Answered
in sentence
2045 examples of Answered in a sentence
"We are in haste,
" answered
one of the encamisados, "and the inn is far off, and we cannot stop to render you such an account as you demand;" and spurring his mule he moved on.
"God, by means of a malignant fever that took him,
" answered
the bachelor.
"Things do not all happen in the same way,
" answered
Don Quixote; "it all came, Sir Bachelor Alonzo Lopez, of your going, as you did, by night, dressed in those surplices, with lighted torches, praying, covered with mourning, so that naturally you looked like something evil and of the other world; and so I could not avoid doing my duty in attacking you, and I should have attacked you even had I known positively that you were the very devils of hell, for such I certainly believed and took you to be.""As my fate has so willed it," said the bachelor, "I entreat you, sir knight-errant, whose errand has been such an evil one for me, to help me to get from under this mule that holds one of my legs caught between the stirrup and the saddle."
"I do not understand that Latin,
" answered
Don Quixote, "but I know well I did not lay hands, only this pike; besides, I did not think I was committing an assault upon priests or things of the Church, which, like a Catholic and faithful Christian as I am, I respect and revere, but upon phantoms and spectres of the other world; but even so, I remember how it fared with Cid Ruy Diaz when he broke the chair of the ambassador of that king before his Holiness the Pope, who excommunicated him for the same; and yet the good Roderick of Vivar bore himself that day like a very noble and valiant knight."
"There is no need to weep,
" answered
Sancho, "for I will amuse your worship by telling stories from this till daylight, unless indeed you like to dismount and lie down to sleep a little on the green grass after the fashion of knights-errant, so as to be fresher when day comes and the moment arrives for attempting this extraordinary adventure you are looking forward to.""What art thou talking about dismounting or sleeping for?" said Don Quixote.
"Tales are always told in my country in the very way I am telling this,
" answered
Sancho, "and I cannot tell it in any other, nor is it right of your worship to ask me to make new customs."
"No, senor, not a bit," replied Sancho; "for when I asked your worship to tell me how many goats had crossed, and you
answered
you did not know, at that very instant all I had to say passed away out of my memory, and, faith, there was much virtue in it, and entertainment."
"I am,
" answered
Sancho; "but how does your worship perceive it now more than ever?""Because just now thou smellest stronger than ever, and not of ambergris,
" answered
Don Quixote.
"The devil take thee, man," said Don Quixote; "what has a helmet to do with fulling mills?""I don't know," replied Sancho, "but, faith, if I might speak as I used, perhaps I could give such reasons that your worship would see you were mistaken in what you say.""How can I be mistaken in what I say, unbelieving traitor?" returned Don Quixote; "tell me, seest thou not yonder knight coming towards us on a dappled grey steed, who has upon his head a helmet of gold?""What I see and make out,
" answered
Sancho, "is only a man on a grey ass like my own, who has something that shines on his head."
"So have I,
" answered
Sancho, "but if ever I make it, or try it again as long as I live, may this be my last hour; moreover, I have no intention of putting myself in the way of wanting it, for I mean, with all my five senses, to keep myself from being wounded or from wounding anyone: as to being blanketed again I say nothing, for it is hard to prevent mishaps of that sort, and if they come there is nothing for it but to squeeze our shoulders together, hold our breath, shut our eyes, and let ourselves go where luck and the blanket may send us."
"On that head I am not quite certain,
" answered
Don Quixote, "and the matter being doubtful, pending better information, I say thou mayest change them, if so be thou hast urgent need of them."
"So urgent is it,
" answered
Sancho, "that if they were for my own person I could not want them more;" and forthwith, fortified by this licence, he effected the mutatio capparum, rigging out his beast to the ninety-nines and making quite another thing of it.
"Thou speakest not amiss, Sancho,
" answered
Don Quixote, "but before that point is reached it is requisite to roam the world, as it were on probation, seeking adventures, in order that, by achieving some, name and fame may be acquired, such that when he betakes himself to the court of some great monarch the knight may be already known by his deeds, and that the boys, the instant they see him enter the gate of the city, may all follow him and surround him, crying, 'This is the Knight of the Sun'-or the Serpent, or any other title under which he may have achieved great deeds.
