Seeing this Sancho said, "Good luck to him who has saved us the trouble

of stripping the pack-saddle off Dapple! By my faith he would not have

gone without a slap on the croup and something said in his praise; though

if he were here I would not let anyone strip him, for there would be no

occasion, as he had nothing of the lover or victim of despair about him,

inasmuch as his master, which I was while it was God's pleasure, was

nothing of the sort; and indeed, Sir Knight of the Rueful Countenance, if

my departure and your worship's madness are to come off in earnest, it

will be as well to saddle Rocinante again in order that he may supply the

want of Dapple, because it will save me time in going and returning: for

if I go on foot I don't know when I shall get there or when I shall get

back, as I am, in truth, a bad walker."

"I declare, Sancho," returned Don Quixote, "it shall be as thou wilt, for

thy plan does not seem to me a bad one, and three days hence thou wilt

depart, for I wish thee to observe in the meantime what I do and say for

her sake, that thou mayest be able to tell it."

"But what more have I to see besides what I have seen?" said Sancho.

"Much thou knowest about it!" said Don Quixote. "I have now got to tear

up my garments, to scatter about my armour, knock my head against these

rocks, and more of the same sort of thing, which thou must witness."

"For the love of God," said Sancho, "be careful, your worship, how you

give yourself those knocks on the head, for you may come across such a

rock, and in such a way, that the very first may put an end to the whole

contrivance of this penance; and I should think, if indeed knocks on the

head seem necessary to you, and this business cannot be done without

them, you might be content--as the whole thing is feigned, and

counterfeit, and in joke--you might be content, I say, with giving them

to yourself in the water, or against something soft, like cotton; and

leave it all to me; for I'll tell my lady that your worship knocked your

head against a point of rock harder than a diamond."

"I thank thee for thy good intentions, friend Sancho," answered Don

Quixote, "but I would have thee know that all these things I am doing are

not in joke, but very much in earnest, for anything else would be a

transgression of the ordinances of chivalry, which forbid us to tell any

lie whatever under the penalties due to apostasy; and to do one thing

instead of another is just the same as lying; so my knocks on the head

must be real, solid, and valid, without anything sophisticated or

fanciful about them, and it will be needful to leave me some lint to

dress my wounds, since fortune has compelled us to do without the balsam

we lost."




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