II: ABOUT CERVANTES AND DON QUIXOTE

Four generations had laughed over "Don Quixote" before it occurred to

anyone to ask, who and what manner of man was this Miguel de Cervantes

Saavedra whose name is on the title-page; and it was too late for a

satisfactory answer to the question when it was proposed to add a life of

the author to the London edition published at Lord Carteret's instance in

1738. All traces of the personality of Cervantes had by that time

disappeared. Any floating traditions that may once have existed,

transmitted from men who had known him, had long since died out, and of

other record there was none; for the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

were incurious as to "the men of the time," a reproach against which the

nineteenth has, at any rate, secured itself, if it has produced no

Shakespeare or Cervantes. All that Mayans y Siscar, to whom the task was

entrusted, or any of those who followed him, Rios, Pellicer, or

Navarrete, could do was to eke out the few allusions Cervantes makes to

himself in his various prefaces with such pieces of documentary evidence

bearing upon his life as they could find.

This, however, has been done by the last-named biographer to such good

purpose that he has superseded all predecessors. Thoroughness is the

chief characteristic of Navarrete's work. Besides sifting, testing, and

methodising with rare patience and judgment what had been previously

brought to light, he left, as the saying is, no stone unturned under

which anything to illustrate his subject might possibly be found.

Navarrete has done all that industry and acumen could do, and it is no

fault of his if he has not given us what we want. What Hallam says of

Shakespeare may be applied to the almost parallel case of Cervantes: "It

is not the register of his baptism, or the draft of his will, or the

orthography of his name that we seek; no letter of his writing, no record

of his conversation, no character of him drawn ... by a contemporary has

been produced."

It is only natural, therefore, that the biographers of Cervantes, forced

to make brick without straw, should have recourse largely to conjecture,

and that conjecture should in some instances come by degrees to take the

place of established fact. All that I propose to do here is to separate

what is matter of fact from what is matter of conjecture, and leave it to

the reader's judgment to decide whether the data justify the inference or

not.

The men whose names by common consent stand in the front rank of Spanish

literature, Cervantes, Lope de Vega, Quevedo, Calderon, Garcilaso de la

Vega, the Mendozas, Gongora, were all men of ancient families, and,

curiously, all, except the last, of families that traced their origin to

the same mountain district in the North of Spain. The family of Cervantes

is commonly said to have been of Galician origin, and unquestionably it

was in possession of lands in Galicia at a very early date; but I think

the balance of the evidence tends to show that the "solar," the original

site of the family, was at Cervatos in the north-west corner of Old

Castile, close to the junction of Castile, Leon, and the Asturias. As it

happens, there is a complete history of the Cervantes family from the

tenth century down to the seventeenth extant under the title of

"Illustrious Ancestry, Glorious Deeds, and Noble Posterity of the Famous

Nuno Alfonso, Alcaide of Toledo," written in 1648 by the industrious

genealogist Rodrigo Mendez Silva, who availed himself of a manuscript

genealogy by Juan de Mena, the poet laureate and historiographer of John

II.




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