Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
CHAPTER XLIX.
4486 words | Chapter 210
OF WHAT HAPPENED SANCHO IN MAKING THE ROUND OF HIS ISLAND
p49a.jpg (170K)
Full Size
We left the great governor angered and irritated by that
portrait-painting rogue of a farmer who, instructed by the majordomo,
as the majordomo was by the duke, tried to practise upon him; he
however, fool, boor, and clown as he was, held his own against them
all, saying to those round him and to Doctor Pedro Recio, who as soon
as the private business of the duke’s letter was disposed of had
returned to the room, “Now I see plainly enough that judges and
governors ought to be and must be made of brass not to feel the
importunities of the applicants that at all times and all seasons
insist on being heard, and having their business despatched, and their
own affairs and no others attended to, come what may; and if the poor
judge does not hear them and settle the matter—either because he cannot
or because that is not the time set apart for hearing them—forthwith
they abuse him, and run him down, and gnaw at his bones, and even pick
holes in his pedigree. You silly, stupid applicant, don’t be in a
hurry; wait for the proper time and season for doing business; don’t
come at dinner-hour, or at bed-time; for judges are only flesh and
blood, and must give to Nature what she naturally demands of them; all
except myself, for in my case I give her nothing to eat, thanks to
Señor Doctor Pedro Recio Tirteafuera here, who would have me die of
hunger, and declares that death to be life; and the same sort of life
may God give him and all his kind—I mean the bad doctors; for the good
ones deserve palms and laurels.”
All who knew Sancho Panza were astonished to hear him speak so
elegantly, and did not know what to attribute it to unless it were that
office and grave responsibility either smarten or stupefy men’s wits.
At last Doctor Pedro Recio Agilers of Tirteafuera promised to let him
have supper that night though it might be in contravention of all the
aphorisms of Hippocrates. With this the governor was satisfied and
looked forward to the approach of night and supper-time with great
anxiety; and though time, to his mind, stood still and made no
progress, nevertheless the hour he so longed for came, and they gave
him a beef salad with onions and some boiled calves’ feet rather far
gone. At this he fell to with greater relish than if they had given him
francolins from Milan, pheasants from Rome, veal from Sorrento,
partridges from Moron, or geese from Lavajos, and turning to the doctor
at supper he said to him, “Look here, señor doctor, for the future
don’t trouble yourself about giving me dainty things or choice dishes
to eat, for it will be only taking my stomach off its hinges; it is
accustomed to goat, cow, bacon, hung beef, turnips and onions; and if
by any chance it is given these palace dishes, it receives them
squeamishly, and sometimes with loathing. What the head-carver had best
do is to serve me with what they call ollas podridas (and the rottener
they are the better they smell); and he can put whatever he likes into
them, so long as it is good to eat, and I’ll be obliged to him, and
will requite him some day. But let nobody play pranks on me, for either
we are or we are not; let us live and eat in peace and good-fellowship,
for when God sends the dawn, he sends it for all. I mean to govern this
island without giving up a right or taking a bribe; let everyone keep
his eye open, and look out for the arrow; for I can tell them ‘the
devil’s in Cantillana,’ and if they drive me to it they’ll see
something that will astonish them. Nay! make yourself honey and the
flies eat you.”
“Of a truth, señor governor,” said the carver, “your worship is in the
right of it in everything you have said; and I promise you in the name
of all the inhabitants of this island that they will serve your worship
with all zeal, affection, and good-will, for the mild kind of
government you have given a sample of to begin with, leaves them no
ground for doing or thinking anything to your worship’s disadvantage.”
“That I believe,” said Sancho; “and they would be great fools if they
did or thought otherwise; once more I say, see to my feeding and my
Dapple’s for that is the great point and what is most to the purpose;
and when the hour comes let us go the rounds, for it is my intention to
purge this island of all manner of uncleanness and of all idle
good-for-nothing vagabonds; for I would have you know that lazy idlers
are the same thing in a State as the drones in a hive, that eat up the
honey the industrious bees make. I mean to protect the husbandman, to
preserve to the gentleman his privileges, to reward the virtuous, and
above all to respect religion and honour its ministers. What say you to
that, my friends? Is there anything in what I say, or am I talking to
no purpose?”
