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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>THE HISTORY OF DON QUIXOTE, By Cervantes, Vol. I., Part 16.</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+
+<style type="text/css">
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+
+<h2>THE HISTORY OF DON QUIXOTE, By Cervantes, Vol. I., Part 16.</h2>
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I., Part
+16., by Miguel de Cervantes
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I., Part 16.
+
+Author: Miguel de Cervantes
+
+Release Date: July 19, 2004 [EBook #5918]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DON QUIXOTE, PART 16 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center>
+<h1>DON QUIXOTE</h1>
+<br>
+<h2>by Miguel de Cervantes</h2>
+<br>
+<h3>Translated by John Ormsby</h3>
+</center>
+
+<br><br>
+
+<center><h3>
+Volume I.,&nbsp; Part 16
+<br><br>
+Chapters 47-49
+</h3></center>
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="bookcover.jpg (230K)" src="images/bookcover.jpg" height="842" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/bookcover.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg">
+</a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="spine.jpg (152K)" src="images/spine.jpg" height="842" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/spine.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg">
+</a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+
+<h3>Ebook Editor's Note</h3>
+
+<blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><blockquote>
+<p>The book cover and spine above and the images which follow were not part of the original Ormsby
+translation--they are taken from the 1880 edition of J. W. Clark, illustrated by
+Gustave Dore. Clark in his edition states that, "The English text of 'Don Quixote'
+adopted in this edition is that of Jarvis, with occasional corrections from Motteaux."
+See in the introduction below John Ormsby's critique of
+both the Jarvis and Motteaux translations. It has been elected in the present Project Gutenberg edition
+to attach the famous engravings of Gustave Dore to the Ormsby translation instead
+of the Jarvis/Motteaux. The detail of many of the Dore engravings can be fully appreciated only
+by utilizing the "Enlarge" button to expand them to their original dimensions. Ormsby
+in his Preface has criticized the fanciful nature of Dore's illustrations; others feel
+these woodcuts and steel engravings well match Quixote's dreams.
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;D.W.</p>
+</blockquote></blockquote></blockquote></blockquote>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="p003.jpg (307K)" src="images/p003.jpg" height="813" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p003.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg">
+</a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<center><h2>CONTENTS</h2></center>
+
+<pre>
+
+<a href="#ch47">CHAPTER XLVII</a>
+OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH DON QUIXOTE OF
+LA MANCHA WAS CARRIED AWAY ENCHANTED, TOGETHER
+WITH OTHER REMARKABLE INCIDENTS
+
+<a href="#ch48">CHAPTER XLVIII</a>
+IN WHICH THE CANON PURSUES THE SUBJECT OF THE BOOKS
+OF CHIVALRY, WITH OTHER MATTERS WORTHY OF HIS WIT
+
+<a href="#ch49">CHAPTER XLIX</a>
+WHICH TREATS OF THE SHREWD CONVERSATION WHICH SANCHO
+PANZA HELD WITH HIS MASTER DON QUIXOTE
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch47"></a>CHAPTER XLVII.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH DON QUIXOTE OF LA MANCHA WAS
+CARRIED AWAY ENCHANTED, TOGETHER WITH OTHER REMARKABLE INCIDENTS
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="c47a"></a><img alt="c47a.jpg (181K)" src="images/c47a.jpg" height="433" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/c47a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>When Don Quixote saw himself caged and hoisted on the cart in this
+way, he said, "Many grave histories of knights-errant have I read; but
+never yet have I read, seen, or heard of their carrying off
+enchanted knights-errant in this fashion, or at the slow pace that
+these lazy, sluggish animals promise; for they always take them away
+through the air with marvellous swiftness, enveloped in a dark thick
+cloud, or on a chariot of fire, or it may be on some hippogriff or
+other beast of the kind; but to carry me off like this on an
+ox-cart! By God, it puzzles me! But perhaps the chivalry and
+enchantments of our day take a different course from that of those
+in days gone by; and it may be, too, that as I am a new knight in
+the world, and the first to revive the already forgotten calling of
+knight-adventurers, they may have newly invented other kinds of
+enchantments and other modes of carrying off the enchanted. What
+thinkest thou of the matter, Sancho my son?"</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="c47b"></a><img alt="c47b.jpg (357K)" src="images/c47b.jpg" height="836" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/c47b.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"I don't know what to think," answered Sancho, "not being as well
+read as your worship in errant writings; but for all that I venture to
+say and swear that these apparitions that are about us are not quite
+catholic."</p>
+
+<p>"Catholic!" said Don Quixote. "Father of me! how can they be
+Catholic when they are all devils that have taken fantastic shapes
+to come and do this, and bring me to this condition? And if thou
+wouldst prove it, touch them, and feel them, and thou wilt find they
+have only bodies of air, and no consistency except in appearance."</p>
+
+<p>"By God, master," returned Sancho, "I have touched them already; and
+that devil, that goes about there so busily, has firm flesh, and
+another property very different from what I have heard say devils
+have, for by all accounts they all smell of brimstone and other bad
+smells; but this one smells of amber half a league off." Sancho was
+here speaking of Don Fernando, who, like a gentleman of his rank,
+was very likely perfumed as Sancho said.</p>
+
+<p>"Marvel not at that, Sancho my friend," said Don Quixote; "for let
+me tell thee devils are crafty; and even if they do carry odours about
+with them, they themselves have no smell, because they are spirits;
+or, if they have any smell, they cannot smell of anything sweet, but
+of something foul and fetid; and the reason is that as they carry hell
+with them wherever they go, and can get no ease whatever from their
+torments, and as a sweet smell is a thing that gives pleasure and
+enjoyment, it is impossible that they can smell sweet; if, then,
+this devil thou speakest of seems to thee to smell of amber, either
+thou art deceiving thyself, or he wants to deceive thee by making thee
+fancy he is not a devil."</p>
+
+<p>Such was the conversation that passed between master and man; and
+Don Fernando and Cardenio, apprehensive of Sancho's making a
+complete discovery of their scheme, towards which he had already
+gone some way, resolved to hasten their departure, and calling the
+landlord aside, they directed him to saddle Rocinante and put the
+pack-saddle on Sancho's ass, which he did with great alacrity. In
+the meantime the curate had made an arrangement with the officers that
+they should bear them company as far as his village, he paying them so
+much a day. Cardenio hung the buckler on one side of the bow of
+Rocinante's saddle and the basin on the other, and by signs
+commanded Sancho to mount his ass and take Rocinante's bridle, and
+at each side of the cart he placed two officers with their muskets;
+but before the cart was put in motion, out came the landlady and her
+daughter and Maritornes to bid Don Quixote farewell, pretending to
+weep with grief at his misfortune; and to them Don Quixote said:</p>
+
+<p>"Weep not, good ladies, for all these mishaps are the lot of those
+who follow the profession I profess; and if these reverses did not
+befall me I should not esteem myself a famous knight-errant; for
+such things never happen to knights of little renown and fame, because
+nobody in the world thinks about them; to valiant knights they do, for
+these are envied for their virtue and valour by many princes and other
+knights who compass the destruction of the worthy by base means.
+Nevertheless, virtue is of herself so mighty, that, in spite of all
+the magic that Zoroaster its first inventor knew, she will come
+victorious out of every trial, and shed her light upon the earth as
+the sun does upon the heavens. Forgive me, fair ladies, if, through
+inadvertence, I have in aught offended you; for intentionally and
+wittingly I have never done so to any; and pray to God that he deliver
+me from this captivity to which some malevolent enchanter has
+consigned me; and should I find myself released therefrom, the favours
+that ye have bestowed upon me in this castle shall be held in memory
+by me, that I may acknowledge, recognise, and requite them as they
+deserve."</p>
+
+<p>While this was passing between the ladies of the castle and Don
+Quixote, the curate and the barber bade farewell to Don Fernando and
+his companions, to the captain, his brother, and the ladies, now all
+made happy, and in particular to Dorothea and Luscinda. They all
+embraced one another, and promised to let each other know how things
+went with them, and Don Fernando directed the curate where to write to
+him, to tell him what became of Don Quixote, assuring him that there
+was nothing that could give him more pleasure than to hear of it,
+and that he too, on his part, would send him word of everything he
+thought he would like to know, about his marriage, Zoraida's
+baptism, Don Luis's affair, and Luscinda's return to her home. The
+curate promised to comply with his request carefully, and they
+embraced once more, and renewed their promises.</p>
+
+<p>The landlord approached the curate and handed him some papers,
+saying he had discovered them in the lining of the valise in which the
+novel of "The Ill-advised Curiosity" had been found, and that he might
+take them all away with him as their owner had not since returned;
+for, as he could not read, he did not want them himself. The curate
+thanked him, and opening them he saw at the beginning of the
+manuscript the words, "Novel of Rinconete and Cortadillo," by which he
+perceived that it was a novel, and as that of "The Ill-advised
+Curiosity" had been good he concluded this would be so too, as they
+were both probably by the same author; so he kept it, intending to
+read it when he had an opportunity. He then mounted and his friend the
+barber did the same, both masked, so as not to be recognised by Don
+Quixote, and set out following in the rear of the cart. The order of
+march was this: first went the cart with the owner leading it; at each
+side of it marched the officers of the Brotherhood, as has been
+said, with their muskets; then followed Sancho Panza on his ass,
+leading Rocinante by the bridle; and behind all came the curate and
+the barber on their mighty mules, with faces covered, as aforesaid,
+and a grave and serious air, measuring their pace to suit the slow
+steps of the oxen. Don Quixote was seated in the cage, with his
+hands tied and his feet stretched out, leaning against the bars as
+silent and as patient as if he were a stone statue and not a man of
+flesh. Thus slowly and silently they made, it might be, two leagues,
+until they reached a valley which the carter thought a convenient
+place for resting and feeding his oxen, and he said so to the
+curate, but the barber was of opinion that they ought to push on a
+little farther, as at the other side of a hill which appeared close by
+he knew there was a valley that had more grass and much better than
+the one where they proposed to halt; and his advice was taken and they
+continued their journey.</p>
+
+<p>Just at that moment the curate, looking back, saw coming on behind
+them six or seven mounted men, well found and equipped, who soon
+overtook them, for they were travelling, not at the sluggish,
+deliberate pace of oxen, but like men who rode canons' mules, and in
+haste to take their noontide rest as soon as possible at the inn which
+was in sight not a league off. The quick travellers came up with the
+slow, and courteous salutations were exchanged; and one of the new
+comers, who was, in fact, a canon of Toledo and master of the others
+who accompanied him, observing the regular order of the procession,
+the cart, the officers, Sancho, Rocinante, the curate and the
+barber, and above all Don Quixote caged and confined, could not help
+asking what was the meaning of carrying the man in that fashion;
+though, from the badges of the officers, he already concluded that
+he must be some desperate highwayman or other malefactor whose
+punishment fell within the jurisdiction of the Holy Brotherhood. One
+of the officers to whom he had put the question, replied, "Let the
+gentleman himself tell you the meaning of his going this way, senor,
+for we do not know."</p>
+
+<p>Don Quixote overheard the conversation and said, "Haply,
+gentlemen, you are versed and learned in matters of errant chivalry?
