The ecclesiastic took his seat opposite to him, and the duke and
duchess those at the sides. All this time Sancho stood by, gaping with
amazement at the honour he saw shown to his master by these illustrious
persons; and observing all the ceremonious pressing that had passed between the
duke and Don Quixote to induce him to take his seat at the head of the table,
he said, "If your worship will give me leave I will tell you a story of what
happened in my village about this matter of seats."
The moment Sancho said this Don Quixote trembled, making sure that
he was about to say something foolish. Sancho glanced at him, and guessing his
thoughts, said, "Don't be afraid of my going astray, senor, or saying anything
that won't be pat to the purpose; I haven't forgotten the advice your worship
gave me just now about talking much or little, well or ill."
"I have no recollection of anything, Sancho," said Don Quixote;
"say what thou wilt, only say it quickly."
"Well then," said Sancho, "what I am going to say is so true that
my master Don Quixote, who is here present, will keep me from lying."
"Lie as much as thou wilt for all I care, Sancho," said Don
Quixote, "for I am not going to stop thee, but consider what thou art going to
say."
"I have so considered and reconsidered," said Sancho, "that the
bell-ringer's in a safe berth; as will be seen by what follows."
"It would be well," said Don Quixote, "if your highnesses would
order them to turn out this idiot, for he will talk a heap of nonsense."
"By the life of the duke, Sancho shall not be taken away from me
for a moment," said the duchess; "I am very fond of him, for I know he is very
discreet."
"Discreet be the days of your holiness," said Sancho, "for the
good opinion you have of my wit, though there's none in me; but the story I
want to tell is this. There was an invitation given by a gentleman of my town,
a very rich one, and one of quality, for he was one of the Alamos of Medina del
Campo, and married to Dona Mencia de Quinones, the daughter of Don Alonso de
Maranon, Knight of the Order of Santiago, that was drowned at the Herradura-
him there was that quarrel about years ago in our village, that my master Don
Quixote was mixed up in, to the best of my belief, that Tomasillo the
scapegrace, the son of Balbastro the smith, was wounded in.- Isn't all this
true, master mine? As you live, say so, that these gentlefolk may not take me
for some lying chatterer."
"So far," said the ecclesiastic, "I take you to be more a
chatterer than a liar; but I don't know what I shall take you for by-and-by."
"Thou citest so many witnesses and proofs, Sancho," said Don
Quixote, "that I have no choice but to say thou must be telling the truth; go
on, and cut the story short, for thou art taking the way not to make an end for
two days to come."
"He is not to cut it short," said the duchess; "on the contrary,
for my gratification, he is to tell it as he knows it, though he should not
finish it these six days; and if he took so many they would be to me the
pleasantest I ever spent."
"Well then, sirs, I say," continued Sancho, "that this same
gentleman, whom I know as well as I do my own hands, for it's not a bowshot
from my house to his, invited a poor but respectable labourer-"
"Get on, brother," said the churchman; "at the rate you are going
you will not stop with your story short of the next world."
"I'll stop less than half-way, please God," said Sancho; "and so I
say this labourer, coming to the house of the gentleman I spoke of that invited
him- rest his soul, he is now dead; and more by token he died the death of an
angel, so they say; for I was not there, for just at that time I had gone to
reap at Tembleque-"
"As you live, my son," said the churchman, "make haste back from
Tembleque, and finish your story without burying the gentleman, unless you want
to make more funerals."
"Well then, it so happened," said Sancho, "that as the pair of
them were going to sit down to table -and I think I can see them now plainer
than ever-"
Great was the enjoyment the duke and duchess derived from the
irritation the worthy churchman showed at the long-winded, halting way Sancho
had of telling his story, while Don Quixote was chafing with rage and vexation.
"So, as I was saying," continued Sancho, "as the pair of them were
going to sit down to table, as I said, the labourer insisted upon the
gentleman's taking the head of the table, and the gentleman insisted upon the
labourer's taking it, as his orders should be obeyed in his house; but the
labourer, who plumed himself on his politeness and good breeding, would not on
any account, until the gentleman, out of patience, putting his hands on his
shoulders, compelled him by force to sit down, saying, 'Sit down, you stupid
lout, for wherever I sit will he the head to you; and that's the story, and,
troth, I think it hasn't been brought in amiss here."