“There is so much in what your worship says, señor governor,” said the
majordomo, “that I am filled with wonder when I see a man like your
worship, entirely without learning (for I believe you have none at
all), say such things, and so full of sound maxims and sage remarks,
very different from what was expected of your worship’s intelligence by
those who sent us or by us who came here. Every day we see something
new in this world; jokes become realities, and the jokers find the
tables turned upon them.”
Night came, and with the permission of Doctor Pedro Recio, the governor
had supper. They then got ready to go the rounds, and he started with
the majordomo, the secretary, the head-carver, the chronicler charged
with recording his deeds, and alguacils and notaries enough to form a
fair-sized squadron. In the midst marched Sancho with his staff, as
fine a sight as one could wish to see, and but a few streets of the
town had been traversed when they heard a noise as of a clashing of
swords. They hastened to the spot, and found that the combatants were
but two, who seeing the authorities approaching stood still, and one of
them exclaimed, “Help, in the name of God and the king! Are men to be
allowed to rob in the middle of this town, and rush out and attack
people in the very streets?”
“Be calm, my good man,” said Sancho, “and tell me what the cause of
this quarrel is; for I am the governor.”
Said the other combatant, “Señor governor, I will tell you in a very
few words. Your worship must know that this gentleman has just now won
more than a thousand reals in that gambling house opposite, and God
knows how. I was there, and gave more than one doubtful point in his
favour, very much against what my conscience told me. He made off with
his winnings, and when I made sure he was going to give me a crown or
so at least by way of a present, as it is usual and customary to give
men of quality of my sort who stand by to see fair or foul play, and
back up swindles, and prevent quarrels, he pocketed his money and left
the house. Indignant at this I followed him, and speaking to him fairly
and civilly asked him to give me if it were only eight reals, for he
knows I am an honest man and that I have neither profession nor
property, for my parents never brought me up to any or left me any; but
the rogue, who is a greater thief than Cacus and a greater sharper than
Andradilla, would not give me more than four reals; so your worship may
see how little shame and conscience he has. But by my faith if you had
not come up I’d have made him disgorge his winnings, and he’d have
learned what the range of the steel-yard was.”
“What say you to this?” asked Sancho. The other replied that all his
antagonist said was true, and that he did not choose to give him more
than four reals because he very often gave him money; and that those
who expected presents ought to be civil and take what is given them
with a cheerful countenance, and not make any claim against winners
unless they know them for certain to be sharpers and their winnings to
be unfairly won; and that there could be no better proof that he
himself was an honest man than his having refused to give anything; for
sharpers always pay tribute to lookers-on who know them.
“That is true,” said the majordomo; “let your worship consider what is
to be done with these men.”
“What is to be done,” said Sancho, “is this; you, the winner, be you
good, bad, or indifferent, give this assailant of yours a hundred reals
at once, and you must disburse thirty more for the poor prisoners; and
you who have neither profession nor property, and hang about the island
in idleness, take these hundred reals now, and some time of the day
to-morrow quit the island under sentence of banishment for ten years,
and under pain of completing it in another life if you violate the
sentence, for I’ll hang you on a gibbet, or at least the hangman will
by my orders; not a word from either of you, or I’ll make him feel my
hand.”
The one paid down the money and the other took it, and the latter
quitted the island, while the other went home; and then the governor
said, “Either I am not good for much, or I’ll get rid of these gambling
houses, for it strikes me they are very mischievous.”
“This one at least,” said one of the notaries, “your worship will not
be able to get rid of, for a great man owns it, and what he loses every
year is beyond all comparison more than what he makes by the cards. On
the minor gambling houses your worship may exercise your power, and it
is they that do most harm and shelter the most barefaced practices; for
in the houses of lords and gentlemen of quality the notorious sharpers
dare not attempt to play their tricks; and as the vice of gambling has
become common, it is better that men should play in houses of repute
than in some tradesman’s, where they catch an unlucky fellow in the
small hours of the morning and skin him alive.”