"So be it,
" answered
Sancho.
"I will tell you,
" answered
Sancho.
I asked why this man did not join the other man, instead of always going behind him; they
answered
me that he was his equerry, and that it was the custom with nobles to have such persons behind them, and ever since then I know it, for I have never forgotten it."
"So it shall be,
" answered
Don Quixote, and raising his eyes he saw what will be told in the following chapter.
"I do not say that,
" answered
Sancho, "but that these are people condemned for their crimes to serve by force in the king's galleys."
One of the guards on horseback
answered
that they were galley slaves belonging to his majesty, that they were going to the galleys, and that was all that was to be said and all he had any business to know.
"Gurapas are galleys,
" answered
the galley slave, who was a young man of about four-and-twenty, and said he was a native of Piedrahita.
Don Quixote asked the same question of the second, who made no reply, so downcast and melancholy was he; but the first
answered
for him, and said, "He, sir, goes as a canary, I mean as a musician and a singer."
"What!" said Don Quixote, "for being musicians and singers are people sent to the galleys too?""Yes, sir,
" answered
the galley slave, "for there is nothing worse than singing under suffering."
"And I think so too,
" answered
Don Quixote; then passing on to the third he asked him what he had asked the others, and the man
answered
very readily and unconcernedly, "I am going for five years to their ladyships the gurapas for the want of ten ducats."
Don Quixote went on and asked another what his crime was, and the man
answered
with no less but rather much more sprightliness than the last one.
"That cannot be,
" answered
Sancho, "because if they had been robbers they would not have left this money."
"We have come upon nobody,
" answered
Don Quixote, "nor on anything except a saddle-pad and a little valise that we found not far from this.""I found it too," said the goatherd, "but I would not lift it nor go near it for fear of some ill-luck or being charged with theft, for the devil is crafty, and things rise up under one's feet to make one fall without knowing why or wherefore."
"In faith, Sancho,
" answered
Don Quixote, "if thou knewest as I do what an honourable and illustrious lady Queen Madasima was, I know thou wouldst say I had great patience that I did not break in pieces the mouth that uttered such blasphemies, for a very great blasphemy it is to say or imagine that a queen has made free with a surgeon.
"What is it in reality," said Sancho, "that your worship means to do in such an out-of-the-way place as this?""Have I not told thee,
" answered
Don Quixote, "that I mean to imitate Amadis here, playing the victim of despair, the madman, the maniac, so as at the same time to imitate the valiant Don Roland, when at the fountain he had evidence of the fair Angelica having disgraced herself with Medoro and through grief thereat went mad, and plucked up trees, troubled the waters of the clear springs, slew destroyed flocks, burned down huts, levelled houses, dragged mares after him, and perpetrated a hundred thousand other outrages worthy of everlasting renown and record?
"I thank thee for thy good intentions, friend Sancho,
" answered
Don Quixote, "but I would have thee know that all these things I am doing are not in joke, but very much in earnest, for anything else would be a transgression of the ordinances of chivalry, which forbid us to tell any lie whatever under the penalties due to apostasy; and to do one thing instead of another is just the same as lying; so my knocks on the head must be real, solid, and valid, without anything sophisticated or fanciful about them, and it will be needful to leave me some lint to dress my wounds, since fortune has compelled us to do without the balsam we lost."
"Retentio,
" answered
Sancho, "means that whoever is in hell never comes nor can come out of it, which will be the opposite case with your worship or my legs will be idle, that is if I have spurs to enliven Rocinante: let me once get to El Toboso and into the presence of my lady Dulcinea, and I will tell her such things of the follies and madnesses (for it is all one) that your worship has done and is still doing, that I will manage to make her softer than a glove though I find her harder than a cork tree; and with her sweet and honeyed answer I will come back through the air like a witch, and take your worship out of this purgatory that seems to be hell but is not, as there is hope of getting out of it; which, as I have said, those in hell have not, and I believe your worship will not say anything to the contrary."
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