Don Quixote turned all colours, which, on his sunburnt face,
mottled it till it looked like jasper. The duke and duchess suppressed their
laughter so as not altogether to mortify Don Quixote, for they saw through
Sancho's impertinence; and to change the conversation, and keep Sancho from
uttering more absurdities, the duchess asked Don Quixote what news he had of
the lady Dulcinea, and if he had sent her any presents of giants or miscreants
lately, for he could not but have vanquished a good many.
To which Don Quixote replied, "Senora, my misfortunes, though they
had a beginning, will never have an end. I have vanquished giants and I have
sent her caitiffs and miscreants; but where are they to find her if she is
enchanted and turned into the most ill-favoured peasant wench that can be
imagined?"
"I don't know," said Sancho Panza; "to me she seems the fairest
creature in the world; at any rate, in nimbleness and jumping she won't give in
to a tumbler; by my faith, senora duchess, she leaps from the ground on to the
back of an ass like a cat."
"Have you seen her enchanted, Sancho?" asked the duke.
"What, seen her!" said Sancho; "why, who the devil was it but
myself that first thought of the enchantment business? She is as much enchanted
as my father."
The ecclesiastic, when he heard them talking of giants and
caitiffs and enchantments, began to suspect that this must be Don Quixote of La
Mancha, whose story the duke was always reading; and he had himself often
reproved him for it, telling him it was foolish to read such fooleries; and
becoming convinced that his suspicion was correct, addressing the duke, he said
very angrily to him, "Senor, your excellence will have to give account to God
for what this good man does. This Don Quixote, or Don Simpleton, or whatever
his name is, cannot, I imagine, be such a blockhead as your excellence would
have him, holding out encouragement to him to go on with his vagaries and
follies." Then turning to address Don Quixote he said, "And you, num-skull, who
put it into your head that you are a knight-errant, and vanquish giants and
capture miscreants? Go your ways in a good hour, and in a good hour be it said
to you. Go home and bring up your children if you have any, and attend to your
business, and give over going wandering about the world, gaping and making a
laughing-stock of yourself to all who know you and all who don't. Where, in
heaven's name, have you discovered that there are or ever were knights-errant?
Where are there giants in Spain or miscreants in La Mancha, or enchanted
Dulcineas, or all the rest of the silly things they tell about you?"
Don Quixote listened attentively to the reverend gentleman's
words, and as soon as he perceived he had done speaking, regardless of the
presence of the duke and duchess, he sprang to his feet with angry looks and an
agitated countenance, and said -But the reply deserves a chapter to itself.
  Chapter XXXII
Of the reply Don Quixote gave his censurer, with
other incidents, grave and droll
Don Quixote, then, having risen to his feet, trembling from head
to foot like a man dosed with mercury, said in a hurried, agitated voice, "The
place I am in, the presence in which I stand, and the respect I have and always
have had for the profession to which your worship belongs, hold and bind the
hands of my just indignation; and as well for these reasons as because I know,
as everyone knows, that a gownsman's weapon is the same as a woman's, the
tongue, I will with mine engage in equal combat with your worship, from whom
one might have expected good advice instead of foul abuse. Pious, well-meant
reproof requires a different demeanour and arguments of another sort; at any
rate, to have reproved me in public, and so roughly, exceeds the bounds of
proper reproof, for that comes better with gentleness than with rudeness; and
it is not seemly to call the sinner roundly blockhead and booby, without
knowing anything of the sin that is reproved. Come, tell me, for which of the
stupidities you have observed in me do you condemn and abuse me, and bid me go
home and look after my house and wife and children, without knowing whether I
have any? Is nothing more needed than to get a footing, by hook or by crook, in
other people's houses to rule over the masters (and that, perhaps, after having
been brought up in all the straitness of some seminary, and without having ever
seen more of the world than may lie within twenty or thirty leagues round), to
fit one to lay down the law rashly for chivalry, and pass judgment on
knights-errant? Is it, haply, an idle occupation, or is the time ill-spent that
is spent in roaming the world in quest, not of its enjoyments, but of those
arduous toils whereby the good mount upwards to the abodes of everlasting life?
If gentlemen, great lords, nobles, men of high birth, were to rate me as a fool
I should take it as an irreparable insult; but I care not a farthing if clerks
who have never entered upon or trod the paths of chivalry should think me
foolish. Knight I am, and knight I will die, if such be the pleasure of the
Most High. Some take the broad road of overweening ambition; others that of
mean and servile flattery; others that of deceitful hypocrisy, and some that of
true religion; but I, led by my star, follow the narrow path of
knight-errantry, and in pursuit of that calling I despise wealth, but not
honour. I have redressed injuries, righted wrongs, punished insolences,
vanquished giants, and crushed monsters; I am in love, for no other reason than
that it is incumbent on knights-errant to be so; but though I am, I am no
carnal-minded lover, but one of the chaste, platonic sort. My intentions are
always directed to worthy ends, to do good to all and evil to none; and if he
who means this, does this, and makes this his practice deserves to be called a
fool, it is for your highnesses to say, O most excellent duke and duchess."
