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This chapter introduces Alonso Quijano, a hidalgo obsessed with chivalric romances, who decides to become the knight-errant Don Quixote.
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"In a village of La Mancha, the name of which I have no desire to call to mind, there lived not long since one of those gentlemen that keep a lance in the lance-rack, an old buckler, a lean hack, and a greyhound for coursing."
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"So eagerly did he give himself up to these delectable studies that he spent whole days and nights over them; and thus by little and little his brain grew dry and he lost his judgment."
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"Finally, his wits being quite gone, he hit upon the strangest notion that ever madman in this world hit upon, and that was that he believed it was fitting and necessary, as well for his own honour as for the service of his country, that he should make a knight-errant of himself."
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Don Quixote sets out on his first adventure without informing anyone, mistaking a roadside inn for a castle.
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"Having made these preparations, he would not delay any longer putting his design into execution, for he considered that his delay was a loss to the world, seeing the grievances that were righting, the wrongs that were redressing, the abuses that were amending, and the debts that were being satisfied."
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"It was now drawing towards nightfall, and as his hack and he were tired and hungry, he looked all around to see if he could discover any castle, or shepherd's hut where he might take shelter and refresh himself."
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"It happened that the innkeeper was a very fat man, and one who, being of a peaceful disposition, when he saw such a figure armed in this fashion, was not at all pleased at the apparition."
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Don Quixote insists the innkeeper is the lord of the castle and requests to be dubbed a knight, leading to a mock ceremony.
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"'Sir Knight,' said the innkeeper, 'we have no chapel in this castle where you can watch your armour, for it has been pulled down in order to rebuild it.'"
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"Don Quixote believed that the innkeeper was making game of him, and said, 'Where I am watching my armour, there is no need of a chapel.'"
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"Thereupon he asked the landlord to give him a blow on the neck and shoulders by way of dubbing, using the formula and ceremonies he had read of in his books."
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Leaving the inn, Don Quixote intervenes in a dispute between a farmer and his servant Andrés, believing he has righted a wrong, but the abuse continues after he leaves.
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"Scarcely had Don Quixote sallied forth from the inn, when a voice as of someone weeping piteously reached his ears from a thicket hard by."
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"'Discourtesy it is,' said Don Quixote, 'to smite one who cannot defend himself.'"
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"But no sooner had Don Quixote turned his back, than the farmer, recovering from his anger, seized his boy Andrés, and untying him, lashed him so soundly that he left him for dead."
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Don Quixote attacks some merchants who refuse to acknowledge the beauty of Dulcinea del Toboso and is severely beaten.
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"'Let all the world stand!' cried Don Quixote. 'If all the world does not confess that in beauty there is none to compare with the Empress of La Mancha, Dulcinea del Toboso, I will never let you pass.'"
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"'Gentleman,' replied one of them, 'we do not know who this good lady is of whom you speak.'"
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"With this, making no further parley, he commended himself with all his heart to his lady Dulcinea, imploring her to succour him in this strait, and well covered with his buckler, he charged Rocinante at a clumsy half-gallop at the one who had spoken."
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The curate and the barber examine Don Quixote's books of chivalry and decide which ones should be burned to cure his madness.
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"'Your worship must know, Master Nicholas,' said the curate, 'that Don Quixote has fallen into a very strange delusion.'"
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"'Depend upon it, sir,' said the barber, 'that these books, and these alone, are the cause of all his mischief.'"
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Don Quixote is found and brought home. His horse Rocinante and his rustic squire, Sancho Panza, are introduced.
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"The neighbour, who had helped him home, related to the curate and the barber how he had found Don Quixote lying in the middle of the plain, unable to move."
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"'I will make you so rich that in a very short time you will be able to marry your children to lords and ladies,' with these and other promises he persuaded the poor clown, and he agreed to become his squire."
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with other occurrences worthy to be duly recorded. (Chapter 8)
Don Quixote and Sancho set out on their second adventure, and Don Quixote attacks windmills, believing them to be giants.
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"'Fortune,' said Don Quixote, 'is guiding our affairs better than we ourselves could have wished; for you see there, friend Sancho Panza, thirty or forty outrageous giants with whom I intend to do battle.'"
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"'Look, your worship,' said Sancho, 'what we see there are not giants but windmills, and what seem to be their arms are the sails that turned them.'"