+Because if you are I will tell you my misfortunes; if not, there is no
+good in my giving myself the trouble of relating them;" but here the
+curate and the barber, seeing that the travellers were engaged in
+conversation with Don Quixote, came forward, in order to answer in
+such a way as to save their stratagem from being discovered.</p>
+
+<p>The canon, replying to Don Quixote, said, "In truth, brother, I know
+more about books of chivalry than I do about Villalpando's elements of
+logic; so if that be all, you may safely tell me what you please."</p>
+
+<p>"In God's name, then, senor," replied Don Quixote; "if that be so, I
+would have you know that I am held enchanted in this cage by the
+envy and fraud of wicked enchanters; for virtue is more persecuted
+by the wicked than loved by the good. I am a knight-errant, and not
+one of those whose names Fame has never thought of immortalising in
+her record, but of those who, in defiance and in spite of envy itself,
+and all the magicians that Persia, or Brahmans that India, or
+Gymnosophists that Ethiopia ever produced, will place their names in
+the temple of immortality, to serve as examples and patterns for
+ages to come, whereby knights-errant may see the footsteps in which
+they must tread if they would attain the summit and crowning point
+of honour in arms."</p>
+
+<p>"What Senor Don Quixote of La Mancha says," observed the curate, "is
+the truth; for he goes enchanted in this cart, not from any fault or
+sins of his, but because of the malevolence of those to whom virtue is
+odious and valour hateful. This, senor, is the Knight of the Rueful
+Countenance, if you have ever heard him named, whose valiant
+achievements and mighty deeds shall be written on lasting brass and
+imperishable marble, notwithstanding all the efforts of envy to
+obscure them and malice to hide them."</p>
+
+<p>When the canon heard both the prisoner and the man who was at
+liberty talk in such a strain he was ready to cross himself in his
+astonishment, and could not make out what had befallen him; and all
+his attendants were in the same state of amazement.</p>
+
+<p>At this point Sancho Panza, who had drawn near to hear the
+conversation, said, in order to make everything plain, "Well, sirs,
+you may like or dislike what I am going to say, but the fact of the
+matter is, my master, Don Quixote, is just as much enchanted as my
+mother. He is in his full senses, he eats and he drinks, and he has
+his calls like other men and as he had yesterday, before they caged
+him. And if that's the case, what do they mean by wanting me to
+believe that he is enchanted? For I have heard many a one say that
+enchanted people neither eat, nor sleep, nor talk; and my master, if
+you don't stop him, will talk more than thirty lawyers." Then
+turning to the curate he exclaimed, "Ah, senor curate, senor curate!
+do you think I don't know you? Do you think I don't guess and see
+the drift of these new enchantments? Well then, I can tell you I
+know you, for all your face is covered, and I can tell you I am up
+to you, however you may hide your tricks. After all, where envy reigns
+virtue cannot live, and where there is niggardliness there can be no
+liberality. Ill betide the devil! if it had not been for your
+worship my master would be married to the Princess Micomicona this
+minute, and I should be a count at least; for no less was to be
+expected, as well from the goodness of my master, him of the Rueful
+Countenance, as from the greatness of my services. But I see now how
+true it is what they say in these parts, that the wheel of fortune
+turns faster than a mill-wheel, and that those who were up yesterday
+are down to-day. I am sorry for my wife and children, for when they
+might fairly and reasonably expect to see their father return to
+them a governor or viceroy of some island or kingdom, they will see
+him come back a horse-boy. I have said all this, senor curate, only to
+urge your paternity to lay to your conscience your ill-treatment of my
+master; and have a care that God does not call you to account in
+another life for making a prisoner of him in this way, and charge
+against you all the succours and good deeds that my lord Don Quixote
+leaves undone while he is shut up.</p>
+
+<p>"Trim those lamps there!" exclaimed the barber at this; "so you
+are of the same fraternity as your master, too, Sancho? By God, I
+begin to see that you will have to keep him company in the cage, and
+be enchanted like him for having caught some of his humour and
+chivalry. It was an evil hour when you let yourself be got with
+child by his promises, and that island you long so much for found
+its way into your head."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not with child by anyone," returned Sancho, "nor am I a man to
+let myself be got with child, if it was by the King himself. Though
+I am poor I am an old Christian, and I owe nothing to nobody, and if I
+long for an island, other people long for worse. Each of us is the son
+of his own works; and being a man I may come to be pope, not to say
+governor of an island, especially as my master may win so many that he
+will not know whom to give them to. Mind how you talk, master
+barber; for shaving is not everything, and there is some difference
+between Peter and Peter. I say this because we all know one another,
+and it will not do to throw false dice with me; and as to the
+enchantment of my master, God knows the truth; leave it as it is; it
+only makes it worse to stir it."</p>
+
+<p>The barber did not care to answer Sancho lest by his plain
+speaking he should disclose what the curate and he himself were trying
+so hard to conceal; and under the same apprehension the curate had
+asked the canon to ride on a little in advance, so that he might
+tell him the mystery of this man in the cage, and other things that
+would amuse him. The canon agreed, and going on ahead with his
+servants, listened with attention to the account of the character,
+life, madness, and ways of Don Quixote, given him by the curate, who
+described to him briefly the beginning and origin of his craze, and
+told him the whole story of his adventures up to his being confined in
+the cage, together with the plan they had of taking him home to try if
+by any means they could discover a cure for his madness. The canon and
+his servants were surprised anew when they heard Don Quixote's strange
+story, and when it was finished he said, "To tell the truth, senor
+curate, I for my part consider what they call books of chivalry to
+be mischievous to the State; and though, led by idle and false
+taste, I have read the beginnings of almost all that have been
+printed, I never could manage to read any one of them from beginning
+to end; for it seems to me they are all more or less the same thing;
+and one has nothing more in it than another; this no more than that.
+And in my opinion this sort of writing and composition is of the
+same species as the fables they call the Milesian, nonsensical tales
+that aim solely at giving amusement and not instruction, exactly the
+opposite of the apologue fables which amuse and instruct at the same
+time. And though it may be the chief object of such books to amuse,
+I do not know how they can succeed, when they are so full of such
+monstrous nonsense. For the enjoyment the mind feels must come from
+the beauty and harmony which it perceives or contemplates in the
+things that the eye or the imagination brings before it; and nothing
+that has any ugliness or disproportion about it can give any pleasure.
+What beauty, then, or what proportion of the parts to the whole, or of
+the whole to the parts, can there be in a book or fable where a lad of
+sixteen cuts down a giant as tall as a tower and makes two halves of
+him as if he was an almond cake? And when they want to give us a
+picture of a battle, after having told us that there are a million
+of combatants on the side of the enemy, let the hero of the book be
+opposed to them, and we have perforce to believe, whether we like it
+or not, that the said knight wins the victory by the single might of
+his strong arm. And then, what shall we say of the facility with which
+a born queen or empress will give herself over into the arms of some
+unknown wandering knight? What mind, that is not wholly barbarous
+and uncultured, can find pleasure in reading of how a great tower full
+of knights sails away across the sea like a ship with a fair wind, and
+will be to-night in Lombardy and to-morrow morning in the land of
+Prester John of the Indies, or some other that Ptolemy never described
+nor Marco Polo saw? And if, in answer to this, I am told that the
+authors of books of the kind write them as fiction, and therefore
+are not bound to regard niceties of truth, I would reply that
+fiction is all the better the more it looks like truth, and gives
+the more pleasure the more probability and possibility there is
+about it. Plots in fiction should be wedded to the understanding of
+the reader, and be constructed in such a way that, reconciling
+impossibilities, smoothing over difficulties, keeping the mind on
+the alert, they may surprise, interest, divert, and entertain, so that
+wonder and delight joined may keep pace one with the other; all
+which he will fail to effect who shuns verisimilitude and truth to
+nature, wherein lies the perfection of writing. I have never yet
+seen any book of chivalry that puts together a connected plot complete
+in all its numbers, so that the middle agrees with the beginning,
+and the end with the beginning and middle; on the contrary, they
+construct them with such a multitude of members that it seems as
+though they meant to produce a chimera or monster rather than a
+well-proportioned figure. And besides all this they are harsh in their
+style, incredible in their achievements, licentious in their amours,
+uncouth in their courtly speeches, prolix in their battles, silly in
+their arguments, absurd in their travels, and, in short, wanting in
+everything like intelligent art; for which reason they deserve to be
+banished from the Christian commonwealth as a worthless breed."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="c47c"></a><img alt="c47c.jpg (300K)" src="images/c47c.jpg" height="524" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/c47c.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>The curate listened to him attentively and felt that he was a man of
+sound understanding, and that there was good reason in what he said;
+so he told him that, being of the same opinion himself, and bearing
+a grudge to books of chivalry, he had burned all Don Quixote's,
+which were many; and gave him an account of the scrutiny he had made
+of them, and of those he had condemned to the flames and those he
+had spared, with which the canon was not a little amused, adding
+that though he had said so much in condemnation of these books,
+still he found one good thing in them, and that was the opportunity
+they afforded to a gifted intellect for displaying itself; for they
+presented a wide and spacious field over which the pen might range
+freely, describing shipwrecks, tempests, combats, battles,
+portraying a valiant captain with all the qualifications requisite
+to make one, showing him sagacious in foreseeing the wiles of the
+enemy, eloquent in speech to encourage or restrain his soldiers,
+ripe in counsel, rapid in resolve, as bold in biding his time as in
+pressing the attack; now picturing some sad tragic incident, now
+some joyful and unexpected event; here a beauteous lady, virtuous,
+wise, and modest; there a Christian knight, brave and gentle; here a
+lawless, barbarous braggart; there a courteous prince, gallant and
+gracious; setting forth the devotion and loyalty of vassals, the
+greatness and generosity of nobles. "Or again," said he, "the author
+may show himself to be an astronomer, or a skilled cosmographer, or
+musician, or one versed in affairs of state, and sometimes he will
+have a chance of coming forward as a magician if he likes. He can
+set forth the craftiness of Ulysses, the piety of AEneas, the valour
+of Achilles, the misfortunes of Hector, the treachery of Sinon, the
+friendship of Euryalus, the generosity of Alexander, the boldness of
+Caesar, the clemency and truth of Trajan, the fidelity of Zopyrus, the
+wisdom of Cato, and in short all the faculties that serve to make an
+illustrious man perfect, now uniting them in one individual, again
+distributing them among many; and if this be done with charm of
+style and ingenious invention, aiming at the truth as much as
+possible, he will assuredly weave a web of bright and varied threads
+that, when finished, will display such perfection and beauty that it
+will attain the worthiest object any writing can seek, which, as I
+said before, is to give instruction and pleasure combined; for the
+unrestricted range of these books enables the author to show his
+powers, epic, lyric, tragic, or comic, and all the moods the sweet and
+winning arts of poesy and oratory are capable of; for the epic may
+be written in prose just as well as in verse."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="c47e"></a><img alt="c47e.jpg (67K)" src="images/c47e.jpg" height="409" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/c47e.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch48"></a>CHAPTER XLVIII.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>IN WHICH THE CANON PURSUES THE SUBJECT OF THE BOOKS OF CHIVALRY,
+WITH OTHER MATTERS WORTHY OF HIS WIT
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="c48a"></a><img alt="c48a.jpg (80K)" src="images/c48a.jpg" height="232" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/c48a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"It is as you say, senor canon," said the curate; "and for that
+reason those who have hitherto written books of the sort deserve all
+the more censure for writing without paying any attention to good
+taste or the rules of art, by which they might guide themselves and
+become as famous in prose as the two princes of Greek and Latin poetry
+are in verse."</p>
+
+<p>"I myself, at any rate," said the canon, "was once tempted to
+write a book of chivalry in which all the points I have mentioned were
+to be observed; and if I must own the truth I have more than a hundred
+sheets written; and to try if it came up to my own opinion of it, I
+showed them to persons who were fond of this kind of reading, to
+learned and intelligent men as well as to ignorant people who cared
+for nothing but the pleasure of listening to nonsense, and from all
+I obtained flattering approval; nevertheless I proceeded no farther
+with it, as well because it seemed to me an occupation inconsistent
+with my profession, as because I perceived that the fools are more
+numerous than the wise; and, though it is better to be praised by
+the wise few than applauded by the foolish many, I have no mind to
+submit myself to the stupid judgment of the silly public, to whom
+the reading of such books falls for the most part.</p>
+
+<p>"But what most of all made me hold my hand and even abandon all idea
+of finishing it was an argument I put to myself taken from the plays
+that are acted now-a-days, which was in this wise: if those that are
+now in vogue, as well those that are pure invention as those founded
+on history, are, all or most of them, downright nonsense and things
+that have neither head nor tail, and yet the public listens to them
+with delight, and regards and cries them up as perfection when they
+are so far from it; and if the authors who write them, and the players
+who act them, say that this is what they must be, for the public wants
+this and will have nothing else; and that those that go by rule and
+work out a plot according to the laws of art will only find some
+half-dozen intelligent people to understand them, while all the rest
+remain blind to the merit of their composition; and that for
+themselves it is better to get bread from the many than praise from
+the few; then my book will fare the same way, after I have burnt off
+my eyebrows in trying to observe the principles I have spoken of,
+and I shall be 'the tailor of the corner.' And though I have sometimes
+endeavoured to convince actors that they are mistaken in this notion
+they have adopted, and that they would attract more people, and get
+more credit, by producing plays in accordance with the rules of art,
+than by absurd ones, they are so thoroughly wedded to their own
+opinion that no argument or evidence can wean them from it.</p>
+
+<p>"I remember saying one day to one of these obstinate fellows,
+'Tell me, do you not recollect that a few years ago, there were
+three tragedies acted in Spain, written by a famous poet of these
+kingdoms, which were such that they filled all who heard them with
+admiration, delight, and interest, the ignorant as well as the wise,
+the masses as well as the higher orders, and brought in more money
+to the performers, these three alone, than thirty of the best that
+have been since produced?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No doubt,' replied the actor in question, 'you mean the
+"Isabella," the "Phyllis," and the "Alexandra."'</p>
+
+<p>"'Those are the ones I mean,' said I; 'and see if they did not
+observe the principles of art, and if, by observing them, they
+failed to show their superiority and please all the world; so that the
+fault does not lie with the public that insists upon nonsense, but
+with those who don't know how to produce something else. "The
+Ingratitude Revenged" was not nonsense, nor was there any in "The
+Numantia," nor any to be found in "The Merchant Lover," nor yet in
+"The Friendly Fair Foe," nor in some others that have been written
+by certain gifted poets, to their own fame and renown, and to the
+profit of those that brought them out;' some further remarks I added
+to these, with which, I think, I left him rather dumbfoundered, but
+not so satisfied or convinced that I could disabuse him of his error."</p>
+
+<p>"You have touched upon a subject, senor canon," observed the
+curate here, "that has awakened an old enmity I have against the plays
+in vogue at the present day, quite as strong as that which I bear to
+the books of chivalry; for while the drama, according to Tully, should
+be the mirror of human life, the model of manners, and the image of
+the truth, those which are presented now-a-days are mirrors of
+nonsense, models of folly, and images of lewdness. For what greater
+nonsense can there be in connection with what we are now discussing
+than for an infant to appear in swaddling clothes in the first scene
+of the first act, and in the second a grown-up bearded man? Or what
+greater absurdity can there be than putting before us an old man as
+a swashbuckler, a young man as a poltroon, a lackey using fine
+language, a page giving sage advice, a king plying as a porter, a
+princess who is a kitchen-maid? And then what shall I say of their
+attention to the time in which the action they represent may or can
+take place, save that I have seen a play where the first act began
+in Europe, the second in Asia, the third finished in Africa, and no
+doubt, had it been in four acts, the fourth would have ended in
+America, and so it would have been laid in all four quarters of the
+globe? And if truth to life is the main thing the drama should keep in
+view, how is it possible for any average understanding to be satisfied
+when the action is supposed to pass in the time of King Pepin or
+Charlemagne, and the principal personage in it they represent to be
+the Emperor Heraclius who entered Jerusalem with the cross and won the
+Holy Sepulchre, like Godfrey of Bouillon, there being years
+innumerable between the one and the other? or, if the play is based on
+fiction and historical facts are introduced, or bits of what
+occurred to different people and at different times mixed up with
+it, all, not only without any semblance of probability, but with
+obvious errors that from every point of view are inexcusable? And
+the worst of it is, there are ignorant people who say that this is
+perfection, and that anything beyond this is affected refinement.
