OF WHAT HAPPENED TO THE INGENIOUS GENTLEMAN IN THE INN WHICH HE TOOK TO

BE A CASTLE

The innkeeper, seeing Don Quixote slung across the ass, asked Sancho what

was amiss with him. Sancho answered that it was nothing, only that he had

fallen down from a rock and had his ribs a little bruised. The innkeeper

had a wife whose disposition was not such as those of her calling

commonly have, for she was by nature kind-hearted and felt for the

sufferings of her neighbours, so she at once set about tending Don

Quixote, and made her young daughter, a very comely girl, help her in

taking care of her guest. There was besides in the inn, as servant, an

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Asturian lass with a broad face, flat poll, and snub nose, blind of one

eye and not very sound in the other. The elegance of her shape, to be

sure, made up for all her defects; she did not measure seven palms from

head to foot, and her shoulders, which overweighted her somewhat, made

her contemplate the ground more than she liked. This graceful lass, then,

helped the young girl, and the two made up a very bad bed for Don Quixote

in a garret that showed evident signs of having formerly served for many

years as a straw-loft, in which there was also quartered a carrier whose

bed was placed a little beyond our Don Quixote's, and, though only made

of the pack-saddles and cloths of his mules, had much the advantage of

it, as Don Quixote's consisted simply of four rough boards on two not

very even trestles, a mattress, that for thinness might have passed for a

quilt, full of pellets which, were they not seen through the rents to be

wool, would to the touch have seemed pebbles in hardness, two sheets made

of buckler leather, and a coverlet the threads of which anyone that chose

might have counted without missing one in the reckoning.

On this accursed bed Don Quixote stretched himself, and the hostess and

her daughter soon covered him with plasters from top to toe, while

Maritornes--for that was the name of the Asturian--held the light for

them, and while plastering him, the hostess, observing how full of wheals

Don Quixote was in some places, remarked that this had more the look of

blows than of a fall.

It was not blows, Sancho said, but that the rock had many points and

projections, and that each of them had left its mark. "Pray, senora," he

added, "manage to save some tow, as there will be no want of some one to

use it, for my loins too are rather sore."




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