fbpx
Wikipedia

Don Quixote

Don Quixote[a][b] is a Spanish epic novel by Miguel de Cervantes. Originally published in two parts, in 1605 and 1615, its full title is The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha or, in Spanish, El ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote[b] de la Mancha (changing in Part 2 to El ingenioso caballero don Quixote[b] de la Mancha).[c] A founding work of Western literature, it is often labelled as the first modern novel[2][3] and one of the greatest works ever written.[4][5] Don Quixote is also one of the most-translated books in the world.[6]

Don Quixote
Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605, first edition)
AuthorMiguel de Cervantes
Original titleEl ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la Mancha
CountryHabsburg Spain
LanguageEarly Modern Spanish
GenreNovel
PublisherFrancisco de Robles
Publication date
1605 (Part One)
1615 (Part Two)
Published in English
1612 (Part One)
1620 (Part Two)
Media typePrint
863
LC ClassPQ6323
Original text
El ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la Mancha at Spanish Wikisource
TranslationDon Quixote at Wikisource

The plot revolves around the adventures of a member of the lowest nobility, an hidalgo from La Mancha named Alonso Quijano, who reads so many chivalric romances that he either loses or pretends to have lost his mind in order to become a knight-errant (caballero andante) to revive chivalry and serve his nation, under the name Don Quixote de la Mancha.[b] He recruits a simple farmer, Sancho Panza, as his squire, who often employs a unique, earthy wit in dealing with Don Quixote's rhetorical monologues on knighthood, already considered old-fashioned at the time, and representing the most droll realism in contrast to his master's idealism. In the first part of the book, Don Quixote does not see the world for what it is and prefers to imagine that he is living out a knightly story that's meant for the annals of all time.

The book had a major influence on the literary community, as evidenced by direct references in Alexandre Dumas' The Three Musketeers (1844), Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), and Edmond Rostand's Cyrano de Bergerac (1897),[citation needed] as well as the word quixotic.

When first published, Don Quixote was usually interpreted as a comic novel. After the successful French Revolution, it was better known for its presumed central ethic that in some ways individuals can be intelligent while their society is quite fanciful and was seen as a fascinating, enchanting or disenchanting book in this dynamic (and for among books). In the 19th century, it was seen as social commentary, but no one could easily tell "whose side Cervantes was on". Many critics came to view the work as a tragedy in which Don Quixote's idealism and nobility are viewed by the post-chivalric world as not enough and are defeated and rendered useless by a common reality devoid of his "true" romantic inclinations; by the 20th century, the novel had come to occupy a canonical space as one of the foundations of letters in literature.

Summary

 
Illustration by Gustave Doré depicting the famous windmill scene

Cervantes wrote that the first chapters were taken from "the archives of La Mancha", and the rest were translated from an Arabic text by the Moorish historian Cide Hamete Benengeli. This metafictional trick appears to give a greater credibility to the text, implying that Don Quixote is a real character and that this has been researched from the logs of the events that truly occurred several decades prior to the recording of this account and the work of magical sage historians that are known to be involved here (this getting some explaining). However, it was also common practice in that era for fictional works to make some creative pretense for seeming factual to the readers, such as the common opening line of fairy tales "Once upon a time in a land far away...".

In the course of their travels, the protagonists meet innkeepers, prostitutes, goat-herders, soldiers, priests, escaped convicts and scorned lovers. The aforementioned characters sometimes tell tales that incorporate events from the real world. Their encounters are magnified by Don Quixote's imagination into chivalrous quests. Don Quixote's tendency to intervene violently in matters irrelevant to himself, and his habit of not paying debts, result in privations, injuries, and humiliations (with Sancho often the victim). Finally, Don Quixote is persuaded to return to his home village. The narrator hints that there was a third quest, saying that records of it have been lost, "...at any rate derived from authentic documents; tradition has merely preserved in the memory of La Mancha..." this third sally. A leaden box in possession of an old physician that was discovered at an old hermitage being rebuilt is related, containing "certain parchment manuscripts in Gothic character, but in Castilian verse" that seems to know the story even of Don Quixote's burial and having "sundry epitaphs and eulogies". The narrator requesting not much for the "vast toil which it has cost him in examining and searching the Manchegan archives" volunteers to present what can be made out of them with the good nature of "...and will be encouraged to seek out and produce other histories...". A group of Academicians from a village of La Mancha are set forth. The most worm-eaten were given to an Academician "to make out their meaning conjecturally." He's been informed he means to publish these in hopes of a third sally.

Part 1 (1605)

For Cervantes and the readers of his day, Don Quixote was a one-volume book published in 1605, divided internally into four parts, not the first part of a two-part set. The mention in the 1605 book of further adventures yet to be told was totally conventional, does not indicate any authorial plans for a continuation, and was not taken seriously by the book's first readers.[7]

The First Sally (Chapters 1–5)

Alonso Quixano, the protagonist of the novel (though he is not given this name until much later in the book), is a hidalgo (member of the lesser Spanish nobility), nearing 50 years of age, living in an unnamed section of La Mancha with his niece and housekeeper, as well as a stable boy who is never heard of again after the first chapter. Although Quixano is usually a rational man, in keeping with the humoral physiology theory of the time, not sleeping adequately—because he was reading—has caused his brain to dry. Quixano's temperament is thus choleric, the hot and dry humor. As a result, he is easily given to anger[8] and believes every word of some of these fictional books of chivalry to be true such were the "complicated conceits"; "what Aristotle himself could not have made out or extracted had he come to life again for that special purpose".

"He commended, however, the author's way of ending his book with the promise of that interminable adventure, and many a time was he tempted to take up his pen and finish it properly as is there proposed, which no doubt he would have done...". Having "greater and more absorbing thoughts", he reaches imitating the protagonists of these books, and he decides to become a knight errant in search of adventure. To these ends, he dons an old suit of armor, renames himself "Don Quixote", names his exhausted horse "Rocinante", and designates Aldonza Lorenzo, intelligence able to be gathered of her perhaps relating that of being a slaughterhouse worker with a famed hand for salting pigs, as his lady love, renaming her Dulcinea del Toboso, while she knows nothing of this. Expecting to become famous quickly, he arrives at an inn, which he believes to be a castle, calls the prostitutes he meets "ladies" (doncellas), and demands that the innkeeper, whom he takes to be the lord of the castle, dub him a knight. He goes along with it (in the meantime convincing Don Quixote to take to heart his need to have money and a squire and some magical cure for injuries) and having morning planned for it. Don Quixote starts the night holding vigil over his armor and shortly becomes involved in a fight with muleteers who try to remove his armor from the horse trough so that they can water their mules. In a pretended ceremony, the innkeeper dubs him a knight to be rid of him and sends him on his way right then.

Don Quixote next "helps" a servant named Andres who is tied to a tree and beaten by his master over disputed wages, and makes his master swear to treat him fairly, but in an example of transference his beating is continued (and in fact redoubled) as soon as Quixote leaves (later explained to Quixote by Andres). Don Quixote then encounters traders from Toledo, who "insult" the imaginary Dulcinea. He attacks them, only to be severely beaten and left on the side of the road, and is returned to his home by a neighboring peasant.

Destruction of Don Quixote's library (Chapters 6–7)

While Don Quixote is unconscious in his bed, his niece, the housekeeper, the parish curate, and the local barber burn most of his chivalric and other books. A large part of this section consists of the priest deciding which books deserve to be burned and which to be saved. It is a scene of high comedy: If the books are so bad for morality, how does the priest know them well enough to describe every naughty scene? Even so, this gives an occasion for many comments on books Cervantes himself liked and disliked. For example, Cervantes' own pastoral novel La Galatea is saved, while the rather unbelievable romance Felixmarte de Hyrcania is burned. After the books are dealt with, they seal up the room which contained the library, later telling Don Quixote that it was the action of a wizard (encantador).

The Second Sally (Chapters 8–10)

After a short period of feigning health, Don Quixote requests his neighbour, Sancho Panza, to be his squire, promising him a petty governorship (ínsula). Sancho is a poor and simple farmer but more practical than the head-in-the-clouds Don Quixote and agrees to the offer, sneaking away with Don Quixote in the early dawn. It is here that their famous adventures begin, starting with Don Quixote's attack on windmills that he believes to be ferocious giants.

The two next encounter two Benedictine friars travelling on the road ahead of a lady in a carriage. The friars are not traveling with the lady, but happen to be travelling on the same road. Don Quixote takes the friars to be enchanters who hold the lady captive, knocks a friar from his horse, and is challenged by an armed Basque traveling with the company. As he has no shield, the Basque uses a pillow from the carriage to protect himself, which saves him when Don Quixote strikes him. Cervantes chooses this point, in the middle of the battle, to say that his source ends here. Soon, however, he resumes Don Quixote's adventures after a story about finding Arabic notebooks containing the rest of the story by Cid Hamet Ben Engeli. The combat ends with the lady leaving her carriage and commanding those traveling with her to "surrender" to Don Quixote.

 
First editions of the first and second parts

The Pastoral Peregrinations (Chapters 11–15)

Sancho and Don Quixote fall in with a group of goat herders. Don Quixote tells Sancho and the goat herders about the "Golden Age" of man, in which property does not exist and men live in peace. The goatherders invite the Knight and Sancho to the funeral of Grisóstomo, a former student who left his studies to become a shepherd after reading pastoral novels (paralleling Don Quixote's decision to become a knight), seeking the shepherdess Marcela. At the funeral Marcela appears - vindicating herself as the victim of a bad one-sided affair and from the bitter verses written about her by Grisóstomo claiming she's just satisfied by her communing with nature now and is assuming her own autonomy and freedom from expectations put on. She disappears into the woods, and Don Quixote and Sancho follow. Ultimately giving up, the two dismount by a stream to rest. "A drove of Galician ponies belonging to certain Yanguesan carriers" are planned to feed there, and Rocinante (Don Quixote's horse) attempts to mate with the ponies. The carriers hit Rocinante with clubs to dissuade him, whereupon Don Quixote tries to defend Rocinante. The carriers beat Don Quixote and Sancho, leaving them in great pain.

The Inn (Chapters 16–17)

After escaping the Yanguesan carriers, Don Quixote and Sancho ride to a nearby inn. Once again, Don Quixote imagines the inn is a castle, although Sancho is not quite convinced. Don Quixote is given a bed in a former hayloft, and Sancho sleeps on the rug next to the bed; they share the loft with a carrier. When night comes "... he began to feel uneasy and to consider the perilous risk which his virtue was about to encounter...". Don Quixote imagines the servant girl at the inn, Maritornes, to be this imagined beautiful princess now fallen in love with him "... and had promised to come to his bed for a while that night...", and makes her sit on his bed with him by holding her "... besides, to this impossibility another yet greater is to be added...". Having been waiting for Maritornes and seeing her held while trying to get free the carrier attacks Don Quixote "...and jealous that the Asturian should have broken her word with him for another...", breaking the fragile bed and leading to a large and chaotic fight in which Don Quixote and Sancho are once again badly hurt. Don Quixote's explanation for everything is that they fought with an enchanted Moor. He also believes that he can cure their wounds with a mixture he calls "the balm of Fierabras", which only makes Sancho so sick that he should be at death's door. Don Quixote's not quite through with it yet, however, as his take on things can be different. Don Quixote and Sancho decide to leave the inn, but Quixote, following the example of the fictional knights, leaves without paying. Sancho, however, remains and ends up wrapped in a blanket and tossed up in the air (blanketed) by several mischievous guests at the inn, something that is often mentioned over the rest of the novel. After his release, he and Don Quixote continue their travels.

The galley slaves and Cardenio (Chapters 19–24)

 
Don Quixote de la Mancha and Sancho Panza, 1863, by Gustave Doré

After Don Quixote has adventures involving a dead body, a helmet (to Don Quixote), and freeing a group of galley slaves, he and Sancho wander into the Sierra Morena and there encounter the dejected and mostly mad Cardenio. Cardenio relates the first part of his story, in which he falls mutually in love with his childhood friend Lucinda, and is hired as the companion to the Duke's son, leading to his friendship with the Duke's younger son, Don Fernando. Cardenio confides in Don Fernando his love for Lucinda and the delays in their engagement, caused by Cardenio's desire to keep with tradition. After reading Cardenio's poems praising Lucinda, Don Fernando falls in love with her. Don Quixote interrupts when Cardenio's transference of his misreading suggests his madness, over that his beloved may have become unfaithful, stems from Queen Madasima and Master Elisabad relationship in a chivalric novel (Lucinda and Don Fernando not at all the case, also). They get into a physical fight, ending with Cardenio beating all of them and walking away to the mountains.

The priest, the barber, and Dorotea (Chapters 25–31)

Quixote pines over Dulcinea's lack of affection ability, imitating the penance of Beltenebros. Quixote sends Sancho to deliver a letter to Dulcinea, but instead Sancho finds the barber and priest from his village and brings them to Quixote. The priest and barber make plans with Sancho to trick Don Quixote to come home. They get the help of the hapless Dorotea, an amazingly beautiful woman whom they discover in the forest that has been deceived with Don Fernando by acts of love and marriage, as things just keep going very wrong for her after he had made it to her bedchamber one night "...by no fault of hers, has furnished matters..." She pretends that she is the Princess Micomicona and coming from Guinea desperate to get Quixote's help with her fantastical story, "Which of the bystanders could have helped laughing to see the madness of the master and the simplicity of the servant?" Quixote runs into Andrés "...the next moment ran to Don Quixote and clasping him round the legs..." in need of further assistance who tells Don Quixote something about having "...meddled in other people's affairs...".

