Don Quixote - Part I - Page 391/400

This soldier, then, that I have described, this Vicente de la Roca, this

bravo, gallant, musician, poet, was often seen and watched by Leandra

from a window of her house which looked out on the plaza. The glitter of

his showy attire took her fancy, his ballads bewitched her (for he gave

away twenty copies of every one he made), the tales of his exploits which

he told about himself came to her ears; and in short, as the devil no

doubt had arranged it, she fell in love with him before the presumption

of making love to her had suggested itself to him; and as in love-affairs

none are more easily brought to an issue than those which have the

inclination of the lady for an ally, Leandra and Vicente came to an

understanding without any difficulty; and before any of her numerous

suitors had any suspicion of her design, she had already carried it into

effect, having left the house of her dearly beloved father (for mother

she had none), and disappeared from the village with the soldier, who

came more triumphantly out of this enterprise than out of any of the

large number he laid claim to. All the village and all who heard of it

were amazed at the affair; I was aghast, Anselmo thunderstruck, her

father full of grief, her relations indignant, the authorities all in a

ferment, the officers of the Brotherhood in arms. They scoured the roads,

they searched the woods and all quarters, and at the end of three days

they found the flighty Leandra in a mountain cave, stript to her shift,

and robbed of all the money and precious jewels she had carried away from

home with her.

They brought her back to her unhappy father, and questioned her as to her

misfortune, and she confessed without pressure that Vicente de la Roca

had deceived her, and under promise of marrying her had induced her to

leave her father's house, as he meant to take her to the richest and most

delightful city in the whole world, which was Naples; and that she,

ill-advised and deluded, had believed him, and robbed her father, and

handed over all to him the night she disappeared; and that he had carried

her away to a rugged mountain and shut her up in the eave where they had

found her. She said, moreover, that the soldier, without robbing her of

her honour, had taken from her everything she had, and made off, leaving

her in the cave, a thing that still further surprised everybody. It was

not easy for us to credit the young man's continence, but she asserted it

with such earnestness that it helped to console her distressed father,

who thought nothing of what had been taken since the jewel that once lost

can never be recovered had been left to his daughter. The same day that

Leandra made her appearance her father removed her from our sight and

took her away to shut her up in a convent in a town near this, in the

hope that time may wear away some of the disgrace she has incurred.

Leandra's youth furnished an excuse for her fault, at least with those to

whom it was of no consequence whether she was good or bad; but those who

knew her shrewdness and intelligence did not attribute her misdemeanour

to ignorance but to wantonness and the natural disposition of women,

which is for the most part flighty and ill-regulated.