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THE MAN BEHIND DON QUIXOTE

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 June 1966

32

Abstract

WHILE MIGUEL DE CERNANTES SAAVEDRA languished as a guest of King Philip of Spain in a small noisome cell of the Madrid prison, he had time to do two things. He wrote each day at a rickety table with the quill and parchment he had bribed his jailer to supply. His manuscript concerned an old gentleman farmer, grey, lean, and weatherbeaten—like Cervantes himself, then fifty‐six—who had read so many books about chivalry that ‘his brain had dried up and he had gone completely out of his mind’. The old man was obsessed that he must leave his farm and ride out as the knights of old had done into a world of giants, maidens in distress and deep enchantment. Nearly four hundred years later the name of the old knight‐errant is still world famous, for Cervantes chose with care the name of his run‐down hero, Don Quixote. (Cervantes spelt it Quijote.)

Citation

Lamont Brown, R. (1966), "THE MAN BEHIND DON QUIXOTE", Library Review, Vol. 20 No. 6, pp. 383-386. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb012446

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1966, MCB UP Limited

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