Don Quixote smiled when he heard these words, and said very calmly, "Come

now, base, ill-born brood; call ye it highway robbery to give freedom to

those in bondage, to release the captives, to succour the miserable, to

raise up the fallen, to relieve the needy? Infamous beings, who by your

vile grovelling intellects deserve that heaven should not make known to

you the virtue that lies in knight-errantry, or show you the sin and

ignorance in which ye lie when ye refuse to respect the shadow, not to

say the presence, of any knight-errant! Come now; band, not of officers,

but of thieves; footpads with the licence of the Holy Brotherhood; tell

me who was the ignoramus who signed a warrant of arrest against such a

knight as I am? Who was he that did not know that knights-errant are

independent of all jurisdictions, that their law is their sword, their

charter their prowess, and their edicts their will? Who, I say again, was

the fool that knows not that there are no letters patent of nobility that

confer such privileges or exemptions as a knight-errant acquires the day

he is dubbed a knight, and devotes himself to the arduous calling of

chivalry? What knight-errant ever paid poll-tax, duty, queen's pin-money,

king's dues, toll or ferry? What tailor ever took payment of him for

making his clothes? What castellan that received him in his castle ever

made him pay his shot? What king did not seat him at his table? What

damsel was not enamoured of him and did not yield herself up wholly to

his will and pleasure? And, lastly, what knight-errant has there been, is

there, or will there ever be in the world, not bold enough to give,

single-handed, four hundred cudgellings to four hundred officers of the

Holy Brotherhood if they come in his way?"




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