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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. II., Part 30.</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, Vol. II., Part 30.</h2>
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. II., Part
+30, 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. II., Part 30
+
+Author: Miguel de Cervantes
+
+Release Date: July 24, 2004 [EBook #5933]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DON QUIXOTE, PART 30 ***
+
+
+
+
+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 II.,&nbsp; Part 30
+<br><br>
+Chapters 36-43
+</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>
+
+
+<center>
+<h3>Ebook Editor's Note</h3>
+</center>
+<blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><blockquote>
+<p>
+The book cover and spine above and the images which follow were not part of the original Ormsby
+translation&mdash;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="#ch36b">CHAPTER XXXVI</a>
+WHEREIN IS RELATED THE STRANGE AND UNDREAMT-OF
+ADVENTURE OF THE DISTRESSED DUENNA, ALIAS THE COUNTESS
+TRIFALDI, TOGETHER WITH A LETTER WHICH SANCHO PANZA
+WROTE TO HIS WIFE, TERESA PANZA
+
+<a href="#ch37b">CHAPTER XXXVII</a>
+WHEREIN IS CONTINUED THE NOTABLE ADVENTURE OF THE
+DISTRESSED DUENNA
+
+<a href="#ch38b">CHAPTER XXXVIII</a>
+WHEREIN IS TOLD THE DISTRESSED DUENNA'S TALE OF HER
+MISFORTUNES
+
+<a href="#ch39b">CHAPTER XXXIX</a>
+IN WHICH THE TRIFALDI CONTINUES HER MARVELLOUS AND
+MEMORABLE STORY
+
+<a href="#ch40b">CHAPTER XL</a>
+OF MATTERS RELATING AND BELONGING TO THIS ADVENTURE
+AND TO THIS MEMORABLE HISTORY
+
+<a href="#ch41b">CHAPTER XLI</a>
+OF THE ARRIVAL OF CLAVILENO AND THE END OF THIS
+PROTRACTED ADVENTURE
+
+<a href="#ch42b">CHAPTER XLII</a>
+OF THE COUNSELS WHICH DON QUIXOTE GAVE SANCHO PANZA
+BEFORE HE SET OUT TO GOVERN THE ISLAND, TOGETHER WITH
+OTHER WELL-CONSIDERED MATTERS
+
+<a href="#ch43b">CHAPTER XLIII</a>
+OF THE SECOND SET OF COUNSELS DON QUIXOTE GAVE
+SANCHO PANZA
+
+</pre>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<center><h1>DON QUIXOTE</h1></center>
+<br><br>
+<center><h2>Volume II.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch36b"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>WHEREIN IS RELATED THE STRANGE AND UNDREAMT-OF ADVENTURE OF THE
+DISTRESSED DUENNA, ALIAS THE COUNTESS TRIFALDI, TOGETHER WITH A LETTER
+WHICH SANCHO PANZA WROTE TO HIS WIFE, TERESA PANZA
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p36a"></a><img alt="p36a.jpg (150K)" src="images/p36a.jpg" height="428" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p36a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>The duke had a majordomo of a very facetious and sportive turn,
+and he it was that played the part of Merlin, made all the
+arrangements for the late adventure, composed the verses, and got a
+page to represent Dulcinea; and now, with the assistance of his master
+and mistress, he got up another of the drollest and strangest
+contrivances that can be imagined.</p>
+
+<p>The duchess asked Sancho the next day if he had made a beginning
+with his penance task which he had to perform for the disenchantment
+of Dulcinea. He said he had, and had given himself five lashes
+overnight.</p>
+
+<p>The duchess asked him what he had given them with.</p>
+
+<p>He said with his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"That," said the duchess, "is more like giving oneself slaps than
+lashes; I am sure the sage Merlin will not be satisfied with such
+tenderness; worthy Sancho must make a scourge with claws, or a
+cat-o'-nine tails, that will make itself felt; for it's with blood
+that letters enter, and the release of so great a lady as Dulcinea
+will not be granted so cheaply, or at such a paltry price; and
+remember, Sancho, that works of charity done in a lukewarm and
+half-hearted way are without merit and of no avail."</p>
+
+<p>To which Sancho replied, "If your ladyship will give me a proper
+scourge or cord, I'll lay on with it, provided it does not hurt too
+much; for you must know, boor as I am, my flesh is more cotton than
+hemp, and it won't do for me to destroy myself for the good of anybody
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"So be it by all means," said the duchess; "tomorrow I'll give you a
+scourge that will be just the thing for you, and will accommodate
+itself to the tenderness of your flesh, as if it was its own sister."</p>
+
+<p>Then said Sancho, "Your highness must know, dear lady of my soul,
+that I have a letter written to my wife, Teresa Panza, giving her an
+account of all that has happened me since I left her; I have it here
+in my bosom, and there's nothing wanting but to put the address to it;
+I'd be glad if your discretion would read it, for I think it runs in
+the governor style; I mean the way governors ought to write."</p>
+
+<p>"And who dictated it?" asked the duchess.</p>
+
+<p>"Who should have dictated but myself, sinner as I am?" said Sancho.</p>
+
+<p>"And did you write it yourself?" said the duchess.</p>
+
+<p>"That I didn't," said Sancho; "for I can neither read nor write,
+though I can sign my name."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us see it," said the duchess, "for never fear but you display
+in it the quality and quantity of your wit."</p>
+
+<p>Sancho drew out an open letter from his bosom, and the duchess,
+taking it, found it ran in this fashion:</p>
+
+<blockquote><blockquote>
+<p>
+SANCHO PANZA'S LETTER TO HIS WIFE, TERESA PANZA</p>
+
+<p>
+If I was well whipped I went mounted like a gentleman; if I have got
+a good government it is at the cost of a good whipping. Thou wilt
+not understand this just now, my Teresa; by-and-by thou wilt know what
+it means. I may tell thee, Teresa, I mean thee to go in a coach, for
+that is a matter of importance, because every other way of going is
+going on all-fours. Thou art a governor's wife; take care that
+nobody speaks evil of thee behind thy back. I send thee here a green
+hunting suit that my lady the duchess gave me; alter it so as to
+make a petticoat and bodice for our daughter. Don Quixote, my
+master, if I am to believe what I hear in these parts, is a madman
+of some sense, and a droll blockhead, and I am no way behind him. We
+have been in the cave of Montesinos, and the sage Merlin has laid hold
+of me for the disenchantment of Dulcinea del Toboso, her that is
+called Aldonza Lorenzo over there. With three thousand three hundred
+lashes, less five, that I'm to give myself, she will be left as
+entirely disenchanted as the mother that bore her. Say nothing of this
+to anyone; for, make thy affairs public, and some will say they are
+white and others will say they are black. I shall leave this in a
+few days for my government, to which I am going with a mighty great
+desire to make money, for they tell me all new governors set out
+with the same desire; I will feel the pulse of it and will let thee
+know if thou art to come and live with me or not. Dapple is well and
+sends many remembrances to thee; I am not going to leave him behind
+though they took me away to be Grand Turk. My lady the duchess
+kisses thy hands a thousand times; do thou make a return with two
+thousand, for as my master says, nothing costs less or is cheaper than
+civility. God has not been pleased to provide another valise for me
+with another hundred crowns, like the one the other day; but never
+mind, my Teresa, the bell-ringer is in safe quarters, and all will
+come out in the scouring of the government; only it troubles me
+greatly what they tell me&mdash;that once I have tasted it I will eat my
+hands off after it; and if that is so it will not come very cheap to
+me; though to be sure the maimed have a benefice of their own in the
+alms they beg for; so that one way or another thou wilt be rich and in
+luck. God give it to thee as he can, and keep me to serve thee. From
+this castle, the 20th of July, 1614.</p>
+
+<p>Thy husband, the governor.</p>
+
+<p>SANCHO PANZA</p>
+</blockquote></blockquote>
+
+
+<p>When she had done reading the letter the duchess said to Sancho, "On
+two points the worthy governor goes rather astray; one is in saying or
+hinting that this government has been bestowed upon him for the lashes
+that he is to give himself, when he knows (and he cannot deny it) that
+when my lord the duke promised it to him nobody ever dreamt of such
+a thing as lashes; the other is that he shows himself here to be
+very covetous; and I would not have him a money-seeker, for
+'covetousness bursts the bag,' and the covetous governor does
+ungoverned justice."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean it that way, senora," said Sancho; "and if you think
+the letter doesn't run as it ought to do, it's only to tear it up
+and make another; and maybe it will be a worse one if it is left to my
+gumption."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," said the duchess, "this one will do, and I wish the duke
+to see it."</p>
+
+<p>With this they betook themselves to a garden where they were to
+dine, and the duchess showed Sancho's letter to the duke, who was
+highly delighted with it. They dined, and after the cloth had been
+removed and they had amused themselves for a while with Sancho's
+rich conversation, the melancholy sound of a fife and harsh discordant
+drum made itself heard. All seemed somewhat put out by this dull,
+confused, martial harmony, especially Don Quixote, who could not
+keep his seat from pure disquietude; as to Sancho, it is needless to
+say that fear drove him to his usual refuge, the side or the skirts of
+the duchess; and indeed and in truth the sound they heard was a most
+doleful and melancholy one. While they were still in uncertainty
+they saw advancing towards them through the garden two men clad in
+mourning robes so long and flowing that they trailed upon the
+ground. As they marched they beat two great drums which were
+likewise draped in black, and beside them came the fife player,
+black and sombre like the others. Following these came a personage
+of gigantic stature enveloped rather than clad in a gown of the
+deepest black, the skirt of which was of prodigious dimensions. Over
+the gown, girdling or crossing his figure, he had a broad baldric
+which was also black, and from which hung a huge scimitar with a black
+scabbard and furniture. He had his face covered with a transparent
+black veil, through which might be descried a very long beard as white
+as snow. He came on keeping step to the sound of the drums with
+great gravity and dignity; and, in short, his stature, his gait, the
+sombreness of his appearance and his following might well have
+struck with astonishment, as they did, all who beheld him without
+knowing who he was. With this measured pace and in this guise he
+advanced to kneel before the duke, who, with the others, awaited him
+standing. The duke, however, would not on any account allow him to
+speak until he had risen. The prodigious scarecrow obeyed, and
+standing up, removed the veil from his face and disclosed the most
+enormous, the longest, the whitest and the thickest beard that human
+eyes had ever beheld until that moment, and then fetching up a
+grave, sonorous voice from the depths of his broad, capacious chest,
+and fixing his eyes on the duke, he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Most high and mighty senor, my name is Trifaldin of the White
+Beard; I am squire to the Countess Trifaldi, otherwise called the
+Distressed Duenna, on whose behalf I bear a message to your
+highness, which is that your magnificence will be pleased to grant her
+leave and permission to come and tell you her trouble, which is one of
+the strangest and most wonderful that the mind most familiar with
+trouble in the world could have imagined; but first she desires to
+know if the valiant and never vanquished knight, Don Quixote of La
+Mancha, is in this your castle, for she has come in quest of him on
+foot and without breaking her fast from the kingdom of Kandy to your
+realms here; a thing which may and ought to be regarded as a miracle
+or set down to enchantment; she is even now at the gate of this
+fortress or plaisance, and only waits for your permission to enter.
+I have spoken." And with that he coughed, and stroked down his beard
+with both his hands, and stood very tranquilly waiting for the
+response of the duke, which was to this effect: "Many days ago, worthy
+squire Trifaldin of the White Beard, we heard of the misfortune of
+my lady the Countess Trifaldi, whom the enchanters have caused to be
+called the Distressed Duenna. Bid her enter, O stupendous squire,
+and tell her that the valiant knight Don Quixote of La Mancha is here,
+and from his generous disposition she may safely promise herself every
+protection and assistance; and you may tell her, too, that if my aid
+be necessary it will not be withheld, for I am bound to give it to her
+by my quality of knight, which involves the protection of women of all
+sorts, especially widowed, wronged, and distressed dames, such as
+her ladyship seems to be."</p>
+
+<p>On hearing this Trifaldin bent the knee to the ground, and making
+a sign to the fifer and drummers to strike up, he turned and marched
+out of the garden to the same notes and at the same pace as when he
+entered, leaving them all amazed at his bearing and solemnity. Turning
+to Don Quixote, the duke said, "After all, renowned knight, the
+mists of malice and ignorance are unable to hide or obscure the
+light of valour and virtue. I say so, because your excellence has been
+barely six days in this castle, and already the unhappy and the
+afflicted come in quest of you from lands far distant and remote,
+and not in coaches or on dromedaries, but on foot and fasting,
+confident that in that mighty arm they will find a cure for their
+sorrows and troubles; thanks to your great achievements, which are
+circulated all over the known earth."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish, senor duke," replied Don Quixote, "that blessed
+ecclesiastic, who at table the other day showed such ill-will and
+bitter spite against knights-errant, were here now to see with his own
+eyes whether knights of the sort are needed in the world; he would
+at any rate learn by experience that those suffering any extraordinary
+affliction or sorrow, in extreme cases and unusual misfortunes do
+not go to look for a remedy to the houses of jurists or village
+sacristans, or to the knight who has never attempted to pass the
+bounds of his own town, or to the indolent courtier who only seeks for
+news to repeat and talk of, instead of striving to do deeds and
+exploits for others to relate and record. Relief in distress, help
+in need, protection for damsels, consolation for widows, are to be
+found in no sort of persons better than in knights-errant; and I
+give unceasing thanks to heaven that I am one, and regard any
+misfortune or suffering that may befall me in the pursuit of so
+honourable a calling as endured to good purpose. Let this duenna
+come and ask what she will, for I will effect her relief by the
+might of my arm and the dauntless resolution of my bold heart."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p36e"></a><img alt="p36e.jpg (22K)" src="images/p36e.jpg" height="501" width="403">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch37b"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>WHEREIN IS CONTINUED THE NOTABLE ADVENTURE OF THE DISTRESSED DUENNA
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p37a"></a><img alt="p37a.jpg (94K)" src="images/p37a.jpg" height="295" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p37a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>The duke and duchess were extremely glad to see how readily Don
+Quixote fell in with their scheme; but at this moment Sancho observed,
+"I hope this senora duenna won't be putting any difficulties in the
+way of the promise of my government; for I have heard a Toledo
+apothecary, who talked like a goldfinch, say that where duennas were
+mixed up nothing good could happen. God bless me, how he hated them,
+that same apothecary! And so what I'm thinking is, if all duennas,
+of whatever sort or condition they may be, are plagues and busybodies,
+what must they be that are distressed, like this Countess Three-skirts
+or Three-tails!&mdash;for in my country skirts or tails, tails or skirts,
+it's all one."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, friend Sancho," said Don Quixote; "since this lady duenna
+comes in quest of me from such a distant land she cannot be one of
+those the apothecary meant; moreover this is a countess, and when
+countesses serve as duennas it is in the service of queens and
+empresses, for in their own houses they are mistresses paramount and
+have other duennas to wait on them."</p>
+
+<p>To this Dona Rodriguez, who was present, made answer, "My lady the
+duchess has duennas in her service that might be countesses if it
+was the will of fortune; 'but laws go as kings like;' let nobody speak
+ill of duennas, above all of ancient maiden ones; for though I am
+not one myself, I know and am aware of the advantage a maiden duenna
+has over one that is a widow; but 'he who clipped us has kept the
+scissors.'"</p>
+
+<p>"For all that," said Sancho, "there's so much to be clipped about
+duennas, so my barber said, that 'it will be better not to stir the
+rice even though it sticks.'"</p>
+
+<p>"These squires," returned Dona Rodriguez, "are always our enemies;
+and as they are the haunting spirits of the antechambers and watch
+us at every step, whenever they are not saying their prayers (and
+that's often enough) they spend their time in tattling about us,
+digging up our bones and burying our good name. But I can tell these
+walking blocks that we will live in spite of them, and in great houses
+too, though we die of hunger and cover our flesh, be it delicate or
+not, with widow's weeds, as one covers or hides a dunghill on a
+procession day. By my faith, if it were permitted me and time allowed,
+I could prove, not only to those here present, but to all the world,
+that there is no virtue that is not to be found in a duenna."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no doubt," said the duchess, "that my good Dona Rodriguez is
+right, and very much so; but she had better bide her time for fighting
+her own battle and that of the rest of the duennas, so as to crush the
+calumny of that vile apothecary, and root out the prejudice in the
+great Sancho Panza's mind."</p>
+
+<p>To which Sancho replied, "Ever since I have sniffed the governorship
+I have got rid of the humours of a squire, and I don't care a wild fig
+for all the duennas in the world."</p>
+
+<p>They would have carried on this duenna dispute further had they
+not heard the notes of the fife and drums once more, from which they
+concluded that the Distressed Duenna was making her entrance. The
+duchess asked the duke if it would be proper to go out to receive her,
+as she was a countess and a person of rank.</p>
+
+<p>"In respect of her being a countess," said Sancho, before the duke
+could reply, "I am for your highnesses going out to receive her; but
+in respect of her being a duenna, it is my opinion you should not stir
+a step."</p>
+
+<p>"Who bade thee meddle in this, Sancho?" said Don Quixote.</p>
+
+<p>"Who, senor?" said Sancho; "I meddle for I have a right to meddle,
+as a squire who has learned the rules of courtesy in the school of
+your worship, the most courteous and best-bred knight in the whole
+world of courtliness; and in these things, as I have heard your
+worship say, as much is lost by a card too many as by a card too
+few, and to one who has his ears open, few words."</p>
+
+<p>"Sancho is right," said the duke; "we'll see what the countess is
+like, and by that measure the courtesy that is due to her."</p>
+
+<p>And now the drums and fife made their entrance as before; and here
+the author brought this short chapter to an end and began the next,
+following up the same adventure, which is one of the most notable in
+the history.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p37e"></a><img alt="p37e.jpg (21K)" src="images/p37e.jpg" height="349" width="363">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch38b"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>WHEREIN IS TOLD THE DISTRESSED DUENNA'S TALE OF HER MISFORTUNES
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p38a"></a><img alt="p38a.jpg (54K)" src="images/p38a.jpg" height="175" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p38a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>Following the melancholy musicians there filed into the garden as
+many as twelve duennas, in two lines, all dressed in ample mourning
+robes apparently of milled serge, with hoods of fine white gauze so
+long that they allowed only the border of the robe to be seen.
