Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
CHAPTER LXVIII.
1942 words | Chapter 229
OF THE BRISTLY ADVENTURE THAT BEFELL DON QUIXOTE
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The night was somewhat dark, for though there was a moon in the sky it
was not in a quarter where she could be seen; for sometimes the lady
Diana goes on a stroll to the antipodes, and leaves the mountains all
black and the valleys in darkness. Don Quixote obeyed nature so far as
to sleep his first sleep, but did not give way to the second, very
different from Sancho, who never had any second, because with him sleep
lasted from night till morning, wherein he showed what a sound
constitution and few cares he had. Don Quixote’s cares kept him
restless, so much so that he awoke Sancho and said to him, “I am
amazed, Sancho, at the unconcern of thy temperament. I believe thou art
made of marble or hard brass, incapable of any emotion or feeling
whatever. I lie awake while thou sleepest, I weep while thou singest, I
am faint with fasting while thou art sluggish and torpid from pure
repletion. It is the duty of good servants to share the sufferings and
feel the sorrows of their masters, if it be only for the sake of
appearances. See the calmness of the night, the solitude of the spot,
inviting us to break our slumbers by a vigil of some sort. Rise as thou
livest, and retire a little distance, and with a good heart and
cheerful courage give thyself three or four hundred lashes on account
of Dulcinea’s disenchantment score; and this I entreat of thee, making
it a request, for I have no desire to come to grips with thee a second
time, as I know thou hast a heavy hand. As soon as thou hast laid them
on we will pass the rest of the night, I singing my separation, thou
thy constancy, making a beginning at once with the pastoral life we are
to follow at our village.”
“Señor,” replied Sancho, “I’m no monk to get up out of the middle of my
sleep and scourge myself, nor does it seem to me that one can pass from
one extreme of the pain of whipping to the other of music. Will your
worship let me sleep, and not worry me about whipping myself? or you’ll
make me swear never to touch a hair of my doublet, not to say my
flesh.”
“O hard heart!” said Don Quixote, “O pitiless squire! O bread
ill-bestowed and favours ill-acknowledged, both those I have done thee
and those I mean to do thee! Through me hast thou seen thyself a
governor, and through me thou seest thyself in immediate expectation of
being a count, or obtaining some other equivalent title, for I—_post
tenebras spero lucem_.”
“I don’t know what that is,” said Sancho; “all I know is that so long
as I am asleep I have neither fear nor hope, trouble nor glory; and
good luck betide him that invented sleep, the cloak that covers over
all a man’s thoughts, the food that removes hunger, the drink that
drives away thirst, the fire that warms the cold, the cold that tempers
the heat, and, to wind up with, the universal coin wherewith everything
is bought, the weight and balance that makes the shepherd equal with
the king and the fool with the wise man. Sleep, I have heard say, has
only one fault, that it is like death; for between a sleeping man and a
dead man there is very little difference.”
“Never have I heard thee speak so elegantly as now, Sancho,” said Don
Quixote; “and here I begin to see the truth of the proverb thou dost
sometimes quote, ‘Not with whom thou art bred, but with whom thou art
fed.’”
“Ha, by my life, master mine,” said Sancho, “it’s not I that am
stringing proverbs now, for they drop in pairs from your worship’s
mouth faster than from mine; only there is this difference between mine
and yours, that yours are well-timed and mine are untimely; but anyhow,
they are all proverbs.”
At this point they became aware of a harsh indistinct noise that seemed
to spread through all the valleys around. Don Quixote stood up and laid
his hand upon his sword, and Sancho ensconced himself under Dapple and
put the bundle of armour on one side of him and the ass’s pack-saddle
on the other, in fear and trembling as great as Don Quixote’s
perturbation. Each instant the noise increased and came nearer to the
two terrified men, or at least to one, for as to the other, his courage
is known to all. The fact of the matter was that some men were taking
above six hundred pigs to sell at a fair, and were on their way with
them at that hour, and so great was the noise they made and their
grunting and blowing, that they deafened the ears of Don Quixote and
Sancho Panza, and they could not make out what it was. The wide-spread
grunting drove came on in a surging mass, and without showing any
respect for Don Quixote’s dignity or Sancho’s, passed right over the
pair of them, demolishing Sancho’s entrenchments, and not only
upsetting Don Quixote but sweeping Rocinante off his feet into the
bargain; and what with the trampling and the grunting, and the pace at
which the unclean beasts went, pack-saddle, armour, Dapple and
Rocinante were left scattered on the ground and Sancho and Don Quixote
at their wits’ end.
Sancho got up as well as he could and begged his master to give him his
sword, saying he wanted to kill half a dozen of those dirty unmannerly
pigs, for he had by this time found out that that was what they were.