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"'They may be giants,' replied Don Quixote, 'and if you are afraid, move aside and begin to pray, while I engage them in fierce and unequal combat.'"
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The chapter abruptly ends Don Quixote's battle with the Biscayan, leaving the outcome in suspense. Cervantes explains the continuation was found in Arabic.
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"In this dread pass his sword hung useless by his side, and had not Dulcinea del Toboso come to his aid, he had been by this time in a parlous plight."
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"But the misfortune of it is that the author of this history left this battle pending and unfinished."
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"But Heaven, or chance, brought into my hands an Arabic manuscript, which was found by a certain Morisco sage."
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Don Quixote and Sancho discuss the nature of knighthood and their adventures, revealing their contrasting perspectives.
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"'You must know, Sancho,' said Don Quixote, 'that it is an honour to be a knight-errant.'"
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"'All the same, your worship,' said Sancho, 'I should like to know what honour it is.'"
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"'I have already told you, Sancho,' replied Don Quixote, 'that it is the best and most honourable calling of all.'"
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Don Quixote and Sancho encounter goatherds and share their meal. Don Quixote delivers a discourse on the Golden Age.
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"They gave Don Quixote and Sancho a hearty welcome, and Sancho, without being pressed, seated himself at the tail of one of the tables."
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"'Happy times and happy ages were those that lacked the dreadful fury of infernal machines of artillery, whose inventor I am persuaded is now in hell receiving the reward of his diabolical invention.'"
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One of the goatherds tells the tragic love story of Chrysostom and Marcela.
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"'There was a certain youth in our village, the son of a very wealthy man, and his name was Chrysostom.'"
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"'But the cruelty which Marcela showed him brought him in the end to his grave.'"
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"'And so he died, and we buried him, and it is not long since we found these verses that he left behind him.'"
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Marcela appears at Chrysostom's funeral and defends her right to remain independent and not return the love of those who court her.
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"And as Marcela made her appearance, several of the shepherds, as well as many others who had come to the burial, recognized her."
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"'I know well enough that the beauty that heaven has given me is the cause that Chrysostom has come to his end.'"
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"'But for all that, I would have you know that I never encouraged Chrysostom with promises, nor did I ever boast of having his life at my disposal.'"
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Don Quixote attacks a procession of mourners carrying a corpse, believing they are being forced.
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"'I conjure you, forthwith to release those persons, for they are plainly being forced against their will.'"
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"All of them, thinking that this madman was about to fall upon them, began to make haste to secure themselves."
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"Don Quixote, seeing their fear, lowered his lance, and in a quiet voice said to them, 'Why do you fly, cowardly rabble?'"
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Don Quixote and Rocinante are brutally beaten by Yanguesan carriers after Rocinante mingles with their mares.
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"It happened that there were grazing in this valley some scores of Galician mares belonging to certain Yanguesan carriers."
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"Rocinante, who was always peaceable and particularly so when he had had his fill, took it into his head, without anyone driving him, to mingle with the mares."
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Don Quixote arrives at another inn, which he again mistakes for a castle, and has a peculiar encounter with the servant girl Maritornes.
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"He fancied now that the inn was without a doubt a castle with its four towers and battlements of shining silver."
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"It happened that the hostess had a daughter who was an Asturian servant-girl, wide in the face, flat in the head, with a snub nose and one eye squinting a little."
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"Don Quixote believed that this was the daughter of the lord of the castle, and that she had come to solace him."
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... inn which he had unfortunately mistaken for a castle. (Chapter 17)
The farcical situation with Maritornes escalates into a chaotic brawl in the dark involving several inn guests.
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"In short, the battle was joined, and they dealt one another so many fisticuffs and cuffs that more than half the teeth in the inn were knocked out."
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"Sancho, finding himself thus roughly handled, without knowing by whom, raised his voice and began to call out to his master to help him."
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"The innkeeper, seeing all the mischief that was being done, mounted upon the others and began to lay on blows right and left as fiercely as if he had been a madman."
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...related.
Don Quixote explains his understanding of chivalry to Sancho, and they experience a frightening encounter with the noise of fulling hammers.
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"'You must know, Sancho,' said Don Quixote, 'that it is no dishonour to change one's mind.'"
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"'But tell me, señor,' said Sancho, 'what is the meaning of these fulling hammers that seem to be beating the bowels out of the earth?'"
