Don Quixote - Part I - Page 170/400

"It is true," said the good old man, "and indeed, sir, as far as the

charge of sorcery goes I was not guilty; as to that of being a pimp I

cannot deny it; but I never thought I was doing any harm by it, for my

only object was that all the world should enjoy itself and live in peace

and quiet, without quarrels or troubles; but my good intentions were

unavailing to save me from going where I never expect to come back from,

with this weight of years upon me and a urinary ailment that never gives

me a moment's ease;" and again he fell to weeping as before, and such

compassion did Sancho feel for him that he took out a real of four from

his bosom and gave it to him in alms.

Don Quixote went on and asked another what his crime was, and the man

answered with no less but rather much more sprightliness than the last

one.

"I am here because I carried the joke too far with a couple of cousins of

mine, and with a couple of other cousins who were none of mine; in short,

I carried the joke so far with them all that it ended in such a

complicated increase of kindred that no accountant could make it clear:

it was all proved against me, I got no favour, I had no money, I was near

having my neck stretched, they sentenced me to the galleys for six years,

I accepted my fate, it is the punishment of my fault; I am a young man;

let life only last, and with that all will come right. If you, sir, have

anything wherewith to help the poor, God will repay it to you in heaven,

and we on earth will take care in our petitions to him to pray for the

life and health of your worship, that they may be as long and as good as

your amiable appearance deserves."

This one was in the dress of a student, and one of the guards said he was

a great talker and a very elegant Latin scholar.

Behind all these there came a man of thirty, a very personable fellow,

except that when he looked, his eyes turned in a little one towards the

other. He was bound differently from the rest, for he had to his leg a

chain so long that it was wound all round his body, and two rings on his

neck, one attached to the chain, the other to what they call a

"keep-friend" or "friend's foot," from which hung two irons reaching to

his waist with two manacles fixed to them in which his hands were secured

by a big padlock, so that he could neither raise his hands to his mouth

nor lower his head to his hands. Don Quixote asked why this man carried

so many more chains than the others. The guard replied that it was

because he alone had committed more crimes than all the rest put

together, and was so daring and such a villain, that though they marched

him in that fashion they did not feel sure of him, but were in dread of

his making his escape.