<h2> <SPAN name="ch21b" id="ch21b"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI. </h2>
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<h3> IN WHICH CAMACHO'S WEDDING IS CONTINUED, WITH OTHER DELIGHTFUL INCIDENTS </h3>
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<p>While Don Quixote and Sancho were engaged in the discussion set forth the
last chapter, they heard loud shouts and a great noise, which were uttered
and made by the men on the mares as they went at full gallop, shouting, to
receive the bride and bridegroom, who were approaching with musical
instruments and pageantry of all sorts around them, and accompanied by the
priest and the relatives of both, and all the most distinguished people of
the surrounding villages. When Sancho saw the bride, he exclaimed, "By my
faith, she is not dressed like a country girl, but like some fine court
lady; egad, as well as I can make out, the patena she wears rich coral,
and her green Cuenca stuff is thirty-pile velvet; and then the white linen
trimming—by my oath, but it's satin! Look at her hands—jet
rings on them! May I never have luck if they're not gold rings, and real
gold, and set with pearls as white as a curdled milk, and every one of
them worth an eye of one's head! Whoreson baggage, what hair she has! if
it's not a wig, I never saw longer or fairer all the days of my life. See
how bravely she bears herself—and her shape! Wouldn't you say she
was like a walking palm tree loaded with clusters of dates? for the
trinkets she has hanging from her hair and neck look just like them. I
swear in my heart she is a brave lass, and fit 'to pass over the banks of
Flanders.'"</p>
<p>Don Quixote laughed at Sancho's boorish eulogies and thought that, saving
his lady Dulcinea del Toboso, he had never seen a more beautiful woman.
The fair Quiteria appeared somewhat pale, which was, no doubt, because of
the bad night brides always pass dressing themselves out for their wedding
on the morrow. They advanced towards a theatre that stood on one side of
the meadow decked with carpets and boughs, where they were to plight their
troth, and from which they were to behold the dances and plays; but at the
moment of their arrival at the spot they heard a loud outcry behind them,
and a voice exclaiming, "Wait a little, ye, as inconsiderate as ye are
hasty!" At these words all turned round, and perceived that the speaker
was a man clad in what seemed to be a loose black coat garnished with
crimson patches like flames. He was crowned (as was presently seen) with a
crown of gloomy cypress, and in his hand he held a long staff. As he
approached he was recognised by everyone as the gay Basilio, and all
waited anxiously to see what would come of his words, in dread of some
catastrophe in consequence of his appearance at such a moment. He came up
at last weary and breathless, and planting himself in front of the bridal
pair, drove his staff, which had a steel spike at the end, into the
ground, and, with a pale face and eyes fixed on Quiteria, he thus
addressed her in a hoarse, trembling voice:</p>
<p>"Well dost thou know, ungrateful Quiteria, that according to the holy law
we acknowledge, so long as live thou canst take no husband; nor art thou
ignorant either that, in my hopes that time and my own exertions would
improve my fortunes, I have never failed to observe the respect due to thy
honour; but thou, casting behind thee all thou owest to my true love,
wouldst surrender what is mine to another whose wealth serves to bring him
not only good fortune but supreme happiness; and now to complete it (not
that I think he deserves it, but inasmuch as heaven is pleased to bestow
it upon him), I will, with my own hands, do away with the obstacle that
may interfere with it, and remove myself from between you. Long live the
rich Camacho! many a happy year may he live with the ungrateful Quiteria!
and let the poor Basilio die, Basilio whose poverty clipped the wings of
his happiness, and brought him to the grave!"</p>
<p>And so saying, he seized the staff he had driven into the ground, and
leaving one half of it fixed there, showed it to be a sheath that
concealed a tolerably long rapier; and, what may be called its hilt being
planted in the ground, he swiftly, coolly, and deliberately threw himself
upon it, and in an instant the bloody point and half the steel blade
appeared at his back, the unhappy man falling to the earth bathed in his
blood, and transfixed by his own weapon.</p>
<p>His friends at once ran to his aid, filled with grief at his misery and
sad fate, and Don Quixote, dismounting from Rocinante, hastened to support
him, and took him in his arms, and found he had not yet ceased to breathe.