+And then if we turn to sacred dramas--what miracles they invent in
+them! What apocryphal, ill-devised incidents, attributing to one saint
+the miracles of another! And even in secular plays they venture to
+introduce miracles without any reason or object except that they think
+some such miracle, or transformation as they call it, will come in
+well to astonish stupid people and draw them to the play. All this
+tends to the prejudice of the truth and the corruption of history, nay
+more, to the reproach of the wits of Spain; for foreigners who
+scrupulously observe the laws of the drama look upon us as barbarous
+and ignorant, when they see the absurdity and nonsense of the plays we
+produce. Nor will it be a sufficient excuse to say that the chief
+object well-ordered governments have in view when they permit plays to
+be performed in public is to entertain the people with some harmless
+amusement occasionally, and keep it from those evil humours which
+idleness is apt to engender; and that, as this may be attained by
+any sort of play, good or bad, there is no need to lay down laws, or
+bind those who write or act them to make them as they ought to be
+made, since, as I say, the object sought for may be secured by any
+sort. To this I would reply that the same end would be, beyond all
+comparison, better attained by means of good plays than by those
+that are not so; for after listening to an artistic and properly
+constructed play, the hearer will come away enlivened by the jests,
+instructed by the serious parts, full of admiration at the
+incidents, his wits sharpened by the arguments, warned by the
+tricks, all the wiser for the examples, inflamed against vice, and
+in love with virtue; for in all these ways a good play will
+stimulate the mind of the hearer be he ever so boorish or dull; and of
+all impossibilities the greatest is that a play endowed with all these
+qualities will not entertain, satisfy, and please much more than one
+wanting in them, like the greater number of those which are commonly
+acted now-a-days. Nor are the poets who write them to be blamed for
+this; for some there are among them who are perfectly well aware of
+their faults, and know what they ought to do; but as plays have become
+a salable commodity, they say, and with truth, that the actors will
+not buy them unless they are after this fashion; and so the poet tries
+to adapt himself to the requirements of the actor who is to pay him
+for his work. And that this is the truth may be seen by the
+countless plays that a most fertile wit of these kingdoms has written,
+with so much brilliancy, so much grace and gaiety, such polished
+versification, such choice language, such profound reflections, and in
+a word, so rich in eloquence and elevation of style, that he has
+filled the world with his fame; and yet, in consequence of his
+desire to suit the taste of the actors, they have not all, as some
+of them have, come as near perfection as they ought. Others write
+plays with such heedlessness that, after they have been acted, the
+actors have to fly and abscond, afraid of being punished, as they
+often have been, for having acted something offensive to some king
+or other, or insulting to some noble family. All which evils, and many
+more that I say nothing of, would be removed if there were some
+intelligent and sensible person at the capital to examine all plays
+before they were acted, not only those produced in the capital itself,
+but all that were intended to be acted in Spain; without whose
+approval, seal, and signature, no local magistracy should allow any
+play to be acted. In that case actors would take care to send their
+plays to the capital, and could act them in safety, and those who
+write them would be more careful and take more pains with their
+work, standing in awe of having to submit it to the strict examination
+of one who understood the matter; and so good plays would be
+produced and the objects they aim at happily attained; as well the
+amusement of the people, as the credit of the wits of Spain, the
+interest and safety of the actors, and the saving of trouble in
+inflicting punishment on them. And if the same or some other person
+were authorised to examine the newly written books of chivalry, no
+doubt some would appear with all the perfections you have described,
+enriching our language with the gracious and precious treasure of
+eloquence, and driving the old books into obscurity before the light
+of the new ones that would come out for the harmless entertainment,
+not merely of the idle but of the very busiest; for the bow cannot
+be always bent, nor can weak human nature exist without some lawful
+amusement."</p>
+
+<p>The canon and the curate had proceeded thus far with their
+conversation, when the barber, coming forward, joined them, and said
+to the curate, "This is the spot, senor licentiate, that I said was
+a good one for fresh and plentiful pasture for the oxen, while we take
+our noontide rest."</p>
+
+<p>"And so it seems," returned the curate, and he told the canon what
+he proposed to do, on which he too made up his mind to halt with them,
+attracted by the aspect of the fair valley that lay before their eyes;
+and to enjoy it as well as the conversation of the curate, to whom
+he had begun to take a fancy, and also to learn more particulars about
+the doings of Don Quixote, he desired some of his servants to go on to
+the inn, which was not far distant, and fetch from it what eatables
+there might be for the whole party, as he meant to rest for the
+afternoon where he was; to which one of his servants replied that
+the sumpter mule, which by this time ought to have reached the inn,
+carried provisions enough to make it unnecessary to get anything
+from the inn except barley.</p>
+
+<p>"In that case," said the canon, "take all the beasts there, and
+bring the sumpter mule back."</p>
+
+<p>While this was going on, Sancho, perceiving that he could speak to
+his master without having the curate and the barber, of whom he had
+his suspicions, present all the time, approached the cage in which Don
+Quixote was placed, and said, "Senor, to ease my conscience I want
+to tell you the state of the case as to your enchantment, and that
+is that these two here, with their faces covered, are the curate of
+our village and the barber; and I suspect they have hit upon this plan
+of carrying you off in this fashion, out of pure envy because your
+worship surpasses them in doing famous deeds; and if this be the truth
+it follows that you are not enchanted, but hoodwinked and made a
+fool of. And to prove this I want to ask you one thing; and if you
+answer me as I believe you will answer, you will be able to lay your
+finger on the trick, and you will see that you are not enchanted but
+gone wrong in your wits."</p>
+
+<p>"Ask what thou wilt, Sancho my son," returned Don Quixote, "for I
+will satisfy thee and answer all thou requirest. As to what thou
+sayest, that these who accompany us yonder are the curate and the
+barber, our neighbours and acquaintances, it is very possible that
+they may seem to be those same persons; but that they are so in
+reality and in fact, believe it not on any account; what thou art to
+believe and think is that, if they look like them, as thou sayest,
+it must be that those who have enchanted me have taken this shape
+and likeness; for it is easy for enchanters to take any form they
+please, and they may have taken those of our friends in order to
+make thee think as thou dost, and lead thee into a labyrinth of
+fancies from which thou wilt find no escape though thou hadst the cord
+of Theseus; and they may also have done it to make me uncertain in
+my mind, and unable to conjecture whence this evil comes to me; for if
+on the one hand thou dost tell me that the barber and curate of our
+village are here in company with us, and on the other I find myself
+shut up in a cage, and know in my heart that no power on earth that
+was not supernatural would have been able to shut me in, what
+wouldst thou have me say or think, but that my enchantment is of a
+sort that transcends all I have ever read of in all the histories that
+deal with knights-errant that have been enchanted? So thou mayest
+set thy mind at rest as to the idea that they are what thou sayest,
+for they are as much so as I am a Turk. But touching thy desire to ask
+me something, say on, and I will answer thee, though thou shouldst ask
+questions from this till to-morrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>"May Our Lady be good to me!" said Sancho, lifting up his voice;
+"and is it possible that your worship is so thick of skull and so
+short of brains that you cannot see that what I say is the simple
+truth, and that malice has more to do with your imprisonment and
+misfortune than enchantment? But as it is so, I will prove plainly
+to you that you are not enchanted. Now tell me, so may God deliver you
+from this affliction, and so may you find yourself when you least
+expect it in the arms of my lady Dulcinea-"</p>
+
+<p>"Leave off conjuring me," said Don Quixote, "and ask what thou
+wouldst know; I have already told thee I will answer with all possible
+precision."</p>
+
+<p>"That is what I want," said Sancho; "and what I would know, and have
+you tell me, without adding or leaving out anything, but telling the
+whole truth as one expects it to be told, and as it is told, by all
+who profess arms, as your worship professes them, under the title of
+knights-errant-"</p>
+
+<p>"I tell thee I will not lie in any particular," said Don Quixote;
+"finish thy question; for in truth thou weariest me with all these
+asseverations, requirements, and precautions, Sancho."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I rely on the goodness and truth of my master," said
+Sancho; "and so, because it bears upon what we are talking about, I
+would ask, speaking with all reverence, whether since your worship has
+been shut up and, as you think, enchanted in this cage, you have
+felt any desire or inclination to go anywhere, as the saying is?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not understand 'going anywhere,'" said Don Quixote; "explain
+thyself more clearly, Sancho, if thou wouldst have me give an answer
+to the point."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it possible," said Sancho, "that your worship does not
+understand 'going anywhere'? Why, the schoolboys know that from the
+time they were babes. Well then, you must know I mean have you had any
+desire to do what cannot be avoided?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! now I understand thee, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "yes,
+often, and even this minute; get me out of this strait, or all will
+not go right."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="c48e"></a><img alt="c48e.jpg (32K)" src="images/c48e.jpg" height="653" width="461">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch49"></a>CHAPTER XLIX.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>WHICH TREATS OF THE SHREWD CONVERSATION WHICH SANCHO PANZA HELD WITH
+HIS MASTER DON QUIXOTE
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="c49a"></a><img alt="c49a.jpg (181K)" src="images/c49a.jpg" height="434" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/c49a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>"Aha, I have caught you," said Sancho; "this is what in my heart and
+soul I was longing to know. Come now, senor, can you deny what is
+commonly said around us, when a person is out of humour, 'I don't know
+what ails so-and-so, that he neither eats, nor drinks, nor sleeps, nor
+gives a proper answer to any question; one would think he was
+enchanted'? From which it is to be gathered that those who do not eat,
+or drink, or sleep, or do any of the natural acts I am speaking
+of--that such persons are enchanted; but not those that have the desire