+Behind them came the Countess Trifaldi, the squire Trifaldin of the
+White Beard leading her by the hand, clad in the finest unnapped black
+baize, such that, had it a nap, every tuft would have shown as big
+as a Martos chickpea; the tail, or skirt, or whatever it might be
+called, ended in three points which were borne up by the hands of
+three pages, likewise dressed in mourning, forming an elegant
+geometrical figure with the three acute angles made by the three
+points, from which all who saw the peaked skirt concluded that it must
+be because of it the countess was called Trifaldi, as though it were
+Countess of the Three Skirts; and Benengeli says it was so, and that
+by her right name she was called the Countess Lobuna, because wolves
+bred in great numbers in her country; and if, instead of wolves,
+they had been foxes, she would have been called the Countess
+Zorruna, as it was the custom in those parts for lords to take
+distinctive titles from the thing or things most abundant in their
+dominions; this countess, however, in honour of the new fashion of her
+skirt, dropped Lobuna and took up Trifaldi.</p>
+
+<p>The twelve duennas and the lady came on at procession pace, their
+faces being covered with black veils, not transparent ones like
+Trifaldin's, but so close that they allowed nothing to be seen through
+them. As soon as the band of duennas was fully in sight, the duke, the
+duchess, and Don Quixote stood up, as well as all who were watching
+the slow-moving procession. The twelve duennas halted and formed a
+lane, along which the Distressed One advanced, Trifaldin still holding
+her hand. On seeing this the duke, the duchess, and Don Quixote went
+some twelve paces forward to meet her. She then, kneeling on the
+ground, said in a voice hoarse and rough, rather than fine and
+delicate, "May it please your highnesses not to offer such
+courtesies to this your servant, I should say to this your handmaid,
+for I am in such distress that I shall never be able to make a
+proper return, because my strange and unparalleled misfortune has
+carried off my wits, and I know not whither; but it must be a long way
+off, for the more I look for them the less I find them."</p>
+
+<p>"He would be wanting in wits, senora countess," said the duke,
+"who did not perceive your worth by your person, for at a glance it
+may be seen it deserves all the cream of courtesy and flower of polite
+usage;" and raising her up by the hand he led her to a seat beside the
+duchess, who likewise received her with great urbanity. Don Quixote
+remained silent, while Sancho was dying to see the features of
+Trifaldi and one or two of her many duennas; but there was no
+possibility of it until they themselves displayed them of their own
+accord and free will.</p>
+
+<p>All kept still, waiting to see who would break silence, which the
+Distressed Duenna did in these words: "I am confident, most mighty
+lord, most fair lady, and most discreet company, that my most
+miserable misery will be accorded a reception no less dispassionate
+than generous and condolent in your most valiant bosoms, for it is one
+that is enough to melt marble, soften diamonds, and mollify the
+steel of the most hardened hearts in the world; but ere it is
+proclaimed to your hearing, not to say your ears, I would fain be
+enlightened whether there be present in this society, circle, or
+company, that knight immaculatissimus, Don Quixote de la
+Manchissima, and his squirissimus Panza."</p>
+
+<p>"The Panza is here," said Sancho, before anyone could reply, "and
+Don Quixotissimus too; and so, most distressedest Duenissima, you
+may say what you willissimus, for we are all readissimus to do you any
+servissimus."</p>
+
+<p>On this Don Quixote rose, and addressing the Distressed Duenna,
+said, "If your sorrows, afflicted lady, can indulge in any hope of
+relief from the valour or might of any knight-errant, here are mine,
+which, feeble and limited though they be, shall be entirely devoted to
+your service. I am Don Quixote of La Mancha, whose calling it is to
+give aid to the needy of all sorts; and that being so, it is not
+necessary for you, senora, to make any appeal to benevolence, or
+deal in preambles, only to tell your woes plainly and
+straightforwardly: for you have hearers that will know how, if not
+to remedy them, to sympathise with them."</p>
+
+<p>On hearing this, the Distressed Duenna made as though she would
+throw herself at Don Quixote's feet, and actually did fall before them
+and said, as she strove to embrace them, "Before these feet and legs I
+cast myself, O unconquered knight, as before, what they are, the
+foundations and pillars of knight-errantry; these feet I desire to
+kiss, for upon their steps hangs and depends the sole remedy for my
+misfortune, O valorous errant, whose veritable achievements leave
+behind and eclipse the fabulous ones of the Amadises, Esplandians, and
+Belianises!" Then turning from Don Quixote to Sancho Panza, and
+grasping his hands, she said, "O thou, most loyal squire that ever
+served knight-errant in this present age or ages past, whose
+goodness is more extensive than the beard of Trifaldin my companion
+here of present, well mayest thou boast thyself that, in serving the
+great Don Quixote, thou art serving, summed up in one, the whole
+host of knights that have ever borne arms in the world. I conjure
+thee, by what thou owest to thy most loyal goodness, that thou wilt
+become my kind intercessor with thy master, that he speedily give
+aid to this most humble and most unfortunate countess."</p>
+
+<p>To this Sancho made answer, "As to my goodness, senora, being as
+long and as great as your squire's beard, it matters very little to
+me; may I have my soul well bearded and moustached when it comes to
+quit this life, that's the point; about beards here below I care
+little or nothing; but without all these blandishments and prayers,
+I will beg my master (for I know he loves me, and, besides, he has
+need of me just now for a certain business) to help and aid your
+worship as far as he can; unpack your woes and lay them before us, and
+leave us to deal with them, for we'll be all of one mind."</p>
+
+<p>The duke and duchess, as it was they who had made the experiment
+of this adventure, were ready to burst with laughter at all this,
+and between themselves they commended the clever acting of the
+Trifaldi, who, returning to her seat, said, "Queen Dona Maguncia
+reigned over the famous kingdom of Kandy, which lies between the great
+Trapobana and the Southern Sea, two leagues beyond Cape Comorin. She
+was the widow of King Archipiela, her lord and husband, and of their
+marriage they had issue the Princess Antonomasia, heiress of the
+kingdom; which Princess Antonomasia was reared and brought up under my
+care and direction, I being the oldest and highest in rank of her
+mother's duennas. Time passed, and the young Antonomasia reached the
+age of fourteen, and such a perfection of beauty, that nature could
+not raise it higher. Then, it must not be supposed her intelligence
+was childish; she was as intelligent as she was fair, and she was
+fairer than all the world; and is so still, unless the envious fates
+and hard-hearted sisters three have cut for her the thread of life.
+But that they have not, for Heaven will not suffer so great a wrong to
+Earth, as it would be to pluck unripe the grapes of the fairest
+vineyard on its surface. Of this beauty, to which my poor feeble
+tongue has failed to do justice, countless princes, not only of that
+country, but of others, were enamoured, and among them a private
+gentleman, who was at the court, dared to raise his thoughts to the
+heaven of so great beauty, trusting to his youth, his gallant bearing,
+his numerous accomplishments and graces, and his quickness and
+readiness of wit; for I may tell your highnesses, if I am not wearying
+you, that he played the guitar so as to make it speak, and he was,
+besides, a poet and a great dancer, and he could make birdcages so
+well, that by making them alone he might have gained a livelihood, had
+he found himself reduced to utter poverty; and gifts and graces of
+this kind are enough to bring down a mountain, not to say a tender
+young girl. But all his gallantry, wit, and gaiety, all his graces and
+accomplishments, would have been of little or no avail towards gaining
+the fortress of my pupil, had not the impudent thief taken the
+precaution of gaining me over first. First, the villain and
+heartless vagabond sought to win my good-will and purchase my
+compliance, so as to get me, like a treacherous warder, to deliver
+up to him the keys of the fortress I had in charge. In a word, he
+gained an influence over my mind, and overcame my resolutions with I
+know not what trinkets and jewels he gave me; but it was some verses I
+heard him singing one night from a grating that opened on the street
+where he lived, that, more than anything else, made me give way and
+led to my fall; and if I remember rightly they ran thus:</p>
+
+<pre>
+From that sweet enemy of mine
+ My bleeding heart hath had its wound;
+ And to increase the pain I'm bound
+To suffer and to make no sign.
+
+</pre>
+
+<p>The lines seemed pearls to me and his voice sweet as syrup; and
+afterwards, I may say ever since then, looking at the misfortune
+into which I have fallen, I have thought that poets, as Plato advised,
+ought to be banished from all well-ordered States; at least the
+amatory ones, for they write verses, not like those of 'The Marquis of
+Mantua,' that delight and draw tears from the women and children,
+but sharp-pointed conceits that pierce the heart like soft thorns, and
+like the lightning strike it, leaving the raiment uninjured. Another
+time he sang:</p>
+
+<pre>
+Come Death, so subtly veiled that I
+ Thy coming know not, how or when,
+ Lest it should give me life again
+To find how sweet it is to die.
+
+</pre>
+
+<p>-and other verses and burdens of the same sort, such as enchant when
+sung and fascinate when written. And then, when they condescend to
+compose a sort of verse that was at that time in vogue in Kandy, which
+they call seguidillas! Then it is that hearts leap and laughter breaks
+forth, and the body grows restless and all the senses turn
+quicksilver. And so I say, sirs, that these troubadours richly deserve
+to be banished to the isles of the lizards. Though it is not they that
+are in fault, but the simpletons that extol them, and the fools that
+believe in them; and had I been the faithful duenna I should have
+been, his stale conceits would have never moved me, nor should I
+have been taken in by such phrases as 'in death I live,' 'in ice I
+burn,' 'in flames I shiver,' 'hopeless I hope,' 'I go and stay,' and
+paradoxes of that sort which their writings are full of. And then when
+they promise the Phoenix of Arabia, the crown of Ariadne, the horses
+of the Sun, the pearls of the South, the gold of Tibar, and the balsam
+of Panchaia! Then it is they give a loose to their pens, for it
+costs them little to make promises they have no intention or power
+of fulfilling. But where am I wandering to? Woe is me, unfortunate
+being! What madness or folly leads me to speak of the faults of
+others, when there is so much to be said about my own? Again, woe is
+me, hapless that I am! it was not verses that conquered me, but my own
+simplicity; it was not music made me yield, but my own imprudence;
+my own great ignorance and little caution opened the way and cleared
+the path for Don Clavijo's advances, for that was the name of the
+gentleman I have referred to; and so, with my help as go-between, he
+found his way many a time into the chamber of the deceived Antonomasia
+(deceived not by him but by me) under the title of a lawful husband;
+for, sinner though I was, would not have allowed him to approach the
+edge of her shoe-sole without being her husband. No, no, not that;
+marriage must come first in any business of this sort that I take in
+hand. But there was one hitch in this case, which was that of
+inequality of rank, Don Clavijo being a private gentleman, and the
+Princess Antonomasia, as I said, heiress to the kingdom. The
+entanglement remained for some time a secret, kept hidden by my
+cunning precautions, until I perceived that a certain expansion of
+waist in Antonomasia must before long disclose it, the dread of
+which made us all there take counsel together, and it was agreed
+that before the mischief came to light, Don Clavijo should demand
+Antonomasia as his wife before the Vicar, in virtue of an agreement to
+marry him made by the princess, and drafted by my wit in such
+binding terms that the might of Samson could not have broken it. The
+necessary steps were taken; the Vicar saw the agreement, and took
+the lady's confession; she confessed everything in full, and he
+ordered her into the custody of a very worthy alguacil of the court."</p>
+
+<p>"Are there alguacils of the court in Kandy, too," said Sancho at
+this, "and poets, and seguidillas? I swear I think the world is the
+same all over! But make haste, Senora Trifaldi; for it is late, and
+I am dying to know the end of this long story."</p>
+
+<p>"I will," replied the countess.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p38e"></a><img alt="p38e.jpg (22K)" src="images/p38e.jpg" height="415" width="431">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch39b"></a>CHAPTER XXXIX.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>IN WHICH THE TRIFALDI CONTINUES HER MARVELLOUS AND MEMORABLE STORY
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p39a"></a><img alt="p39a.jpg (96K)" src="images/p39a.jpg" height="380" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p39a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>By every word that Sancho uttered, the duchess was as much delighted
+as Don Quixote was driven to desperation. He bade him hold his tongue,
+and the Distressed One went on to say: "At length, after much
+questioning and answering, as the princess held to her story,
+without changing or varying her previous declaration, the Vicar gave
+his decision in favour of Don Clavijo, and she was delivered over to
+him as his lawful wife; which the Queen Dona Maguncia, the Princess
+Antonomasia's mother, so took to heart, that within the space of three
+days we buried her."</p>
+
+<p>"She died, no doubt," said Sancho.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Trifaldin; "they don't bury living people in
+Kandy, only the dead."</p>
+
+<p>"Senor Squire," said Sancho, "a man in a swoon has been known to
+be buried before now, in the belief that he was dead; and it struck me
+that Queen Maguncia ought to have swooned rather than died; because
+with life a great many things come right, and the princess's folly was
+not so great that she need feel it so keenly. If the lady had
+married some page of hers, or some other servant of the house, as many
+another has done, so I have heard say, then the mischief would have
+been past curing. But to marry such an elegant accomplished
+gentleman as has been just now described to us&mdash;indeed, indeed, though
+it was a folly, it was not such a great one as you think; for
+according to the rules of my master here&mdash;and he won't allow me to
+lie&mdash;as of men of letters bishops are made, so of gentlemen knights,
+specially if they be errant, kings and emperors may be made."</p>
+
+<p>"Thou art right, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "for with a
+knight-errant, if he has but two fingers' breadth of good fortune,
+it is on the cards to become the mightiest lord on earth. But let
+senora the Distressed One proceed; for I suspect she has got yet to
+tell us the bitter part of this so far sweet story."</p>
+
+<p>"The bitter is indeed to come," said the countess; "and such
+bitter that colocynth is sweet and oleander toothsome in comparison.
+The queen, then, being dead, and not in a swoon, we buried her; and
+hardly had we covered her with earth, hardly had we said our last
+farewells, when, quis talia fando temperet a lachrymis? over the
+queen's grave there appeared, mounted upon a wooden horse, the giant
+Malambruno, Maguncia's first cousin, who besides being cruel is an
+enchanter; and he, to revenge the death of his cousin, punish the
+audacity of Don Clavijo, and in wrath at the contumacy of Antonomasia,
+left them both enchanted by his art on the grave itself; she being
+changed into an ape of brass, and he into a horrible crocodile of some
+unknown metal; while between the two there stands a pillar, also of
+metal, with certain characters in the Syriac language inscribed upon
+it, which, being translated into Kandian, and now into Castilian,
+contain the following sentence: 'These two rash lovers shall not
+recover their former shape until the valiant Manchegan comes to do
+battle with me in single combat; for the Fates reserve this unexampled
+adventure for his mighty valour alone.' This done, he drew from its
+sheath a huge broad scimitar, and seizing me by the hair he made as
+though he meant to cut my throat and shear my head clean off. I was
+terror-stricken, my voice stuck in my throat, and I was in the deepest
+distress; nevertheless I summoned up my strength as well as I could,
+and in a trembling and piteous voice I addressed such words to him
+as induced him to stay the infliction of a punishment so severe. He
+then caused all the duennas of the palace, those that are here
+present, to be brought before him; and after having dwelt upon the
+enormity of our offence, and denounced duennas, their characters,
+their evil ways and worse intrigues, laying to the charge of all
+what I alone was guilty of, he said he would not visit us with capital
+punishment, but with others of a slow nature which would be in
+effect civil death for ever; and the very instant he ceased speaking
+we all felt the pores of our faces opening, and pricking us, as if
+with the points of needles. We at once put our hands up to our faces
+and found ourselves in the state you now see."</p>
+
+<p>Here the Distressed One and the other duennas raised the veils
+with which they were covered, and disclosed countenances all bristling
+with beards, some red, some black, some white, and some grizzled, at
+which spectacle the duke and duchess made a show of being filled
+with wonder. Don Quixote and Sancho were overwhelmed with amazement,
+and the bystanders lost in astonishment, while the Trifaldi went on to
+say: "Thus did that malevolent villain Malambruno punish us,
+covering the tenderness and softness of our faces with these rough
+bristles! Would to heaven that he had swept off our heads with his
+enormous scimitar instead of obscuring the light of our countenances
+with these wool-combings that cover us! For if we look into the
+matter, sirs (and what I am now going to say I would say with eyes
+flowing like fountains, only that the thought of our misfortune and
+the oceans they have already wept, keep them as dry as barley
+spears, and so I say it without tears), where, I ask, can a duenna
+with a beard to to? What father or mother will feel pity for her?
+Who will help her? For, if even when she has a smooth skin, and a face
+tortured by a thousand kinds of washes and cosmetics, she can hardly
+get anybody to love her, what will she do when she shows a
+countenace turned into a thicket? Oh duennas, companions mine! it
+was an unlucky moment when we were born and an ill-starred hour when
+our fathers begot us!" And as she said this she showed signs of
+being about to faint.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p39e"></a><img alt="p39e.jpg (27K)" src="images/p39e.jpg" height="673" width="395">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch40b"></a>CHAPTER XL.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>OF MATTERS RELATING AND BELONGING TO THIS ADVENTURE AND TO THIS
+MEMORABLE HISTORY
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p40a"></a><img alt="p40a.jpg (129K)" src="images/p40a.jpg" height="443" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p40a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>Verily and truly all those who find pleasure in histories like
+this ought show their gratitude to Cide Hamete, its original author,
+for the scrupulous care he has taken to set before us all its minute
+particulars, not leaving anything, however trifling it may be, that he
+does not make clear and plain. He portrays the thoughts, he reveals
+the fancies, he answers implied questions, clears up doubts, sets
+objections at rest, and, in a word, makes plain the smallest points
+the most inquisitive can desire to know. O renowned author! O happy
+Don Quixote! O famous famous droll Sancho! All and each, may ye live
+countless ages for the delight and amusement of the dwellers on earth!</p>
+
+<p>The history goes on to say that when Sancho saw the Distressed One
+faint he exclaimed: "I swear by the faith of an honest man and the
+shades of all my ancestors the Panzas, that never I did see or hear
+of, nor has my master related or conceived in his mind, such an
+adventure as this. A thousand devils&mdash;not to curse thee&mdash;take thee,
+Malambruno, for an enchanter and a giant! Couldst thou find no other
+sort of punishment for these sinners but bearding them? Would it not
+have been better&mdash;it would have been better for them&mdash;to have taken
+off half their noses from the middle upwards, even though they'd
+have snuffled when they spoke, than to have put beards on them? I'll
+bet they have not the means of paying anybody to shave them."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the truth, senor," said one of the twelve; "we have not the
+money to get ourselves shaved, and so we have, some of us, taken to
+using sticking-plasters by way of an economical remedy, for by
+applying them to our faces and plucking them off with a jerk we are
+left as bare and smooth as the bottom of a stone mortar. There are, to
+be sure, women in Kandy that go about from house to house to remove
+down, and trim eyebrows, and make cosmetics for the use of the
+women, but we, the duennas of my lady, would never let them in, for
+most of them have a flavour of agents that have ceased to be
+principals; and if we are not relieved by Senor Don Quixote we shall
+be carried to our graves with beards."</p>
+
+<p>"I will pluck out my own in the land of the Moors," said Don
+Quixote, "if I don't cure yours."</p>
+
+<p>At this instant the Trifaldi recovered from her swoon and said, "The
+chink of that promise, valiant knight, reached my ears in the midst of
+my swoon, and has been the means of reviving me and bringing back my
+senses; and so once more I implore you, illustrious errant,
+indomitable sir, to let your gracious promises be turned into deeds."</p>
+
+<p>"There shall be no delay on my part," said Don Quixote. "Bethink
+you, senora, of what I must do, for my heart is most eager to serve
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," replied the Distressed One, "it is five thousand
+leagues, a couple more or less, from this to the kingdom of Kandy,
+if you go by land; but if you go through the air and in a straight
+line, it is three thousand two hundred and twenty-seven. You must
+know, too, that Malambruno told me that, whenever fate provided the
+knight our deliverer, he himself would send him a steed far better and
+with less tricks than a post-horse; for he will be that same wooden
+horse on which the valiant Pierres carried off the fair Magalona;
+which said horse is guided by a peg he has in his forehead that serves
+for a bridle, and flies through the air with such rapidity that you
+would fancy the very devils were carrying him. This horse, according
+to ancient tradition, was made by Merlin. He lent him to Pierres,
+who was a friend of his, and who made long journeys with him, and,
+as has been said, carried off the fair Magalona, bearing her through
+the air on its haunches and making all who beheld them from the
+earth gape with astonishment; and he never lent him save to those whom
+he loved or those who paid him well; and since the great Pierres we
+know of no one having mounted him until now. From him Malambruno stole
+him by his magic art, and he has him now in his possession, and
+makes use of him in his journeys which he constantly makes through
+different parts of the world; he is here to-day, to-morrow in
+France, and the next day in Potosi; and the best of it is the said
+horse neither eats nor sleeps nor wears out shoes, and goes at an
+ambling pace through the air without wings, so that he whom he has
+mounted upon him can carry a cup full of water in his hand without
+spilling a drop, so smoothly and easily does he go, for which reason
+the fair Magalona enjoyed riding him greatly."</p>
+
+<p>"For going smoothly and easily," said Sancho at this, "give me my
+Dapple, though he can't go through the air; but on the ground I'll
+back him against all the amblers in the world."</p>
+
+<p>They all laughed, and the Distressed One continued: "And this same
+horse, if so be that Malambruno is disposed to put an end to our
+sufferings, will be here before us ere the night shall have advanced
+half an hour; for he announced to me that the sign he would give me
+whereby I might know that I had found the knight I was in quest of,
+would be to send me the horse wherever he might be, speedily and
+promptly."</p>
+
+<p>"And how many is there room for on this horse?" asked Sancho.</p>
+
+<p>"Two," said the Distressed One, "one in the saddle, and the other on
+the croup; and generally these two are knight and squire, when there
+is no damsel that's being carried off."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to know, Senora Distressed One," said Sancho, "what is the
+name of this horse?"</p>
+
+<p>"His name," said the Distressed One, "is not the same as
+Bellerophon's horse that was called Pegasus, or Alexander the Great's,
+called Bucephalus, or Orlando Furioso's, the name of which was
+Brigliador, nor yet Bayard, the horse of Reinaldos of Montalvan, nor
+Frontino like Ruggiero's, nor Bootes or Peritoa, as they say the
+horses of the sun were called, nor is he called Orelia, like the horse
+on which the unfortunate Rodrigo, the last king of the Goths, rode
+to the battle where he lost his life and his kingdom."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll bet," said Sancho, "that as they have given him none of
+these famous names of well-known horses, no more have they given him
+the name of my master's Rocinante, which for being apt surpasses all
+that have been mentioned."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true," said the bearded countess, "still it fits him very
+well, for he is called Clavileno the Swift, which name is in
+accordance with his being made of wood, with the peg he has in his
+forehead, and with the swift pace at which he travels; and so, as
+far as name goes, he may compare with the famous Rocinante."</p>
+
+<p>"I have nothing to say against his name," said Sancho; "but with
+what sort of bridle or halter is he managed?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have said already," said the Trifaldi, "that it is with a peg, by
+turning which to one side or the other the knight who rides him
+makes him go as he pleases, either through the upper air, or
+skimming and almost sweeping the earth, or else in that middle
+course that is sought and followed in all well-regulated proceedings."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to see him," said Sancho; "but to fancy I'm going to mount
+him, either in the saddle or on the croup, is to ask pears of the
+elm tree. A good joke indeed! I can hardly keep my seat upon Dapple,
+and on a pack-saddle softer than silk itself, and here they'd have
+me hold on upon haunches of plank without pad or cushion of any
+sort! Gad, I have no notion of bruising myself to get rid of
+anyone's beard; let each one shave himself as best he can; I'm not
+going to accompany my master on any such long journey; besides, I
+can't give any help to the shaving of these beards as I can to the
+disenchantment of my lady Dulcinea."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you can, my friend," replied the Trifaldi; "and so much,
+that without you, so I understand, we shall be able to do nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"In the king's name!" exclaimed Sancho, "what have squires got to do
+with the adventures of their masters? Are they to have the fame of
+such as they go through, and we the labour? Body o' me! if the
+historians would only say, 'Such and such a knight finished such and
+such an adventure, but with the help of so and so, his squire, without
+which it would have been impossible for him to accomplish it;' but
+they write curtly, "Don Paralipomenon of the Three Stars
+accomplished the adventure of the six monsters;' without mentioning
+such a person as his squire, who was there all the time, just as if
+there was no such being. Once more, sirs, I say my master may go
+alone, and much good may it do him; and I'll stay here in the
+company of my lady the duchess; and maybe when he comes back, he
+will find the lady Dulcinea's affair ever so much advanced; for I mean
+in leisure hours, and at idle moments, to give myself a spell of
+whipping without so much as a hair to cover me."</p>
+
+<p>"For all that you must go if it be necessary, my good Sancho,"
+said the duchess, "for they are worthy folk who ask you; and the faces
+of these ladies must not remain overgrown in this way because of
+your idle fears; that would be a hard case indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"In the king's name, once more!" said Sancho; "If this charitable
+work were to be done for the sake of damsels in confinement or
+charity-girls, a man might expose himself to some hardships; but to
+bear it for the sake of stripping beards off duennas! Devil take it!
