Don Quixote - Part I - Page 353/400

To which the youth, pressing his hand in a way that showed his heart was

troubled by some great sorrow, and shedding a flood of tears, made

answer:

"Senor, I have no more to tell you than that from the moment when,

through heaven's will and our being near neighbours, I first saw Dona

Clara, your daughter and my lady, from that instant I made her the

mistress of my will, and if yours, my true lord and father, offers no

impediment, this very day she shall become my wife. For her I left my

father's house, and for her I assumed this disguise, to follow her

whithersoever she may go, as the arrow seeks its mark or the sailor the

pole-star. She knows nothing more of my passion than what she may have

learned from having sometimes seen from a distance that my eyes were

filled with tears. You know already, senor, the wealth and noble birth of

my parents, and that I am their sole heir; if this be a sufficient

inducement for you to venture to make me completely happy, accept me at

once as your son; for if my father, influenced by other objects of his

own, should disapprove of this happiness I have sought for myself, time

has more power to alter and change things, than human will."

With this the love-smitten youth was silent, while the Judge, after

hearing him, was astonished, perplexed, and surprised, as well at the

manner and intelligence with which Don Luis had confessed the secret of

his heart, as at the position in which he found himself, not knowing what

course to take in a matter so sudden and unexpected. All the answer,

therefore, he gave him was to bid him to make his mind easy for the

present, and arrange with his servants not to take him back that day, so

that there might be time to consider what was best for all parties. Don

Luis kissed his hands by force, nay, bathed them with his tears, in a way

that would have touched a heart of marble, not to say that of the Judge,

who, as a shrewd man, had already perceived how advantageous the marriage

would be to his daughter; though, were it possible, he would have

preferred that it should be brought about with the consent of the father

of Don Luis, who he knew looked for a title for his son.

The guests had by this time made peace with the landlord, for, by

persuasion and Don Quixote's fair words more than by threats, they had

paid him what he demanded, and the servants of Don Luis were waiting for

the end of the conversation with the Judge and their master's decision,

when the devil, who never sleeps, contrived that the barber, from whom

Don Quixote had taken Mambrino's helmet, and Sancho Panza the trappings

of his ass in exchange for those of his own, should at this instant enter

the inn; which said barber, as he led his ass to the stable, observed

Sancho Panza engaged in repairing something or other belonging to the

pack-saddle; and the moment he saw it he knew it, and made bold to attack

Sancho, exclaiming, "Ho, sir thief, I have caught you! hand over my basin

and my pack-saddle, and all my trappings that you robbed me of."