Don Quixote - Part I - Page 70/400

One of the remedies which the curate and the barber immediately applied

to their friend's disorder was to wall up and plaster the room where the

books were, so that when he got up he should not find them (possibly the

cause being removed the effect might cease), and they might say that a

magician had carried them off, room and all; and this was done with all

despatch. Two days later Don Quixote got up, and the first thing he did

was to go and look at his books, and not finding the room where he had

left it, he wandered from side to side looking for it. He came to the

place where the door used to be, and tried it with his hands, and turned

and twisted his eyes in every direction without saying a word; but after

a good while he asked his housekeeper whereabouts was the room that held

his books.

The housekeeper, who had been already well instructed in what she was to

answer, said, "What room or what nothing is it that your worship is

looking for? There are neither room nor books in this house now, for the

devil himself has carried all away."

"It was not the devil," said the niece, "but a magician who came on a

cloud one night after the day your worship left this, and dismounting

from a serpent that he rode he entered the room, and what he did there I

know not, but after a little while he made off, flying through the roof,

and left the house full of smoke; and when we went to see what he had

done we saw neither book nor room: but we remember very well, the

housekeeper and I, that on leaving, the old villain said in a loud voice

that, for a private grudge he owed the owner of the books and the room,

he had done mischief in that house that would be discovered by-and-by: he

said too that his name was the Sage Munaton."

"He must have said Friston," said Don Quixote.

"I don't know whether he called himself Friston or Friton," said the

housekeeper, "I only know that his name ended with 'ton.'"

"So it does," said Don Quixote, "and he is a sage magician, a great enemy

of mine, who has a spite against me because he knows by his arts and lore

that in process of time I am to engage in single combat with a knight

whom he befriends and that I am to conquer, and he will be unable to

prevent it; and for this reason he endeavours to do me all the ill turns

that he can; but I promise him it will be hard for him to oppose or avoid

what is decreed by Heaven."