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    Part 2 - Chapter 46 - Page 2

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    guitar and tuned it as well as he could, he spat and cleared his chest, and then with a voice a little hoarse but full-toned, he sang the following ballad, which he had himself that day composed:

    Mighty Love the hearts of maidens
    Doth unsettle and perplex,
    And the instrument he uses
    Most of all is idleness.

    Sewing, stitching, any labour,
    Having always work to do,
    To the poison Love instilleth
    Is the antidote most sure.

    And to proper-minded maidens
    Who desire the matron's name
    Modesty's a marriage portion,
    Modesty their highest praise.

    Men of prudence and discretion,
    Courtiers gay and gallant knights,
    With the wanton damsels dally,
    But the modest take to wife.
    There are passions, transient, fleeting,
    Loves in hostelries declar'd,
    Sunrise loves, with sunset ended,
    When the guest hath gone his way.

    Love that springs up swift and sudden,
    Here to-day, to-morrow flown,
    Passes, leaves no trace behind it,
    Leaves no image on the soul.

    Painting that is laid on painting
    Maketh no display or show;
    Where one beauty's in possession
    There no other can take hold.

    Dulcinea del Toboso
    Painted on my heart I wear;

    Never from its tablets, never,
    Can her image be eras'd.

    The quality of all in lovers
    Most esteemed is constancy;
    'T is by this that love works wonders,
    This exalts them to the skies.

    Don Quixote had got so far with his song, to which the duke, the duchess, Altisidora, and nearly the whole household of the castle were listening, when all of a sudden from a gallery above that was exactly over his window they let down a cord with more than a hundred bells attached to it, and immediately after that discharged a great sack full of cats, which also had bells of smaller size tied to their tails. Such was the din of the bells and the squalling of the cats, that though the duke and duchess were the contrivers of the joke they were startled by it, while Don Quixote stood paralysed with fear; and as luck would have it, two or three of the cats made their way in through the grating of his chamber, and flying from one side to the other, made it seem as if there was a legion of devils at large in it. They extinguished the candles that were burning in the room, and rushed about seeking some way of escape; the cord with the large bells never ceased rising and falling; and most of the people of the castle, not knowing what was really the matter, were at their wits' end with astonishment. Don Quixote sprang to his feet, and drawing his sword, began making passes at the grating, shouting out, "Avaunt, malignant enchanters! avaunt, ye witchcraft-working rabble! I am Don Quixote of La Mancha, against whom your evil machinations avail not nor have any power." And turning upon the cats that were running about the
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