They were about to draw out the rapier, but the priest who was standing by
objected to its being withdrawn before he had confessed him, as the
instant of its withdrawal would be that of this death. Basilio, however,
reviving slightly, said in a weak voice, as though in pain, "If thou
wouldst consent, cruel Quiteria, to give me thy hand as my bride in this
last fatal moment, I might still hope that my rashness would find pardon,
as by its means I attained the bliss of being thine."</p>
<p>Hearing this the priest bade him think of the welfare of his soul rather
than of the cravings of the body, and in all earnestness implore God's
pardon for his sins and for his rash resolve; to which Basilio replied
that he was determined not to confess unless Quiteria first gave him her
hand in marriage, for that happiness would compose his mind and give him
courage to make his confession.</p>
<p>Don Quixote hearing the wounded man's entreaty, exclaimed aloud that what
Basilio asked was just and reasonable, and moreover a request that might
be easily complied with; and that it would be as much to Senor Camacho's
honour to receive the lady Quiteria as the widow of the brave Basilio as
if he received her direct from her father.</p>
<p>"In this case," said he, "it will be only to say 'yes,' and no
consequences can follow the utterance of the word, for the nuptial couch
of this marriage must be the grave."</p>
<p>Camacho was listening to all this, perplexed and bewildered and not
knowing what to say or do; but so urgent were the entreaties of Basilio's
friends, imploring him to allow Quiteria to give him her hand, so that his
soul, quitting this life in despair, should not be lost, that they moved,
nay, forced him, to say that if Quiteria were willing to give it he was
satisfied, as it was only putting off the fulfillment of his wishes for a
moment. At once all assailed Quiteria and pressed her, some with prayers,
and others with tears, and others with persuasive arguments, to give her
hand to poor Basilio; but she, harder than marble and more unmoved than
any statue, seemed unable or unwilling to utter a word, nor would she have
given any reply had not the priest bade her decide quickly what she meant
to do, as Basilio now had his soul at his teeth, and there was no time for
hesitation.</p>
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<p>On this the fair Quiteria, to all appearance distressed, grieved, and
repentant, advanced without a word to where Basilio lay, his eyes already
turned in his head, his breathing short and painful, murmuring the name of
Quiteria between his teeth, and apparently about to die like a heathen and
not like a Christian. Quiteria approached him, and kneeling, demanded his
hand by signs without speaking. Basilio opened his eyes and gazing fixedly
at her, said, "O Quiteria, why hast thou turned compassionate at a moment
when thy compassion will serve as a dagger to rob me of life, for I have
not now the strength left either to bear the happiness thou givest me in
accepting me as thine, or to suppress the pain that is rapidly drawing the
dread shadow of death over my eyes? What I entreat of thee, O thou fatal
star to me, is that the hand thou demandest of me and wouldst give me, be
not given out of complaisance or to deceive me afresh, but that thou
confess and declare that without any constraint upon thy will thou givest
it to me as to thy lawful husband; for it is not meet that thou shouldst
trifle with me at such a moment as this, or have recourse to falsehoods
with one who has dealt so truly by thee."</p>
<p>While uttering these words he showed such weakness that the bystanders
expected each return of faintness would take his life with it. Then
Quiteria, overcome with modesty and shame, holding in her right hand the
hand of Basilio, said, "No force would bend my will; as freely, therefore,
as it is possible for me to do so, I give thee the hand of a lawful wife,
and take thine if thou givest it to me of thine own free will, untroubled
and unaffected by the calamity thy hasty act has brought upon thee."</p>
<p>"Yes, I give it," said Basilio, "not agitated or distracted, but with
unclouded reason that heaven is pleased to grant me, thus do I give myself
to be thy husband."</p>
<p>"And I give myself to be thy wife," said Quiteria, "whether thou livest
many years, or they carry thee from my arms to the grave."</p>
<p>"For one so badly wounded," observed Sancho at this point, "this young man
has a great deal to say; they should make him leave off billing and
cooing, and attend to his soul; for to my thinking he has it more on his
tongue than at his teeth."</p>
<p>Basilio and Quiteria having thus joined hands, the priest, deeply moved
and with tears in his eyes, pronounced the blessing upon them, and
implored heaven to grant an easy passage to the soul of the newly wedded
man, who, the instant he received the blessing, started nimbly to his feet
and with unparalleled effrontery pulled out the rapier that had been
