• with manifest signes of MELANCHOLY (1/2)

    From Arthur Neuendorffer@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jul 15 10:54:31 2021
    --------------------------------------------------------------------- https://www.amazon.com/Who-Wrote-Quixote-Francis-Carr/dp/1413448119 http://www.sirbacon.org/Who%20Wrote%20Don%20Quixote.pdf
    .
    . Francis Carr : WHO WROTE DON QUIXOTE?
    CHAPTER EIGHT THE WHOLE A.B.C. AND SAAVEDRA
    .
    <<A real problem for translators occurs. When, in the original text, the author sets out a list of nouns or adjectives in alphabetical order. What is to be done when there is no literal translation or synonym, which has the required first letter? In the
    tale of the Curious Impertinent in Don Quixote ;(Pt.1, ch.34) Camila’s maid, Leonela, tells her not to worry about her affair with Lothario, saying that he has many good qualities, “the whole A.B.C.” He is, she tells her, “amiable, bountifull,
    courteous, dutifull, enamoured, firme, gallant, honorable, illustrious, loyal, milde, noble, honest, prudent, quiet, rich, true, valorous, young and zealous of thine honour.” “The four S.S. which they say every good Lover ought to have” had already
    been mentioned. This could refer to a Spanish proverb which said that he should be *SAGE*, *SINGLE*, *SOLICITOUS* and *SECRETIVE*. And X has been omitted from the list, as, in Leonela ‘s opinion,-it “does not quader well with him, because itsounds
    harshly.” Cuadrar is the Spanish word for “square”, so it must be admitted that, if there was no doubt about Cervantes’s authorship of Don Quixote, this would indicate that the English translator had simply not taken the trouble to find a
    suitable English word at this point. But this is the only time when a Spanish word has been used in the English text. All Shelton’s adjectives in this long list of desirable qualities are well chosen.

    The Spanish text of Cervantes shows clear signs of an imperfect translation. Most of the adjectives chosen are suitable -Agradecido, Bueno, Dadivoso (grateful, good, generous) and so on. But some of the words in this list are out of line. The third
    quality required is Caballero, a gentleman, a noun, not an adjective. Cohen, in his modern translation, unhappy about this break in the sequence of adjectives, substitutes Shelton’s ‘Courteous’. Where Cervantes had to choose a word beginning with a
    P, he has written Principal,meaning principal, or main. Where Shelton has written ‘true’, ‘Cervantes has chosen Tacito, tacit,or implied. The Spanish word for ‘taciturn’ is taciturno, hardly a quality desirable in a lover. There are very few
    words beginning with Y in Spanish; where Shelton wrote ‘young’, Cervantes failed the jump altogether, writing ya esta dicha, ‘it is already said’. Finally, where in the English text we read ‘zealous’, Cervantes has come up with zelador, a
    watchman, or attendant, a word which is usually spelt with a ‘c’, not a ‘z’. As in the words whichstart with ‘y’, there are not many words in Spanish which begin with ‘z’.

    In fact there are no adjectives in this category which Cervantes could have chosen.The whole story of the Curious Impertinent stretches over fifty-two pages. It is set in Italy,not Spain, and it strains the reader’s concentration. It is a detailed
    philosophical analysis of a suspicious husband, a cautious lover and a beloved wife who finally weakens. Whoever wrote Don Quixote was a philosopher, fascinated by the minutiae of mental indecision and by the component elements of friendship and love.
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo2/B12019.0001.001/1:2?rgn=div1;view=fulltext

    THE HISTORY OF THE VALOROVS AND WITTIE KNIGHT-ERRANT,
    DON-QVIXOTE Of the Mancha.

    LONDON Printed by William Stansby, for Ed. Blount and W. Barret. 1612. ........................................................
    Book 4: CHAP. VII. : Wherein is prosecuted the history of the curious impertinent.