"Good, by God!" cried Sancho; "say no more in your own defence,
master mine, for there's nothing more in the world to be said, thought, or
insisted on; and besides, when this gentleman denies, as he has, that there are
or ever have been any knights-errant in the world, is it any wonder if he knows
nothing of what he has been talking about?"
"Perhaps, brother," said the ecclesiastic, "you are that Sancho
Panza that is mentioned, to whom your master has promised an island?"
"Yes, I am," said Sancho, "and what's more, I am one who deserves
it as much as anyone; I am one of the sort- 'Attach thyself to the good, and
thou wilt be one of them,' and of those, 'Not with whom thou art bred, but with
whom thou art fed,' and of those, 'Who leans against a good tree, a good shade
covers him;' I have leant upon a good master, and I have been for months going
about with him, and please God I shall be just such another; long life to him
and long life to me, for neither will he be in any want of empires to rule, or
I of islands to govern."
"No, Sancho my friend, certainly not," said the duke, "for in the
name of Senor Don Quixote I confer upon you the government of one of no small
importance that I have at my disposal."
"Go down on thy knees, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "and kiss the
feet of his excellence for the favour he has bestowed upon thee."
Sancho obeyed, and on seeing this the ecclesiastic stood up from
table completely out of temper, exclaiming, "By the gown I wear, I am almost
inclined to say that your excellence is as great a fool as these sinners. No
wonder they are mad, when people who are in their senses sanction their
madness! I leave your excellence with them, for so long as they are in the
house, I will remain in my own, and spare myself the trouble of reproving what
I cannot remedy;" and without uttering another word, or eating another morsel,
he went off, the entreaties of the duke and duchess being entirely unavailing
to stop him; not that the duke said much to him, for he could not, because of
the laughter his uncalled-for anger provoked.
When he had done laughing, he said to Don Quixote, "You have
replied on your own behalf so stoutly, Sir Knight of the Lions, that there is
no occasion to seek further satisfaction for this, which, though it may look
like an offence, is not so at all, for, as women can give no offence, no more
can ecclesiastics, as you very well know."
"That is true," said Don Quixote, "and the reason is, that he who
is not liable to offence cannot give offence to anyone. Women, children, and
ecclesiastics, as they cannot defend themselves, though they may receive
offence cannot be insulted, because between the offence and the insult there
is, as your excellence very well knows, this difference: the insult comes from
one who is capable of offering it, and does so, and maintains it; the offence
may come from any quarter without carrying insult. To take an example: a man is
standing unsuspectingly in the street and ten others come up armed and beat
him; he draws his sword and quits himself like a man, but the number of his
antagonists makes it impossible for him to effect his purpose and avenge
himself; this man suffers an offence but not an insult. Another example will
make the same thing plain: a man is standing with his back turned, another
comes up and strikes him, and after striking him takes to flight, without
waiting an instant, and the other pursues him but does not overtake him; he who
received the blow received an offence, but not an insult, because an insult
must be maintained. If he who struck him, though he did so sneakingly and
treacherously, had drawn his sword and stood and faced him, then he who had
been struck would have received offence and insult at the same time; offence
because he was struck treacherously, insult because he who struck him
maintained what he had done, standing his ground without taking to flight. And
so, according to the laws of the accursed duel, I may have received offence,
but not insult, for neither women nor children can maintain it, nor can they
wound, nor have they any way of standing their ground, and it is just the same
with those connected with religion; for these three sorts of persons are
without arms offensive or defensive, and so, though naturally they are bound to
defend themselves, they have no right to offend anybody; and though I said just
now I might have received offence, I say now certainly not, for he who cannot
receive an insult can still less give one; for which reasons I ought not to
feel, nor do I feel, aggrieved at what that good man said to me; I only wish he
had stayed a little longer, that I might have shown him the mistake he makes in
supposing and maintaining that there are not and never have been any
knights-errant in the world; had Amadis or any of his countless descendants
heard him say as much, I am sure it would not have gone well with his worship."
