Don Quixote - Part I - Page 58/400

"Sir Knight," replied the trader, "I entreat your worship in the name of

this present company of princes, that, to save us from charging our

consciences with the confession of a thing we have never seen or heard

of, and one moreover so much to the prejudice of the Empresses and Queens

of the Alcarria and Estremadura, your worship will be pleased to show us

some portrait of this lady, though it be no bigger than a grain of wheat;

for by the thread one gets at the ball, and in this way we shall be

satisfied and easy, and you will be content and pleased; nay, I believe

we are already so far agreed with you that even though her portrait

should show her blind of one eye, and distilling vermilion and sulphur

from the other, we would nevertheless, to gratify your worship, say all

in her favour that you desire."

"She distils nothing of the kind, vile rabble," said Don Quixote, burning

with rage, "nothing of the kind, I say, only ambergris and civet in

cotton; nor is she one-eyed or humpbacked, but straighter than a

Guadarrama spindle: but ye must pay for the blasphemy ye have uttered

against beauty like that of my lady."

And so saying, he charged with levelled lance against the one who had

spoken, with such fury and fierceness that, if luck had not contrived

that Rocinante should stumble midway and come down, it would have gone

hard with the rash trader. Down went Rocinante, and over went his master,

rolling along the ground for some distance; and when he tried to rise he

was unable, so encumbered was he with lance, buckler, spurs, helmet, and

the weight of his old armour; and all the while he was struggling to get

up he kept saying, "Fly not, cowards and caitiffs! stay, for not by my

fault, but my horse's, am I stretched here."

One of the muleteers in attendance, who could not have had much good

nature in him, hearing the poor prostrate man blustering in this style,

was unable to refrain from giving him an answer on his ribs; and coming

up to him he seized his lance, and having broken it in pieces, with one

of them he began so to belabour our Don Quixote that, notwithstanding and

in spite of his armour, he milled him like a measure of wheat. His

masters called out not to lay on so hard and to leave him alone, but the

muleteers blood was up, and he did not care to drop the game until he had

vented the rest of his wrath, and gathering up the remaining fragments of

the lance he finished with a discharge upon the unhappy victim, who all

through the storm of sticks that rained on him never ceased threatening

heaven, and earth, and the brigands, for such they seemed to him. At last

the muleteer was tired, and the traders continued their journey, taking

with them matter for talk about the poor fellow who had been cudgelled.

He when he found himself alone made another effort to rise; but if he was

unable when whole and sound, how was he to rise after having been

thrashed and well-nigh knocked to pieces? And yet he esteemed himself

fortunate, as it seemed to him that this was a regular knight-errant's

mishap, and entirely, he considered, the fault of his horse. However,

battered in body as he was, to rise was beyond his power.