“Let them be, my friend,” said Don Quixote; “this insult is the penalty
of my sin; and it is the righteous chastisement of heaven that jackals
should devour a vanquished knight, and wasps sting him and pigs trample
him under foot.”
“I suppose it is the chastisement of heaven, too,” said Sancho, “that
flies should prick the squires of vanquished knights, and lice eat
them, and hunger assail them. If we squires were the sons of the
knights we serve, or their very near relations, it would be no wonder
if the penalty of their misdeeds overtook us, even to the fourth
generation. But what have the Panzas to do with the Quixotes? Well,
well, let’s lie down again and sleep out what little of the night
there’s left, and God will send us dawn and we shall be all right.”
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“Sleep thou, Sancho,” returned Don Quixote, “for thou wast born to
sleep as I was born to watch; and during the time it now wants of dawn
I will give a loose rein to my thoughts, and seek a vent for them in a
little madrigal which, unknown to thee, I composed in my head last
night.”
“I should think,” said Sancho, “that the thoughts that allow one to
make verses cannot be of great consequence; let your worship string
verses as much as you like and I’ll sleep as much as I can;” and
forthwith, taking the space of ground he required, he muffled himself
up and fell into a sound sleep, undisturbed by bond, debt, or trouble
of any sort. Don Quixote, propped up against the trunk of a beech or a
cork tree—for Cide Hamete does not specify what kind of tree it
was—sang in this strain to the accompaniment of his own sighs:
When in my mind
I muse, O Love, upon thy cruelty,
To death I flee,
In hope therein the end of all to find.
But drawing near
That welcome haven in my sea of woe,
Such joy I know,
That life revives, and still I linger here.
Thus life doth slay,
And death again to life restoreth me;
Strange destiny,
That deals with life and death as with a play!
He accompanied each verse with many sighs and not a few tears, just
like one whose heart was pierced with grief at his defeat and his
separation from Dulcinea.
And now daylight came, and the sun smote Sancho on the eyes with his
beams. He awoke, roused himself up, shook himself and stretched his
lazy limbs, and seeing the havoc the pigs had made with his stores he
cursed the drove, and more besides. Then the pair resumed their
journey, and as evening closed in they saw coming towards them some ten
men on horseback and four or five on foot. Don Quixote’s heart beat
quick and Sancho’s quailed with fear, for the persons approaching them
carried lances and bucklers, and were in very warlike guise. Don
Quixote turned to Sancho and said, “If I could make use of my weapons,
and my promise had not tied my hands, I would count this host that
comes against us but cakes and fancy bread; but perhaps it may prove
something different from what we apprehend.” The men on horseback now
came up, and raising their lances surrounded Don Quixote in silence,
and pointed them at his back and breast, menacing him with death. One
of those on foot, putting his finger to his lips as a sign to him to be
silent, seized Rocinante’s bridle and drew him out of the road, and the
others driving Sancho and Dapple before them, and all maintaining a
strange silence, followed in the steps of the one who led Don Quixote.
The latter two or three times attempted to ask where they were taking
him to and what they wanted, but the instant he began to open his lips
they threatened to close them with the points of their lances; and
Sancho fared the same way, for the moment he seemed about to speak one
of those on foot punched him with a goad, and Dapple likewise, as if he
too wanted to talk. Night set in, they quickened their pace, and the
fears of the two prisoners grew greater, especially as they heard
themselves assailed with—“Get on, ye Troglodytes;” “Silence, ye
barbarians;” “March, ye cannibals;” “No murmuring, ye Scythians;”
“Don’t open your eyes, ye murderous Polyphemes, ye blood-thirsty
lions,” and suchlike names with which their captors harassed the ears
of the wretched master and man. Sancho went along saying to himself,
“We, tortolites, barbers, animals! I don’t like those names at all;
‘it’s in a bad wind our corn is being winnowed;’ ‘misfortune comes upon
us all at once like sticks on a dog,’ and God grant it may be no worse
than them that this unlucky adventure has in store for us.”
Don Quixote rode completely dazed, unable with the aid of all his wits
to make out what could be the meaning of these abusive names they
called them, and the only conclusion he could arrive at was that there
was no good to be hoped for and much evil to be feared. And now, about
an hour after midnight, they reached a castle which Don Quixote saw at
once was the duke’s, where they had been but a short time before. “God
bless me!” said he, as he recognised the mansion, “what does this mean?
It is all courtesy and politeness in this house; but with the
vanquished good turns into evil, and evil into worse.”
They entered the chief court of the castle and found it prepared and
fitted up in a style that added to their amazement and doubled their
fears, as will be seen in the following chapter.
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