YMMV • Radar • Quotes • (Funny • Heartwarming • Awesome) • Fridge • Characters • Fanfic Recs • Nightmare Fuel • Shout Out • Plot • Tear Jerker • Headscratchers • Trivia • WMG • Recap • Ho Yay • Image Links • Memes • Haiku • Laconic • Source • Setting |
---|
In a place of La Mancha, the name of which I don't want to recall, there lived not long ago one of those gentlemen with lance on the rack, old shield, worn-out horse, and racing greyhound. |
These are the very first lines of Don Quixote, full title The Ingenious Hidalgo Don Quixote of La Mancha( "El ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha" in the original Spanish). The novel was written by Spanish writer and satirist Miguel De Cervantes. Cervantes wrote the story in two parts, the first part published in 1605 and the second in 1615.
The story is about an old hidalgo named Alonso Quijano, who was so into chivalric novels that he became insane and decided that he was a vagrant knight. Quijano renames himself as "Don Quixote de La Mancha" and decides to win eternal fame through the besting of wrongdoers and general upholding of the Chivalric Code. Unfortunately for a lot of innocent people, his delusions make him pick fights with other knights innocent bystanders, some of whom do not fight back because Don Quixote is obviously superior in his fighting skills crazy. Of course, there are strangers who are not that sympathetic, and after one of those delivers a brutal beating to Don Quixote, a neighbor from his village meets the wounded Don Quixote and takes him home, where his friends and family burn out the accursed books of chivalry to try to cure him, but he soon returns to his heroic quest delusion and journey. This time he manages to inspire convince a simple farm-man, Sancho Panza, to become his squire and sidekick under the promise of a governorship in the future. Then they live a lot of adventures, including the famous one where Don Quixote attacks some windmills because they are might be giants in disguise. At the end of the book, Don Quixote’s friends trick him by making him believe he is enchanted and take him back to his village.
Throughout the novel Don Quixote never, even for a moment, doubt that the fictional adventures that he has read were real and that he really is a knight errant. Not even the petitions of his loved ones, the continuous ridicule of his peers or the brutal beatings he suffers made him break his resolution: Don Quixote always continues trying to impose his quixotic (literally; he's the word's origin) beliefs on the world.
The first part of the novel was published in 1605, when the books of chivalry were pushing Deader Than Disco and Don Quixote's dreams of reviving chivalry ways were really a strange, misbegotten idea. The novel became a big success among the public of the time (although that success was nothing unheard of at the time with other titles, and certainly that was not the case with the contemporary Spanish critics), and was reprinted several times in the next decade and even translated into French and English. But most notable was the change in Spanish popular culture. A few months after printing, virtually all of Spain knew about Don Quixote’s exploits: Memetic Mutations arose, those ridiculous books of chivalry became popular again, and even apocryphal "continuations" appeared. Cervantes created a character to mock the Fan Dumb and the books of chivalry that perverted true heroism, only to find that Don Quixote, thanks to his readers, had achieved his goal: to change reality.
Cervantes, in an early attempt at killing a Misaimed Fandom, decided to end the story and wrote a still hilarious second part with a more serious tone, taking advantage of the change operated by the first part of the book in Real Life, where Don Quixote has evolved from a Lord Error-Prone to a honest man whose noble attitude and his delusions makes him the Butt Monkey of a lot of people. Don Quixote has to confront his delusions (but only in the very last chapter), and the harshness of reality make him realize that in reality there are no heroes his naïve dreams were shallow, and brings him back to sanity before his death. To his chagrin, Book II is considered even more brilliant than Book I.
It has been adapted to every medium, including a couple of animated adaptations (one of them with Funny Animals) and even a Musical.
Very commonly cited, in literary criticism, as "the first modern novel" and is probably among the most influential books of all time (just take a look at the The Other Wiki's list).
Trope Namer for:[]
- The Dulcinea Effect
- The Rocinante: Or as it's more commonly known on these boards, The Alleged Steed.
- No Mere Windmill: An inversion of the famous windmill scene
- Windmill Crusader: With Don Quixote being the Ur Example.
- Windmill Political: The Ur Example, but in most other examples the windmills are not literal.
Tropes found in Don Quixote:[]
- Achilles in His Tent: Parodied when Don Quixote invokes this trope for no other reason that a lot of other Knights (Amadis of Gaul, Beltenebros and Orlando) did it. At the Sierra Morena forest, Don Quixote sends Sancho with a letter to Dulcinea (his imaginary love interest) explaining her that he will be in the forest until she forgives him… Even when don Quixote has not made anything against her. This madness will force the Curate and the Barber to ask Dorotea to pretend to be a princess and ask Don Quixote a favour to get him out of the forest.
- Antiquated Linguistics/El Viejo Español Masacrado: In the original Spanish book, at least, Don Quijote uses outdated forms of speech and pronunciation, like maintaining the initial 'f' in words like 'fermosa' (hermosa), in an attempt to emulate the outdated forms of speech used on chivalry novels.
- This shows up in some translations as a Woolseyism: Don Quixote simply uses more archaic vocabulary than everyone else around.
- Really toned down in the second part, so it appears that the Spanish language was modernized in 10 years, or for the people missing the joke (because they don't know if words like 'fermosa' were used back in the 1600s) thinking it's a more up to date transcription.
- An special mention deserves the Spanish word insula, an Altum Videtur that means island or place limited and isolated, the Standard Hero Reward Don Quixote has promised to Sancho. Sancho keeps using that word even when he doesn’t know what is it.
- Affectionate Parody: Cervantes was a connoisseur of chivalry novels (evidenced by the famous scene where the priest and the barber go into a lengthy discussion of Don Quixote's library), and his parody of the genre isn't as vicious and destructive as commonly thought.
- Altum Videtur: This trope is lampshaded twice by Cervantes:
- In the Preface of the Author, Part I, Cervantes attacks authors that want to impress their readers with his knowledge without the appropiate research. Cervantes denounces to include sentences of Latin that seem to be profound (and so impress his lectors), but in reality, those Latin sentences were very common and any author of his time could find them with very little effort. In a word, he defines this trope in the 17th century. And then, Cervantes proceeds to include some sentences in Latin in both parts of Don Quixote.
- Another example is lampshaded in Part II, chapter LI. Sancho has been made governor of the "Island of Barataria". In the seventeen century, it was expected that the people who were part of the government and the aristocracy were well educated, and this education included Latin. Don Quixote never uses Latin words in his sentences with Sancho because he is not interested in impress him with his superior knowledge, but he expects that now that Sancho is a governor he has learned Latin.
- Animated Adaptation: "Don Coyote & Sancho Panda"
- An earlier example (1979), without Talking Animals.
- And a hilarious anime adaptation, too: Zukkoke Knight Don de la Mancha.
- Arcadia: Don Quixote considers becoming a shepherd instead of a knight at the end. Fore Shadowed by the Golden Age speech he gives to the shepherds in the book's beginning; pastoral tropes in general are very important in the novel for deconstruction and parody: The real shepherds are CountryMouses ignorant people who have enough common sense and work as sheperds by need. They want to help and are sympathetic enough. The problem comes when a lot of CityMouses try to invoke this trope:
- At the Sierra Morena, Don Quixote converses this trope with the goatherds at Chapter XXI, delivering an Author Filibuster, “Discourse on the Golden Age”, comparing the goatherds with NobleSavages. None of them understand a word. One of the goatherds sings a song, but he didn’t compose it (because he doesn’t know how), it was his uncle who composed it, a cleric who has studied.
All this long harangue (which might very well have been spared) our knight delivered because the acorns they gave him reminded him of the golden age; and the whim seized him to address all this unnecessary argument to the goatherds, who listened to him gaping in amazement without saying a word in reply. |
- In any Arcadia poem, one or various shepherds complains about the shepherdess that ignores him. Marcela and Grisostomo deconstruct this at chapter XII – XIV, were the Shepherdess Ice Queen claims she is So Beautiful It's a Curse and so she had to be a shepherdess only to get her freedom, but all the CityMouses that court her decided to be shepherds too. and if that Grisóstomo killed himself, is unjust to blame her.
- Deconstructed again at chapter LII from the first part, Eugenio tells the story of the beautiful Leandra, who elopes with a soldier that left her. Leandra gets Locked Away in a Monastery while her various CityMouses admirers decided to become shepherds and make poems about how Leandra betrayed them… even when she never gave them any hope. Eugenio tells that all those shepherds curse Leandra’s indiscretion and they seem so unhappy that he lampshades that Arcadia is really a living hell. Eugenio then says he has decided to follow the easier way, claim All Women Are Lustful and become a Politically Incorrect Hero who hates all women.
