Don Quixote - Part I - Page 24/400

The extraordinary influence of the romances of chivalry in his day is

quite enough to account for the genesis of the book. Some idea of the

prodigious development of this branch of literature in the sixteenth

century may be obtained from the scrutiny of Chapter VII, if the reader

bears in mind that only a portion of the romances belonging to by far the

largest group are enumerated. As to its effect upon the nation, there is

abundant evidence. From the time when the Amadises and Palmerins began to

grow popular down to the very end of the century, there is a steady

stream of invective, from men whose character and position lend weight to

their words, against the romances of chivalry and the infatuation of

their readers. Ridicule was the only besom to sweep away that dust.

That this was the task Cervantes set himself, and that he had ample

provocation to urge him to it, will be sufficiently clear to those who

look into the evidence; as it will be also that it was not chivalry

itself that he attacked and swept away. Of all the absurdities that,

thanks to poetry, will be repeated to the end of time, there is no

greater one than saying that "Cervantes smiled Spain's chivalry away." In

the first place there was no chivalry for him to smile away. Spain's

chivalry had been dead for more than a century. Its work was done when

Granada fell, and as chivalry was essentially republican in its nature,

it could not live under the rule that Ferdinand substituted for the free

institutions of mediaeval Spain. What he did smile away was not chivalry

but a degrading mockery of it.

The true nature of the "right arm" and the "bright array," before which,

according to the poet, "the world gave ground," and which Cervantes'

single laugh demolished, may be gathered from the words of one of his own

countrymen, Don Felix Pacheco, as reported by Captain George Carleton, in

his "Military Memoirs from 1672 to 1713." "Before the appearance in the

world of that labour of Cervantes," he said, "it was next to an

impossibility for a man to walk the streets with any delight or without

danger. There were seen so many cavaliers prancing and curvetting before

the windows of their mistresses, that a stranger would have imagined the

whole nation to have been nothing less than a race of knight-errants. But

after the world became a little acquainted with that notable history, the

man that was seen in that once celebrated drapery was pointed at as a Don

Quixote, and found himself the jest of high and low. And I verily believe

that to this, and this only, we owe that dampness and poverty of spirit

which has run through all our councils for a century past, so little

agreeable to those nobler actions of our famous ancestors."