Return to the inn (Chapters 32–42)

Convinced that he is on a quest to first return princess Micomicona to the throne of her kingdom before needing to go see Dulcinea at her request (a Sancho deception related to the letter Sancho says he's delivered and has been questioned about), Quixote and the group return to the previous inn where the priest reads aloud the manuscript of the story of Anselmo (The Impertinently Curious Man) while Quixote, sleepwalking, battles with wine skins that he takes to be the giant who stole the princess Micomicona's kingdom to victory, "there you see my master has already salted the giant." A stranger arrives at the inn accompanying a young woman. The stranger is revealed to be Don Fernando, and the young woman Lucinda. Dorotea is reunited with Don Fernando and Cardenio with Lucinda. "...it may be by my death he will be convinced that I kept my faith to him to the last moment of life." "...and, moreover, that true nobility consists in virtue, and if thou art wanting in that, refusing what in justice thou owest me, then even I have higher claims to nobility than thine." A Christian captive from Moorish lands in company of an Arabic speaking lady (Zoraida) arrive and the captive is asked to tell the story of his life; "If your worships will give me your attention you will hear a true story which, perhaps, fictitious one constructed with ingenious and studied art can not come up to." "...at any rate, she seemed to me the most beautiful object I had ever seen; and when, besides, I thought of all I owed to her I felt as though I had before me some heavenly being come to earth to bring me relief and happiness." A judge arrives travelling with his beautiful and curiously smitten daughter, and it is found that the captive is his long-lost brother, and the two are reunited as Dona Clara's (his daughter's name) interest arrives with/at singing her songs from outside that night. Don Quixote's explanation for everything now at this inn being "chimeras of knight-errantry". A prolonged attempt at reaching agreement on what are the new barber's basin and some gear is an example of Quixote being "reasoned" with. "...behold with your own eyes how the discord of Agramante's camp has come hither, and been transferred into the midst of us." He goes on some here to explain what he is referring to with a reason for peace among them presented and what's to be done. This works to create peacefulness for them but the officers, present now for a while, have one for him that he can not get out of though he goes through his usual reactions.

The ending (Chapters 45–52)

An officer of the Santa Hermandad has a warrant for Quixote's arrest for freeing the galley slaves "...as Sancho had, with very good reason, apprehended." The priest begs for the officer to have mercy on account of Quixote's insanity. The officer agrees, and Quixote is locked in a cage and made to think that it is an enchantment and that there is a prophecy of him returned home afterwards that's meaning pleases him. He has a learned conversation with a Toledo canon (church official) he encounters by chance on the road, in which the canon expresses his scorn for untruthful chivalric books, but Don Quixote defends them. The group stops to eat and lets Don Quixote out of the cage; he gets into a fight with a goatherd (Leandra transferred to a goat) and with a group of pilgrims (tries to liberate their image of Mary), who beat him into submission, and he is finally brought home. The narrator ends the story by saying that he has found manuscripts of Quixote's further adventures.

Part 2

 
Illustration to The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha. Volume II.

Although the two parts are now published as a single work, Don Quixote, Part Two was a sequel published ten years after the original novel. While Part One was mostly farcical, the second half is more serious and philosophical about the theme of deception and "sophistry". Opening just prior to the third Sally, the first chapters of Part Two show Don Quixote found to be still some sort of a modern day "highly" literate know-it-all, knight errant that can recover quickly from injury - Sancho his squire, however.

Part Two of Don Quixote explores the concept of a character understanding that he is written about, an idea much explored in the 20th century. As Part Two begins, it is assumed that the literate classes of Spain have all read the first part of the story. Cervantes' meta-fictional device was to make even the characters in the story familiar with the publication of Part One, as well as with an actually published, fraudulent Part Two.

The Third Sally

The narrator relates how Hamet Benengeli begins the eighth chapter with thanksgivings to Allah at having Don Quixote and Sancho "fairly afield" now (and going to El Toboso). Traveling all night, some religiosity and other matters are expressed between Don Quixote and Sancho with Sancho getting at that he thinks they should be better off by being "canonized and beatified." They reach the city at daybreak and it's decided to enter at nightfall, with Sancho aware that his Dulcinea story to Don Quixote was a complete fabrication (and again with good reason sensing a major problem); "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?" The place is asleep and dark with the sounds of an intruder from animals heard and the matter absurd but a bad omen spooks Quixote into retreat and they leave before daybreak.

(Soon and yet to come, when a Duke and Duchess encounter the duo they already know their famous history and they themselves "very fond" of books of chivalry plan to "fall in with his humor and agree to everything he said" in accepting his advancements and then their terrible dismount setting forth a string of imagined adventures resulting in a series of practical jokes. Some of them put Don Quixote's sense of chivalry and his devotion to Dulcinea through many tests.)

Now pressed into finding Dulcinea, Sancho is sent out alone again as a go-between with Dulcinea and decides they are both mad here but as for Don Quixote, "with a madness that mostly takes one thing for another" and plans to persuade him into seeing Dulcinea as a "sublimated presence" of a sorts. Sancho's luck brings three focusing peasant girls along the road he was sitting not far from where he set out from and he quickly tells Don Quixote that they are Dulcinea and her ladies-in-waiting and as beautiful as ever, as they get unwittingly involved with the duo. As Don Quixote always only sees the peasant girls "...but open your eyes, and come and pay your respects to the lady of your thoughts..." carrying on for their part, "Hey-day! My grandfather!", Sancho always pretends (reversing some incidents of Part One and keeping to his plan) that their appearance is as Sancho is perceiving it as he explains its magnificent qualities (and must be an enchantment of some sort at work here). Don Quixote's usual (and predictable) kind of belief in this matter results in "Sancho, the rogue" having "nicely befooled" him into thinking he'd met Dulcinea controlled by enchantment, but delivered by Sancho. Don Quixote then has the opportunity to purport that "for from a child I was fond of the play, and in my youth a keen lover of the actor's art" while with players of a company and for him thus far an unusually high regard for poetry when with Don Diego de Miranda, "She is the product of an Alchemy of such virtue that he who is able to practice it, will turn her into pure gold of inestimable worth" "sublime conceptions". Don Quixote makes to the other world and somehow meets his fictional characters, at return reversing the timestamp of the usual event and with a possible apocryphal example. As one of his deeds, Don Quixote joins into a puppet troop, "Melisendra was Melisendra, Don Gaiferos Don Gaiferos, Marsilio Marsilio, and Charlemagne Charlemagne."

Having created a lasting false premise for them, Sancho later gets his comeuppance for this when, as part of one of the Duke and Duchess's pranks, the two are led to believe that the only method to release Dulcinea from this spell (if among possibilities under consideration, she has been changed rather than Don Quixote's perception has been enchanted - which at one point he explains is not possible however) is for Sancho to give himself three thousand three hundred lashes. Sancho naturally resists this course of action, leading to friction with his master. Under the Duke's patronage, Sancho eventually gets a governorship, though it is false, and he proves to be a wise and practical ruler although this ends in humiliation as well. Near the end, Don Quixote reluctantly sways towards sanity.

The lengthy untold "history" of Don Quixote's adventures in knight-errantry comes to a close after his battle with the Knight of the White Moon (a young man from Don Quixote's hometown who had previously posed as the Knight of Mirrors) on the beach in Barcelona, in which the reader finds him conquered. Bound by the rules of chivalry, Don Quixote submits to prearranged terms that the vanquished is to obey the will of the conqueror: here, it is that Don Quixote is to lay down his arms and cease his acts of chivalry for the period of one year (in which he may be cured of his madness). He and Sancho undergo one more prank that night by the Duke and Duchess before setting off. A play-like event, though perceived as mostly real life by Sancho and Don Quixote, over Altisidora's required remedy from death (over her love for Don Quixote). "Print on Sancho's face four-and-twenty smacks, and give him twelve pinches and six pin-thrusts in the back and arms." Altisidora is first to visit in the morning taking away Don Quixote's usual way for a moment or two, being back from the dead, but her story of the experience quickly snaps him back into his usual mode. Some others come around and it is decided to part that day.

"The duped Don Quixote did not miss a single stroke of the count..."; "...beyond measure joyful." A once nearly deadly confrontation for them, on the way back home (along with some other situations maybe of note) Don Quixote and Sancho "resolve" the disenchantment of Dulcinea (being fresh from his success with Altisidora). Upon returning to his village, Don Quixote announces his plan to retire to the countryside as a shepherd (considered an erudite bunch for the most part), but his housekeeper urges him to stay at home. Soon after, he retires to his bed with a deathly illness, and later awakes from a dream, having fully become good. Sancho's character tries to restore his faith and/or his interest of a disenchanted Dulcinea, but the Quexana character ("...will have it his surname..." "...for here there is some difference of opinion among the authors who write on the subject..." "...it seems plain that he was called Quexana.") only renounces his previous ambition and apologizes for the harm he has caused. He dictates his will, which includes a provision that his niece will be disinherited if she marries a man who reads books of chivalry. After the Quexana character dies, the author emphasizes that there are no more adventures to relate and that any further books about Don Quixote would be spurious.

 
Don Quixote on a 1 Peseta banknote from 1951

Meaning

Harold Bloom says Don Quixote is the first modern novel, and that the protagonist is at war with Freud's reality principle, which accepts the necessity of dying. Bloom says that the novel has an endless range of meanings, but that a recurring theme is the human need to withstand suffering.[9]

Edith Grossman, who wrote and published a highly acclaimed[10] English translation of the novel in 2003, says that the book is mostly meant to move people into emotion using a systematic change of course, on the verge of both tragedy and comedy at the same time. Grossman has stated:

The question is that Quixote has multiple interpretations [...] and how do I deal with that in my translation. I'm going to answer your question by avoiding it [...] so when I first started reading the Quixote I thought it was the most tragic book in the world, and I would read it and weep [...] As I grew older [...] my skin grew thicker [...] and so when I was working on the translation I was actually sitting at my computer and laughing out loud. This is done [...] as Cervantes did it [...] by never letting the reader rest. You are never certain that you truly got it. Because as soon as you think you understand something, Cervantes introduces something that contradicts your premise.[11]

Themes

 
Don Quixote by Honoré Daumier (1868)

The novel's structure is episodic in form. The full title is indicative of the tale's object, as ingenioso (Spanish) means "quick with inventiveness",[12] marking the transition of modern literature from dramatic to thematic unity. The novel takes place over a long period of time, including many adventures united by common themes of the nature of reality, reading, and dialogue in general.

Although burlesque on the surface, the novel, especially in its second half, has served as an important thematic source not only in literature but also in much of art and music, inspiring works by Pablo Picasso and Richard Strauss. The contrasts between the tall, thin, fancy-struck and idealistic Quixote and the fat, squat, world-weary Panza is a motif echoed ever since the book's publication, and Don Quixote's imaginings are the butt of outrageous and cruel practical jokes in the novel.

Even faithful and simple Sancho is forced to deceive him at certain points. The novel is considered a satire of orthodoxy, veracity and even nationalism. In exploring the individualism of his characters, Cervantes helped lead literary practice beyond the narrow convention of the chivalric romance. He spoofs the chivalric romance through a straightforward retelling of a series of acts that redound to the knightly virtues of the hero. The character of Don Quixote became so well known in its time that the word quixotic was quickly adopted by many languages. Characters such as Sancho Panza and Don Quixote's steed, Rocinante, are emblems of Western literary culture. The phrase "tilting at windmills" to describe an act of attacking imaginary enemies (or an act of extreme idealism), derives from an iconic scene in the book.

It stands in a unique position between medieval romance and the modern novel. The former consist of disconnected stories featuring the same characters and settings with little exploration of the inner life of even the main character. The latter are usually focused on the psychological evolution of their characters. In Part I, Quixote imposes himself on his environment. By Part II, people know about him through "having read his adventures", and so, he needs to do less to maintain his image. By his deathbed, he has regained his sanity, and is once more "Alonso Quixano the Good".

Background

Sources

Sources for Don Quixote include the Castilian novel Amadis de Gaula, which had enjoyed great popularity throughout the 16th century. Another prominent source, which Cervantes evidently admires more, is Tirant lo Blanch, which the priest describes in Chapter VI of Quixote as "the best book in the world." (However, the sense in which it was "best" is much debated among scholars. Since the 19th century, the passage has been called "the most difficult passage of Don Quixote".) The scene of the book burning gives an excellent list of Cervantes' likes and dislikes about literature.

Cervantes makes a number of references to the Italian poem Orlando furioso. In chapter 10 of the first part of the novel, Don Quixote says he must take the magical helmet of Mambrino, an episode from Canto I of Orlando, and itself a reference to Matteo Maria Boiardo's Orlando innamorato.[13] The interpolated story in chapter 33 of Part four of the First Part is a retelling of a tale from Canto 43 of Orlando, regarding a man who tests the fidelity of his wife.[14]

Another important source appears to have been Apuleius's The Golden Ass, one of the earliest known novels, a picaresque from late classical antiquity. The wineskins episode near the end of the interpolated tale "The Curious Impertinent" in chapter 35 of the first part of Don Quixote is a clear reference to Apuleius, and recent scholarship suggests that the moral philosophy and the basic trajectory of Apuleius's novel are fundamental to Cervantes' program.[15] Similarly, many of both Sancho's adventures in Part II and proverbs throughout are taken from popular Spanish and Italian folklore.

Cervantes' experiences as a galley slave in Algiers also influenced Quixote.

Medical theories may have also influenced Cervantes' literary process. Cervantes had familial ties to the distinguished medical community. His father, Rodrigo de Cervantes, and his great-grandfather, Juan Díaz de Torreblanca, were surgeons. Additionally, his sister, Andrea de Cervantes, was a nurse.[16] He also befriended many individuals involved in the medical field, in that he knew medical author Francisco Díaz, an expert in urology, and royal doctor Antonio Ponce de Santa Cruz who served as a personal doctor to both Philip III and Philip IV of Spain.[17]

Apart from the personal relations Cervantes maintained within the medical field, Cervantes' personal life was defined by an interest in medicine. He frequently visited patients from the Hospital de Inocentes in Sevilla.[16] Furthermore, Cervantes explored medicine in his personal library. His library contained more than 200 volumes and included books like Examen de Ingenios by Juan Huarte and Practica y teórica de cirugía by Dionisio Daza Chacón that defined medical literature and medical theories of his time.[17]

Spurious Second Part by Avellaneda

It is not certain when Cervantes began writing Part Two of Don Quixote, but he had probably not proceeded much further than Chapter LIX by late July 1614. About September, however, a spurious Part Two, entitled Second Volume of the Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha: by the Licenciado (doctorate) Alonso Fernández de Avellaneda, of Tordesillas, was published in Tarragona by an unidentified Aragonese who was an admirer of Lope de Vega, rival of Cervantes.[18] It was translated into English by William Augustus Yardley, Esquire in two volumes in 1784.