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"'Without any fear whatsoever, do you place yourself upon Rocinante, and I upon my Dapple, and let us go and see what this terrible noise is.'"
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Don Quixote, ignoring Sancho's warnings, charges at the fulling hammers, believing them to be giants.
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"'Though you should see them brandishing a hundred arms apiece, and though they should be real Briarei, I will attack them.'"
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"And without paying any heed to Sancho’s cries, he spurred Rocinante and charged at full gallop down the slope."
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"But as he drew near, he reined in Rocinante, who, seemingly scenting the monsters, stopped so suddenly that Don Quixote was pitched head foremost over his withrs."
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...with less peril than any other he had ever encountered. (Chapter 20)
This chapter recounts the "Adventure of the Lion," where Don Quixote bravely confronts a caged lion, which ultimately ignores him.
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"'My good friend,' said Don Quixote, 'you must know that fear is one of the passions most difficult to conquer, and that the smallest sign of cowardice will suffice to put down the most valiant heart.'"
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"The lion yawned several times and then put out his tongue a yard long, and with it he licked the dust out of his eyes."
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"Thereupon Don Quixote ordered the gentleman to open the cage, and the gentleman said that he would not do so on any account."
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invincible knight. (Chapter 21)
Don Quixote mistakes a barber's basin for the legendary helmet of Mambrino and attacks the barber to take it.
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"'See you not that cavalier who is coming towards us on a dapple-grey steed, and wears a golden helmet?'"
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"'But observe what I tell you, that the helmet which that cavalier wears is the identical helmet of Mambrino.'"
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"And without another word he charged at him with such fury that if the barber had not slipped off his mule, he would have been sent flying."
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Don Quixote encounters a chain gang of galley slaves and, believing them unjustly imprisoned, attacks the guards and frees them.
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"'These persons who are going along in chains are men forced by the king's command to serve in the galleys.'"
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* "'But tell me, good sirs, for what offense do they take these poor men along?'"
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Fleeing the authorities after freeing the galley slaves, Don Quixote retreats into the Sierra Morena mountains and decides to imitate the penance of Amadís of Gaul.
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"'Here it is, Sancho my friend, that we can thrust our hand up to the elbow in what they call adventures.'"
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"'I intend to remain in this wilderness, and do penance for the many sins that I have committed in this wicked world.'"
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"'And perchance, when your worship least expects it, you will find your Dulcinea’s letter lying on the ground.'"
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Don Quixote sends Sancho with a letter to Dulcinea (which he hasn't written) and instructs him to observe her reactions. Sancho encounters the curate and the barber searching for Don Quixote.
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"'You will take this letter to Dulcinea del Toboso, and if she is not at home, you will give it to some damsel of her acquaintance.'"
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"'And as to the signs that she gives you in answer to my message, you will note them all down carefully, so that I may give them the credit they deserve.'"
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"'We are going, good Sancho,' said the curate, 'in search of a madman, who calls himself Don Quixote of La Mancha.'"
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...that he made of Beltenebros’ penance. (Chapter 25)
Don Quixote begins his exaggerated and comical penance in the Sierra Morena.
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"Thereupon Don Quixote proceeded to strip himself to his shirt-sleeves and breeches, and then cut a caper or two in the air, and two somersaults, heels over head."
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"Then he began to pluck out his hair by handfuls and fling it to the winds, and to give himself pinches that made the blood flow."
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"'Oh Dulcinea del Toboso, mistress of my heart, you sorrowful pilgrim do I send you across these briny tears!'"
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Don Quixote continues his absurd imitation of a lovesick knight, performing ridiculous acts of penance.
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"'Behold, O ye dwellers in these mountains, the sorrowful pilgrim Amadís of Gaul, for love of his lady Oriana!'"
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"He would seat himself at the foot of some tall rock, and there, abandoning himself to his thoughts, would remain until nightfall."
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"But the thing that caused him the most pain was that he believed his breeches had been torn."
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The curate and the barber devise a plan to trick Don Quixote into returning home by having Dorothea pretend to be a damsel in distress.
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"'Now, Master Nicholas,' said the curate, 'we have a plan for curing our friend Don Quixote.'"
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"'And we will go to him in the Sierra Morena and beg him to right a great wrong that has been done to us.'"
