[The History of Don Quixote<br> Vol. I<br> Complete by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra]@TWC D-Link book
The History of Don Quixote
Vol. I
Complete

PART I, Complete
64/74

Sancho's curt comments can never fall flat, but they lose half their flavour when transferred from their native Castilian into any other medium.

But if foreigners have failed to do justice to the humour of Cervantes, they are no worse than his own countrymen.

Indeed, were it not for the Spanish peasant's relish of "Don Quixote," one might be tempted to think that the great humourist was not looked upon as a humourist at all in his own country.
The craze of Don Quixote seems, in some instances, to have communicated itself to his critics, making them see things that are not in the book and run full tilt at phantoms that have no existence save in their own imaginations.

Like a good many critics now-a-days, they forget that screams are not criticism, and that it is only vulgar tastes that are influenced by strings of superlatives, three-piled hyperboles, and pompous epithets.

But what strikes one as particularly strange is that while they deal in extravagant eulogies, and ascribe all manner of imaginary ideas and qualities to Cervantes, they show no perception of the quality that ninety-nine out of a hundred of his readers would rate highest in him, and hold to be the one that raises him above all rivalry.
To speak of "Don Quixote" as if it were merely a humorous book would be a manifest misdescription.


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