Some modern scholars suggest that Don Quixote's fictional encounter with Avellaneda in Chapter 59 of Part II should not be taken as the date that Cervantes encountered it, which may have been much earlier.

Avellaneda's identity has been the subject of many theories, but there is no consensus as to who he was. In its prologue, the author gratuitously insulted Cervantes, who not surprisingly took offense and responded; the last half of Chapter LIX and most of the following chapters of Cervantes' Segunda Parte lend some insight into the effects upon him; Cervantes manages to work in some subtle digs at Avellaneda's own work, and in his preface to Part II, comes very near to criticizing Avellaneda directly.

In his introduction to The Portable Cervantes, Samuel Putnam, a noted translator of Cervantes' novel, calls Avellaneda's version "one of the most disgraceful performances in history".[19]

The second part of Cervantes' Don Quixote, finished as a direct result of the Avellaneda book, has come to be regarded by some literary critics[20] as superior to the first part, because of its greater depth of characterization, its discussions, mostly between Quixote and Sancho, on diverse subjects, and its philosophical insights. In Cervantes' Segunda Parte, Don Quixote visits a printing-house in Barcelona and finds Avellaneda's Second Part being printed there, in an early example of metafiction.[21]

Other stories

 
Don Quixote, his horse Rocinante and his squire Sancho Panza after an unsuccessful attack on a windmill. By Gustave Doré.

Don Quixote, Part One contains a number of stories which do not directly involve the two main characters, but which are narrated by some of the picaresque figures encountered by the Don and Sancho during their travels. The longest and best known of these is "El Curioso Impertinente" (The Ill-Advised Curiosity), found in Part One, Book Four. This story, read to a group of travelers at an inn, tells of a Florentine nobleman, Anselmo, who becomes obsessed with testing his wife's fidelity, and talks his close friend Lothario into attempting to seduce her, with disastrous results for all.

In Part Two, the author acknowledges the criticism of his digressions in Part One and promises to concentrate the narrative on the central characters (although at one point he laments that his narrative muse has been constrained in this manner). Nevertheless, "Part Two" contains several back narratives related by peripheral characters.

Several abridged editions have been published which delete some or all of the extra tales in order to concentrate on the central narrative.[22]

The Ill-Advised Curiosity summary

 
Camilla threatens Lothario with a dagger. Illustration by Apeles Mestres, engraving by Francisco Fusté.

The story within a story relates that, for no particular reason, Anselmo decides to test the fidelity of his wife, Camilla, and asks his friend, Lothario, to seduce her. Thinking that to be madness, Lothario reluctantly agrees, and soon reports to Anselmo that Camilla is a faithful wife. Anselmo learns that Lothario has lied and attempted no seduction. He makes Lothario promise to try in earnest and leaves town to make this easier. Lothario tries and Camilla writes letters to her husband telling him of the attempts by Lothario and asking him to return. Anselmo makes no reply and does not return. Lothario then falls in love with Camilla, who eventually reciprocates, an affair between them ensues, but is not disclosed to Anselmo, and their affair continues after Anselmo returns.

One day, Lothario sees a man leaving Camilla's house and jealously presumes she has taken another lover. He tells Anselmo that, at last, he has been successful and arranges a time and place for Anselmo to see the seduction. Before this rendezvous, however, Lothario learns that the man was the lover of Camilla's maid. He and Camilla then contrive to deceive Anselmo further: When Anselmo watches them, she refuses Lothario, protests her love for her husband, and stabs herself lightly in the breast. Anselmo is reassured of her fidelity. The affair restarts with Anselmo none the wiser.

Later, the maid's lover is discovered by Anselmo. Fearing that Anselmo will kill her, the maid says she will tell Anselmo a secret the next day. Anselmo tells Camilla that this is to happen, and Camilla expects that her affair is to be revealed. Lothario and Camilla flee that night. The maid flees the next day. Anselmo searches for them in vain before learning from a stranger of his wife's affair. He starts to write the story, but dies of grief before he can finish.

Style

Spelling and pronunciation

Cervantes wrote his work in Early Modern Spanish, heavily borrowing from Old Spanish, the medieval form of the language. The language of Don Quixote, although still containing archaisms, is far more understandable to modern Spanish readers than is, for instance, the completely medieval Spanish of the Poema de mio Cid, a kind of Spanish that is as different from Cervantes' language as Middle English is from Modern English. The Old Castilian language was also used to show the higher class that came with being a knight errant.

In Don Quixote, there are basically two different types of Castilian: Old Castilian is spoken only by Don Quixote, while the rest of the roles speak a contemporary (late 16th century) version of Spanish. The Old Castilian of Don Quixote is a humoristic resource—he copies the language spoken in the chivalric books that made him mad; and many times, when he talks nobody is able to understand him because his language is too old. This humorous effect is more difficult to see nowadays because the reader must be able to distinguish the two old versions of the language, but when the book was published it was much celebrated. (English translations can get some sense of the effect by having Don Quixote use King James Bible or Shakespearean English, or even Middle English.)

In Old Castilian, the letter x represented the sound written sh in modern English, so the name was originally pronounced [kiˈʃote]. However, as Old Castilian evolved towards modern Spanish, a sound change caused it to be pronounced with a voiceless velar fricative [x] sound (like the Scots or German ch), and today the Spanish pronunciation of "Quixote" is [kiˈxote]. The original pronunciation is reflected in languages such as Asturian, Leonese, Galician, Catalan, Italian, Portuguese, Turkish and French, where it is pronounced with a "sh" or "ch" sound; the French opera Don Quichotte is one of the best-known modern examples of this pronunciation.

Today, English speakers generally attempt something close to the modern Spanish pronunciation of Quixote (Quijote), as /kˈhti/,[1] although the traditional English spelling-based pronunciation with the value of the letter x in modern English is still sometimes used, resulting in /ˈkwɪksət/ or /ˈkwɪkst/. In Australian English, the preferred pronunciation amongst members of the educated classes was /ˈkwɪksət/ until well into the 1970s, as part of a tendency for the upper class to "anglicise its borrowing ruthlessly".[23] The traditional English rendering is preserved in the pronunciation of the adjectival form quixotic, i.e., /kwɪkˈsɒtɪk/,[24][25] defined by Merriam-Webster as the foolishly impractical pursuit of ideals, typically marked by rash and lofty romanticism.[26]

Setting

I suspect that in Don Quixote, it does not rain a single time. The landscapes described by Cervantes have nothing in common with the landscapes of Castile: they are conventional landscapes, full of meadows, streams, and copses that belong in an Italian novel.

Cervantes' story takes place on the plains of La Mancha, specifically the comarca of Campo de Montiel.

En un lugar de La Mancha, de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme, no ha mucho tiempo que vivía un hidalgo de los de lanza en astillero, adarga antigua, rocín flaco y galgo corredor.
(Somewhere in La Mancha, in a place whose name I do not care to remember, a gentleman lived not long ago, one of those who has a lance and ancient shield on a shelf and keeps a skinny nag and a greyhound for racing.)

— Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote, Volume I, Chapter I (translated by Edith Grossman)

The story also takes place in El Toboso where Don Quixote goes to seek Dulcinea's blessings. The location of the village to which Cervantes alludes in the opening sentence of Don Quixote has been the subject of debate since its publication over four centuries ago. Indeed, Cervantes deliberately omits the name of the village, giving an explanation in the final chapter:

Such was the end of the Ingenious Gentleman of La Mancha, whose village Cide Hamete would not indicate precisely, in order to leave all the towns and villages of La Mancha to contend among themselves for the right to adopt him and claim him as a son, as the seven cities of Greece contended for Homer.

— Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote, Volume II, Chapter 74

Theories

In 2004, a multidisciplinary team of academics from Complutense University, led by Francisco Parra Luna, Manuel Fernández Nieto, and Santiago Petschen Verdaguer, deduced that the village was that of Villanueva de los Infantes.[28] Their findings were published in a paper titled "'El Quijote' como un sistema de distancias/tiempos: hacia la localización del lugar de la Mancha", which was later published as a book: El enigma resuelto del Quijote. The result was replicated in two subsequent investigations: "La determinación del lugar de la Mancha como problema estadístico" and "The Kinematics of the Quixote and the Identity of the 'Place in La Mancha'".[29][30]

Researchers Isabel Sanchez Duque and Francisco Javier Escudero have found relevant information regarding the possible sources of inspiration of Cervantes for writing Don Quixote. Cervantes was friend of the family Villaseñor, which was involved in a combat with Francisco de Acuña. Both sides combated disguised as medieval knights in the road from El Toboso to Miguel Esteban in 1581. They also found a person called Rodrigo Quijada, who bought the title of nobility of "hidalgo", and created diverse conflicts with the help of a squire.[31][32]

Language

Because of its widespread influence, Don Quixote also helped cement the modern Spanish language. The opening sentence of the book created a classic Spanish cliché with the phrase "de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme" ("whose name I do not wish to recall"): "En un lugar de la Mancha, de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme, no hace mucho tiempo que vivía un hidalgo de los de lanza en astillero, adarga antigua, rocín flaco y galgo corredor." ("In a village of La Mancha, whose name I do not wish to recall, there lived, not very long ago, one of those gentlemen with a lance in the lance-rack, an ancient shield, a skinny old horse, and a fast greyhound.")

The novel's farcical elements make use of punning and similar verbal playfulness. Character-naming in Don Quixote makes ample figural use of contradiction, inversion, and irony, such as the names Rocinante[33] (a reversal) and Dulcinea (an allusion to illusion), and the word quixote itself, possibly a pun on quijada (jaw) but certainly cuixot (Catalan: thighs), a reference to a horse's rump.[34]

As a military term, the word quijote refers to cuisses, part of a full suit of plate armour protecting the thighs. The Spanish suffix -ote denotes the augmentative—for example, grande means large, but grandote means extra large, with grotesque connotations. Following this example, Quixote would suggest 'The Great Quijano', an oxymoronic play on words that makes much sense in light of the character's delusions of grandeur.[35]

La Mancha is a region of Spain, but mancha (Spanish word) means spot, mark, stain. Translators such as John Ormsby have declared La Mancha to be one of the most desertlike, unremarkable regions of Spain, the least romantic and fanciful place that one would imagine as the home of a courageous knight.

Don Quixote, alongside its many translations, has also provided a number of idioms and expressions within the English language. Examples with their own articles include the phrase "the pot calling the kettle black" and the adjective "quixotic."

Publication

 
Illustration to Don Quixote de la Mancha by Miguel de Cervantes (the edition translated by Charles Jarvis)
 
Don Quixote. Close up of Illustration.
 
Bronze statues of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, at the Plaza de España in Madrid
 
Collage of the engravings of The Adventures of Don Quixote by Gustave Doré

In July 1604, Cervantes sold the rights of El ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la Mancha (known as Don Quixote, Part I) to the publisher-bookseller Francisco de Robles for an unknown sum.[36] License to publish was granted in September, the printing was finished in December, and the book came out on 16 January 1605.[37][38]

The novel was an immediate success. The majority of the 400 copies of the first edition were sent to the New World, with the publisher hoping to get a better price in the Americas.[39] Although most of them disappeared in a shipwreck near La Havana, approximately 70 copies reached Lima, from where they were sent to Cuzco in the heart of the defunct Inca Empire.[39]

No sooner was it in the hands of the public than preparations were made to issue derivative (pirated) editions. In 1614 a fake second part was published by a mysterious author under the pen name Avellaneda. This author was never satisfactorily identified. This rushed Cervantes into writing and publishing a genuine second part in 1615, which was a year before his own death.[21] Don Quixote had been growing in favour, and its author's name was now known beyond the Pyrenees. By August 1605, there were two Madrid editions, two published in Lisbon, and one in Valencia. Publisher Francisco de Robles secured additional copyrights for Aragon and Portugal for a second edition.[40]

Sale of these publishing rights deprived Cervantes of further financial profit on Part One. In 1607, an edition was printed in Brussels. Robles, the Madrid publisher, found it necessary to meet demand with a third edition, a seventh publication in all, in 1608. Popularity of the book in Italy was such that a Milan bookseller issued an Italian edition in 1610. Yet another Brussels edition was called for in 1611.[38] Since then, numerous editions have been released and in total, the novel is believed to have sold more than 500 million copies worldwide.[41] The work has been produced in numerous editions and languages, the Cervantes Collection, at the State Library of New South Wales includes over 1,100 editions. These were collected, by Dr Ben Haneman, over a period of thirty years.[42]

In 1613, Cervantes published the Novelas Ejemplares, dedicated to the Maecenas of the day, the Conde de Lemos. Eight and a half years after Part One had appeared came the first hint of a forthcoming Segunda Parte (Part Two). "You shall see shortly," Cervantes says, "the further exploits of Don Quixote and humours of Sancho Panza."[43] Don Quixote, Part Two, published by the same press as its predecessor, appeared late in 1615, and quickly reprinted in Brussels and Valencia (1616) and Lisbon (1617). Parts One and Two were published as one edition in Barcelona in 1617. Historically, Cervantes' work has been said to have "smiled Spain's chivalry away", suggesting that Don Quixote as a chivalric satire contributed to the demise of Spanish Chivalry.[44]

English editions in translation

 
Don Quixote goes mad from his reading of books of chivalry. Engraving by Gustave Doré.
 
Don Quichote And Sancho Panza by Louis Anquetin

There are many translations of the book, and it has been adapted many times in shortened versions. Many derivative editions were also written at the time, as was the custom of envious or unscrupulous writers. Seven years after the Parte Primera appeared, Don Quixote had been translated into French, German, Italian, and English, with the first French translation of 'Part II' appearing in 1618, and the first English translation in 1620. One abridged adaptation, authored by Agustín Sánchez, runs slightly over 150 pages, cutting away about 750 pages.[45]

Thomas Shelton's English translation of the First Part appeared in 1612 while Cervantes was still alive, although there is no evidence that Shelton had met the author. Although Shelton's version is cherished by some, according to John Ormsby and Samuel Putnam, it was far from satisfactory as a carrying over of Cervantes' text.[40] Shelton's translation of the novel's Second Part appeared in 1620.

