<h2> <SPAN name="ch2b" id="ch2b"></SPAN>CHAPTER II. </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> WHICH TREATS OF THE NOTABLE ALTERCATION WHICH SANCHO PANZA HAD WITH DON QUIXOTE'S NIECE, AND HOUSEKEEPER, TOGETHER WITH OTHER DROLL MATTERS </h3>
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<p>The history relates that the outcry Don Quixote, the curate, and the
barber heard came from the niece and the housekeeper exclaiming to Sancho,
who was striving to force his way in to see Don Quixote while they held
the door against him, "What does the vagabond want in this house? Be off
to your own, brother, for it is you, and no one else, that delude my
master, and lead him astray, and take him tramping about the country."</p>
<p>To which Sancho replied, "Devil's own housekeeper! it is I who am deluded,
and led astray, and taken tramping about the country, and not thy master!
He has carried me all over the world, and you are mightily mistaken. He
enticed me away from home by a trick, promising me an island, which I am
still waiting for."</p>
<p>"May evil islands choke thee, thou detestable Sancho," said the niece;
"What are islands? Is it something to eat, glutton and gormandiser that
thou art?"</p>
<p>"It is not something to eat," replied Sancho, "but something to govern and
rule, and better than four cities or four judgeships at court."</p>
<p>"For all that," said the housekeeper, "you don't enter here, you bag of
mischief and sack of knavery; go govern your house and dig your
seed-patch, and give over looking for islands or shylands."</p>
<p>The curate and the barber listened with great amusement to the words of
the three; but Don Quixote, uneasy lest Sancho should blab and blurt out a
whole heap of mischievous stupidities, and touch upon points that might
not be altogether to his credit, called to him and made the other two hold
their tongues and let him come in. Sancho entered, and the curate and the
barber took their leave of Don Quixote, of whose recovery they despaired
when they saw how wedded he was to his crazy ideas, and how saturated with
the nonsense of his unlucky chivalry; and said the curate to the barber,
"You will see, gossip, that when we are least thinking of it, our
gentleman will be off once more for another flight."</p>
<p>"I have no doubt of it," returned the barber; "but I do not wonder so much
at the madness of the knight as at the simplicity of the squire, who has
such a firm belief in all that about the island, that I suppose all the
exposures that could be imagined would not get it out of his head."</p>
<p>"God help them," said the curate; "and let us be on the look-out to see
what comes of all these absurdities of the knight and squire, for it seems
as if they had both been cast in the same mould, and the madness of the
master without the simplicity of the man would not be worth a farthing."</p>
<p>"That is true," said the barber, "and I should like very much to know what
the pair are talking about at this moment."</p>
<p>"I promise you," said the curate, "the niece or the housekeeper will tell
us by-and-by, for they are not the ones to forget to listen."</p>
<p>Meanwhile Don Quixote shut himself up in his room with Sancho, and when
they were alone he said to him, "It grieves me greatly, Sancho, that thou
shouldst have said, and sayest, that I took thee out of thy cottage, when
thou knowest I did not remain in my house. We sallied forth together, we
took the road together, we wandered abroad together; we have had the same
fortune and the same luck; if they blanketed thee once, they belaboured me
a hundred times, and that is the only advantage I have of thee."</p>
<p>"That was only reasonable," replied Sancho, "for, by what your worship
says, misfortunes belong more properly to knights-errant than to their
squires."</p>
<p>"Thou art mistaken, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "according to the maxim
quando caput dolet, etc."</p>
<p>"I don't understand any language but my own," said Sancho.</p>
<p>"I mean to say," said Don Quixote, "that when the head suffers all the
members suffer; and so, being thy lord and master, I am thy head, and thou
a part of me as thou art my servant; and therefore any evil that affects
or shall affect me should give thee pain, and what affects thee give pain
to me."</p>
<p>"It should be so," said Sancho; "but when I was blanketed as a member, my
head was on the other side of the wall, looking on while I was flying
through the air, and did not feel any pain whatever; and if the members
are obliged to feel the suffering of the head, it should be obliged to
feel their sufferings."</p>