- Parodied at the chapter LVIII of the Second Part: Don Quixote meets some beautiful shepherdess who are part of a crew of noble and rich people who invoke this trope by retiring to a forest to play to be shepherd and shepherdess. They are so sophisticated that they have studied two poems from Garcilaso (In Spanish) and Camoes (in Portuguese). Only the truly rich CityMouse can afford to live in a happy Arcadia.
- Don Quixote considers becoming a shepherd instead of a knight at the end of the second part, before he can invoke this trope, his housekeeper tries to dissuade him by lampshading the truth:
will your worship be able to bear, out in the fields, the heats of summer, and the chills of winter, and the howling of the wolves? Not you; for that's a life and a business for hardy men, bred and seasoned to such work almost from the time they were in swaddling-clothes. Why, to make choice of evils, it's better to be a knight-errant than a shepherd! |
- Ascended Fanboy: Quixote takes a more proactive approach than most.
- Author Avatar: Cervantes dedicates some chapters of the first part of the novel to “The story of the Captive Captain”, Ruy Pérez de Viedma, a Spanish captain who was prisoner of the Moors. Curiously, this man, like the Priest, claims to know some guy called “de Saavedra”.
- Author Filibuster: Parodied and lampshaded. The critics have said that the chivalry books were plagued by a lot of lengthy discourses from different abstract themes, immobilizing the action and discouraging the reader. Cervantes lampshaded this when Don Quixote talks for nearly two pages in the "Discourse on The Golden Age", Part I, Chapter XI: "All this long harangue (which might very well have been spared)" and satirized it when in the "Discourse on Arms and Letters", Part I, Chapter XXXVIII, the action really never stops, because all the other characters eat their dinners while Don Quixote talked: "All this lengthy discourse Don Quixote delivered while the others supped, forgetting to raise a morsel to his lips, though Sancho more than once told him to eat his supper, as he would have time enough afterwards to say all he wanted."
- A Wizard Did It: Quite literally. Just replace "Wizard" with "Enchanter." When the events of the story veer far enough away from Quixote's account in the style of Knights Errant, Quixote explicitly invokes this trope to explain the discrepancy.
- Badass Spaniard: Don Quixote aspires to be one, and actually does pull off some real badassery (e.g., his adventure with the lion).
- Beam Me Up, Scotty: Lampshaded: In the Preface of the Author, Part I, Cervantes’s friend mentions a quote in Latin that a lot of people attributed to Horace, but Cervantes's friend really has done the research, so he mentions "or whoever said it".
- There are some cases of this trope in the Spanish pop culture, see some examples in the link.
- Beleaguered Assistant: Sancho Panza
- Bittersweet Downer Ending: Don Quixote, after a string of treasons and especially cruel practical jokes, regains his sanity and negates chivalry just before his death, while his squire has ingrained the chivalry lifestyle so deeply that he practically cries for Don Quixote to come back to the adventure.
- Blunt Metaphors Trauma: Subverted with the Biscayan, who is another of the many VictimizedBystanders Don Quixote will find in his adventures. He talks exclusively in this fashion when he engages with Don Quixote in a duel to the death, even when Don Quixote understand him perfectly:
One of the squires in attendance upon the coach, a Biscayan, was listening to all Don Quixote was saying, and, perceiving that he would not allow the coach to go on, but was saying it must return at once to El Toboso, he made at him, and seizing his lance addressed him in bad Castilian and worse Biscayan after his fashion, "Begone, caballero, and ill go with thee; by the God that made me, unless thou quittest coach, slayest thee as art here a Biscayan." |
- Book-Burning: A subversion of this trope given that books then were new media: Don Quixote’s niece and Old Retainer asked the Moral Guardian’s permission to do the Book-Burning in a desperate attempt to cure him. The MoralGuardians are the most educated people in the village (a curate and a barber), they never wanted to impose their ideas and are doing this as a favor to the family, so they don’t care much for this Book-Burning. And a lot of those are really bad written books that destroyed Don Quixote’s mind, and the good books were stolen by the Moral Guardian.
- Book Ends: At chapter I of the first part, Don Quixote spends four days thinking how to MeaningfulRename his horse, and another eight days how to rename himself, showing us that he is a Mad Dreamer. At the penultimate chapter of the second part, Don Quixote immediately thinks of the names he and his partners will adopt as shepherds, and Sanson Carrasco even say some names in a carelessly manner. Don Quixote laughed at the adaptation of the name, showing us that he now is Bored with Insanity.
- Bored with Insanity: In the last chapter of Don Quixote, a poster boy for Fan Dumb of Chivalric Romance, his Fan Disillusionment is so great that he comes back to his senses.
"I was mad, now I am in my senses; I was Don Quixote of La Mancha, I am now, as I said, Alonso Quixano the Good" |
- Born in the Wrong Century: Surprisingly, played straight and lampshaded, not because Don Quixote wants to be a Knight in Shining Armor (Don Quixote wanted to revive a past that really never was, a past with good and bad wizards, fierce giants, fabulous monsters, imaginary reigns, incredible dresses, poisonous snakes, terrible battles, incredible encounters, lovesick princess, funny dwarfs, squires made counts and a lot of outrageous adventures) but because he is an Hidalgo (noble). Alonso Quijano lives in the wrong century and is lampshaded in the famous "Discourse on Arms and Letters", Part I, Chapter 38. Cervante's genius let him realize that technological advances like the gunpowder and the artillery demanded the end of the cavalry and the initiation of new strategies and organizational forms in the armies, as well as a redefinition of the role of nobility in a society where individual courage and skill are useless, and the organization of nameless masses of soldiers (infantry) becomes important. With Don Quijote, Cervantes is saying that for him, and for all the nobility (rich or poor) they were born in the wrong century , and they must renovate or die.
- Buffy-Speak: See You Keep Using That Word.
- Canon Immigrant: In a way, Álvaro Tarfe may be one of the first examples, if not the first. He is a character from the non canon sequel written by Avellaneda, who appears at the end of the legitimate second part of the Quijote, the one written by Cervantes, talking to the real Don Quijote and Sancho.
- Character Witness: Hiliarously subverted by Andres and Tosilos, who come back Laser-Guided Karma not to help, but to denounce Don Quixote.
- Andres, a boy that Don Quixote thinks has rescued at chapter IV part I shows up again at Chapter XXXI part I. Don Quixote wants him to defend his Chivalric Romance delusions, but instead Andres denounces him as with a Nice Job Breaking It, Hero speech and left with a bitter Stop Helping Me!.
- Lacquey Tosilos appear at chapter LVI of the second part when Don Quixote is trying to We Help the Helpless, and comes back in chapter LXVII to inform Don Quixote that all was a Shaggy Dog Story.
- Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: Played perfectly straight: In the Chapter I, Part I, Cervantes mentions the people who lived in Don Quixote’s house: his niece, his housekeeper and a lad who helps them with the field and the marketplace… whom we’ll never see or hear of again. Obviously, Cervantes completely forgotten about this character, and didn't want to write him even in the Second Part of the novel, but in his defense, one of Don Quixote’s themes is about how silly it is to detect errors of continuity in a
literary worksilly fictional tale. - Civil War: Don Quixote travels to Barcelona, a Spanish province that is at a Civil War at The Cavalier Years
- Cliff Hanger: parodied by the end of Part I, chapter 8: that chapter ends with a dramatic description of Don Quixote and
another knighta poor innocent bystander charging at each other... only to have the next chapter start with the narrator telling us that he doesn't have the page in the original manuscript that describes the fight, and wasting three pages telling us how he could get the next part. The critics have said that the cliffhanger was a regular resource of the chivalry books. - Cloudcuckoolander: There is nothing else to call a man who attacks windmills.
- Combat Pragmatist: Bernardo del Carpio is one of Alonso Quixano favorite knights, because he found the way to defeat Roland the enchanted: instead of attacking him with a sword, Bernardo just strangle him.
- Concepts Are Cheap: Deconstructed In-Universe: In the first part of the novel, Don Quixote wants to be an Knight Errant For Great Justice. In reality, he is The Hedonist and all his efforts are really guided to live his dreams, but he doesn't accept it because he is an Hypocrite. In the second part of the novel, his motivation changes For Happiness. But this time Don Quixote is an honest man that must admit at the end of the novel that his efforts didn’t help anyone and her Chivalric Romance dreams were shallow.
