While this conversation passed between Sancho Panza and his wife, Don

Quixote's housekeeper and niece took him in and undressed him and laid

him in his old bed. He eyed them askance, and could not make out where he

was. The curate charged his niece to be very careful to make her uncle

comfortable and to keep a watch over him lest he should make his escape

from them again, telling her what they had been obliged to do to bring

him home. On this the pair once more lifted up their voices and renewed

their maledictions upon the books of chivalry, and implored heaven to

plunge the authors of such lies and nonsense into the midst of the

bottomless pit. They were, in short, kept in anxiety and dread lest their

uncle and master should give them the slip the moment he found himself

somewhat better, and as they feared so it fell out.

But the author of this history, though he has devoted research and

industry to the discovery of the deeds achieved by Don Quixote in his

third sally, has been unable to obtain any information respecting them,

at any rate derived from authentic documents; tradition has merely

preserved in the memory of La Mancha the fact that Don Quixote, the third

time he sallied forth from his home, betook himself to Saragossa, where

he was present at some famous jousts which came off in that city, and

that he had adventures there worthy of his valour and high intelligence.

Of his end and death he could learn no particulars, nor would he have

ascertained it or known of it, if good fortune had not produced an old

physician for him who had in his possession a leaden box, which,

according to his account, had been discovered among the crumbling

foundations of an ancient hermitage that was being rebuilt; in which box

were found certain parchment manuscripts in Gothic character, but in

Castilian verse, containing many of his achievements, and setting forth

the beauty of Dulcinea, the form of Rocinante, the fidelity of Sancho

Panza, and the burial of Don Quixote himself, together with sundry

epitaphs and eulogies on his life and character; but all that could be

read and deciphered were those which the trustworthy author of this new

and unparalleled history here presents. And the said author asks of those

that shall read it nothing in return for the vast toil which it has cost

him in examining and searching the Manchegan archives in order to bring

it to light, save that they give him the same credit that people of sense

give to the books of chivalry that pervade the world and are so popular;

for with this he will consider himself amply paid and fully satisfied,

and will be encouraged to seek out and produce other histories, if not as

truthful, at least equal in invention and not less entertaining. The

first words written on the parchment found in the leaden box were these:




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