+I'd sooner see them all bearded, from the highest to the lowest, and
+from the most prudish to the most affected."</p>
+
+<p>"You are very hard on duennas, Sancho my friend," said the
+duchess; "you incline very much to the opinion of the Toledo
+apothecary. But indeed you are wrong; there are duennas in my house
+that may serve as patterns of duennas; and here is my Dona
+Rodriguez, who will not allow me to say otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"Your excellence may say it if you like," said the Rodriguez; "for
+God knows the truth of everything; and whether we duennas are good
+or bad, bearded or smooth, we are our mothers' daughters like other
+women; and as God sent us into the world, he knows why he did, and
+on his mercy I rely, and not on anybody's beard."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Senora Rodriguez, Senora Trifaldi, and present company," said
+Don Quixote, "I trust in Heaven that it will look with kindly eyes
+upon your troubles, for Sancho will do as I bid him. Only let
+Clavileno come and let me find myself face to face with Malambruno,
+and I am certain no razor will shave you more easily than my sword
+shall shave Malambruno's head off his shoulders; for 'God bears with
+the wicked, but not for ever."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" exclaimed the Distressed One at this, "may all the stars of
+the celestial regions look down upon your greatness with benign
+eyes, valiant knight, and shed every prosperity and valour upon your
+heart, that it may be the shield and safeguard of the abused and
+downtrodden race of duennas, detested by apothecaries, sneered at by
+squires, and made game of by pages. Ill betide the jade that in the
+flower of her youth would not sooner become a nun than a duenna!
+Unfortunate beings that we are, we duennas! Though we may be descended
+in the direct male line from Hector of Troy himself, our mistresses
+never fail to address us as 'you' if they think it makes queens of
+them. O giant Malambruno, though thou art an enchanter, thou art
+true to thy promises. Send us now the peerless Clavileno, that our
+misfortune may be brought to an end; for if the hot weather sets in
+and these beards of ours are still there, alas for our lot!"</p>
+
+<p>The Trifaldi said this in such a pathetic way that she drew tears
+from the eyes of all and even Sancho's filled up; and he resolved in
+his heart to accompany his master to the uttermost ends of the
+earth, if so be the removal of the wool from those venerable
+countenances depended upon it.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p40e"></a><img alt="p40e.jpg (13K)" src="images/p40e.jpg" height="273" width="345">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch41b"></a>CHAPTER XLI.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>OF THE ARRIVAL OF CLAVILENO AND THE END OF THIS PROTRACTED ADVENTURE
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p41a"></a><img alt="p41a.jpg (138K)" src="images/p41a.jpg" height="433" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p41a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<p>And now night came, and with it the appointed time for the arrival
+of the famous horse Clavileno, the non-appearance of which was already
+beginning to make Don Quixote uneasy, for it struck him that, as
+Malambruno was so long about sending it, either he himself was not the
+knight for whom the adventure was reserved, or else Malambruno did not
+dare to meet him in single combat. But lo! suddenly there came into
+the garden four wild-men all clad in green ivy bearing on their
+shoulders a great wooden horse. They placed it on its feet on the
+ground, and one of the wild-men said, "Let the knight who has heart
+for it mount this machine."</p>
+
+<p>Here Sancho exclaimed, "I don't mount, for neither have I the
+heart nor am I a knight."</p>
+
+<p>"And let the squire, if he has one," continued the wild-man, "take
+his seat on the croup, and let him trust the valiant Malambruno; for
+by no sword save his, nor by the malice of any other, shall he be
+assailed. It is but to turn this peg the horse has in his neck, and he
+will bear them through the air to where Malambruno awaits them; but
+lest the vast elevation of their course should make them giddy,
+their eyes must be covered until the horse neighs, which will be the
+sign of their having completed their journey."</p>
+
+<p>With these words, leaving Clavileno behind them, they retired with
+easy dignity the way they came. As soon as the Distressed One saw
+the horse, almost in tears she exclaimed to Don Quixote, "Valiant
+knight, the promise of Malambruno has proved trustworthy; the horse
+has come, our beards are growing, and by every hair in them all of
+us implore thee to shave and shear us, as it is only mounting him with
+thy squire and making a happy beginning with your new journey."</p>
+
+<p>"That I will, Senora Countess Trifaldi," said Don Quixote, "most
+gladly and with right goodwill, without stopping to take a cushion
+or put on my spurs, so as not to lose time, such is my desire to see
+you and all these duennas shaved clean."</p>
+
+<p>"That I won't," said Sancho, "with good-will or bad-will, or any way
+at all; and if this shaving can't be done without my mounting on the
+croup, my master had better look out for another squire to go with
+him, and these ladies for some other way of making their faces smooth;
+I'm no witch to have a taste for travelling through the air. What
+would my islanders say when they heard their governor was going,
+strolling about on the winds? And another thing, as it is three
+thousand and odd leagues from this to Kandy, if the horse tires, or
+the giant takes huff, we'll be half a dozen years getting back, and
+there won't be isle or island in the world that will know me: and
+so, as it is a common saying 'in delay there's danger,' and 'when they
+offer thee a heifer run with a halter,' these ladies' beards must
+excuse me; 'Saint Peter is very well in Rome;' I mean I am very well
+in this house where so much is made of me, and I hope for such a
+good thing from the master as to see myself a governor."</p>
+
+<p>"Friend Sancho," said the duke at this, "the island that I have
+promised you is not a moving one, or one that will run away; it has
+roots so deeply buried in the bowels of the earth that it will be no
+easy matter to pluck it up or shift it from where it is; you know as
+well as I do that there is no sort of office of any importance that is
+not obtained by a bribe of some kind, great or small; well then,
+that which I look to receive for this government is that you go with
+your master Don Quixote, and bring this memorable adventure to a
+conclusion; and whether you return on Clavileno as quickly as his
+speed seems to promise, or adverse fortune brings you back on foot
+travelling as a pilgrim from hostel to hostel and from inn to inn, you
+will always find your island on your return where you left it, and
+your islanders with the same eagerness they have always had to receive
+you as their governor, and my good-will will remain the same; doubt
+not the truth of this, Senor Sancho, for that would be grievously
+wronging my disposition to serve you."</p>
+
+<p>"Say no more, senor," said Sancho; "I am a poor squire and not equal
+to carrying so much courtesy; let my master mount; bandage my eyes and
+commit me to God's care, and tell me if I may commend myself to our
+Lord or call upon the angels to protect me when we go towering up
+there."</p>
+
+<p>To this the Trifaldi made answer, "Sancho, you may freely commend
+yourself to God or whom you will; for Malambruno though an enchanter
+is a Christian, and works his enchantments with great
+circumspection, taking very good care not to fall out with anyone."</p>
+
+<p>"Well then," said Sancho, "God and the most holy Trinity of Gaeta
+give me help!"</p>
+
+<p>"Since the memorable adventure of the fulling mills," said Don
+Quixote, "I have never seen Sancho in such a fright as now; were I
+as superstitious as others his abject fear would cause me some
+little trepidation of spirit. But come here, Sancho, for with the
+leave of these gentles I would say a word or two to thee in
+private;" and drawing Sancho aside among the trees of the garden and
+seizing both his hands he said, "Thou seest, brother Sancho, the
+long journey we have before us, and God knows when we shall return, or
+what leisure or opportunities this business will allow us; I wish thee
+therefore to retire now to thy chamber, as though thou wert going to
+fetch something required for the road, and in a trice give thyself
+if it be only five hundred lashes on account of the three thousand
+three hundred to which thou art bound; it will be all to the good, and
+to make a beginning with a thing is to have it half finished."</p>
+
+<p>"By God," said Sancho, "but your worship must be out of your senses!
+This is like the common saying, 'You see me with child, and you want
+me a virgin.' Just as I'm about to go sitting on a bare board, your
+worship would have me score my backside! Indeed, your worship is not
+reasonable. Let us be off to shave these duennas; and on our return
+I promise on my word to make such haste to wipe off all that's due
+as will satisfy your worship; I can't say more."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will comfort myself with that promise, my good Sancho,"
+replied Don Quixote, "and I believe thou wilt keep it; for indeed
+though stupid thou art veracious."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not voracious," said Sancho, "only peckish; but even if I was a
+little, still I'd keep my word."</p>
+
+<p>With this they went back to mount Clavileno, and as they were
+about to do so Don Quixote said, "Cover thine eyes, Sancho, and mount;
+for one who sends for us from lands so far distant cannot mean to
+deceive us for the sake of the paltry glory to be derived from
+deceiving persons who trust in him; though all should turn out the
+contrary of what I hope, no malice will be able to dim the glory of
+having undertaken this exploit."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us be off, senor," said Sancho, "for I have taken the beards
+and tears of these ladies deeply to heart, and I shan't eat a bit to
+relish it until I have seen them restored to their former
+smoothness. Mount, your worship, and blindfold yourself, for if I am
+to go on the croup, it is plain the rider in the saddle must mount
+first."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true," said Don Quixote, and, taking a handkerchief out
+of his pocket, he begged the Distressed One to bandage his eyes very
+carefully; but after having them bandaged he uncovered them again,
+saying, "If my memory does not deceive me, I have read in Virgil of
+the Palladium of Troy, a wooden horse the Greeks offered to the
+goddess Pallas, which was big with armed knights, who were
+afterwards the destruction of Troy; so it would be as well to see,
+first of all, what Clavileno has in his stomach."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no occasion," said the Distressed One; "I will be bail for
+him, and I know that Malambruno has nothing tricky or treacherous
+about him; you may mount without any fear, Senor Don Quixote; on my
+head be it if any harm befalls you."</p>
+
+<p>Don Quixote thought that to say anything further with regard to
+his safety would be putting his courage in an unfavourable light;
+and so, without more words, he mounted Clavileno, and tried the peg,
+which turned easily; and as he had no stirrups and his legs hung down,
+he looked like nothing so much as a figure in some Roman triumph
+painted or embroidered on a Flemish tapestry.</p>
+
+<p>Much against the grain, and very slowly, Sancho proceeded to
+mount, and, after settling himself as well as he could on the croup,
+found it rather hard, and not at all soft, and asked the duke if it
+would be possible to oblige him with a pad of some kind, or a cushion;
+even if it were off the couch of his lady the duchess, or the bed of
+one of the pages; as the haunches of that horse were more like
+marble than wood. On this the Trifaldi observed that Clavileno would
+not bear any kind of harness or trappings, and that his best plan
+would be to sit sideways like a woman, as in that way he would not
+feel the hardness so much.</p>
+
+<p>Sancho did so, and, bidding them farewell, allowed his eyes to be
+bandaged, but immediately afterwards uncovered them again, and looking
+tenderly and tearfully on those in the garden, bade them help him in
+his present strait with plenty of Paternosters and Ave Marias, that
+God might provide some one to say as many for them, whenever they
+found themselves in a similar emergency.</p>
+
+<p>At this Don Quixote exclaimed, "Art thou on the gallows, thief, or
+at thy last moment, to use pitiful entreaties of that sort?
+Cowardly, spiritless creature, art thou not in the very place the fair
+Magalona occupied, and from which she descended, not into the grave,
+but to become Queen of France; unless the histories lie? And I who
+am here beside thee, may I not put myself on a par with the valiant
+Pierres, who pressed this very spot that I now press? Cover thine
+eyes, cover thine eyes, abject animal, and let not thy fear escape thy
+lips, at least in my presence."</p>
+
+<p>"Blindfold me," said Sancho; "as you won't let me commend myself
+or be commended to God, is it any wonder if I am afraid there is a
+region of devils about here that will carry us off to Peralvillo?"</p>
+
+<p>They were then blindfolded, and Don Quixote, finding himself settled
+to his satisfaction, felt for the peg, and the instant he placed his
+fingers on it, all the duennas and all who stood by lifted up their
+voices exclaiming, "God guide thee, valiant knight! God be with
+thee, intrepid squire! Now, now ye go cleaving the air more swiftly
+than an arrow! Now ye begin to amaze and astonish all who are gazing
+at you from the earth! Take care not to wobble about, valiant
+Sancho! Mind thou fall not, for thy fall will be worse than that
+rash youth's who tried to steer the chariot of his father the Sun!"</p>
+
+<p>As Sancho heard the voices, clinging tightly to his master and
+winding his arms round him, he said, "Senor, how do they make out we
+are going up so high, if their voices reach us here and they seem to
+be speaking quite close to us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't mind that, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "for as affairs of this
+sort, and flights like this are out of the common course of things,
+you can see and hear as much as you like a thousand leagues off; but
+don't squeeze me so tight or thou wilt upset me; and really I know not
+what thou hast to be uneasy or frightened at, for I can safely swear I
+never mounted a smoother-going steed all the days of my life; one
+would fancy we never stirred from one place. Banish fear, my friend,
+for indeed everything is going as it ought, and we have the wind
+astern."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," said Sancho, "for such a strong wind comes against me
+on this side, that it seems as if people were blowing on me with a
+thousand pair of bellows;" which was the case; they were puffing at
+him with a great pair of bellows; for the whole adventure was so
+well planned by the duke, the duchess, and their majordomo, that
+nothing was omitted to make it perfectly successful.</p>
+
+<p>Don Quixote now, feeling the blast, said, "Beyond a doubt, Sancho,
+we must have already reached the second region of the air, where the
+hail and snow are generated; the thunder, the lightning, and the
+thunderbolts are engendered in the third region, and if we go on
+ascending at this rate, we shall shortly plunge into the region of
+fire, and I know not how to regulate this peg, so as not to mount up
+where we shall be burned."</p>
+
+<p>And now they began to warm their faces, from a distance, with tow
+that could be easily set on fire and extinguished again, fixed on
+the end of a cane. On feeling the heat Sancho said, "May I die if we
+are not already in that fire place, or very near it, for a good part
+of my beard has been singed, and I have a mind, senor, to uncover
+and see whereabouts we are."</p>
+
+<p>"Do nothing of the kind," said Don Quixote; "remember the true story
+of the licentiate Torralva that the devils carried flying through
+the air riding on a stick with his eyes shut; who in twelve hours
+reached Rome and dismounted at Torre di Nona, which is a street of the
+city, and saw the whole sack and storming and the death of Bourbon,
+and was back in Madrid the next morning, where he gave an account of
+all he had seen; and he said moreover that as he was going through the
+air, the devil bade him open his eyes, and he did so, and saw
+himself so near the body of the moon, so it seemed to him, that he
+could have laid hold of it with his hand, and that he did not dare
+to look at the earth lest he should be seized with giddiness. So that,
+Sancho, it will not do for us to uncover ourselves, for he who has
+us in charge will be responsible for us; and perhaps we are gaining an
+altitude and mounting up to enable us to descend at one swoop on the
+kingdom of Kandy, as the saker or falcon does on the heron, so as to
+seize it however high it may soar; and though it seems to us not
+half an hour since we left the garden, believe me we must have
+travelled a great distance."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know how that may be," said Sancho; "all I know is that
+if the Senora Magallanes or Magalona was satisfied with this croup,
+she could not have been very tender of flesh."</p>
+
+<p>The duke, the duchess, and all in the garden were listening to the
+conversation of the two heroes, and were beyond measure amused by
+it; and now, desirous of putting a finishing touch to this rare and
+well-contrived adventure, they applied a light to Clavileno's tail
+with some tow, and the horse, being full of squibs and crackers,
+immediately blew up with a prodigious noise, and brought Don Quixote
+and Sancho Panza to the ground half singed. By this time the bearded
+band of duennas, the Trifaldi and all, had vanished from the garden,
+and those that remained lay stretched on the ground as if in a
+swoon. Don Quixote and Sancho got up rather shaken, and, looking about
+them, were filled with amazement at finding themselves in the same
+garden from which they had started, and seeing such a number of people
+stretched on the ground; and their astonishment was increased when
+at one side of the garden they perceived a tall lance planted in the
+ground, and hanging from it by two cords of green silk a smooth
+white parchment on which there was the following inscription in
+large gold letters: "The illustrious knight Don Quixote of La Mancha
+has, by merely attempting it, finished and concluded the adventure
+of the Countess Trifaldi, otherwise called the Distressed Duenna;
+Malambruno is now satisfied on every point, the chins of the duennas
+are now smooth and clean, and King Don Clavijo and Queen Antonomasia
+in their original form; and when the squirely flagellation shall
+have been completed, the white dove shall find herself delivered
+from the pestiferous gerfalcons that persecute her, and in the arms of
+her beloved mate; for such is the decree of the sage Merlin,
+arch-enchanter of enchanters."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Don Quixote had read the inscription on the parchment
+he perceived clearly that it referred to the disenchantment of
+Dulcinea, and returning hearty thanks to heaven that he had with so
+little danger achieved so grand an exploit as to restore to their
+former complexion the countenances of those venerable duennas, he
+advanced towards the duke and duchess, who had not yet come to
+themselves, and taking the duke by the hand he said, "Be of good
+cheer, worthy sir, be of good cheer; it's nothing at all; the
+adventure is now over and without any harm done, as the inscription
+fixed on this post shows plainly."</p>
+
+<p>The duke came to himself slowly and like one recovering
+consciousness after a heavy sleep, and the duchess and all who had
+fallen prostrate about the garden did the same, with such
+demonstrations of wonder and amazement that they would have almost
+persuaded one that what they pretended so adroitly in jest had
+happened to them in reality. The duke read the placard with
+half-shut eyes, and then ran to embrace Don Quixote with-open arms,
+declaring him to be the best knight that had ever been seen in any
+age. Sancho kept looking about for the Distressed One, to see what her
+face was like without the beard, and if she was as fair as her elegant
+person promised; but they told him that, the instant Clavileno
+descended flaming through the air and came to the ground, the whole
+band of duennas with the Trifaldi vanished, and that they were already
+shaved and without a stump left.</p>
+
+<p>The duchess asked Sancho how he had fared on that long journey, to
+which Sancho replied, "I felt, senora, that we were flying through the
+region of fire, as my master told me, and I wanted to uncover my
+eyes for a bit; but my master, when I asked leave to uncover myself,
+would not let me; but as I have a little bit of curiosity about me,
+and a desire to know what is forbidden and kept from me, quietly and
+without anyone seeing me I drew aside the handkerchief covering my
+eyes ever so little, close to my nose, and from underneath looked
+towards the earth, and it seemed to me that it was altogether no
+bigger than a grain of mustard seed, and that the men walking on it
+were little bigger than hazel nuts; so you may see how high we must
+have got to then."</p>
+
+<p>To this the duchess said, "Sancho, my friend, mind what you are
+saying; it seems you could not have seen the earth, but only the men
+walking on it; for if the earth looked to you like a grain of
+mustard seed, and each man like a hazel nut, one man alone would
+have covered the whole earth."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true," said Sancho, "but for all that I got a glimpse of
+a bit of one side of it, and saw it all."</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, Sancho," said the duchess, "with a bit of one side one
+does not see the whole of what one looks at."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand that way of looking at things," said Sancho;
+"I only know that your ladyship will do well to bear in mind that as
+we were flying by enchantment so I might have seen the whole earth and
+all the men by enchantment whatever way I looked; and if you won't
+believe this, no more will you believe that, uncovering myself
+nearly to the eyebrows, I saw myself so close to the sky that there
+was not a palm and a half between me and it; and by everything that
+I can swear by, senora, it is mighty great! And it so happened we came
+by where the seven goats are, and by God and upon my soul, as in my
+youth I was a goatherd in my own country, as soon as I saw them I felt
+a longing to be among them for a little, and if I had not given way to
+it I think I'd have burst. So I come and take, and what do I do?