Near the end of the 17th century, John Phillips, a nephew of poet John Milton, published what Putnam considered the worst English translation. The translation, as literary critics claim, was not based on Cervantes' text but mostly upon a French work by Filleau de Saint-Martin and upon notes which Thomas Shelton had written.

Around 1700, a version by Pierre Antoine Motteux appeared. Motteux's translation enjoyed lasting popularity; it was reprinted as the Modern Library Series edition of the novel until recent times.[46] Nonetheless, future translators would find much to fault in Motteux's version: Samuel Putnam criticized "the prevailing slapstick quality of this work, especially where Sancho Panza is involved, the obtrusion of the obscene where it is found in the original, and the slurring of difficulties through omissions or expanding upon the text". John Ormsby considered Motteux's version "worse than worthless", and denounced its "infusion of Cockney flippancy and facetiousness" into the original.[47]

The proverb "The proof of the pudding is in the eating" is widely attributed to Cervantes. The Spanish word for pudding (budín), however, does not appear in the original text but premieres in the Motteux translation.[48] In Smollett's translation of 1755 he notes that the original text reads literally "you will see when the eggs are fried", meaning "time will tell".[49]

A translation by Captain John Stevens, which revised Thomas Shelton's version, also appeared in 1700, but its publication was overshadowed by the simultaneous release of Motteux's translation.[46]

In 1742, the Charles Jervas translation appeared, posthumously. Through a printer's error, it came to be known, and is still known, as "the Jarvis translation". It was the most scholarly and accurate English translation of the novel up to that time, but future translator John Ormsby points out in his own introduction to the novel that the Jarvis translation has been criticized as being too stiff. Nevertheless, it became the most frequently reprinted translation of the novel until about 1885. Another 18th-century translation into English was that of Tobias Smollett, himself a novelist, first published in 1755. Like the Jarvis translation, it continues to be reprinted today.

A translation by Alexander James Duffield appeared in 1881 and another by Henry Edward Watts in 1888. Most modern translators take as their model the 1885 translation by John Ormsby.[50]

An expurgated children's version, under the title The Story of Don Quixote, was published in 1922 (available on Project Gutenberg). It leaves out the risqué sections as well as chapters that young readers might consider dull, and embellishes a great deal on Cervantes' original text. The title page actually gives credit to the two editors as if they were the authors, and omits any mention of Cervantes.[51]

The most widely read English-language translations of the mid-20th century are by Samuel Putnam (1949), J. M. Cohen (1950; Penguin Classics), and Walter Starkie (1957). The last English translation of the novel in the 20th century was by Burton Raffel, published in 1996. The 21st century has already seen five new translations of the novel into English. The first is by John D. Rutherford and the second by Edith Grossman. Reviewing the novel in the New York Times, Carlos Fuentes called Grossman's translation a "major literary achievement"[52] and another called it the "most transparent and least impeded among more than a dozen English translations going back to the 17th century."[53]

In 2005, the year of the novel's 400th anniversary, Tom Lathrop published a new English translation of the novel, based on a lifetime of specialized study of the novel and its history.[54] The fourth translation of the 21st century was released in 2006 by former university librarian James H Montgomery, 26 years after he had begun it, in an attempt to "recreate the sense of the original as closely as possible, though not at the expense of Cervantes' literary style."[55]

In 2011, another translation by Gerald J. Davis appeared.[56] It is the latest and the fifth translation of the 21st century.

Tilting at windmills

Tilting at windmills is an English idiom that means attacking imaginary enemies. The expression is derived from Don Quixote, and the word "tilt" in this context refers to jousting.

The phrase is sometimes used to describe either confrontations where adversaries are incorrectly perceived, or courses of action that are based on misinterpreted or misapplied heroic, romantic, or idealistic justifications. It may also connote an inopportune, unfounded, and vain effort against adversaries real or imagined.[57]

List of English translations

  1. Thomas Shelton (1612 & 1620)
    1. Captain John Stevens (1700) (revision of Thomas Shelton)
  2. John Phillips (1687) – the nephew of John Milton
  3. Pierre Antoine Motteux (1700)
    1. John Ozell (1719) (revision of Pierre Antoine Motteux)
    2. George Kelly (1769) (considered as another revision of Pierre Antoine Motteux)
  4. Ned Ward (1700), (The) Life & Notable Adventures of Don Quixote merrily translated into Hudibrastic Verse
  5. Charles Jervas (1742)
    1. Tobias Smollett (1755) (revision of Charles Jervas)
    2. O. M. Brack Jr. (2003) (revision of the 1755 Tobias Smollett revision of Charles Jervas)
    3. E. C. Riley (2008) (revision of Charles Jervas)
  6. Charles Henry Wilmot (1774)
  7. Mary Smirke with engravings by Robert Smirke (1818)
  8. Alexander James Duffield (1881)
  9. John Ormsby (1885). The original version, available free on the Internet Archive, is to be preferred to the WikiSource and similar versions, which do not include Ormsby's careful notes and with his Introduction much abbreviated.[58]
    1. Joseph Ramon Jones and Kenneth Douglas (1981) (revision of Ormsby). (ISBN 978-0393090185, 0393090183) - Norton Critical Edition
  10. Henry Edward Watts (1888)
  11. Robinson Smith (1910)
  12. Samuel Putnam (Modern Library, 1949)
  13. J. M. Cohen (Penguin, 1950)
  14. Walter Starkie (1964)
  15. Burton Raffel (Norton, 1996)
    1. Diana de Armas Wilson (2020) (revision of Burton Raffel)
  16. John Rutherford (Penguin, 2000)
  17. Edith Grossman (2003)
  18. Thomas Lathrop (2005)
  19. James H. Montgomery (2006)
  20. Gerald J. Davis (2011)

Reviewing the English translations as a whole, Daniel Eisenberg stated that there is no one translation ideal for every purpose, but expressed a preference for those of Putnam and the revision of Ormsby's translation by Douglas and Jones.[58]

English Translation of the Spurious Don Quixote

  1. Captain John Stevens (1705)
  2. William Augustus Yardley (1784)

Influence and media

See also

General

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b Oxford English Dictionary, ""
  2. ^ Harold Bloom (13 December 2003). "The knight in the mirror". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  3. ^ Ana Puchau de Lecea (25 June 2018). "Guide to the classics: Don Quixote, the world's first modern novel – and one of the best". The Conversation. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  4. ^ "Don Quixote gets authors' votes". BBC News. 7 May 2002. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
  5. ^ Angelique, Chrisafis (21 July 2003). "Don Quixote is the world's best book say the world's top authors". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 13 October 2012.
  6. ^ Mineo, Liz (25 April 2016). "A true giant". Harvard Gazette. Boston. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  7. ^ Eisenberg, Daniel (1991) [1976]. "El rucio de Sancho y la fecha de composición de la Segunda Parte de Don Quijote". Estudios cervantinos. Revised version of article first published in es:Nueva Revista de Filología Hispánica, vol. 25, 1976, pp. 94-102. Barcelona: Sirmio. ISBN 9788477690375. from the original on 24 September 2015.
  8. ^ Otis H. Green. "El Ingenioso Hidalgo", Hispanic Review 25 (1957), 175–93.
  9. ^ The Knight in the Mirror a 2003 book report in The Guardian about Harold Bloom's book.
  10. ^ Lathrop, Tom (22 March 2006). "Edith Grossman's Translation of Don Quixote" (PDF). Bulletin of the Cervantes Society. 26 (1–2): 237–255. (PDF) from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  11. ^ Edith Grossman about Don Quixote as tragedy and comedy a discussion held in New York City on 5 February 2009 by Words Without Borders (YouTube)
  12. ^ ingenio 1, Real Academia Española
  13. ^ Don Quijote de la Mancha, Miguel de Cervantes, Edición de Florencio Sevilla Arroyo, Área 2002 p. 161
  14. ^ "Don Quixote" by Miguel de Cervantes, translated and annotated by Edith Grossman, p. 272
  15. ^ See chapter 2 of E. C. Graf's Cervantes and Modernity.
  16. ^ a b Lopez-Munoz, F. “The Mad and the Demented in the Literary Works of Cervantes: On Cervantes' Sources of Medical Information about Neuropsychiatry.” Revista De Neurologia, vol. 46, 2008, pp. 489-501: 490.
  17. ^ a b Palma, Jose-Alberto, Palma, Fermin. “Neurology and Don Quixote.” European Neurology, vol. 68, 2012, pp. 247-57: 253.
  18. ^ Eisenberg, Daniel. Cervantes, Lope and Avellaneda. Estudios cervantinos. Aditya Yadav 🇮🇳🇮🇳41.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  19. ^ Cervantes, Miguel, The Portable Cervantes, ed. Samuel Putnam (New York: Penguin, [1951] 1978), p. viii
  20. ^ Putnam, Samuel (1976). Introduction to The Portable Cervantes. Harmondsworth: Penguin. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-14-015057-5.
  21. ^ a b Lyons, M. (2011). Books: a living history. London: Thames & Hudson.
  22. ^ An example is The Portable Cervantes (New York: Viking Penguin, 1949), which contains an abridged version of the Samuel Putnam translation.
  23. ^ Peters, P. H., ed. (1986). Style in Australia: current practices in spelling, punctuation, hyphenation, capitalisation, etc. Macquarie Park, New South Wales: Dictionary Research Centre, Macquarie University. pp. 48–49. ISBN 978-0858375888.
  24. ^ "quixotic". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  25. ^ "quixotic". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  26. ^ "Quixotic". Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Retrieved 17 May 2010.
  27. ^ Professor Borges: A Course on English Literature. New Directions Publishing, 2013. ISBN 978-0811218757. p. 15.
  28. ^ "To Quixote's village at the speed of a nag". Times Online. London.
  29. ^ (PDF) (in Spanish). Valencia: Department of Statistics, University of Malaga. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 July 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  30. ^ "The Kinematics of the Quixote and the Identity of the "Place in La Mancha"" (PDF). Valencia: Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Valencia: 7. (PDF) from the original on 18 July 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  31. ^ "Don Quijote era Acuña el Procurador". El Mundo. Madrid.
  32. ^ "Don Quijote de La Mancha: ¿realidad o ficción?". El País. Madrid.
  33. ^ rocinante: deriv. of rocín, work horse; colloq., brusque labourer; rough, unkempt man. Real Academia Española.
  34. ^ quijote1.2: rump or haunch. Real Academia Española.
  35. ^ González Echevarría, Roberto (2015). "1. Introduction: Why Read the Quixote?". Cervantes' Don Quixote. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300213317.
  36. ^ Clement, Richard W. (2002). "Francisco de Robles, Cervantes, and the Spanish Book Trade". Mediterranean Studies. 11: 115–30. JSTOR 41166942.
  37. ^ Cahill, Hugh. . King's College London. Archived from the original on 25 May 2007. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  38. ^ a b "Cervantes, Miguel de". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
    J. Ormsby, "About Cervantes and Don Quixote" 3 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ a b Serge Gruzinski, teacher at the EHESS (July–August 2007). "Don Quichotte, best-seller mondial". n°322. L'Histoire. p. 30.
  40. ^ a b J. Ormsby, "About Cervantes and Don Quixote" 3 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  41. ^ Grabianowski, Ed (2018). "The 21 Best-selling Books of All Time". HowStuffWorks. p. 1. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  42. ^ "Cervantes Collection". www.sl.nsw.gov.au. 19 June 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
  43. ^ See also the introduction to Cervantes, Miguel de (1984) Don Quixote, Penguin p. 18, for a discussion of Cervantes' statement in response to Avellaneda's attempt to write a sequel.
  44. ^ Prestage, Edgar (1928). Chivalry. p. 110.
  45. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 August 2007. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  46. ^ a b Sieber, Harry. The Don Quixote Exhibit, Tour 2, Chapter 5. George Peabody Library. 1996. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  47. ^ . Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, Translated by John Ormsby. Archived from the original on 23 August 2010.
  48. ^ "Proverb "Proof of the Pudding is in the Eating"".
  49. ^ Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, translated by Tobias Smollett, Introduction and Notes by Carole Slade; Barnes and Noble Classics, New York p. 318
  50. ^ Battestin, Martin C. (1997). "The Authorship of Smollett's "Don Quixote"". Studies in Bibliography. 50: 295–321. ISSN 0081-7600. JSTOR 40372067.
  51. ^ . Gutenberg.org. 20 July 2009. Archived from the original on 21 August 2013. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  52. ^ Fuentes, Carlos (2 November 2003). "Tilt". The New York Times.
  53. ^ Eder, Richard (14 November 2003). "Beholding Windmills and Wisdom From a New Vantage". The New York Times.
  54. ^ McGrath, Michael J (2007). "Reviews: Don Quixote trans. Tom Lathrop" (PDF). H-Net. (PDF) from the original on 5 February 2015.
  55. ^ McGrath, Michael J (2010). "Reviews: Don Quixote trans. James Montgomery" (PDF). H-Net. (PDF) from the original on 15 October 2013.
  56. ^ Davis, Gerald J. (2012). Don Quixote. Lulu Enterprises Incorporated. ISBN 978-1105810664.
  57. ^ Ammer, Christine (2003). . The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0618249534. Archived from the original on 15 April 2013. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  58. ^ a b Eisenberg, Daniel (2006). "The Text of Don Quixote as Seen by its Modern English Translators" (PDF). Cervantes (Journal of the Cervantes Society of America). 26: 103–126. (PDF) from the original on 11 October 2008.
  59. ^ . Gutenberg.org. 27 April 2010. Archived from the original on 2 November 2013. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  60. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 24 September 2014.