<p>"Dost thou mean to say now, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "that I did not
feel when they were blanketing thee? If thou dost, thou must not say so or
think so, for I felt more pain then in spirit than thou didst in body. But
let us put that aside for the present, for we shall have opportunities
enough for considering and settling the point; tell me, Sancho my friend,
what do they say about me in the village here? What do the common people
think of me? What do the hidalgos? What do the caballeros? What do they
say of my valour; of my achievements; of my courtesy? How do they treat
the task I have undertaken in reviving and restoring to the world the now
forgotten order of chivalry? In short, Sancho, I would have thee tell me
all that has come to thine ears on this subject; and thou art to tell me,
without adding anything to the good or taking away anything from the bad;
for it is the duty of loyal vassals to tell the truth to their lords just
as it is and in its proper shape, not allowing flattery to add to it or
any idle deference to lessen it. And I would have thee know, Sancho, that
if the naked truth, undisguised by flattery, came to the ears of princes,
times would be different, and other ages would be reckoned iron ages more
than ours, which I hold to be the golden of these latter days. Profit by
this advice, Sancho, and report to me clearly and faithfully the truth of
what thou knowest touching what I have demanded of thee."</p>
<p>"That I will do with all my heart, master," replied Sancho, "provided your
worship will not be vexed at what I say, as you wish me to say it out in
all its nakedness, without putting any more clothes on it than it came to
my knowledge in."</p>
<p>"I will not be vexed at all," returned Don Quixote; "thou mayest speak
freely, Sancho, and without any beating about the bush."</p>
<p>"Well then," said he, "first of all, I have to tell you that the common
people consider your worship a mighty great madman, and me no less a fool.
The hidalgos say that, not keeping within the bounds of your quality of
gentleman, you have assumed the 'Don,' and made a knight of yourself at a
jump, with four vine-stocks and a couple of acres of land, and never a
shirt to your back. The caballeros say they do not want to have hidalgos
setting up in opposition to them, particularly squire hidalgos who polish
their own shoes and darn their black stockings with green silk."</p>
<p>"That," said Don Quixote, "does not apply to me, for I always go well
dressed and never patched; ragged I may be, but ragged more from the wear
and tear of arms than of time."</p>
<p>"As to your worship's valour, courtesy, accomplishments, and task, there
is a variety of opinions. Some say, 'mad but droll;' others, 'valiant but
unlucky;' others, 'courteous but meddling,' and then they go into such a
number of things that they don't leave a whole bone either in your worship
or in myself."</p>
<p>"Recollect, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "that wherever virtue exists in an
eminent degree it is persecuted. Few or none of the famous men that have
lived escaped being calumniated by malice. Julius Caesar, the boldest,
wisest, and bravest of captains, was charged with being ambitious, and not
particularly cleanly in his dress, or pure in his morals. Of Alexander,
whose deeds won him the name of Great, they say that he was somewhat of a
drunkard. Of Hercules, him of the many labours, it is said that he was
lewd and luxurious. Of Don Galaor, the brother of Amadis of Gaul, it was
whispered that he was over quarrelsome, and of his brother that he was
lachrymose. So that, O Sancho, amongst all these calumnies against good
men, mine may be let pass, since they are no more than thou hast said."</p>
<p>"That's just where it is, body of my father!"</p>
<p>"Is there more, then?" asked Don Quixote.</p>
<p>"There's the tail to be skinned yet," said Sancho; "all so far is cakes
and fancy bread; but if your worship wants to know all about the calumnies
they bring against you, I will fetch you one this instant who can tell you
the whole of them without missing an atom; for last night the son of
Bartholomew Carrasco, who has been studying at Salamanca, came home after
having been made a bachelor, and when I went to welcome him, he told me
that your worship's history is already abroad in books, with the title of
THE INGENIOUS GENTLEMAN DON QUIXOTE OF LA MANCHA; and he says they mention
me in it by my own name of Sancho Panza, and the lady Dulcinea del Toboso
too, and divers things that happened to us when we were alone; so that I
