"That is the truth," answered Don Quixote, "and there is no use in

troubling oneself about these matters of enchantment or being angry or

vexed at them, for as they are invisible and visionary we shall find no

one on whom to avenge ourselves, do what we may; rise, Sancho, if thou

canst, and call the alcaide of this fortress, and get him to give me a

little oil, wine, salt, and rosemary to make the salutiferous balsam, for

indeed I believe I have great need of it now, because I am losing much

blood from the wound that phantom gave me."

Sancho got up with pain enough in his bones, and went after the innkeeper

in the dark, and meeting the officer, who was looking to see what had

become of his enemy, he said to him, "Senor, whoever you are, do us the

favour and kindness to give us a little rosemary, oil, salt, and wine,

for it is wanted to cure one of the best knights-errant on earth, who

lies on yonder bed wounded by the hands of the enchanted Moor that is in

this inn."

When the officer heard him talk in this way, he took him for a man out of

his senses, and as day was now beginning to break, he opened the inn

gate, and calling the host, he told him what this good man wanted. The

host furnished him with what he required, and Sancho brought it to Don

Quixote, who, with his hand to his head, was bewailing the pain of the

blow of the lamp, which had done him no more harm than raising a couple

of rather large lumps, and what he fancied blood was only the sweat that

flowed from him in his sufferings during the late storm. To be brief, he

took the materials, of which he made a compound, mixing them all and

boiling them a good while until it seemed to him they had come to

perfection. He then asked for some vial to pour it into, and as there was

not one in the inn, he decided on putting it into a tin oil-bottle or

flask of which the host made him a free gift; and over the flask he

repeated more than eighty paternosters and as many more ave-marias,

salves, and credos, accompanying each word with a cross by way of

benediction, at all which there were present Sancho, the innkeeper, and

the cuadrillero; for the carrier was now peacefully engaged in attending

to the comfort of his mules.

This being accomplished, he felt anxious to make trial himself, on the

spot, of the virtue of this precious balsam, as he considered it, and so

he drank near a quart of what could not be put into the flask and

remained in the pigskin in which it had been boiled; but scarcely had he

done drinking when he began to vomit in such a way that nothing was left

in his stomach, and with the pangs and spasms of vomiting he broke into a

profuse sweat, on account of which he bade them cover him up and leave

him alone. They did so, and he lay sleeping more than three hours, at the

end of which he awoke and felt very great bodily relief and so much ease

from his bruises that he thought himself quite cured, and verily believed

he had hit upon the balsam of Fierabras; and that with this remedy he

might thenceforward, without any fear, face any kind of destruction,

battle, or combat, however perilous it might be.




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