+without saying anything to anybody, not even to my master, softly
+and quietly I got down from Clavileno and amused myself with the
+goats&mdash;which are like violets, like flowers&mdash;for nigh three-quarters
+of an hour; and Clavileno never stirred or moved from one spot."</p>
+
+<p>"And while the good Sancho was amusing himself with the goats," said
+the duke, "how did Senor Don Quixote amuse himself?"</p>
+
+<p>To which Don Quixote replied, "As all these things and such like
+occurrences are out of the ordinary course of nature, it is no
+wonder that Sancho says what he does; for my own part I can only say
+that I did not uncover my eyes either above or below, nor did I see
+sky or earth or sea or shore. It is true I felt that I was passing
+through the region of the air, and even that I touched that of fire;
+but that we passed farther I cannot believe; for the region of fire
+being between the heaven of the moon and the last region of the air,
+we could not have reached that heaven where the seven goats Sancho
+speaks of are without being burned; and as we were not burned,
+either Sancho is lying or Sancho is dreaming."</p>
+
+<p>"I am neither lying nor dreaming," said Sancho; "only ask me the
+tokens of those same goats, and you'll see by that whether I'm telling
+the truth or not."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell us them then, Sancho," said the duchess.</p>
+
+<p>"Two of them," said Sancho, "are green, two blood-red, two blue, and
+one a mixture of all colours."</p>
+
+<p>"An odd sort of goat, that," said the duke; "in this earthly
+region of ours we have no such colours; I mean goats of such colours."</p>
+
+<p>"That's very plain," said Sancho; "of course there must be a
+difference between the goats of heaven and the goats of the earth."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me, Sancho," said the duke, "did you see any he-goat among
+those goats?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, senor," said Sancho; "but I have heard say that none ever
+passed the horns of the moon."</p>
+
+<p>They did not care to ask him anything more about his journey, for
+they saw he was in the vein to go rambling all over the heavens giving
+an account of everything that went on there, without having ever
+stirred from the garden. Such, in short, was the end of the
+adventure of the Distressed Duenna, which gave the duke and duchess
+laughing matter not only for the time being, but for all their
+lives, and Sancho something to talk about for ages, if he lived so
+long; but Don Quixote, coming close to his ear, said to him,
+"Sancho, as you would have us believe what you saw in heaven, I
+require you to believe me as to what I saw in the cave of
+Montesinos; I say no more."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p41e"></a><img alt="p41e.jpg (38K)" src="images/p41e.jpg" height="603" width="525">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch42b"></a>CHAPTER XLII.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>OF THE COUNSELS WHICH DON QUIXOTE GAVE SANCHO PANZA BEFORE HE SET
+OUT TO GOVERN THE ISLAND, TOGETHER WITH OTHER WELL-CONSIDERED MATTERS
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p42a"></a><img alt="p42a.jpg (120K)" src="images/p42a.jpg" height="438" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p42a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<p>The duke and duchess were so well pleased with the successful and
+droll result of the adventure of the Distressed One, that they
+resolved to carry on the joke, seeing what a fit subject they had to
+deal with for making it all pass for reality. So having laid their
+plans and given instructions to their servants and vassals how to
+behave to Sancho in his government of the promised island, the next
+day, that following Clavileno's flight, the duke told Sancho to
+prepare and get ready to go and be governor, for his islanders were
+already looking out for him as for the showers of May.</p>
+
+<p>Sancho made him an obeisance, and said, "Ever since I came down from
+heaven, and from the top of it beheld the earth, and saw how little it
+is, the great desire I had to be a governor has been partly cooled
+in me; for what is there grand in being ruler on a grain of mustard
+seed, or what dignity or authority in governing half a dozen men about
+as big as hazel nuts; for, so far as I could see, there were no more
+on the whole earth? If your lordship would be so good as to give me
+ever so small a bit of heaven, were it no more than half a league, I'd
+rather have it than the best island in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Recollect, Sancho," said the duke, "I cannot give a bit of
+heaven, no not so much as the breadth of my nail, to anyone; rewards
+and favours of that sort are reserved for God alone. What I can give I
+give you, and that is a real, genuine island, compact, well
+proportioned, and uncommonly fertile and fruitful, where, if you
+know how to use your opportunities, you may, with the help of the
+world's riches, gain those of heaven."</p>
+
+<p>"Well then," said Sancho, "let the island come; and I'll try and
+be such a governor, that in spite of scoundrels I'll go to heaven; and
+it's not from any craving to quit my own humble condition or better
+myself, but from the desire I have to try what it tastes like to be
+a governor."</p>
+
+<p>"If you once make trial of it, Sancho," said the duke, "you'll eat
+your fingers off after the government, so sweet a thing is it to
+command and be obeyed. Depend upon it when your master comes to be
+emperor (as he will beyond a doubt from the course his affairs are
+taking), it will be no easy matter to wrest the dignity from him,
+and he will be sore and sorry at heart to have been so long without
+becoming one."</p>
+
+<p>"Senor," said Sancho, "it is my belief it's a good thing to be in
+command, if it's only over a drove of cattle."</p>
+
+<p>"May I be buried with you, Sancho," said the duke, "but you know
+everything; I hope you will make as good a governor as your sagacity
+promises; and that is all I have to say; and now remember to-morrow is
+the day you must set out for the government of the island, and this
+evening they will provide you with the proper attire for you to
+wear, and all things requisite for your departure."</p>
+
+<p>"Let them dress me as they like," said Sancho; "however I'm
+dressed I'll be Sancho Panza."</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," said the duke; "but one's dress must be suited to the
+office or rank one holds; for it would not do for a jurist to dress
+like a soldier, or a soldier like a priest. You, Sancho, shall go
+partly as a lawyer, partly as a captain, for, in the island I am
+giving you, arms are needed as much as letters, and letters as much as
+arms."</p>
+
+<p>"Of letters I know but little," said Sancho, "for I don't even
+know the A B C; but it is enough for me to have the Christus in my
+memory to be a good governor. As for arms, I'll handle those they give
+me till I drop, and then, God be my help!"</p>
+
+<p>"With so good a memory," said the duke, "Sancho cannot go wrong in
+anything."</p>
+
+<p>Here Don Quixote joined them; and learning what passed, and how soon
+Sancho was to go to his government, he with the duke's permission took
+him by the hand, and retired to his room with him for the purpose of
+giving him advice as to how he was to demean himself in his office. As
+soon as they had entered the chamber he closed the door after him, and
+almost by force made Sancho sit down beside him, and in a quiet tone
+thus addressed him: "I give infinite thanks to heaven, friend
+Sancho, that, before I have met with any good luck, fortune has come
+forward to meet thee. I who counted upon my good fortune to
+discharge the recompense of thy services, find myself still waiting
+for advancement, while thou, before the time, and contrary to all
+reasonable expectation, seest thyself blessed in the fulfillment of
+thy desires. Some will bribe, beg, solicit, rise early, entreat,
+persist, without attaining the object of their suit; while another
+comes, and without knowing why or wherefore, finds himself invested
+with the place or office so many have sued for; and here it is that
+the common saying, 'There is good luck as well as bad luck in
+suits,' applies. Thou, who, to my thinking, art beyond all doubt a
+dullard, without early rising or night watching or taking any trouble,
+with the mere breath of knight-errantry that has breathed upon thee,
+seest thyself without more ado governor of an island, as though it
+were a mere matter of course. This I say, Sancho, that thou
+attribute not the favour thou hast received to thine own merits, but
+give thanks to heaven that disposes matters beneficently, and secondly
+thanks to the great power the profession of knight-errantry contains
+in itself. With a heart, then, inclined to believe what I have said to
+thee, attend, my son, to thy Cato here who would counsel thee and be
+thy polestar and guide to direct and pilot thee to a safe haven out of
+this stormy sea wherein thou art about to ingulf thyself; for
+offices and great trusts are nothing else but a mighty gulf of
+troubles.</p>
+
+<p>"First of all, my son, thou must fear God, for in the fear of him is
+wisdom, and being wise thou canst not err in aught.</p>
+
+<p>"Secondly, thou must keep in view what thou art, striving to know
+thyself, the most difficult thing to know that the mind can imagine.
+If thou knowest thyself, it will follow thou wilt not puff thyself
+up like the frog that strove to make himself as large as the ox; if
+thou dost, the recollection of having kept pigs in thine own country
+will serve as the ugly feet for the wheel of thy folly."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the truth," said Sancho; "but that was when I was a boy;
+afterwards when I was something more of a man it was geese I kept, not
+pigs. But to my thinking that has nothing to do with it; for all who
+are governors don't come of a kingly stock."</p>
+
+<p>"True," said Don Quixote, "and for that reason those who are not
+of noble origin should take care that the dignity of the office they
+hold he accompanied by a gentle suavity, which wisely managed will
+save them from the sneers of malice that no station escapes.</p>
+
+<p>"Glory in thy humble birth, Sancho, and be not ashamed of saying
+thou art peasant-born; for when it is seen thou art not ashamed no one
+will set himself to put thee to the blush; and pride thyself rather
+upon being one of lowly virtue than a lofty sinner. Countless are they
+who, born of mean parentage, have risen to the highest dignities,
+pontifical and imperial, and of the truth of this I could give thee
+instances enough to weary thee.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember, Sancho, if thou make virtue thy aim, and take a pride
+in doing virtuous actions, thou wilt have no cause to envy those who
+have princely and lordly ones, for blood is an inheritance, but virtue
+an acquisition, and virtue has in itself alone a worth that blood does
+not possess.</p>
+
+<p>"This being so, if perchance anyone of thy kinsfolk should come to
+see thee when thou art in thine island, thou art not to repel or
+slight him, but on the contrary to welcome him, entertain him, and
+make much of him; for in so doing thou wilt be approved of heaven
+(which is not pleased that any should despise what it hath made),
+and wilt comply with the laws of well-ordered nature.</p>
+
+<p>"If thou carriest thy wife with thee (and it is not well for those
+that administer governments to be long without their wives), teach and
+instruct her, and strive to smooth down her natural roughness; for all
+that may be gained by a wise governor may be lost and wasted by a
+boorish stupid wife.</p>
+
+<p>"If perchance thou art left a widower&mdash;a thing which may happen&mdash;and
+in virtue of thy office seekest a consort of higher degree, choose not
+one to serve thee for a hook, or for a fishing-rod, or for the hood of
+thy 'won't have it;' for verily, I tell thee, for all the judge's wife
+receives, the husband will be held accountable at the general
+calling to account; where he will have repay in death fourfold,
+items that in life he regarded as naught.</p>
+
+<p>"Never go by arbitrary law, which is so much favoured by ignorant
+men who plume themselves on cleverness.</p>
+
+<p>"Let the tears of the poor man find with thee more compassion, but
+not more justice, than the pleadings of the rich.</p>
+
+<p>"Strive to lay bare the truth, as well amid the promises and
+presents of the rich man, as amid the sobs and entreaties of the poor.</p>
+
+<p>"When equity may and should be brought into play, press not the
+utmost rigour of the law against the guilty; for the reputation of the
+stern judge stands not higher than that of the compassionate.</p>
+
+<p>"If perchance thou permittest the staff of justice to swerve, let it
+be not by the weight of a gift, but by that of mercy.</p>
+
+<p>"If it should happen thee to give judgment in the cause of one who
+is thine enemy, turn thy thoughts away from thy injury and fix them on
+the justice of the case.</p>
+
+<p>"Let not thine own passion blind thee in another man's cause; for
+the errors thou wilt thus commit will be most frequently irremediable;
+or if not, only to be remedied at the expense of thy good name and
+even of thy fortune.</p>
+
+<p>"If any handsome woman come to seek justice of thee, turn away thine
+eyes from her tears and thine ears from her lamentations, and consider
+deliberately the merits of her demand, if thou wouldst not have thy
+reason swept away by her weeping, and thy rectitude by her sighs.</p>
+
+<p>"Abuse not by word him whom thou hast to punish in deed, for the
+pain of punishment is enough for the unfortunate without the
+addition of thine objurgations.</p>
+
+<p>"Bear in mind that the culprit who comes under thy jurisdiction is
+but a miserable man subject to all the propensities of our depraved
+nature, and so far as may be in thy power show thyself lenient and
+forbearing; for though the attributes of God are all equal, to our
+eyes that of mercy is brighter and loftier than that of justice.</p>
+
+<p>"If thou followest these precepts and rules, Sancho, thy days will
+be long, thy fame eternal, thy reward abundant, thy felicity
+unutterable; thou wilt marry thy children as thou wouldst; they and
+thy grandchildren will bear titles; thou wilt live in peace and
+concord with all men; and, when life draws to a close, death will come
+to thee in calm and ripe old age, and the light and loving hands of
+thy great-grandchildren will close thine eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"What I have thus far addressed to thee are instructions for the
+adornment of thy mind; listen now to those which tend to that of the
+body."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p42e"></a><img alt="p42e.jpg (17K)" src="images/p42e.jpg" height="381" width="317">
+</center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center><h2><a name="ch43b"></a>CHAPTER XLIII.</h2></center>
+<br>
+<center><h3>OF THE SECOND SET OF COUNSELS DON QUIXOTE GAVE SANCHO PANZA
+</h3></center>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<center><a name="p43a"></a><img alt="p43a.jpg (129K)" src="images/p43a.jpg" height="432" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/p43a.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<p>Who, hearing the foregoing discourse of Don Quixote, would not
+have set him down for a person of great good sense and greater
+rectitude of purpose? But, as has been frequently observed in the
+course of this great history, he only talked nonsense when he
+touched on chivalry, and in discussing all other subjects showed
+that he had a clear and unbiassed understanding; so that at every turn
+his acts gave the lie to his intellect, and his intellect to his acts;
+but in the case of these second counsels that he gave Sancho he showed
+himself to have a lively turn of humour, and displayed conspicuously
+his wisdom, and also his folly.</p>
+
+<p>Sancho listened to him with the deepest attention, and endeavoured
+to fix his counsels in his memory, like one who meant to follow them
+and by their means bring the full promise of his government to a happy
+issue. Don Quixote, then, went on to say:</p>
+
+<p>"With regard to the mode in which thou shouldst govern thy person
+and thy house, Sancho, the first charge I have to give thee is to be
+clean, and to cut thy nails, not letting them grow as some do, whose
+ignorance makes them fancy that long nails are an ornament to their
+hands, as if those excrescences they neglect to cut were nails, and
+not the talons of a lizard-catching kestrel&mdash;a filthy and unnatural
+abuse.</p>
+
+<p>"Go not ungirt and loose, Sancho; for disordered attire is a sign of
+an unstable mind, unless indeed the slovenliness and slackness is to
+be set down to craft, as was the common opinion in the case of
+Julius Caesar.</p>
+
+<p>"Ascertain cautiously what thy office may be worth; and if it will
+allow thee to give liveries to thy servants, give them respectable and
+serviceable, rather than showy and gay ones, and divide them between
+thy servants and the poor; that is to say, if thou canst clothe six
+pages, clothe three and three poor men, and thus thou wilt have
+pages for heaven and pages for earth; the vainglorious never think
+of this new mode of giving liveries.</p>
+
+<p>"Eat not garlic nor onions, lest they find out thy boorish origin by
+the smell; walk slowly and speak deliberately, but not in such a way
+as to make it seem thou art listening to thyself, for all
+affectation is bad.</p>
+
+<p>"Dine sparingly and sup more sparingly still; for the health of
+the whole body is forged in the workshop of the stomach.</p>
+
+<p>"Be temperate in drinking, bearing in mind that wine in excess keeps
+neither secrets nor promises.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, Sancho, not to chew on both sides, and not to eruct in
+anybody's presence."</p>
+
+<p>"Eruct!" said Sancho; "I don't know what that means."</p>
+
+<p>"To eruct, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "means to belch, and that is
+one of the filthiest words in the Spanish language, though a very
+expressive one; and therefore nice folk have had recourse to the
+Latin, and instead of belch say eruct, and instead of belches say
+eructations; and if some do not understand these terms it matters
+little, for custom will bring them into use in the course of time,
+so that they will be readily understood; this is the way a language is
+enriched; custom and the public are all-powerful there."</p>
+
+<p>"In truth, senor," said Sancho, "one of the counsels and cautions
+I mean to bear in mind shall be this, not to belch, for I'm constantly
+doing it."</p>
+
+<p>"Eruct, Sancho, not belch," said Don Quixote.</p>
+
+<p>"Eruct, I shall say henceforth, and I swear not to forget it,"
+said Sancho.</p>
+
+<p>"Likewise, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "thou must not mingle such a
+quantity of proverbs in thy discourse as thou dost; for though
+proverbs are short maxims, thou dost drag them in so often by the head
+and shoulders that they savour more of nonsense than of maxims."</p>
+
+<p>"God alone can cure that," said Sancho; "for I have more proverbs in
+me than a book, and when I speak they come so thick together into my
+mouth that they fall to fighting among themselves to get out; that's
+why my tongue lets fly the first that come, though they may not be pat
+to the purpose. But I'll take care henceforward to use such as befit
+the dignity of my office; for 'in a house where there's plenty, supper
+is soon cooked,' and 'he who binds does not wrangle,' and 'the
+bell-ringer's in a safe berth,' and 'giving and keeping require
+brains.'"</p>
+
+<p>"That's it, Sancho!" said Don Quixote; "pack, tack, string
+proverbs together; nobody is hindering thee! 'My mother beats me,
+and I go on with my tricks.' I am bidding thee avoid proverbs, and
+here in a second thou hast shot out a whole litany of them, which have
+as much to do with what we are talking about as 'over the hills of
+Ubeda.' Mind, Sancho, I do not say that a proverb aptly brought in
+is objectionable; but to pile up and string together proverbs at
+random makes conversation dull and vulgar.</p>
+
+<p>"When thou ridest on horseback, do not go lolling with thy body on
+the back of the saddle, nor carry thy legs stiff or sticking out
+from the horse's belly, nor yet sit so loosely that one would
+suppose thou wert on Dapple; for the seat on a horse makes gentlemen
+of some and grooms of others.</p>
+
+<p>"Be moderate in thy sleep; for he who does not rise early does not
+get the benefit of the day; and remember, Sancho, diligence is the
+mother of good fortune, and indolence, its opposite, never yet
+attained the object of an honest ambition.</p>
+
+<p>"The last counsel I will give thee now, though it does not tend to
+bodily improvement, I would have thee carry carefully in thy memory,
+for I believe it will be no less useful to thee than those I have
+given thee already, and it is this&mdash;never engage in a dispute about
+families, at least in the way of comparing them one with another;
+for necessarily one of those compared will be better than the other,
+and thou wilt be hated by the one thou hast disparaged, and get
+nothing in any shape from the one thou hast exalted.</p>
+
+<p>"Thy attire shall be hose of full length, a long jerkin, and a cloak
+a trifle longer; loose breeches by no means, for they are becoming
+neither for gentlemen nor for governors.</p>
+
+<p>"For the present, Sancho, this is all that has occurred to me to
+advise thee; as time goes by and occasions arise my instructions shall
+follow, if thou take care to let me know how thou art circumstanced."</p>
+
+<p>"Senor," said Sancho, "I see well enough that all these things
+your worship has said to me are good, holy, and profitable; but what
+use will they be to me if I don't remember one of them? To be sure
+that about not letting my nails grow, and marrying again if I have the
+chance, will not slip out of my head; but all that other hash, muddle,
+and jumble&mdash;I don't and can't recollect any more of it than of last
+year's clouds; so it must be given me in writing; for though I can't
+either read or write, I'll give it to my confessor, to drive it into
+me and remind me of it whenever it is necessary."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, sinner that I am!" said Don Quixote, "how bad it looks in
+governors not to know how to read or write; for let me tell thee,
+Sancho, when a man knows not how to read, or is left-handed, it argues
+one of two things; either that he was the son of exceedingly mean
+and lowly parents, or that he himself was so incorrigible and
+ill-conditioned that neither good company nor good teaching could make
+any impression on him. It is a great defect that thou labourest under,
+and therefore I would have thee learn at any rate to sign thy name."
+ "I can sign my name well enough," said Sancho, "for when I was
+steward of the brotherhood in my village I learned to make certain
+letters, like the marks on bales of goods, which they told me made out
+my name. Besides I can pretend my right hand is disabled and make some
+one else sign for me, for 'there's a remedy for everything except
+death;' and as I shall be in command and hold the staff, I can do as I
+like; moreover, 'he who has the alcalde for his father-,' and I'll
+be governor, and that's higher than alcalde. Only come and see! Let
+them make light of me and abuse me; 'they'll come for wool and go back
+shorn;' 'whom God loves, his house is known to Him;' 'the silly
+sayings of the rich pass for saws in the world;' and as I'll be
+rich, being a governor, and at the same time generous, as I mean to
+be, no fault will be seen in me. 'Only make yourself honey and the
+flies will suck you;' 'as much as thou hast so much art thou worth,'
+as my grandmother used to say; and 'thou canst have no revenge of a
+man of substance.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, God's curse upon thee, Sancho!" here exclaimed Don Quixote;
+"sixty thousand devils fly away with thee and thy proverbs! For the
+last hour thou hast been stringing them together and inflicting the
+pangs of torture on me with every one of them. Those proverbs will
+bring thee to the gallows one day, I promise thee; thy subjects will
+take the government from thee, or there will be revolts among them.