+your worship has, and drink when drink is given them, and eat when
+there is anything to eat, and answer every question that is asked
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"What thou sayest is true, Sancho," replied Don Quixote; "but I have
+already told thee there are many sorts of enchantments, and it may
+be that in the course of time they have been changed one for
+another, and that now it may be the way with enchanted people to do
+all that I do, though they did not do so before; so it is vain to
+argue or draw inferences against the usage of the time. I know and
+feel that I am enchanted, and that is enough to ease my conscience;
+for it would weigh heavily on it if I thought that I was not
+enchanted, and that in a faint-hearted and cowardly way I allowed
+myself to lie in this cage, defrauding multitudes of the succour I
+might afford to those in need and distress, who at this very moment
+may be in sore want of my aid and protection."</p>
+
+<p>"Still for all that," replied Sancho, "I say that, for your
+greater and fuller satisfaction, it would be well if your worship were
+to try to get out of this prison (and I promise to do all in my
+power to help, and even to take you out of it), and see if you could
+once more mount your good Rocinante, who seems to be enchanted too, he
+is so melancholy and dejected; and then we might try our chance in
+looking for adventures again; and if we have no luck there will be
+time enough to go back to the cage; in which, on the faith of a good
+and loyal squire, I promise to shut myself up along with your worship,
+if so be you are so unfortunate, or I so stupid, as not to be able
+to carry out my plan."</p>
+
+<p>"I am content to do as thou sayest, brother Sancho," said Don
+Quixote, "and when thou seest an opportunity for effecting my
+release I will obey thee absolutely; but thou wilt see, Sancho, how
+mistaken thou art in thy conception of my misfortune."</p>
+
+<p>The knight-errant and the ill-errant squire kept up their
+conversation till they reached the place where the curate, the
+canon, and the barber, who had already dismounted, were waiting for
+them. The carter at once unyoked the oxen and left them to roam at
+large about the pleasant green spot, the freshness of which seemed
+to invite, not enchanted people like Don Quixote, but wide-awake,
+sensible folk like his squire, who begged the curate to allow his
+master to leave the cage for a little; for if they did not let him
+out, the prison might not be as clean as the propriety of such a
+gentleman as his master required. The curate understood him, and
+said he would very gladly comply with his request, only that he feared
+his master, finding himself at liberty, would take to his old
+courses and make off where nobody could ever find him again.</p>
+
+<p>"I will answer for his not running away," said Sancho.</p>
+
+<p>"And I also," said the canon, "especially if he gives me his word as
+a knight not to leave us without our consent."</p>
+
+<p>Don Quixote, who was listening to all this, said, "I give
+it;--moreover one who is enchanted as I am cannot do as he likes with
+himself; for he who had enchanted him could prevent his moving from
+one place for three ages, and if he attempted to escape would bring
+him back flying."--And that being so, they might as well release
+him, particularly as it would be to the advantage of all; for, if they
+did not let him out, he protested he would be unable to avoid
+offending their nostrils unless they kept their distance.</p>
+
+<p>The canon took his hand, tied together as they both were, and on his
+word and promise they unbound him, and rejoiced beyond measure he
+was to find himself out of the cage. The first thing he did was to
+stretch himself all over, and then he went to where Rocinante was
+standing and giving him a couple of slaps on the haunches said, "I
+still trust in God and in his blessed mother, O flower and mirror of
+steeds, that we shall soon see ourselves, both of us, as we wish to
+be, thou with thy master on thy back, and I mounted upon thee,
+following the calling for which God sent me into the world." And so
+saying, accompanied by Sancho, he withdrew to a retired spot, from
+which he came back much relieved and more eager than ever to put his
+squire's scheme into execution.</p>
+
+<p>The canon gazed at him, wondering at the extraordinary nature of his
+madness, and that in all his remarks and replies he should show such
+excellent sense, and only lose his stirrups, as has been already said,
+when the subject of chivalry was broached. And so, moved by
+compassion, he said to him, as they all sat on the green grass
+awaiting the arrival of the provisions:</p>
+
+<p>"Is it possible, gentle sir, that the nauseous and idle reading of
+books of chivalry can have had such an effect on your worship as to
+upset your reason so that you fancy yourself enchanted, and the
+like, all as far from the truth as falsehood itself is? How can
+there be any human understanding that can persuade itself there ever
+was all that infinity of Amadises in the world, or all that
+multitude of famous knights, all those emperors of Trebizond, all
+those Felixmartes of Hircania, all those palfreys, and damsels-errant,
+and serpents, and monsters, and giants, and marvellous adventures, and
+enchantments of every kind, and battles, and prodigious encounters,
+splendid costumes, love-sick princesses, squires made counts, droll
+dwarfs, love letters, billings and cooings, swashbuckler women, and,
+in a word, all that nonsense the books of chivalry contain? For
+myself, I can only say that when I read them, so long as I do not stop
+to think that they are all lies and frivolity, they give me a
+certain amount of pleasure; but when I come to consider what they are,
+I fling the very best of them at the wall, and would fling it into the
+fire if there were one at hand, as richly deserving such punishment as
+cheats and impostors out of the range of ordinary toleration, and as
+founders of new sects and modes of life, and teachers that lead the
+ignorant public to believe and accept as truth all the folly they
+contain. And such is their audacity, they even dare to unsettle the
+wits of gentlemen of birth and intelligence, as is shown plainly by
+the way they have served your worship, when they have brought you to
+such a pass that you have to be shut up in a cage and carried on an
+ox-cart as one would carry a lion or a tiger from place to place to
+make money by showing it. Come, Senor Don Quixote, have some
+compassion for yourself, return to the bosom of common sense, and make
+use of the liberal share of it that heaven has been pleased to
+bestow upon you, employing your abundant gifts of mind in some other
+reading that may serve to benefit your conscience and add to your
+honour. And if, still led away by your natural bent, you desire to
+read books of achievements and of chivalry, read the Book of Judges in
+the Holy Scriptures, for there you will find grand reality, and
+deeds as true as they are heroic. Lusitania had a Viriatus, Rome a
+Caesar, Carthage a Hannibal, Greece an Alexander, Castile a Count
+Fernan Gonzalez, Valencia a Cid, Andalusia a Gonzalo Fernandez,
+Estremadura a Diego Garcia de Paredes, Jerez a Garci Perez de
+Vargas, Toledo a Garcilaso, Seville a Don Manuel de Leon, to read of
+whose valiant deeds will entertain and instruct the loftiest minds and
+fill them with delight and wonder. Here, Senor Don Quixote, will be
+reading worthy of your sound understanding; from which you will rise
+learned in history, in love with virtue, strengthened in goodness,
+improved in manners, brave without rashness, prudent without
+cowardice; and all to the honour of God, your own advantage and the
+glory of La Mancha, whence, I am informed, your worship derives your
+birth."</p>
+
+<p>Don Quixote listened with the greatest attention to the canon's
+words, and when he found he had finished, after regarding him for some
+time, he replied to him:</p>
+
+<p>"It appears to me, gentle sir, that your worship's discourse is
+intended to persuade me that there never were any knights-errant in
+the world, and that all the books of chivalry are false, lying,
+mischievous and useless to the State, and that I have done wrong in
+reading them, and worse in believing them, and still worse in
+imitating them, when I undertook to follow the arduous calling of
+knight-errantry which they set forth; for you deny that there ever
+were Amadises of Gaul or of Greece, or any other of the knights of
+whom the books are full."</p>
+
+<p>"It is all exactly as you state it," said the canon; to which Don
+Quixote returned, "You also went on to say that books of this kind had
+done me much harm, inasmuch as they had upset my senses, and shut me
+up in a cage, and that it would be better for me to reform and
+change my studies, and read other truer books which would afford
+more pleasure and instruction."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so," said the canon.</p>
+
+<p>"Well then," returned Don Quixote, "to my mind it is you who are the
+one that is out of his wits and enchanted, as you have ventured to
+utter such blasphemies against a thing so universally acknowledged and
+accepted as true that whoever denies it, as you do, deserves the
+same punishment which you say you inflict on the books that irritate
+you when you read them. For to try to persuade anybody that Amadis,
+and all the other knights-adventurers with whom the books are
+filled, never existed, would be like trying to persuade him that the
+sun does not yield light, or ice cold, or earth nourishment. What
+wit in the world can persuade another that the story of the Princess
+Floripes and Guy of Burgundy is not true, or that of Fierabras and the
+bridge of Mantible, which happened in the time of Charlemagne? For
+by all that is good it is as true as that it is daylight now; and if
+it be a lie, it must be a lie too that there was a Hector, or
+Achilles, or Trojan war, or Twelve Peers of France, or Arthur of
+England, who still lives changed into a raven, and is unceasingly
+looked for in his kingdom. One might just as well try to make out that
+the history of Guarino Mezquino, or of the quest of the Holy Grail, is
+false, or that the loves of Tristram and the Queen Yseult are
+apocryphal, as well as those of Guinevere and Lancelot, when there are
+persons who can almost remember having seen the Dame Quintanona, who
+was the best cupbearer in Great Britain. And so true is this, that I
+recollect a grandmother of mine on the father's side, whenever she saw
+any dame in a venerable hood, used to say to me, 'Grandson, that one
+is like Dame Quintanona,' from which I conclude that she must have
+known her, or at least had managed to see some portrait of her. Then
+who can deny that the story of Pierres and the fair Magalona is
+true, when even to this day may be seen in the king's armoury the
+pin with which the valiant Pierres guided the wooden horse he rode
+through the air, and it is a trifle bigger than the pole of a cart?
+And alongside of the pin is Babieca's saddle, and at Roncesvalles
+there is Roland's horn, as large as a large beam; whence we may
+infer that there were Twelve Peers, and a Pierres, and a Cid, and
+other knights like them, of the sort people commonly call adventurers.
+Or perhaps I shall be told, too, that there was no such
+knight-errant as the valiant Lusitanian Juan de Merlo, who went to
+Burgundy and in the city of Arras fought with the famous lord of
+Charny, Mosen Pierres by name, and afterwards in the city of Basle
+with Mosen Enrique de Remesten, coming out of both encounters
+covered with fame and honour; or adventures and challenges achieved
+and delivered, also in Burgundy, by the valiant Spaniards Pedro
+Barba and Gutierre Quixada (of whose family I come in the direct
+male line), when they vanquished the sons of the Count of San Polo.