crossed myself in my wonder how the historian who wrote them down could
have known them."</p>
<p>"I promise thee, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "the author of our history
will be some sage enchanter; for to such nothing that they choose to write
about is hidden."</p>
<p>"What!" said Sancho, "a sage and an enchanter! Why, the bachelor Samson
Carrasco (that is the name of him I spoke of) says the author of the
history is called Cide Hamete Berengena."</p>
<p>"That is a Moorish name," said Don Quixote.</p>
<p>"May be so," replied Sancho; "for I have heard say that the Moors are
mostly great lovers of berengenas."</p>
<p>"Thou must have mistaken the surname of this 'Cide'—which means in
Arabic 'Lord'—Sancho," observed Don Quixote.</p>
<p>"Very likely," replied Sancho, "but if your worship wishes me to fetch the
bachelor I will go for him in a twinkling."</p>
<p>"Thou wilt do me a great pleasure, my friend," said Don Quixote, "for what
thou hast told me has amazed me, and I shall not eat a morsel that will
agree with me until I have heard all about it."</p>
<p>"Then I am off for him," said Sancho; and leaving his master he went in
quest of the bachelor, with whom he returned in a short time, and, all
three together, they had a very droll colloquy.</p>
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<h2> <SPAN name="ch3b" id="ch3b"></SPAN>CHAPTER III. </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> OF THE LAUGHABLE CONVERSATION THAT PASSED BETWEEN DON QUIXOTE, SANCHO PANZA, AND THE BACHELOR SAMSON CARRASCO </h3>
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<p>Don Quixote remained very deep in thought, waiting for the bachelor
Carrasco, from whom he was to hear how he himself had been put into a book
as Sancho said; and he could not persuade himself that any such history
could be in existence, for the blood of the enemies he had slain was not
yet dry on the blade of his sword, and now they wanted to make out that
his mighty achievements were going about in print. For all that, he
fancied some sage, either a friend or an enemy, might, by the aid of
magic, have given them to the press; if a friend, in order to magnify and
exalt them above the most famous ever achieved by any knight-errant; if an
enemy, to bring them to naught and degrade them below the meanest ever
recorded of any low squire, though as he said to himself, the achievements
of squires never were recorded. If, however, it were the fact that such a
history were in existence, it must necessarily, being the story of a
knight-errant, be grandiloquent, lofty, imposing, grand and true. With
this he comforted himself somewhat, though it made him uncomfortable to
think that the author was a Moor, judging by the title of "Cide;" and that
no truth was to be looked for from Moors, as they are all impostors,
cheats, and schemers. He was afraid he might have dealt with his love
affairs in some indecorous fashion, that might tend to the discredit and
prejudice of the purity of his lady Dulcinea del Toboso; he would have had
him set forth the fidelity and respect he had always observed towards her,
spurning queens, empresses, and damsels of all sorts, and keeping in check
the impetuosity of his natural impulses. Absorbed and wrapped up in these
and divers other cogitations, he was found by Sancho and Carrasco, whom
Don Quixote received with great courtesy.</p>
<p>The bachelor, though he was called Samson, was of no great bodily size,
but he was a very great wag; he was of a sallow complexion, but very
sharp-witted, somewhere about four-and-twenty years of age, with a round
face, a flat nose, and a large mouth, all indications of a mischievous
disposition and a love of fun and jokes; and of this he gave a sample as
soon as he saw Don Quixote, by falling on his knees before him and saying,
"Let me kiss your mightiness's hand, Senor Don Quixote of La Mancha, for,
by the habit of St. Peter that I wear, though I have no more than the
first four orders, your worship is one of the most famous knights-errant
that have ever been, or will be, all the world over. A blessing on Cide
Hamete Benengeli, who has written the history of your great deeds, and a
double blessing on that connoisseur who took the trouble of having it
translated out of the Arabic into our Castilian vulgar tongue for the
universal entertainment of the people!"</p>
<p>Don Quixote made him rise, and said, "So, then, it is true that there is a
history of me, and that it was a Moor and a sage who wrote it?"</p>
<p>"So true is it, senor," said Samson, "that my belief is there are more
than twelve thousand volumes of the said history in print this very day.