- Contractual Genre Blindness: Sancho is very aware that the man he is following is pretty insane and often tells him so, but sometimes has to act according to his master's delusions.
- Crack is Cheaper:
Don QuixoteAlonso Quijano was a victim of this phenomenon. At chapter I Part I we learn that he has acquired a lot of chivalry books (almost three hundred), and if you think that the printing had been discovered in Europe only some years ago, it's a considerable feat. But alas! Then as now, his relatives and friends, who certainly think that this hobby is getting out of control, had no second thoughts to send a lot of his books to the bonfire, even if Don Quixote has spent a lot of money in those books:
"and to such a pitch did his eagerness and infatuation go that he sold many an acre of tillage land to buy books of chivalry to read" |
- It should be noted that just having a few hundred books in the time in which the story was written would have been a huge expense. It's not like they had Barnes and Noble back then.
- Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: Although Don Quixote is a loon and almost always beaten and humiliated, sometimes he shows that he's got some real balls and fighting chops (e.g., the lion episode).
- Crushing the Populace: When Don Quixote travels to Barcelona, Sancho gets lost at night in a forest whose trees are filled with feet wearing shoes and stockings. Don Quixote calmly explains that the authorities hang outlaws by the twenties and thirties when they catch them.
- Damsel in Distress: Deconstructed and Played for Laughs. Don Quixote believes that just about every lady he meets needs to be rescued from villains. Then, Hilarity Ensues.
- Deconstruction.
- Deconstructor Fleet: The novel not only deconstructs the Chivalric Romance genre, but applies Genre Deconstruction to the next genres: Romance Novel, (May-December Romance, Fille Fatale), (the Arcadia, Secret Test of Character, Sweet Polly Oliver, Gentleman Thief literature, the Deadpan Snarker, (and all kind of snarkers). It also has UnbuiltTropes like Straw Fan, Lord Error-Prone, Mad Dreamer, Cut Lex Luthor a Check and Book-Burning… and given its status as the first modern novel, it’s full of Post Modernism.
- Daydream Believer: Quixote himself is the archetype of this. And he does not only believe in chivalry books, in Part II, Chapter LXXI, he declares that if he had lived in Homeric times, he could have saved Troy and Carthage by slaying Paris.
- Sancho Panza is an illiterate peasant that believes everything his master says about Chivalric Romance, and Juan Palomeque the Innkeeper believes Chivalric Romance books because TV Never Lies.
- Dan Browned: This trope is lampshaded by Cervantes... and then played for laughs. In the Preface of the Autor, Part I, Cervantes denounces authors who claim that the verses they use in the preface of the book commending that work (a common literary practice at the time) were made by personages identified as famous poets, when with a little research we easily discover they were not, or worse yet, they were illiterate. In a word, he defines this trope in the 17th century. And then, Cervantes proceeds to make "some commendatory verses" whose authors are some wizards, knights and damsels protagonist of other chivalry books.
- Deader Than Disco: In-Universe: At Part II Chapter XVI, Don Quixote claims that the Chivalric Romance (and it's Real Life counterpart, knight-errantry is this trope and he is merely trying to bring it to life again.
My desire was to bring to life again knight-errantry, now dead, and for some time past, stumbling here, falling there, now coming down headlong, now raising myself up again |
- Deadpan Snarker / Sarcastic Devotee / Servile Snarker: Deconstructed by Sancho Panza: What happens in Real Life to the employee that cannot say anything about his master without being sarcastic? Why, Sancho is beaten by Don Quixote at chapters XX and XXV of Part I, and gives him a hurricane of insults at chapter XLVI. The problem is that a lot of people enjoys Sancho’s sarcasm (he is good at it) and so he feels compelled to say it, even when he is in perilous situations, like when he denied payment to a Innkeeper (Chapter XVII part I), and he mocked the entire people of the Braying Town or the highwaymen of Barcelona (Chapters XXVII and LX of the part II) The first give him a beating, the highwaymen almost kill him.
- The only murder that is explicitly shown in this novel is the bandit who dared to snark to his leader, and Andres (the flogged boy) snarking about Don Quixote's rescue is the first clue the reader has that he was an Asshole Victim all the time.
- Death by Despair:
- Parodied by the "resurrection" of Altisidora, a girl who claims to love Don Quixote and invokes this trope (it’s really a prank). Don Quixote and Sancho didn’t believe it for a minute. When Don Quixote rejects her again:
Hearing this, Altisidora, with a show of anger and agitation, exclaimed, "God's life! Don Stockfish, soul of a mortar, stone of a date, more obstinate and obdurate than a clown asked a favour when he has his mind made up, if I fall upon you I'll tear your eyes out! Do you fancy, Don Vanquished, Don Cudgelled, that I died for your sake? All that you have seen to-night has been make-believe; I'm not the woman to let the black of my nail suffer for such a camel, much less die!" |
- Played straight at the end of the novel by Don Quixote, whom could not survive his Fan Disillusionment.
- Deconstructive Parody: Books of chivalry are ridiculed by having their tropes applied to real, everyday life.
- The other trope deconstructed and parodied is Fan Dumb.
- Doorstopper: It's quite a long book, although not obscenely so. The romances of chivalry it parodies tended to be even lengthier.
- Fan Disillusionment: After two novels being a literal Ascended Fanboy Up to Eleven of the Chivalric Romance, Don Quixote must accept in the last chapter that the Cliché Storm that he read as the adventures of a Knight Errant is not as joyous as he thought it would be:
- Fan Fiction:
- In-Universe:
- Chapter I, part I:
Don QuixoteAlonso Quijano has read The tale of Don Belianis of Greece: ]] and notes that the author has not finished that adventure, so he planned to write a continuation of it, and it would have been a great continuation if not because he abandoned that idea to become Don Quixote (this is not an Informed Ability: In Part I, Chapter II, Don Quixote begins the story of his own heroic exploits, that will undoubtedly write a sage in the future, and in Part I, Chapter XXI, Don Quixote narrates Sancho a perfect summary of the plot and all the typical situations of a chivalry book):
- Chapter I, part I:
- In-Universe:
"He commended, however, the author's way of ending his book with the promise of that interminable adventure, and many a time was he tempted to take up his pen and finish it properly as is there proposed, which no doubt he would have done, and made a successful piece of work of it too, had not greater and more absorbing thoughts prevented him." |
- At Part I, Chapter XLVIII, Don Quixote and his party meet a man who is referred only as the canon, who knows all the rules to write a good book, in the next chapter, he confess that he wrote a hundred pages of a chivalry book, but then he cites the reasons that made him desist his intent:
"I myself, at any rate," said the canon, "was once tempted to write a book of chivalry in which all the points I have mentioned were to be observed; if I must own the truth I have more than a hundred sheets written; and to try if it came up to my own opinion of it, I showed them to persons who were fond of this kind of reading, to learned and intelligent men as well as to ignorant people who cared for nothing but the pleasure of listening to nonsense, and from all I obtained flattering approval; nevertheless I proceeded no farther with it, as well because it seemed to me an occupation inconsistent with my profession, as because I perceived that the fools are more numerous than the wise; and, though it is better to be praised by the wise few than applauded by the foolish many, I have no mind to submit myself to the stupid judgment of the silly public, to whom the reading of such books falls for the most part." |
- In Real Life:
- Fanfiction of the book itself. In the 10 years between the first and second part of the novel, there were some "apocryphal" continuations, which Cervantes himself references and afterwards rejects, saying he is the original writer. Which probably makes it one of the oldest examples.
- Also, there had been
books(profesional fanfictions) written in spanish for the last four hundred years, (the most recent: "Al morir Don Quijote", published in 2004). You can find some examples in the other wiki: "List of works influenced by Don Quixote: 'Selected adaptations in literature'" and additional examples of Alternate Universe Fic, Continuation Fic, Elsewhere Fic, Original Flavour, in the other (Spanish) wiki: "Continuations of Quixote: 'Continuaciones del Quixote'"
- In Real Life:
- Flanderization: In the first part of the novel, Sancho Panza gives an Hurricane of Aphorisms only once (Chapter XXVII, part I). In the second part, he gives it continuosly, and also his wife and his daughter.