"I will take my oath of that," said Sancho; "they would have given
him a slash that would have slit him down from top to toe like a pomegranate or
a ripe melon; they were likely fellows to put up with jokes of that sort! By my
faith, I'm certain if Reinaldos of Montalvan had heard the little man's words
he would have given him such a spank on the mouth that he wouldn't have spoken
for the next three years; ay, let him tackle them, and he'll see how he'll get
out of their hands!"
The duchess, as she listened to Sancho, was ready to die with
laughter, and in her own mind she set him down as droller and madder than his
master; and there were a good many just then who were of the same opinion.
Don Quixote finally grew calm, and dinner came to an end, and as
the cloth was removed four damsels came in, one of them with a silver basin,
another with a jug also of silver, a third with two fine white towels on her
shoulder, and the fourth with her arms bared to the elbows, and in her white
hands (for white they certainly were) a round ball of Naples soap. The one with
the basin approached, and with arch composure and impudence, thrust it under
Don Quixote's chin, who, wondering at such a ceremony, said never a word,
supposing it to be the custom of that country to wash beards instead of hands;
he therefore stretched his out as far as he could, and at the same instant the
jug began to pour and the damsel with the soap rubbed his beard briskly,
raising snow-flakes, for the soap lather was no less white, not only over the
beard, but all over the face, and over the eyes of the submissive knight, so
that they were perforce obliged to keep shut. The duke and duchess, who had not
known anything about this, waited to see what came of this strange washing. The
barber damsel, when she had him a hand's breadth deep in lather, pretended that
there was no more water, and bade the one with the jug go and fetch some, while
Senor Don Quixote waited. She did so, and Don Quixote was left the strangest
and most ludicrous figure that could be imagined. All those present, and there
were a good many, were watching him, and as they saw him there with half a yard
of neck, and that uncommonly brown, his eyes shut, and his beard full of soap,
it was a great wonder, and only by great discretion, that they were able to
restrain their laughter. The damsels, the concocters of the joke, kept their
eyes down, not daring to look at their master and mistress; and as for them,
laughter and anger struggled within them, and they knew not what to do, whether
to punish the audacity of the girls, or to reward them for the amusement they
had received from seeing Don Quixote in such a plight.
At length the damsel with the jug returned and they made an end of
washing Don Quixote, and the one who carried the towels very deliberately wiped
him and dried him; and all four together making him a profound obeisance and
curtsey, they were about to go, when the duke, lest Don Quixote should see
through the joke, called out to the one with the basin saying, "Come and wash
me, and take care that there is water enough." The girl, sharp-witted and
prompt, came and placed the basin for the duke as she had done for Don Quixote,
and they soon had him well soaped and washed, and having wiped him dry they
made their obeisance and retired. It appeared afterwards that the duke had
sworn that if they had not washed him as they had Don Quixote he would have
punished them for their impudence, which they adroitly atoned for by soaping
him as well.
Sancho observed the ceremony of the washing very attentively, and
said to himself, "God bless me, if it were only the custom in this country to
wash squires' beards too as well as knights'. For by God and upon my soul I
want it badly; and if they gave me a scrape of the razor besides I'd take it as
a still greater kindness."
"What are you saying to yourself, Sancho?" asked the duchess.
"I was saying, senora," he replied, "that in the courts of other
princes, when the cloth is taken away, I have always heard say they give water
for the hands, but not lye for the beard; and that shows it is good to live
long that you may see much; to be sure, they say too that he who lives a long
life must undergo much evil, though to undergo a washing of that sort is
pleasure rather than pain."
"Don't be uneasy, friend Sancho," said the duchess; "I will take
care that my damsels wash you, and even put you in the tub if necessary."
"I'll be content with the beard," said Sancho, "at any rate for
the present; and as for the future, God has decreed what is to be."
"Attend to worthy Sancho's request, seneschal," said the duchess,
"and do exactly what he wishes."
The seneschal replied that Senor Sancho should be obeyed in
everything; and with that he went away to dinner and took Sancho along with
him, while the duke and duchess and Don Quixote remained at table discussing a
great variety of things, but all bearing on the calling of arms and
knight-errantry.
The duchess begged Don Quixote, as he seemed to have a retentive
memory, to describe and portray to her the beauty and features of the lady
Dulcinea del Toboso, for, judging by what fame trumpeted abroad of her beauty,
she felt sure she must be the fairest creature in the world, nay, in all La
Mancha.
