He shows plainly enough, too, that "Don Quixote" and the demolition of

the chivalry romances was not the work that lay next his heart. He was,

indeed, as he says himself in his preface, more a stepfather than a

father to "Don Quixote." Never was great work so neglected by its author.

That it was written carelessly, hastily, and by fits and starts, was not

always his fault, but it seems clear he never read what he sent to the

press. He knew how the printers had blundered, but he never took the

trouble to correct them when the third edition was in progress, as a man

who really cared for the child of his brain would have done. He appears

to have regarded the book as little more than a mere libro de

entretenimiento, an amusing book, a thing, as he says in the "Viaje," "to

divert the melancholy moody heart at any time or season." No doubt he had

an affection for his hero, and was very proud of Sancho Panza. It would

have been strange indeed if he had not been proud of the most humorous

creation in all fiction. He was proud, too, of the popularity and success

of the book, and beyond measure delightful is the naivete with which he

shows his pride in a dozen passages in the Second Part. But it was not

the success he coveted. In all probability he would have given all the

success of "Don Quixote," nay, would have seen every copy of "Don

Quixote" burned in the Plaza Mayor, for one such success as Lope de Vega

was enjoying on an average once a week.

And so he went on, dawdling over "Don Quixote," adding a chapter now and

again, and putting it aside to turn to "Persiles and Sigismunda"--which,

as we know, was to be the most entertaining book in the language, and the

rival of "Theagenes and Chariclea"--or finishing off one of his darling

comedies; and if Robles asked when "Don Quixote" would be ready, the

answer no doubt was: En breve-shortly, there was time enough for that. At

sixty-eight he was as full of life and hope and plans for the future as a

boy of eighteen.

Nemesis was coming, however. He had got as far as Chapter LIX, which at

his leisurely pace he could hardly have reached before October or

November 1614, when there was put into his hand a small octave lately

printed at Tarragona, and calling itself "Second Volume of the Ingenious

Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha: by the Licentiate Alonso Fernandez de

Avellaneda of Tordesillas." The last half of Chapter LIX and most of the

following chapters of the Second Part give us some idea of the effect

produced upon him, and his irritation was not likely to be lessened by

the reflection that he had no one to blame but himself. Had Avellaneda,

in fact, been content with merely bringing out a continuation to "Don

Quixote," Cervantes would have had no reasonable grievance. His own

intentions were expressed in the very vaguest language at the end of the

book; nay, in his last words, "forse altro cantera con miglior plettro,"

he seems actually to invite some one else to continue the work, and he

made no sign until eight years and a half had gone by; by which time

Avellaneda's volume was no doubt written.




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