- Flyover Country: Critics have said La Mancha, don Quixote's home, is the Spanish version of this trope, as the preface to the Gutenberg project said:
on many of his readers in Spain, and most of his readers out of it, the significance of his choice of a country for his hero is completely lost. It would be going too far to say that no one can thoroughly comprehend "Don Quixote" without having seen La Mancha, but undoubtedly even a glimpse of La Mancha will give an insight into the meaning of Cervantes such as no commentator can give. Of all the regions of Spain it is the last that would suggest the idea of romance. Of all the dull central plateau of the Peninsula it is the dullest tract. There is something impressive about the grim solitudes of Estremadura; and if the plains of Leon and Old Castile are bald and dreary, they are studded with old cities renowned in history and rich in relics of the past. But there is no redeeming feature in the Manchegan landscape; it has all the sameness of the desert without its dignity; the few towns and villages that break its monotony are mean and commonplace, there is nothing venerable about them, they have not even the picturesqueness of poverty; indeed, Don Quixote's own village, Argamasilla, has a sort of oppressive respectability in the prim regularity of its streets and houses; everything is ignoble; the very windmills are the ugliest and shabbiest of the windmill kind. |
- Folk Hero
- Forgotten Trope: The novel show us an example of the Captivity Narrative when Ruy Pérez de Viedma relates all his biography in “The story of the Captive Captain”, you can see more at Life Embellished.
- Genre Killer: Credited with killing off romances of chivalry, although, to be fair, they were already falling out of fashion and pushing Deader Than Disco.
- Genre Savvy: Apart from the protagonist (who is Wrong Genre Savvy), many other characters are familiar with chivalric tropes and invoke or discuss them. Note that at the end of both volumes, Don Quixote is defeated and forced to return to his village in strict accordance with the laws of the genre.
- Gentle Giant: Part I Chapter I reveals that the giant Morgante is one of the
Don QuixoteAlonso Quixano’s favorite characters, because despite being a giant, he is affable and well bred. - Giver of Lame Names: The protagonist is probably the Trope Codifier.
- Go Mad From the Revelation: Inverted: Don Quixote goes mad trying to make sense of the Purple Prose that plagued the chivalry books he has read, but there never was any reveal because even Aristotle could not have made sense of it.
- Healing Potion: Parodied. Don Quixote claims to have the recipe for an elixir that heals all wounds, but beng who he is, it instead induces severe pain and vomiting.
- The Hedonist: At the first part of the novel, Don Quixote is a Lord Error-Prone who only cares about living his Chivalric Romance fantasies, no matter who else pays for it. The second part he evolves to a For Happiness motivation.
- Heroic Wannabe: Practically made this trope.
- Hero's Muse: The eponymous hero fights for his lady love, whom he refers to as Dulcinea. In his mind, he elevates her to a princess and the most beautiful woman in the world, although she is in reality a peasant girl named Aldonza.
- Hikikomori: Somewhat of an Ur Example. Don Quixote seems to be living in his village for years, doing nothing but hunting, reading romances of chivalry, selling his property to pay for them (books were a lot more expensive then) and discussing them with his friends. Justified, because landed gentry of the time was expected to do little else.
- Hypocritical Humor: When Don Quixote reads some pages of the Second Part of 'Don Quixote of La Mancha, he claims there are obvious errors from the author, the most important is that he errs on the name of Sancho’s wife (see Series Continuity Error to understand why this is hypocritical).
...is that he goes wrong and departs from the truth in the most important part of the history, for here he says that my squire Sancho Panza's wife is called Mari Gutierrez, when she is called nothing of the sort, but Teresa Panza; and when a man errs on such an important point as this there is good reason to fear that he is in error on every other point in the history." |
- Honor Before Reason: The protagonist falls victim to this trope countless times.
- Hot-Blooded: Don Quixote sure makes a lot of passionate speeches, and charges forward with aplomb, later subverted when he denies chivalry with the same passion.
- Hourglass Plot: In the first part of the novel, Don Quixote is a Daydream Believer Mad Dreamer and Sancho Panza has Simpleminded Wisdom and represents realism. Both are StaticCharacters. At the second part, Sancho is influenced by Don Quixote and becomes more and more of a Daydream Believer, while at the end, Don Quixote will become Bored with Insanity by Sancho’s influence. The relevance is that they maybe were the very first characters in literature to use this trope and become DynamicCharacters
- Humiliation Conga: Practically every single chapter ends up being this to Quixote and Sancho.
- Hurricane of Aphorisms: Sancho Panza does this, usually so poorly that it just makes him look stupider. Interestingly, in the First part of the novel he does it only once. In the second part, he gives those almost always.
- Idiot Hero: If not the Trope Maker, pretty much the Trope Codifier. Up to Eleven if you think that in the end when he denies chivalry, Don Quixote is portrayed as the Only Sane Man and even as the ideal man.
- It's subverted: Don Quixote is not an idiot, and we know it since the very beginning of the novel. He is a very smart, intelligent, well-educated man, who is perfectly normal as long as he is not talking about his obsessions: "apart from the silly things which this worthy gentleman says in connection with his craze, when other subjects are dealt with, he can discuss them in a perfectly rational manner, showing that his mind is quite clear and composed; so that, provided his chivalry is not touched upon, no one would take him to be anything but a man of thoroughly sound understanding." Part I, chapter 30. Of course, when he is indulging his chivalry fantasies... well...
- If I Can't Have You: Part II, chapter LX, Claudia Jeronima and Don Vicente Tornellas, from different factions of the civil war that was plaguing Barcelona, secretly fall in love and planned to marry, but one day Claudia Jerónima learned that Don Vicente wants to marry another woman. The next day, overwhelmed and exasperated, she shot him. And then she learns that he never intended to marry any other woman that Claudia.
- Impoverished Patrician:
Don QuixoteAlonso Quijano is an Hidalgo that still has the ancient arms of his ancestors, but has so little money that almost most of them is spent in food. What can he do? He is very smart and talented, so he could work, but if he does, he will lose the few privileges he has as an hidalgo (like, to be excused to pay taxes) . He is poor and bored. It does not help that he spent a lot of them in those silly chivalry books. Sure, they help him with the boredom, and the knight life is certainly exciting, but they are only absurd tales? right? - In Name Only: Joel Silver is threatening to produce a big-budget, "Pirates of the Caribbean-like" film about a Swashbuckler Don Quixote that is not crazy and fights real monsters from Another Dimension.
- Ironically, Don Quixote would have preferred this kind of adaptation to any other.
- The Insomniac: Alonso Quijano is a type B, as described in Part I Chapter I: lead by his obsession to read chivalry books, he sleeps less and less while reading more and more and that sends him over the edge.
- Insanity Defense: The reason why Don Quixote is never killed (but often beaten) by the poor Innocent Bystander of the day.
The landlord shouted to them to leave him alone, for he had already told them that he was mad, and as a madman he would not be accountable even if he killed them all. |
- In Which a Trope Is Described: Played Straight with Almost All the Chapters of the Two Parts because the Beginning of a Chapter Summarizes the Chapter's Events, but then Inverted in Some Chapters that Do Not Summarize Anything:
** Part II, Chapter 70 WHICH FOLLOWS SIXTY-NINE AND DEALS WITH MATTERS INDISPENSABLE FOR THE CLEAR COMPREHENSION OF THIS HISTORY
|
- Knight in Shining Armor and Knight Errant: What Don Quixote thinks he is, and thereby thoroughly deconstructs.
- Knighting: Parodied at Part I Chapter III when Don Quixote insists that an innkeeper (who he thinks is a castellan) knight him after he has watched his armor in the castle chapel — that is, in the stable of the inn. This shows that Don Quixote could be mad, but he knows exactly how the ceremony must be.
- The Law of Conservation of Detail: This law is invoked by the Innkeeper when he and Don Quixote discuss at Part I Chapter III the need for money being a Knight Errant who is Walking the Earth, (Don Quixote doesn't have any money because he never has read about a Knight Errant paying for anything) and helps to deconstruct those tropes in the book.
On this point the landlord told him he was mistaken; for, though not recorded in the histories, because in the author's opinion there was no need to mention anything so obvious and necessary as money and clean shirts, it was not to be supposed therefore that they did not carry them, |
- Life Embellished: Ruy Pérez de Viedma relates all his biography in “The story of the Captive Captain”. He was a handsome captive captain who wanted to escape the Moors and was helped by a Zoraida, a beautiful moor princess who wanted to convert to Christianity, organized a successful evasion to Spain, was well received by his powerful and rich relatives and married Zoraida. Cervantes was a captive who failed all his evasion intents, his family paid his rescue and always was an Impoverished Patrician.