Don Quixote sighed on hearing the duchess's request, and said, "If
I could pluck out my heart, and lay it on a plate on this table here before
your highness's eyes, it would spare my tongue the pain of telling what can
hardly be thought of, for in it your excellence would see her portrayed in
full. But why should I attempt to depict and describe in detail, and feature by
feature, the beauty of the peerless Dulcinea, the burden being one worthy of
other shoulders than mine, an enterprise wherein the pencils of Parrhasius,
Timantes, and Apelles, and the graver of Lysippus ought to be employed, to
paint it in pictures and carve it in marble and bronze, and Ciceronian and
Demosthenian eloquence to sound its praises?"
"What does Demosthenian mean, Senor Don Quixote?" said the
duchess; "it is a word I never heard in all my life."
"Demosthenian eloquence," said Don Quixote, "means the eloquence
of Demosthenes, as Ciceronian means that of Cicero, who were the two most
eloquent orators in the world."
"True," said the duke; "you must have lost your wits to ask such a
question. Nevertheless, Senor Don Quixote would greatly gratify us if he would
depict her to us; for never fear, even in an outline or sketch she will be
something to make the fairest envious."
"I would do so certainly," said Don Quixote, "had she not been
blurred to my mind's eye by the misfortune that fell upon her a short time
since, one of such a nature that I am more ready to weep over it than to
describe it. For your highnesses must know that, going a few days back to kiss
her hands and receive her benediction, approbation, and permission for this
third sally, I found her altogether a different being from the one I sought; I
found her enchanted and changed from a princess into a peasant, from fair to
foul, from an angel into a devil, from fragrant to pestiferous, from refined to
clownish, from a dignified lady into a jumping tomboy, and, in a word, from
Dulcinea del Toboso into a coarse Sayago wench."
"God bless me!" said the duke aloud at this, "who can have done
the world such an injury? Who can have robbed it of the beauty that gladdened
it, of the grace and gaiety that charmed it, of the modesty that shed a lustre
upon it?"
"Who?" replied Don Quixote; "who could it be but some malignant
enchanter of the many that persecute me out of envy- that accursed race born
into the world to obscure and bring to naught the achievements of the good, and
glorify and exalt the deeds of the wicked? Enchanters have persecuted me,
enchanters persecute me still, and enchanters will continue to persecute me
until they have sunk me and my lofty chivalry in the deep abyss of oblivion;
and they injure and wound me where they know I feel it most. For to deprive a
knight-errant of his lady is to deprive him of the eyes he sees with, of the
sun that gives him light, of the food whereby he lives. Many a time before have
I said it, and I say it now once more, a knight-errant without a lady is like a
tree without leaves, a building without a foundation, or a shadow without the
body that causes it."
"There is no denying it," said the duchess; "but still, if we are
to believe the history of Don Quixote that has come out here lately with
general applause, it is to be inferred from it, if I mistake not, that you
never saw the lady Dulcinea, and that the said lady is nothing in the world but
an imaginary lady, one that you yourself begot and gave birth to in your brain,
and adorned with whatever charms and perfections you chose."
"There is a good deal to be said on that point," said Don Quixote;
"God knows whether there he any Dulcinea or not in the world, or whether she is
imaginary or not imaginary; these are things the proof of which must not be
pushed to extreme lengths. I have not begotten nor given birth to my lady,
though I behold her as she needs must be, a lady who contains in herself all
the qualities to make her famous throughout the world, beautiful without
blemish, dignified without haughtiness, tender and yet modest, gracious from
courtesy and courteous from good breeding, and lastly, of exalted lineage,
because beauty shines forth and excels with a higher degree of perfection upon
good blood than in the fair of lowly birth."
"That is true," said the duke; "but Senor Don Quixote will give me
leave to say what I am constrained to say by the story of his exploits that I
have read, from which it is to be inferred that, granting there is a Dulcinea
in El Toboso, or out of it, and that she is in the highest degree beautiful as
you have described her to us, as regards the loftiness of her lineage she is
not on a par with the Orianas, Alastrajareas, Madasimas, or others of that
sort, with whom, as you well know, the histories abound."
"To that I may reply," said Don Quixote, "that Dulcinea is the
daughter of her own works, and that virtues rectify blood, and that lowly
virtue is more to be regarded and esteemed than exalted vice. Dulcinea,
besides, has that within her that may raise her to be a crowned and sceptred
queen; for the merit of a fair and virtuous woman is capable of performing
greater miracles; and virtually, though not formally, she has in herself higher
fortunes."
