118 2 17MB
English Pages 590 [589] Year 2015
BOLLINGEN
SERIES
LXXXV
Selected W o r k s of M i g u e l de Unaniuno Editors ANTHONY KERRIGAN MARTIN NOZICK tFEDERICO DE ONIS HERBERT READ
Volume 3
Miguel de Unamuno
OurLord Don Quixote The Life of Don Quixote and Sancho with Related Essays
Translated by Anthony Kerrigan
With an Introduction by Walter Starkie
Bollingen Series L X X X V · 3 Princeton University Press
Copyright © 1967 by Bollingen Foundation Published for Bollingen Foundation, JVew York, JV.T. by Princeton University Press, Princeton, JV.J.
THIS IS VOLUME THREE OF THE SELECTED WORKS OF MIGUEL DE UNAMUNO CONSTITUTING NUMBER LXXXV IN BOLLINGEN SERIES SPONSORED BY AND PUBLISHED FOR BOLLINGEN FOUNDATION. IT IS THE FIRST VOLUME OF THE SELECTED WORKS TO APPEAR
Library of Congress catalogue card no. 67-22341 Printed in the United States of America by Clarke £=? Way, Inc., JVew Tork, JV.T. Designed by Bert Clarke
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION,
by Walter Starkie
ix
I
T h e Life of D o n Quixote and Sanchc FOREWORDS
3
The Sepulcher of Don Quixote
9
The First 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12-13. 15. 16". 17.
Part
The Famous Knight Don Quixote The First Sally The Knighting of Don Quixote On Leaving the Inn A Misadventure The Scrutiny of the Library The Second Sortie The Adventure of the Windmills The Battle with the Brave Basque A Pleasant Conversation The Hospitality of the Goatherds Tales Told by the Goatherds Some Heartless Yanguesans The Inn He Took to Be a Castle Further Hardships at the Inn The chapter titles are shortened for this list.
23 31 38 41 48 52 53 57 63 65 61 13
85 88 89
Table of Contents 18. 21. 22. 23. 24-25. 26. 27. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33-34. 35. 36. 38. 39-42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51-52.
Conversations with Sancho Mambrino's Helmet Don Quixote Frees the Prisoners Don Quixote in the Sierra Morena The Penance of Don Quixote Don Quixote in Love The Curate and the Barber More of the Curate and the Barber The Princess Micomicona A Conversation with Sancho Don Quixote and His Company at the Inn The Tale of Foolish Curiosity The Battle of the Wineskins Other Rare Events A Discourse on Arms and Letters The Captive's Story The Story of the Muleteer Don Quixote Mocked Doubts about Mambrino's Helmet The Ferocity of Our Knight A Strange Enchantment On Books of Chivalry A Shrewd Conversation Some Learned Arguments End of the Second Sally
The Second 1. 2. 3-4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
92 .97 99 107 110
114 119 120 124 127 131
133 134 136 137
137 138 140 142 149 150 152 153 155 157
Part
Don Quixote's Malady Sancho Defends His Master Sancho and the University Graduate Sancho and His Wife Don Quixote and His Niece The Knight and Squire Discuss Terms A Visit to Dulcinea
159 160 161 162
163 167 170
Table of Contents 9. 10. 11. 12. 13-14. 15. 16-17. 18-23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 40—43. 44. 46. 47—55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61-63. 64. 67. 68. 69. 71. 72-73. 74.
Sancho's Search The Enchantment of Dulcinea The Adventure of the Wagon of Death o The Brave Knight of the Mirrors The Knight of die Wood W h o the Knight of the Mirrors Was The Affair of the Lions The Cave of Montesinos A Thousand Necessary Trifles The Braying Adventure The Adventure of the Puppeteer Master Peter and His Ape The Enchanted Boat A Fair Huntress Many Great Matters Don Quixote's Reply to His Censor Sancho and the Duchess The Disenchantment of Dulcinea The Coming of Clavileno Sancho's Government The Enamored Altisidora The End of Sancho's Governorship Doha Rodriguez Don Quixote Takes His Leave Adventures Thick and Fast What Might Be an Accident On the Road to Barcelona Entering Barcelona A Painful Adventure Don Quixote Will Turn Shepherd A Bristly Adventure Don Quixote's Strangest Adventure On the W a y Home Back Home The Death of Don Quixote
172 173 180 182
183 184 186
191 194 196 198 205 206 208
209 210
214 216
219 223 230 235 242 246 246 259 261
271 275 282
297 298 301 304 306
Table of Contents II Essays Quixotism The Knight of the Sad Countenance Glosses on Don Quixote i. The Essence of Quixotism π. The Cause of Quixotism Ganivet, Philosopher Regarding Don Juan Don Quixote-Bolivar Mudarra, Son of Prison On the Forms of Spanish Sorrow: Acedia The £migr£s and the Begrudgers On a Passage by Fielding, the Cervantine Don Quixote's Shipwreck Don Quixote's Beatitude SaintQuixoteofLaMancha The Childhood of Don Quixote "In a Village in La Mancha . . ."
329 334 356 361 368 374 383 401 405 412 416 421 426 429 434 438
APPENDIX : On the Reading and Interpretation
of Don Quixote
445
NOTES
467
INDEX
539
Introduction i. The Forerunners M I G U E L D E U N A M U N O Υ J U G O was vowed to fate by his allegorical first surname, which in the ancient Basque lan guage meant "hill of asphodels"—the pallid flowers that the specters flitting through the shadowy Elysian Fields used to nibble when they wished to become visible. But, as Ramon Gomez de la Serna used to point out, his second name Jugo ("juice" or "sap") gives a note of earthly antith esis to modern Spain's apostle of Quixotism. In order to understand the full significance of Unamuno's spirit and his impact upon Spain and his contemporaries of the Generation of 1898, it is necessary to study the forces molding Spain in the last twenty years of the nineteenth century, when Menendez y Pelayo, Ramon y Cajal, and Perez Gald