I wish it were possible, dear reader, to dispense with writing this preface;
for that which I put at the beginning of my "Don Quixote" did not turn out so
well for me as to give me any inclination to write another. The fault lies with
a friend of mineone of the many I have made in the course of my life with my
heart rather than my head. This friend might well have caused my portrait, which
the famous Don Juan de Jauregui would have given him, to be engraved and put in
the first page of this book, according to custom. By that means he would have
gratified my ambition and the wishes of several persons, who would like to know
what sort of face and figure has he who makes bold to come before the world with
so many works of his own invention. My friend might have written under the
portrait"This person whom you see here, with an oval visage, chestnut hair,
smooth open forehead, lively eyes, a hooked but well-proportioned nose, &
silvery beard that twenty years ago was golden, large moustaches, a small mouth,
teeth not much to speak of, for he has but six, in bad condition and worse
placed, no two of them corresponding to each other, a figure midway between the
two extremes, neither tall nor short, a vivid complexion, rather fair than dark,
somewhat stooped in the shoulders, and not very lightfooted: this, I say, is the
author of 'Galatea,' 'Don Quixote de la Mancha,' 'The Journey to Parnassus,'
which he wrote in imitation of Cesare Caporali Perusino, and other works which
are current among the public, and perhaps without the author's name. He is
commonly called MIGUEL DE CERVANTES SAAVEDRA. He was for many years a soldier,
and for five years and a half in captivity, where he learned to have patience in
adversity. He lost his left hand by a musket-shot in the battle of Lepanto: and
ugly as this wound may appear, he regards it as beautiful, having received it on
the most memorable and sublime occasion which past times have over seen, or
future times can hope to equal, fighting under the victorious banners of the son
of that thunderbolt of war, Charles V., of blessed memory." Should the friend of
whom I complain have had nothing more to say of me than this, I would myself
have composed a couple of dozen of eulogiums, and communicated them to him in
secret, thereby to extend my fame and exalt the credit of my genius; for it
would be absurd to expect the exact truth in such matters. We know well that
neither praise nor abuse is meted out with strict accuracy.
However, since this opportunity is lost, and I am left in the lurch without a
portrait, I must have recourse to my own tongue, which, for all its stammering,
may do well enough to state some truths that are tolerably self-evident. I
assure you then, dear reader, that you can by no means make a fricassee of these
tales which I here present to you, for they have neither legs, head, bowels, nor
anything of the sort; I mean that the amorous intrigues you will find in some of
them, are so decorous, so measured, and so conformable to reason and Christian
propriety, that they are incapable of exciting any impure thoughts in him who
reads them with or without caution.
I have called them exemplary, because if you rightly consider them,
there is not one of them from which you may not draw some useful example; and
were I not afraid of being too prolix, I might show you what savoury and
wholesome fruit might be extracted from them, collectively and severally.
My intention has been to set up, in the midst of our community, a
billiard-table, at which every one may amuse himself without hurt to body and
soul; for innocent recreations do good rather than harm. One cannot be always at
church, or always saying one's prayers, or always engaged in one's business,
however important it may be; there are hours for recreation when the wearied
mind should take repose. It is to this end that alleys of trees are planted to
walk in, waters are conveyed from remote fountains, hills are levelled, and
gardens are cultivated with such care. One thing I boldly declare: could I by
any means suppose that these novels could excite any bad thought or desire in
those who read them, I would rather cut off the hand with which I write them,
than give them to the public. I am at an age when it does not become me to
trifle with the life to come, for I am upwards of sixty-four.
My genius and my inclination prompt me to this kind of writing; the more so
as I consider (and with truth) that I am the first who has written novels in the
Spanish language, though many have hitherto appeared among us, all of them
translated from foreign authors. But these are my own, neither imitated nor
stolen from anyone; my genius has engendered them, my pen has brought them
forth, and they are growing up in the arms of the press. After them, should my
life be spared, I will present to you the Adventures of Persiles, a book which
ventures to compete with Heliodorus. But previously you shall see, and that
before long, the continuation of the exploits of Don Quixote and the humours of
Sancho Panza; and then the Weeks of the Garden. This is promising largely for
one of my feeble powers; but who can curb his desires? I only beg you to remark
that since I have had the boldness to address these novels to the great Count of
Lemos, they must contain some hidden mystery which exalts their merit.
I have no more to say, so pray God to keep you, and give me patience to bear
all the ill that will be spoken of me by more than one subtle and starched
critic. Vale.