<h2> DEDICATION OF VOLUME II. </h2>
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<h3> TO THE COUNT OF LEMOS: </h3>
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<p>These days past, when sending Your Excellency my plays, that had appeared
in print before being shown on the stage, I said, if I remember well, that
Don Quixote was putting on his spurs to go and render homage to Your
Excellency. Now I say that "with his spurs, he is on his way." Should he
reach destination methinks I shall have rendered some service to Your
Excellency, as from many parts I am urged to send him off, so as to dispel
the loathing and disgust caused by another Don Quixote who, under the name
of Second Part, has run masquerading through the whole world. And he who
has shown the greatest longing for him has been the great Emperor of
China, who wrote me a letter in Chinese a month ago and sent it by a
special courier. He asked me, or to be truthful, he begged me to send him
Don Quixote, for he intended to found a college where the Spanish tongue
would be taught, and it was his wish that the book to be read should be
the History of Don Quixote. He also added that I should go and be the
rector of this college. I asked the bearer if His Majesty had afforded a
sum in aid of my travel expenses. He answered, "No, not even in thought."</p>
<p>"Then, brother," I replied, "you can return to your China, post haste or
at whatever haste you are bound to go, as I am not fit for so long a
travel and, besides being ill, I am very much without money, while Emperor
for Emperor and Monarch for Monarch, I have at Naples the great Count of
Lemos, who, without so many petty titles of colleges and rectorships,
sustains me, protects me and does me more favour than I can wish for."</p>
<p>Thus I gave him his leave and I beg mine from you, offering Your
Excellency the "Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda," a book I shall finish
within four months, Deo volente, and which will be either the worst or the
best that has been composed in our language, I mean of those intended for
entertainment; at which I repent of having called it the worst, for, in
the opinion of friends, it is bound to attain the summit of possible
quality. May Your Excellency return in such health that is wished you;
Persiles will be ready to kiss your hand and I your feet, being as I am,
Your Excellency's most humble servant.</p>
<p>From Madrid, this last day of October of the year one thousand six hundred
and fifteen.</p>
<p>At the service of Your Excellency:</p>
<p>MIGUEL DE CERVANTES SAAVEDRA</p>
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<h2> THE AUTHOR'S PREFACE </h2>
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<p>God bless me, gentle (or it may be plebeian) reader, how eagerly must thou
be looking forward to this preface, expecting to find there retaliation,
scolding, and abuse against the author of the second Don Quixote—I
mean him who was, they say, begotten at Tordesillas and born at Tarragona!
Well then, the truth is, I am not going to give thee that satisfaction;
for, though injuries stir up anger in humbler breasts, in mine the rule
must admit of an exception. Thou wouldst have me call him ass, fool, and
malapert, but I have no such intention; let his offence be his punishment,
with his bread let him eat it, and there's an end of it. What I cannot
help taking amiss is that he charges me with being old and one-handed, as
if it had been in my power to keep time from passing over me, or as if the
loss of my hand had been brought about in some tavern, and not on the
grandest occasion the past or present has seen, or the future can hope to
see. If my wounds have no beauty to the beholder's eye, they are, at
least, honourable in the estimation of those who know where they were
received; for the soldier shows to greater advantage dead in battle than
alive in flight; and so strongly is this my feeling, that if now it were
proposed to perform an impossibility for me, I would rather have had my
share in that mighty action, than be free from my wounds this minute
without having been present at it. Those the soldier shows on his face and
breast are stars that direct others to the heaven of honour and ambition
of merited praise; and moreover it is to be observed that it is not with
grey hairs that one writes, but with the understanding, and that commonly
improves with years. I take it amiss, too, that he calls me envious, and
explains to me, as if I were ignorant, what envy is; for really and truly,
of the two kinds there are, I only know that which is holy, noble, and
high-minded; and if that be so, as it is, I am not likely to attack a
priest, above all if, in addition, he holds the rank of familiar of the
Holy Office. And if he said what he did on account of him on whose behalf
it seems he spoke, he is entirely mistaken; for I worship the genius of
that person, and admire his works and his unceasing and strenuous
industry. After all, I am grateful to this gentleman, the author, for
saying that my novels are more satirical than exemplary, but that they are
good; for they could not be that unless there was a little of everything
in them.</p>
<p>I suspect thou wilt say that I am taking a very humble line, and keeping
myself too much within the bounds of my moderation, from a feeling that