sheathed in his body. All the bystanders were astounded, and some, more
simple than inquiring, began shouting, "A miracle, a miracle!" But Basilio
replied, "No miracle, no miracle; only a trick, a trick!" The priest,
perplexed and amazed, made haste to examine the wound with both hands, and
found that the blade had passed, not through Basilio's flesh and ribs, but
through a hollow iron tube full of blood, which he had adroitly fixed at
the place, the blood, as was afterwards ascertained, having been so
prepared as not to congeal. In short, the priest and Camacho and most of
those present saw they were tricked and made fools of. The bride showed no
signs of displeasure at the deception; on the contrary, hearing them say
that the marriage, being fraudulent, would not be valid, she said that she
confirmed it afresh, whence they all concluded that the affair had been
planned by agreement and understanding between the pair, whereat Camacho
and his supporters were so mortified that they proceeded to revenge
themselves by violence, and a great number of them drawing their swords
attacked Basilio, in whose protection as many more swords were in an
instant unsheathed, while Don Quixote taking the lead on horseback, with
his lance over his arm and well covered with his shield, made all give way
before him. Sancho, who never found any pleasure or enjoyment in such
doings, retreated to the wine-jars from which he had taken his delectable
skimmings, considering that, as a holy place, that spot would be
respected.</p>
<p>"Hold, sirs, hold!" cried Don Quixote in a loud voice; "we have no right
to take vengeance for wrongs that love may do to us: remember love and war
are the same thing, and as in war it is allowable and common to make use
of wiles and stratagems to overcome the enemy, so in the contests and
rivalries of love the tricks and devices employed to attain the desired
end are justifiable, provided they be not to the discredit or dishonour of
the loved object. Quiteria belonged to Basilio and Basilio to Quiteria by
the just and beneficent disposal of heaven. Camacho is rich, and can
purchase his pleasure when, where, and as it pleases him. Basilio has but
this ewe-lamb, and no one, however powerful he may be, shall take her from
him; these two whom God hath joined man cannot separate; and he who
attempts it must first pass the point of this lance;" and so saying he
brandished it so stoutly and dexterously that he overawed all who did not
know him.</p>
<p>But so deep an impression had the rejection of Quiteria made on Camacho's
mind that it banished her at once from his thoughts; and so the counsels
of the priest, who was a wise and kindly disposed man, prevailed with him,
and by their means he and his partisans were pacified and tranquillised,
and to prove it put up their swords again, inveighing against the pliancy
of Quiteria rather than the craftiness of Basilio; Camacho maintaining
that, if Quiteria as a maiden had such a love for Basilio, she would have
loved him too as a married woman, and that he ought to thank heaven more
for having taken her than for having given her.</p>
<p>Camacho and those of his following, therefore, being consoled and
pacified, those on Basilio's side were appeased; and the rich Camacho, to
show that he felt no resentment for the trick, and did not care about it,
desired the festival to go on just as if he were married in reality.
Neither Basilio, however, nor his bride, nor their followers would take
any part in it, and they withdrew to Basilio's village; for the poor, if
they are persons of virtue and good sense, have those who follow, honour,
and uphold them, just as the rich have those who flatter and dance
attendance on them. With them they carried Don Quixote, regarding him as a
man of worth and a stout one. Sancho alone had a cloud on his soul, for he
found himself debarred from waiting for Camacho's splendid feast and
festival, which lasted until night; and thus dragged away, he moodily
followed his master, who accompanied Basilio's party, and left behind him
the flesh-pots of Egypt; though in his heart he took them with him, and
their now nearly finished skimmings that he carried in the bucket conjured
up visions before his eyes of the glory and abundance of the good cheer he
was losing. And so, vexed and dejected though not hungry, without
dismounting from Dapple he followed in the footsteps of Rocinante.</p>
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<h2> <SPAN name="ch22b" id="ch22b"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII. </h2>
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<h3> WHERIN IS RELATED THE GRAND ADVENTURE OF THE CAVE OF MONTESINOS IN THE HEART OF LA MANCHA, WHICH THE VALIANT DON QUIXOTE BROUGHT TO A HAPPY TERMINATION </h3>
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<p>Many and great were the attentions shown to Don Quixote by the newly
married couple, who felt themselves under an obligation to him for coming
forward in defence of their cause; and they exalted his wisdom to the same