Further reading

External links

  Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article: El ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha

  Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article: El ingenioso caballero Don Quijote de la Mancha

  • Don Quixote at Standard Ebooks
  • Don Quixote at Project Gutenberg
  •   Don Quixote public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Don Quixote on In Our Time at the BBC
  • Cervantine Collection of the Biblioteca de Catalunya
  • Miguel de Cervantes Collection has rare first volumes in multiple languages of Don Quixote. From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress.

quixote, other, uses, disambiguation, quijote, redirects, here, genus, gastropod, quijote, gastropod, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, plo. For other uses see Don Quixote disambiguation Quijote redirects here For the genus of gastropod see Quijote gastropod This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource December 2022 This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Don Quixote a b is a Spanish epic novel by Miguel de Cervantes Originally published in two parts in 1605 and 1615 its full title is The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha or in Spanish El ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote b de la Mancha changing in Part 2 to El ingenioso caballero don Quixote b de la Mancha c A founding work of Western literature it is often labelled as the first modern novel 2 3 and one of the greatest works ever written 4 5 Don Quixote is also one of the most translated books in the world 6 Don QuixoteDon Quixote de la Mancha 1605 first edition AuthorMiguel de CervantesOriginal titleEl ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la ManchaCountryHabsburg SpainLanguageEarly Modern SpanishGenreNovelPublisherFrancisco de RoblesPublication date1605 Part One 1615 Part Two Published in English1612 Part One 1620 Part Two Media typePrintDewey Decimal863LC ClassPQ6323Original textEl ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la Mancha at Spanish WikisourceTranslationDon Quixote at WikisourceThe plot revolves around the adventures of a member of the lowest nobility an hidalgo from La Mancha named Alonso Quijano who reads so many chivalric romances that he either loses or pretends to have lost his mind in order to become a knight errant caballero andante to revive chivalry and serve his nation under the name Don Quixote de la Mancha b He recruits a simple farmer Sancho Panza as his squire who often employs a unique earthy wit in dealing with Don Quixote s rhetorical monologues on knighthood already considered old fashioned at the time and representing the most droll realism in contrast to his master s idealism In the first part of the book Don Quixote does not see the world for what it is and prefers to imagine that he is living out a knightly story that s meant for the annals of all time The book had a major influence on the literary community as evidenced by direct references in Alexandre Dumas The Three Musketeers 1844 Mark Twain s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 1884 and Edmond Rostand s Cyrano de Bergerac 1897 citation needed as well as the word quixotic When first published Don Quixote was usually interpreted as a comic novel After the successful French Revolution it was better known for its presumed central ethic that in some ways individuals can be intelligent while their society is quite fanciful and was seen as a fascinating enchanting or disenchanting book in this dynamic and for among books In the 19th century it was seen as social commentary but no one could easily tell whose side Cervantes was on Many critics came to view the work as a tragedy in which Don Quixote s idealism and nobility are viewed by the post chivalric world as not enough and are defeated and rendered useless by a common reality devoid of his true romantic inclinations by the 20th century the novel had come to occupy a canonical space as one of the foundations of letters in literature Contents 1 Summary 1 1 Part 1 1605 1 1 1 The First Sally Chapters 1 5 1 1 2 Destruction of Don Quixote s library Chapters 6 7 1 1 3 The Second Sally Chapters 8 10 1 1 4 The Pastoral Peregrinations Chapters 11 15 1 1 5 The Inn Chapters 16 17 1 1 6 The galley slaves and Cardenio Chapters 19 24 1 1 7 The priest the barber and Dorotea Chapters 25 31 1 1 8 Return to the inn Chapters 32 42 1 1 9 The ending Chapters 45 52 1 2 Part 2 1 2 1 The Third Sally 2 Meaning 3 Themes 4 Background 4 1 Sources 4 2 Spurious Second Part by Avellaneda 4 3 Other stories 4 3 1 The Ill Advised Curiosity summary 5 Style 5 1 Spelling and pronunciation 5 2 Setting 5 2 1 Theories 5 3 Language 6 Publication 6 1 English editions in translation 7 Tilting at windmills 8 List of English translations 8 1 English Translation of the Spurious Don Quixote 9 Influence and media 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksSummary Edit Illustration by Gustave Dore depicting the famous windmill scene Cervantes wrote that the first chapters were taken from the archives of La Mancha and the rest were translated from an Arabic text by the Moorish historian Cide Hamete Benengeli This metafictional trick appears to give a greater credibility to the text implying that Don Quixote is a real character and that this has been researched from the logs of the events that truly occurred several decades prior to the recording of this account and the work of magical sage historians that are known to be involved here this getting some explaining However it was also common practice in that era for fictional works to make some creative pretense for seeming factual to the readers such as the common opening line of fairy tales Once upon a time in a land far away In the course of their travels the protagonists meet innkeepers prostitutes goat herders soldiers priests escaped convicts and scorned lovers The aforementioned characters sometimes tell tales that incorporate events from the real world Their encounters are magnified by Don Quixote s imagination into chivalrous quests Don Quixote s tendency to intervene violently in matters irrelevant to himself and his habit of not paying debts result in privations injuries and humiliations with Sancho often the victim Finally Don Quixote is persuaded to return to his home village The narrator hints that there was a third quest saying that records of it have been lost at any rate derived from authentic documents tradition has merely preserved in the memory of La Mancha this third sally A leaden box in possession of an old physician that was discovered at an old hermitage being rebuilt is related containing certain parchment manuscripts in Gothic character but in Castilian verse that seems to know the story even of Don Quixote s burial and having sundry epitaphs and eulogies The narrator requesting not much for the vast toil which it has cost him in examining and searching the Manchegan archives volunteers to present what can be made out of them with the good nature of and will be encouraged to seek out and produce other histories A group of Academicians from a village of La Mancha are set forth The most worm eaten were given to an Academician to make out their meaning conjecturally He s been informed he means to publish these in hopes of a third sally Part 1 1605 Edit For Cervantes and the readers of his day Don Quixote was a one volume book published in 1605 divided internally into four parts not the first part of a two part set The mention in the 1605 book of further adventures yet to be told was totally conventional does not indicate any authorial plans for a continuation and was not taken seriously by the book s first readers 7 The First Sally Chapters 1 5 Edit Alonso Quixano the protagonist of the novel though he is not given this name until much later in the book is a hidalgo member of the lesser Spanish nobility nearing 50 years of age living in an unnamed section of La Mancha with his niece and housekeeper as well as a stable boy who is never heard of again after the first chapter Although Quixano is usually a rational man in keeping with the humoral physiology theory of the time not sleeping adequately because he was reading has caused his brain to dry Quixano s temperament is thus choleric the hot and dry humor As a result he is easily given to anger 8 and believes every word of some of these fictional books of chivalry to be true such were the complicated conceits what Aristotle himself could not have made out or extracted had he come to life again for that special purpose He commended however the author s way of ending his book with the promise of that interminable adventure and many a time was he tempted to take up his pen and finish it properly as is there proposed which no doubt he would have done Having greater and more absorbing thoughts he reaches imitating the protagonists of these books and he decides to become a knight errant in search of adventure To these ends he dons an old suit of armor renames himself Don Quixote names his exhausted horse Rocinante and designates Aldonza Lorenzo intelligence able to be gathered of her perhaps relating that of being a slaughterhouse worker with a famed hand for salting pigs as his lady love renaming her Dulcinea del Toboso while she knows nothing of this Expecting to become famous quickly he arrives at an inn which he believes to be a castle calls the prostitutes he meets ladies doncellas and demands that the innkeeper whom he takes to be the lord of the castle dub him a knight He goes along with it in the meantime convincing Don Quixote to take to heart his need to have money and a squire and some magical cure for injuries and having morning planned for it Don Quixote starts the night holding vigil over his armor and shortly becomes involved in a fight with muleteers who try to remove his armor from the horse trough so that they can water their mules In a pretended ceremony the innkeeper dubs him a knight to be rid of him and sends him on his way right then Don Quixote next helps a servant named Andres who is tied to a tree and beaten by his master over disputed wages and makes his master swear to treat him fairly but in an example of transference his beating is continued and in fact redoubled as soon as Quixote leaves later explained to Quixote by Andres Don Quixote then encounters traders from Toledo who insult the imaginary Dulcinea He attacks them only to be severely beaten and left on the side of the road and is returned to his home by a neighboring peasant Destruction of Don Quixote s library Chapters 6 7 Edit While Don Quixote is unconscious in his bed his niece the housekeeper the parish curate and the local barber burn most of his chivalric and other books A large part of this section consists of the priest deciding which books deserve to be burned and which to be saved It is a scene of high comedy If the books are so bad for morality how does the priest know them well enough to describe every naughty scene Even so this gives an occasion for many comments on books Cervantes himself liked and disliked For example Cervantes own pastoral novel La Galatea is saved while the rather unbelievable romance Felixmarte de Hyrcania is burned After the books are dealt with they seal up the room which contained the library later telling Don Quixote that it was the action of a wizard encantador The Second Sally Chapters 8 10 Edit After a short period of feigning health Don Quixote requests his neighbour Sancho Panza to be his squire promising him a petty governorship insula Sancho is a poor and simple farmer but more practical than the head in the clouds Don Quixote and agrees to the offer sneaking away with Don Quixote in the early dawn It is here that their famous adventures begin starting with Don Quixote s attack on windmills that he believes to be ferocious giants The two next encounter two Benedictine friars travelling on the road ahead of a lady in a carriage The friars are not traveling with the lady but happen to be travelling on the same road Don Quixote takes the friars to be enchanters who hold the lady captive knocks a friar from his horse and is challenged by an armed Basque traveling with the company As he has no shield the Basque uses a pillow from the carriage to protect himself which saves him when Don Quixote strikes him Cervantes chooses this point in the middle of the battle to say that his source ends here Soon however he resumes Don Quixote s adventures after a story about finding Arabic notebooks containing the rest of the story by Cid Hamet Ben Engeli The combat ends with the lady leaving her carriage and commanding those traveling with her to surrender to Don Quixote First editions of the first and second parts The Pastoral Peregrinations Chapters 11 15 Edit Sancho and Don Quixote fall in with a group of goat herders Don Quixote tells Sancho and the goat herders about the Golden Age of man in which property does not exist and men live in peace The goatherders invite the Knight and Sancho to the funeral of Grisostomo a former student who left his studies to become a shepherd after reading pastoral novels paralleling Don Quixote s decision to become a knight seeking the shepherdess Marcela At the funeral Marcela appears vindicating herself as the victim of a bad one sided affair and from the bitter verses written about her by Grisostomo claiming she s just satisfied by her communing with nature now and is assuming her own autonomy and freedom from expectations put on She disappears into the woods and Don Quixote and Sancho follow Ultimately giving up the two dismount by a stream to rest A drove of Galician ponies belonging to certain Yanguesan carriers are planned to feed there and Rocinante Don Quixote s horse attempts to mate with the ponies The carriers hit Rocinante with clubs to dissuade him whereupon Don Quixote tries to defend Rocinante The carriers beat Don Quixote and Sancho leaving them in great pain The Inn Chapters 16 17 Edit After escaping the Yanguesan carriers Don Quixote and Sancho ride to a nearby inn Once again Don Quixote imagines the inn is a castle although Sancho is not quite convinced Don Quixote is given a bed in a former hayloft and Sancho sleeps on the rug next to the bed they share the loft with a carrier When night comes he began to feel uneasy and to consider the perilous risk which his virtue was about to encounter Don Quixote imagines the servant girl at the inn Maritornes to be this imagined beautiful princess now fallen in love with him and had promised to come to his bed for a while that night and makes her sit on his bed with him by holding her besides to this impossibility another yet greater is to be added Having been waiting for Maritornes and seeing her held while trying to get free the carrier attacks Don Quixote and jealous that the Asturian should have broken her word with him for another breaking the fragile bed and leading to a large and chaotic fight in which Don Quixote and Sancho are once again badly hurt Don Quixote s explanation for everything is that they fought with an enchanted Moor He also believes that he can cure their wounds with a mixture he calls the balm of Fierabras which only makes Sancho so sick that he should be at death s door Don Quixote s not quite through with it yet however as his take on things can be different Don Quixote and Sancho decide to leave the inn but Quixote following the example of the fictional knights leaves without paying Sancho however remains and ends up wrapped in a blanket and tossed up in the air blanketed by several mischievous guests at the inn something that is often mentioned over the rest of the novel After his release he and Don Quixote continue their travels The galley slaves and Cardenio Chapters 19 24 Edit Don Quixote de la Mancha and Sancho Panza 1863 by Gustave Dore After Don Quixote has adventures involving a dead body a helmet to Don Quixote and freeing a group of galley slaves he and Sancho wander into the Sierra Morena and there encounter the dejected and mostly mad Cardenio Cardenio relates the first part of his story in which he falls mutually in love with his childhood friend Lucinda and is hired as the companion to the Duke s son leading to his friendship with the Duke s younger son Don Fernando Cardenio confides in Don Fernando his love for Lucinda and the delays in their engagement caused by Cardenio s desire to keep with tradition After reading Cardenio s poems praising Lucinda Don Fernando falls in love with her Don Quixote interrupts when Cardenio s transference of his misreading suggests his madness over that his beloved may have become unfaithful stems from Queen Madasima and Master Elisabad relationship in a chivalric novel Lucinda and Don Fernando not at all the case also They get into a physical fight ending with Cardenio beating all of them and walking away to the mountains The priest the barber and Dorotea Chapters 25 31 Edit Quixote pines over Dulcinea s lack of affection ability imitating the penance of Beltenebros Quixote sends Sancho to deliver a letter to Dulcinea but instead Sancho finds the barber and priest from his village and brings them to Quixote The priest and barber make plans with Sancho to trick Don Quixote to come home They get the help of the hapless Dorotea an amazingly beautiful woman whom they discover in the forest that has been deceived with Don Fernando