<h2> <SPAN name="ch52b" id="ch52b"></SPAN>CHAPTER LII. </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> WHEREIN IS RELATED THE ADVENTURE OF THE SECOND DISTRESSED OR AFFLICTED DUENNA, OTHERWISE CALLED DONA RODRIGUEZ </h3>
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<p>Cide Hamete relates that Don Quixote being now cured of his scratches felt
that the life he was leading in the castle was entirely inconsistent with
the order of chivalry he professed, so he determined to ask the duke and
duchess to permit him to take his departure for Saragossa, as the time of
the festival was now drawing near, and he hoped to win there the suit of
armour which is the prize at festivals of the sort. But one day at table
with the duke and duchess, just as he was about to carry his resolution
into effect and ask for their permission, lo and behold suddenly there
came in through the door of the great hall two women, as they afterwards
proved to be, draped in mourning from head to foot, one of whom
approaching Don Quixote flung herself at full length at his feet, pressing
her lips to them, and uttering moans so sad, so deep, and so doleful that
she put all who heard and saw her into a state of perplexity; and though
the duke and duchess supposed it must be some joke their servants were
playing off upon Don Quixote, still the earnest way the woman sighed and
moaned and wept puzzled them and made them feel uncertain, until Don
Quixote, touched with compassion, raised her up and made her unveil
herself and remove the mantle from her tearful face. She complied and
disclosed what no one could have ever anticipated, for she disclosed the
countenance of Dona Rodriguez, the duenna of the house; the other female
in mourning being her daughter, who had been made a fool of by the rich
farmer's son. All who knew her were filled with astonishment, and the duke
and duchess more than any; for though they thought her a simpleton and a
weak creature, they did not think her capable of crazy pranks. Dona
Rodriguez, at length, turning to her master and mistress said to them,
"Will your excellences be pleased to permit me to speak to this gentleman
for a moment, for it is requisite I should do so in order to get
successfully out of the business in which the boldness of an evil-minded
clown has involved me?"</p>
<p>The duke said that for his part he gave her leave, and that she might
speak with Senor Don Quixote as much as she liked.</p>
<p>She then, turning to Don Quixote and addressing herself to him said, "Some
days since, valiant knight, I gave you an account of the injustice and
treachery of a wicked farmer to my dearly beloved daughter, the unhappy
damsel here before you, and you promised me to take her part and right the
wrong that has been done her; but now it has come to my hearing that you
are about to depart from this castle in quest of such fair adventures as
God may vouchsafe to you; therefore, before you take the road, I would
that you challenge this froward rustic, and compel him to marry my
daughter in fulfillment of the promise he gave her to become her husband
before he seduced her; for to expect that my lord the duke will do me
justice is to ask pears from the elm tree, for the reason I stated
privately to your worship; and so may our Lord grant you good health and
forsake us not."</p>
<p>To these words Don Quixote replied very gravely and solemnly, "Worthy
duenna, check your tears, or rather dry them, and spare your sighs, for I
take it upon myself to obtain redress for your daughter, for whom it would
have been better not to have been so ready to believe lovers' promises,
which are for the most part quickly made and very slowly performed; and
so, with my lord the duke's leave, I will at once go in quest of this
inhuman youth, and will find him out and challenge him and slay him, if so
be he refuses to keep his promised word; for the chief object of my
profession is to spare the humble and chastise the proud; I mean, to help
the distressed and destroy the oppressors."</p>
<p>"There is no necessity," said the duke, "for your worship to take the
trouble of seeking out the rustic of whom this worthy duenna complains,
nor is there any necessity, either, for asking my leave to challenge him;
for I admit him duly challenged, and will take care that he is informed of
the challenge, and accepts it, and comes to answer it in person to this
castle of mine, where I shall afford to both a fair field, observing all
the conditions which are usually and properly observed in such trials, and
observing too justice to both sides, as all princes who offer a free field
to combatants within the limits of their lordships are bound to do."</p>
<p>"Then with that assurance and your highness's good leave," said Don
Quixote, "I hereby for this once waive my privilege of gentle blood, and
come down and put myself on a level with the lowly birth of the
