Don Quixote - Part II - Page 106/129

"Our guest has broken out on our hands," said Don Lorenzo to himself at

this point; "but, for all that, he is a glorious madman, and I should be

a dull blockhead to doubt it."

Here, being summoned to dinner, they brought their colloquy to a close.

Don Diego asked his son what he had been able to make out as to the wits

of their guest. To which he replied, "All the doctors and clever scribes

in the world will not make sense of the scrawl of his madness; he is a

madman full of streaks, full of lucid intervals."

They went in to dinner, and the repast was such as Don Diego said on the

road he was in the habit of giving to his guests, neat, plentiful, and

tasty; but what pleased Don Quixote most was the marvellous silence that

reigned throughout the house, for it was like a Carthusian monastery.

When the cloth had been removed, grace said and their hands washed, Don

Quixote earnestly pressed Don Lorenzo to repeat to him his verses for the

poetical tournament, to which he replied, "Not to be like those poets

who, when they are asked to recite their verses, refuse, and when they

are not asked for them vomit them up, I will repeat my gloss, for which I

do not expect any prize, having composed it merely as an exercise of

ingenuity."

"A discerning friend of mine," said Don Quixote, "was of opinion that no

one ought to waste labour in glossing verses; and the reason he gave was

that the gloss can never come up to the text, and that often or most

frequently it wanders away from the meaning and purpose aimed at in the

glossed lines; and besides, that the laws of the gloss were too strict,

as they did not allow interrogations, nor 'said he,' nor 'I say,' nor

turning verbs into nouns, or altering the construction, not to speak of

other restrictions and limitations that fetter gloss-writers, as you no

doubt know."

"Verily, Senor Don Quixote," said Don Lorenzo, "I wish I could catch your

worship tripping at a stretch, but I cannot, for you slip through my

fingers like an eel."

"I don't understand what you say, or mean by slipping," said Don Quixote.

"I will explain myself another time," said Don Lorenzo; "for the present

pray attend to the glossed verses and the gloss, which run thus:

Could 'was' become an 'is' for me,

Then would I ask no more than this;

Or could, for me, the time that is

Become the time that is to be!--