level with his courage, rating him as a Cid in arms, and a Cicero in
eloquence. Worthy Sancho enjoyed himself for three days at the expense of
the pair, from whom they learned that the sham wound was not a scheme
arranged with the fair Quiteria, but a device of Basilio's, who counted on
exactly the result they had seen; he confessed, it is true, that he had
confided his idea to some of his friends, so that at the proper time they
might aid him in his purpose and insure the success of the deception.</p>
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<p>"That," said Don Quixote, "is not and ought not to be called deception
which aims at virtuous ends;" and the marriage of lovers he maintained to
be a most excellent end, reminding them, however, that love has no greater
enemy than hunger and constant want; for love is all gaiety, enjoyment,
and happiness, especially when the lover is in the possession of the
object of his love, and poverty and want are the declared enemies of all
these; which he said to urge Senor Basilio to abandon the practice of
those accomplishments he was skilled in, for though they brought him fame,
they brought him no money, and apply himself to the acquisition of wealth
by legitimate industry, which will never fail those who are prudent and
persevering. The poor man who is a man of honour (if indeed a poor man can
be a man of honour) has a jewel when he has a fair wife, and if she is
taken from him, his honour is taken from him and slain. The fair woman who
is a woman of honour, and whose husband is poor, deserves to be crowned
with the laurels and crowns of victory and triumph. Beauty by itself
attracts the desires of all who behold it, and the royal eagles and birds
of towering flight stoop on it as on a dainty lure; but if beauty be
accompanied by want and penury, then the ravens and the kites and other
birds of prey assail it, and she who stands firm against such attacks well
deserves to be called the crown of her husband. "Remember, O prudent
Basilio," added Don Quixote, "it was the opinion of a certain sage, I know
not whom, that there was not more than one good woman in the whole world;
and his advice was that each one should think and believe that this one
good woman was his own wife, and in this way he would live happy. I myself
am not married, nor, so far, has it ever entered my thoughts to be so;
nevertheless I would venture to give advice to anyone who might ask it, as
to the mode in which he should seek a wife such as he would be content to
marry. The first thing I would recommend him, would be to look to good
name rather than to wealth, for a good woman does not win a good name
merely by being good, but by letting it be seen that she is so, and open
looseness and freedom do much more damage to a woman's honour than secret
depravity. If you take a good woman into your house it will be an easy
matter to keep her good, and even to make her still better; but if you
take a bad one you will find it hard work to mend her, for it is no very
easy matter to pass from one extreme to another. I do not say it is
impossible, but I look upon it as difficult."</p>
<p>Sancho, listening to all this, said to himself, "This master of mine, when
I say anything that has weight and substance, says I might take a pulpit
in hand, and go about the world preaching fine sermons; but I say of him
that, when he begins stringing maxims together and giving advice not only
might he take a pulpit in hand, but two on each finger, and go into the
market-places to his heart's content. Devil take you for a knight-errant,
what a lot of things you know! I used to think in my heart that the only
thing he knew was what belonged to his chivalry; but there is nothing he
won't have a finger in."</p>
<p>Sancho muttered this somewhat aloud, and his master overheard him, and
asked, "What art thou muttering there, Sancho?"</p>
<p>"I'm not saying anything or muttering anything," said Sancho; "I was only
saying to myself that I wish I had heard what your worship has said just
now before I married; perhaps I'd say now, 'The ox that's loose licks
himself well.'"</p>
<p>"Is thy Teresa so bad then, Sancho?"</p>
<p>"She is not very bad," replied Sancho; "but she is not very good; at least
she is not as good as I could wish."</p>
<p>"Thou dost wrong, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "to speak ill of thy wife;
for after all she is the mother of thy children." "We are quits," returned
Sancho; "for she speaks ill of me whenever she takes it into her head,
especially when she is jealous; and Satan himself could not put up with
her then."</p>
<p>In fine, they remained three days with the newly married couple, by whom
they were entertained and treated like kings. Don Quixote begged the
fencing licentiate to find him a guide to show him the way to the cave of
Montesinos, as he had a great desire to enter it and see with his own eyes
if the wonderful tales that were told of it all over the country were
