Don Quixote by: Miguel de Cervantes
Overview
Don Quixote is a middle-aged gentleman from the region of La Mancha
in central Spain. Obsessed with the chivalrous ideals touted in books
he has read, he decides to take up his lance and sword to defend the
helpless and destroy the wicked. After a first failed adventure, he
sets out on a second one with a somewhat befuddled laborer named Sancho
Panza, whom he has persuaded to accompany him as his faithful squire.
In return for Sanchos services, Don Quixote promises to make
Sancho the wealthy governor of an isle. On his horse, Rocinante, a
barn nag well past his prime, Don Quixote rides the roads of Spain
in search of glory and grand adventure. He gives up food, shelter,
and comfort, all in the name of a peasant woman, Dulcinea del Toboso,
whom he envisions as a princess.
On his second expedition, Don Quixote becomes more of a bandit than
a savior, stealing from and hurting baffled and justifiably angry
citizens while acting out against what he perceives as threats to
his knighthood or to the world. Don Quixote abandons a boy, leaving
him in the hands of an evil farmer simply because the farmer swears
an oath that he will not harm the boy. He steals a barbers basin
that he believes to be the mythic Mambrinos helmet, and he becomes
convinced of the healing powers of the Balsam of Fierbras, an elixir
that makes him so ill that, by comparison, he later feels healed.
Sancho stands by Don Quixote, often bearing the brunt of the punishments
that arise from Don Quixotes behavior.
The story of Don Quixotes deeds includes the stories of those
he meets on his journey. Don Quixote witnesses the funeral of a student
who dies as a result of his love for a disdainful lady turned shepherdess.
He frees a wicked and devious galley slave, Gines de Pasamonte, and
unwittingly reunites two bereaved couples, Cardenio and Lucinda, and
Ferdinand and Dorothea. Torn apart by Ferdinands treachery,
the four lovers finally come together at an inn where Don Quixote
sleeps, dreaming that he is battling a giant.
Along the way, the simple Sancho plays the straight man to Don Quixote,
trying his best to correct his masters outlandish fantasies.
Two of Don Quixotes friends, the priest and the barber, come
to drag him home. Believing that he is under the force of an enchantment,
he accompanies them, thus ending his second expedition and the First
Part of the novel.
The Second Part of the novel begins with a passionate invective against
a phony sequel of Don Quixote that was published in the interim between
Cervantess two parts. Everywhere Don Quixote goes, his reputationgleaned
by others from both the real and the false versions of the storyprecedes
him.
As the two embark on their journey, Sancho lies to Don Quixote, telling
him that an evil enchanter has transformed Dulcinea into a peasant
girl. Undoing this enchantment, in which even Sancho comes to believe,
becomes Don Quixotes chief goal.
Don Quixote meets a Duke and Duchess who conspire to play tricks on
him. They make a servant dress up as Merlin, for example, and tell
Don Quixote that Dulcineas enchantmentwhich they know
to be a hoaxcan be undone only if Sancho whips himself 3,300
times on his naked backside. Under the watch of the Duke and Duchess,
Don Quixote and Sancho undertake several adventures. They set out
on a flying wooden horse, hoping to slay a giant who has turned a
princess and her lover into metal figurines and bearded the princesss
female servants.
During his stay with the Duke, Sancho becomes governor of a fictitious
isle. He rules for ten days until he is wounded in an onslaught the
Duke and Duchess sponsor for their entertainment. Sancho reasons that
it is better to be a happy laborer than a miserable governor.
A young maid at the Duchesss home falls in love with Don Quixote,
but he remains a staunch worshipper of Dulcinea. Their never-consummated
affair amuses the court to no end. Finally, Don Quixote sets out again
on his journey, but his demise comes quickly. Shortly after his arrival
in Barcelona, the Knight of the White Moonactually an old friend
in disguisevanquishes him.
Cervantes relates the story of Don Quixote as a history, which he
claims he has translated from a manuscript written by a Moor named
Cide Hamete Benengeli. Cervantes becomes a party to his own fiction,
even allowing Sancho and Don Quixote to modify their own histories
and comment negatively upon the false history published in their names.
In the end, the beaten and battered Don Quixote forswears all the
chivalric truths he followed so fervently and dies from a fever. With
his death, knights-errant become extinct. Benengeli returns at the
end of the novel to tell us that illustrating the demise of chivalry
was his main purpose in writing the history of Don Quixote.