"I protest, Senor Don Quixote," said the duchess, "that in all you
say, you go most cautiously and lead in hand, as the saying is; henceforth I
will believe myself, and I will take care that everyone in my house believes,
even my lord the duke if needs be, that there is a Dulcinea in El Toboso, and
that she is living to-day, and that she is beautiful and nobly born and
deserves to have such a knight as Senor Don Quixote in her service, and that is
the highest praise that it is in my power to give her or that I can think of.
But I cannot help entertaining a doubt, and having a certain grudge against
Sancho Panza; the doubt is this, that the aforesaid history declares that the
said Sancho Panza, when he carried a letter on your worship's behalf to the
said lady Dulcinea, found her sifting a sack of wheat; and more by token it
says it was red wheat; a thing which makes me doubt the loftiness of her
lineage."
To this Don Quixote made answer, "Senora, your highness must know
that everything or almost everything that happens me transcends the ordinary
limits of what happens to other knights-errant; whether it he that it is
directed by the inscrutable will of destiny, or by the malice of some jealous
enchanter. Now it is an established fact that all or most famous knights-errant
have some special gift, one that of being proof against enchantment, another
that of being made of such invulnerable flesh that he cannot be wounded, as was
the famous Roland, one of the twelve peers of France, of whom it is related
that he could not be wounded except in the sole of his left foot, and that it
must be with the point of a stout pin and not with any other sort of weapon
whatever; and so, when Bernardo del Carpio slew him at Roncesvalles, finding
that he could not wound him with steel, he lifted him up from the ground in his
arms and strangled him, calling to mind seasonably the death which Hercules
inflicted on Antaeus, the fierce giant that they say was the son of Terra. I
would infer from what I have mentioned that perhaps I may have some gift of
this kind, not that of being invulnerable, because experience has many times
proved to me that I am of tender flesh and not at all impenetrable; nor that of
being proof against enchantment, for I have already seen myself thrust into a
cage, in which all the world would not have been able to confine me except by
force of enchantments. But as I delivered myself from that one, I am inclined
to believe that there is no other that can hurt me; and so, these enchanters,
seeing that they cannot exert their vile craft against my person, revenge
themselves on what I love most, and seek to rob me of life by maltreating that
of Dulcinea in whom I live; and therefore I am convinced that when my squire
carried my message to her, they changed her into a common peasant girl, engaged
in such a mean occupation as sifting wheat; I have already said, however, that
that wheat was not red wheat, nor wheat at all, but grains of orient pearl. And
as a proof of all this, I must tell your highnesses that, coming to El Toboso a
short time back, I was altogether unable to discover the palace of Dulcinea;
and that the next day, though Sancho, my squire, saw her in her own proper
shape, which is the fairest in the world, to me she appeared to be a coarse,
ill-favoured farm-wench, and by no means a well-spoken one, she who is
propriety itself. And so, as I am not and, so far as one can judge, cannot be
enchanted, she it is that is enchanted, that is smitten, that is altered,
changed, and transformed; in her have my enemies revenged themselves upon me,
and for her shall I live in ceaseless tears, until I see her in her pristine
state. I have mentioned this lest anybody should mind what Sancho said about
Dulcinea's winnowing or sifting; for, as they changed her to me, it is no
wonder if they changed her to him. Dulcinea is illustrious and well-born, and
of one of the gentle families of El Toboso, which are many, ancient, and good.
Therein, most assuredly, not small is the share of the peerless Dulcinea,
through whom her town will be famous and celebrated in ages to come, as Troy
was through Helen, and Spain through La Cava, though with a better title and
tradition. For another thing; I would have your graces understand that Sancho
Panza is one of the drollest squires that ever served knight-errant; sometimes
there is a simplicity about him so acute that it is an amusement to try and
make out whether he is simple or sharp; he has mischievous tricks that stamp
him rogue, and blundering ways that prove him a booby; he doubts everything and
believes everything; when I fancy he is on the point of coming down headlong
from sheer stupidity, he comes out with something shrewd that sends him up to
the skies. After all, I would not exchange him for another squire, though I
were given a city to boot, and therefore I am in doubt whether it will be well
to send him to the government your highness has bestowed upon him; though I
perceive in him a certain aptitude for the work of governing, so that, with a
little trimming of his understanding, he would manage any government as easily
as the king does his taxes; and moreover, we know already ample experience that
it does not require much cleverness or much learning to be a governor, for
there are a hundred round about us that scarcely know how to read, and govern
like gerfalcons. The main point is that they should have good intentions and be
desirous of doing right in all things, for they will never be at a loss for
persons to advise and direct them in what they have to do, like those
knight-governors who, being no lawyers, pronounce sentences with the aid of an
assessor. My advice to him will be to take no bribe and surrender no right, and
I have some other little matters in reserve, that shall be produced in due
season for Sancho's benefit and the advantage of the island he is to govern."
