Don Quixote - Part I - Page 297/400

All the time Dorothea was speaking, Cardenio, though he held Luscinda in

his arms, never took his eyes off Don Fernando, determined, if he saw him

make any hostile movement, to try and defend himself and resist as best

he could all who might assail him, though it should cost him his life.

But now Don Fernando's friends, as well as the curate and the barber, who

had been present all the while, not forgetting the worthy Sancho Panza,

ran forward and gathered round Don Fernando, entreating him to have

regard for the tears of Dorothea, and not suffer her reasonable hopes to

be disappointed, since, as they firmly believed, what she said was but

the truth; and bidding him observe that it was not, as it might seem, by

accident, but by a special disposition of Providence that they had all

met in a place where no one could have expected a meeting. And the curate

bade him remember that only death could part Luscinda from Cardenio; that

even if some sword were to separate them they would think their death

most happy; and that in a case that admitted of no remedy his wisest

course was, by conquering and putting a constraint upon himself, to show

a generous mind, and of his own accord suffer these two to enjoy the

happiness Heaven had granted them. He bade him, too, turn his eyes upon

the beauty of Dorothea and he would see that few if any could equal much

less excel her; while to that beauty should be added her modesty and the

surpassing love she bore him. But besides all this, he reminded him that

if he prided himself on being a gentleman and a Christian, he could not

do otherwise than keep his plighted word; and that in doing so he would

obey God and meet the approval of all sensible people, who know and

recognised it to be the privilege of beauty, even in one of humble birth,

provided virtue accompany it, to be able to raise itself to the level of

any rank, without any slur upon him who places it upon an equality with

himself; and furthermore that when the potent sway of passion asserts

itself, so long as there be no mixture of sin in it, he is not to be

blamed who gives way to it.

To be brief, they added to these such other forcible arguments that Don

Fernando's manly heart, being after all nourished by noble blood, was

touched, and yielded to the truth which, even had he wished it, he could

not gainsay; and he showed his submission, and acceptance of the good

advice that had been offered to him, by stooping down and embracing

Dorothea, saying to her, "Rise, dear lady, it is not right that what I

hold in my heart should be kneeling at my feet; and if until now I have

shown no sign of what I own, it may have been by Heaven's decree in order

that, seeing the constancy with which you love me, I may learn to value

you as you deserve. What I entreat of you is that you reproach me not

with my transgression and grievous wrong-doing; for the same cause and

force that drove me to make you mine impelled me to struggle against

being yours; and to prove this, turn and look at the eyes of the now

happy Luscinda, and you will see in them an excuse for all my errors: and

as she has found and gained the object of her desires, and I have found

in you what satisfies all my wishes, may she live in peace and

contentment as many happy years with her Cardenio, as on my knees I pray

Heaven to allow me to live with my Dorothea;" and with these words he

once more embraced her and pressed his face to hers with so much

tenderness that he had to take great heed to keep his tears from

completing the proof of his love and repentance in the sight of all. Not

so Luscinda, and Cardenio, and almost all the others, for they shed so

many tears, some in their own happiness, some at that of the others, that

one would have supposed a heavy calamity had fallen upon them all. Even

Sancho Panza was weeping; though afterwards he said he only wept because

he saw that Dorothea was not as he fancied the queen Micomicona, of whom

he expected such great favours. Their wonder as well as their weeping

lasted some time, and then Cardenio and Luscinda went and fell on their

knees before Don Fernando, returning him thanks for the favour he had

rendered them in language so grateful that he knew not how to answer

them, and raising them up embraced them with every mark of affection and

courtesy.