“I know already, notary, that there is a good deal to be said on that
point,” said Sancho.
And now a tipstaff came up with a young man in his grasp, and said,
“Señor governor, this youth was coming towards us, and as soon as he
saw the officers of justice he turned about and ran like a deer, a sure
proof that he must be some evil-doer; I ran after him, and had it not
been that he stumbled and fell, I should never have caught him.”
“What did you run for, fellow?” said Sancho.
To which the young man replied, “Señor, it was to avoid answering all
the questions officers of justice put.”
“What are you by trade?”
“A weaver.”
“And what do you weave?”
“Lance heads, with your worship’s good leave.”
“You’re facetious with me! You plume yourself on being a wag? Very
good; and where were you going just now?”
“To take the air, señor.”
“And where does one take the air in this island?”
“Where it blows.”
“Good! your answers are very much to the point; you are a smart youth;
but take notice that I am the air, and that I blow upon you a-stern,
and send you to gaol. Ho there! lay hold of him and take him off; I’ll
make him sleep there to-night without air.”
“By God,” said the young man, “your worship will make me sleep in gaol
just as soon as make me king.”
“Why shan’t I make thee sleep in gaol?” said Sancho. “Have I not the
power to arrest thee and release thee whenever I like?”
“All the power your worship has,” said the young man, “won’t be able to
make me sleep in gaol.”
“How? not able!” said Sancho; “take him away at once where he’ll see
his mistake with his own eyes, even if the gaoler is willing to exert
his interested generosity on his behalf; for I’ll lay a penalty of two
thousand ducats on him if he allows him to stir a step from the
prison.”
“That’s ridiculous,” said the young man; “the fact is, all the men on
earth will not make me sleep in prison.”
“Tell me, you devil,” said Sancho, “have you got any angel that will
deliver you, and take off the irons I am going to order them to put
upon you?”
“Now, señor governor,” said the young man in a sprightly manner, “let
us be reasonable and come to the point. Granted your worship may order
me to be taken to prison, and to have irons and chains put on me, and
to be shut up in a cell, and may lay heavy penalties on the gaoler if
he lets me out, and that he obeys your orders; still, if I don’t choose
to sleep, and choose to remain awake all night without closing an eye,
will your worship with all your power be able to make me sleep if I
don’t choose?”
“No, truly,” said the secretary, “and the fellow has made his point.”
“So then,” said Sancho, “it would be entirely of your own choice you
would keep from sleeping; not in opposition to my will?”
“No, señor,” said the youth, “certainly not.”
“Well then, go, and God be with you,” said Sancho; “be off home to
sleep, and God give you sound sleep, for I don’t want to rob you of it;
but for the future, let me advise you don’t joke with the authorities,
because you may come across someone who will bring down the joke on
your own skull.”
The young man went his way, and the governor continued his round, and
shortly afterwards two tipstaffs came up with a man in custody, and
said, “Señor governor, this person, who seems to be a man, is not so,
but a woman, and not an ill-favoured one, in man’s clothes.” They
raised two or three lanterns to her face, and by their light they
distinguished the features of a woman to all appearance of the age of
sixteen or a little more, with her hair gathered into a gold and green
silk net, and fair as a thousand pearls. They scanned her from head to
foot, and observed that she had on red silk stockings with garters of
white taffety bordered with gold and pearl; her breeches were of green
and gold stuff, and under an open jacket or jerkin of the same she wore
a doublet of the finest white and gold cloth; her shoes were white and
such as men wear; she carried no sword at her belt, but only a richly
ornamented dagger, and on her fingers she had several handsome rings.
In short, the girl seemed fair to look at in the eyes of all, and none
of those who beheld her knew her, the people of the town said they
could not imagine who she was, and those who were in on the secret of
the jokes that were to be practised upon Sancho were the ones who were
most surprised, for this incident or discovery had not been arranged by
them; and they watched anxiously to see how the affair would end.
