Don Quixote - Part I - Page 229/400

"But while I was in the city, uncertain what to do, as I could not find

Don Fernando, I heard notice given by the public crier offering a great

reward to anyone who should find me, and giving the particulars of my age

and of the very dress I wore; and I heard it said that the lad who came

with me had taken me away from my father's house; a thing that cut me to

the heart, showing how low my good name had fallen, since it was not

enough that I should lose it by my flight, but they must add with whom I

had fled, and that one so much beneath me and so unworthy of my

consideration. The instant I heard the notice I quitted the city with my

servant, who now began to show signs of wavering in his fidelity to me,

and the same night, for fear of discovery, we entered the most thickly

wooded part of these mountains. But, as is commonly said, one evil calls

up another and the end of one misfortune is apt to be the beginning of

one still greater, and so it proved in my case; for my worthy servant,

until then so faithful and trusty when he found me in this lonely spot,

moved more by his own villainy than by my beauty, sought to take

advantage of the opportunity which these solitudes seemed to present him,

and with little shame and less fear of God and respect for me, began to

make overtures to me; and finding that I replied to the effrontery of his

proposals with justly severe language, he laid aside the entreaties which

he had employed at first, and began to use violence.

"But just Heaven, that seldom fails to watch over and aid good intentions,

so aided mine that with my slight strength and with little exertion I

pushed him over a precipice, where I left him, whether dead or alive I

know not; and then, with greater speed than seemed possible in my terror

and fatigue, I made my way into the mountains, without any other thought

or purpose save that of hiding myself among them, and escaping my father

and those despatched in search of me by his orders. It is now I know not

how many months since with this object I came here, where I met a

herdsman who engaged me as his servant at a place in the heart of this

Sierra, and all this time I have been serving him as herd, striving to

keep always afield to hide these locks which have now unexpectedly

betrayed me. But all my care and pains were unavailing, for my master

made the discovery that I was not a man, and harboured the same base

designs as my servant; and as fortune does not always supply a remedy in

cases of difficulty, and I had no precipice or ravine at hand down which

to fling the master and cure his passion, as I had in the servant's case,

I thought it a lesser evil to leave him and again conceal myself among

these crags, than make trial of my strength and argument with him. So, as

I say, once more I went into hiding to seek for some place where I might

with sighs and tears implore Heaven to have pity on my misery, and grant

me help and strength to escape from it, or let me die among the

solitudes, leaving no trace of an unhappy being who, by no fault of hers,

has furnished matter for talk and scandal at home and abroad."