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Don Quixote — Chapter 57 in French

By Miguel de Cervantes

En arrivant à écrire ce cinquième chapitre, le traducteur de cette histoire avertit qu’il le tient pour apocryphe, parce que Sancho y parle sur un autre style que celui qu’on devait attendre de son intelligence bornée, et y dit des choses si subtiles qu’il semble impossible qu’elles viennent de lui. The translator of this history, when he comes to write this fifth chapter, says that he considers it apocryphal, because in it Sancho Panza speaks in a style unlike that which might have been expected from his limited intelligence, and says things so subtle that he does not think it possible he could have conceived them; however, desirous of doing what his task imposed upon him, he was unwilling to leave it untranslated, and therefore he went on to say:
Sancho rentra chez lui si content, si joyeux, que sa femme aperçut son allégresse à une portée de mousquet, tellement qu’elle ne put s’empêcher de lui demander : « Qu’avez-vous donc, ami Sancho, que vous revenez si gai ? Sancho came home in such glee and spirits that his wife noticed his happiness a bowshot off, so much so that it made her ask him, "What have you got, Sancho friend, that you are so glad?"
— Femme, répondit Sancho, si Dieu le voulait, je serais bien aise de ne pas être si content que j’en ai l’air. To which he replied, "Wife, if it were God's will, I should be very glad not to be so well pleased as I show myself."
— Je ne vous entends pas, mari, répliqua-t-elle, et ne sais ce que vous voulez dire, que vous seriez bien aise, si Dieu le voulait, de ne pas être content ; car, toute sotte que je suis, je ne sais pas qui peut trouver du plaisir à n’en pas avoir. "I don't understand you, husband," said she, "and I don't know what you mean by saying you would be glad, if it were God's will, not to be well pleased; for, fool as I am, I don't know how one can find pleasure in not having it."