+Tell me, where dost thou pick them up, thou booby? How dost thou apply
+them, thou blockhead? For with me, to utter one and make it apply
+properly, I have to sweat and labour as if I were digging."</p>
+
+<p>"By God, master mine," said Sancho, "your worship is making a fuss
+about very little. Why the devil should you be vexed if I make use
+of what is my own? And I have got nothing else, nor any other stock in
+trade except proverbs and more proverbs; and here are three just
+this instant come into my head, pat to the purpose and like pears in a
+basket; but I won't repeat them, for 'sage silence is called Sancho.'"</p>
+
+<p>"That, Sancho, thou art not," said Don Quixote; "for not only art
+thou not sage silence, but thou art pestilent prate and perversity;
+still I would like to know what three proverbs have just now come into
+thy memory, for I have been turning over mine own&mdash;and it is a good
+one&mdash;and none occurs to me."</p>
+
+<p>"What can be better," said Sancho, "than 'never put thy thumbs
+between two back teeth;' and 'to "get out of my house" and "what do
+you want with my wife?" there is no answer;' and 'whether the
+pitcher hits the stove, or the stove the pitcher, it's a bad
+business for the pitcher;' all which fit to a hair? For no one
+should quarrel with his governor, or him in authority over him,
+because he will come off the worst, as he does who puts his finger
+between two back and if they are not back teeth it makes no
+difference, so long as they are teeth; and to whatever the governor
+may say there's no answer, any more than to 'get out of my house'
+and 'what do you want with my wife?' and then, as for that about the
+stone and the pitcher, a blind man could see that. So that he 'who
+sees the mote in another's eye had need to see the beam in his own,'
+that it be not said of himself, 'the dead woman was frightened at
+the one with her throat cut;' and your worship knows well that 'the
+fool knows more in his own house than the wise man in another's.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "the fool knows nothing, either
+in his own house or in anybody else's, for no wise structure of any
+sort can stand on a foundation of folly; but let us say no more
+about it, Sancho, for if thou governest badly, thine will be the fault
+and mine the shame; but I comfort myself with having done my duty in
+advising thee as earnestly and as wisely as I could; and thus I am
+released from my obligations and my promise. God guide thee, Sancho,
+and govern thee in thy government, and deliver me from the misgiving I
+have that thou wilt turn the whole island upside down, a thing I might
+easily prevent by explaining to the duke what thou art and telling him
+that all that fat little person of thine is nothing else but a sack
+full of proverbs and sauciness."</p>
+
+<p>"Senor," said Sancho, "if your worship thinks I'm not fit for this
+government, I give it up on the spot; for the mere black of the nail
+of my soul is dearer to me than my whole body; and I can live just
+as well, simple Sancho, on bread and onions, as governor, on
+partridges and capons; and what's more, while we're asleep we're all
+equal, great and small, rich and poor. But if your worship looks
+into it, you will see it was your worship alone that put me on to this
+business of governing; for I know no more about the government of
+islands than a buzzard; and if there's any reason to think that
+because of my being a governor the devil will get hold of me, I'd
+rather go Sancho to heaven than governor to hell."</p>
+
+<p>"By God, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "for those last words thou
+hast uttered alone, I consider thou deservest to be governor of a
+thousand islands. Thou hast good natural instincts, without which no
+knowledge is worth anything; commend thyself to God, and try not to
+swerve in the pursuit of thy main object; I mean, always make it thy
+aim and fixed purpose to do right in all matters that come before
+thee, for heaven always helps good intentions; and now let us go to
+dinner, for I think my lord and lady are waiting for us."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="p43e"></a><img alt="p43e.jpg (41K)" src="images/p43e.jpg" height="693" width="475">
+</center>
+
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+
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+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. II.,
+Part 30, by Miguel de Cervantes
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. II., Part
+30, 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. II., Part 30
+
+Author: Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
+
+Release Date: July 24, 2004 [EBook #5933]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DON QUIXOTE, PART 30 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+ DON QUIXOTE
+
+ Volume II.
+
+ Part 30.
+
+ by Miguel de Cervantes
+
+
+ Translated by John Ormsby
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+WHEREIN IS RELATED THE STRANGE AND UNDREAMT-OF ADVENTURE OF THE
+DISTRESSED DUENNA, ALIAS THE COUNTESS TRIFALDI, TOGETHER WITH A LETTER
+WHICH SANCHO PANZA WROTE TO HIS WIFE, TERESA PANZA
+
+
+The duke had a majordomo of a very facetious and sportive turn, and he it
+was that played the part of Merlin, made all the arrangements for the
+late adventure, composed the verses, and got a page to represent
+Dulcinea; and now, with the assistance of his master and mistress, he got
+up another of the drollest and strangest contrivances that can be
+imagined.
+
+The duchess asked Sancho the next day if he had made a beginning with his
+penance task which he had to perform for the disenchantment of Dulcinea.
+He said he had, and had given himself five lashes overnight.
+
+The duchess asked him what he had given them with.
+
+He said with his hand.
+
+"That," said the duchess, "is more like giving oneself slaps than lashes;
+I am sure the sage Merlin will not be satisfied with such tenderness;
+worthy Sancho must make a scourge with claws, or a cat-o'-nine tails,
+that will make itself felt; for it's with blood that letters enter, and
+the release of so great a lady as Dulcinea will not be granted so
+cheaply, or at such a paltry price; and remember, Sancho, that works of
+charity done in a lukewarm and half-hearted way are without merit and of
+no avail."
+
+To which Sancho replied, "If your ladyship will give me a proper scourge
+or cord, I'll lay on with it, provided it does not hurt too much; for you
+must know, boor as I am, my flesh is more cotton than hemp, and it won't
+do for me to destroy myself for the good of anybody else."
+
+"So be it by all means," said the duchess; "tomorrow I'll give you a
+scourge that will be just the thing for you, and will accommodate itself
+to the tenderness of your flesh, as if it was its own sister."
+
+Then said Sancho, "Your highness must know, dear lady of my soul, that I
+have a letter written to my wife, Teresa Panza, giving her an account of
+all that has happened me since I left her; I have it here in my bosom,
+and there's nothing wanting but to put the address to it; I'd be glad if
+your discretion would read it, for I think it runs in the governor style;
+I mean the way governors ought to write."
+
+"And who dictated it?" asked the duchess.
+
+"Who should have dictated but myself, sinner as I am?" said Sancho.
+
+"And did you write it yourself?" said the duchess.
+
+"That I didn't," said Sancho; "for I can neither read nor write, though I
+can sign my name."
+
+"Let us see it," said the duchess, "for never fear but you display in it
+the quality and quantity of your wit."
+
+Sancho drew out an open letter from his bosom, and the duchess, taking
+it, found it ran in this fashion:
+
+
+SANCHO PANZA'S LETTER TO HIS WIFE, TERESA PANZA
+
+If I was well whipped I went mounted like a gentleman; if I have got a
+good government it is at the cost of a good whipping. Thou wilt not
+understand this just now, my Teresa; by-and-by thou wilt know what it
+means. I may tell thee, Teresa, I mean thee to go in a coach, for that is
+a matter of importance, because every other way of going is going on
+all-fours. Thou art a governor's wife; take care that nobody speaks evil
+of thee behind thy back. I send thee here a green hunting suit that my
+lady the duchess gave me; alter it so as to make a petticoat and bodice
+for our daughter. Don Quixote, my master, if I am to believe what I hear
+in these parts, is a madman of some sense, and a droll blockhead, and I
+am no way behind him. We have been in the cave of Montesinos, and the
+sage Merlin has laid hold of me for the disenchantment of Dulcinea del
+Toboso, her that is called Aldonza Lorenzo over there. With three
+thousand three hundred lashes, less five, that I'm to give myself, she
+will be left as entirely disenchanted as the mother that bore her. Say
+nothing of this to anyone; for, make thy affairs public, and some will
+say they are white and others will say they are black. I shall leave this
+in a few days for my government, to which I am going with a mighty great
+desire to make money, for they tell me all new governors set out with the
+same desire; I will feel the pulse of it and will let thee know if thou
+art to come and live with me or not. Dapple is well and sends many
+remembrances to thee; I am not going to leave him behind though they took
+me away to be Grand Turk. My lady the duchess kisses thy hands a thousand
+times; do thou make a return with two thousand, for as my master says,
+nothing costs less or is cheaper than civility. God has not been pleased
+to provide another valise for me with another hundred crowns, like the
+one the other day; but never mind, my Teresa, the bell-ringer is in safe
+quarters, and all will come out in the scouring of the government; only
+it troubles me greatly what they tell me--that once I have tasted it I
+will eat my hands off after it; and if that is so it will not come very
+cheap to me; though to be sure the maimed have a benefice of their own in
+the alms they beg for; so that one way or another thou wilt be rich and
+in luck. God give it to thee as he can, and keep me to serve thee. From
+this castle, the 20th of July, 1614.
+
+Thy husband, the governor.
+
+SANCHO PANZA
+
+
+When she had done reading the letter the duchess said to Sancho, "On two
+points the worthy governor goes rather astray; one is in saying or
+hinting that this government has been bestowed upon him for the lashes
+that he is to give himself, when he knows (and he cannot deny it) that
+when my lord the duke promised it to him nobody ever dreamt of such a
+thing as lashes; the other is that he shows himself here to be very
+covetous; and I would not have him a money-seeker, for 'covetousness
+bursts the bag,' and the covetous governor does ungoverned justice."
+
+"I don't mean it that way, senora," said Sancho; "and if you think the
+letter doesn't run as it ought to do, it's only to tear it up and make
+another; and maybe it will be a worse one if it is left to my gumption."
+
+"No, no," said the duchess, "this one will do, and I wish the duke to see
+it."
+
+With this they betook themselves to a garden where they were to dine, and
+the duchess showed Sancho's letter to the duke, who was highly delighted
+with it. They dined, and after the cloth had been removed and they had
+amused themselves for a while with Sancho's rich conversation, the
+melancholy sound of a fife and harsh discordant drum made itself heard.
+All seemed somewhat put out by this dull, confused, martial harmony,
+especially Don Quixote, who could not keep his seat from pure
+disquietude; as to Sancho, it is needless to say that fear drove him to
+his usual refuge, the side or the skirts of the duchess; and indeed and
+in truth the sound they heard was a most doleful and melancholy one.
+While they were still in uncertainty they saw advancing towards them
+through the garden two men clad in mourning robes so long and flowing
+that they trailed upon the ground. As they marched they beat two great
+drums which were likewise draped in black, and beside them came the fife
+player, black and sombre like the others. Following these came a
+personage of gigantic stature enveloped rather than clad in a gown of the
+deepest black, the skirt of which was of prodigious dimensions. Over the
+gown, girdling or crossing his figure, he had a broad baldric which was
+also black, and from which hung a huge scimitar with a black scabbard and
+furniture. He had his face covered with a transparent black veil, through
+which might be descried a very long beard as white as snow. He came on
+keeping step to the sound of the drums with great gravity and dignity;
+and, in short, his stature, his gait, the sombreness of his appearance
+and his following might well have struck with astonishment, as they did,
+all who beheld him without knowing who he was. With this measured pace
+and in this guise he advanced to kneel before the duke, who, with the
+others, awaited him standing. The duke, however, would not on any account
+allow him to speak until he had risen. The prodigious scarecrow obeyed,
+and standing up, removed the veil from his face and disclosed the most
+enormous, the longest, the whitest and the thickest beard that human eyes
+had ever beheld until that moment, and then fetching up a grave, sonorous
+voice from the depths of his broad, capacious chest, and fixing his eyes
+on the duke, he said:
+
+"Most high and mighty senor, my name is Trifaldin of the White Beard; I
+am squire to the Countess Trifaldi, otherwise called the Distressed
+Duenna, on whose behalf I bear a message to your highness, which is that
+your magnificence will be pleased to grant her leave and permission to
+come and tell you her trouble, which is one of the strangest and most
+wonderful that the mind most familiar with trouble in the world could
+have imagined; but first she desires to know if the valiant and never
+vanquished knight, Don Quixote of La Mancha, is in this your castle, for
+she has come in quest of him on foot and without breaking her fast from
+the kingdom of Kandy to your realms here; a thing which may and ought to
+be regarded as a miracle or set down to enchantment; she is even now at
+the gate of this fortress or plaisance, and only waits for your
+permission to enter. I have spoken." And with that he coughed, and
+stroked down his beard with both his hands, and stood very tranquilly
+waiting for the response of the duke, which was to this effect: "Many
+days ago, worthy squire Trifaldin of the White Beard, we heard of the
+misfortune of my lady the Countess Trifaldi, whom the enchanters have
+caused to be called the Distressed Duenna. Bid her enter, O stupendous
+squire, and tell her that the valiant knight Don Quixote of La Mancha is
+here, and from his generous disposition she may safely promise herself
+every protection and assistance; and you may tell her, too, that if my
+aid be necessary it will not be withheld, for I am bound to give it to
+her by my quality of knight, which involves the protection of women of
+all sorts, especially widowed, wronged, and distressed dames, such as her
+ladyship seems to be."
+
+On hearing this Trifaldin bent the knee to the ground, and making a sign
+to the fifer and drummers to strike up, he turned and marched out of the
+garden to the same notes and at the same pace as when he entered, leaving
+them all amazed at his bearing and solemnity. Turning to Don Quixote, the
+duke said, "After all, renowned knight, the mists of malice and ignorance
+are unable to hide or obscure the light of valour and virtue. I say so,
+because your excellence has been barely six days in this castle, and
+already the unhappy and the afflicted come in quest of you from lands far
+distant and remote, and not in coaches or on dromedaries, but on foot and
+fasting, confident that in that mighty arm they will find a cure for
+their sorrows and troubles; thanks to your great achievements, which are
+circulated all over the known earth."
+
+"I wish, senor duke," replied Don Quixote, "that blessed ecclesiastic,
+who at table the other day showed such ill-will and bitter spite against
+knights-errant, were here now to see with his own eyes whether knights of
+the sort are needed in the world; he would at any rate learn by
+experience that those suffering any extraordinary affliction or sorrow,
+in extreme cases and unusual misfortunes do not go to look for a remedy
+to the houses of jurists or village sacristans, or to the knight who has
+never attempted to pass the bounds of his own town, or to the indolent
+courtier who only seeks for news to repeat and talk of, instead of
+striving to do deeds and exploits for others to relate and record. Relief
+in distress, help in need, protection for damsels, consolation for
+widows, are to be found in no sort of persons better than in
+knights-errant; and I give unceasing thanks to heaven that I am one, and
+regard any misfortune or suffering that may befall me in the pursuit of
+so honourable a calling as endured to good purpose. Let this duenna come
+and ask what she will, for I will effect her relief by the might of my
+arm and the dauntless resolution of my bold heart."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+WHEREIN IS CONTINUED THE NOTABLE ADVENTURE OF THE DISTRESSED DUENNA
+
+
+The duke and duchess were extremely glad to see how readily Don Quixote
+fell in with their scheme; but at this moment Sancho observed, "I hope
+this senora duenna won't be putting any difficulties in the way of the
+promise of my government; for I have heard a Toledo apothecary, who
+talked like a goldfinch, say that where duennas were mixed up nothing
+good could happen. God bless me, how he hated them, that same apothecary!
+And so what I'm thinking is, if all duennas, of whatever sort or
+condition they may be, are plagues and busybodies, what must they be that
+are distressed, like this Countess Three-skirts or Three-tails!--for in
+my country skirts or tails, tails or skirts, it's all one."
+
+"Hush, friend Sancho," said Don Quixote; "since this lady duenna comes in
+quest of me from such a distant land she cannot be one of those the
+apothecary meant; moreover this is a countess, and when countesses serve
+as duennas it is in the service of queens and empresses, for in their own
+houses they are mistresses paramount and have other duennas to wait on
+them."
+
+To this Dona Rodriguez, who was present, made answer, "My lady the
+duchess has duennas in her service that might be countesses if it was the
+will of fortune; 'but laws go as kings like;' let nobody speak ill of
+duennas, above all of ancient maiden ones; for though I am not one
+myself, I know and am aware of the advantage a maiden duenna has over one
+that is a widow; but 'he who clipped us has kept the scissors.'"
+
+"For all that," said Sancho, "there's so much to be clipped about
+duennas, so my barber said, that 'it will be better not to stir the rice
+even though it sticks.'"
+
+"These squires," returned Dona Rodriguez, "are always our enemies; and as
+they are the haunting spirits of the antechambers and watch us at every
+step, whenever they are not saying their prayers (and that's often
+enough) they spend their time in tattling about us, digging up our bones
+and burying our good name. But I can tell these walking blocks that we
+will live in spite of them, and in great houses too, though we die of
+hunger and cover our flesh, be it delicate or not, with widow's weeds, as
+one covers or hides a dunghill on a procession day. By my faith, if it
+were permitted me and time allowed, I could prove, not only to those here
+present, but to all the world, that there is no virtue that is not to be
+found in a duenna."
+
+"I have no doubt," said the duchess, "that my good Dona Rodriguez is
+right, and very much so; but she had better bide her time for fighting
+her own battle and that of the rest of the duennas, so as to crush the
+calumny of that vile apothecary, and root out the prejudice in the great
+Sancho Panza's mind."
+
+To which Sancho replied, "Ever since I have sniffed the governorship I
+have got rid of the humours of a squire, and I don't care a wild fig for
+all the duennas in the world."
+
+They would have carried on this duenna dispute further had they not heard
+the notes of the fife and drums once more, from which they concluded that
+the Distressed Duenna was making her entrance. The duchess asked the duke
+if it would be proper to go out to receive her, as she was a countess and
+a person of rank.
+
+"In respect of her being a countess," said Sancho, before the duke could
+reply, "I am for your highnesses going out to receive her; but in respect
+of her being a duenna, it is my opinion you should not stir a step."
+
+"Who bade thee meddle in this, Sancho?" said Don Quixote.
+
+"Who, senor?" said Sancho; "I meddle for I have a right to meddle, as a
+squire who has learned the rules of courtesy in the school of your
+worship, the most courteous and best-bred knight in the whole world of
+courtliness; and in these things, as I have heard your worship say, as
+much is lost by a card too many as by a card too few, and to one who has
+his ears open, few words."
+
+"Sancho is right," said the duke; "we'll see what the countess is like,
+and by that measure the courtesy that is due to her."
+
+And now the drums and fife made their entrance as before; and here the
+author brought this short chapter to an end and began the next, following
+up the same adventure, which is one of the most notable in the history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+WHEREIN IS TOLD THE DISTRESSED DUENNA'S TALE OF HER MISFORTUNES
+
+
+Following the melancholy musicians there filed into the garden as many as
+twelve duennas, in two lines, all dressed in ample mourning robes
+apparently of milled serge, with hoods of fine white gauze so long that
+they allowed only the border of the robe to be seen. Behind them came the
+Countess Trifaldi, the squire Trifaldin of the White Beard leading her by
+the hand, clad in the finest unnapped black baize, such that, had it a
+nap, every tuft would have shown as big as a Martos chickpea; the tail,
+or skirt, or whatever it might be called, ended in three points which
+were borne up by the hands of three pages, likewise dressed in mourning,
+forming an elegant geometrical figure with the three acute angles made by
+the three points, from which all who saw the peaked skirt concluded that
+it must be because of it the countess was called Trifaldi, as though it
+were Countess of the Three Skirts; and Benengeli says it was so, and that
+by her right name she was called the Countess Lobuna, because wolves bred
+in great numbers in her country; and if, instead of wolves, they had been
+foxes, she would have been called the Countess Zorruna, as it was the
+custom in those parts for lords to take distinctive titles from the thing
+or things most abundant in their dominions; this countess, however, in
+honour of the new fashion of her skirt, dropped Lobuna and took up
+Trifaldi.
+
+The twelve duennas and the lady came on at procession pace, their faces
+being covered with black veils, not transparent ones like Trifaldin's,
+but so close that they allowed nothing to be seen through them. As soon
+as the band of duennas was fully in sight, the duke, the duchess, and Don
+Quixote stood up, as well as all who were watching the slow-moving
+procession. The twelve duennas halted and formed a lane, along which the
+Distressed One advanced, Trifaldin still holding her hand. On seeing this
+the duke, the duchess, and Don Quixote went some twelve paces forward to
+meet her. She then, kneeling on the ground, said in a voice hoarse and
+rough, rather than fine and delicate, "May it please your highnesses not
+to offer such courtesies to this your servant, I should say to this your
+handmaid, for I am in such distress that I shall never be able to make a
+proper return, because my strange and unparalleled misfortune has carried
+off my wits, and I know not whither; but it must be a long way off, for
+the more I look for them the less I find them."
+
+"He would be wanting in wits, senora countess," said the duke, "who did
+not perceive your worth by your person, for at a glance it may be seen it
+deserves all the cream of courtesy and flower of polite usage;" and
+raising her up by the hand he led her to a seat beside the duchess, who
+likewise received her with great urbanity. Don Quixote remained silent,
+while Sancho was dying to see the features of Trifaldi and one or two of
+her many duennas; but there was no possibility of it until they
+themselves displayed them of their own accord and free will.
+
+All kept still, waiting to see who would break silence, which the
+Distressed Duenna did in these words: "I am confident, most mighty lord,
+most fair lady, and most discreet company, that my most miserable misery
+will be accorded a reception no less dispassionate than generous and
+condolent in your most valiant bosoms, for it is one that is enough to
+melt marble, soften diamonds, and mollify the steel of the most hardened
+hearts in the world; but ere it is proclaimed to your hearing, not to say
+your ears, I would fain be enlightened whether there be present in this
+society, circle, or company, that knight immaculatissimus, Don Quixote de
+la Manchissima, and his squirissimus Panza."