additional suffering should not be inflicted upon a sufferer, and that
what this gentleman has to endure must doubtless be very great, as he does
not dare to come out into the open field and broad daylight, but hides his
name and disguises his country as if he had been guilty of some lese
majesty. If perchance thou shouldst come to know him, tell him from me
that I do not hold myself aggrieved; for I know well what the temptations
of the devil are, and that one of the greatest is putting it into a man's
head that he can write and print a book by which he will get as much fame
as money, and as much money as fame; and to prove it I will beg of you, in
your own sprightly, pleasant way, to tell him this story.</p>
<p>There was a madman in Seville who took to one of the drollest absurdities
and vagaries that ever madman in the world gave way to. It was this: he
made a tube of reed sharp at one end, and catching a dog in the street, or
wherever it might be, he with his foot held one of its legs fast, and with
his hand lifted up the other, and as best he could fixed the tube where,
by blowing, he made the dog as round as a ball; then holding it in this
position, he gave it a couple of slaps on the belly, and let it go, saying
to the bystanders (and there were always plenty of them): "Do your
worships think, now, that it is an easy thing to blow up a dog?"—Does
your worship think now, that it is an easy thing to write a book?</p>
<p>And if this story does not suit him, you may, dear reader, tell him this
one, which is likewise of a madman and a dog.</p>
<p>In Cordova there was another madman, whose way it was to carry a piece of
marble slab or a stone, not of the lightest, on his head, and when he came
upon any unwary dog he used to draw close to him and let the weight fall
right on top of him; on which the dog in a rage, barking and howling,
would run three streets without stopping. It so happened, however, that
one of the dogs he discharged his load upon was a cap-maker's dog, of
which his master was very fond. The stone came down hitting it on the
head, the dog raised a yell at the blow, the master saw the affair and was
wroth, and snatching up a measuring-yard rushed out at the madman and did
not leave a sound bone in his body, and at every stroke he gave him he
said, "You dog, you thief! my lurcher! Don't you see, you brute, that my
dog is a lurcher?" and so, repeating the word "lurcher" again and again,
he sent the madman away beaten to a jelly. The madman took the lesson to
heart, and vanished, and for more than a month never once showed himself
in public; but after that he came out again with his old trick and a
heavier load than ever. He came up to where there was a dog, and examining
it very carefully without venturing to let the stone fall, he said: "This
is a lurcher; ware!" In short, all the dogs he came across, be they
mastiffs or terriers, he said were lurchers; and he discharged no more
stones. Maybe it will be the same with this historian; that he will not
venture another time to discharge the weight of his wit in books, which,
being bad, are harder than stones. Tell him, too, that I do not care a
farthing for the threat he holds out to me of depriving me of my profit by
means of his book; for, to borrow from the famous interlude of "The
Perendenga," I say in answer to him, "Long life to my lord the
Veintiquatro, and Christ be with us all." Long life to the great Conde de
Lemos, whose Christian charity and well-known generosity support me
against all the strokes of my curst fortune; and long life to the supreme
benevolence of His Eminence of Toledo, Don Bernardo de Sandoval y Rojas;
and what matter if there be no printing-presses in the world, or if they
print more books against me than there are letters in the verses of Mingo
Revulgo! These two princes, unsought by any adulation or flattery of mine,
of their own goodness alone, have taken it upon them to show me kindness
and protect me, and in this I consider myself happier and richer than if
Fortune had raised me to her greatest height in the ordinary way. The poor
man may retain honour, but not the vicious; poverty may cast a cloud over
nobility, but cannot hide it altogether; and as virtue of itself sheds a
certain light, even though it be through the straits and chinks of penury,
it wins the esteem of lofty and noble spirits, and in consequence their
protection. Thou needst say no more to him, nor will I say anything more
to thee, save to tell thee to bear in mind that this Second Part of "Don
Quixote" which I offer thee is cut by the same craftsman and from the same
cloth as the First, and that in it I present thee Don Quixote continued,
and at length dead and buried, so that no one may dare to bring forward
any further evidence against him, for that already produced is sufficient;
and suffice it, too, that some reputable person should have given an
account of all these shrewd lunacies of his without going into the matter
again; for abundance, even of good things, prevents them from being
valued; and scarcity, even in the case of what is bad, confers a certain
value. I was forgetting to tell thee that thou mayest expect the
"Persiles," which I am now finishing, and also the Second Part of
"Galatea."</p>
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