Don Quixote - Part I - Page 313/400

It was a common opinion that our men should not have shut themselves up

in the Goletta, but should have waited in the open at the landing-place;

but those who say so talk at random and with little knowledge of such

matters; for if in the Goletta and in the fort there were barely seven

thousand soldiers, how could such a small number, however resolute, sally

out and hold their own against numbers like those of the enemy? And how

is it possible to help losing a stronghold that is not relieved, above

all when surrounded by a host of determined enemies in their own country?

But many thought, and I thought so too, that it was special favour and

mercy which Heaven showed to Spain in permitting the destruction of that

source and hiding place of mischief, that devourer, sponge, and moth of

countless money, fruitlessly wasted there to no other purpose save

preserving the memory of its capture by the invincible Charles V; as if

to make that eternal, as it is and will be, these stones were needed to

support it. The fort also fell; but the Turks had to win it inch by inch,

for the soldiers who defended it fought so gallantly and stoutly that the

number of the enemy killed in twenty-two general assaults exceeded

twenty-five thousand. Of three hundred that remained alive not one was

taken unwounded, a clear and manifest proof of their gallantry and

resolution, and how sturdily they had defended themselves and held their

post. A small fort or tower which was in the middle of the lagoon under

the command of Don Juan Zanoguera, a Valencian gentleman and a famous

soldier, capitulated upon terms. They took prisoner Don Pedro

Puertocarrero, commandant of the Goletta, who had done all in his power

to defend his fortress, and took the loss of it so much to heart that he

died of grief on the way to Constantinople, where they were carrying him

a prisoner. They also took the commandant of the fort, Gabrio Cerbellon

by name, a Milanese gentleman, a great engineer and a very brave soldier.

In these two fortresses perished many persons of note, among whom was

Pagano Doria, knight of the Order of St. John, a man of generous

disposition, as was shown by his extreme liberality to his brother, the

famous John Andrea Doria; and what made his death the more sad was that

he was slain by some Arabs to whom, seeing that the fort was now lost, he

entrusted himself, and who offered to conduct him in the disguise of a

Moor to Tabarca, a small fort or station on the coast held by the Genoese

employed in the coral fishery. These Arabs cut off his head and carried

it to the commander of the Turkish fleet, who proved on them the truth of

our Castilian proverb, that "though the treason may please, the traitor

is hated;" for they say he ordered those who brought him the present to

be hanged for not having brought him alive.