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Sancho recounts his supposed encounter with Dulcinea to the curate and barber, embellishing the story with his own rustic imagination.
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"'Well, sirs,' said Sancho, 'when I gave my lady Dulcinea your worship's letter, she was sifting a sack of wheat.'"
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"'She said... she said... that your worship should tell her knight to come and see her, and that she would be very glad to receive him.'"
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Dorothea, disguised as the Princess Micomicona, tells a fabricated tale of a giant who has usurped her kingdom, appealing to Don Quixote for help.
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"'Know, valiant knight, that I am a princess, and the ruler of a great kingdom called Micomicona.'"
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"'A wicked giant, called Malambruno, has by his magic art robbed me of my kingdom.'"
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"'And I have come to you, renowned Don Quixote of La Mancha, to beg you to redress this wrong.'"
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...imposed upon himself. (Chapter 30)
Dorothea's performance as the distressed princess convinces Don Quixote to abandon his penance and offer his services.
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"'Sorrowful damsel,' said Don Quixote, 'dry your tears, for it belongs to me to remedy your misfortunes.'"
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"'I will go with you to the ends of the earth to avenge you on this wicked giant.'"
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...incidents. (Chapter 31)
Don Quixote and Sancho continue their journey with the supposed Princess Micomicona, discussing the nature of knighthood and the rewards it offers.
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"'Believe me, Sancho,' said Don Quixote, 'there is no greater pleasure than to conquer in battle.'"
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"'All the same, I think the pleasure would be greater if one conquered giants, as your worship says, and then the princess became queen and gave your worship a kingdom.'"
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"'That would not be amiss,' replied Don Quixote, 'but it is not always the case that those we conquer are princesses.'"
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Don Quixote comforts the "princess" in her supposed distress, while Sancho amuses the curate and barber with his rustic wit.
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"'Dry your tears, high and peerless lady,' said Don Quixote, 'for it belongs to me to remedy your misfortunes.'"
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They encounter a young woman, Dorothea, dressed as a shepherdess and lamenting a lost love. She skillfully plays along with the curate and barber's plan.
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"'I am not, sirs, of the condition in which you see me, but heaven, for its own secret ends, has brought me to this pass.'"
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"'My name is Dorothea, and I am the daughter of rich parents, and of no mean rank.'"
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"'It is not fitting that such beauty should be found in this desert, where there is no one to enjoy it.'"
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Dorothea continues her fabricated story of being a princess whose kingdom was usurped by a giant, enlisting Don Quixote's help.
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"'And he has carried me off from my kingdom, and transformed me into this rustic guise.'"
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Dorothea's tale reaches its climax, further convincing Don Quixote of his duty to aid her. The curate and barber marvel at her intelligence.
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"'And so, valiant knight, you see the extent of the injury that Malambruno has done me.'"
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"'It only remains for you to promise me that you will go with me whither I shall lead you.'"
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"'There is no doubt,' said the curate to the barber, 'that this Dorothea is a very clever woman.'"
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...tale of the fair Dorothea. (Chapter 36)
Don Quixote dreams he is fighting the giant Malambruno and attacks the wine-skins in the inn, spilling the wine. Dorothea's story is concluded.
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"He dreamt that he had entered the kingdom of Micomicona, and that he was standing before the giant Malambruno."
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"And in the heat of the battle, he began to lay about him at the wine-skins with such fury that in a little while the whole room was afloat with wine."
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"Dorothea then rose and curtsied to the company, and went to help the hostess mend the wine-skins."
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The curate and barber continue their plan to transport Don Quixote back home, maintaining the illusion of the enchanted princess.
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"'We must humour this poor gentleman in his delusion, until we can find some cure for it.'"
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Don Quixote holds forth on the virtues of knighthood-errant, contrasting it with the lives of courtiers.
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"'Know, sirs,' said Don Quixote, 'that the profession I follow is the noblest and most excellent of all those in the world.'"
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"'What say you to the courtiers?' asked the curate. 'Do they not enjoy a good life?'"
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"'They enjoy a life,' replied Don Quixote, 'which, for all its seeming pleasure, is full of anxiety and vexation.'"
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A captive who joins their company recounts his life story, including his capture by pirates and his experiences in Algiers.
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"'Perhaps heaven may have ordained that I should find some one in this company who knows me.'"