- Literary Agent Hypothesis: Cervantes (only referred in the book as "The second author") says that the book was based on some manuscripts he found and made translate to spanish by an arab translator.
- Written by some Arabian named Cide Hamete Benengeli (or Sidi Ahmed bin Engeli, as it would be rendered today) whose first name, "Cide", could be translated as "Mister", and whoselast name is a pun on "berenjena" (eggplant/aubergine).
- This trope is parodied, because a lot of chivalry books have his authors claim that they are based in an old manuscript found in an ancient pyramid or another ruined building in some faraway country, written in an exotic language by a wise, famed wizard who favored the hero of the novel. Those claims are made to feign that the chivalry book was inspired by real events. Cervantes twist this and uses it to a comic effect, explaining that the next part of the novel was found in some phamplets and papers (only a few years old) found in Alcana de Toledo (a real city in Spain) in a silk mercer store, written in Arabic (a fairly known language in Spain) by a (foolish) boy who didn't know what was written in them and so sold the papers to Cervantes for peanuts. If we include the funny name of the wizard and the fact that the second author, the translator and Cide Hamete Benengeli are always making comments about the book, we can see that Cervantes want us to admit that all this tale is a long sequence of lies and nonsense... just like all the chivalry books.
- Written by some Arabian named Cide Hamete Benengeli (or Sidi Ahmed bin Engeli, as it would be rendered today) whose first name, "Cide", could be translated as "Mister", and whoselast name is a pun on "berenjena" (eggplant/aubergine).
- Loads and Loads of Characters: Critics have counted six hundred characters in the book (a lot of them unnamed).
- Long List: This trope is played straight and parodied:
- Played straight at the Preface of the Author, Part I: a friend of Cervantes advices him to get a book that quotes famous authors from A to Z and just insert the examples in his own book, so Cervantes can feign that he knows all those authors, because some readers are simple enough to believe that the author can use all those quotes in any book.
- Parodied at Chapter XVIII, Part I. Since Homer, the description of the forces and the generals of an army was an important part of the heroic literature, and books of chivalry were pleased to develop it, (Amadis of Gaul has a similar scene). In that chapter, Don Quixote describes what he sees at two contending armies to Sancho, whom only can see… two droves of sheep.
- Loony Fan: Sanson Carrásco presents himself as one fan of Don Quixote and discuss with him and Sancho the SeriesContinuityErrors, and wants to help that poor, mad fool to regain sanity. Hilarity Ensues.
- Lord Error-Prone: Pretty much the Trope Maker and the Ur-Example: In the first part of the novel, Cervantes settles Don Quixote characterization as this: he almost kills the Vizcayan at chapter IX and maimed for life the Licenciate at chapter XIX. Misaimed Fandom insisted in seeing him as the much more sympathetic Mad Dreamer.
- Lost in Translation: A joke in the Spanish version is that even when everyone understands the term island, only truly sophisticated people understand the term insula. So, Sancho doesn’t really understand what an insula really is, but he desperately wants to rule one, so he would be tricked later in a Massive Multiplayer Scam to rule a little town that is not an island. In some English translations (for example, the Gutenberg project this joke is Lost in Translation).
- Love Martyr: Part II, chapter LX, Don Vicente Tornellas has been shot by his fiancée Claudia Jeronima because she believed that Don Vicente wanted to marry another woman. Don Vicente?s last words are to tell her that he was innocent, never intended to marry any other woman, that he considers himself lucky to talk with her in his last moments of life, and then his last act before dying is to give Jeronima his hand and ask her to make him his husband.
- Mad Dreamer: The first part of the novel settles Don Quixote as Lord Error-Prone. Misaimed Fandom insisted to see him as the Ur Example of the much more sympathetic Mad Dreamer. Cervantes wanted to explore all ramifications of this new trope: Don Quixote is welcomed by people of all classes… because they want to mock him. One character even gives the Family-Unfriendly Aesop that "the gain by Don Quixote’s sanity can never equal the enjoyment his crazes give"
- May-December Romance: Don Quixote is around 50; Dulcinea, being an unmarried peasant girl, is probably less than 20. Not that she knows anything about her pretender's interest, though.
- Deconstructed with Altisidora and Don Quixote in the second part: Altisidora, a 14 year old maiden at the Duke’s palace, pretends to be in love with Don Quixote. He stoically supports her teasing and mean pranks because he believes she’s in love with him, but he never attempts anything because he wants to be loyal to Dulcinea and is very happy when he abandons her and the palace. Being an honest man, he confesses to Sancho that Altisidora’s felings caused him more confusion than pity, showing us how awkward and foolish would be this kind of relationship in reality.
- Meaningful Name: Dulcinea, the name Don Quixote gives to his random Love Interest, could be translated as "Sweety". For the others, see Punny Name. Another example: Doctor Pedro Recio (could be translated as "Doctor Hard Rock"), a doctor who insists that Sancho, as a governor, must have a very strict diet. There are many, many others. The very name itself, quixote (Modern Spanish quijote) means "cuisse", the thighplate of a knightly armour.
- Mook Chivalry: At chapter IV, Don Quixote lampshades it and invokes it, but he concedes to the Victimized Bystanders that they don’t have to follow it:
...else ye have to do with me in battle, ill-conditioned, arrogant rabble that ye are; and come ye on, one by one as the order of knighthood requires, or all together as is the custom and vile usage of your breed... |
- The Musical: Man of La Mancha, with showtune standard "The Impossible Dream".
- Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Countless times, Don Quixote's chivalric antics make things only worse. All Don Quixote’s adventures end like this, just to see the first of them:
- Chapter IV Part I: Don Quixote rescues Andres, a boy shepherd who was flogged by his master Juan Haduldo, and trusts Juan to pay Andres his salary (because the knights in Chivalric Romance always keep their word). Just after Don Quixote leaves, Juan brutally flogs Andres and doesn’t pay him.
- New Media Are Evil: Spain at The Cavalier Years had just discovered the printing press, and books were considered this trope. The Book-Burning the MoralGuardians enact at first part chapter VI to cure Don Quixote’s madness has not the darker connotations associated to the trope (and it’s full of TakeThats against bad written booksI.
- At chapter IV of the Second Part, Don Quixote and Samsom Carrasco discuss Fallen Creator (In-Universe). Don Quixote notices reputed writers that lost prestige when they publish their works on the new printing presses. Carrasco explains that a printed book makes easier to explore for any kind of error, and Fan Dumb is always envy of great creators, because they have never produced a book. (Incidentally, Cervantes get a lot of critiques because the first part of Don Quixote was plagued with SeriesContinuityErrors).
- No Fourth Wall: Numerous characters in the second part recognize Don Quixote and Sancho Panza by having read the first part.
- Considering that this was written in the 17th century, it's a textbook case of a trope used avant la lettre.
- Obligatory War Crime Scene: Don Quixote travels to Barcelona, a province of the Spanish Empire facing a Civil War. Sancho get lost at night in a forest whose trees are filled with feet wearing shoes and stocking. Don Quixote calmly explains that the authorities hang outlaws by twenties and thirties when they catch them.
- Oh Crap There Are Fanfics of Us: At chapter LIX of the second part, Don Quixote hears some guys talking about the Fan Fiction Avellaneda wrote about Don Quixote. This is only the beginning of Don Quixote and Sancho continuous attacks against Avellaneda for the Character Derailment in the rest of the novel.
The instant Don Quixote heard his own name be started to his feet and listened with open ears to catch what they said about him, and heard the Don Jeronimo who had been addressed say in reply, "Why would you have us read that absurd stuff, Don Juan, when it is impossible for anyone who has read the First Part of the history of 'Don Quixote of La Mancha' to take any pleasure in reading this Second Part?" |
- Older Than They Think:
- In-Universe: This is only one of the Common Fan Fallacies
Don QuixoteAlonso Quixano falls into in the first chapter of the novel, showing us his descent from Fanboy to Fandumb:- In Part I, Chapter I: Bernardo del Carpio is one of Alonso Quixano's favorite knights, because he found the way to defeat Roland the enchanted: instead of attacking him with a sword, Bernardo simply strangled Roland… Cool, isn’t it? But not as cool as the first time this tale was told, as our narrator remind us,
- In Part I, Chapter I: The giant Morgante is one of
Don QuixoteAlonso Quixano’s favorite characters, because despite being a giant, (and in the chivalry books all giants are arrogant and angry), he is affable and well bred… It’s cool, isn’t it? the whole point is that Alonso Quixano think’s this kind of character is original of his beloved chivalry books, but really it’s not.