by acts of love and marriage as things just keep going very wrong for her after he had made it to her bedchamber one night by no fault of hers has furnished matters She pretends that she is the Princess Micomicona and coming from Guinea desperate to get Quixote s help with her fantastical story Which of the bystanders could have helped laughing to see the madness of the master and the simplicity of the servant Quixote runs into Andres the next moment ran to Don Quixote and clasping him round the legs in need of further assistance who tells Don Quixote something about having meddled in other people s affairs Return to the inn Chapters 32 42 Edit Convinced that he is on a quest to first return princess Micomicona to the throne of her kingdom before needing to go see Dulcinea at her request a Sancho deception related to the letter Sancho says he s delivered and has been questioned about Quixote and the group return to the previous inn where the priest reads aloud the manuscript of the story of Anselmo The Impertinently Curious Man while Quixote sleepwalking battles with wine skins that he takes to be the giant who stole the princess Micomicona s kingdom to victory there you see my master has already salted the giant A stranger arrives at the inn accompanying a young woman The stranger is revealed to be Don Fernando and the young woman Lucinda Dorotea is reunited with Don Fernando and Cardenio with Lucinda it may be by my death he will be convinced that I kept my faith to him to the last moment of life and moreover that true nobility consists in virtue and if thou art wanting in that refusing what in justice thou owest me then even I have higher claims to nobility than thine A Christian captive from Moorish lands in company of an Arabic speaking lady Zoraida arrive and the captive is asked to tell the story of his life If your worships will give me your attention you will hear a true story which perhaps fictitious one constructed with ingenious and studied art can not come up to at any rate she seemed to me the most beautiful object I had ever seen and when besides I thought of all I owed to her I felt as though I had before me some heavenly being come to earth to bring me relief and happiness A judge arrives travelling with his beautiful and curiously smitten daughter and it is found that the captive is his long lost brother and the two are reunited as Dona Clara s his daughter s name interest arrives with at singing her songs from outside that night Don Quixote s explanation for everything now at this inn being chimeras of knight errantry A prolonged attempt at reaching agreement on what are the new barber s basin and some gear is an example of Quixote being reasoned with behold with your own eyes how the discord of Agramante s camp has come hither and been transferred into the midst of us He goes on some here to explain what he is referring to with a reason for peace among them presented and what s to be done This works to create peacefulness for them but the officers present now for a while have one for him that he can not get out of though he goes through his usual reactions The ending Chapters 45 52 Edit An officer of the Santa Hermandad has a warrant for Quixote s arrest for freeing the galley slaves as Sancho had with very good reason apprehended The priest begs for the officer to have mercy on account of Quixote s insanity The officer agrees and Quixote is locked in a cage and made to think that it is an enchantment and that there is a prophecy of him returned home afterwards that s meaning pleases him He has a learned conversation with a Toledo canon church official he encounters by chance on the road in which the canon expresses his scorn for untruthful chivalric books but Don Quixote defends them The group stops to eat and lets Don Quixote out of the cage he gets into a fight with a goatherd Leandra transferred to a goat and with a group of pilgrims tries to liberate their image of Mary who beat him into submission and he is finally brought home The narrator ends the story by saying that he has found manuscripts of Quixote s further adventures Part 2 Edit Illustration to The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha Volume II Although the two parts are now published as a single work Don Quixote Part Two was a sequel published ten years after the original novel While Part One was mostly farcical the second half is more serious and philosophical about the theme of deception and sophistry Opening just prior to the third Sally the first chapters of Part Two show Don Quixote found to be still some sort of a modern day highly literate know it all knight errant that can recover quickly from injury Sancho his squire however This article is missing information about section Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page September 2022 Part Two of Don Quixote explores the concept of a character understanding that he is written about an idea much explored in the 20th century As Part Two begins it is assumed that the literate classes of Spain have all read the first part of the story Cervantes meta fictional device was to make even the characters in the story familiar with the publication of Part One as well as with an actually published fraudulent Part Two The Third Sally Edit The narrator relates how Hamet Benengeli begins the eighth chapter with thanksgivings to Allah at having Don Quixote and Sancho fairly afield now and going to El Toboso Traveling all night some religiosity and other matters are expressed between Don Quixote and Sancho with Sancho getting at that he thinks they should be better off by being canonized and beatified They reach the city at daybreak and it s decided to enter at nightfall with Sancho aware that his Dulcinea story to Don Quixote was a complete fabrication and again with good reason sensing a major problem 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 The place is asleep and dark with the sounds of an intruder from animals heard and the matter absurd but a bad omen spooks Quixote into retreat and they leave before daybreak Soon and yet to come when a Duke and Duchess encounter the duo they already know their famous history and they themselves very fond of books of chivalry plan to fall in with his humor and agree to everything he said in accepting his advancements and then their terrible dismount setting forth a string of imagined adventures resulting in a series of practical jokes Some of them put Don Quixote s sense of chivalry and his devotion to Dulcinea through many tests Now pressed into finding Dulcinea Sancho is sent out alone again as a go between with Dulcinea and decides they are both mad here but as for Don Quixote with a madness that mostly takes one thing for another and plans to persuade him into seeing Dulcinea as a sublimated presence of a sorts Sancho s luck brings three focusing peasant girls along the road he was sitting not far from where he set out from and he quickly tells Don Quixote that they are Dulcinea and her ladies in waiting and as beautiful as ever as they get unwittingly involved with the duo As Don Quixote always only sees the peasant girls but open your eyes and come and pay your respects to the lady of your thoughts carrying on for their part Hey day My grandfather Sancho always pretends reversing some incidents of Part One and keeping to his plan that their appearance is as Sancho is perceiving it as he explains its magnificent qualities and must be an enchantment of some sort at work here Don Quixote s usual and predictable kind of belief in this matter results in Sancho the rogue having nicely befooled him into thinking he d met Dulcinea controlled by enchantment but delivered by Sancho Don Quixote then has the opportunity to purport that for from a child I was fond of the play and in my youth a keen lover of the actor s art while with players of a company and for him thus far an unusually high regard for poetry when with Don Diego de Miranda She is the product of an Alchemy of such virtue that he who is able to practice it will turn her into pure gold of inestimable worth sublime conceptions Don Quixote makes to the other world and somehow meets his fictional characters at return reversing the timestamp of the usual event and with a possible apocryphal example As one of his deeds Don Quixote joins into a puppet troop Melisendra was Melisendra Don Gaiferos Don Gaiferos Marsilio Marsilio and Charlemagne Charlemagne Having created a lasting false premise for them Sancho later gets his comeuppance for this when as part of one of the Duke and Duchess s pranks the two are led to believe that the only method to release Dulcinea from this spell if among possibilities under consideration she has been changed rather than Don Quixote s perception has been enchanted which at one point he explains is not possible however is for Sancho to give himself three thousand three hundred lashes Sancho naturally resists this course of action leading to friction with his master Under the Duke s patronage Sancho eventually gets a governorship though it is false and he proves to be a wise and practical ruler although this ends in humiliation as well Near the end Don Quixote reluctantly sways towards sanity The lengthy untold history of Don Quixote s adventures in knight errantry comes to a close after his battle with the Knight of the White Moon a young man from Don Quixote s hometown who had previously posed as the Knight of Mirrors on the beach in Barcelona in which the reader finds him conquered Bound by the rules of chivalry Don Quixote submits to prearranged terms that the vanquished is to obey the will of the conqueror here it is that Don Quixote is to lay down his arms and cease his acts of chivalry for the period of one year in which he may be cured of his madness He and Sancho undergo one more prank that night by the Duke and Duchess before setting off A play like event though perceived as mostly real life by Sancho and Don Quixote over Altisidora s required remedy from death over her love for Don Quixote Print on Sancho s face four and twenty smacks and give him twelve pinches and six pin thrusts in the back and arms Altisidora is first to visit in the morning taking away Don Quixote s usual way for a moment or two being back from the dead but her story of the experience quickly snaps him back into his usual mode Some others come around and it is decided to part that day The duped Don Quixote did not miss a single stroke of the count beyond measure joyful A once nearly deadly confrontation for them on the way back home along with some other situations maybe of note Don Quixote and Sancho resolve the disenchantment of Dulcinea being fresh from his success with Altisidora Upon returning to his village Don Quixote announces his plan to retire to the countryside as a shepherd considered an erudite bunch for the most part but his housekeeper urges him to stay at home Soon after he retires to his bed with a deathly illness and later awakes from a dream having fully become good Sancho s character tries to restore his faith and or his interest of a disenchanted Dulcinea but the Quexana character will have it his surname for here there is some difference of opinion among the authors who write on the subject it seems plain that he was called Quexana only renounces his previous ambition and apologizes for the harm he has caused He dictates his will which includes a provision that his niece will be disinherited if she marries a man who reads books of chivalry After the Quexana character dies the author emphasizes that there are no more adventures to relate and that any further books about Don Quixote would be spurious Don Quixote on a 1 Peseta banknote from 1951Meaning EditHarold Bloom says Don Quixote is the first modern novel and that the protagonist is at war with Freud s reality principle which accepts the necessity of dying Bloom says that the novel has an endless range of meanings but that a recurring theme is the human need to withstand suffering 9 Edith Grossman who wrote and published a highly acclaimed 10 English translation of the novel in 2003 says that the book is mostly meant to move people into emotion using a systematic change of course on the verge of both tragedy and comedy at the same time Grossman has stated The question is that Quixote has multiple interpretations and how do I deal with that in my translation I m going to answer your question by avoiding it so when I first started reading the Quixote I thought it was the most tragic book in the world and I would read it and weep As I grew older my skin grew thicker and so when I was working on the translation I was actually sitting at my computer and laughing out loud This is done as Cervantes did it by never letting the reader rest You are never certain that you truly got it Because as soon as you think you understand something Cervantes introduces something that contradicts your premise 11 Themes EditSee also List of works influenced by Don Quixote Don Quixote by Honore Daumier 1868 The novel s structure is episodic in form The full title is indicative of the tale s object as ingenioso Spanish means quick with inventiveness 12 marking the transition of modern literature from dramatic to thematic unity The novel takes place over a long period of time including many adventures united by common themes of the nature of reality reading and dialogue in general Although burlesque on the surface the novel especially in its second half has served as an important thematic source not only in literature but also in much of art and music inspiring works by Pablo Picasso and Richard Strauss The contrasts between the tall thin fancy struck and idealistic Quixote and the fat squat world weary Panza is a motif echoed ever since the book s publication and Don Quixote s imaginings are the butt of outrageous and cruel practical jokes in the novel Even faithful and simple Sancho is forced to deceive him at certain points The novel is considered a satire of orthodoxy veracity and even nationalism In exploring the individualism of his characters Cervantes helped lead literary practice beyond the narrow convention of the chivalric romance He spoofs the chivalric romance through a straightforward retelling of a series of acts that redound to the knightly virtues of the hero The character of Don Quixote became so well known in its time that the word quixotic was quickly adopted by many languages Characters such as Sancho Panza and Don Quixote s steed Rocinante are emblems of Western literary culture The phrase tilting at windmills to describe an act of attacking imaginary enemies or an act of extreme idealism derives from an iconic scene in the book It stands in a unique position between medieval romance and the modern novel The former consist of disconnected stories featuring the same characters and settings with little exploration of the inner life of even the main character The latter are usually focused on the psychological evolution of their characters In Part I Quixote imposes himself on his environment By Part II people know about him through having read his adventures and so he needs to do less to maintain his image By his deathbed he has regained his sanity and is once more Alonso Quixano the Good Background EditSources Edit Sources for Don Quixote include the Castilian novel Amadis de Gaula which had enjoyed great popularity throughout the 16th century Another prominent source which Cervantes evidently admires more is Tirant lo Blanch which the priest describes in Chapter VI of Quixote as the best book in the world However the sense in which it was best is much debated among scholars Since the 19th century the passage has been called the most difficult passage of Don Quixote The scene of the book burning gives an excellent list of Cervantes likes and dislikes about literature Cervantes makes a number of references to the Italian poem Orlando furioso In chapter 10 of the first part of the novel Don Quixote says he must take the magical helmet of Mambrino an episode from Canto I of Orlando and itself a reference to Matteo Maria Boiardo s Orlando innamorato 13 The interpolated story in chapter 33 of Part four of the First Part is a retelling of a tale from Canto 43 of Orlando regarding a man who tests the fidelity of his wife 14 Another important source appears to have been Apuleius s The Golden Ass one of the earliest known novels a picaresque from late classical antiquity The wineskins episode near the end of the interpolated tale The Curious Impertinent in chapter 35 of the first part of Don Quixote is a clear reference to Apuleius and recent scholarship suggests that the moral philosophy and the basic trajectory of Apuleius s novel are fundamental to Cervantes program 15 Similarly many of both Sancho s adventures in Part II and proverbs throughout are taken from popular Spanish and Italian folklore Cervantes experiences as a galley slave in Algiers also influenced Quixote Medical theories may have also influenced Cervantes literary process Cervantes had familial ties to the distinguished medical community His father Rodrigo de Cervantes and his great grandfather Juan Diaz de Torreblanca were surgeons Additionally his sister Andrea de Cervantes was a nurse 16 He also befriended many individuals involved in the medical field in that he knew medical author Francisco Diaz an expert in urology and royal doctor Antonio Ponce de Santa Cruz who served as a