The duke, duchess, and Don Quixote had reached this point in their
conversation, when they heard voices and a great hubbub in the palace, and
Sancho burst abruptly into the room all glowing with anger, with a
straining-cloth by way of a bib, and followed by several servants, or, more
properly speaking, kitchen-boys and other underlings, one of whom carried a
small trough full of water, that from its colour and impurity was plainly
dishwater. The one with the trough pursued him and followed him everywhere he
went, endeavouring with the utmost persistence to thrust it under his chin,
while another kitchen-boy seemed anxious to wash his beard.
"What is all this, brothers?" asked the duchess. "What is it? What
do you want to do to this good man? Do you forget he is a governor-elect?"
To which the barber kitchen-boy replied, "The gentleman will not
let himself be washed as is customary, and as my lord the and the senor his
master have been."
"Yes, I will," said Sancho, in a great rage; "but I'd like it to
be with cleaner towels, clearer lye, and not such dirty hands; for there's not
so much difference between me and my master that he should be washed with
angels' water and I with devil's lye. The customs of countries and princes'
palaces are only good so long as they give no annoyance; but the way of washing
they have here is worse than doing penance. I have a clean beard, and I don't
require to be refreshed in that fashion, and whoever comes to wash me or touch
a hair of my head, I mean to say my beard, with all due respect be it said,
I'll give him a punch that will leave my fist sunk in his skull; for cirimonies
and soapings of this sort are more like jokes than the polite attentions of
one's host."
The duchess was ready to die with laughter when she saw Sancho's
rage and heard his words; but it was no pleasure to Don Quixote to see him in
such a sorry trim, with the dingy towel about him, and the hangers-on of the
kitchen all round him; so making a low bow to the duke and duchess, as if to
ask their permission to speak, he addressed the rout in a dignified tone:
"Holloa, gentlemen! you let that youth alone, and go back to where you came
from, or anywhere else if you like; my squire is as clean as any other person,
and those troughs are as bad as narrow thin-necked jars to him; take my advice
and leave him alone, for neither he nor I understand joking."
Sancho took the word out of his mouth and went on, "Nay, let them
come and try their jokes on the country bumpkin, for it's about as likely I'll
stand them as that it's now midnight! Let them bring me a comb here, or what
they please, and curry this beard of mine, and if they get anything out of it
that offends against cleanliness, let them clip me to the skin."
Upon this, the duchess, laughing all the while, said, "Sancho
Panza is right, and always will be in all he says; he is clean, and, as he says
himself, he does not require to be washed; and if our ways do not please him,
he is free to choose. Besides, you promoters of cleanliness have been
excessively careless and thoughtless, I don't know if I ought not to say
audacious, to bring troughs and wooden utensils and kitchen dishclouts, instead
of basins and jugs of pure gold and towels of holland, to such a person and
such a beard; but, after all, you are ill-conditioned and ill-bred, and
spiteful as you are, you cannot help showing the grudge you have against the
squires of knights-errant."
The impudent servitors, and even the seneschal who came with them,
took the duchess to be speaking in earnest, so they removed the straining-cloth
from Sancho's neck, and with something like shame and confusion of face went
off all of them and left him; whereupon he, seeing himself safe out of that
extreme danger, as it seemed to him, ran and fell on his knees before the
duchess, saying, "From great ladies great favours may be looked for; this which
your grace has done me today cannot be requited with less than wishing I was
dubbed a knight-errant, to devote myself all the days of my life to the service
of so exalted a lady. I am a labouring man, my name is Sancho Panza, I am
married, I have children, and I am serving as a squire; if in any one of these
ways I can serve your highness, I will not he longer in obeying than your grace
in commanding."
"It is easy to see, Sancho," replied the duchess, "that you have
learned to he polite in the school of politeness itself; I mean to say it is
easy to see that you have been nursed in the bosom of Senor Don Quixote, who
is, of course, the cream of good breeding and flower of ceremony- or cirimony,
as you would say yourself. Fair be the fortunes of such a master and such a
servant, the one the cynosure of knight-errantry, the other the star of
squirely fidelity! Rise, Sancho, my friend; I will repay your courtesy by
taking care that my lord the duke makes good to you the promised gift of the
government as soon as possible."