Only ask Portugal, Barcelona, and Valencia, where they have been printed,
and moreover there is a report that it is being printed at Antwerp, and I
am persuaded there will not be a country or language in which there will
not be a translation of it."</p>
<p>"One of the things," here observed Don Quixote, "that ought to give most
pleasure to a virtuous and eminent man is to find himself in his lifetime
in print and in type, familiar in people's mouths with a good name; I say
with a good name, for if it be the opposite, then there is no death to be
compared to it."</p>
<p>"If it goes by good name and fame," said the bachelor, "your worship alone
bears away the palm from all the knights-errant; for the Moor in his own
language, and the Christian in his, have taken care to set before us your
gallantry, your high courage in encountering dangers, your fortitude in
adversity, your patience under misfortunes as well as wounds, the purity
and continence of the platonic loves of your worship and my lady Dona
Dulcinea del Toboso-"</p>
<p>"I never heard my lady Dulcinea called Dona," observed Sancho here;
"nothing more than the lady Dulcinea del Toboso; so here already the
history is wrong."</p>
<p>"That is not an objection of any importance," replied Carrasco.</p>
<p>"Certainly not," said Don Quixote; "but tell me, senor bachelor, what
deeds of mine are they that are made most of in this history?"</p>
<p>"On that point," replied the bachelor, "opinions differ, as tastes do;
some swear by the adventure of the windmills that your worship took to be
Briareuses and giants; others by that of the fulling mills; one cries up
the description of the two armies that afterwards took the appearance of
two droves of sheep; another that of the dead body on its way to be buried
at Segovia; a third says the liberation of the galley slaves is the best
of all, and a fourth that nothing comes up to the affair with the
Benedictine giants, and the battle with the valiant Biscayan."</p>
<p>"Tell me, senor bachelor," said Sancho at this point, "does the adventure
with the Yanguesans come in, when our good Rocinante went hankering after
dainties?"</p>
<p>"The sage has left nothing in the ink-bottle," replied Samson; "he tells
all and sets down everything, even to the capers that worthy Sancho cut in
the blanket."</p>
<p>"I cut no capers in the blanket," returned Sancho; "in the air I did, and
more of them than I liked."</p>
<p>"There is no human history in the world, I suppose," said Don Quixote,
"that has not its ups and downs, but more than others such as deal with
chivalry, for they can never be entirely made up of prosperous
adventures."</p>
<p>"For all that," replied the bachelor, "there are those who have read the
history who say they would have been glad if the author had left out some
of the countless cudgellings that were inflicted on Senor Don Quixote in
various encounters."</p>
<p>"That's where the truth of the history comes in," said Sancho.</p>
<p>"At the same time they might fairly have passed them over in silence,"
observed Don Quixote; "for there is no need of recording events which do
not change or affect the truth of a history, if they tend to bring the
hero of it into contempt. AEneas was not in truth and earnest so pious as
Virgil represents him, nor Ulysses so wise as Homer describes him."</p>
<p>"That is true," said Samson; "but it is one thing to write as a poet,
another to write as a historian; the poet may describe or sing things, not
as they were, but as they ought to have been; but the historian has to
write them down, not as they ought to have been, but as they were, without
adding anything to the truth or taking anything from it."</p>
<p>"Well then," said Sancho, "if this senor Moor goes in for telling the
truth, no doubt among my master's drubbings mine are to be found; for they
never took the measure of his worship's shoulders without doing the same
for my whole body; but I have no right to wonder at that, for, as my
master himself says, the members must share the pain of the head."</p>
<p>"You are a sly dog, Sancho," said Don Quixote; "i' faith, you have no want
of memory when you choose to remember."</p>
<p>"If I were to try to forget the thwacks they gave me," said Sancho, "my
