Don Quixote - Part I - Page 336/400

We remained six days in Velez, at the end of which the renegade, having

informed himself of all that was requisite for him to do, set out for the

city of Granada to restore himself to the sacred bosom of the Church

through the medium of the Holy Inquisition. The other released captives

took their departures, each the way that seemed best to him, and Zoraida

and I were left alone, with nothing more than the crowns which the

courtesy of the Frenchman had bestowed upon Zoraida, out of which I

bought the beast on which she rides; and, I for the present attending her

as her father and squire and not as her husband, we are now going to

ascertain if my father is living, or if any of my brothers has had better

fortune than mine has been; though, as Heaven has made me the companion

of Zoraida, I think no other lot could be assigned to me, however happy,

that I would rather have. The patience with which she endures the

hardships that poverty brings with it, and the eagerness she shows to

become a Christian, are such that they fill me with admiration, and bind

me to serve her all my life; though the happiness I feel in seeing myself

hers, and her mine, is disturbed and marred by not knowing whether I

shall find any corner to shelter her in my own country, or whether time

and death may not have made such changes in the fortunes and lives of my

father and brothers, that I shall hardly find anyone who knows me, if

they are not alive.

I have no more of my story to tell you, gentlemen; whether it be an

interesting or a curious one let your better judgments decide; all I can

say is I would gladly have told it to you more briefly; although my fear

of wearying you has made me leave out more than one circumstance.