wrong-doer, making myself equal with him and enabling him to enter into
combat with me; and so, I challenge and defy him, though absent, on the
plea of his malfeasance in breaking faith with this poor damsel, who was a
maiden and now by his misdeed is none; and say that he shall fulfill the
promise he gave her to become her lawful husband, or else stake his life
upon the question."</p>
<p>And then plucking off a glove he threw it down in the middle of the hall,
and the duke picked it up, saying, as he had said before, that he accepted
the challenge in the name of his vassal, and fixed six days thence as the
time, the courtyard of the castle as the place, and for arms the customary
ones of knights, lance and shield and full armour, with all the other
accessories, without trickery, guile, or charms of any sort, and examined
and passed by the judges of the field. "But first of all," he said, "it is
requisite that this worthy duenna and unworthy damsel should place their
claim for justice in the hands of Don Quixote; for otherwise nothing can
be done, nor can the said challenge be brought to a lawful issue."</p>
<p>"I do so place it," replied the duenna.</p>
<p>"And I too," added her daughter, all in tears and covered with shame and
confusion.</p>
<p>This declaration having been made, and the duke having settled in his own
mind what he would do in the matter, the ladies in black withdrew, and the
duchess gave orders that for the future they were not to be treated as
servants of hers, but as lady adventurers who came to her house to demand
justice; so they gave them a room to themselves and waited on them as they
would on strangers, to the consternation of the other women-servants, who
did not know where the folly and imprudence of Dona Rodriguez and her
unlucky daughter would stop.</p>
<p>And now, to complete the enjoyment of the feast and bring the dinner to a
satisfactory end, lo and behold the page who had carried the letters and
presents to Teresa Panza, the wife of the governor Sancho, entered the
hall; and the duke and duchess were very well pleased to see him, being
anxious to know the result of his journey; but when they asked him the
page said in reply that he could not give it before so many people or in a
few words, and begged their excellences to be pleased to let it wait for a
private opportunity, and in the meantime amuse themselves with these
letters; and taking out the letters he placed them in the duchess's hand.
One bore by way of address, Letter for my lady the Duchess So-and-so, of I
don't know where; and the other To my husband Sancho Panza, governor of
the island of Barataria, whom God prosper longer than me. The duchess's
bread would not bake, as the saying is, until she had read her letter; and
having looked over it herself and seen that it might be read aloud for the
duke and all present to hear, she read out as follows.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>TERESA PANZA'S LETTER TO THE DUCHESS.</p>
<p>The letter your highness wrote me, my lady, gave me great pleasure, for
indeed I found it very welcome. The string of coral beads is very fine,
and my husband's hunting suit does not fall short of it. All this
village is very much pleased that your ladyship has made a governor of
my good man Sancho; though nobody will believe it, particularly the
curate, and Master Nicholas the barber, and the bachelor Samson
Carrasco; but I don't care for that, for so long as it is true, as it
is, they may all say what they like; though, to tell the truth, if the
coral beads and the suit had not come I would not have believed it
either; for in this village everybody thinks my husband a numskull, and
except for governing a flock of goats, they cannot fancy what sort of
government he can be fit for. God grant it, and direct him according as
he sees his children stand in need of it. I am resolved with your
worship's leave, lady of my soul, to make the most of this fair day, and
go to Court to stretch myself at ease in a coach, and make all those I
have envying me already burst their eyes out; so I beg your excellence
to order my husband to send me a small trifle of money, and to let it be
something to speak of, because one's expenses are heavy at the Court;
for a loaf costs a real, and meat thirty maravedis a pound, which is
beyond everything; and if he does not want me to go let him tell me in
time, for my feet are on the fidgets to be off; and my friends and
neighbours tell me that if my daughter and I make a figure and a brave
show at Court, my husband will come to be known far more by me than I by
him, for of course plenty of people will ask, "Who are those ladies in
that coach?" and some servant of mine will answer, "The wife and
daughter of Sancho Panza, governor of the island of Barataria;" and in
this way Sancho will become known, and I'll be thought well of, and "to