+I shall be told, too, that Don Fernando de Guevara did not go in quest
+of adventures to Germany, where he engaged in combat with Micer
+George, a knight of the house of the Duke of Austria. I shall be
+told that the jousts of Suero de Quinones, him of the 'Paso,' and
+the emprise of Mosen Luis de Falces against the Castilian knight,
+Don Gonzalo de Guzman, were mere mockeries; as well as many other
+achievements of Christian knights of these and foreign realms, which
+are so authentic and true, that, I repeat, he who denies them must
+be totally wanting in reason and good sense."</p>
+
+<p>The canon was amazed to hear the medley of truth and fiction Don
+Quixote uttered, and to see how well acquainted he was with everything
+relating or belonging to the achievements of his knight-errantry; so
+he said in reply:</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot deny, Senor Don Quixote, that there is some truth in
+what you say, especially as regards the Spanish knights-errant; and
+I am willing to grant too that the Twelve Peers of France existed, but
+I am not disposed to believe that they did all the things that the
+Archbishop Turpin relates of them. For the truth of the matter is they
+were knights chosen by the kings of France, and called 'Peers' because
+they were all equal in worth, rank and prowess (at least if they
+were not they ought to have been), and it was a kind of religious
+order like those of Santiago and Calatrava in the present day, in
+which it is assumed that those who take it are valiant knights of
+distinction and good birth; and just as we say now a Knight of St.
+John, or of Alcantara, they used to say then a Knight of the Twelve
+Peers, because twelve equals were chosen for that military order. That
+there was a Cid, as well as a Bernardo del Carpio, there can be no
+doubt; but that they did the deeds people say they did, I hold to be
+very doubtful. In that other matter of the pin of Count Pierres that
+you speak of, and say is near Babieca's saddle in the Armoury, I
+confess my sin; for I am either so stupid or so short-sighted, that,
+though I have seen the saddle, I have never been able to see the
+pin, in spite of it being as big as your worship says it is."</p>
+
+<p>"For all that it is there, without any manner of doubt," said Don
+Quixote; "and more by token they say it is inclosed in a sheath of
+cowhide to keep it from rusting."</p>
+
+<p>"All that may be," replied the canon; "but, by the orders I have
+received, I do not remember seeing it. However, granting it is
+there, that is no reason why I am bound to believe the stories of
+all those Amadises and of all that multitude of knights they tell us
+about, nor is it reasonable that a man like your worship, so worthy,
+and with so many good qualities, and endowed with such a good
+understanding, should allow himself to be persuaded that such wild
+crazy things as are written in those absurd books of chivalry are
+really true."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="c49e"></a><img alt="c49e.jpg (22K)" src="images/c49e.jpg" height="513" width="389">
+</center>
+
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+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+
+
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+
+
+
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+
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+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I.,
+Part 16., by Miguel de Cervantes
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I., Part
+16., by Miguel de Cervantes
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I., Part 16.
+
+Author: Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
+
+Release Date: July 19, 2004 [EBook #5918]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DON QUIXOTE, PART 16 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+ DON QUIXOTE
+
+ by Miguel de Cervantes
+
+ Translated by John Ormsby
+
+
+ Volume I.
+
+ Part 16.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII.
+
+OF THE STRANGE MANNER IN WHICH DON QUIXOTE OF LA MANCHA WAS CARRIED AWAY
+ENCHANTED, TOGETHER WITH OTHER REMARKABLE INCIDENTS
+
+
+When Don Quixote saw himself caged and hoisted on the cart in this way,
+he said, "Many grave histories of knights-errant have I read; but never
+yet have I read, seen, or heard of their carrying off enchanted
+knights-errant in this fashion, or at the slow pace that these lazy,
+sluggish animals promise; for they always take them away through the air
+with marvellous swiftness, enveloped in a dark thick cloud, or on a
+chariot of fire, or it may be on some hippogriff or other beast of the
+kind; but to carry me off like this on an ox-cart! By God, it puzzles me!
+But perhaps the chivalry and enchantments of our day take a different
+course from that of those in days gone by; and it may be, too, that as I
+am a new knight in the world, and the first to revive the already
+forgotten calling of knight-adventurers, they may have newly invented
+other kinds of enchantments and other modes of carrying off the
+enchanted. What thinkest thou of the matter, Sancho my son?"
+
+"I don't know what to think," answered Sancho, "not being as well read as
+your worship in errant writings; but for all that I venture to say and
+swear that these apparitions that are about us are not quite catholic."
+
+"Catholic!" said Don Quixote. "Father of me! how can they be Catholic
+when they are all devils that have taken fantastic shapes to come and do
+this, and bring me to this condition? And if thou wouldst prove it, touch
+them, and feel them, and thou wilt find they have only bodies of air, and
+no consistency except in appearance."
+
+"By God, master," returned Sancho, "I have touched them already; and that
+devil, that goes about there so busily, has firm flesh, and another
+property very different from what I have heard say devils have, for by
+all accounts they all smell of brimstone and other bad smells; but this
+one smells of amber half a league off." Sancho was here speaking of Don
+Fernando, who, like a gentleman of his rank, was very likely perfumed as
+Sancho said.
+
+"Marvel not at that, Sancho my friend," said Don Quixote; "for let me
+tell thee devils are crafty; and even if they do carry odours about with
+them, they themselves have no smell, because they are spirits; or, if
+they have any smell, they cannot smell of anything sweet, but of
+something foul and fetid; and the reason is that as they carry hell with
+them wherever they go, and can get no ease whatever from their torments,
+and as a sweet smell is a thing that gives pleasure and enjoyment, it is
+impossible that they can smell sweet; if, then, this devil thou speakest
+of seems to thee to smell of amber, either thou art deceiving thyself, or
+he wants to deceive thee by making thee fancy he is not a devil."
+
+Such was the conversation that passed between master and man; and Don
+Fernando and Cardenio, apprehensive of Sancho's making a complete
+discovery of their scheme, towards which he had already gone some way,
+resolved to hasten their departure, and calling the landlord aside, they
+directed him to saddle Rocinante and put the pack-saddle on Sancho's ass,
+which he did with great alacrity. In the meantime the curate had made an
+arrangement with the officers that they should bear them company as far
+as his village, he paying them so much a day. Cardenio hung the buckler
+on one side of the bow of Rocinante's saddle and the basin on the other,
+and by signs commanded Sancho to mount his ass and take Rocinante's
+bridle, and at each side of the cart he placed two officers with their
+muskets; but before the cart was put in motion, out came the landlady and
+her daughter and Maritornes to bid Don Quixote farewell, pretending to
+weep with grief at his misfortune; and to them Don Quixote said:
+
+"Weep not, good ladies, for all these mishaps are the lot of those who
+follow the profession I profess; and if these reverses did not befall me
+I should not esteem myself a famous knight-errant; for such things never
+happen to knights of little renown and fame, because nobody in the world
+thinks about them; to valiant knights they do, for these are envied for
+their virtue and valour by many princes and other knights who compass the
+destruction of the worthy by base means. Nevertheless, virtue is of
+herself so mighty, that, in spite of all the magic that Zoroaster its
+first inventor knew, she will come victorious out of every trial, and
+shed her light upon the earth as the sun does upon the heavens. Forgive
+me, fair ladies, if, through inadvertence, I have in aught offended you;
+for intentionally and wittingly I have never done so to any; and pray to
+God that he deliver me from this captivity to which some malevolent
+enchanter has consigned me; and should I find myself released therefrom,
+the favours that ye have bestowed upon me in this castle shall be held in
+memory by me, that I may acknowledge, recognise, and requite them as they
+deserve."
+
+While this was passing between the ladies of the castle and Don Quixote,
+the curate and the barber bade farewell to Don Fernando and his
+companions, to the captain, his brother, and the ladies, now all made
+happy, and in particular to Dorothea and Luscinda. They all embraced one
+another, and promised to let each other know how things went with them,
+and Don Fernando directed the curate where to write to him, to tell him
+what became of Don Quixote, assuring him that there was nothing that
+could give him more pleasure than to hear of it, and that he too, on his
+part, would send him word of everything he thought he would like to know,
+about his marriage, Zoraida's baptism, Don Luis's affair, and Luscinda's
+return to her home. The curate promised to comply with his request
+carefully, and they embraced once more, and renewed their promises.
+
+The landlord approached the curate and handed him some papers, saying he
+had discovered them in the lining of the valise in which the novel of
+"The Ill-advised Curiosity" had been found, and that he might take them
+all away with him as their owner had not since returned; for, as he could
+not read, he did not want them himself. The curate thanked him, and
+opening them he saw at the beginning of the manuscript the words, "Novel
+of Rinconete and Cortadillo," by which he perceived that it was a novel,
+and as that of "The Ill-advised Curiosity" had been good he concluded
+this would be so too, as they were both probably by the same author; so
+he kept it, intending to read it when he had an opportunity. He then
+mounted and his friend the barber did the same, both masked, so as not to
+be recognised by Don Quixote, and set out following in the rear of the
+cart. The order of march was this: first went the cart with the owner
+leading it; at each side of it marched the officers of the Brotherhood,
+as has been said, with their muskets; then followed Sancho Panza on his
+ass, leading Rocinante by the bridle; and behind all came the curate and
+the barber on their mighty mules, with faces covered, as aforesaid, and a
+grave and serious air, measuring their pace to suit the slow steps of the
+oxen. Don Quixote was seated in the cage, with his hands tied and his
+feet stretched out, leaning against the bars as silent and as patient as
+if he were a stone statue and not a man of flesh. Thus slowly and
+silently they made, it might be, two leagues, until they reached a valley
+which the carter thought a convenient place for resting and feeding his
+oxen, and he said so to the curate, but the barber was of opinion that
+they ought to push on a little farther, as at the other side of a hill
+which appeared close by he knew there was a valley that had more grass
+and much better than the one where they proposed to halt; and his advice
+was taken and they continued their journey.
+
+Just at that moment the curate, looking back, saw coming on behind them
+six or seven mounted men, well found and equipped, who soon overtook
+them, for they were travelling, not at the sluggish, deliberate pace of
+oxen, but like men who rode canons' mules, and in haste to take their
+noontide rest as soon as possible at the inn which was in sight not a
+league off. The quick travellers came up with the slow, and courteous
+salutations were exchanged; and one of the new comers, who was, in fact,
+a canon of Toledo and master of the others who accompanied him, observing
+the regular order of the procession, the cart, the officers, Sancho,
+Rocinante, the curate and the barber, and above all Don Quixote caged and
+confined, could not help asking what was the meaning of carrying the man
+in that fashion; though, from the badges of the officers, he already
+concluded that he must be some desperate highwayman or other malefactor
+whose punishment fell within the jurisdiction of the Holy Brotherhood.
+One of the officers to whom he had put the question, replied, "Let the
+gentleman himself tell you the meaning of his going this way, senor, for
+we do not know."
+
+Don Quixote overheard the conversation and said, "Haply, gentlemen, you
+are versed and learned in matters of errant chivalry? Because if you are
+I will tell you my misfortunes; if not, there is no good in my giving
+myself the trouble of relating them;" but here the curate and the barber,
+seeing that the travellers were engaged in conversation with Don Quixote,
+came forward, in order to answer in such a way as to save their stratagem
+from being discovered.
+
+The canon, replying to Don Quixote, said, "In truth, brother, I know more
+about books of chivalry than I do about Villalpando's elements of logic;
+so if that be all, you may safely tell me what you please."
+
+"In God's name, then, senor," replied Don Quixote; "if that be so, I
+would have you know that I am held enchanted in this cage by the envy and
+fraud of wicked enchanters; for virtue is more persecuted by the wicked
+than loved by the good. I am a knight-errant, and not one of those whose
+names Fame has never thought of immortalising in her record, but of those
+who, in defiance and in spite of envy itself, and all the magicians that
+Persia, or Brahmans that India, or Gymnosophists that Ethiopia ever
+produced, will place their names in the temple of immortality, to serve
+as examples and patterns for ages to come, whereby knights-errant may see
+the footsteps in which they must tread if they would attain the summit
+and crowning point of honour in arms."
+
+"What Senor Don Quixote of La Mancha says," observed the curate, "is the
+truth; for he goes enchanted in this cart, not from any fault or sins of
+his, but because of the malevolence of those to whom virtue is odious and
+valour hateful. This, senor, is the Knight of the Rueful Countenance, if
+you have ever heard him named, whose valiant achievements and mighty
+deeds shall be written on lasting brass and imperishable marble,
+notwithstanding all the efforts of envy to obscure them and malice to
+hide them."
+
+When the canon heard both the prisoner and the man who was at liberty
+talk in such a strain he was ready to cross himself in his astonishment,
+and could not make out what had befallen him; and all his attendants were
+in the same state of amazement.
