Don Quixote - Part I - Page 20/400

From the moment the book came into his hands he seems to have been

haunted by the fear that there might be more Avellanedas in the field,

and putting everything else aside, he set himself to finish off his task

and protect Don Quixote in the only way he could, by killing him. The

conclusion is no doubt a hasty and in some places clumsy piece of work

and the frequent repetition of the scolding administered to Avellaneda

becomes in the end rather wearisome; but it is, at any rate, a conclusion

and for that we must thank Avellaneda.

The new volume was ready for the press in February, but was not printed

till the very end of 1615, and during the interval Cervantes put together

the comedies and interludes he had written within the last few years,

and, as he adds plaintively, found no demand for among the managers, and

published them with a preface, worth the book it introduces tenfold, in

which he gives an account of the early Spanish stage, and of his own

attempts as a dramatist. It is needless to say they were put forward by

Cervantes in all good faith and full confidence in their merits. The

reader, however, was not to suppose they were his last word or final

effort in the drama, for he had in hand a comedy called "Engano a los

ojos," about which, if he mistook not, there would be no question.

Of this dramatic masterpiece the world has no opportunity of judging; his

health had been failing for some time, and he died, apparently of dropsy,

on the 23rd of April, 1616, the day on which England lost Shakespeare,

nominally at least, for the English calendar had not yet been reformed.

He died as he had lived, accepting his lot bravely and cheerfully.

Was it an unhappy life, that of Cervantes? His biographers all tell us

that it was; but I must say I doubt it. It was a hard life, a life of

poverty, of incessant struggle, of toil ill paid, of disappointment, but

Cervantes carried within himself the antidote to all these evils. His was

not one of those light natures that rise above adversity merely by virtue

of their own buoyancy; it was in the fortitude of a high spirit that he

was proof against it. It is impossible to conceive Cervantes giving way

to despondency or prostrated by dejection. As for poverty, it was with

him a thing to be laughed over, and the only sigh he ever allows to

escape him is when he says, "Happy he to whom Heaven has given a piece of

bread for which he is not bound to give thanks to any but Heaven itself."

Add to all this his vital energy and mental activity, his restless

invention and his sanguine temperament, and there will be reason enough

to doubt whether his could have been a very unhappy life. He who could

take Cervantes' distresses together with his apparatus for enduring them

would not make so bad a bargain, perhaps, as far as happiness in life is

concerned.