- In-Universe: This is only one of the Common Fan Fallacies
- Only Sane Man: Sancho. And even then, he still willingly follows Quixote and even believes some of the ridiculous things he's told, because he's a simple peasant who doesn't know any better.
- Better examples are the unnamed ecclesiastic from chapter XXXI and the unnamed Castilian for chapter LXII, both from part II. They are the only ones who publicly recognize that Don Quixote is a crazy fool, and lampshade that everyone who makes jokes on him is also a crazy fool too.
- Out-of-Character Moment: Lampshaded: In the first part, it's very clear that Sancho Panza is a naïve simpleton. In the second part, Sancho suddenly says very intelligent things to his wife. One of the "narrators" of this tale, seeing this inconsistence, decides to warn us: "The translator of this history, when he comes to write this fifth chapter, says that he considers it apocryphal, because in it Sancho Panza speaks in a style unlike that which might have been expected from his limited intelligence, and says things so intelligent that he does not think it possible he could have conceived them; however, desirous of doing what his task imposed upon him, he was unwilling to leave it untranslated, and therefore he went on to say": This could be considered the beginning of Sancho's slow transformation into a wiser person.
- Pitying Perversion: The Barber and the Curate, two Moral Guardians, and later Loony Fan Sanson Carrásco, whose sincere desire to help that poor fool, Don Quixote and cure his madness is sabotaged by this attitude, rendering all of them into Threshold Guardians. (Also, all three do things to help him that could be easily described as "crazy")
- The Presents Were Never From Santa: At Part I Chapter II, Don Quixote meets a rascally innkeeper who he thinks he is a Castellan (a castle warden) and asks him for Knighting. Ironically, in Real Life, to be knighted as a joke would have disabled Don Quixote to become a real Knight by the rules of the Siete Partidas of Alphonso X the Wise.
- Punny Name: In a 17th century's pun, Quixote means "cuisse", the piece of armor covering the thigh. Modern Spanish form is quijote.
- Don Quixote's real name, Alonso Quijano, is a pun on "quijada" (jaw), as he's also a rather skinny guy.
- Panza means "belly", specifically a big one. Accordingly, Sancho is fat.
- Rocinante comes from "rocín", still used today in Spanish to name any ugly, skinny or generally bad-quality horse.
- Even better: Rocinante is a contraction from "rocín antes", which means that it was a "rocín" before.
- Purple Prose: Parodied and Lampshaded: Cervantes achieved the rare miracle of having a florid style that is clearly understandable. But he recognized and denounced this trope:
- Cervantes denounces this trope in the books of chivalry: We all know that purple prose is annoying to those who read it, but in the chapter I part I, Cervantes ensures us that Alonso Quijano went crazy because he tried to understand what the authors meant, and he imitates the style of one in particular. You can find the quote at the click in the link ... if you dare.
- Another example is obtained in Chapter II, Part I: Don Quixote has begun his lefting his home through a back door and now travels the countryside, thinking about how some wise wizard will write the beginning of his adventure. Don Quixote uses a style perhaps not as exaggerated as some examples of purple prose, but certainly is overdeveloped and fancy. You can find the quote at the link of this trope.
- Random Events Plot: Given that the first part of the novel is a Deconstructive Parody of Chivalric Romance, and those books were not more than a Knight Errant in the road reacting to the events that happened to him, the first part is this (the second part has a plot in Dulcinea’s rescue). Only that instead of being boring or confusing, Cervantes aimed, and was able, to reproduce the feel of Real Life in his book.
- Rashomon Style: At chapter XII of Part I, Don Quixote hears conflicted versions of the story of Chrysostom and Marcela in his way to Chrysostom’s funeral: Shepherd Pedro thinks Marcela is a good person. Ambrosio, Chrysostom’s best friend, calls her cruel, but admits it’s an Informed Flaw. Chrysostom poem claims he is a Love Martyr and Marcela is a cruel Ice Queen. At the end, Marcela claims she is So Beautiful It's a Curse and he has the right, as a free woman, to reject anyone. Nobody says, but everybody implies, Spurned Into Suicide.
- Reality Ensues: This is what happens when an aging nobleman with little fighting skills and crappy armaments imagines himself a knight-errant.
- Retcon: In Part II, Cervantes tried to correct some of the most glaring continuity errors of the first book, particularly the mysterious disappearance of Sancho's donkey.
- Revealing Coverup, parodied by the MoralGuardians who become ThresholdGuardians: In his first sally, Don Quixote. doesn’t find any dragon, enchanter nor any Damsel in Distress. He is very disappointed when he comes back to his house, where their family and two MoralGuardians have made a Book-Burning of his Chivalric Romance books. To avoid Don Quixote’s ire, the MoralGuardians advise the family to tell him, literally, that A Wizard Did It. That excuse was Don Quixote’s first contact with the Medieval European Fantasy he so desperately wanted to live! If the Moral Guardians would have tell him the truth, he would never have persevered in his madness.
- Sarcastic Devotee: Sancho Panza deconstructs this trope, see Deadpan Snarker.
- Satire, Parody, Pastiche: Cervantes, both in the prologue and in the the novel itself parodies the way contemporary writers wrote, satirized characters, books, made allusions to many, MANY other works and made a huge impact at the time it was printed.
- Scheherazade Gambit: Sancho tries to do this to Quixote to keep him from charging against a watermill (Quixote had something with mills). He forgets about what he was telling.
- It's actually even funnier than that: the story he tells Quixote was a common children's story of the time, and is supposed to work like a lullaby, repeating a useless element over and over until the kid goes to sleep.
- Screening the Call: If Quixote's reading induced insanity is his Call to Adventure, then the attempt to burn his books is an attempt to Screen The Call.
- Secret Test of Character: Deconstructed in the Novel Within A Novel "The Ill-Advised Curiosity" where Anselmo asks his best friend Lotario to test the fidelity of his wife, Camila. In any other story, Lucinda will pass the test and everyone will have lived Happily Ever After. In the novel, Lucinda and Lotario became lovers causing the tragic deaths of the three.
- Series Continuity Error: For a book that only has one continuation, there are various examples of those errors. Then again, Cervantes was mocking fans who put too much attention to continuity… There are two types:
- Lampshaded In-Universe:
- Chapter I, part I: Alonso Quijano has some continuity questions about The tale of Don Belianis of Greece:
- Lampshaded In-Universe:
- Played straight In the book (and conversed by Don Quixote, Sancho and Sansón Carrasco):
- Played straight In the book:
- Sancho talks about using a sword at Part I Chapter XV and the Barber mentions Sancho has a sword in his hips at Part I Chapter XLVI, but at Part II Chapter XIV, Sancho denies ever having a sword.
- The name of Sancho’s wife changes at the same page in Part I Chapter 7 (Juana Gutiérrez and Mari Gutiérrez), in Part I Chapter LII (Juana Panza), changes again at Part II Chapter V (Teresa Panza and Teresa Cascajo) and in Part II Chapter L (Teresa Panza).
- At the first part, Don Quixote knows that Dulcinea del Toboso is a Shadow Archetype based on Aldonza Lorenzo. In the second part, he claims he never has seen her.
- The lad who helps them with the field and the marketplace.
- Serious Business: This is the theme of the novel: The first part, only Don Quixote is affected with the chivalry lifestyle, but in the second, a sizable portion of the Spanish population takes it far more seriously than it should be. There are various examples:
- In-Universe:
- Don Quixote: Type I: The very last stage of
Don QuixoteAlonso Quixano obsession with chivalry books and the first stage of his true madness (and also to show exactly how out of touch with reality he really is): Part I, Chapter I shows us how important are the chivalry books for him: he will have given his housekeeper and his niece to kick that traitor of Ganelon. (Ganelon was the guy who betrayed Roland at Roncesvalles and who becomes, with Mordred and Judas, one of the great exemplars of treachery for the mediæval period). - The Duke and the Duchess: They spent a lot of money and organize truly Massive Multiplayer Scam (Dulcinea’s enchantment has all the people in their castle, the Insula Barataria involucres all the people of a town) only to laugh at Don Quixote and Sancho.
