Don Quixote - Part I - Page 298/400

He then asked Dorothea how she had managed to reach a place so far

removed from her own home, and she in a few fitting words told all that

she had previously related to Cardenio, with which Don Fernando and his

companions were so delighted that they wished the story had been longer;

so charmingly did Dorothea describe her misadventures. When she had

finished Don Fernando recounted what had befallen him in the city after

he had found in Luscinda's bosom the paper in which she declared that she

was Cardenio's wife, and never could be his. He said he meant to kill

her, and would have done so had he not been prevented by her parents, and

that he quitted the house full of rage and shame, and resolved to avenge

himself when a more convenient opportunity should offer. The next day he

learned that Luscinda had disappeared from her father's house, and that

no one could tell whither she had gone. Finally, at the end of some

months he ascertained that she was in a convent and meant to remain there

all the rest of her life, if she were not to share it with Cardenio; and

as soon as he had learned this, taking these three gentlemen as his

companions, he arrived at the place where she was, but avoided speaking

to her, fearing that if it were known he was there stricter precautions

would be taken in the convent; and watching a time when the porter's

lodge was open he left two to guard the gate, and he and the other

entered the convent in quest of Luscinda, whom they found in the

cloisters in conversation with one of the nuns, and carrying her off

without giving her time to resist, they reached a place with her where

they provided themselves with what they required for taking her away; all

which they were able to do in complete safety, as the convent was in the

country at a considerable distance from the city. He added that when

Luscinda found herself in his power she lost all consciousness, and after

returning to herself did nothing but weep and sigh without speaking a

word; and thus in silence and tears they reached that inn, which for him

was reaching heaven where all the mischances of earth are over and at an

end.