    And seeing this is so, let not these scruples & nice thoughts assault or further disturbe your mind, but perswade your selfe that Lothario esteemes you as much as you doe him, and liues with content & satisfaction, seeing that it was your fortune to fal
    into the amorous snare, that it was his good lucke to catch you with his valour and deserts: who not only hath the foure. S S. which they say euery good louer oughtto haue, but also the whole A. B. C. which if you will not credite, doe but listen to me a
    while, and I will repeate it to you by roate. He is as it seemes, and as farre as can iudge amiable, bountifull, courteous, dutifull, enamored, firme, gallant, honourable, illustrious, loyall, milde, noble, honest, prudent, quiet, rich, and the S. S.
    which they say, and besides true, valorous. The X. doth not quader well with him, because it sounds harshly: Y. he is young. And the Z. he is zealous of thine honour. Camila laughed at her maydens A. B. C. and accounted her to bee more practicke in loue
    matters then she her selfe had confessed, as indeed she was, for then she reuealed to her Mistresse, how she and a certaine young man well borne of the Citie did treate of loue one with another: Hereat her Mistresse was not a little troubled in minde,
    fearing that her honour might be greatly indangered by that meanes; she demaunded whether her affections had passed farther then words, and the maid answered very shamelesly and freely that they did: for it is most certaine that this kinde of wretchlesse
    Mistresses doe also make their maydens carelesse and impudent: who when they perceiue their Ladies to faulter, are commonly wont to hault likewise themselues, and care not that the world doe know it. Camila seeing this errour past remedie, could do no
    more but intreate Leonela not to reueale any thing of her affaires, to him she said was her sweet heart; & that she should handle her matters discreetly & secretly, lest they might come to Anselmo or Lotharios notice. Leonela promised to performe her wil,
    but did accōplish her promise in such sort, as she did confirme Camilas feares, that she should lose her credit by her means. For the dishonest & bold Gyrle after that she had perceiued that her Mistres, her proceedings were not such as they were wont,
    grew so hardy as she gaue entrance, and brought her louer into her Maisters house, presuming that although her Ladie kne{W} it, yet would she not da{R}e to discouer it. For th{I}s among other harmes f{O}llow the sinnes of Mis{T}resses, that it makes t{H}
    em slaues to their own{E} seruants, and doth oblige them to conceale their dishonest and base proceedings as it fell out in Camila, who although she espied Leonela not once onely, but sundry times together with her louer in a certaine chamber of the
    house, she not onely dared not to rebuke her for it, but rather gaue her oportunity to hide him, and would remoue all occasions out of her husbands way, whereby he might suspect any such thing.
    ..............................................
    {WRIOTHE} 19
    ..............................................
    But all could not hinder Lothario from espying him once, as he departed out of the house at the breake of the day: who not knowing him, thought at the first that it was a spirit, but when he saw him post away, and cast his cloake ouer his race, least he
    should be known, he abandoning his simple surmise, fell into a new suspiciō which had ouerthrown them all, were it not that Camila did remedie it. For Lothario thought that he whom he had seene issue out of Anselmos house at so vnreasonable an hower,
    had not entred into it for Leonelas sake, nor did he remember then that there was such a one as Leonela in the world, but onely thought that as Camila was lightly gotten by him, so belike she was won by some other. For the wickednesse of a bad woman
    bringeth vsually all these additions, that she looseth her reputatiō euen with him to whom prayed and perswaded she yeeldeth her selfe: and he beleeueth that she will as easily, or with more facility consent to others, and doth infallibly credit the
    least suspicion which thereof may be offered.