- The Cousin, a Know-Nothing Know-It-All who is a researcher of Little-Known Facts and author of three books (still not published): All of great utility and no less entertainment to the nation. With quotes from more than twenty five authors.
- The Spanish Inquisition: To have an enchanted head that answers questions could lead to the ignorant vulgar should be scandalized. So it orders it to be destroyed.
- Don Quixote: Type I: The very last stage of
- In-Universe:
- Shallow Love Interest: Aldonza Lorenzo a.k.a Dulcinea Del Toboso, who isn't even aware of her status as love interest of Don Quixote.
- This trope is parodied and exaggerated with Dulcinea Del Toboso, a lover that Don Quixote imagined from a peasant girl called Aldonza Lorenzo. She represents for him all that is lovable about a woman without any of the defects of a real person, and he only imagined her so he can undertake adventures in her name. She becomes the illogical extreme of this trope, because nobody is more shallow than a Shadow Archetype.
- Shout-Out: Hundreds upon hundreds of them, although many would be unrecognizable to the modern reader.
- Chapter I part I mentions Aristotle, philosopher widely regarded as the greatest abstract thinker of Occidental Civilization. Even he has no chance to make sense of the purple prose that plagued Chivalry Books. Also in the Chapter III part II, Don Quixote's opinion about history and poetry reflects the theory exposed in Aristotle's Poetics.
- Show Within a Show (in Part 1, a number of short stories told by other characters). For example, "The Ill-Advised Curiosity" is a true novel within the novel, and the priest reads it to all the guests in the inn completely through two chapters of the first part.
- Simpleminded Wisdom: Sancho Panza has this trait.
- Slapstick: And charging against a windmill is just in chapter 8 of 126 chapters!!!
- Small Reference Pools: This trope is defined and lampshaded by Cervantes in the Preface of the Author, Part I, denouncing a common author trick: Any Spanish author of XVII century only needs to mention the most obvious and world-renowned people or facts. And he doesn't even need to know those facts, he could only research a book that quotes famous authors from A to Z and just insert the examples in his own book, because some readers are simple enough to believe that the author can use all those quotes in any book.
- So Beautiful It's a Curse: Deconstructed with Marcela: At Chrysostom’s funeral, she makes a speech claiming she is not an Ice Queen, and she states her beauty is a drawback, in a remote and inaccessible forest, claiming that she is free and if Chrysostom chose to be Spurned Into Suicide was his decision… but no one of her audience (made by men) hears anything and they are only interested in Marcela’s beauty. They want to follow her, but Marcela, being Dangerously Genre Savvy, was in a remote point to prevent them to follow her… because she has been through this situation all her life.
- The Spanish Inquisition: Cervantes, a contemporary spanish author shows ot his institution as responsible for ensuring that the Spanish captives by the Moors who returned to Spain did not present traces of having converted to Islam, and as a Moral Guardian full of Pitying Perversion for the masses at their charge when a noble makes a Practical Joke with an enchanted head. However, the book would never have been published if the institution was showed at a worse light.
- Stop Helping Me!: Many characters (most memorably Andres, the flogged boy) react this way to Don Quixote's interference.
'For the love of God, sir knight-errant, if you ever meet me again, though you may see them cutting me to pieces, give me no aid or succour, but leave me to my misfortune, which will not be so great but that a greater will come to me by being helped by your worship, on whom and all the knights-errant that have ever been born God send his curse |
- Sweet Polly Oliver: Dorotea, from the first part, plays this trope perfectly straight. At the second part, this trope will be parodied and deconstructed
- The daughter of Don Pedro de la Llana parodies this trope showing us will use it in Real Life: The Ingenue who has been in a Gilded Cage all his life and asked his brother to show her the world… that is, the little town they live… at night. Justified because she is Just a Kid who has lived in a Gilded Cage and really doesn’t know better.
- Clingy Jealous Girl Claudia Jeronima deconstructs this trope: She is wearing man’s clothes because she has murdered a supposedly unfaithful lover and Barcelona is having a Civil War. She wants to conceal her identity so her family would not be harmed by Revenge.
- The Exile Ana Felix deconstructs this trope: Fleeing for Spain for having muslim fathers, she enters Algiers, where the King blackmails her to steal his family treasure hidden in Spain. So she wears man’s clothes to come back with the King’s soldiers and mislead the Spanish authorities.
- Take That: AND HOW! Cervantes uses his book to attack several people and institutions of the XVII century, always in a funny manner:
- Unfortunately for him, Cervantes was not a very known author when he published "Don Quixote" at 1605, and given the extremely difficult Spanish literary environment of his time, he didn't get any commendatory verses for his book from any (famous) author, so he wrote a dialog in the Preface of the Author, Part I, where Cervantes explains this setback and despairs to publish "Don Quixote". His friend advised him to pretend that Cervantes has done extensive research to impress his audience, when in fact he will take advantage of some tricks used by several renowned Spanish writers of his time (Cervantes never mentions names so as not to disturb famous Spanish authors like Lope de Vega).
- The first advice of his friend is to make himself (Cervantes) the commendatory verses, and then claim they were made from some famous or powerful characters of his time, even claiming that some of them were famous poets, when the truth is that a lot of the powerful Spanish people of his time could not be poets, and even were illiterate.
- The second advice of his friend is to include sentences of Latin that seem to be profound (and so impress his lectors), but in reality, those Latin sentences were very common and any author of his time could find them with very little effort.
- Cervantes also mocks the authors attributed to another author some famous line by way of Popcultural Osmosis (in the Spain of the 17th century), despite the fact that those lines were never uttered by them. Cervantes’s friend mentions a line that a lot of people attributed to Horace, but this friend really has done the research, so he mentions "or whoever said it".
- Last but no least, in his prologue of part I, Cervante’s friend mentions a common author trick of his time: Any spanish author of XVII century only needs to mention the most obvious and world-renowned people or facts. And he doesn´t even need to know those facts, he could only research a book that quotes famous authors from A to Z and just insert the examples in his own book, because some readers are simple enough to believe that the author can use all those quotes in any book. Critics have said that this last reference was an attack to Lope de Vega, the most influential Spanish playwright and writer, and very successful and famous in their own time. (Cervantes himself was not successful, but he is one of the most influential universal writers).
- An attack to the (then) famous chivalry book's author Feliciano de Silva's composition, "for their lucidity of style and complicated conceits were as pearls in his sight", Feliciano's style was an example of how to sacrifice Utility in the altar of Eloquence , writing sentence after sentence of redundant synonyms once and again, making it so confuse that you cannot even try to comprehend it.
- In Chapter I Part I, the narrator notes that the history of Reinaldos de Montalban mentions an idol of Mahomet made of gold.
- Unfortunately for him, Cervantes was not a very known author when he published "Don Quixote" at 1605, and given the extremely difficult Spanish literary environment of his time, he didn't get any commendatory verses for his book from any (famous) author, so he wrote a dialog in the Preface of the Author, Part I, where Cervantes explains this setback and despairs to publish "Don Quixote". His friend advised him to pretend that Cervantes has done extensive research to impress his audience, when in fact he will take advantage of some tricks used by several renowned Spanish writers of his time (Cervantes never mentions names so as not to disturb famous Spanish authors like Lope de Vega).
- Technical Pacifist
- The Alleged Steed: Rocinante. So much so that his name is synonymous with busted old nags in Spain.
- The Dulcinea Effect (pretty much the Trope Maker -and Trope Namer- for this.)
- The Ghost: There are two examples:
- Played straight with Aldonza Lorenzo, a young peasant girl from a town called Toboso, who is blissfully unaware that Don Quixote's had a crush on her. She never appeared in neither parts of the novel, only was referred to by other characters.
- Parodied by Dulcinea del Toboso, the imaginary love interest of Don Quixote. Since the first part of the novel, Don Quixote imagines her as a beatiful noblewoman who lives in a castle, or in other words, a person completely different from Aldonza Lorenzo. This imaginary entity is a literal ghost, but it's mentioned so many times across the novel that she can be considered the third protagonist besides Don Quixote and Sancho. Besides, in the second part, one of the plot points is Don Quixote's quest to disenchant Dulcinea and to find her at last, even when he knows he imagined her, this is another proof of Don Quixote's madness.
- Threshold Guardians: Deconsctructed by the curate and the barber: Don Quixote family asks help as MoralGuardians to destroy Don Quixote delusions, but their Pitying Perversion makes them pull a Revealing Coverup that enforces those delusions, making them Threshold Guardians.