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"'I was born in a village in the mountains of León, and my father was a man of good standing.'"
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"'Fortune did not favour my design, for scarcely had we been two leagues out to sea when we were overtaken by two Turkish galleys.'"
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The captive continues his tale, detailing his time as a slave, his encounters with a beautiful Moorish woman named Zoraida, and their plan to escape.
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"'My misfortunes were so great that they ought to be written in letters of brass.'"
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"'Among these ladies, one in particular took my fancy, and she was a Moorish lady of quality, and of great beauty.'"
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The captive recounts the daring escape plan devised by Zoraida and their perilous journey across the sea to Spain.
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Various other characters and storylines intersect at the inn, including a judge and his beautiful daughter, and a quarrel over a muleteer's love affair.
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"'And this young lady is his daughter, who is going to Seville to see a lawsuit that her brother has won.'"
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"There arose a great uproar in the inn, for it happened that a certain muleteer and a daughter of one of the guests had come to words."
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The story of the muleteer's love affair with the guest's daughter is recounted, involving a secret rendezvous and a jealous servant.
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"'There was in this inn a daughter of one of the guests from Aragon, a very graceful and pleasing maiden.'"
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The chaotic events at the inn continue, with Don Quixote intervening in the muleteer's quarrel, further escalating the confusion.
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"Don Quixote, who was always ready to right wrongs, believing that some distress was at hand, placed himself in the midst of the fray."
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...befell the invincible Don Quixote. (Chapter 45)
The dispute over the barber's basin (Mambrino's helmet) and a pack-saddle is resolved in a comical and illogical manner by Don Quixote.
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"'Let the pack-saddle be worth as much as the helmet, and let each take his own.'"
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Officers of the Holy Brotherhood arrive at the inn to arrest Don Quixote for freeing the galley slaves, leading to a tense standoff.
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"'Take care, your worships,' said Don Quixote, 'what you do, for these are not persons whom you have any right to arrest.'"
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The curate and barber, with the help of others, trick Don Quixote into being transported back home in a caged ox-cart, convincing him it's an enchantment.
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"'We will have him carried off in this ox-cart, and we will pretend that he is enchanted.'"
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Don Quixote remains convinced of his enchantment during the journey, while Sancho has amusing conversations with the travelers.
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"'I am enchanted, and I must endure this until the heavens shall be pleased to release me.'"
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"'Take comfort, your worship,' said Sancho, 'for this enchantment will not last for ever.'"
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"Sancho entertained them so much with his remarks that the curate could scarcely restrain his laughter."
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Sancho recounts the cleverness and ambition of his wife Teresa Panza, who desires a higher social standing.
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Don Quixote and Sancho have another disagreement about the nature of their adventures and the reality of the enchantments.
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"'Hold your peace, Sancho,' replied Don Quixote, 'and do not contradict your master.'"
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A goatherd recounts the story of a wealthy girl, Leandra, who ran away with a soldier, only to be abandoned and return home in disgrace.
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"'But the soldier left her, and she came back to our village, disgraced and heartbroken.'"
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...which the curate contrived with the barber. (Chapter 52)
The argument between Don Quixote and the goatherd continues. The curate and barber stage a procession of penitents to further their plan to get Don Quixote home.
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"Suddenly they saw two men on horseback approaching them, dressed in mourning garments."
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"'We are penitents,' said one of them, 'and we are going to a certain shrine to discharge a vow.'"
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IDEAS CURATED BY
CURATOR'S NOTE
Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote (Part 1) is a brilliant satire on chivalry, reality, and human folly. Following the delusional yet noble Don Quixote and his pragmatic squire Sancho Panza, the novel explores themes of idealism, adventure, and the clash between fantasy and truth. With humor and depth, Cervantes critiques society while celebrating the power of dreams. A foundational work of literature, Part 1 sets the stage for one of the most influential stories ever written...
“
Different Perspectives Curated by Others from Don Quixote - 1st Edition
Curious about different takes? Check out our book page to explore multiple unique summaries written by Deepstash curators:
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PURANA PEN 's Key Ideas from Don Quixote
Miguel de Cervantes, Edith Grossman
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Madhurya Chakraborty's Key Ideas from Don Quixote
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
147 ideas
Jordan Oates's Key Ideas from Don Quixote - Original Version
Miguel de Cervantes
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