Sancho was fascinated by the girl’s beauty, and he asked her who she
was, where she was going, and what had induced her to dress herself in
that garb. She with her eyes fixed on the ground answered in modest
confusion, “I cannot tell you, señor, before so many people what it is
of such consequence to me to have kept secret; one thing I wish to be
known, that I am no thief or evildoer, but only an unhappy maiden whom
the power of jealousy has led to break through the respect that is due
to modesty.”
Hearing this the majordomo said to Sancho, “Make the people stand back,
señor governor, that this lady may say what she wishes with less
embarrassment.”
Sancho gave the order, and all except the majordomo, the head-carver,
and the secretary fell back. Finding herself then in the presence of no
more, the damsel went on to say, “I am the daughter, sirs, of Pedro
Perez Mazorca, the wool-farmer of this town, who is in the habit of
coming very often to my father’s house.”
“That won’t do, señora,” said the majordomo; “for I know Pedro Perez
very well, and I know he has no child at all, either son or daughter;
and besides, though you say he is your father, you add then that he
comes very often to your father’s house.”
“I had already noticed that,” said Sancho.
“I am confused just now, sirs,” said the damsel, “and I don’t know what
I am saying; but the truth is that I am the daughter of Diego de la
Llana, whom you must all know.”
“Ay, that will do,” said the majordomo; “for I know Diego de la Llana,
and know that he is a gentleman of position and a rich man, and that he
has a son and a daughter, and that since he was left a widower nobody
in all this town can speak of having seen his daughter’s face; for he
keeps her so closely shut up that he does not give even the sun a
chance of seeing her; and for all that report says she is extremely
beautiful.”
“It is true,” said the damsel, “and I am that daughter; whether report
lies or not as to my beauty, you, sirs, will have decided by this time,
as you have seen me;” and with this she began to weep bitterly.
On seeing this the secretary leant over to the head-carver’s ear, and
said to him in a low voice, “Something serious has no doubt happened
this poor maiden, that she goes wandering from home in such a dress and
at such an hour, and one of her rank too.” “There can be no doubt about
it,” returned the carver, “and moreover her tears confirm your
suspicion.” Sancho gave her the best comfort he could, and entreated
her to tell them without any fear what had happened her, as they would
all earnestly and by every means in their power endeavour to relieve
her.
“The fact is, sirs,” said she, “that my father has kept me shut up
these ten years, for so long is it since the earth received my mother.
Mass is said at home in a sumptuous chapel, and all this time I have
seen but the sun in the heaven by day, and the moon and the stars by
night; nor do I know what streets are like, or plazas, or churches, or
even men, except my father and a brother I have, and Pedro Perez the
wool-farmer; whom, because he came frequently to our house, I took it
into my head to call my father, to avoid naming my own. This seclusion
and the restrictions laid upon my going out, were it only to church,
have been keeping me unhappy for many a day and month past; I longed to
see the world, or at least the town where I was born, and it did not
seem to me that this wish was inconsistent with the respect maidens of
good quality should have for themselves. When I heard them talking of
bull-fights taking place, and of javelin games, and of acting plays, I
asked my brother, who is a year younger than myself, to tell me what
sort of things these were, and many more that I had never seen; he
explained them to me as well as he could, but the only effect was to
kindle in me a still stronger desire to see them. At last, to cut short
the story of my ruin, I begged and entreated my brother—O that I had
never made such an entreaty—” And once more she gave way to a burst of
weeping.
“Proceed, señora,” said the majordomo, “and finish your story of what
has happened to you, for your words and tears are keeping us all in
suspense.”
“I have but little more to say, though many a tear to shed,” said the
damsel; “for ill-placed desires can only be paid for in some such way.”