+
+"The Panza is here," said Sancho, before anyone could reply, "and Don
+Quixotissimus too; and so, most distressedest Duenissima, you may say
+what you willissimus, for we are all readissimus to do you any
+servissimus."
+
+On this Don Quixote rose, and addressing the Distressed Duenna, said, "If
+your sorrows, afflicted lady, can indulge in any hope of relief from the
+valour or might of any knight-errant, here are mine, which, feeble and
+limited though they be, shall be entirely devoted to your service. I am
+Don Quixote of La Mancha, whose calling it is to give aid to the needy of
+all sorts; and that being so, it is not necessary for you, senora, to
+make any appeal to benevolence, or deal in preambles, only to tell your
+woes plainly and straightforwardly: for you have hearers that will know
+how, if not to remedy them, to sympathise with them."
+
+On hearing this, the Distressed Duenna made as though she would throw
+herself at Don Quixote's feet, and actually did fall before them and
+said, as she strove to embrace them, "Before these feet and legs I cast
+myself, O unconquered knight, as before, what they are, the foundations
+and pillars of knight-errantry; these feet I desire to kiss, for upon
+their steps hangs and depends the sole remedy for my misfortune, O
+valorous errant, whose veritable achievements leave behind and eclipse
+the fabulous ones of the Amadises, Esplandians, and Belianises!" Then
+turning from Don Quixote to Sancho Panza, and grasping his hands, she
+said, "O thou, most loyal squire that ever served knight-errant in this
+present age or ages past, whose goodness is more extensive than the beard
+of Trifaldin my companion here of present, well mayest thou boast thyself
+that, in serving the great Don Quixote, thou art serving, summed up in
+one, the whole host of knights that have ever borne arms in the world. I
+conjure thee, by what thou owest to thy most loyal goodness, that thou
+wilt become my kind intercessor with thy master, that he speedily give
+aid to this most humble and most unfortunate countess."
+
+To this Sancho made answer, "As to my goodness, senora, being as long and
+as great as your squire's beard, it matters very little to me; may I have
+my soul well bearded and moustached when it comes to quit this life,
+that's the point; about beards here below I care little or nothing; but
+without all these blandishments and prayers, I will beg my master (for I
+know he loves me, and, besides, he has need of me just now for a certain
+business) to help and aid your worship as far as he can; unpack your woes
+and lay them before us, and leave us to deal with them, for we'll be all
+of one mind."
+
+The duke and duchess, as it was they who had made the experiment of this
+adventure, were ready to burst with laughter at all this, and between
+themselves they commended the clever acting of the Trifaldi, who,
+returning to her seat, said, "Queen Dona Maguncia reigned over the famous
+kingdom of Kandy, which lies between the great Trapobana and the Southern
+Sea, two leagues beyond Cape Comorin. She was the widow of King
+Archipiela, her lord and husband, and of their marriage they had issue
+the Princess Antonomasia, heiress of the kingdom; which Princess
+Antonomasia was reared and brought up under my care and direction, I
+being the oldest and highest in rank of her mother's duennas. Time
+passed, and the young Antonomasia reached the age of fourteen, and such a
+perfection of beauty, that nature could not raise it higher. Then, it
+must not be supposed her intelligence was childish; she was as
+intelligent as she was fair, and she was fairer than all the world; and
+is so still, unless the envious fates and hard-hearted sisters three have
+cut for her the thread of life. But that they have not, for Heaven will
+not suffer so great a wrong to Earth, as it would be to pluck unripe the
+grapes of the fairest vineyard on its surface. Of this beauty, to which
+my poor feeble tongue has failed to do justice, countless princes, not
+only of that country, but of others, were enamoured, and among them a
+private gentleman, who was at the court, dared to raise his thoughts to
+the heaven of so great beauty, trusting to his youth, his gallant
+bearing, his numerous accomplishments and graces, and his quickness and
+readiness of wit; for I may tell your highnesses, if I am not wearying
+you, that he played the guitar so as to make it speak, and he was,
+besides, a poet and a great dancer, and he could make birdcages so well,
+that by making them alone he might have gained a livelihood, had he found
+himself reduced to utter poverty; and gifts and graces of this kind are
+enough to bring down a mountain, not to say a tender young girl. But all
+his gallantry, wit, and gaiety, all his graces and accomplishments, would
+have been of little or no avail towards gaining the fortress of my pupil,
+had not the impudent thief taken the precaution of gaining me over first.
+First, the villain and heartless vagabond sought to win my good-will and
+purchase my compliance, so as to get me, like a treacherous warder, to
+deliver up to him the keys of the fortress I had in charge. In a word, he
+gained an influence over my mind, and overcame my resolutions with I know
+not what trinkets and jewels he gave me; but it was some verses I heard
+him singing one night from a grating that opened on the street where he
+lived, that, more than anything else, made me give way and led to my
+fall; and if I remember rightly they ran thus:
+
+ From that sweet enemy of mine
+ My bleeding heart hath had its wound;
+ And to increase the pain I'm bound
+ To suffer and to make no sign.
+
+The lines seemed pearls to me and his voice sweet as syrup; and
+afterwards, I may say ever since then, looking at the misfortune into
+which I have fallen, I have thought that poets, as Plato advised, ought
+to be banished from all well-ordered States; at least the amatory ones,
+for they write verses, not like those of 'The Marquis of Mantua,' that
+delight and draw tears from the women and children, but sharp-pointed
+conceits that pierce the heart like soft thorns, and like the lightning
+strike it, leaving the raiment uninjured. Another time he sang:
+
+ Come Death, so subtly veiled that I
+ Thy coming know not, how or when,
+ Lest it should give me life again
+ To find how sweet it is to die.
+
+--and other verses and burdens of the same sort, such as enchant when
+sung and fascinate when written. And then, when they condescend to
+compose a sort of verse that was at that time in vogue in Kandy, which
+they call seguidillas! Then it is that hearts leap and laughter breaks
+forth, and the body grows restless and all the senses turn quicksilver.
+And so I say, sirs, that these troubadours richly deserve to be banished
+to the isles of the lizards. Though it is not they that are in fault, but
+the simpletons that extol them, and the fools that believe in them; and
+had I been the faithful duenna I should have been, his stale conceits
+would have never moved me, nor should I have been taken in by such
+phrases as 'in death I live,' 'in ice I burn,' 'in flames I shiver,'
+'hopeless I hope,' 'I go and stay,' and paradoxes of that sort which
+their writings are full of. And then when they promise the Phoenix of
+Arabia, the crown of Ariadne, the horses of the Sun, the pearls of the
+South, the gold of Tibar, and the balsam of Panchaia! Then it is they
+give a loose to their pens, for it costs them little to make promises
+they have no intention or power of fulfilling. But where am I wandering
+to? Woe is me, unfortunate being! What madness or folly leads me to speak
+of the faults of others, when there is so much to be said about my own?
+Again, woe is me, hapless that I am! it was not verses that conquered me,
+but my own simplicity; it was not music made me yield, but my own
+imprudence; my own great ignorance and little caution opened the way and
+cleared the path for Don Clavijo's advances, for that was the name of the
+gentleman I have referred to; and so, with my help as go-between, he
+found his way many a time into the chamber of the deceived Antonomasia
+(deceived not by him but by me) under the title of a lawful husband; for,
+sinner though I was, would not have allowed him to approach the edge of
+her shoe-sole without being her husband. No, no, not that; marriage must
+come first in any business of this sort that I take in hand. But there
+was one hitch in this case, which was that of inequality of rank, Don
+Clavijo being a private gentleman, and the Princess Antonomasia, as I
+said, heiress to the kingdom. The entanglement remained for some time a
+secret, kept hidden by my cunning precautions, until I perceived that a
+certain expansion of waist in Antonomasia must before long disclose it,
+the dread of which made us all there take counsel together, and it was
+agreed that before the mischief came to light, Don Clavijo should demand
+Antonomasia as his wife before the Vicar, in virtue of an agreement to
+marry him made by the princess, and drafted by my wit in such binding
+terms that the might of Samson could not have broken it. The necessary
+steps were taken; the Vicar saw the agreement, and took the lady's
+confession; she confessed everything in full, and he ordered her into the
+custody of a very worthy alguacil of the court."
+
+"Are there alguacils of the court in Kandy, too," said Sancho at this,
+"and poets, and seguidillas? I swear I think the world is the same all
+over! But make haste, Senora Trifaldi; for it is late, and I am dying to
+know the end of this long story."
+
+"I will," replied the countess.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+IN WHICH THE TRIFALDI CONTINUES HER MARVELLOUS AND MEMORABLE STORY
+
+
+By every word that Sancho uttered, the duchess was as much delighted as
+Don Quixote was driven to desperation. He bade him hold his tongue, and
+the Distressed One went on to say: "At length, after much questioning and
+answering, as the princess held to her story, without changing or varying
+her previous declaration, the Vicar gave his decision in favour of Don
+Clavijo, and she was delivered over to him as his lawful wife; which the
+Queen Dona Maguncia, the Princess Antonomasia's mother, so took to heart,
+that within the space of three days we buried her."
+
+"She died, no doubt," said Sancho.
+
+"Of course," said Trifaldin; "they don't bury living people in Kandy,
+only the dead."
+
+"Senor Squire," said Sancho, "a man in a swoon has been known to be
+buried before now, in the belief that he was dead; and it struck me that
+Queen Maguncia ought to have swooned rather than died; because with life
+a great many things come right, and the princess's folly was not so great
+that she need feel it so keenly. If the lady had married some page of
+hers, or some other servant of the house, as many another has done, so I
+have heard say, then the mischief would have been past curing. But to
+marry such an elegant accomplished gentleman as has been just now
+described to us--indeed, indeed, though it was a folly, it was not such a
+great one as you think; for according to the rules of my master here--and
+he won't allow me to lie--as of men of letters bishops are made, so of
+gentlemen knights, specially if they be errant, kings and emperors may be
+made."
+
+"Thou art right, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "for with a knight-errant, if
+he has but two fingers' breadth of good fortune, it is on the cards to
+become the mightiest lord on earth. But let senora the Distressed One
+proceed; for I suspect she has got yet to tell us the bitter part of this
+so far sweet story."
+
+"The bitter is indeed to come," said the countess; "and such bitter that
+colocynth is sweet and oleander toothsome in comparison. The queen, then,
+being dead, and not in a swoon, we buried her; and hardly had we covered
+her with earth, hardly had we said our last farewells, when, quis talia
+fando temperet a lachrymis? over the queen's grave there appeared,
+mounted upon a wooden horse, the giant Malambruno, Maguncia's first
+cousin, who besides being cruel is an enchanter; and he, to revenge the
+death of his cousin, punish the audacity of Don Clavijo, and in wrath at
+the contumacy of Antonomasia, left them both enchanted by his art on the
+grave itself; she being changed into an ape of brass, and he into a
+horrible crocodile of some unknown metal; while between the two there
+stands a pillar, also of metal, with certain characters in the Syriac
+language inscribed upon it, which, being translated into Kandian, and now
+into Castilian, contain the following sentence: 'These two rash lovers
+shall not recover their former shape until the valiant Manchegan comes to
+do battle with me in single combat; for the Fates reserve this unexampled
+adventure for his mighty valour alone.' This done, he drew from its
+sheath a huge broad scimitar, and seizing me by the hair he made as
+though he meant to cut my throat and shear my head clean off. I was
+terror-stricken, my voice stuck in my throat, and I was in the deepest
+distress; nevertheless I summoned up my strength as well as I could, and
+in a trembling and piteous voice I addressed such words to him as induced
+him to stay the infliction of a punishment so severe. He then caused all
+the duennas of the palace, those that are here present, to be brought
+before him; and after having dwelt upon the enormity of our offence, and
+denounced duennas, their characters, their evil ways and worse intrigues,
+laying to the charge of all what I alone was guilty of, he said he would
+not visit us with capital punishment, but with others of a slow nature
+which would be in effect civil death for ever; and the very instant he
+ceased speaking we all felt the pores of our faces opening, and pricking
+us, as if with the points of needles. We at once put our hands up to our
+faces and found ourselves in the state you now see."
+
+Here the Distressed One and the other duennas raised the veils with which
+they were covered, and disclosed countenances all bristling with beards,
+some red, some black, some white, and some grizzled, at which spectacle
+the duke and duchess made a show of being filled with wonder. Don Quixote
+and Sancho were overwhelmed with amazement, and the bystanders lost in
+astonishment, while the Trifaldi went on to say: "Thus did that
+malevolent villain Malambruno punish us, covering the tenderness and
+softness of our faces with these rough bristles! Would to heaven that he
+had swept off our heads with his enormous scimitar instead of obscuring
+the light of our countenances with these wool-combings that cover us! For
+if we look into the matter, sirs (and what I am now going to say I would
+say with eyes flowing like fountains, only that the thought of our
+misfortune and the oceans they have already wept, keep them as dry as
+barley spears, and so I say it without tears), where, I ask, can a duenna
+with a beard to to? What father or mother will feel pity for her? Who
+will help her? For, if even when she has a smooth skin, and a face
+tortured by a thousand kinds of washes and cosmetics, she can hardly get
+anybody to love her, what will she do when she shows a countenace turned
+into a thicket? Oh duennas, companions mine! it was an unlucky moment
+when we were born and an ill-starred hour when our fathers begot us!" And
+as she said this she showed signs of being about to faint.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+OF MATTERS RELATING AND BELONGING TO THIS ADVENTURE AND TO THIS MEMORABLE
+HISTORY
+
+
+Verily and truly all those who find pleasure in histories like this ought
+show their gratitude to Cide Hamete, its original author, for the
+scrupulous care he has taken to set before us all its minute particulars,
+not leaving anything, however trifling it may be, that he does not make
+clear and plain. He portrays the thoughts, he reveals the fancies, he
+answers implied questions, clears up doubts, sets objections at rest,
+and, in a word, makes plain the smallest points the most inquisitive can
+desire to know. O renowned author! O happy Don Quixote! O famous famous
+droll Sancho! All and each, may ye live countless ages for the delight
+and amusement of the dwellers on earth!
+
+The history goes on to say that when Sancho saw the Distressed One faint
+he exclaimed: "I swear by the faith of an honest man and the shades of
+all my ancestors the Panzas, that never I did see or hear of, nor has my
+master related or conceived in his mind, such an adventure as this. A
+thousand devils--not to curse thee--take thee, Malambruno, for an
+enchanter and a giant! Couldst thou find no other sort of punishment for
+these sinners but bearding them? Would it not have been better--it would
+have been better for them--to have taken off half their noses from the
+middle upwards, even though they'd have snuffled when they spoke, than to
+have put beards on them? I'll bet they have not the means of paying
+anybody to shave them."
+
+"That is the truth, senor," said one of the twelve; "we have not the
+money to get ourselves shaved, and so we have, some of us, taken to using
+sticking-plasters by way of an economical remedy, for by applying them to
+our faces and plucking them off with a jerk we are left as bare and
+smooth as the bottom of a stone mortar. There are, to be sure, women in
+Kandy that go about from house to house to remove down, and trim
+eyebrows, and make cosmetics for the use of the women, but we, the
+duennas of my lady, would never let them in, for most of them have a
+flavour of agents that have ceased to be principals; and if we are not
+relieved by Senor Don Quixote we shall be carried to our graves with
+beards."
+
+"I will pluck out my own in the land of the Moors," said Don Quixote, "if
+I don't cure yours."
+
+At this instant the Trifaldi recovered from her swoon and said, "The
+chink of that promise, valiant knight, reached my ears in the midst of my
+swoon, and has been the means of reviving me and bringing back my senses;
+and so once more I implore you, illustrious errant, indomitable sir, to
+let your gracious promises be turned into deeds."
+
+"There shall be no delay on my part," said Don Quixote. "Bethink you,
+senora, of what I must do, for my heart is most eager to serve you."
+
+"The fact is," replied the Distressed One, "it is five thousand leagues,
+a couple more or less, from this to the kingdom of Kandy, if you go by
+land; but if you go through the air and in a straight line, it is three
+thousand two hundred and twenty-seven. You must know, too, that
+Malambruno told me that, whenever fate provided the knight our deliverer,
+he himself would send him a steed far better and with less tricks than a
+post-horse; for he will be that same wooden horse on which the valiant
+Pierres carried off the fair Magalona; which said horse is guided by a
+peg he has in his forehead that serves for a bridle, and flies through
+the air with such rapidity that you would fancy the very devils were
+carrying him. This horse, according to ancient tradition, was made by
+Merlin. He lent him to Pierres, who was a friend of his, and who made
+long journeys with him, and, as has been said, carried off the fair
+Magalona, bearing her through the air on its haunches and making all who
+beheld them from the earth gape with astonishment; and he never lent him
+save to those whom he loved or those who paid him well; and since the
+great Pierres we know of no one having mounted him until now. From him
+Malambruno stole him by his magic art, and he has him now in his
+possession, and makes use of him in his journeys which he constantly
+makes through different parts of the world; he is here to-day, to-morrow
+in France, and the next day in Potosi; and the best of it is the said
+horse neither eats nor sleeps nor wears out shoes, and goes at an ambling
+pace through the air without wings, so that he whom he has mounted upon
+him can carry a cup full of water in his hand without spilling a drop, so
+smoothly and easily does he go, for which reason the fair Magalona
+enjoyed riding him greatly."
+
+"For going smoothly and easily," said Sancho at this, "give me my Dapple,
+though he can't go through the air; but on the ground I'll back him
+against all the amblers in the world."
+
+They all laughed, and the Distressed One continued: "And this same horse,
+if so be that Malambruno is disposed to put an end to our sufferings,
+will be here before us ere the night shall have advanced half an hour;
+for he announced to me that the sign he would give me whereby I might
+know that I had found the knight I was in quest of, would be to send me
+the horse wherever he might be, speedily and promptly."
+
+"And how many is there room for on this horse?" asked Sancho.
+
+"Two," said the Distressed One, "one in the saddle, and the other on the
+croup; and generally these two are knight and squire, when there is no
+damsel that's being carried off."
+
+"I'd like to know, Senora Distressed One," said Sancho, "what is the name
+of this horse?"
+
+"His name," said the Distressed One, "is not the same as Bellerophon's
+horse that was called Pegasus, or Alexander the Great's, called
+Bucephalus, or Orlando Furioso's, the name of which was Brigliador, nor
+yet Bayard, the horse of Reinaldos of Montalvan, nor Frontino like
+Ruggiero's, nor Bootes or Peritoa, as they say the horses of the sun were
+called, nor is he called Orelia, like the horse on which the unfortunate
+Rodrigo, the last king of the Goths, rode to the battle where he lost his
+life and his kingdom."
+
+"I'll bet," said Sancho, "that as they have given him none of these
+famous names of well-known horses, no more have they given him the name
+of my master's Rocinante, which for being apt surpasses all that have
+been mentioned."
+
+"That is true," said the bearded countess, "still it fits him very well,
+for he is called Clavileno the Swift, which name is in accordance with
+his being made of wood, with the peg he has in his forehead, and with the
+swift pace at which he travels; and so, as far as name goes, he may
+compare with the famous Rocinante."
+
+"I have nothing to say against his name," said Sancho; "but with what
+sort of bridle or halter is he managed?"
+
+"I have said already," said the Trifaldi, "that it is with a peg, by
+turning which to one side or the other the knight who rides him makes him
+go as he pleases, either through the upper air, or skimming and almost
+sweeping the earth, or else in that middle course that is sought and
+followed in all well-regulated proceedings."
+
+"I'd like to see him," said Sancho; "but to fancy I'm going to mount him,
+either in the saddle or on the croup, is to ask pears of the elm tree. A
+good joke indeed! I can hardly keep my seat upon Dapple, and on a
+pack-saddle softer than silk itself, and here they'd have me hold on upon
+haunches of plank without pad or cushion of any sort! Gad, I have no
+notion of bruising myself to get rid of anyone's beard; let each one
+shave himself as best he can; I'm not going to accompany my master on any
+such long journey; besides, I can't give any help to the shaving of these
+beards as I can to the disenchantment of my lady Dulcinea."
+
+"Yes, you can, my friend," replied the Trifaldi; "and so much, that
+without you, so I understand, we shall be able to do nothing."
+
+"In the king's name!" exclaimed Sancho, "what have squires got to do with
+the adventures of their masters? Are they to have the fame of such as
+they go through, and we the labour? Body o' me! if the historians would
+only say, 'Such and such a knight finished such and such an adventure,
+but with the help of so and so, his squire, without which it would have
+been impossible for him to accomplish it;' but they write curtly, "Don
+Paralipomenon of the Three Stars accomplished the adventure of the six
+monsters;' without mentioning such a person as his squire, who was there
+all the time, just as if there was no such being. Once more, sirs, I say
+my master may go alone, and much good may it do him; and I'll stay here
+in the company of my lady the duchess; and maybe when he comes back, he
+will find the lady Dulcinea's affair ever so much advanced; for I mean in
+leisure hours, and at idle moments, to give myself a spell of whipping
+without so much as a hair to cover me."
+
+"For all that you must go if it be necessary, my good Sancho," said the
+duchess, "for they are worthy folk who ask you; and the faces of these
+ladies must not remain overgrown in this way because of your idle fears;
+that would be a hard case indeed."