Rome for everything." I am as vexed as vexed can be that they have
gathered no acorns this year in our village; for all that I send your
highness about half a peck that I went to the wood to gather and pick
out one by one myself, and I could find no bigger ones; I wish they were
as big as ostrich eggs.</p>
<p>Let not your high mightiness forget to write to me; and I will take care
to answer, and let you know how I am, and whatever news there may be in
this place, where I remain, praying our Lord to have your highness in
his keeping and not to forget me.</p>
<p>Sancha my daughter, and my son, kiss your worship's hands.</p>
<p>She who would rather see your ladyship than write to you,</p>
<p>Your servant,<br/> TERESA PANZA.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>All were greatly amused by Teresa Panza's letter, but particularly the
duke and duchess; and the duchess asked Don Quixote's opinion whether they
might open the letter that had come for the governor, which she suspected
must be very good. Don Quixote said that to gratify them he would open it,
and did so, and found that it ran as follows.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>TERESA PANZA'S LETTER TO HER HUSBAND SANCHO PANZA.</p>
<p>I got thy letter, Sancho of my soul, and I promise thee and swear as a
Catholic Christian that I was within two fingers' breadth of going mad I
was so happy. I can tell thee, brother, when I came to hear that thou
wert a governor I thought I should have dropped dead with pure joy; and
thou knowest they say sudden joy kills as well as great sorrow; and as
for Sanchica thy daughter, she leaked from sheer happiness. I had before
me the suit thou didst send me, and the coral beads my lady the duchess
sent me round my neck, and the letters in my hands, and there was the
bearer of them standing by, and in spite of all this I verily believed
and thought that what I saw and handled was all a dream; for who could
have thought that a goatherd would come to be a governor of islands?
Thou knowest, my friend, what my mother used to say, that one must live
long to see much; I say it because I expect to see more if I live
longer; for I don't expect to stop until I see thee a farmer of taxes or
a collector of revenue, which are offices where, though the devil
carries off those who make a bad use of them, still they make and handle
money. My lady the duchess will tell thee the desire I have to go to the
Court; consider the matter and let me know thy pleasure; I will try to
do honour to thee by going in a coach.</p>
<p>Neither the curate, nor the barber, nor the bachelor, nor even the
sacristan, can believe that thou art a governor, and they say the whole
thing is a delusion or an enchantment affair, like everything belonging
to thy master Don Quixote; and Samson says he must go in search of thee
and drive the government out of thy head and the madness out of Don
Quixote's skull; I only laugh, and look at my string of beads, and plan
out the dress I am going to make for our daughter out of thy suit. I
sent some acorns to my lady the duchess; I wish they had been gold. Send
me some strings of pearls if they are in fashion in that island. Here is
the news of the village; La Berrueca has married her daughter to a
good-for-nothing painter, who came here to paint anything that might
turn up. The council gave him an order to paint his Majesty's arms over
the door of the town-hall; he asked two ducats, which they paid him in
advance; he worked for eight days, and at the end of them had nothing
painted, and then said he had no turn for painting such trifling things;
he returned the money, and for all that has married on the pretence of
being a good workman; to be sure he has now laid aside his paint-brush
and taken a spade in hand, and goes to the field like a gentleman. Pedro
Lobo's son has received the first orders and tonsure, with the intention
of becoming a priest. Minguilla, Mingo Silvato's granddaughter, found it
out, and has gone to law with him on the score of having given her
promise of marriage. Evil tongues say she is with child by him, but he
denies it stoutly. There are no olives this year, and there is not a
drop of vinegar to be had in the whole village. A company of soldiers
passed through here; when they left they took away with them three of
the girls of the village; I will not tell thee who they are; perhaps
they will come back, and they will be sure to find those who will take
them for wives with all their blemishes, good or bad. Sanchica is making
bonelace; she earns eight maravedis a day clear, which she puts into a
moneybox as a help towards house furnishing; but now that she is a
governor's daughter thou wilt give her a portion without her working for
it. The fountain in the plaza has run dry. A flash of lightning struck
the gibbet, and I wish they all lit there. I look for an answer to this,