true. The licentiate said he would get him a cousin of his own, a famous
scholar, and one very much given to reading books of chivalry, who would
have great pleasure in conducting him to the mouth of the very cave, and
would show him the lakes of Ruidera, which were likewise famous all over
La Mancha, and even all over Spain; and he assured him he would find him
entertaining, for he was a youth who could write books good enough to be
printed and dedicated to princes. The cousin arrived at last, leading an
ass in foal, with a pack-saddle covered with a parti-coloured carpet or
sackcloth; Sancho saddled Rocinante, got Dapple ready, and stocked his
alforjas, along with which went those of the cousin, likewise well filled;
and so, commending themselves to God and bidding farewell to all, they set
out, taking the road for the famous cave of Montesinos.</p>
<p>On the way Don Quixote asked the cousin of what sort and character his
pursuits, avocations, and studies were, to which he replied that he was by
profession a humanist, and that his pursuits and studies were making books
for the press, all of great utility and no less entertainment to the
nation. One was called "The Book of Liveries," in which he described seven
hundred and three liveries, with their colours, mottoes, and ciphers, from
which gentlemen of the court might pick and choose any they fancied for
festivals and revels, without having to go a-begging for them from anyone,
or puzzling their brains, as the saying is, to have them appropriate to
their objects and purposes; "for," said he, "I give the jealous, the
rejected, the forgotten, the absent, what will suit them, and fit them
without fail. I have another book, too, which I shall call 'Metamorphoses,
or the Spanish Ovid,' one of rare and original invention, for imitating
Ovid in burlesque style, I show in it who the Giralda of Seville and the
Angel of the Magdalena were, what the sewer of Vecinguerra at Cordova was,
what the bulls of Guisando, the Sierra Morena, the Leganitos and Lavapies
fountains at Madrid, not forgetting those of the Piojo, of the Cano
Dorado, and of the Priora; and all with their allegories, metaphors, and
changes, so that they are amusing, interesting, and instructive, all at
once. Another book I have which I call 'The Supplement to Polydore
Vergil,' which treats of the invention of things, and is a work of great
erudition and research, for I establish and elucidate elegantly some
things of great importance which Polydore omitted to mention. He forgot to
tell us who was the first man in the world that had a cold in his head,
and who was the first to try salivation for the French disease, but I give
it accurately set forth, and quote more than five-and-twenty authors in
proof of it, so you may perceive I have laboured to good purpose and that
the book will be of service to the whole world."</p>
<p>Sancho, who had been very attentive to the cousin's words, said to him,
"Tell me, senor—and God give you luck in printing your books—can
you tell me (for of course you know, as you know everything) who was the
first man that scratched his head? For to my thinking it must have been
our father Adam."</p>
<p>"So it must," replied the cousin; "for there is no doubt but Adam had a
head and hair; and being the first man in the world he would have
scratched himself sometimes."</p>
<p>"So I think," said Sancho; "but now tell me, who was the first tumbler in
the world?"</p>
<p>"Really, brother," answered the cousin, "I could not at this moment say
positively without having investigated it; I will look it up when I go
back to where I have my books, and will satisfy you the next time we meet,
for this will not be the last time."</p>
<p>"Look here, senor," said Sancho, "don't give yourself any trouble about
it, for I have just this minute hit upon what I asked you. The first
tumbler in the world, you must know, was Lucifer, when they cast or
pitched him out of heaven; for he came tumbling into the bottomless pit."</p>
<p>"You are right, friend," said the cousin; and said Don Quixote, "Sancho,
that question and answer are not thine own; thou hast heard them from some
one else."</p>
<p>"Hold your peace, senor," said Sancho; "faith, if I take to asking
questions and answering, I'll go on from this till to-morrow morning. Nay!
to ask foolish things and answer nonsense I needn't go looking for help
from my neighbours."</p>
<p>"Thou hast said more than thou art aware of, Sancho," said Don Quixote;
"for there are some who weary themselves out in learning and proving
things that, after they are known and proved, are not worth a farthing to
the understanding or memory."</p>
<p>In this and other pleasant conversation the day went by, and that night
they put up at a small hamlet whence it was not more than two leagues to
the cave of Montesinos, so the cousin told Don Quixote, adding, that if he
was bent upon entering it, it would be requisite for him to provide
himself with ropes, so that he might be tied and lowered into its depths.