- Those Two Guys: Pedro Perez, The priest, and Maese Nicholas, The barber. Better known as "The priest and the barber", two guys from the same town as Don Quixote, who are fond of chivalry books, like Don Quixote, and that are completely sane, unlike Don Quixote, and... well, you would not find any other personality trait in them.
- TV Never Lies: This is one of the themes of the novel: Juan Palomeque, the innkeeper, believes that Chivalric Romance stories are real because these are printed in books approved by the Royal Council:
"But consider, brother," said the curate once more, "there never was any Felixmarte of Hircania in the world, nor any Cirongilio of Thrace, or any of the other knights of the same sort, that the books of chivalry talk of; the whole thing is the fabrication and invention of idle wits, devised by them for the purpose you describe of beguiling the time, as your reapers do when they read; for I swear to you in all seriousness there never were any such knights in the world, and no such exploits or nonsense ever happened anywhere." |
- Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny: Alonso Quijano and his friends the curate and the barber were victims of this phenomenon and in the very first chapter of part I we learn that they had a lot of discussions about who had been the better knight... Keep in mind this book was written more than four hundred years ago!
- Undying Loyalty: Sancho Panza claims to have this for Don Quixote… even when Sancho considers several times in the book to left Don Quixote service, but he is so fond of him he never does it.
...if I were wise I should have left my master long ago; but this was my fate, this was my bad luck; I can't help it, I must follow him; we're from the same village, I've eaten his bread, I'm fond of him, I'm grateful, he gave me his ass-colts, and above all I'm faithful; so it's quite impossible for anything to separate us, except the pickaxe and shovel. |
- Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist: The first part of the novel settles Don Quixote characterization as a Lord Error-Prone: he almost kills the Biscayan at chapter IX and maimed for life the Licentiate at chapter XIX. This makes easier to read the continuous Humiliation Conga in practically all the chapters for Don Quixote. Misaimed Fandom insisted in seeing him as the much more sympathetic Mad Dreamer. The second part deconstructs the Mad Dreamer into a Wide-Eyed Idealist that everyone else mocks mercilessly because Humans Are Bastards.
- Unreliable Narrator: Several layers of this, actually.
- Lampshaded: In the very first paragraph, Don Quixote's literary portrait has the narrator NOT telling us the name of Don Quixote's town, and the narrator admits he doesn't know very well if his name was Quixada, Quesada or Quexana. For the people of the seventeen century, this was an infringement of a very well known rule of the literary portrait, and so they immediately had the real impression that the author was a liar. Also, the original author (Cide Hamete Benengeli) and the Translator (an anonymous moor) comment the text when the plot is being implausible, and the second author (Cervantes), constantly remind us that this is a true history. All these tricks show that Cervantes clearly want the reader realizes that this tale cannot be true.
- Not to mention the fact that the so called original author has an Arabic name. At that time in Spain, Arabs were thought to be liars.
- Lampshaded: In the very first paragraph, Don Quixote's literary portrait has the narrator NOT telling us the name of Don Quixote's town, and the narrator admits he doesn't know very well if his name was Quixada, Quesada or Quexana. For the people of the seventeen century, this was an infringement of a very well known rule of the literary portrait, and so they immediately had the real impression that the author was a liar. Also, the original author (Cide Hamete Benengeli) and the Translator (an anonymous moor) comment the text when the plot is being implausible, and the second author (Cervantes), constantly remind us that this is a true history. All these tricks show that Cervantes clearly want the reader realizes that this tale cannot be true.
- Up to Eleven: Every major female character on Part 1 tops the beauty of all preceding ladies of the Novel. Even when the previous most beautiful girls are present, everyone is amazed by the incomparable beauty of the newly introduced, challenging the reader to imagine them increasingly better good looking. It finally peaks with Leandra, whose beauty was famous even in the halls of the royalty of distant cities. It seems it "overflows" in Part II, where the person Sancho chooses to be the new Dulcinea is described as the ugliest woman you can imagine. How? A Wizard Did It! and the plot becomes to try to disenchant her.
- Very Loosely Based on a True Story: The Captive's Tale is loosely based on the author's own life.
- Victimized Bystander: Most of the people Don Quixote encounters fall in this trope, espacialy Sancho.
- Walking the Earth: Well, they try to.
- Wanting Is Better Than Having: Don Quixote perceives this as a common theme for a knight and his lady. Part II, Chapter XXXII:
" I am in love, for no other reason than that it is incumbent on knights-errant to be so; but though I am, I am no carnal-minded lover, but one of the chaste, platonic sort". |
- All the first part of the novel, Sancho has ride with Don Quixote under the promise of a governorship. At chapter VII of the second part, Sancho demands a salary for his work. Don Quixote claims that he had never read a Chivalry book where a squire would get a wage and he will never disturb the ancient usage of Knight – Errantry, so he invokes this trope telling Sancho:
"and bear in mind, my son, that a good hope is better than a bad holding, and a good grievance better than a bad compensation" |
- Wacky Wayside Tribe: The last chapters of the First Part are dedicated to solve a Romantic Plot Tumor, reading a Novel Within A Novel named "The Ill-Advised Curiosity" and to hear the tale of the Captive Captain, leaving Don Quixote as a mere spectator in his own book. In the Second Part In the Second Part Cervantes makes a Author's Saving Throw when Don Quixote opines:
- What Would X Do?: Parodied when Don Quixote invokes Achilles in His Tent in the Sierra Morena, he asks himself What would two KnightInShiningArmors do? The catch is that being a deconstruction, Don Quixote must choose between the Knight in Shining Armor played straight (Amadis cries and prays for days because his lady Oriana doesn’t want to see him anymore) and the Knight in Shining Armor deconstruction (Roland went mad and killed humans, animals and plants when he discovered princess Angelica slept with Medoro).
- Where the Hell Is Springfield?: First line: "In a village of La Mancha the name of which I have no desire to recall." It's even lampshaded in the very last chapter: Part II, chapter 74: "Such was the end of the Ingenious Gentleman of La Mancha, whose village Cide Hamete would not indicate precisely, in order to leave all the towns and villages of La Mancha to contend among themselves for the right to adopt him and claim him as a son, as the seven cities of Greece contended for Homer".
- Which, guess what, is what happened.
- Wide-Eyed Idealist: Quixote.
- Well, it is where the word 'quixotic' comes from...
- This trope is severely deconstructed: In the first part, Don Quixote cares more for fulfilling his fantasies than for anyone else. He confides that the farmer Haduldo will stop floggin the boy Andrés and that the Galley slaves he liberates will be grateful enough to make him a favor. (They´re not). His actions make him the original Lord Error-Prone. In the second part is even worse: he really acts For Happiness and after some Massive Multiplayer Scam aventures that convince him he is a real Knight Errant he must face the sad fact that he has not helped anyone and therefore, all those Chivalric Romance tropes were Blatant Lies. This is so heartbreaking that he becomes Bored with Insanity and dies. Being called "Quixotic" is not always a good thing.
- A Wizard Did It: All over the place in the books Don Quixote reads, so naturally when reality blatantly deviates from how he imagines it, he assumes that enchanters are behind it.
- Much more literally, when the priest and the barber burn Don Quixote's books, they tell him that a wizard stole them. Don Quixote goes off to find the wizard.
- Wrong Genre Savvy: Probably the Trope Maker.
- You Keep Using That Word / Buffy-Speak: Sancho doesn’t really understand that the insula he was promised as a Standard Hero Reward by Don Quixote means an island, as we see at Chapter II of the Second part:
"May evil insulas [islands] choke thee, thou detestable Sancho," said the niece; "What are insulas [islands]? Is it something to eat, glutton and gormandiser that thou art?" |
- You Watch Too Much X: Even when Quixote could be the Ur Example and Trope Maker for this trope, in the novel this is a Unbuilt Trope: the Stock Phrase never appears in the novel, and Don Quixote is not Genre Savvy but Wrong Genre Savvy: When in some situation Don Quixote comments about how similar situation have happened in the tales he has read in his chivalry books , the people hearing him don’t answer with “You read too much X”. Even so, there are some examples that are very near to this situation, and the fact that Don Quixote read too much and that drove him to believe that he was a knight errand is the core of the novel, and is lampshaded by the narrator since the very beginning (Chapter I Part I).
- ↑ Alfonso de Madrigal, philosopher whose works "have more than twenty volumes.".