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KNIGHTS AND KNIGHTHOOD - SPAIN - FICTION (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   012215


Don Quijote / Cervantes, Miguel de; Aguilar, de Agustin Sanchez 1996  Book
Cervantes, Miguel de Book
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Publication Barcelona, Vicens Vives, 1996.
Description 159pBrown spine
Summary/Abstract In the sixteenth century, romances of chivalry, written in absurd, exaggerated style, were extremely popular in Spain. A dignified gentleman by the name of Quixada, who lived between Aragon and Castile, went crazy over these foolish books, which he spent all his substance in buying. His brain was stuffed with enchantments, quarrels, battles, challenges, wounds, magic salves, complaints, amours, torments, giants, castles, captured maidens, gallant rescues, and all sorts of impossible deeds of daring, which seemed to him as true as the most authentic history. Every innkeeper was a magnate; every mule-driver a cavalier. He decided that for his own honor and for the service of the world he must turn knight errant and jaunt through the world, redress- ing wrongs, rescuing captured princesses, and at last winning the imperial scepter of Trapizonda. He changed his name to Don Quixote de la Mancha, got himself dubbed knight by a rascally publican whose inn he thought was a castle with four turrets crowned with pinnacles of glistening silver. In order to carry a full purse he sold one of his houses, mortgaged another, and borrowed a goodly sum from a friend. When his practical house-keeper and his pretty niece, together with his neighbors, the barber and the curate, thought to cure him by burning his books, he was persuaded that his library had been carried away by a necromancer, and became crazier than ever. He scoured up a rusty suit of mail which had belonged to one of his ancestors, mended the broken helmet with a pasteboard vizor, patched with thin iron plates, and thus accoutered set forth on his old hack Rocinante, whose ribs stuck out like the skeleton of a ship, accompanied by a rustic named Sancho Panza, persuaded into serving as his squire.
Standard Number 9788431676377 Pb.
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
I00396863.6/CERMainOn ShelfGeneralSpanish