Don Quixote - Part I - Page 309/400

WHEREIN THE CAPTIVE RELATES HIS LIFE AND ADVENTURES

My family had its origin in a village in the mountains of Leon, and

nature had been kinder and more generous to it than fortune; though in

the general poverty of those communities my father passed for being even

a rich man; and he would have been so in reality had he been as clever in

preserving his property as he was in spending it. This tendency of his to

be liberal and profuse he had acquired from having been a soldier in his

youth, for the soldier's life is a school in which the niggard becomes

free-handed and the free-handed prodigal; and if any soldiers are to be

found who are misers, they are monsters of rare occurrence. My father

went beyond liberality and bordered on prodigality, a disposition by no

means advantageous to a married man who has children to succeed to his

name and position. My father had three, all sons, and all of sufficient

age to make choice of a profession. Finding, then, that he was unable to

resist his propensity, he resolved to divest himself of the instrument

and cause of his prodigality and lavishness, to divest himself of wealth,

without which Alexander himself would have seemed parsimonious; and so

calling us all three aside one day into a room, he addressed us in words

somewhat to the following effect:

"My sons, to assure you that I love you, no more need be known or said

than that you are my sons; and to encourage a suspicion that I do not

love you, no more is needed than the knowledge that I have no

self-control as far as preservation of your patrimony is concerned;

therefore, that you may for the future feel sure that I love you like a

father, and have no wish to ruin you like a stepfather, I propose to do

with you what I have for some time back meditated, and after mature

deliberation decided upon. You are now of an age to choose your line of

life or at least make choice of a calling that will bring you honour and

profit when you are older; and what I have resolved to do is to divide my

property into four parts; three I will give to you, to each his portion

without making any difference, and the other I will retain to live upon

and support myself for whatever remainder of life Heaven may be pleased

to grant me. But I wish each of you on taking possession of the share

that falls to him to follow one of the paths I shall indicate. In this

Spain of ours there is a proverb, to my mind very true--as they all are,

being short aphorisms drawn from long practical experience--and the one I

refer to says, 'The church, or the sea, or the king's house;' as much as

to say, in plainer language, whoever wants to flourish and become rich,

let him follow the church, or go to sea, adopting commerce as his

calling, or go into the king's service in his household, for they say,

'Better a king's crumb than a lord's favour.' I say so because it is my

will and pleasure that one of you should follow letters, another trade,

and the third serve the king in the wars, for it is a difficult matter to

gain admission to his service in his household, and if war does not bring

much wealth it confers great distinction and fame. Eight days hence I

will give you your full shares in money, without defrauding you of a

farthing, as you will see in the end. Now tell me if you are willing to

follow out my idea and advice as I have laid it before you."