The maiden’s beauty had made a deep impression on the head-carver’s
heart, and he again raised his lantern for another look at her, and
thought they were not tears she was shedding, but seed-pearl or dew of
the meadow, nay, he exalted them still higher, and made Oriental pearls
of them, and fervently hoped her misfortune might not be so great a one
as her tears and sobs seemed to indicate. The governor was losing
patience at the length of time the girl was taking to tell her story,
and told her not to keep them waiting any longer; for it was late, and
there still remained a good deal of the town to be gone over.
She, with broken sobs and half-suppressed sighs, went on to say, “My
misfortune, my misadventure, is simply this, that I entreated my
brother to dress me up as a man in a suit of his clothes, and take me
some night, when our father was asleep, to see the whole town; he,
overcome by my entreaties, consented, and dressing me in this suit and
himself in clothes of mine that fitted him as if made for him (for he
has not a hair on his chin, and might pass for a very beautiful young
girl), to-night, about an hour ago, more or less, we left the house,
and guided by our youthful and foolish impulse we made the circuit of
the whole town, and then, as we were about to return home, we saw a
great troop of people coming, and my brother said to me, ‘Sister, this
must be the round, stir your feet and put wings to them, and follow me
as fast as you can, lest they recognise us, for that would be a bad
business for us;’ and so saying he turned about and began, I cannot say
to run but to fly; in less than six paces I fell from fright, and then
the officer of justice came up and carried me before your worships,
where I find myself put to shame before all these people as whimsical
and vicious.”
“So then, señora,” said Sancho, “no other mishap has befallen you, nor
was it jealousy that made you leave home, as you said at the beginning
of your story?”
“Nothing has happened me,” said she, “nor was it jealousy that brought
me out, but merely a longing to see the world, which did not go beyond
seeing the streets of this town.”
The appearance of the tipstaffs with her brother in custody, whom one
of them had overtaken as he ran away from his sister, now fully
confirmed the truth of what the damsel said. He had nothing on but a
rich petticoat and a short blue damask cloak with fine gold lace, and
his head was uncovered and adorned only with its own hair, which looked
like rings of gold, so bright and curly was it. The governor, the
majordomo, and the carver went aside with him, and, unheard by his
sister, asked him how he came to be in that dress, and he with no less
shame and embarrassment told exactly the same story as his sister, to
the great delight of the enamoured carver; the governor, however, said
to them, “In truth, young lady and gentleman, this has been a very
childish affair, and to explain your folly and rashness there was no
necessity for all this delay and all these tears and sighs; for if you
had said we are so-and-so, and we escaped from our father’s house in
this way in order to ramble about, out of mere curiosity and with no
other object, there would have been an end of the matter, and none of
these little sobs and tears and all the rest of it.”
“That is true,” said the damsel, “but you see the confusion I was in
was so great it did not let me behave as I ought.”
“No harm has been done,” said Sancho; “come, we will leave you at your
father’s house; perhaps they will not have missed you; and another time
don’t be so childish or eager to see the world; for a respectable
damsel should have a broken leg and keep at home; and the woman and the
hen by gadding about are soon lost; and she who is eager to see is also
eager to be seen; I say no more.”
The youth thanked the governor for his kind offer to take them home,
and they directed their steps towards the house, which was not far off.
On reaching it the youth threw a pebble up at a grating, and
immediately a woman-servant who was waiting for them came down and
opened the door to them, and they went in, leaving the party marvelling
as much at their grace and beauty as at the fancy they had for seeing
the world by night and without quitting the village; which, however,
they set down to their youth.
The head-carver was left with a heart pierced through and through, and
he made up his mind on the spot to demand the damsel in marriage of her
father on the morrow, making sure she would not be refused him as he
was a servant of the duke’s; and even to Sancho ideas and schemes of
marrying the youth to his daughter Sanchica suggested themselves, and
he resolved to open the negotiation at the proper season, persuading
himself that no husband could be refused to a governor’s daughter. And
so the night’s round came to an end, and a couple of days later the
government, whereby all his plans were overthrown and swept away, as
will be seen farther on.
p49e.jpg (55K)
Reading Tips
Use arrow keys to navigate
Press 'N' for next chapter
Press 'P' for previous chapter