Don Quixote - Part II - Page 113/129

"If you did not pique yourself more on your dexterity with those foils

you carry than on dexterity of tongue," said the other student, "you

would have been head of the degrees, where you are now tail."

"Look here, bachelor Corchuelo," returned the licentiate, "you have the

most mistaken idea in the world about skill with the sword, if you think

it useless."

"It is no idea on my part, but an established truth," replied Corchuelo;

"and if you wish me to prove it to you by experiment, you have swords

there, and it is a good opportunity; I have a steady hand and a strong

arm, and these joined with my resolution, which is not small, will make

you confess that I am not mistaken. Dismount and put in practice your

positions and circles and angles and science, for I hope to make you see

stars at noonday with my rude raw swordsmanship, in which, next to God, I

place my trust that the man is yet to be born who will make me turn my

back, and that there is not one in the world I will not compel to give

ground."

"As to whether you turn your back or not, I do not concern myself,"

replied the master of fence; "though it might be that your grave would be

dug on the spot where you planted your foot the first time; I mean that

you would be stretched dead there for despising skill with the sword."

"We shall soon see," replied Corchuelo, and getting off his ass briskly,

he drew out furiously one of the swords the licentiate carried on his

beast.

"It must not be that way," said Don Quixote at this point; "I will be the

director of this fencing match, and judge of this often disputed

question;" and dismounting from Rocinante and grasping his lance, he

planted himself in the middle of the road, just as the licentiate, with

an easy, graceful bearing and step, advanced towards Corchuelo, who came

on against him, darting fire from his eyes, as the saying is. The other

two of the company, the peasants, without dismounting from their asses,

served as spectators of the mortal tragedy. The cuts, thrusts, down

strokes, back strokes and doubles, that Corchuelo delivered were past

counting, and came thicker than hops or hail. He attacked like an angry

lion, but he was met by a tap on the mouth from the button of the

licentiate's sword that checked him in the midst of his furious onset,

and made him kiss it as if it were a relic, though not as devoutly as

relics are and ought to be kissed. The end of it was that the licentiate

reckoned up for him by thrusts every one of the buttons of the short

cassock he wore, tore the skirts into strips, like the tails of a

cuttlefish, knocked off his hat twice, and so completely tired him out,

that in vexation, anger, and rage, he took the sword by the hilt and

flung it away with such force, that one of the peasants that were there,

who was a notary, and who went for it, made an affidavit afterwards that

he sent it nearly three-quarters of a league, which testimony will serve,

and has served, to show and establish with all certainty that strength is

overcome by skill.