Don Quixote - Part II - Page 87/129

OF WHAT BEFELL DON QUIXOTE WITH A DISCREET GENTLEMAN OF LA MANCHA

Don Quixote pursued his journey in the high spirits, satisfaction, and

self-complacency already described, fancying himself the most valorous

knight-errant of the age in the world because of his late victory. All

the adventures that could befall him from that time forth he regarded as

already done and brought to a happy issue; he made light of enchantments

and enchanters; he thought no more of the countless drubbings that had

been administered to him in the course of his knight-errantry, nor of the

volley of stones that had levelled half his teeth, nor of the ingratitude

of the galley slaves, nor of the audacity of the Yanguesans and the

shower of stakes that fell upon him; in short, he said to himself that

could he discover any means, mode, or way of disenchanting his lady

Dulcinea, he would not envy the highest fortune that the most fortunate

knight-errant of yore ever reached or could reach.

He was going along entirely absorbed in these fancies, when Sancho said

to him, "Isn't it odd, senor, that I have still before my eyes that

monstrous enormous nose of my gossip, Tom Cecial?"

"And dost thou, then, believe, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "that the

Knight of the Mirrors was the bachelor Carrasco, and his squire Tom

Cecial thy gossip?"

"I don't know what to say to that," replied Sancho; "all I know is that

the tokens he gave me about my own house, wife and children, nobody else

but himself could have given me; and the face, once the nose was off, was

the very face of Tom Cecial, as I have seen it many a time in my town and

next door to my own house; and the sound of the voice was just the same."

"Let us reason the matter, Sancho," said Don Quixote. "Come now, by what

process of thinking can it be supposed that the bachelor Samson Carrasco

would come as a knight-errant, in arms offensive and defensive, to fight

with me? Have I ever been by any chance his enemy? Have I ever given him

any occasion to owe me a grudge? Am I his rival, or does he profess arms,

that he should envy the fame I have acquired in them?"

"Well, but what are we to say, senor," returned Sancho, "about that

knight, whoever he is, being so like the bachelor Carrasco, and his

squire so like my gossip, Tom Cecial? And if that be enchantment, as your

worship says, was there no other pair in the world for them to take the

likeness of?"