"That's what I want, and no mistake about it!" said Sancho. "That's what

I'm waiting for; for all this, word for word, is in store for your

worship under the title of the Knight of the Rueful Countenance."

"Thou needst not doubt it, Sancho," replied Don Quixote, "for in the same

manner, and by the same steps as I have described here, knights-errant

rise and have risen to be kings and emperors; all we want now is to find

out what king, Christian or pagan, is at war and has a beautiful

daughter; but there will be time enough to think of that, for, as I have

told thee, fame must be won in other quarters before repairing to the

court. There is another thing, too, that is wanting; for supposing we

find a king who is at war and has a beautiful daughter, and that I have

won incredible fame throughout the universe, I know not how it can be

made out that I am of royal lineage, or even second cousin to an emperor;

for the king will not be willing to give me his daughter in marriage

unless he is first thoroughly satisfied on this point, however much my

famous deeds may deserve it; so that by this deficiency I fear I shall

lose what my arm has fairly earned. True it is I am a gentleman of known

house, of estate and property, and entitled to the five hundred sueldos

mulct; and it may be that the sage who shall write my history will so

clear up my ancestry and pedigree that I may find myself fifth or sixth

in descent from a king; for I would have thee know, Sancho, that there

are two kinds of lineages in the world; some there be tracing and

deriving their descent from kings and princes, whom time has reduced

little by little until they end in a point like a pyramid upside down;

and others who spring from the common herd and go on rising step by step

until they come to be great lords; so that the difference is that the one

were what they no longer are, and the others are what they formerly were

not. And I may be of such that after investigation my origin may prove

great and famous, with which the king, my father-in-law that is to be,

ought to be satisfied; and should he not be, the princess will so love me

that even though she well knew me to be the son of a water-carrier, she

will take me for her lord and husband in spite of her father; if not,

then it comes to seizing her and carrying her off where I please; for

time or death will put an end to the wrath of her parents."




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