+
+At this point Sancho Panza, who had drawn near to hear the conversation,
+said, in order to make everything plain, "Well, sirs, you may like or
+dislike what I am going to say, but the fact of the matter is, my master,
+Don Quixote, is just as much enchanted as my mother. He is in his full
+senses, he eats and he drinks, and he has his calls like other men and as
+he had yesterday, before they caged him. And if that's the case, what do
+they mean by wanting me to believe that he is enchanted? For I have heard
+many a one say that enchanted people neither eat, nor sleep, nor talk;
+and my master, if you don't stop him, will talk more than thirty
+lawyers." Then turning to the curate he exclaimed, "Ah, senor curate,
+senor curate! do you think I don't know you? Do you think I don't guess
+and see the drift of these new enchantments? Well then, I can tell you I
+know you, for all your face is covered, and I can tell you I am up to
+you, however you may hide your tricks. After all, where envy reigns
+virtue cannot live, and where there is niggardliness there can be no
+liberality. Ill betide the devil! if it had not been for your worship my
+master would be married to the Princess Micomicona this minute, and I
+should be a count at least; for no less was to be expected, as well from
+the goodness of my master, him of the Rueful Countenance, as from the
+greatness of my services. But I see now how true it is what they say in
+these parts, that the wheel of fortune turns faster than a mill-wheel,
+and that those who were up yesterday are down to-day. I am sorry for my
+wife and children, for when they might fairly and reasonably expect to
+see their father return to them a governor or viceroy of some island or
+kingdom, they will see him come back a horse-boy. I have said all this,
+senor curate, only to urge your paternity to lay to your conscience your
+ill-treatment of my master; and have a care that God does not call you to
+account in another life for making a prisoner of him in this way, and
+charge against you all the succours and good deeds that my lord Don
+Quixote leaves undone while he is shut up.
+
+"Trim those lamps there!" exclaimed the barber at this; "so you are of
+the same fraternity as your master, too, Sancho? By God, I begin to see
+that you will have to keep him company in the cage, and be enchanted like
+him for having caught some of his humour and chivalry. It was an evil
+hour when you let yourself be got with child by his promises, and that
+island you long so much for found its way into your head."
+
+"I am not with child by anyone," returned Sancho, "nor am I a man to let
+myself be got with child, if it was by the King himself. Though I am poor
+I am an old Christian, and I owe nothing to nobody, and if I long for an
+island, other people long for worse. Each of us is the son of his own
+works; and being a man I may come to be pope, not to say governor of an
+island, especially as my master may win so many that he will not know
+whom to give them to. Mind how you talk, master barber; for shaving is
+not everything, and there is some difference between Peter and Peter. I
+say this because we all know one another, and it will not do to throw
+false dice with me; and as to the enchantment of my master, God knows the
+truth; leave it as it is; it only makes it worse to stir it."
+
+The barber did not care to answer Sancho lest by his plain speaking he
+should disclose what the curate and he himself were trying so hard to
+conceal; and under the same apprehension the curate had asked the canon
+to ride on a little in advance, so that he might tell him the mystery of
+this man in the cage, and other things that would amuse him. The canon
+agreed, and going on ahead with his servants, listened with attention to
+the account of the character, life, madness, and ways of Don Quixote,
+given him by the curate, who described to him briefly the beginning and
+origin of his craze, and told him the whole story of his adventures up to
+his being confined in the cage, together with the plan they had of taking
+him home to try if by any means they could discover a cure for his
+madness. The canon and his servants were surprised anew when they heard
+Don Quixote's strange story, and when it was finished he said, "To tell
+the truth, senor curate, I for my part consider what they call books of
+chivalry to be mischievous to the State; and though, led by idle and
+false taste, I have read the beginnings of almost all that have been
+printed, I never could manage to read any one of them from beginning to
+end; for it seems to me they are all more or less the same thing; and one
+has nothing more in it than another; this no more than that. And in my
+opinion this sort of writing and composition is of the same species as
+the fables they call the Milesian, nonsensical tales that aim solely at
+giving amusement and not instruction, exactly the opposite of the
+apologue fables which amuse and instruct at the same time. And though it
+may be the chief object of such books to amuse, I do not know how they
+can succeed, when they are so full of such monstrous nonsense. For the
+enjoyment the mind feels must come from the beauty and harmony which it
+perceives or contemplates in the things that the eye or the imagination
+brings before it; and nothing that has any ugliness or disproportion
+about it can give any pleasure. What beauty, then, or what proportion of
+the parts to the whole, or of the whole to the parts, can there be in a
+book or fable where a lad of sixteen cuts down a giant as tall as a tower
+and makes two halves of him as if he was an almond cake? And when they
+want to give us a picture of a battle, after having told us that there
+are a million of combatants on the side of the enemy, let the hero of the
+book be opposed to them, and we have perforce to believe, whether we like
+it or not, that the said knight wins the victory by the single might of
+his strong arm. And then, what shall we say of the facility with which a
+born queen or empress will give herself over into the arms of some
+unknown wandering knight? What mind, that is not wholly barbarous and
+uncultured, can find pleasure in reading of how a great tower full of
+knights sails away across the sea like a ship with a fair wind, and will
+be to-night in Lombardy and to-morrow morning in the land of Prester John
+of the Indies, or some other that Ptolemy never described nor Marco Polo
+saw? And if, in answer to this, I am told that the authors of books of
+the kind write them as fiction, and therefore are not bound to regard
+niceties of truth, I would reply that fiction is all the better the more
+it looks like truth, and gives the more pleasure the more probability and
+possibility there is about it. Plots in fiction should be wedded to the
+understanding of the reader, and be constructed in such a way that,
+reconciling impossibilities, smoothing over difficulties, keeping the
+mind on the alert, they may surprise, interest, divert, and entertain, so
+that wonder and delight joined may keep pace one with the other; all
+which he will fail to effect who shuns verisimilitude and truth to
+nature, wherein lies the perfection of writing. I have never yet seen any
+book of chivalry that puts together a connected plot complete in all its
+numbers, so that the middle agrees with the beginning, and the end with
+the beginning and middle; on the contrary, they construct them with such
+a multitude of members that it seems as though they meant to produce a
+chimera or monster rather than a well-proportioned figure. And besides
+all this they are harsh in their style, incredible in their achievements,
+licentious in their amours, uncouth in their courtly speeches, prolix in
+their battles, silly in their arguments, absurd in their travels, and, in
+short, wanting in everything like intelligent art; for which reason they
+deserve to be banished from the Christian commonwealth as a worthless
+breed."
+
+The curate listened to him attentively and felt that he was a man of
+sound understanding, and that there was good reason in what he said; so
+he told him that, being of the same opinion himself, and bearing a grudge
+to books of chivalry, he had burned all Don Quixote's, which were many;
+and gave him an account of the scrutiny he had made of them, and of those
+he had condemned to the flames and those he had spared, with which the
+canon was not a little amused, adding that though he had said so much in
+condemnation of these books, still he found one good thing in them, and
+that was the opportunity they afforded to a gifted intellect for
+displaying itself; for they presented a wide and spacious field over
+which the pen might range freely, describing shipwrecks, tempests,
+combats, battles, portraying a valiant captain with all the
+qualifications requisite to make one, showing him sagacious in foreseeing
+the wiles of the enemy, eloquent in speech to encourage or restrain his
+soldiers, ripe in counsel, rapid in resolve, as bold in biding his time
+as in pressing the attack; now picturing some sad tragic incident, now
+some joyful and unexpected event; here a beauteous lady, virtuous, wise,
+and modest; there a Christian knight, brave and gentle; here a lawless,
+barbarous braggart; there a courteous prince, gallant and gracious;
+setting forth the devotion and loyalty of vassals, the greatness and
+generosity of nobles. "Or again," said he, "the author may show himself
+to be an astronomer, or a skilled cosmographer, or musician, or one
+versed in affairs of state, and sometimes he will have a chance of coming
+forward as a magician if he likes. He can set forth the craftiness of
+Ulysses, the piety of AEneas, the valour of Achilles, the misfortunes of
+Hector, the treachery of Sinon, the friendship of Euryalus, the
+generosity of Alexander, the boldness of Caesar, the clemency and truth
+of Trajan, the fidelity of Zopyrus, the wisdom of Cato, and in short all
+the faculties that serve to make an illustrious man perfect, now uniting
+them in one individual, again distributing them among many; and if this
+be done with charm of style and ingenious invention, aiming at the truth
+as much as possible, he will assuredly weave a web of bright and varied
+threads that, when finished, will display such perfection and beauty that
+it will attain the worthiest object any writing can seek, which, as I
+said before, is to give instruction and pleasure combined; for the
+unrestricted range of these books enables the author to show his powers,
+epic, lyric, tragic, or comic, and all the moods the sweet and winning
+arts of poesy and oratory are capable of; for the epic may be written in
+prose just as well as in verse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII.
+
+IN WHICH THE CANON PURSUES THE SUBJECT OF THE BOOKS OF CHIVALRY, WITH
+OTHER MATTERS WORTHY OF HIS WIT
+
+
+"It is as you say, senor canon," said the curate; "and for that reason
+those who have hitherto written books of the sort deserve all the more
+censure for writing without paying any attention to good taste or the
+rules of art, by which they might guide themselves and become as famous
+in prose as the two princes of Greek and Latin poetry are in verse."
+
+"I myself, at any rate," said the canon, "was once tempted to write a
+book of chivalry in which all the points I have mentioned were to be
+observed; and if I must own the truth I have more than a hundred sheets
+written; and to try if it came up to my own opinion of it, I showed them
+to persons who were fond of this kind of reading, to learned and
+intelligent men as well as to ignorant people who cared for nothing but
+the pleasure of listening to nonsense, and from all I obtained flattering
+approval; nevertheless I proceeded no farther with it, as well because it
+seemed to me an occupation inconsistent with my profession, as because I
+perceived that the fools are more numerous than the wise; and, though it
+is better to be praised by the wise few than applauded by the foolish
+many, I have no mind to submit myself to the stupid judgment of the silly
+public, to whom the reading of such books falls for the most part.
+
+"But what most of all made me hold my hand and even abandon all idea of
+finishing it was an argument I put to myself taken from the plays that
+are acted now-a-days, which was in this wise: if those that are now in
+vogue, as well those that are pure invention as those founded on history,
+are, all or most of them, downright nonsense and things that have neither
+head nor tail, and yet the public listens to them with delight, and
+regards and cries them up as perfection when they are so far from it; and
+if the authors who write them, and the players who act them, say that
+this is what they must be, for the public wants this and will have
+nothing else; and that those that go by rule and work out a plot
+according to the laws of art will only find some half-dozen intelligent
+people to understand them, while all the rest remain blind to the merit
+of their composition; and that for themselves it is better to get bread
+from the many than praise from the few; then my book will fare the same
+way, after I have burnt off my eyebrows in trying to observe the
+principles I have spoken of, and I shall be 'the tailor of the corner.'
+And though I have sometimes endeavoured to convince actors that they are
+mistaken in this notion they have adopted, and that they would attract
+more people, and get more credit, by producing plays in accordance with
+the rules of art, than by absurd ones, they are so thoroughly wedded to
+their own opinion that no argument or evidence can wean them from it.
+
+"I remember saying one day to one of these obstinate fellows, 'Tell me,
+do you not recollect that a few years ago, there were three tragedies
+acted in Spain, written by a famous poet of these kingdoms, which were
+such that they filled all who heard them with admiration, delight, and
+interest, the ignorant as well as the wise, the masses as well as the
+higher orders, and brought in more money to the performers, these three
+alone, than thirty of the best that have been since produced?'
+
+"'No doubt,' replied the actor in question, 'you mean the "Isabella," the
+"Phyllis," and the "Alexandra."'