and to know thy mind about my going to the Court; and so, God keep thee
longer than me, or as long, for I would not leave thee in this world
without me.</p>
<p>Thy wife,<br/> TERESA PANZA.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The letters were applauded, laughed over, relished, and admired; and then,
as if to put the seal to the business, the courier arrived, bringing the
one Sancho sent to Don Quixote, and this, too, was read out, and it raised
some doubts as to the governor's simplicity. The duchess withdrew to hear
from the page about his adventures in Sancho's village, which he narrated
at full length without leaving a single circumstance unmentioned. He gave
her the acorns, and also a cheese which Teresa had given him as being
particularly good and superior to those of Tronchon. The duchess received
it with greatest delight, in which we will leave her, to describe the end
of the government of the great Sancho Panza, flower and mirror of all
governors of islands.</p>
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<h2> <SPAN name="ch53b" id="ch53b"></SPAN>CHAPTER LIII. </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> OF THE TROUBLOUS END AND TERMINATION SANCHO PANZA'S GOVERNMENT CAME TO </h3>
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<p>To fancy that in this life anything belonging to it will remain for ever
in the same state is an idle fancy; on the contrary, in it everything
seems to go in a circle, I mean round and round. The spring succeeds the
summer, the summer the fall, the fall the autumn, the autumn the winter,
and the winter the spring, and so time rolls with never-ceasing wheel.
Man's life alone, swifter than time, speeds onward to its end without any
hope of renewal, save it be in that other life which is endless and
boundless. Thus saith Cide Hamete the Mahometan philosopher; for there are
many that by the light of nature alone, without the light of faith, have a
comprehension of the fleeting nature and instability of this present life
and the endless duration of that eternal life we hope for; but our author
is here speaking of the rapidity with which Sancho's government came to an
end, melted away, disappeared, vanished as it were in smoke and shadow.
For as he lay in bed on the night of the seventh day of his government,
sated, not with bread and wine, but with delivering judgments and giving
opinions and making laws and proclamations, just as sleep, in spite of
hunger, was beginning to close his eyelids, he heard such a noise of
bell-ringing and shouting that one would have fancied the whole island was
going to the bottom. He sat up in bed and remained listening intently to
try if he could make out what could be the cause of so great an uproar;
not only, however, was he unable to discover what it was, but as countless
drums and trumpets now helped to swell the din of the bells and shouts, he
was more puzzled than ever, and filled with fear and terror; and getting
up he put on a pair of slippers because of the dampness of the floor, and
without throwing a dressing gown or anything of the kind over him he
rushed out of the door of his room, just in time to see approaching along
a corridor a band of more than twenty persons with lighted torches and
naked swords in their hands, all shouting out, "To arms, to arms, senor
governor, to arms! The enemy is in the island in countless numbers, and we
are lost unless your skill and valour come to our support."</p>
<p>Keeping up this noise, tumult, and uproar, they came to where Sancho stood
dazed and bewildered by what he saw and heard, and as they approached one
of them called out to him, "Arm at once, your lordship, if you would not
have yourself destroyed and the whole island lost."</p>
<p>"What have I to do with arming?" said Sancho. "What do I know about arms
or supports? Better leave all that to my master Don Quixote, who will
settle it and make all safe in a trice; for I, sinner that I am, God help
me, don't understand these scuffles."</p>
<p>"Ah, senor governor," said another, "what slackness of mettle this is! Arm
yourself; here are arms for you, offensive and defensive; come out to the
plaza and be our leader and captain; it falls upon you by right, for you
are our governor."</p>
<p>"Arm me then, in God's name," said Sancho, and they at once produced two
large shields they had come provided with, and placed them upon him over
his shirt, without letting him put on anything else, one shield in front
and the other behind, and passing his arms through openings they had made,
they bound him tight with ropes, so that there he was walled and boarded
up as straight as a spindle and unable to bend his knees or stir a single
step. In his hand they placed a lance, on which he leant to keep himself
from falling, and as soon as they had him thus fixed they bade him march
forward and lead them on and give them all courage; for with him for their