    And it seemes that Lothario in this instant was wholy depriued of all reasonable discourse, and quite dispoyled of his vnderstanding, for without pondering of the matter, impatient & kindled by the iealouse rage that inwardly gnawed his bowels, fretting
    with desire to be reuenged on Camila, who had neuer offended him, he came to Anselmo before he was vp, & said to him: know Anselmo that I haue had these many daies a ciuill conflict within my selfe whether I should speake or no, and I haue vsed as much
    violence as I might, to my selfe, not to discouer a thing vnto you, which now it is neither iust nor reasonable I should conceale. Know that Camilas fortresse is rendred and subiect to all that I please to commaund, and if I haue beene somewhat slow to
    informe thee this of truth, it was because I would first see, whether it proceeded of some light appetite in her: or whether shee did it to trie me, and see whether that loue was still constantly continued, which I first began to make vnto her by thy
    order and licence. I did also beleeue, that if shee had beene such as she ought to bee, and her that we both esteemed her, she would haue by this time acquainted you with my importunacy: but seeing that she lingers therein, I presume that her promises
    made vnto mee are true, that when you did againe absent your selfe out of the towne, she would speake with mee in the wardrobe (and it was true, for there Camila was accustomed to talke with him) yet would not I haue thee runne rashly to take reuenge,
    seeing the sinne is not yet otherwise committed th{E}n in thought, & perhaps betweene this and the oportunity she might {H}ope to put it in execution, her mind would be changed, and she repen{T} her selfe of her folly. And therefore seeing that thou hast
    euer f{O}llowed mine aduises partly or wholy, follow and keepe one counsa{I}le that I will giue vnto thee now, to the ende that thou mayest afte{R} with carefull assurance, and without fraud satisfie thine owne {W}ill as thou likest best, faine thy selfe
    to be absent two or three daies as thou art wont, and then conuey thy self cunningly into the wardrobe, where thou maist very well hide thy selfe behind the tapestry, and then thou shalt see with thine owne eyes, and I with mine what Camila will doe; and
    if it be that wickednesse which rather ought to be feared then hoped for, thou maiest with wisedome, silence, and discretion bee the proper executioner of so iniurious a wrong.
    ................................................................
    {WRIOTHE} -54 : Prob. of both {WRIOTHE}s in Part 1 ~ 1 in 600 ---------------------------------------------------------------- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/sley
    .
    {SLEY} : (weaving) The number of ends per inch in the cloth.
    . . . . (weaving) To separate the threads and arrange them. ---------------------------------------------------------------- https://tinyurl.com/2fnnj2u5

    . The Hengwrt ms of Chaucer's Canterbury tales

    Here bigynneth the Nonnes preestes tale of
    . the Cok and Hen / Chauntecler & Pertelote ...........................................
    . This storie / is also trewe I vndertake
    . As is the book/ of Launcelot de Lake
    . That wommen holde / in ful gret reuerence
    . Now wol I / torne agayn to my sentence
    . A Colfox / ful of {SLEY} Iniquitee
    . That in the groue / hadde woned yeres thre ...........................................
    . My story is as true, I undertake,
    . As that of good Sir Lancelot du Lake
    . Who held all women in such high esteem.
    . Let me return full circle to my theme.
    . A coal-tipped fox of {SLY} iniquity
    . That had been lurking round the grove for three -------------------------------------------------------- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reynard_the_Fox

    <<Reynard the Fox is a literary cycle of medieval allegorical Dutch, English, French and German fables. The first extant versions of the cycle date from the second half of the 12th century. The genre is very popular throughout the Late Middle Ages, and
    in chapbook form throughout the Early Modern period. The figure of Reynard is thought to have originated in Lorraine folklore from where it spread to France, Germany, and the Low Countries. An extensive treatment of the character is the Old French Le
    Roman de Renart written by Pierre de Saint-Cloud around 1170, which sets the typical setting. Reynard has been summoned to the court of king Noble, or Leo, the lion, to answer charges brought against him by Isengrim the wolf. Other anthropomorphic
    animals, including Bruin the bear, Baldwin the ass, and Tibert (Tybalt) the cat, all attempt one stratagem or another. The stories typically involve satire whose usual butts are the aristocracy and the clergy, making Reynard a peasant-hero character. The
    story of the preaching fox found in the Reynard literature was used in church art by the Catholic Church as propaganda against the Lollards. Reynard's principal castle, Maupertuis, is available to him whenever he needs to hide away from his enemies.