+
+"In the king's name, once more!" said Sancho; "If this charitable work
+were to be done for the sake of damsels in confinement or charity-girls,
+a man might expose himself to some hardships; but to bear it for the sake
+of stripping beards off duennas! Devil take it! I'd sooner see them all
+bearded, from the highest to the lowest, and from the most prudish to the
+most affected."
+
+"You are very hard on duennas, Sancho my friend," said the duchess; "you
+incline very much to the opinion of the Toledo apothecary. But indeed you
+are wrong; there are duennas in my house that may serve as patterns of
+duennas; and here is my Dona Rodriguez, who will not allow me to say
+otherwise."
+
+"Your excellence may say it if you like," said the Rodriguez; "for God
+knows the truth of everything; and whether we duennas are good or bad,
+bearded or smooth, we are our mothers' daughters like other women; and as
+God sent us into the world, he knows why he did, and on his mercy I rely,
+and not on anybody's beard."
+
+"Well, Senora Rodriguez, Senora Trifaldi, and present company," said Don
+Quixote, "I trust in Heaven that it will look with kindly eyes upon your
+troubles, for Sancho will do as I bid him. Only let Clavileno come and
+let me find myself face to face with Malambruno, and I am certain no
+razor will shave you more easily than my sword shall shave Malambruno's
+head off his shoulders; for 'God bears with the wicked, but not for
+ever."
+
+"Ah!" exclaimed the Distressed One at this, "may all the stars of the
+celestial regions look down upon your greatness with benign eyes, valiant
+knight, and shed every prosperity and valour upon your heart, that it may
+be the shield and safeguard of the abused and downtrodden race of
+duennas, detested by apothecaries, sneered at by squires, and made game
+of by pages. Ill betide the jade that in the flower of her youth would
+not sooner become a nun than a duenna! Unfortunate beings that we are, we
+duennas! Though we may be descended in the direct male line from Hector
+of Troy himself, our mistresses never fail to address us as 'you' if they
+think it makes queens of them. O giant Malambruno, though thou art an
+enchanter, thou art true to thy promises. Send us now the peerless
+Clavileno, that our misfortune may be brought to an end; for if the hot
+weather sets in and these beards of ours are still there, alas for our
+lot!"
+
+The Trifaldi said this in such a pathetic way that she drew tears from
+the eyes of all and even Sancho's filled up; and he resolved in his heart
+to accompany his master to the uttermost ends of the earth, if so be the
+removal of the wool from those venerable countenances depended upon it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+OF THE ARRIVAL OF CLAVILENO AND THE END OF THIS PROTRACTED ADVENTURE
+
+
+And now night came, and with it the appointed time for the arrival of the
+famous horse Clavileno, the non-appearance of which was already beginning
+to make Don Quixote uneasy, for it struck him that, as Malambruno was so
+long about sending it, either he himself was not the knight for whom the
+adventure was reserved, or else Malambruno did not dare to meet him in
+single combat. But lo! suddenly there came into the garden four wild-men
+all clad in green ivy bearing on their shoulders a great wooden horse.
+They placed it on its feet on the ground, and one of the wild-men said,
+"Let the knight who has heart for it mount this machine."
+
+Here Sancho exclaimed, "I don't mount, for neither have I the heart nor
+am I a knight."
+
+"And let the squire, if he has one," continued the wild-man, "take his
+seat on the croup, and let him trust the valiant Malambruno; for by no
+sword save his, nor by the malice of any other, shall he be assailed. It
+is but to turn this peg the horse has in his neck, and he will bear them
+through the air to where Malambruno awaits them; but lest the vast
+elevation of their course should make them giddy, their eyes must be
+covered until the horse neighs, which will be the sign of their having
+completed their journey."
+
+With these words, leaving Clavileno behind them, they retired with easy
+dignity the way they came. As soon as the Distressed One saw the horse,
+almost in tears she exclaimed to Don Quixote, "Valiant knight, the
+promise of Malambruno has proved trustworthy; the horse has come, our
+beards are growing, and by every hair in them all of us implore thee to
+shave and shear us, as it is only mounting him with thy squire and making
+a happy beginning with your new journey."
+
+"That I will, Senora Countess Trifaldi," said Don Quixote, "most gladly
+and with right goodwill, without stopping to take a cushion or put on my
+spurs, so as not to lose time, such is my desire to see you and all these
+duennas shaved clean."
+
+"That I won't," said Sancho, "with good-will or bad-will, or any way at
+all; and if this shaving can't be done without my mounting on the croup,
+my master had better look out for another squire to go with him, and
+these ladies for some other way of making their faces smooth; I'm no
+witch to have a taste for travelling through the air. What would my
+islanders say when they heard their governor was going, strolling about
+on the winds? And another thing, as it is three thousand and odd leagues
+from this to Kandy, if the horse tires, or the giant takes huff, we'll be
+half a dozen years getting back, and there won't be isle or island in the
+world that will know me: and so, as it is a common saying 'in delay
+there's danger,' and 'when they offer thee a heifer run with a halter,'
+these ladies' beards must excuse me; 'Saint Peter is very well in Rome;'
+I mean I am very well in this house where so much is made of me, and I
+hope for such a good thing from the master as to see myself a governor."
+
+"Friend Sancho," said the duke at this, "the island that I have promised
+you is not a moving one, or one that will run away; it has roots so
+deeply buried in the bowels of the earth that it will be no easy matter
+to pluck it up or shift it from where it is; you know as well as I do
+that there is no sort of office of any importance that is not obtained by
+a bribe of some kind, great or small; well then, that which I look to
+receive for this government is that you go with your master Don Quixote,
+and bring this memorable adventure to a conclusion; and whether you
+return on Clavileno as quickly as his speed seems to promise, or adverse
+fortune brings you back on foot travelling as a pilgrim from hostel to
+hostel and from inn to inn, you will always find your island on your
+return where you left it, and your islanders with the same eagerness they
+have always had to receive you as their governor, and my good-will will
+remain the same; doubt not the truth of this, Senor Sancho, for that
+would be grievously wronging my disposition to serve you."
+
+"Say no more, senor," said Sancho; "I am a poor squire and not equal to
+carrying so much courtesy; let my master mount; bandage my eyes and
+commit me to God's care, and tell me if I may commend myself to our Lord
+or call upon the angels to protect me when we go towering up there."
+
+To this the Trifaldi made answer, "Sancho, you may freely commend
+yourself to God or whom you will; for Malambruno though an enchanter is a
+Christian, and works his enchantments with great circumspection, taking
+very good care not to fall out with anyone."
+
+"Well then," said Sancho, "God and the most holy Trinity of Gaeta give me
+help!"
+
+"Since the memorable adventure of the fulling mills," said Don Quixote,
+"I have never seen Sancho in such a fright as now; were I as
+superstitious as others his abject fear would cause me some little
+trepidation of spirit. But come here, Sancho, for with the leave of these
+gentles I would say a word or two to thee in private;" and drawing Sancho
+aside among the trees of the garden and seizing both his hands he said,
+"Thou seest, brother Sancho, the long journey we have before us, and God
+knows when we shall return, or what leisure or opportunities this
+business will allow us; I wish thee therefore to retire now to thy
+chamber, as though thou wert going to fetch something required for the
+road, and in a trice give thyself if it be only five hundred lashes on
+account of the three thousand three hundred to which thou art bound; it
+will be all to the good, and to make a beginning with a thing is to have
+it half finished."
+
+"By God," said Sancho, "but your worship must be out of your senses! This
+is like the common saying, 'You see me with child, and you want me a
+virgin.' Just as I'm about to go sitting on a bare board, your worship
+would have me score my backside! Indeed, your worship is not reasonable.
+Let us be off to shave these duennas; and on our return I promise on my
+word to make such haste to wipe off all that's due as will satisfy your
+worship; I can't say more."
+
+"Well, I will comfort myself with that promise, my good Sancho," replied
+Don Quixote, "and I believe thou wilt keep it; for indeed though stupid
+thou art veracious."
+
+"I'm not voracious," said Sancho, "only peckish; but even if I was a
+little, still I'd keep my word."
+
+With this they went back to mount Clavileno, and as they were about to do
+so Don Quixote said, "Cover thine eyes, Sancho, and mount; for one who
+sends for us from lands so far distant cannot mean to deceive us for the
+sake of the paltry glory to be derived from deceiving persons who trust
+in him; though all should turn out the contrary of what I hope, no malice
+will be able to dim the glory of having undertaken this exploit."
+
+"Let us be off, senor," said Sancho, "for I have taken the beards and
+tears of these ladies deeply to heart, and I shan't eat a bit to relish
+it until I have seen them restored to their former smoothness. Mount,
+your worship, and blindfold yourself, for if I am to go on the croup, it
+is plain the rider in the saddle must mount first."
+
+"That is true," said Don Quixote, and, taking a handkerchief out of his
+pocket, he begged the Distressed One to bandage his eyes very carefully;
+but after having them bandaged he uncovered them again, saying, "If my
+memory does not deceive me, I have read in Virgil of the Palladium of
+Troy, a wooden horse the Greeks offered to the goddess Pallas, which was
+big with armed knights, who were afterwards the destruction of Troy; so
+it would be as well to see, first of all, what Clavileno has in his
+stomach."
+
+"There is no occasion," said the Distressed One; "I will be bail for him,
+and I know that Malambruno has nothing tricky or treacherous about him;
+you may mount without any fear, Senor Don Quixote; on my head be it if
+any harm befalls you."
+
+Don Quixote thought that to say anything further with regard to his
+safety would be putting his courage in an unfavourable light; and so,
+without more words, he mounted Clavileno, and tried the peg, which turned
+easily; and as he had no stirrups and his legs hung down, he looked like
+nothing so much as a figure in some Roman triumph painted or embroidered
+on a Flemish tapestry.
+
+Much against the grain, and very slowly, Sancho proceeded to mount, and,
+after settling himself as well as he could on the croup, found it rather
+hard, and not at all soft, and asked the duke if it would be possible to
+oblige him with a pad of some kind, or a cushion; even if it were off the
+couch of his lady the duchess, or the bed of one of the pages; as the
+haunches of that horse were more like marble than wood. On this the
+Trifaldi observed that Clavileno would not bear any kind of harness or
+trappings, and that his best plan would be to sit sideways like a woman,
+as in that way he would not feel the hardness so much.
+
+Sancho did so, and, bidding them farewell, allowed his eyes to be
+bandaged, but immediately afterwards uncovered them again, and looking
+tenderly and tearfully on those in the garden, bade them help him in his
+present strait with plenty of Paternosters and Ave Marias, that God might
+provide some one to say as many for them, whenever they found themselves
+in a similar emergency.
+
+At this Don Quixote exclaimed, "Art thou on the gallows, thief, or at thy
+last moment, to use pitiful entreaties of that sort? Cowardly, spiritless
+creature, art thou not in the very place the fair Magalona occupied, and
+from which she descended, not into the grave, but to become Queen of
+France; unless the histories lie? And I who am here beside thee, may I
+not put myself on a par with the valiant Pierres, who pressed this very
+spot that I now press? Cover thine eyes, cover thine eyes, abject animal,
+and let not thy fear escape thy lips, at least in my presence."
+
+"Blindfold me," said Sancho; "as you won't let me commend myself or be
+commended to God, is it any wonder if I am afraid there is a region of
+devils about here that will carry us off to Peralvillo?"
+
+They were then blindfolded, and Don Quixote, finding himself settled to
+his satisfaction, felt for the peg, and the instant he placed his fingers
+on it, all the duennas and all who stood by lifted up their voices
+exclaiming, "God guide thee, valiant knight! God be with thee, intrepid
+squire! Now, now ye go cleaving the air more swiftly than an arrow! Now
+ye begin to amaze and astonish all who are gazing at you from the earth!
+Take care not to wobble about, valiant Sancho! Mind thou fall not, for
+thy fall will be worse than that rash youth's who tried to steer the
+chariot of his father the Sun!"
+
+As Sancho heard the voices, clinging tightly to his master and winding
+his arms round him, he said, "Senor, how do they make out we are going up
+so high, if their voices reach us here and they seem to be speaking quite
+close to us?"
+
+"Don't mind that, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "for as affairs of this
+sort, and flights like this are out of the common course of things, you
+can see and hear as much as you like a thousand leagues off; but don't
+squeeze me so tight or thou wilt upset me; and really I know not what
+thou hast to be uneasy or frightened at, for I can safely swear I never
+mounted a smoother-going steed all the days of my life; one would fancy
+we never stirred from one place. Banish fear, my friend, for indeed
+everything is going as it ought, and we have the wind astern."
+
+"That's true," said Sancho, "for such a strong wind comes against me on
+this side, that it seems as if people were blowing on me with a thousand
+pair of bellows;" which was the case; they were puffing at him with a
+great pair of bellows; for the whole adventure was so well planned by the
+duke, the duchess, and their majordomo, that nothing was omitted to make
+it perfectly successful.
+
+Don Quixote now, feeling the blast, said, "Beyond a doubt, Sancho, we
+must have already reached the second region of the air, where the hail
+and snow are generated; the thunder, the lightning, and the thunderbolts
+are engendered in the third region, and if we go on ascending at this
+rate, we shall shortly plunge into the region of fire, and I know not how
+to regulate this peg, so as not to mount up where we shall be burned."
+
+And now they began to warm their faces, from a distance, with tow that
+could be easily set on fire and extinguished again, fixed on the end of a
+cane. On feeling the heat Sancho said, "May I die if we are not already
+in that fire place, or very near it, for a good part of my beard has been
+singed, and I have a mind, senor, to uncover and see whereabouts we are."
+
+"Do nothing of the kind," said Don Quixote; "remember the true story of
+the licentiate Torralva that the devils carried flying through the air
+riding on a stick with his eyes shut; who in twelve hours reached Rome
+and dismounted at Torre di Nona, which is a street of the city, and saw
+the whole sack and storming and the death of Bourbon, and was back in
+Madrid the next morning, where he gave an account of all he had seen; and
+he said moreover that as he was going through the air, the devil bade him
+open his eyes, and he did so, and saw himself so near the body of the
+moon, so it seemed to him, that he could have laid hold of it with his
+hand, and that he did not dare to look at the earth lest he should be
+seized with giddiness. So that, Sancho, it will not do for us to uncover
+ourselves, for he who has us in charge will be responsible for us; and
+perhaps we are gaining an altitude and mounting up to enable us to
+descend at one swoop on the kingdom of Kandy, as the saker or falcon does
+on the heron, so as to seize it however high it may soar; and though it
+seems to us not half an hour since we left the garden, believe me we must
+have travelled a great distance."
+
+"I don't know how that may be," said Sancho; "all I know is that if the
+Senora Magallanes or Magalona was satisfied with this croup, she could
+not have been very tender of flesh."
+
+The duke, the duchess, and all in the garden were listening to the
+conversation of the two heroes, and were beyond measure amused by it; and
+now, desirous of putting a finishing touch to this rare and
+well-contrived adventure, they applied a light to Clavileno's tail with
+some tow, and the horse, being full of squibs and crackers, immediately
+blew up with a prodigious noise, and brought Don Quixote and Sancho Panza
+to the ground half singed. By this time the bearded band of duennas, the
+Trifaldi and all, had vanished from the garden, and those that remained
+lay stretched on the ground as if in a swoon. Don Quixote and Sancho got
+up rather shaken, and, looking about them, were filled with amazement at
+finding themselves in the same garden from which they had started, and
+seeing such a number of people stretched on the ground; and their
+astonishment was increased when at one side of the garden they perceived
+a tall lance planted in the ground, and hanging from it by two cords of
+green silk a smooth white parchment on which there was the following
+inscription in large gold letters: "The illustrious knight Don Quixote of
+La Mancha has, by merely attempting it, finished and concluded the
+adventure of the Countess Trifaldi, otherwise called the Distressed
+Duenna; Malambruno is now satisfied on every point, the chins of the
+duennas are now smooth and clean, and King Don Clavijo and Queen
+Antonomasia in their original form; and when the squirely flagellation
+shall have been completed, the white dove shall find herself delivered
+from the pestiferous gerfalcons that persecute her, and in the arms of
+her beloved mate; for such is the decree of the sage Merlin,
+arch-enchanter of enchanters."
+
+As soon as Don Quixote had read the inscription on the parchment he
+perceived clearly that it referred to the disenchantment of Dulcinea, and
+returning hearty thanks to heaven that he had with so little danger
+achieved so grand an exploit as to restore to their former complexion the
+countenances of those venerable duennas, he advanced towards the duke and
+duchess, who had not yet come to themselves, and taking the duke by the
+hand he said, "Be of good cheer, worthy sir, be of good cheer; it's
+nothing at all; the adventure is now over and without any harm done, as
+the inscription fixed on this post shows plainly."
+
+The duke came to himself slowly and like one recovering consciousness
+after a heavy sleep, and the duchess and all who had fallen prostrate
+about the garden did the same, with such demonstrations of wonder and
+amazement that they would have almost persuaded one that what they
+pretended so adroitly in jest had happened to them in reality. The duke
+read the placard with half-shut eyes, and then ran to embrace Don Quixote
+with-open arms, declaring him to be the best knight that had ever been
+seen in any age. Sancho kept looking about for the Distressed One, to see
+what her face was like without the beard, and if she was as fair as her
+elegant person promised; but they told him that, the instant Clavileno
+descended flaming through the air and came to the ground, the whole band
+of duennas with the Trifaldi vanished, and that they were already shaved
+and without a stump left.
+
+The duchess asked Sancho how he had fared on that long journey, to which
+Sancho replied, "I felt, senora, that we were flying through the region
+of fire, as my master told me, and I wanted to uncover my eyes for a bit;
+but my master, when I asked leave to uncover myself, would not let me;
+but as I have a little bit of curiosity about me, and a desire to know
+what is forbidden and kept from me, quietly and without anyone seeing me
+I drew aside the handkerchief covering my eyes ever so little, close to
+my nose, and from underneath looked towards the earth, and it seemed to
+me that it was altogether no bigger than a grain of mustard seed, and
+that the men walking on it were little bigger than hazel nuts; so you may
+see how high we must have got to then."
+
+To this the duchess said, "Sancho, my friend, mind what you are saying;
+it seems you could not have seen the earth, but only the men walking on
+it; for if the earth looked to you like a grain of mustard seed, and each
+man like a hazel nut, one man alone would have covered the whole earth."
+
+"That is true," said Sancho, "but for all that I got a glimpse of a bit
+of one side of it, and saw it all."
+
+"Take care, Sancho," said the duchess, "with a bit of one side one does
+not see the whole of what one looks at."
+
+"I don't understand that way of looking at things," said Sancho; "I only
+know that your ladyship will do well to bear in mind that as we were
+flying by enchantment so I might have seen the whole earth and all the
+men by enchantment whatever way I looked; and if you won't believe this,
+no more will you believe that, uncovering myself nearly to the eyebrows,
+I saw myself so close to the sky that there was not a palm and a half
+between me and it; and by everything that I can swear by, senora, it is
+mighty great! And it so happened we came by where the seven goats are,
+and by God and upon my soul, as in my youth I was a goatherd in my own
+country, as soon as I saw them I felt a longing to be among them for a
+little, and if I had not given way to it I think I'd have burst. So I
+come and take, and what do I do? without saying anything to anybody, not
+even to my master, softly and quietly I got down from Clavileno and
+amused myself with the goats--which are like violets, like flowers--for
+nigh three-quarters of an hour; and Clavileno never stirred or moved from
+one spot."
+
+"And while the good Sancho was amusing himself with the goats," said the
+duke, "how did Senor Don Quixote amuse himself?"
+
+To which Don Quixote replied, "As all these things and such like
+occurrences are out of the ordinary course of nature, it is no wonder
+that Sancho says what he does; for my own part I can only say that I did
+not uncover my eyes either above or below, nor did I see sky or earth or
+sea or shore. It is true I felt that I was passing through the region of
+the air, and even that I touched that of fire; but that we passed farther
+I cannot believe; for the region of fire being between the heaven of the
+moon and the last region of the air, we could not have reached that
+heaven where the seven goats Sancho speaks of are without being burned;
+and as we were not burned, either Sancho is lying or Sancho is dreaming."
+
+"I am neither lying nor dreaming," said Sancho; "only ask me the tokens
+of those same goats, and you'll see by that whether I'm telling the truth
+or not."
+
+"Tell us them then, Sancho," said the duchess.
+
+"Two of them," said Sancho, "are green, two blood-red, two blue, and one
+a mixture of all colours."
+
+"An odd sort of goat, that," said the duke; "in this earthly region of
+ours we have no such colours; I mean goats of such colours."
+
+"That's very plain," said Sancho; "of course there must be a difference
+between the goats of heaven and the goats of the earth."
+
+"Tell me, Sancho," said the duke, "did you see any he-goat among those
+goats?"
+
+"No, senor," said Sancho; "but I have heard say that none ever passed the
+horns of the moon."