Don Quixote said that even if it reached to the bottomless pit he meant to
see where it went to; so they bought about a hundred fathoms of rope, and
next day at two in the afternoon they arrived at the cave, the mouth of
which is spacious and wide, but full of thorn and wild-fig bushes and
brambles and briars, so thick and matted that they completely close it up
and cover it over.</p>
<p>On coming within sight of it the cousin, Sancho, and Don Quixote
dismounted, and the first two immediately tied the latter very firmly with
the ropes, and as they were girding and swathing him Sancho said to him,
"Mind what you are about, master mine; don't go burying yourself alive, or
putting yourself where you'll be like a bottle put to cool in a well; it's
no affair or business of your worship's to become the explorer of this,
which must be worse than a Moorish dungeon."</p>
<p>"Tie me and hold thy peace," said Don Quixote, "for an emprise like this,
friend Sancho, was reserved for me;" and said the guide, "I beg of you,
Senor Don Quixote, to observe carefully and examine with a hundred eyes
everything that is within there; perhaps there may be some things for me
to put into my book of 'Transformations.'"</p>
<p>"The drum is in hands that will know how to beat it well enough," said
Sancho Panza.</p>
<p>When he had said this and finished the tying (which was not over the
armour but only over the doublet) Don Quixote observed, "It was careless
of us not to have provided ourselves with a small cattle-bell to be tied
on the rope close to me, the sound of which would show that I was still
descending and alive; but as that is out of the question now, in God's
hand be it to guide me;" and forthwith he fell on his knees and in a low
voice offered up a prayer to heaven, imploring God to aid him and grant
him success in this to all appearance perilous and untried adventure, and
then exclaimed aloud, "O mistress of my actions and movements, illustrious
and peerless Dulcinea del Toboso, if so be the prayers and supplications
of this fortunate lover can reach thy ears, by thy incomparable beauty I
entreat thee to listen to them, for they but ask thee not to refuse me thy
favour and protection now that I stand in such need of them. I am about to
precipitate, to sink, to plunge myself into the abyss that is here before
me, only to let the world know that while thou dost favour me there is no
impossibility I will not attempt and accomplish." With these words he
approached the cavern, and perceived that it was impossible to let himself
down or effect an entrance except by sheer force or cleaving a passage; so
drawing his sword he began to demolish and cut away the brambles at the
mouth of the cave, at the noise of which a vast multitude of crows and
choughs flew out of it so thick and so fast that they knocked Don Quixote
down; and if he had been as much of a believer in augury as he was a
Catholic Christian he would have taken it as a bad omen and declined to
bury himself in such a place. He got up, however, and as there came no
more crows, or night-birds like the bats that flew out at the same time
with the crows, the cousin and Sancho giving him rope, he lowered himself
into the depths of the dread cavern; and as he entered it Sancho sent his
blessing after him, making a thousand crosses over him and saying, "God,
and the Pena de Francia, and the Trinity of Gaeta guide thee, flower and
cream of knights-errant. There thou goest, thou dare-devil of the earth,
heart of steel, arm of brass; once more, God guide thee and send thee back
safe, sound, and unhurt to the light of this world thou art leaving to
bury thyself in the darkness thou art seeking there;" and the cousin
offered up almost the same prayers and supplications.</p>
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<p>Don Quixote kept calling to them to give him rope and more rope, and they
gave it out little by little, and by the time the calls, which came out of
the cave as out of a pipe, ceased to be heard they had let down the
hundred fathoms of rope. They were inclined to pull Don Quixote up again,
as they could give him no more rope; however, they waited about half an
hour, at the end of which time they began to gather in the rope again with
great ease and without feeling any weight, which made them fancy Don
Quixote was remaining below; and persuaded that it was so, Sancho wept
bitterly, and hauled away in great haste in order to settle the question.
When, however, they had come to, as it seemed, rather more than eighty
fathoms they felt a weight, at which they were greatly delighted; and at
last, at ten fathoms more, they saw Don Quixote distinctly, and Sancho
called out to him, saying, "Welcome back, senor, for we had begun to think
you were going to stop there to found a family." But Don Quixote answered
not a word, and drawing him out entirely they perceived he had his eyes
shut and every appearance of being fast asleep.</p>
<p>They stretched him on the ground and untied him, but still he did not
awake; however, they rolled him back and forwards and shook and pulled him
about, so that after some time he came to himself, stretching himself just
as if he were waking up from a deep and sound sleep, and looking about him
he said, "God forgive you, friends; ye have taken me away from the
sweetest and most delightful existence and spectacle that ever human being
enjoyed or beheld. Now indeed do I know that all the pleasures of this
life pass away like a shadow and a dream, or fade like the flower of the
field. O ill-fated Montesinos! O sore-wounded Durandarte! O unhappy
Belerma! O tearful Guadiana, and ye O hapless daughters of Ruidera who
show in your waves the tears that flowed from your beauteous eyes!"</p>
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<p>The cousin and Sancho Panza listened with deep attention to the words of
Don Quixote, who uttered them as though with immense pain he drew them up
from his very bowels. They begged of him to explain himself, and tell them
what he had seen in that hell down there.</p>
<p>"Hell do you call it?" said Don Quixote; "call it by no such name, for it
does not deserve it, as ye shall soon see."</p>
<p>He then begged them to give him something to eat, as he was very hungry.
They spread the cousin's sackcloth on the grass, and put the stores of the
alforjas into requisition, and all three sitting down lovingly and
sociably, they made a luncheon and a supper of it all in one; and when the
sackcloth was removed, Don Quixote of La Mancha said, "Let no one rise,
and attend to me, my sons, both of you."</p>
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