personal doctor to both Philip III and Philip IV of Spain 17 Apart from the personal relations Cervantes maintained within the medical field Cervantes personal life was defined by an interest in medicine He frequently visited patients from the Hospital de Inocentes in Sevilla 16 Furthermore Cervantes explored medicine in his personal library His library contained more than 200 volumes and included books like Examen de Ingenios by Juan Huarte and Practica y teorica de cirugia by Dionisio Daza Chacon that defined medical literature and medical theories of his time 17 Spurious Second Part by Avellaneda Edit It is not certain when Cervantes began writing Part Two of Don Quixote but he had probably not proceeded much further than Chapter LIX by late July 1614 About September however a spurious Part Two entitled Second Volume of the Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha by the Licenciado doctorate Alonso Fernandez de Avellaneda of Tordesillas was published in Tarragona by an unidentified Aragonese who was an admirer of Lope de Vega rival of Cervantes 18 It was translated into English by William Augustus Yardley Esquire in two volumes in 1784 Some modern scholars suggest that Don Quixote s fictional encounter with Avellaneda in Chapter 59 of Part II should not be taken as the date that Cervantes encountered it which may have been much earlier Avellaneda s identity has been the subject of many theories but there is no consensus as to who he was In its prologue the author gratuitously insulted Cervantes who not surprisingly took offense and responded the last half of Chapter LIX and most of the following chapters of Cervantes Segunda Parte lend some insight into the effects upon him Cervantes manages to work in some subtle digs at Avellaneda s own work and in his preface to Part II comes very near to criticizing Avellaneda directly In his introduction to The Portable Cervantes Samuel Putnam a noted translator of Cervantes novel calls Avellaneda s version one of the most disgraceful performances in history 19 The second part of Cervantes Don Quixote finished as a direct result of the Avellaneda book has come to be regarded by some literary critics 20 as superior to the first part because of its greater depth of characterization its discussions mostly between Quixote and Sancho on diverse subjects and its philosophical insights In Cervantes Segunda Parte Don Quixote visits a printing house in Barcelona and finds Avellaneda s Second Part being printed there in an early example of metafiction 21 Other stories Edit Don Quixote his horse Rocinante and his squire Sancho Panza after an unsuccessful attack on a windmill By Gustave Dore Don Quixote Part One contains a number of stories which do not directly involve the two main characters but which are narrated by some of the picaresque figures encountered by the Don and Sancho during their travels The longest and best known of these is El Curioso Impertinente The Ill Advised Curiosity found in Part One Book Four This story read to a group of travelers at an inn tells of a Florentine nobleman Anselmo who becomes obsessed with testing his wife s fidelity and talks his close friend Lothario into attempting to seduce her with disastrous results for all In Part Two the author acknowledges the criticism of his digressions in Part One and promises to concentrate the narrative on the central characters although at one point he laments that his narrative muse has been constrained in this manner Nevertheless Part Two contains several back narratives related by peripheral characters Several abridged editions have been published which delete some or all of the extra tales in order to concentrate on the central narrative 22 The Ill Advised Curiosity summary Edit Camilla threatens Lothario with a dagger Illustration by Apeles Mestres engraving by Francisco Fuste The story within a story relates that for no particular reason Anselmo decides to test the fidelity of his wife Camilla and asks his friend Lothario to seduce her Thinking that to be madness Lothario reluctantly agrees and soon reports to Anselmo that Camilla is a faithful wife Anselmo learns that Lothario has lied and attempted no seduction He makes Lothario promise to try in earnest and leaves town to make this easier Lothario tries and Camilla writes letters to her husband telling him of the attempts by Lothario and asking him to return Anselmo makes no reply and does not return Lothario then falls in love with Camilla who eventually reciprocates an affair between them ensues but is not disclosed to Anselmo and their affair continues after Anselmo returns One day Lothario sees a man leaving Camilla s house and jealously presumes she has taken another lover He tells Anselmo that at last he has been successful and arranges a time and place for Anselmo to see the seduction Before this rendezvous however Lothario learns that the man was the lover of Camilla s maid He and Camilla then contrive to deceive Anselmo further When Anselmo watches them she refuses Lothario protests her love for her husband and stabs herself lightly in the breast Anselmo is reassured of her fidelity The affair restarts with Anselmo none the wiser Later the maid s lover is discovered by Anselmo Fearing that Anselmo will kill her the maid says she will tell Anselmo a secret the next day Anselmo tells Camilla that this is to happen and Camilla expects that her affair is to be revealed Lothario and Camilla flee that night The maid flees the next day Anselmo searches for them in vain before learning from a stranger of his wife s affair He starts to write the story but dies of grief before he can finish Style EditSpelling and pronunciation Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Cervantes wrote his work in Early Modern Spanish heavily borrowing from Old Spanish the medieval form of the language The language of Don Quixote although still containing archaisms is far more understandable to modern Spanish readers than is for instance the completely medieval Spanish of the Poema de mio Cid a kind of Spanish that is as different from Cervantes language as Middle English is from Modern English The Old Castilian language was also used to show the higher class that came with being a knight errant In Don Quixote there are basically two different types of Castilian Old Castilian is spoken only by Don Quixote while the rest of the roles speak a contemporary late 16th century version of Spanish The Old Castilian of Don Quixote is a humoristic resource he copies the language spoken in the chivalric books that made him mad and many times when he talks nobody is able to understand him because his language is too old This humorous effect is more difficult to see nowadays because the reader must be able to distinguish the two old versions of the language but when the book was published it was much celebrated English translations can get some sense of the effect by having Don Quixote use King James Bible or Shakespearean English or even Middle English In Old Castilian the letter x represented the sound written sh in modern English so the name was originally pronounced kiˈʃote However as Old Castilian evolved towards modern Spanish a sound change caused it to be pronounced with a voiceless velar fricative x sound like the Scots or German ch and today the Spanish pronunciation of Quixote is kiˈxote The original pronunciation is reflected in languages such as Asturian Leonese Galician Catalan Italian Portuguese Turkish and French where it is pronounced with a sh or ch sound the French opera Don Quichotte is one of the best known modern examples of this pronunciation Today English speakers generally attempt something close to the modern Spanish pronunciation of Quixote Quijote as k iː ˈ h oʊ t i 1 although the traditional English spelling based pronunciation with the value of the letter x in modern English is still sometimes used resulting in ˈ k w ɪ k s e t or ˈ k w ɪ k s oʊ t In Australian English the preferred pronunciation amongst members of the educated classes was ˈ k w ɪ k s e t until well into the 1970s as part of a tendency for the upper class to anglicise its borrowing ruthlessly 23 The traditional English rendering is preserved in the pronunciation of the adjectival form quixotic i e k w ɪ k ˈ s ɒ t ɪ k 24 25 defined by Merriam Webster as the foolishly impractical pursuit of ideals typically marked by rash and lofty romanticism 26 Setting Edit I suspect that in Don Quixote it does not rain a single time The landscapes described by Cervantes have nothing in common with the landscapes of Castile they are conventional landscapes full of meadows streams and copses that belong in an Italian novel Jorge Luis Borges 27 Cervantes story takes place on the plains of La Mancha specifically the comarca of Campo de Montiel En un lugar de La Mancha de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme no ha mucho tiempo que vivia un hidalgo de los de lanza en astillero adarga antigua rocin flaco y galgo corredor Somewhere in La Mancha in a place whose name I do not care to remember a gentleman lived not long ago one of those who has a lance and ancient shield on a shelf and keeps a skinny nag and a greyhound for racing Miguel de Cervantes Don Quixote Volume I Chapter I translated by Edith Grossman The story also takes place in El Toboso where Don Quixote goes to seek Dulcinea s blessings The location of the village to which Cervantes alludes in the opening sentence of Don Quixote has been the subject of debate since its publication over four centuries ago Indeed Cervantes deliberately omits the name of the village giving an explanation in the final chapter Such was the end of the Ingenious Gentleman of La Mancha whose village Cide Hamete would not indicate precisely in order to leave all the towns and villages of La Mancha to contend among themselves for the right to adopt him and claim him as a son as the seven cities of Greece contended for Homer Miguel de Cervantes Don Quixote Volume II Chapter 74 Theories Edit In 2004 a multidisciplinary team of academics from Complutense University led by Francisco Parra Luna Manuel Fernandez Nieto and Santiago Petschen Verdaguer deduced that the village was that of Villanueva de los Infantes 28 Their findings were published in a paper titled El Quijote como un sistema de distancias tiempos hacia la localizacion del lugar de la Mancha which was later published as a book El enigma resuelto del Quijote The result was replicated in two subsequent investigations La determinacion del lugar de la Mancha como problema estadistico and The Kinematics of the Quixote and the Identity of the Place in La Mancha 29 30 Researchers Isabel Sanchez Duque and Francisco Javier Escudero have found relevant information regarding the possible sources of inspiration of Cervantes for writing Don Quixote Cervantes was friend of the family Villasenor which was involved in a combat with Francisco de Acuna Both sides combated disguised as medieval knights in the road from El Toboso to Miguel Esteban in 1581 They also found a person called Rodrigo Quijada who bought the title of nobility of hidalgo and created diverse conflicts with the help of a squire 31 32 Language Edit Because of its widespread influence Don Quixote also helped cement the modern Spanish language The opening sentence of the book created a classic Spanish cliche with the phrase de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme whose name I do not wish to recall En un lugar de la Mancha de cuyo nombre no quiero acordarme no hace mucho tiempo que vivia un hidalgo de los de lanza en astillero adarga antigua rocin flaco y galgo corredor In a village of La Mancha whose name I do not wish to recall there lived not very long ago one of those gentlemen with a lance in the lance rack an ancient shield a skinny old horse and a fast greyhound The novel s farcical elements make use of punning and similar verbal playfulness Character naming in Don Quixote makes ample figural use of contradiction inversion and irony such as the names Rocinante 33 a reversal and Dulcinea an allusion to illusion and the word quixote itself possibly a pun on quijada jaw but certainly cuixot Catalan thighs a reference to a horse s rump 34 As a military term the word quijote refers to cuisses part of a full suit of plate armour protecting the thighs The Spanish suffix ote denotes the augmentative for example grande means large but grandote means extra large with grotesque connotations Following this example Quixote would suggest The Great Quijano an oxymoronic play on words that makes much sense in light of the character s delusions of grandeur 35 La Mancha is a region of Spain but mancha Spanish word means spot mark stain Translators such as John Ormsby have declared La Mancha to be one of the most desertlike unremarkable regions of Spain the least romantic and fanciful place that one would imagine as the home of a courageous knight Don Quixote alongside its many translations has also provided a number of idioms and expressions within the English language Examples with their own articles include the phrase the pot calling the kettle black and the adjective quixotic Publication Edit Illustration to Don Quixote de la Mancha by Miguel de Cervantes the edition translated by Charles Jarvis Don Quixote Close up of Illustration Bronze statues of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza at the Plaza de Espana in Madrid Collage of the engravings of The Adventures of Don Quixote by Gustave Dore In July 1604 Cervantes sold the rights of El ingenioso hidalgo don Quixote de la Mancha known as Don Quixote Part I to the publisher bookseller Francisco de Robles for an unknown sum 36 License to publish was granted in September the printing was finished in December and the book came out on 16 January 1605 37 38 The novel was an immediate success The majority of the 400 copies of the first edition were sent to the New World with the publisher hoping to get a better price in the Americas 39 Although most of them disappeared in a shipwreck near La Havana approximately 70 copies reached Lima from where they were sent to Cuzco in the heart of the defunct Inca Empire 39 No sooner was it in the hands of the public than preparations were made to issue derivative pirated editions In 1614 a fake second part was published by a mysterious author under the pen name Avellaneda This author was never satisfactorily identified This rushed Cervantes into writing and publishing a genuine second part in 1615 which was a year before his own death 21 Don Quixote had been growing in favour and its author s name was now known beyond the Pyrenees By August 1605 there were two Madrid editions two published in Lisbon and one in Valencia Publisher Francisco de Robles secured additional copyrights for Aragon and Portugal for a second edition 40 Sale of these publishing rights deprived Cervantes of further financial profit on Part One In 1607 an edition was printed in Brussels Robles the Madrid publisher found it necessary to meet demand with a third edition a seventh publication in all in 1608 Popularity of the book in Italy was such that a Milan bookseller issued an Italian edition in 1610 Yet another Brussels edition was called for in 1611 38 Since then numerous editions have been released and in total the novel is believed to have sold more than 500 million copies worldwide 41 The work has been produced in numerous editions and languages the Cervantes Collection at the State Library of New South Wales includes over 1 100 editions These were collected by Dr Ben Haneman over a period of thirty years 42 In 1613 Cervantes published the Novelas Ejemplares dedicated to the Maecenas of the day the Conde de Lemos Eight and a half years after Part One had appeared came the first hint of a forthcoming Segunda Parte Part Two You shall see shortly Cervantes says the further exploits of Don Quixote and humours of Sancho Panza 43 Don Quixote Part Two published by the same press as its predecessor appeared late in 1615 and quickly reprinted in Brussels and Valencia 1616 and Lisbon 1617 Parts One and Two were published as one edition in Barcelona in 1617 Historically Cervantes work has been said to have smiled Spain s chivalry away suggesting that Don Quixote as a chivalric satire contributed to the demise of Spanish Chivalry 44 English editions in translation Edit Don Quixote goes mad from his reading of books of chivalry Engraving by Gustave Dore Don Quichote And Sancho Panza by Louis Anquetin There are many translations of the book and it has been adapted many times in shortened versions Many derivative editions were also written at the time as was the custom of envious or unscrupulous writers Seven years after the Parte Primera appeared Don Quixote had been translated into French German Italian and English with the first French translation of Part II appearing in 1618 and the first English translation in 1620 One abridged adaptation authored by Agustin Sanchez runs slightly over 150 pages cutting away about 750 pages 45 Thomas Shelton s English translation of the First Part appeared in 1612 while Cervantes was still alive although there is no evidence that Shelton had met the author Although Shelton s version is cherished by some according to John Ormsby and Samuel Putnam it was far from satisfactory as a carrying over of Cervantes text 40 Shelton s translation of the novel s Second Part appeared in 1620 Near the end