+
+They did not care to ask him anything more about his journey, for they
+saw he was in the vein to go rambling all over the heavens giving an
+account of everything that went on there, without having ever stirred
+from the garden. Such, in short, was the end of the adventure of the
+Distressed Duenna, which gave the duke and duchess laughing matter not
+only for the time being, but for all their lives, and Sancho something to
+talk about for ages, if he lived so long; but Don Quixote, coming close
+to his ear, said to him, "Sancho, as you would have us believe what you
+saw in heaven, I require you to believe me as to what I saw in the cave
+of Montesinos; I say no more."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+OF THE COUNSELS WHICH DON QUIXOTE GAVE SANCHO PANZA BEFORE HE SET OUT TO
+GOVERN THE ISLAND, TOGETHER WITH OTHER WELL-CONSIDERED MATTERS
+
+
+The duke and duchess were so well pleased with the successful and droll
+result of the adventure of the Distressed One, that they resolved to
+carry on the joke, seeing what a fit subject they had to deal with for
+making it all pass for reality. So having laid their plans and given
+instructions to their servants and vassals how to behave to Sancho in his
+government of the promised island, the next day, that following
+Clavileno's flight, the duke told Sancho to prepare and get ready to go
+and be governor, for his islanders were already looking out for him as
+for the showers of May.
+
+Sancho made him an obeisance, and said, "Ever since I came down from
+heaven, and from the top of it beheld the earth, and saw how little it
+is, the great desire I had to be a governor has been partly cooled in me;
+for what is there grand in being ruler on a grain of mustard seed, or
+what dignity or authority in governing half a dozen men about as big as
+hazel nuts; for, so far as I could see, there were no more on the whole
+earth? If your lordship would be so good as to give me ever so small a
+bit of heaven, were it no more than half a league, I'd rather have it
+than the best island in the world."
+
+"Recollect, Sancho," said the duke, "I cannot give a bit of heaven, no
+not so much as the breadth of my nail, to anyone; rewards and favours of
+that sort are reserved for God alone. What I can give I give you, and
+that is a real, genuine island, compact, well proportioned, and
+uncommonly fertile and fruitful, where, if you know how to use your
+opportunities, you may, with the help of the world's riches, gain those
+of heaven."
+
+"Well then," said Sancho, "let the island come; and I'll try and be such
+a governor, that in spite of scoundrels I'll go to heaven; and it's not
+from any craving to quit my own humble condition or better myself, but
+from the desire I have to try what it tastes like to be a governor."
+
+"If you once make trial of it, Sancho," said the duke, "you'll eat your
+fingers off after the government, so sweet a thing is it to command and
+be obeyed. Depend upon it when your master comes to be emperor (as he
+will beyond a doubt from the course his affairs are taking), it will be
+no easy matter to wrest the dignity from him, and he will be sore and
+sorry at heart to have been so long without becoming one."
+
+"Senor," said Sancho, "it is my belief it's a good thing to be in
+command, if it's only over a drove of cattle."
+
+"May I be buried with you, Sancho," said the duke, "but you know
+everything; I hope you will make as good a governor as your sagacity
+promises; and that is all I have to say; and now remember to-morrow is
+the day you must set out for the government of the island, and this
+evening they will provide you with the proper attire for you to wear, and
+all things requisite for your departure."
+
+"Let them dress me as they like," said Sancho; "however I'm dressed I'll
+be Sancho Panza."
+
+"That's true," said the duke; "but one's dress must be suited to the
+office or rank one holds; for it would not do for a jurist to dress like
+a soldier, or a soldier like a priest. You, Sancho, shall go partly as a
+lawyer, partly as a captain, for, in the island I am giving you, arms are
+needed as much as letters, and letters as much as arms."
+
+"Of letters I know but little," said Sancho, "for I don't even know the A
+B C; but it is enough for me to have the Christus in my memory to be a
+good governor. As for arms, I'll handle those they give me till I drop,
+and then, God be my help!"
+
+"With so good a memory," said the duke, "Sancho cannot go wrong in
+anything."
+
+Here Don Quixote joined them; and learning what passed, and how soon
+Sancho was to go to his government, he with the duke's permission took
+him by the hand, and retired to his room with him for the purpose of
+giving him advice as to how he was to demean himself in his office. As
+soon as they had entered the chamber he closed the door after him, and
+almost by force made Sancho sit down beside him, and in a quiet tone thus
+addressed him: "I give infinite thanks to heaven, friend Sancho, that,
+before I have met with any good luck, fortune has come forward to meet
+thee. I who counted upon my good fortune to discharge the recompense of
+thy services, find myself still waiting for advancement, while thou,
+before the time, and contrary to all reasonable expectation, seest
+thyself blessed in the fulfillment of thy desires. Some will bribe, beg,
+solicit, rise early, entreat, persist, without attaining the object of
+their suit; while another comes, and without knowing why or wherefore,
+finds himself invested with the place or office so many have sued for;
+and here it is that the common saying, 'There is good luck as well as bad
+luck in suits,' applies. Thou, who, to my thinking, art beyond all doubt
+a dullard, without early rising or night watching or taking any trouble,
+with the mere breath of knight-errantry that has breathed upon thee,
+seest thyself without more ado governor of an island, as though it were a
+mere matter of course. This I say, Sancho, that thou attribute not the
+favour thou hast received to thine own merits, but give thanks to heaven
+that disposes matters beneficently, and secondly thanks to the great
+power the profession of knight-errantry contains in itself. With a heart,
+then, inclined to believe what I have said to thee, attend, my son, to
+thy Cato here who would counsel thee and be thy polestar and guide to
+direct and pilot thee to a safe haven out of this stormy sea wherein thou
+art about to ingulf thyself; for offices and great trusts are nothing
+else but a mighty gulf of troubles.
+
+"First of all, my son, thou must fear God, for in the fear of him is
+wisdom, and being wise thou canst not err in aught.
+
+"Secondly, thou must keep in view what thou art, striving to know
+thyself, the most difficult thing to know that the mind can imagine. If
+thou knowest thyself, it will follow thou wilt not puff thyself up like
+the frog that strove to make himself as large as the ox; if thou dost,
+the recollection of having kept pigs in thine own country will serve as
+the ugly feet for the wheel of thy folly."
+
+"That's the truth," said Sancho; "but that was when I was a boy;
+afterwards when I was something more of a man it was geese I kept, not
+pigs. But to my thinking that has nothing to do with it; for all who are
+governors don't come of a kingly stock."
+
+"True," said Don Quixote, "and for that reason those who are not of noble
+origin should take care that the dignity of the office they hold he
+accompanied by a gentle suavity, which wisely managed will save them from
+the sneers of malice that no station escapes.
+
+"Glory in thy humble birth, Sancho, and be not ashamed of saying thou art
+peasant-born; for when it is seen thou art not ashamed no one will set
+himself to put thee to the blush; and pride thyself rather upon being one
+of lowly virtue than a lofty sinner. Countless are they who, born of mean
+parentage, have risen to the highest dignities, pontifical and imperial,
+and of the truth of this I could give thee instances enough to weary
+thee.
+
+"Remember, Sancho, if thou make virtue thy aim, and take a pride in doing
+virtuous actions, thou wilt have no cause to envy those who have princely
+and lordly ones, for blood is an inheritance, but virtue an acquisition,
+and virtue has in itself alone a worth that blood does not possess.
+
+"This being so, if perchance anyone of thy kinsfolk should come to see
+thee when thou art in thine island, thou art not to repel or slight him,
+but on the contrary to welcome him, entertain him, and make much of him;
+for in so doing thou wilt be approved of heaven (which is not pleased
+that any should despise what it hath made), and wilt comply with the laws
+of well-ordered nature.
+
+"If thou carriest thy wife with thee (and it is not well for those that
+administer governments to be long without their wives), teach and
+instruct her, and strive to smooth down her natural roughness; for all
+that may be gained by a wise governor may be lost and wasted by a boorish
+stupid wife.
+
+"If perchance thou art left a widower--a thing which may happen--and in
+virtue of thy office seekest a consort of higher degree, choose not one
+to serve thee for a hook, or for a fishing-rod, or for the hood of thy
+'won't have it;' for verily, I tell thee, for all the judge's wife
+receives, the husband will be held accountable at the general calling to
+account; where he will have repay in death fourfold, items that in life
+he regarded as naught.
+
+"Never go by arbitrary law, which is so much favoured by ignorant men who
+plume themselves on cleverness.
+
+"Let the tears of the poor man find with thee more compassion, but not
+more justice, than the pleadings of the rich.
+
+"Strive to lay bare the truth, as well amid the promises and presents of
+the rich man, as amid the sobs and entreaties of the poor.
+
+"When equity may and should be brought into play, press not the utmost
+rigour of the law against the guilty; for the reputation of the stern
+judge stands not higher than that of the compassionate.
+
+"If perchance thou permittest the staff of justice to swerve, let it be
+not by the weight of a gift, but by that of mercy.
+
+"If it should happen thee to give judgment in the cause of one who is
+thine enemy, turn thy thoughts away from thy injury and fix them on the
+justice of the case.
+
+"Let not thine own passion blind thee in another man's cause; for the
+errors thou wilt thus commit will be most frequently irremediable; or if
+not, only to be remedied at the expense of thy good name and even of thy
+fortune.
+
+"If any handsome woman come to seek justice of thee, turn away thine eyes
+from her tears and thine ears from her lamentations, and consider
+deliberately the merits of her demand, if thou wouldst not have thy
+reason swept away by her weeping, and thy rectitude by her sighs.
+
+"Abuse not by word him whom thou hast to punish in deed, for the pain of
+punishment is enough for the unfortunate without the addition of thine
+objurgations.
+
+"Bear in mind that the culprit who comes under thy jurisdiction is but a
+miserable man subject to all the propensities of our depraved nature, and
+so far as may be in thy power show thyself lenient and forbearing; for
+though the attributes of God are all equal, to our eyes that of mercy is
+brighter and loftier than that of justice.
+
+"If thou followest these precepts and rules, Sancho, thy days will be
+long, thy fame eternal, thy reward abundant, thy felicity unutterable;
+thou wilt marry thy children as thou wouldst; they and thy grandchildren
+will bear titles; thou wilt live in peace and concord with all men; and,
+when life draws to a close, death will come to thee in calm and ripe old
+age, and the light and loving hands of thy great-grandchildren will close
+thine eyes.
+
+"What I have thus far addressed to thee are instructions for the
+adornment of thy mind; listen now to those which tend to that of the
+body."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+OF THE SECOND SET OF COUNSELS DON QUIXOTE GAVE SANCHO PANZA
+
+
+Who, hearing the foregoing discourse of Don Quixote, would not have set
+him down for a person of great good sense and greater rectitude of
+purpose? But, as has been frequently observed in the course of this great
+history, he only talked nonsense when he touched on chivalry, and in
+discussing all other subjects showed that he had a clear and unbiassed
+understanding; so that at every turn his acts gave the lie to his
+intellect, and his intellect to his acts; but in the case of these second
+counsels that he gave Sancho he showed himself to have a lively turn of
+humour, and displayed conspicuously his wisdom, and also his folly.
+
+Sancho listened to him with the deepest attention, and endeavoured to fix
+his counsels in his memory, like one who meant to follow them and by
+their means bring the full promise of his government to a happy issue.
+Don Quixote, then, went on to say:
+
+"With regard to the mode in which thou shouldst govern thy person and thy
+house, Sancho, the first charge I have to give thee is to be clean, and
+to cut thy nails, not letting them grow as some do, whose ignorance makes
+them fancy that long nails are an ornament to their hands, as if those
+excrescences they neglect to cut were nails, and not the talons of a
+lizard-catching kestrel--a filthy and unnatural abuse.
+
+"Go not ungirt and loose, Sancho; for disordered attire is a sign of an
+unstable mind, unless indeed the slovenliness and slackness is to be set
+down to craft, as was the common opinion in the case of Julius Caesar.
+
+"Ascertain cautiously what thy office may be worth; and if it will allow
+thee to give liveries to thy servants, give them respectable and
+serviceable, rather than showy and gay ones, and divide them between thy
+servants and the poor; that is to say, if thou canst clothe six pages,
+clothe three and three poor men, and thus thou wilt have pages for heaven
+and pages for earth; the vainglorious never think of this new mode of
+giving liveries.
+
+"Eat not garlic nor onions, lest they find out thy boorish origin by the
+smell; walk slowly and speak deliberately, but not in such a way as to
+make it seem thou art listening to thyself, for all affectation is bad.
+
+"Dine sparingly and sup more sparingly still; for the health of the whole
+body is forged in the workshop of the stomach.
+
+"Be temperate in drinking, bearing in mind that wine in excess keeps
+neither secrets nor promises.
+
+"Take care, Sancho, not to chew on both sides, and not to eruct in
+anybody's presence."
+
+"Eruct!" said Sancho; "I don't know what that means."
+
+"To eruct, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "means to belch, and that is one of
+the filthiest words in the Spanish language, though a very expressive
+one; and therefore nice folk have had recourse to the Latin, and instead
+of belch say eruct, and instead of belches say eructations; and if some
+do not understand these terms it matters little, for custom will bring
+them into use in the course of time, so that they will be readily
+understood; this is the way a language is enriched; custom and the public
+are all-powerful there."
+
+"In truth, senor," said Sancho, "one of the counsels and cautions I mean
+to bear in mind shall be this, not to belch, for I'm constantly doing
+it."
+
+"Eruct, Sancho, not belch," said Don Quixote.
+
+"Eruct, I shall say henceforth, and I swear not to forget it," said
+Sancho.
+
+"Likewise, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "thou must not mingle such a
+quantity of proverbs in thy discourse as thou dost; for though proverbs
+are short maxims, thou dost drag them in so often by the head and
+shoulders that they savour more of nonsense than of maxims."
+
+"God alone can cure that," said Sancho; "for I have more proverbs in me
+than a book, and when I speak they come so thick together into my mouth
+that they fall to fighting among themselves to get out; that's why my
+tongue lets fly the first that come, though they may not be pat to the
+purpose. But I'll take care henceforward to use such as befit the dignity
+of my office; for 'in a house where there's plenty, supper is soon
+cooked,' and 'he who binds does not wrangle,' and 'the bell-ringer's in a
+safe berth,' and 'giving and keeping require brains.'"
+
+"That's it, Sancho!" said Don Quixote; "pack, tack, string proverbs
+together; nobody is hindering thee! 'My mother beats me, and I go on with
+my tricks.' I am bidding thee avoid proverbs, and here in a second thou
+hast shot out a whole litany of them, which have as much to do with what
+we are talking about as 'over the hills of Ubeda.' Mind, Sancho, I do not
+say that a proverb aptly brought in is objectionable; but to pile up and
+string together proverbs at random makes conversation dull and vulgar.
+
+"When thou ridest on horseback, do not go lolling with thy body on the
+back of the saddle, nor carry thy legs stiff or sticking out from the
+horse's belly, nor yet sit so loosely that one would suppose thou wert on
+Dapple; for the seat on a horse makes gentlemen of some and grooms of
+others.
+
+"Be moderate in thy sleep; for he who does not rise early does not get
+the benefit of the day; and remember, Sancho, diligence is the mother of
+good fortune, and indolence, its opposite, never yet attained the object
+of an honest ambition.
+
+"The last counsel I will give thee now, though it does not tend to bodily
+improvement, I would have thee carry carefully in thy memory, for I
+believe it will be no less useful to thee than those I have given thee
+already, and it is this--never engage in a dispute about families, at
+least in the way of comparing them one with another; for necessarily one
+of those compared will be better than the other, and thou wilt be hated
+by the one thou hast disparaged, and get nothing in any shape from the
+one thou hast exalted.
+
+"Thy attire shall be hose of full length, a long jerkin, and a cloak a
+trifle longer; loose breeches by no means, for they are becoming neither
+for gentlemen nor for governors.
+
+"For the present, Sancho, this is all that has occurred to me to advise
+thee; as time goes by and occasions arise my instructions shall follow,
+if thou take care to let me know how thou art circumstanced."
+
+"Senor," said Sancho, "I see well enough that all these things your
+worship has said to me are good, holy, and profitable; but what use will
+they be to me if I don't remember one of them? To be sure that about not
+letting my nails grow, and marrying again if I have the chance, will not
+slip out of my head; but all that other hash, muddle, and jumble--I don't
+and can't recollect any more of it than of last year's clouds; so it must
+be given me in writing; for though I can't either read or write, I'll
+give it to my confessor, to drive it into me and remind me of it whenever
+it is necessary."
+
+"Ah, sinner that I am!" said Don Quixote, "how bad it looks in governors
+not to know how to read or write; for let me tell thee, Sancho, when a
+man knows not how to read, or is left-handed, it argues one of two
+things; either that he was the son of exceedingly mean and lowly parents,
+or that he himself was so incorrigible and ill-conditioned that neither
+good company nor good teaching could make any impression on him. It is a
+great defect that thou labourest under, and therefore I would have thee
+learn at any rate to sign thy name." "I can sign my name well enough,"
+said Sancho, "for when I was steward of the brotherhood in my village I
+learned to make certain letters, like the marks on bales of goods, which
+they told me made out my name. Besides I can pretend my right hand is
+disabled and make some one else sign for me, for 'there's a remedy for
+everything except death;' and as I shall be in command and hold the
+staff, I can do as I like; moreover, 'he who has the alcalde for his
+father-,' and I'll be governor, and that's higher than alcalde. Only come
+and see! Let them make light of me and abuse me; 'they'll come for wool
+and go back shorn;' 'whom God loves, his house is known to Him;' 'the
+silly sayings of the rich pass for saws in the world;' and as I'll be
+rich, being a governor, and at the same time generous, as I mean to be,
+no fault will be seen in me. 'Only make yourself honey and the flies will
+suck you;' 'as much as thou hast so much art thou worth,' as my
+grandmother used to say; and 'thou canst have no revenge of a man of
+substance.'"
+
+"Oh, God's curse upon thee, Sancho!" here exclaimed Don Quixote; "sixty
+thousand devils fly away with thee and thy proverbs! For the last hour
+thou hast been stringing them together and inflicting the pangs of
+torture on me with every one of them. Those proverbs will bring thee to
+the gallows one day, I promise thee; thy subjects will take the
+government from thee, or there will be revolts among them. Tell me, where
+dost thou pick them up, thou booby? How dost thou apply them, thou
+blockhead? For with me, to utter one and make it apply properly, I have
+to sweat and labour as if I were digging."
+
+"By God, master mine," said Sancho, "your worship is making a fuss about
+very little. Why the devil should you be vexed if I make use of what is
+my own? And I have got nothing else, nor any other stock in trade except
+proverbs and more proverbs; and here are three just this instant come
+into my head, pat to the purpose and like pears in a basket; but I won't
+repeat them, for 'sage silence is called Sancho.'"
+
+"That, Sancho, thou art not," said Don Quixote; "for not only art thou
+not sage silence, but thou art pestilent prate and perversity; still I
+would like to know what three proverbs have just now come into thy
+memory, for I have been turning over mine own--and it is a good one--and
+none occurs to me."
+
+"What can be better," said Sancho, "than 'never put thy thumbs between
+two back teeth;' and 'to "get out of my house" and "what do you want with
+my wife?" there is no answer;' and 'whether the pitcher hits the stove,
+or the stove the pitcher, it's a bad business for the pitcher;' all which
+fit to a hair? For no one should quarrel with his governor, or him in
+authority over him, because he will come off the worst, as he does who
+puts his finger between two back and if they are not back teeth it makes
+no difference, so long as they are teeth; and to whatever the governor
+may say there's no answer, any more than to 'get out of my house' and
+'what do you want with my wife?' and then, as for that about the stone
+and the pitcher, a blind man could see that. So that he 'who sees the
+mote in another's eye had need to see the beam in his own,' that it be
+not said of himself, 'the dead woman was frightened at the one with her
+throat cut;' and your worship knows well that 'the fool knows more in his
+own house than the wise man in another's.'"
+
+"Nay, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "the fool knows nothing, either in his
+own house or in anybody else's, for no wise structure of any sort can
+stand on a foundation of folly; but let us say no more about it, Sancho,
+for if thou governest badly, thine will be the fault and mine the shame;
+but I comfort myself with having done my duty in advising thee as
+earnestly and as wisely as I could; and thus I am released from my
+obligations and my promise. God guide thee, Sancho, and govern thee in
+thy government, and deliver me from the misgiving I have that thou wilt
+turn the whole island upside down, a thing I might easily prevent by
+explaining to the duke what thou art and telling him that all that fat
+little person of thine is nothing else but a sack full of proverbs and
+sauciness."
+
+"Senor," said Sancho, "if your worship thinks I'm not fit for this
+government, I give it up on the spot; for the mere black of the nail of
+my soul is dearer to me than my whole body; and I can live just as well,
+simple Sancho, on bread and onions, as governor, on partridges and
+capons; and what's more, while we're asleep we're all equal, great and
+small, rich and poor. But if your worship looks into it, you will see it
+was your worship alone that put me on to this business of governing; for
+I know no more about the government of islands than a buzzard; and if
+there's any reason to think that because of my being a governor the devil
+will get hold of me, I'd rather go Sancho to heaven than governor to
+hell."
+
+"By God, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "for those last words thou hast
+uttered alone, I consider thou deservest to be governor of a thousand
+islands. Thou hast good natural instincts, without which no knowledge is
+worth anything; commend thyself to God, and try not to swerve in the
+pursuit of thy main object; I mean, always make it thy aim and fixed
+purpose to do right in all matters that come before thee, for heaven
+always helps good intentions; and now let us go to dinner, for I think my
+lord and lady are waiting for us."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The History of Don Quixote, Vol. II.,
+Part 30, by Miguel de Cervantes
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