To call "Don Quixote" a sad book, preaching a pessimist view of life,

argues a total misconception of its drift. It would be so if its moral

were that, in this world, true enthusiasm naturally leads to ridicule and

discomfiture. But it preaches nothing of the sort; its moral, so far as

it can be said to have one, is that the spurious enthusiasm that is born

of vanity and self-conceit, that is made an end in itself, not a means to

an end, that acts on mere impulse, regardless of circumstances and

consequences, is mischievous to its owner, and a very considerable

nuisance to the community at large. To those who cannot distinguish

between the one kind and the other, no doubt "Don Quixote" is a sad book;

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no doubt to some minds it is very sad that a man who had just uttered so

beautiful a sentiment as that "it is a hard case to make slaves of those

whom God and Nature made free," should be ungratefully pelted by the

scoundrels his crazy philanthropy had let loose on society; but to others

of a more judicial cast it will be a matter of regret that reckless

self-sufficient enthusiasm is not oftener requited in some such way for

all the mischief it does in the world.

A very slight examination of the structure of "Don Quixote" will suffice

to show that Cervantes had no deep design or elaborate plan in his mind

when he began the book. When he wrote those lines in which "with a few

strokes of a great master he sets before us the pauper gentleman," he had

no idea of the goal to which his imagination was leading him. There can

be little doubt that all he contemplated was a short tale to range with

those he had already written, a tale setting forth the ludicrous results

that might be expected to follow the attempt of a crazy gentleman to act

the part of a knight-errant in modern life.

It is plain, for one thing, that Sancho Panza did not enter into the

original scheme, for had Cervantes thought of him he certainly would not

have omitted him in his hero's outfit, which he obviously meant to be

complete. Him we owe to the landlord's chance remark in Chapter III that

knights seldom travelled without squires. To try to think of a Don

Quixote without Sancho Panza is like trying to think of a one-bladed pair

of scissors.

The story was written at first, like the others, without any division and

without the intervention of Cide Hamete Benengeli; and it seems not

unlikely that Cervantes had some intention of bringing Dulcinea, or

Aldonza Lorenzo, on the scene in person. It was probably the ransacking

of the Don's library and the discussion on the books of chivalry that

first suggested it to him that his idea was capable of development. What,

if instead of a mere string of farcical misadventures, he were to make

his tale a burlesque of one of these books, caricaturing their style,

incidents, and spirit?




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