When Sancho heard his master's words he began to weep in the most

pathetic way, saying:

"Senor, I know not why your worship wants to attempt this so dreadful

adventure; it is night now, no one sees us here, we can easily turn about

and take ourselves out of danger, even if we don't drink for three days

to come; and as there is no one to see us, all the less will there be

anyone to set us down as cowards; besides, I have many a time heard the

curate of our village, whom your worship knows well, preach that he who

seeks danger perishes in it; so it is not right to tempt God by trying so

tremendous a feat from which there can be no escape save by a miracle,

and Heaven has performed enough of them for your worship in delivering

you from being blanketed as I was, and bringing you out victorious and

safe and sound from among all those enemies that were with the dead man;

and if all this does not move or soften that hard heart, let this thought

and reflection move it, that you will have hardly quitted this spot when

from pure fear I shall yield my soul up to anyone that will take it. I

left home and wife and children to come and serve your worship, trusting

to do better and not worse; but as covetousness bursts the bag, it has

rent my hopes asunder, for just as I had them highest about getting that

wretched unlucky island your worship has so often promised me, I see that

instead and in lieu of it you mean to desert me now in a place so far

from human reach: for God's sake, master mine, deal not so unjustly by

me, and if your worship will not entirely give up attempting this feat,

at least put it off till morning, for by what the lore I learned when I

was a shepherd tells me it cannot want three hours of dawn now, because

the mouth of the Horn is overhead and makes midnight in the line of the

left arm."

"How canst thou see, Sancho," said Don Quixote, "where it makes that

line, or where this mouth or this occiput is that thou talkest of, when

the night is so dark that there is not a star to be seen in the whole

heaven?"

"That's true," said Sancho, "but fear has sharp eyes, and sees things

underground, much more above in heavens; besides, there is good reason to

show that it now wants but little of day."

"Let it want what it may," replied Don Quixote, "it shall not be said of

me now or at any time that tears or entreaties turned me aside from doing

what was in accordance with knightly usage; and so I beg of thee, Sancho,

to hold thy peace, for God, who has put it into my heart to undertake now

this so unexampled and terrible adventure, will take care to watch over

my safety and console thy sorrow; what thou hast to do is to tighten

Rocinante's girths well, and wait here, for I shall come back shortly,

alive or dead."




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