of the 17th century John Phillips a nephew of poet John Milton published what Putnam considered the worst English translation The translation as literary critics claim was not based on Cervantes text but mostly upon a French work by Filleau de Saint Martin and upon notes which Thomas Shelton had written Around 1700 a version by Pierre Antoine Motteux appeared Motteux s translation enjoyed lasting popularity it was reprinted as the Modern Library Series edition of the novel until recent times 46 Nonetheless future translators would find much to fault in Motteux s version Samuel Putnam criticized the prevailing slapstick quality of this work especially where Sancho Panza is involved the obtrusion of the obscene where it is found in the original and the slurring of difficulties through omissions or expanding upon the text John Ormsby considered Motteux s version worse than worthless and denounced its infusion of Cockney flippancy and facetiousness into the original 47 The proverb The proof of the pudding is in the eating is widely attributed to Cervantes The Spanish word for pudding budin however does not appear in the original text but premieres in the Motteux translation 48 In Smollett s translation of 1755 he notes that the original text reads literally you will see when the eggs are fried meaning time will tell 49 A translation by Captain John Stevens which revised Thomas Shelton s version also appeared in 1700 but its publication was overshadowed by the simultaneous release of Motteux s translation 46 In 1742 the Charles Jervas translation appeared posthumously Through a printer s error it came to be known and is still known as the Jarvis translation It was the most scholarly and accurate English translation of the novel up to that time but future translator John Ormsby points out in his own introduction to the novel that the Jarvis translation has been criticized as being too stiff Nevertheless it became the most frequently reprinted translation of the novel until about 1885 Another 18th century translation into English was that of Tobias Smollett himself a novelist first published in 1755 Like the Jarvis translation it continues to be reprinted today A translation by Alexander James Duffield appeared in 1881 and another by Henry Edward Watts in 1888 Most modern translators take as their model the 1885 translation by John Ormsby 50 An expurgated children s version under the title The Story of Don Quixote was published in 1922 available on Project Gutenberg It leaves out the risque sections as well as chapters that young readers might consider dull and embellishes a great deal on Cervantes original text The title page actually gives credit to the two editors as if they were the authors and omits any mention of Cervantes 51 The most widely read English language translations of the mid 20th century are by Samuel Putnam 1949 J M Cohen 1950 Penguin Classics and Walter Starkie 1957 The last English translation of the novel in the 20th century was by Burton Raffel published in 1996 The 21st century has already seen five new translations of the novel into English The first is by John D Rutherford and the second by Edith Grossman Reviewing the novel in the New York Times Carlos Fuentes called Grossman s translation a major literary achievement 52 and another called it the most transparent and least impeded among more than a dozen English translations going back to the 17th century 53 In 2005 the year of the novel s 400th anniversary Tom Lathrop published a new English translation of the novel based on a lifetime of specialized study of the novel and its history 54 The fourth translation of the 21st century was released in 2006 by former university librarian James H Montgomery 26 years after he had begun it in an attempt to recreate the sense of the original as closely as possible though not at the expense of Cervantes literary style 55 In 2011 another translation by Gerald J Davis appeared 56 It is the latest and the fifth translation of the 21st century Tilting at windmills Edit Tilting at Windmills redirects here For other uses see Tilting at windmills disambiguation Tilting at windmills is an English idiom that means attacking imaginary enemies The expression is derived from Don Quixote and the word tilt in this context refers to jousting The phrase is sometimes used to describe either confrontations where adversaries are incorrectly perceived or courses of action that are based on misinterpreted or misapplied heroic romantic or idealistic justifications It may also connote an inopportune unfounded and vain effort against adversaries real or imagined 57 List of English translations EditThomas Shelton 1612 amp 1620 Captain John Stevens 1700 revision of Thomas Shelton John Phillips 1687 the nephew of John Milton Pierre Antoine Motteux 1700 John Ozell 1719 revision of Pierre Antoine Motteux George Kelly 1769 considered as another revision of Pierre Antoine Motteux Ned Ward 1700 The Life amp Notable Adventures of Don Quixote merrily translated into Hudibrastic Verse Charles Jervas 1742 Tobias Smollett 1755 revision of Charles Jervas O M Brack Jr 2003 revision of the 1755 Tobias Smollett revision of Charles Jervas E C Riley 2008 revision of Charles Jervas Charles Henry Wilmot 1774 Mary Smirke with engravings by Robert Smirke 1818 Alexander James Duffield 1881 John Ormsby 1885 The original version available free on the Internet Archive is to be preferred to the WikiSource and similar versions which do not include Ormsby s careful notes and with his Introduction much abbreviated 58 Joseph Ramon Jones and Kenneth Douglas 1981 revision of Ormsby ISBN 978 0393090185 0393090183 Norton Critical Edition Henry Edward Watts 1888 Robinson Smith 1910 Samuel Putnam Modern Library 1949 J M Cohen Penguin 1950 Walter Starkie 1964 Burton Raffel Norton 1996 Diana de Armas Wilson 2020 revision of Burton Raffel John Rutherford Penguin 2000 Edith Grossman 2003 Thomas Lathrop 2005 James H Montgomery 2006 Gerald J Davis 2011 Reviewing the English translations as a whole Daniel Eisenberg stated that there is no one translation ideal for every purpose but expressed a preference for those of Putnam and the revision of Ormsby s translation by Douglas and Jones 58 English Translation of the Spurious Don Quixote Edit Captain John Stevens 1705 William Augustus Yardley 1784 Influence and media EditMain article List of works influenced by Don QuixoteSee also Edit Novels portal Spain portalAlonso Fernandez de Avellaneda author of a spurious sequel to Don Quixote which in turn is referenced in the actual sequel List of Don Quixote characters List of works influenced by Don Quixote including a gallery of paintings and illustrations Tirant lo Blanch one of the chivalric novels frequently referenced by Don Quixote Amadis de Gaula one of the chivalric novels found in the library of Don Quixote Antonio Jose da Silva writer of Vida do Grande Dom Quixote de la Mancha e do Gordo Sancho Panca 1733 Belianis one of the chivalric novels found in the library of Don Quixote Coco In the last chapter the epitaph of Don Quijote identifies him as el coco 59 Man of La Mancha a musical play based on the life of Cervantes author of Don Quixote 60 Monsignor Quixote a novel by the English author Graham Greene Pierre Menard Author of the Quixote a short story by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges Lin Shu Author of the Quixote by Mikael Gomez Guthart GeneralDon Pasquale an Italian opera with which Don Quixote is occasionally confused Great books List of best selling books Lists of 100 best booksNotes Edit Pronunciation ˌ d ɒ n k iː ˈ h oʊ t i DON kee HOH tee US also t eɪ tay 1 Spanish doŋ kiˈxote listen Early Modern Spanish doŋ kiˈʃote a b c d The modern day spelling of Quixote in Spanish is Quijote Pronunciation Spanish el iŋxeˈnjoso iˈdalɣo kabaˈʎeɾo doŋ kiˈxote de la ˈmantʃa listen Early Modern Spanish el inʃeˈnjos o h iˈdalɣo kabaˈʎeɾo doŋ kiˈʃote de la ˈmantʃa References Edit a b Oxford English Dictionary Don Quixote Harold Bloom 13 December 2003 The knight in the mirror The Guardian Retrieved 5 July 2019 Ana Puchau de Lecea 25 June 2018 Guide to the classics Don Quixote the world s first modern novel and one of the best The Conversation Retrieved 1 July 2020 Don Quixote gets authors votes BBC News 7 May 2002 Retrieved 5 July 2019 Angelique Chrisafis 21 July 2003 Don Quixote is the world s best book say the world s top authors The Guardian London Retrieved 13 October 2012 Mineo Liz 25 April 2016 A true giant Harvard Gazette Boston Retrieved 28 December 2020 Eisenberg Daniel 1991 1976 El rucio de Sancho y la fecha de composicion de la Segunda Parte de Don Quijote Estudios cervantinos Revised version of article first published in es Nueva Revista de Filologia Hispanica vol 25 1976 pp 94 102 Barcelona Sirmio ISBN 9788477690375 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Otis H Green El Ingenioso Hidalgo Hispanic Review 25 1957 175 93 The Knight in the Mirror a 2003 book report in The Guardian about Harold Bloom s book Lathrop Tom 22 March 2006 Edith Grossman s Translation of Don Quixote PDF Bulletin of the Cervantes Society 26 1 2 237 255 Archived PDF from the original on 29 August 2008 Retrieved 17 January 2021 Edith Grossman about Don Quixote as tragedy and comedy a discussion held in New York City on 5 February 2009 by Words Without Borders YouTube ingenio 1 Real Academia Espanola Don Quijote de la Mancha Miguel de Cervantes Edicion de Florencio Sevilla Arroyo Area 2002 p 161 Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes translated and annotated by Edith Grossman p 272 See chapter 2 of E C Graf s Cervantes and Modernity a b Lopez Munoz F The Mad and the Demented in the Literary Works of Cervantes On Cervantes Sources of Medical Information about Neuropsychiatry Revista De Neurologia vol 46 2008 pp 489 501 490 a b Palma Jose Alberto Palma Fermin Neurology and Don Quixote European Neurology vol 68 2012 pp 247 57 253 Eisenberg Daniel Cervantes Lope and Avellaneda Estudios cervantinos Aditya Yadav 41 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Cervantes Miguel The Portable Cervantes ed Samuel Putnam New York Penguin 1951 1978 p viii Putnam Samuel 1976 Introduction to The Portable Cervantes Harmondsworth Penguin p 14 ISBN 978 0 14 015057 5 a b Lyons M 2011 Books a living history London Thames amp Hudson An example is The Portable Cervantes New York Viking Penguin 1949 which contains an abridged version of the Samuel Putnam translation Peters P H ed 1986 Style in Australia current practices in spelling punctuation hyphenation capitalisation etc Macquarie Park New South Wales Dictionary Research Centre Macquarie University pp 48 49 ISBN 978 0858375888 quixotic Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 26 January 2016 quixotic Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Retrieved 26 January 2016 Quixotic Merriam Webster Online Dictionary Retrieved 17 May 2010 Professor Borges A Course on English Literature New Directions Publishing 2013 ISBN 978 0811218757 p 15 To Quixote s village at the speed of a nag Times Online London La determinacion del lugar de la Mancha como problema estadistico PDF in Spanish Valencia Department of Statistics University of Malaga Archived from the original PDF on 20 July 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Kinematics of the Quixote and the Identity of the Place in La Mancha PDF Valencia Department of Applied Mathematics University of Valencia 7 Archived PDF from the original on 18 July 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Don Quijote era Acuna el Procurador El Mundo Madrid Don Quijote de La Mancha realidad o ficcion El Pais Madrid rocinante deriv of rocin work horse colloq brusque labourer rough unkempt man Real Academia Espanola quijote1 2 rump or haunch Real Academia Espanola Gonzalez Echevarria Roberto 2015 1 Introduction Why Read the Quixote Cervantes Don Quixote New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300213317 Clement Richard W 2002 Francisco de Robles Cervantes and the Spanish Book Trade Mediterranean Studies 11 115 30 JSTOR 41166942 Cahill Hugh Don Quixote King s College London Archived from the original on 25 May 2007 Retrieved 14 January 2011 a b Cervantes Miguel de Encyclopaedia Britannica 2002 J Ormsby About Cervantes and Don Quixote Archived 3 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b Serge Gruzinski teacher at the EHESS July August 2007 Don Quichotte best seller mondial n 322 L Histoire p 30 a b J Ormsby About Cervantes and Don Quixote Archived 3 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Grabianowski Ed 2018 The 21 Best selling Books of All Time HowStuffWorks p 1 Retrieved 28 May 2018 Cervantes Collection www sl nsw gov au 19 June 2015 Retrieved 18 January 2017 See also the introduction to Cervantes Miguel de 1984 Don Quixote Penguin p 18 for a discussion of Cervantes statement in response to Avellaneda s attempt to write a sequel Prestage Edgar 1928 Chivalry p 110 Library catalogue of the Cervantes Institute of Belgrade Archived from the original on 14 August 2007 Retrieved 26 December 2012 a b Sieber Harry Don Quixote in Translation The Don Quixote Exhibit Tour 2 Chapter 5 George Peabody Library 1996 Retrieved 26 December 2012 Translator s Preface About this translation Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Translated by John Ormsby Archived from the original on 23 August 2010 Proverb Proof of the Pudding is in the Eating Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes translated by Tobias Smollett Introduction and Notes by Carole Slade Barnes and Noble Classics New York p 318 Battestin Martin C 1997 The Authorship of Smollett s Don Quixote Studies in Bibliography 50 295 321 ISSN 0081 7600 JSTOR 40372067 The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story of Don Quixote by Arvid Paulson Clayton Edwards and Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra Gutenberg org 20 July 2009 Archived from the original on 21 August 2013 Retrieved 5 February 2014 Fuentes Carlos 2 November 2003 Tilt The New York Times Eder Richard 14 November 2003 Beholding Windmills and Wisdom From a New Vantage The New York Times McGrath Michael J 2007 Reviews Don Quixote trans Tom Lathrop PDF H Net Archived PDF from the original on 5 February 2015 McGrath Michael J 2010 Reviews Don Quixote trans James Montgomery PDF H Net Archived PDF from the original on 15 October 2013 Davis Gerald J 2012 Don Quixote Lulu Enterprises Incorporated ISBN 978 1105810664 Ammer Christine 2003 What does tilt at windmills mean The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms Boston MA Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0618249534 Archived from the original on 15 April 2013 Retrieved 31 May 2013 a b Eisenberg Daniel 2006 The Text of Don Quixote as Seen by its Modern English Translators PDF Cervantes Journal of the Cervantes Society of America 26 103 126 Archived PDF from the original on 11 October 2008 El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha Gutenberg org 27 April 2010 Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 5 February 2014 Interview with Wasserman Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 24 September 2014 Further reading EditBloom Harold ed 2000 Cervantes Don Quixote Modern Critical Interpretations Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 0 7910 5922 7 Bandera Cesareo The Humble Story of Don Quixote reflections on the birth of the modern novel Washington The Catholic University of America Press 2011 D Haen Theo ed 2009 International Don Quixote Editions Rodopi B V ISBN 90 420 2583 2 Dobbs Ronnie ed 2015 Don Quixote and the History of the Novel Cambridge University Press Echevarria Roberto Gonzalez ed 2005 Cervantes Don Quixote A Casebook Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 516938 7 Duran Manuel and Rogg Fay R 2006 Fighting Windmills Encounters with Don Quixote Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11022 7 Graf Eric C 2007 Cervantes and Modernity Four Essays on Don Quijote Bucknell University Press ISBN 978 1 61148 261 4 Hoyle Alan 2016 Don Quixote of La Mancha 1605 Highlights and Lowlights Rocks Lane Editions See Johnson Carroll B ed 2006 Don Quijote Across Four Centuries 1605 2005 Juan de la Cuesta Hispanic Monographs ISBN 1 58871 088 2 Perez Rolando 2016 What is Don Quijote Don Quixote And And And the Disjunctive Synthesis of Cervantes and Kathy Acker Cervantes ilimitado cuatrocientos anos del Quijote Ed Nuria Morgado ALDEEU See on Academia edu Perez Rolando 2021 Cervantes s Republic On Representation Imitation and Unreason eHumanista 47 89 111 https www academia edu 45635376 Cervantes s Republic On Representation Imitation and Unreason https www ehumanista ucsb edu sites default files sitefiles ehumanista volume47 ehum47 perez pdf External links EditDon Quixote at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article El ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article El ingenioso caballero Don Quijote de la Mancha Don Quixote at Standard Ebooks Don Quixote at Project Gutenberg Don Quixote public domain audiobook at LibriVox Don Quixote on In Our Time at the BBC Cervantine Collection of the Biblioteca de Catalunya Miguel de Cervantes Collection has rare first volumes in multiple languages of Don Quixote From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Don Quixote amp oldid 1132333138, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.