Don Quixote - Part I - Page 346/400

Don Quixote had got so far in his pathetic speech when the landlady's

daughter began to signal to him, saying, "Senor, come over here, please."

At these signals and voice Don Quixote turned his head and saw by the

light of the moon, which then was in its full splendour, that some one

was calling to him from the hole in the wall, which seemed to him to be a

window, and what is more, with a gilt grating, as rich castles, such as

he believed the inn to be, ought to have; and it immediately suggested

itself to his imagination that, as on the former occasion, the fair

damsel, the daughter of the lady of the castle, overcome by love for him,

was once more endeavouring to win his affections; and with this idea, not

to show himself discourteous, or ungrateful, he turned Rocinante's head

and approached the hole, and as he perceived the two wenches he said:

"I pity you, beauteous lady, that you should have directed your thoughts

of love to a quarter from whence it is impossible that such a return can

be made to you as is due to your great merit and gentle birth, for which

you must not blame this unhappy knight-errant whom love renders incapable

of submission to any other than her whom, the first moment his eyes

beheld her, he made absolute mistress of his soul. Forgive me, noble

lady, and retire to your apartment, and do not, by any further

declaration of your passion, compel me to show myself more ungrateful;

and if, of the love you bear me, you should find that there is anything

else in my power wherein I can gratify you, provided it be not love

itself, demand it of me; for I swear to you by that sweet absent enemy of

mine to grant it this instant, though it be that you require of me a lock

of Medusa's hair, which was all snakes, or even the very beams of the sun

shut up in a vial."

"My mistress wants nothing of that sort, sir knight," said Maritornes at

this.

"What then, discreet dame, is it that your mistress wants?" replied Don

Quixote.

"Only one of your fair hands," said Maritornes, "to enable her to vent

over it the great passion passion which has brought her to this loophole,

so much to the risk of her honour; for if the lord her father had heard

her, the least slice he would cut off her would be her ear."

"I should like to see that tried," said Don Quixote; "but he had better

beware of that, if he does not want to meet the most disastrous end that

ever father in the world met for having laid hands on the tender limbs of

a love-stricken daughter."