Don Quixote - Part I - Page 125/400

IN WHICH ARE CONTAINED THE INNUMERABLE TROUBLES WHICH THE BRAVE DON

QUIXOTE AND HIS GOOD SQUIRE SANCHO PANZA ENDURED IN THE INN, WHICH TO HIS

MISFORTUNE HE TOOK TO BE A CASTLE

By this time Don Quixote had recovered from his swoon; and in the same

tone of voice in which he had called to his squire the day before when he

lay stretched "in the vale of the stakes," he began calling to him now,

"Sancho, my friend, art thou asleep? sleepest thou, friend Sancho?"

"How can I sleep, curses on it!" returned Sancho discontentedly and

bitterly, "when it is plain that all the devils have been at me this

night?"

"Thou mayest well believe that," answered Don Quixote, "because, either I

know little, or this castle is enchanted, for thou must know-but this

that I am now about to tell thee thou must swear to keep secret until

after my death."

"I swear it," answered Sancho.

"I say so," continued Don Quixote, "because I hate taking away anyone's

good name."

"I say," replied Sancho, "that I swear to hold my tongue about it till

the end of your worship's days, and God grant I may be able to let it out

tomorrow."

"Do I do thee such injuries, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "that thou

wouldst see me dead so soon?"

"It is not for that," replied Sancho, "but because I hate keeping things

long, and I don't want them to grow rotten with me from over-keeping."

"At any rate," said Don Quixote, "I have more confidence in thy affection

and good nature; and so I would have thee know that this night there

befell me one of the strangest adventures that I could describe, and to

relate it to thee briefly thou must know that a little while ago the

daughter of the lord of this castle came to me, and that she is the most

elegant and beautiful damsel that could be found in the wide world. What

I could tell thee of the charms of her person! of her lively wit! of

other secret matters which, to preserve the fealty I owe to my lady

Dulcinea del Toboso, I shall pass over unnoticed and in silence! I will

only tell thee that, either fate being envious of so great a boon placed

in my hands by good fortune, or perhaps (and this is more probable) this

castle being, as I have already said, enchanted, at the time when I was

engaged in the sweetest and most amorous discourse with her, there came,

without my seeing or knowing whence it came, a hand attached to some arm

of some huge giant, that planted such a cuff on my jaws that I have them

all bathed in blood, and then pummelled me in such a way that I am in a

worse plight than yesterday when the carriers, on account of Rocinante's

misbehaviour, inflicted on us the injury thou knowest of; whence

conjecture that there must be some enchanted Moor guarding the treasure

of this damsel's beauty, and that it is not for me."