With this, the conversation came to an end, and Don Quixote
retired to take his midday sleep; but the duchess begged Sancho, unless he had
a very great desire to go to sleep, to come and spend the afternoon with her
and her damsels in a very cool chamber. Sancho replied that, though he
certainly had the habit of sleeping four or five hours in the heat of the day
in summer, to serve her excellence he would try with all his might not to sleep
even one that day, and that he would come in obedience to her command, and with
that he went off. The duke gave fresh orders with respect to treating Don
Quixote as a knight-errant, without departing even in smallest particular from
the style in which, as the stories tell us, they used to treat the knights of
old.
  Chapter XXXIII
Of the delectable discourse which the Duchess and
her damsels held with Sancho Panza, well worth reading and noting
The history records that Sancho did not sleep that afternoon, but
in order to keep his word came, before he had well done dinner, to visit the
duchess, who, finding enjoyment in listening to him, made him sit down beside
her on a low seat, though Sancho, out of pure good breeding, wanted not to sit
down; the duchess, however, told him he was to sit down as governor and talk as
squire, as in both respects he was worthy of even the chair of the Cid Ruy Diaz
the Campeador. Sancho shrugged his shoulders, obeyed, and sat down, and all the
duchess's damsels and duennas gathered round him, waiting in profound silence
to hear what he would say. It was the duchess, however, who spoke first,
saying:
"Now that we are alone, and that there is nobody here to overhear
us, I should be glad if the senor governor would relieve me of certain doubts I
have, rising out of the history of the great Don Quixote that is now in print.
One is: inasmuch as worthy Sancho never saw Dulcinea, I mean the lady Dulcinea
del Toboso, nor took Don Quixote's letter to her, for it was left in the
memorandum book in the Sierra Morena, how did he dare to invent the answer and
all that about finding her sifting wheat, the whole story being a deception and
falsehood, and so much to the prejudice of the peerless Dulcinea's good name, a
thing that is not at all becoming the character and fidelity of a good squire?"
At these words, Sancho, without uttering one in reply, got up from
his chair, and with noiseless steps, with his body bent and his finger on his
lips, went all round the room lifting up the hangings; and this done, he came
back to his seat and said, "Now, senora, that I have seen that there is no one
except the bystanders listening to us on the sly, I will answer what you have
asked me, and all you may ask me, without fear or dread. And the first thing I
have got to say is, that for my own part I hold my master Don Quixote to be
stark mad, though sometimes he says things that, to my mind, and indeed
everybody's that listens to him, are so wise, and run in such a straight
furrow, that Satan himself could not have said them better; but for all that,
really, and beyond all question, it's my firm belief he is cracked. Well, then,
as this is clear to my mind, I can venture to make him believe things that have
neither head nor tail, like that affair of the answer to the letter, and that
other of six or eight days ago, which is not yet in history, that is to say,
the affair of the enchantment of my lady Dulcinea; for I made him believe she
is enchanted, though there's no more truth in it than over the hills of Ubeda.
The duchess begged him to tell her about the enchantment or
deception, so Sancho told the whole story exactly as it had happened, and his
hearers were not a little amused by it; and then resuming, the duchess said,
"In consequence of what worthy Sancho has told me, a doubt starts up in my
mind, and there comes a kind of whisper to my ear that says, 'If Don Quixote be
mad, crazy, and cracked, and Sancho Panza his squire knows it, and,
notwithstanding, serves and follows him, and goes trusting to his empty
promises, there can be no doubt he must be still madder and sillier than his
master; and that being so, it will be cast in your teeth, senora duchess, if
you give the said Sancho an island to govern; for how will he who does not know
how to govern himself know how to govern others?'"
"By God, senora," said Sancho, "but that doubt comes timely; but
your grace may say it out, and speak plainly, or as you like; for I know what
you say is true, and if I were wise I should have left my master long ago; but
this was my fate, this was my bad luck; I can't help it, I must follow him;
we're from the same village, I've eaten his bread, I'm fond of him, I'm
grateful, he gave me his ass-colts, and above all I'm faithful; so it's quite
impossible for anything to separate us, except the pickaxe and shovel. And if
your highness does not like to give me the government you promised, God made me
without it, and maybe your not giving it to me will be all the better for my
conscience, for fool as I am I know the proverb 'to her hurt the ant got
wings,' and it may be that Sancho the squire will get to heaven sooner than
Sancho the governo |