guide and lamp and morning star, they were sure to bring their business to
a successful issue.</p>
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<p>"How am I to march, unlucky being that I am?" said Sancho, "when I can't
stir my knee-caps, for these boards I have bound so tight to my body won't
let me. What you must do is carry me in your arms, and lay me across or
set me upright in some postern, and I'll hold it either with this lance or
with my body."</p>
<p>"On, senor governor!" cried another, "it is fear more than the boards that
keeps you from moving; make haste, stir yourself, for there is no time to
lose; the enemy is increasing in numbers, the shouts grow louder, and the
danger is pressing."</p>
<p>Urged by these exhortations and reproaches the poor governor made an
attempt to advance, but fell to the ground with such a crash that he
fancied he had broken himself all to pieces. There he lay like a tortoise
enclosed in its shell, or a side of bacon between two kneading-troughs, or
a boat bottom up on the beach; nor did the gang of jokers feel any
compassion for him when they saw him down; so far from that, extinguishing
their torches they began to shout afresh and to renew the calls to arms
with such energy, trampling on poor Sancho, and slashing at him over the
shield with their swords in such a way that, if he had not gathered
himself together and made himself small and drawn in his head between the
shields, it would have fared badly with the poor governor, as, squeezed
into that narrow compass, he lay, sweating and sweating again, and
commending himself with all his heart to God to deliver him from his
present peril. Some stumbled over him, others fell upon him, and one there
was who took up a position on top of him for some time, and from thence as
if from a watchtower issued orders to the troops, shouting out, "Here, our
side! Here the enemy is thickest! Hold the breach there! Shut that gate!
Barricade those ladders! Here with your stink-pots of pitch and resin, and
kettles of boiling oil! Block the streets with feather beds!" In short, in
his ardour he mentioned every little thing, and every implement and engine
of war by means of which an assault upon a city is warded off, while the
bruised and battered Sancho, who heard and suffered all, was saying to
himself, "O if it would only please the Lord to let the island be lost at
once, and I could see myself either dead or out of this torture!" Heaven
heard his prayer, and when he least expected it he heard voices
exclaiming, "Victory, victory! The enemy retreats beaten! Come, senor
governor, get up, and come and enjoy the victory, and divide the spoils
that have been won from the foe by the might of that invincible arm."</p>
<p>"Lift me up," said the wretched Sancho in a woebegone voice. They helped
him to rise, and as soon as he was on his feet said, "The enemy I have
beaten you may nail to my forehead; I don't want to divide the spoils of
the foe, I only beg and entreat some friend, if I have one, to give me a
sup of wine, for I'm parched with thirst, and wipe me dry, for I'm turning
to water."</p>
<p>They rubbed him down, fetched him wine and unbound the shields, and he
seated himself upon his bed, and with fear, agitation, and fatigue he
fainted away. Those who had been concerned in the joke were now sorry they
had pushed it so far; however, the anxiety his fainting away had caused
them was relieved by his returning to himself. He asked what o'clock it
was; they told him it was just daybreak. He said no more, and in silence
began to dress himself, while all watched him, waiting to see what the
haste with which he was putting on his clothes meant.</p>
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<p>He got himself dressed at last, and then, slowly, for he was sorely
bruised and could not go fast, he proceeded to the stable, followed by all
who were present, and going up to Dapple embraced him and gave him a
loving kiss on the forehead, and said to him, not without tears in his
eyes, "Come along, comrade and friend and partner of my toils and sorrows;
when I was with you and had no cares to trouble me except mending your
harness and feeding your little carcass, happy were my hours, my days, and
my years; but since I left you, and mounted the towers of ambition and
pride, a thousand miseries, a thousand troubles, and four thousand
anxieties have entered into my soul;" and all the while he was speaking in
this strain he was fixing the pack-saddle on the ass, without a word from
anyone. Then having Dapple saddled, he, with great pain and difficulty,
got up on him, and addressing himself to the majordomo, the secretary, the
head-carver, and Pedro Recio the doctor and several others who stood by,
he said, "Make way, gentlemen, and let me go back to my old freedom; let
me go look for my past life, and raise myself up from this present death.
