Don Quixote - Part I - Page 384/400

OF THE SHREWD CONTROVERSY WHICH DON QUIXOTE AND THE CANON HELD, TOGETHER

WITH OTHER INCIDENTS

"A good joke, that!" returned Don Quixote. "Books that have been printed

with the king's licence, and with the approbation of those to whom they

have been submitted, and read with universal delight, and extolled by

great and small, rich and poor, learned and ignorant, gentle and simple,

in a word by people of every sort, of whatever rank or condition they may

be--that these should be lies! And above all when they carry such an

appearance of truth with them; for they tell us the father, mother,

country, kindred, age, place, and the achievements, step by step, and day

by day, performed by such a knight or knights! Hush, sir; utter not such

blasphemy; trust me I am advising you now to act as a sensible man

should; only read them, and you will see the pleasure you will derive

from them. For, come, tell me, can there be anything more delightful than

to see, as it were, here now displayed before us a vast lake of bubbling

pitch with a host of snakes and serpents and lizards, and ferocious and

terrible creatures of all sorts swimming about in it, while from the

middle of the lake there comes a plaintive voice saying: 'Knight,

whosoever thou art who beholdest this dread lake, if thou wouldst win the

prize that lies hidden beneath these dusky waves, prove the valour of thy

stout heart and cast thyself into the midst of its dark burning waters,

else thou shalt not be worthy to see the mighty wonders contained in the

seven castles of the seven Fays that lie beneath this black expanse;' and

then the knight, almost ere the awful voice has ceased, without stopping

to consider, without pausing to reflect upon the danger to which he is

exposing himself, without even relieving himself of the weight of his

massive armour, commending himself to God and to his lady, plunges into

the midst of the boiling lake, and when he little looks for it, or knows

what his fate is to be, he finds himself among flowery meadows, with

which the Elysian fields are not to be compared.

"The sky seems more transparent there, and the sun shines with a strange

brilliancy, and a delightful grove of green leafy trees presents itself

to the eyes and charms the sight with its verdure, while the ear is

soothed by the sweet untutored melody of the countless birds of gay

plumage that flit to and fro among the interlacing branches. Here he sees

a brook whose limpid waters, like liquid crystal, ripple over fine sands

and white pebbles that look like sifted gold and purest pearls. There he

perceives a cunningly wrought fountain of many-coloured jasper and

polished marble; here another of rustic fashion where the little

mussel-shells and the spiral white and yellow mansions of the snail

disposed in studious disorder, mingled with fragments of glittering

crystal and mock emeralds, make up a work of varied aspect, where art,

imitating nature, seems to have outdone it.