Don Quixote followed them with his eyes, and when they were no longer in

sight, he turned to Sancho and said, "How now, Sancho? thou seest how I

am hated by enchanters! And see to what a length the malice and spite

they bear me go, when they seek to deprive me of the happiness it would

give me to see my lady in her own proper form. The fact is I was born to

be an example of misfortune, and the target and mark at which the arrows

of adversity are aimed and directed. Observe too, Sancho, that these

traitors were not content with changing and transforming my Dulcinea, but

they transformed and changed her into a shape as mean and ill-favoured as

that of the village girl yonder; and at the same time they robbed her of

that which is such a peculiar property of ladies of distinction, that is

to say, the sweet fragrance that comes of being always among perfumes and

flowers. For I must tell thee, Sancho, that when I approached to put

Dulcinea upon her hackney (as thou sayest it was, though to me it

appeared a she-ass), she gave me a whiff of raw garlic that made my head

reel, and poisoned my very heart."

"O scum of the earth!" cried Sancho at this, "O miserable, spiteful

enchanters! O that I could see you all strung by the gills, like sardines

on a twig! Ye know a great deal, ye can do a great deal, and ye do a

great deal more. It ought to have been enough for you, ye scoundrels, to

have changed the pearls of my lady's eyes into oak galls, and her hair of

purest gold into the bristles of a red ox's tail, and in short, all her

features from fair to foul, without meddling with her smell; for by that

we might somehow have found out what was hidden underneath that ugly

rind; though, to tell the truth, I never perceived her ugliness, but only

her beauty, which was raised to the highest pitch of perfection by a mole

she had on her right lip, like a moustache, with seven or eight red hairs

like threads of gold, and more than a palm long."

"From the correspondence which exists between those of the face and those

of the body," said Don Quixote, "Dulcinea must have another mole

resembling that on the thick of the thigh on that side on which she has

the one on her ace; but hairs of the length thou hast mentioned are very

long for moles."

"Well, all I can say is there they were as plain as could be," replied

Sancho.




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