Abstract

Despite its ludic appearance, “The adventure Don Quixote had with a dead body” (part I, chapter XIX) is one of the most complex pieces of Cervantes’ famous novel. In the midst of a dark night, the Manchegan knight errant confronts an otherwordly procession of robed men carrying torches who transport a dead “knight” on a bier. Don Quixote attacks them to “avenge” the mysterious dead man, discovering they were priests secretly taking the body from Baeza to Segovia. He wants to see face to face the relic of the dead body, but humbly turns his back, avoiding the “close encounter”. Curiously enough, his easy victory renders him sad. Cervantes is alluding to the secret transfer of St. John of the Cross’ body from Úbeda to Segovia, claimed by the devoted widow Doña Ana de Peñalosa. However, Cervantes is also establishing a surprising dialogue with St. John’s symbolic “dark night”, in which he fights as a brave mystical knight. Concurrently, he is quoting the books of chivalry‘s funeral processions and the curiosity of the occasional knight who wants to glance at the dead body. Furthermore, we see how extremely conversant the novelist is with the religious genre of spiritual chivalry, strongly opposed to the loose fantasy of the books of chivalry. Unable to look at St. John’s relic, an authentic knight of the heavenly militia, Don Quixote seems to silently acknowledge that there are higher chivalries than his own that he will never reach. No wonder he ends the adventure with a sad countenance, gaining a new identity as the “Caballero de la Triste Figura”.

Highlights

  • Despite its ludic appearance, “The adventure Don Quixote had with a dead body” is one of the most complex pieces of Cervantes’ famous novel

  • The upsetting night scene sparkled with strange lights inevitably conjures up “the adventure Don Quixote had with a dead body” (I, XIX), which is transferred by men draped in mourning from Baeza to Segovia

  • It is highly probable that Cervantes was aware of the events, since he was in Úbeda for the wheat harvest in 1592, the year after the friar’s death and right before his remains were furtively carried to Segovia in the middle of the night (Sánchez 1990, p. 21)

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Summary

A Bit of History

We are in the middle of a dark night in the year 1593. It is literally the middle of a dark midnight since we have a record of the time of the events. The Court Marshal, Don Juan de Medina Ceballos, is guarding the remains, turned into relic, along with the guards and companions who are carrying it on a litter They avoid the main path to Madrid so as not to be seen, and take different lanes and detours through Jaén, Martos, and Montilla. It is highly probable that Cervantes was aware of the events, since he was in Úbeda for the wheat harvest in 1592, the year after the friar’s death and right before his remains were furtively carried to Segovia in the middle of the night The task would not be easy as Úbeda was logically reluctant to resign the Saint’s corporeal relic After he died, Doña Ana made the appropriate diligences with Friar Nicolás de Jesús María, Vicar General of the Reform, so that the body could be transferred without any suspicion to Segovia, his hometown Úbeda settled for a hand and a tibia of the Reformer’s body (Pasquau 1960, p. 2).

Cervantes and the mystici majores of the Golden Age
Spiritual Chivalry
Cervantes and Saint John of the Cross’s Nocturnal Spiritual Chivalry
A Little More about Saint John of the Cross’s Initiatory Dark Night Strife
Saint John of the Cross
Full Text
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