+
+"'Those are the ones I mean,' said I; 'and see if they did not observe
+the principles of art, and if, by observing them, they failed to show
+their superiority and please all the world; so that the fault does not
+lie with the public that insists upon nonsense, but with those who don't
+know how to produce something else. "The Ingratitude Revenged" was not
+nonsense, nor was there any in "The Numantia," nor any to be found in
+"The Merchant Lover," nor yet in "The Friendly Fair Foe," nor in some
+others that have been written by certain gifted poets, to their own fame
+and renown, and to the profit of those that brought them out;' some
+further remarks I added to these, with which, I think, I left him rather
+dumbfoundered, but not so satisfied or convinced that I could disabuse
+him of his error."
+
+"You have touched upon a subject, senor canon," observed the curate here,
+"that has awakened an old enmity I have against the plays in vogue at the
+present day, quite as strong as that which I bear to the books of
+chivalry; for while the drama, according to Tully, should be the mirror
+of human life, the model of manners, and the image of the truth, those
+which are presented now-a-days are mirrors of nonsense, models of folly,
+and images of lewdness. For what greater nonsense can there be in
+connection with what we are now discussing than for an infant to appear
+in swaddling clothes in the first scene of the first act, and in the
+second a grown-up bearded man? Or what greater absurdity can there be
+than putting before us an old man as a swashbuckler, a young man as a
+poltroon, a lackey using fine language, a page giving sage advice, a king
+plying as a porter, a princess who is a kitchen-maid? And then what shall
+I say of their attention to the time in which the action they represent
+may or can take place, save that I have seen a play where the first act
+began in Europe, the second in Asia, the third finished in Africa, and no
+doubt, had it been in four acts, the fourth would have ended in America,
+and so it would have been laid in all four quarters of the globe? And if
+truth to life is the main thing the drama should keep in view, how is it
+possible for any average understanding to be satisfied when the action is
+supposed to pass in the time of King Pepin or Charlemagne, and the
+principal personage in it they represent to be the Emperor Heraclius who
+entered Jerusalem with the cross and won the Holy Sepulchre, like Godfrey
+of Bouillon, there being years innumerable between the one and the other?
+or, if the play is based on fiction and historical facts are introduced,
+or bits of what occurred to different people and at different times mixed
+up with it, all, not only without any semblance of probability, but with
+obvious errors that from every point of view are inexcusable? And the
+worst of it is, there are ignorant people who say that this is
+perfection, and that anything beyond this is affected refinement. And
+then if we turn to sacred dramas--what miracles they invent in them! What
+apocryphal, ill-devised incidents, attributing to one saint the miracles
+of another! And even in secular plays they venture to introduce miracles
+without any reason or object except that they think some such miracle, or
+transformation as they call it, will come in well to astonish stupid
+people and draw them to the play. All this tends to the prejudice of the
+truth and the corruption of history, nay more, to the reproach of the
+wits of Spain; for foreigners who scrupulously observe the laws of the
+drama look upon us as barbarous and ignorant, when they see the absurdity
+and nonsense of the plays we produce. Nor will it be a sufficient excuse
+to say that the chief object well-ordered governments have in view when
+they permit plays to be performed in public is to entertain the people
+with some harmless amusement occasionally, and keep it from those evil
+humours which idleness is apt to engender; and that, as this may be
+attained by any sort of play, good or bad, there is no need to lay down
+laws, or bind those who write or act them to make them as they ought to
+be made, since, as I say, the object sought for may be secured by any
+sort. To this I would reply that the same end would be, beyond all
+comparison, better attained by means of good plays than by those that are
+not so; for after listening to an artistic and properly constructed play,
+the hearer will come away enlivened by the jests, instructed by the
+serious parts, full of admiration at the incidents, his wits sharpened by
+the arguments, warned by the tricks, all the wiser for the examples,
+inflamed against vice, and in love with virtue; for in all these ways a
+good play will stimulate the mind of the hearer be he ever so boorish or
+dull; and of all impossibilities the greatest is that a play endowed with
+all these qualities will not entertain, satisfy, and please much more
+than one wanting in them, like the greater number of those which are
+commonly acted now-a-days. Nor are the poets who write them to be blamed
+for this; for some there are among them who are perfectly well aware of
+their faults, and know what they ought to do; but as plays have become a
+salable commodity, they say, and with truth, that the actors will not buy
+them unless they are after this fashion; and so the poet tries to adapt
+himself to the requirements of the actor who is to pay him for his work.
+And that this is the truth may be seen by the countless plays that a most
+fertile wit of these kingdoms has written, with so much brilliancy, so
+much grace and gaiety, such polished versification, such choice language,
+such profound reflections, and in a word, so rich in eloquence and
+elevation of style, that he has filled the world with his fame; and yet,
+in consequence of his desire to suit the taste of the actors, they have
+not all, as some of them have, come as near perfection as they ought.
+Others write plays with such heedlessness that, after they have been
+acted, the actors have to fly and abscond, afraid of being punished, as
+they often have been, for having acted something offensive to some king
+or other, or insulting to some noble family. All which evils, and many
+more that I say nothing of, would be removed if there were some
+intelligent and sensible person at the capital to examine all plays
+before they were acted, not only those produced in the capital itself,
+but all that were intended to be acted in Spain; without whose approval,
+seal, and signature, no local magistracy should allow any play to be
+acted. In that case actors would take care to send their plays to the
+capital, and could act them in safety, and those who write them would be
+more careful and take more pains with their work, standing in awe of
+having to submit it to the strict examination of one who understood the
+matter; and so good plays would be produced and the objects they aim at
+happily attained; as well the amusement of the people, as the credit of
+the wits of Spain, the interest and safety of the actors, and the saving
+of trouble in inflicting punishment on them. And if the same or some
+other person were authorised to examine the newly written books of
+chivalry, no doubt some would appear with all the perfections you have
+described, enriching our language with the gracious and precious treasure
+of eloquence, and driving the old books into obscurity before the light
+of the new ones that would come out for the harmless entertainment, not
+merely of the idle but of the very busiest; for the bow cannot be always
+bent, nor can weak human nature exist without some lawful amusement."
+
+The canon and the curate had proceeded thus far with their conversation,
+when the barber, coming forward, joined them, and said to the curate,
+"This is the spot, senor licentiate, that I said was a good one for fresh
+and plentiful pasture for the oxen, while we take our noontide rest."
+
+"And so it seems," returned the curate, and he told the canon what he
+proposed to do, on which he too made up his mind to halt with them,
+attracted by the aspect of the fair valley that lay before their eyes;
+and to enjoy it as well as the conversation of the curate, to whom he had
+begun to take a fancy, and also to learn more particulars about the
+doings of Don Quixote, he desired some of his servants to go on to the
+inn, which was not far distant, and fetch from it what eatables there
+might be for the whole party, as he meant to rest for the afternoon where
+he was; to which one of his servants replied that the sumpter mule, which
+by this time ought to have reached the inn, carried provisions enough to
+make it unnecessary to get anything from the inn except barley.
+
+"In that case," said the canon, "take all the beasts there, and bring the
+sumpter mule back."
+
+While this was going on, Sancho, perceiving that he could speak to his
+master without having the curate and the barber, of whom he had his
+suspicions, present all the time, approached the cage in which Don
+Quixote was placed, and said, "Senor, to ease my conscience I want to
+tell you the state of the case as to your enchantment, and that is that
+these two here, with their faces covered, are the curate of our village
+and the barber; and I suspect they have hit upon this plan of carrying
+you off in this fashion, out of pure envy because your worship surpasses
+them in doing famous deeds; and if this be the truth it follows that you
+are not enchanted, but hoodwinked and made a fool of. And to prove this I
+want to ask you one thing; and if you answer me as I believe you will
+answer, you will be able to lay your finger on the trick, and you will
+see that you are not enchanted but gone wrong in your wits."
+
+"Ask what thou wilt, Sancho my son," returned Don Quixote, "for I will
+satisfy thee and answer all thou requirest. As to what thou sayest, that
+these who accompany us yonder are the curate and the barber, our
+neighbours and acquaintances, it is very possible that they may seem to
+be those same persons; but that they are so in reality and in fact,
+believe it not on any account; what thou art to believe and think is
+that, if they look like them, as thou sayest, it must be that those who
+have enchanted me have taken this shape and likeness; for it is easy for
+enchanters to take any form they please, and they may have taken those of
+our friends in order to make thee think as thou dost, and lead thee into
+a labyrinth of fancies from which thou wilt find no escape though thou
+hadst the cord of Theseus; and they may also have done it to make me
+uncertain in my mind, and unable to conjecture whence this evil comes to
+me; for if on the one hand thou dost tell me that the barber and curate
+of our village are here in company with us, and on the other I find
+myself shut up in a cage, and know in my heart that no power on earth
+that was not supernatural would have been able to shut me in, what
+wouldst thou have me say or think, but that my enchantment is of a sort
+that transcends all I have ever read of in all the histories that deal
+with knights-errant that have been enchanted? So thou mayest set thy mind
+at rest as to the idea that they are what thou sayest, for they are as
+much so as I am a Turk. But touching thy desire to ask me something, say
+on, and I will answer thee, though thou shouldst ask questions from this
+till to-morrow morning."
+
+"May Our Lady be good to me!" said Sancho, lifting up his voice; "and is
+it possible that your worship is so thick of skull and so short of brains
+that you cannot see that what I say is the simple truth, and that malice
+has more to do with your imprisonment and misfortune than enchantment?
+But as it is so, I will prove plainly to you that you are not enchanted.
+Now tell me, so may God deliver you from this affliction, and so may you
+find yourself when you least expect it in the arms of my lady Dulcinea-"
+
+"Leave off conjuring me," said Don Quixote, "and ask what thou wouldst
+know; I have already told thee I will answer with all possible
+precision."
+
+"That is what I want," said Sancho; "and what I would know, and have you
+tell me, without adding or leaving out anything, but telling the whole
+truth as one expects it to be told, and as it is told, by all who profess
+arms, as your worship professes them, under the title of knights-errant-"
+
+"I tell thee I will not lie in any particular," said Don Quixote; "finish
+thy question; for in truth thou weariest me with all these asseverations,
+requirements, and precautions, Sancho."
+
+"Well, I rely on the goodness and truth of my master," said Sancho; "and
+so, because it bears upon what we are talking about, I would ask,
+speaking with all reverence, whether since your worship has been shut up
+and, as you think, enchanted in this cage, you have felt any desire or
+inclination to go anywhere, as the saying is?"
+
+"I do not understand 'going anywhere,'" said Don Quixote; "explain
+thyself more clearly, Sancho, if thou wouldst have me give an answer to
+the point."
+
+"Is it possible," said Sancho, "that your worship does not understand
+'going anywhere'? Why, the schoolboys know that from the time they were
+babes. Well then, you must know I mean have you had any desire to do what
+cannot be avoided?"
+
+"Ah! now I understand thee, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "yes, often, and
+even this minute; get me out of this strait, or all will not go right."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+WHICH TREATS OF THE SHREWD CONVERSATION WHICH SANCHO PANZA HELD WITH HIS
+MASTER DON QUIXOTE
+
+
+"Aha, I have caught you," said Sancho; "this is what in my heart and soul
+I was longing to know. Come now, senor, can you deny what is commonly
+said around us, when a person is out of humour, 'I don't know what ails
+so-and-so, that he neither eats, nor drinks, nor sleeps, nor gives a
+proper answer to any question; one would think he was enchanted'? From
+which it is to be gathered that those who do not eat, or drink, or sleep,
+or do any of the natural acts I am speaking of-that such persons are
+enchanted; but not those that have the desire your worship has, and drink
+when drink is given them, and eat when there is anything to eat, and
+answer every question that is asked them."
+
+"What thou sayest is true, Sancho," replied Don Quixote; "but I have
+already told thee there are many sorts of enchantments, and it may be
+that in the course of time they have been changed one for another, and
+that now it may be the way with enchanted people to do all that I do,
+though they did not do so before; so it is vain to argue or draw
+inferences against the usage of the time. I know and feel that I am
+enchanted, and that is enough to ease my conscience; for it would weigh
+heavily on it if I thought that I was not enchanted, and that in a
+faint-hearted and cowardly way I allowed myself to lie in this cage,
+defrauding multitudes of the succour I might afford to those in need and
+distress, who at this very moment may be in sore want of my aid and
+protection."
