Don Quixote - Part II - Page 46/129

"All that your worship has said so far," said Sancho, "I have understood

quite well; but still I would be glad if your worship would dissolve a

doubt for me, which has just this minute come into my mind."

"Solve, thou meanest, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "say on, in God's name,

and I will answer as well as I can."

"Tell me, senor," Sancho went on to say, "those Julys or Augusts, and all

those venturous knights that you say are now dead--where are they now?"

"The heathens," replied Don Quixote, "are, no doubt, in hell; the

Christians, if they were good Christians, are either in purgatory or in

heaven."

"Very good," said Sancho; "but now I want to know--the tombs where the

bodies of those great lords are, have they silver lamps before them, or

are the walls of their chapels ornamented with crutches, winding-sheets,

tresses of hair, legs and eyes in wax? Or what are they ornamented with?"

To which Don Quixote made answer: "The tombs of the heathens were

generally sumptuous temples; the ashes of Julius Caesar's body were

placed on the top of a stone pyramid of vast size, which they now call in

Rome Saint Peter's needle. The emperor Hadrian had for a tomb a castle as

large as a good-sized village, which they called the Moles Adriani, and

is now the castle of St. Angelo in Rome. The queen Artemisia buried her

husband Mausolus in a tomb which was reckoned one of the seven wonders of

the world; but none of these tombs, or of the many others of the

heathens, were ornamented with winding-sheets or any of those other

offerings and tokens that show that they who are buried there are

saints."

"That's the point I'm coming to," said Sancho; "and now tell me, which is

the greater work, to bring a dead man to life or to kill a giant?"

"The answer is easy," replied Don Quixote; "it is a greater work to bring

to life a dead man."

"Now I have got you," said Sancho; "in that case the fame of them who

bring the dead to life, who give sight to the blind, cure cripples,

restore health to the sick, and before whose tombs there are lamps

burning, and whose chapels are filled with devout folk on their knees

adoring their relics be a better fame in this life and in the other than

that which all the heathen emperors and knights-errant that have ever

been in the world have left or may leave behind them?"

"That I grant, too," said Don Quixote.

"Then this fame, these favours, these privileges, or whatever you call

it," said Sancho, "belong to the bodies and relics of the saints who,

with the approbation and permission of our holy mother Church, have

lamps, tapers, winding-sheets, crutches, pictures, eyes and legs, by

means of which they increase devotion and add to their own Christian

reputation. Kings carry the bodies or relics of saints on their

shoulders, and kiss bits of their bones, and enrich and adorn their

oratories and favourite altars with them."