WHEREIN IS RELATED WHAT WILL BE SEEN THERE

'Twas at the very midnight hour--more or less--when Don Quixote and

Sancho quitted the wood and entered El Toboso. The town was in deep

silence, for all the inhabitants were asleep, and stretched on the broad

of their backs, as the saying is. The night was darkish, though Sancho

would have been glad had it been quite dark, so as to find in the

darkness an excuse for his blundering. All over the place nothing was to

be heard except the barking of dogs, which deafened the ears of Don

Quixote and troubled the heart of Sancho. Now and then an ass brayed,

pigs grunted, cats mewed, and the various noises they made seemed louder

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in the silence of the night; all which the enamoured knight took to be of

evil omen; nevertheless he said to Sancho, "Sancho, my son, lead on to

the palace of Dulcinea, it may be that we shall find her awake."

"Body of the sun! what palace am I to lead to," said Sancho, "when what I

saw her highness in was only a very little house?"

"Most likely she had then withdrawn into some small apartment of her

palace," said Don Quixote, "to amuse herself with damsels, as great

ladies and princesses are accustomed to do."

"Senor," said Sancho, "if your worship will have it in spite of me that

the house of my lady Dulcinea is a palace, is this an hour, think you, to

find the door open; and will it be right for us to go knocking till they

hear us and open the door; making a disturbance and confusion all through

the household? Are we going, do you fancy, to the house of our wenches,

like gallants who come and knock and go in at any hour, however late it

may be?"

"Let us first of all find out the palace for certain," replied Don

Quixote, "and then I will tell thee, Sancho, what we had best do; but

look, Sancho, for either I see badly, or that dark mass that one sees

from here should be Dulcinea's palace."

"Then let your worship lead the way," said Sancho, "perhaps it may be so;

though I see it with my eyes and touch it with my hands, I'll believe it

as much as I believe it is daylight now."

Don Quixote took the lead, and having gone a matter of two hundred paces

he came upon the mass that produced the shade, and found it was a great

tower, and then he perceived that the building in question was no palace,

but the chief church of the town, and said he, "It's the church we have

lit upon, Sancho."




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