+
+"Still for all that," replied Sancho, "I say that, for your greater and
+fuller satisfaction, it would be well if your worship were to try to get
+out of this prison (and I promise to do all in my power to help, and even
+to take you out of it), and see if you could once more mount your good
+Rocinante, who seems to be enchanted too, he is so melancholy and
+dejected; and then we might try our chance in looking for adventures
+again; and if we have no luck there will be time enough to go back to the
+cage; in which, on the faith of a good and loyal squire, I promise to
+shut myself up along with your worship, if so be you are so unfortunate,
+or I so stupid, as not to be able to carry out my plan."
+
+"I am content to do as thou sayest, brother Sancho," said Don Quixote,
+"and when thou seest an opportunity for effecting my release I will obey
+thee absolutely; but thou wilt see, Sancho, how mistaken thou art in thy
+conception of my misfortune."
+
+The knight-errant and the ill-errant squire kept up their conversation
+till they reached the place where the curate, the canon, and the barber,
+who had already dismounted, were waiting for them. The carter at once
+unyoked the oxen and left them to roam at large about the pleasant green
+spot, the freshness of which seemed to invite, not enchanted people like
+Don Quixote, but wide-awake, sensible folk like his squire, who begged
+the curate to allow his master to leave the cage for a little; for if
+they did not let him out, the prison might not be as clean as the
+propriety of such a gentleman as his master required. The curate
+understood him, and said he would very gladly comply with his request,
+only that he feared his master, finding himself at liberty, would take to
+his old courses and make off where nobody could ever find him again.
+
+"I will answer for his not running away," said Sancho.
+
+"And I also," said the canon, "especially if he gives me his word as a
+knight not to leave us without our consent."
+
+Don Quixote, who was listening to all this, said, "I give it;-moreover
+one who is enchanted as I am cannot do as he likes with himself; for he
+who had enchanted him could prevent his moving from one place for three
+ages, and if he attempted to escape would bring him back flying."--And
+that being so, they might as well release him, particularly as it would
+be to the advantage of all; for, if they did not let him out, he
+protested he would be unable to avoid offending their nostrils unless
+they kept their distance.
+
+The canon took his hand, tied together as they both were, and on his word
+and promise they unbound him, and rejoiced beyond measure he was to find
+himself out of the cage. The first thing he did was to stretch himself
+all over, and then he went to where Rocinante was standing and giving him
+a couple of slaps on the haunches said, "I still trust in God and in his
+blessed mother, O flower and mirror of steeds, that we shall soon see
+ourselves, both of us, as we wish to be, thou with thy master on thy
+back, and I mounted upon thee, following the calling for which God sent
+me into the world." And so saying, accompanied by Sancho, he withdrew to
+a retired spot, from which he came back much relieved and more eager than
+ever to put his squire's scheme into execution.
+
+The canon gazed at him, wondering at the extraordinary nature of his
+madness, and that in all his remarks and replies he should show such
+excellent sense, and only lose his stirrups, as has been already said,
+when the subject of chivalry was broached. And so, moved by compassion,
+he said to him, as they all sat on the green grass awaiting the arrival
+of the provisions:
+
+"Is it possible, gentle sir, that the nauseous and idle reading of books
+of chivalry can have had such an effect on your worship as to upset your
+reason so that you fancy yourself enchanted, and the like, all as far
+from the truth as falsehood itself is? How can there be any human
+understanding that can persuade itself there ever was all that infinity
+of Amadises in the world, or all that multitude of famous knights, all
+those emperors of Trebizond, all those Felixmartes of Hircania, all those
+palfreys, and damsels-errant, and serpents, and monsters, and giants, and
+marvellous adventures, and enchantments of every kind, and battles, and
+prodigious encounters, splendid costumes, love-sick princesses, squires
+made counts, droll dwarfs, love letters, billings and cooings,
+swashbuckler women, and, in a word, all that nonsense the books of
+chivalry contain? For myself, I can only say that when I read them, so
+long as I do not stop to think that they are all lies and frivolity, they
+give me a certain amount of pleasure; but when I come to consider what
+they are, I fling the very best of them at the wall, and would fling it
+into the fire if there were one at hand, as richly deserving such
+punishment as cheats and impostors out of the range of ordinary
+toleration, and as founders of new sects and modes of life, and teachers
+that lead the ignorant public to believe and accept as truth all the
+folly they contain. And such is their audacity, they even dare to
+unsettle the wits of gentlemen of birth and intelligence, as is shown
+plainly by the way they have served your worship, when they have brought
+you to such a pass that you have to be shut up in a cage and carried on
+an ox-cart as one would carry a lion or a tiger from place to place to
+make money by showing it. Come, Senor Don Quixote, have some compassion
+for yourself, return to the bosom of common sense, and make use of the
+liberal share of it that heaven has been pleased to bestow upon you,
+employing your abundant gifts of mind in some other reading that may
+serve to benefit your conscience and add to your honour. And if, still
+led away by your natural bent, you desire to read books of achievements
+and of chivalry, read the Book of Judges in the Holy Scriptures, for
+there you will find grand reality, and deeds as true as they are heroic.
+Lusitania had a Viriatus, Rome a Caesar, Carthage a Hannibal, Greece an
+Alexander, Castile a Count Fernan Gonzalez, Valencia a Cid, Andalusia a
+Gonzalo Fernandez, Estremadura a Diego Garcia de Paredes, Jerez a Garci
+Perez de Vargas, Toledo a Garcilaso, Seville a Don Manuel de Leon, to
+read of whose valiant deeds will entertain and instruct the loftiest
+minds and fill them with delight and wonder. Here, Senor Don Quixote,
+will be reading worthy of your sound understanding; from which you will
+rise learned in history, in love with virtue, strengthened in goodness,
+improved in manners, brave without rashness, prudent without cowardice;
+and all to the honour of God, your own advantage and the glory of La
+Mancha, whence, I am informed, your worship derives your birth."
+
+Don Quixote listened with the greatest attention to the canon's words,
+and when he found he had finished, after regarding him for some time, he
+replied to him:
+
+"It appears to me, gentle sir, that your worship's discourse is intended
+to persuade me that there never were any knights-errant in the world, and
+that all the books of chivalry are false, lying, mischievous and useless
+to the State, and that I have done wrong in reading them, and worse in
+believing them, and still worse in imitating them, when I undertook to
+follow the arduous calling of knight-errantry which they set forth; for
+you deny that there ever were Amadises of Gaul or of Greece, or any other
+of the knights of whom the books are full."
+
+"It is all exactly as you state it," said the canon; to which Don Quixote
+returned, "You also went on to say that books of this kind had done me
+much harm, inasmuch as they had upset my senses, and shut me up in a
+cage, and that it would be better for me to reform and change my studies,
+and read other truer books which would afford more pleasure and
+instruction."
+
+"Just so," said the canon.
+
+"Well then," returned Don Quixote, "to my mind it is you who are the one
+that is out of his wits and enchanted, as you have ventured to utter such
+blasphemies against a thing so universally acknowledged and accepted as
+true that whoever denies it, as you do, deserves the same punishment
+which you say you inflict on the books that irritate you when you read
+them. For to try to persuade anybody that Amadis, and all the other
+knights-adventurers with whom the books are filled, never existed, would
+be like trying to persuade him that the sun does not yield light, or ice
+cold, or earth nourishment. What wit in the world can persuade another
+that the story of the Princess Floripes and Guy of Burgundy is not true,
+or that of Fierabras and the bridge of Mantible, which happened in the
+time of Charlemagne? For by all that is good it is as true as that it is
+daylight now; and if it be a lie, it must be a lie too that there was a
+Hector, or Achilles, or Trojan war, or Twelve Peers of France, or Arthur
+of England, who still lives changed into a raven, and is unceasingly
+looked for in his kingdom. One might just as well try to make out that
+the history of Guarino Mezquino, or of the quest of the Holy Grail, is
+false, or that the loves of Tristram and the Queen Yseult are apocryphal,
+as well as those of Guinevere and Lancelot, when there are persons who
+can almost remember having seen the Dame Quintanona, who was the best
+cupbearer in Great Britain. And so true is this, that I recollect a
+grandmother of mine on the father's side, whenever she saw any dame in a
+venerable hood, used to say to me, 'Grandson, that one is like Dame
+Quintanona,' from which I conclude that she must have known her, or at
+least had managed to see some portrait of her. Then who can deny that the
+story of Pierres and the fair Magalona is true, when even to this day may
+be seen in the king's armoury the pin with which the valiant Pierres
+guided the wooden horse he rode through the air, and it is a trifle
+bigger than the pole of a cart? And alongside of the pin is Babieca's
+saddle, and at Roncesvalles there is Roland's horn, as large as a large
+beam; whence we may infer that there were Twelve Peers, and a Pierres,
+and a Cid, and other knights like them, of the sort people commonly call
+adventurers. Or perhaps I shall be told, too, that there was no such
+knight-errant as the valiant Lusitanian Juan de Merlo, who went to
+Burgundy and in the city of Arras fought with the famous lord of Charny,
+Mosen Pierres by name, and afterwards in the city of Basle with Mosen
+Enrique de Remesten, coming out of both encounters covered with fame and
+honour; or adventures and challenges achieved and delivered, also in
+Burgundy, by the valiant Spaniards Pedro Barba and Gutierre Quixada (of
+whose family I come in the direct male line), when they vanquished the
+sons of the Count of San Polo. I shall be told, too, that Don Fernando de
+Guevara did not go in quest of adventures to Germany, where he engaged in
+combat with Micer George, a knight of the house of the Duke of Austria. I
+shall be told that the jousts of Suero de Quinones, him of the 'Paso,'
+and the emprise of Mosen Luis de Falces against the Castilian knight, Don
+Gonzalo de Guzman, were mere mockeries; as well as many other
+achievements of Christian knights of these and foreign realms, which are
+so authentic and true, that, I repeat, he who denies them must be totally
+wanting in reason and good sense."
+
+The canon was amazed to hear the medley of truth and fiction Don Quixote
+uttered, and to see how well acquainted he was with everything relating
+or belonging to the achievements of his knight-errantry; so he said in
+reply:
+
+"I cannot deny, Senor Don Quixote, that there is some truth in what you
+say, especially as regards the Spanish knights-errant; and I am willing
+to grant too that the Twelve Peers of France existed, but I am not
+disposed to believe that they did all the things that the Archbishop
+Turpin relates of them. For the truth of the matter is they were knights
+chosen by the kings of France, and called 'Peers' because they were all
+equal in worth, rank and prowess (at least if they were not they ought to
+have been), and it was a kind of religious order like those of Santiago
+and Calatrava in the present day, in which it is assumed that those who
+take it are valiant knights of distinction and good birth; and just as we
+say now a Knight of St. John, or of Alcantara, they used to say then a
+Knight of the Twelve Peers, because twelve equals were chosen for that
+military order. That there was a Cid, as well as a Bernardo del Carpio,
+there can be no doubt; but that they did the deeds people say they did, I
+hold to be very doubtful. In that other matter of the pin of Count
+Pierres that you speak of, and say is near Babieca's saddle in the
+Armoury, I confess my sin; for I am either so stupid or so short-sighted,
+that, though I have seen the saddle, I have never been able to see the
+pin, in spite of it being as big as your worship says it is."
+
+"For all that it is there, without any manner of doubt," said Don
+Quixote; "and more by token they say it is inclosed in a sheath of
+cowhide to keep it from rusting."
+
+"All that may be," replied the canon; "but, by the orders I have
+received, I do not remember seeing it. However, granting it is there,
+that is no reason why I am bound to believe the stories of all those
+Amadises and of all that multitude of knights they tell us about, nor is
+it reasonable that a man like your worship, so worthy, and with so many
+good qualities, and endowed with such a good understanding, should allow
+himself to be persuaded that such wild crazy things as are written in
+those absurd books of chivalry are really true."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. I.,
+Part 16., by Miguel de Cervantes
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DON QUIXOTE, PART 16 ***
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