weals would not let me, for they are still fresh on my ribs."</p>
<p>"Hush, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "and don't interrupt the bachelor, whom
I entreat to go on and tell all that is said about me in this history."</p>
<p>"And about me," said Sancho, "for they say, too, that I am one of the
principal presonages in it."</p>
<p>"Personages, not presonages, friend Sancho," said Samson.</p>
<p>"What! Another word-catcher!" said Sancho; "if that's to be the way we
shall not make an end in a lifetime."</p>
<p>"May God shorten mine, Sancho," returned the bachelor, "if you are not the
second person in the history, and there are even some who would rather
hear you talk than the cleverest in the whole book; though there are some,
too, who say you showed yourself over-credulous in believing there was any
possibility in the government of that island offered you by Senor Don
Quixote."</p>
<p>"There is still sunshine on the wall," said Don Quixote; "and when Sancho
is somewhat more advanced in life, with the experience that years bring,
he will be fitter and better qualified for being a governor than he is at
present."</p>
<p>"By God, master," said Sancho, "the island that I cannot govern with the
years I have, I'll not be able to govern with the years of Methuselah; the
difficulty is that the said island keeps its distance somewhere, I know
not where; and not that there is any want of head in me to govern it."</p>
<p>"Leave it to God, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "for all will be and perhaps
better than you think; no leaf on the tree stirs but by God's will."</p>
<p>"That is true," said Samson; "and if it be God's will, there will not be
any want of a thousand islands, much less one, for Sancho to govern."</p>
<p>"I have seen governors in these parts," said Sancho, "that are not to be
compared to my shoe-sole; and for all that they are called 'your lordship'
and served on silver."</p>
<p>"Those are not governors of islands," observed Samson, "but of other
governments of an easier kind: those that govern islands must at least
know grammar."</p>
<p>"I could manage the gram well enough," said Sancho; "but for the mar I
have neither leaning nor liking, for I don't know what it is; but leaving
this matter of the government in God's hands, to send me wherever it may
be most to his service, I may tell you, senor bachelor Samson Carrasco, it
has pleased me beyond measure that the author of this history should have
spoken of me in such a way that what is said of me gives no offence; for,
on the faith of a true squire, if he had said anything about me that was
at all unbecoming an old Christian, such as I am, the deaf would have
heard of it."</p>
<p>"That would be working miracles," said Samson.</p>
<p>"Miracles or no miracles," said Sancho, "let everyone mind how he speaks
or writes about people, and not set down at random the first thing that
comes into his head."</p>
<p>"One of the faults they find with this history," said the bachelor, "is
that its author inserted in it a novel called 'The Ill-advised Curiosity;'
not that it is bad or ill-told, but that it is out of place and has
nothing to do with the history of his worship Senor Don Quixote."</p>
<p>"I will bet the son of a dog has mixed the cabbages and the baskets," said
Sancho.</p>
<p>"Then, I say," said Don Quixote, "the author of my history was no sage,
but some ignorant chatterer, who, in a haphazard and heedless way, set
about writing it, let it turn out as it might, just as Orbaneja, the
painter of Ubeda, used to do, who, when they asked him what he was
painting, answered, 'What it may turn out.' Sometimes he would paint a
cock in such a fashion, and so unlike, that he had to write alongside of
it in Gothic letters, 'This is a cock; and so it will be with my history,
which will require a commentary to make it intelligible."</p>
<p>"No fear of that," returned Samson, "for it is so plain that there is
nothing in it to puzzle over; the children turn its leaves, the young
people read it, the grown men understand it, the old folk praise it; in a
word, it is so thumbed, and read, and got by heart by people of all sorts,
that the instant they see any lean hack, they say, 'There goes Rocinante.'