I was not born to be a governor or protect islands or cities from the
enemies that choose to attack them. Ploughing and digging, vinedressing
and pruning, are more in my way than defending provinces or kingdoms.
'Saint Peter is very well at Rome; I mean each of us is best following the
trade he was born to. A reaping-hook fits my hand better than a governor's
sceptre; I'd rather have my fill of gazpacho' than be subject to the
misery of a meddling doctor who me with hunger, and I'd rather lie in
summer under the shade of an oak, and in winter wrap myself in a double
sheepskin jacket in freedom, than go to bed between holland sheets and
dress in sables under the restraint of a government. God be with your
worships, and tell my lord the duke that 'naked I was born, naked I find
myself, I neither lose nor gain;' I mean that without a farthing I came
into this government, and without a farthing I go out of it, very
different from the way governors commonly leave other islands. Stand aside
and let me go; I have to plaster myself, for I believe every one of my
ribs is crushed, thanks to the enemies that have been trampling over me
to-night."</p>
<p>"That is unnecessary, senor governor," said Doctor Recio, "for I will give
your worship a draught against falls and bruises that will soon make you
as sound and strong as ever; and as for your diet I promise your worship
to behave better, and let you eat plentifully of whatever you like."</p>
<p>"You spoke late," said Sancho. "I'd as soon turn Turk as stay any longer.
Those jokes won't pass a second time. By God I'd as soon remain in this
government, or take another, even if it was offered me between two plates,
as fly to heaven without wings. I am of the breed of the Panzas, and they
are every one of them obstinate, and if they once say 'odds,' odds it must
be, no matter if it is evens, in spite of all the world. Here in this
stable I leave the ant's wings that lifted me up into the air for the
swifts and other birds to eat me, and let's take to level ground and our
feet once more; and if they're not shod in pinked shoes of cordovan, they
won't want for rough sandals of hemp; 'every ewe to her like,' 'and let no
one stretch his leg beyond the length of the sheet;' and now let me pass,
for it's growing late with me."</p>
<p>To this the majordomo said, "Senor governor, we would let your worship go
with all our hearts, though it sorely grieves us to lose you, for your wit
and Christian conduct naturally make us regret you; but it is well known
that every governor, before he leaves the place where he has been
governing, is bound first of all to render an account. Let your worship do
so for the ten days you have held the government, and then you may go and
the peace of God go with you."</p>
<p>"No one can demand it of me," said Sancho, "but he whom my lord the duke
shall appoint; I am going to meet him, and to him I will render an exact
one; besides, when I go forth naked as I do, there is no other proof
needed to show that I have governed like an angel."</p>
<p>"By God the great Sancho is right," said Doctor Recio, "and we should let
him go, for the duke will be beyond measure glad to see him."</p>
<p>They all agreed to this, and allowed him to go, first offering to bear him
company and furnish him with all he wanted for his own comfort or for the
journey. Sancho said he did not want anything more than a little barley
for Dapple, and half a cheese and half a loaf for himself; for the
distance being so short there was no occasion for any better or bulkier
provant. They all embraced him, and he with tears embraced all of them,
and left them filled with admiration not only at his remarks but at his
firm and sensible resolution.</p>
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