And those that are most given to reading it are the pages, for there is
not a lord's ante-chamber where there is not a 'Don Quixote' to be found;
one takes it up if another lays it down; this one pounces upon it, and
that begs for it. In short, the said history is the most delightful and
least injurious entertainment that has been hitherto seen, for there is
not to be found in the whole of it even the semblance of an immodest word,
or a thought that is other than Catholic."</p>
<p>"To write in any other way," said Don Quixote, "would not be to write
truth, but falsehood, and historians who have recourse to falsehood ought
to be burned, like those who coin false money; and I know not what could
have led the author to have recourse to novels and irrelevant stories,
when he had so much to write about in mine; no doubt he must have gone by
the proverb 'with straw or with hay, etc,' for by merely setting forth my
thoughts, my sighs, my tears, my lofty purposes, my enterprises, he might
have made a volume as large, or larger than all the works of El Tostado
would make up. In fact, the conclusion I arrive at, senor bachelor, is,
that to write histories, or books of any kind, there is need of great
judgment and a ripe understanding. To give expression to humour, and write
in a strain of graceful pleasantry, is the gift of great geniuses. The
cleverest character in comedy is the clown, for he who would make people
take him for a fool, must not be one. History is in a measure a sacred
thing, for it should be true, and where the truth is, there God is; but
notwithstanding this, there are some who write and fling books broadcast
on the world as if they were fritters."</p>
<p>"There is no book so bad but it has something good in it," said the
bachelor.</p>
<p>"No doubt of that," replied Don Quixote; "but it often happens that those
who have acquired and attained a well-deserved reputation by their
writings, lose it entirely, or damage it in some degree, when they give
them to the press."</p>
<p>"The reason of that," said Samson, "is, that as printed works are examined
leisurely, their faults are easily seen; and the greater the fame of the
writer, the more closely are they scrutinised. Men famous for their
genius, great poets, illustrious historians, are always, or most commonly,
envied by those who take a particular delight and pleasure in criticising
the writings of others, without having produced any of their own."</p>
<p>"That is no wonder," said Don Quixote; "for there are many divines who are
no good for the pulpit, but excellent in detecting the defects or excesses
of those who preach."</p>
<p>"All that is true, Senor Don Quixote," said Carrasco; "but I wish such
fault-finders were more lenient and less exacting, and did not pay so much
attention to the spots on the bright sun of the work they grumble at; for
if aliquando bonus dormitat Homerus, they should remember how long he
remained awake to shed the light of his work with as little shade as
possible; and perhaps it may be that what they find fault with may be
moles, that sometimes heighten the beauty of the face that bears them; and
so I say very great is the risk to which he who prints a book exposes
himself, for of all impossibilities the greatest is to write one that will
satisfy and please all readers."</p>
<p>"That which treats of me must have pleased few," said Don Quixote.</p>
<p>"Quite the contrary," said the bachelor; "for, as stultorum infinitum est
numerus, innumerable are those who have relished the said history; but
some have brought a charge against the author's memory, inasmuch as he
forgot to say who the thief was who stole Sancho's Dapple; for it is not
stated there, but only to be inferred from what is set down, that he was
stolen, and a little farther on we see Sancho mounted on the same ass,
without any reappearance of it. They say, too, that he forgot to state
what Sancho did with those hundred crowns that he found in the valise in
the Sierra Morena, as he never alludes to them again, and there are many
who would be glad to know what he did with them, or what he spent them on,
for it is one of the serious omissions of the work."</p>
<p>"Senor Samson, I am not in a humour now for going into accounts or
explanations," said Sancho; "for there's a sinking of the stomach come
over me, and unless I doctor it with a couple of sups of the old stuff it
will put me on the thorn of Santa Lucia. I have it at home, and my old
woman is waiting for me; after dinner I'll come back, and will answer you
and all the world every question you may choose to ask, as well about the
loss of the ass as about the spending of the hundred crowns;" and without
another word or waiting for a reply he made off home.</p>
<p>Don Quixote begged and entreated the bachelor to stay and do penance with
him. The bachelor accepted the invitation and remained, a couple of young
pigeons were added to the ordinary fare, at dinner they talked chivalry,
Carrasco fell in with his host's humour, the banquet came to an end, they
took their afternoon sleep, Sancho returned, and their conversation was
resumed.</p>
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