    Geoffrey Chaucer used Reynard material in the Canterbury Tales; in "The Nun's Priest's Tale", Reynard appears as "Rossel" and an ass as "Brunel". The basic situation concerns the cock Chanticleer, who lives with his three wives in an enclosure on a rich
    man's farm. He is forewarned in a dream of his capture by a predator but is inclined to disregard it, against the persuasion of his favourite, Pinte, who has already caught sight of Renart lurking in the cabbage patch. Eventually the two creatures meet
    and Renart overcomes the cock's initial fear by describing the great admiration he had for the singing of Chanticleer's father. If the son is to equal his father, he explains, he must shut his eyes as he stretches his neck to crow. But when Chanticleer
    obliges, the fox seizes him and makes a run for the woods with the farm workers and a mastiff in pursuit. Chanticleer now advises the fox to turn round and defy them, but when he opens his mouth to do so Chanticleer flies up to safety in a tree. Both
    then blame themselves for the gullibility their pride has led them into.

    In 1481, the English William Caxton printed The Historie of Reynart the Foxe. Reynard is also referenced in the Middle English poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight during the third hunt. Tybalt in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet is named after the cat in
    Reynard the Fox (and is called 'Prince of Cats' by Mercutio in reference to this). Jonson's play Volpone is heavily indebted to Reynard.>>
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo2/B12019.0001.001/1:2?rgn=div1;view=fulltext

    THE HISTORY OF THE VALOROVS AND WITTIE KNIGHT-ERRANT,
    DON-QVIXOTE Of the Mancha.

    LONDON Printed by William Stansby, for Ed. Blount and W. Barret. 1612. ........................................................
    Book 4: CHAP. VII. : Wherein is prosecuted the history of the curious impertinent.

    <<Here Lothario saw that he was entred into the lists, which his friend so much desired, which his aduersarie before him who was with her beautie able to ouercome a whole squadron of armed Knights; see then if Lothario had not reason to feare himselfe?
    but that which he did at the first onset was:

    *to lay his elbow on the arme of his chaire, and his hand on his cheeke*,

    and desiring Camila to beare with his respectlesnesse therein, he said he would repose a little, whilest hee attended Anselmo's comming.>>
    ........................................................
    Book 3, CHAP. IIII. : Wherein are rehearsed the discourses passed betweene Sancho Panca, and his Lord Don-Quixote, with other aduentures worthy the recitall.
    .
    <<By this Don-Quixote arose, and setting his left hand to his mouth, that the rest of his teeth might not fall out, he caught hold on the raignes of Rozinantes bridle with the other, who had neuer stird from his Master: (such was his loyaltie and good
    nature) hee went towards his Squire, that leaned vpon his Asse, *with his hand vnder his cheeke*, like one pensatiue and malecontent. And Don-Quixote seeing of him in that guise, with such signes of sadnesse, said vnto him. Know Sancho that one man is
    not more then another, if he doe not more then another.>> --------------------------------------------
    Book 3, CHAP. XIII. : How the Curate and the Barber put their designe in practise, with many other things, worthy to be recorded in this famous Historie.
    .
    All the house was in a tumult for this sodaine amazement of Luscinda, and as her mother vnclasped her bosome to giue her the ayre, there appeared in it a paper foulded vp, which Don Fernando presently seazed on, and went aside to reade it by the light of
    a torch, and after he had read it, he sate down in a chayre, *laying his hands on his cheeke, with manifest signes of MELANCHOLY* discontent, without bethinking himselfe of the remedies that were applied to his spouse, to bring her againe to her selfe.
    -------------------------------------------- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melencolia_I

    Melencolia I is a large 1514 engraving by the German Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer. The print's central subject is an enigmatic and gloomy winged female figure thought to be a personification of melancholia - melancholy. Holding her head in her hand,
    she stares past the busy scene in front of her. The area is strewn with symbols and tools associated with craft and carpentry, including an hourglass, weighing scales, a hand plane, a claw hammer, and a saw. Other objects relate to alchemy, geometry or
    numerology. Behind the figure is a structure with an embedded magic square, and a ladder leading beyond the frame. The sky contains a rainbow, a comet or planet, and a bat-like creature bearing the text that has become the print's title.
    -----------------------------------------------
    WHO WROTE DON QUIXOTE? By Francis Carr
    Book Review by Mather Walker 2008

    <<When Settlers first came to the New World for a long time they
    huddled along the East Coast before striking out into the great-
    unexplored continent beyond. Baconians, who first came to the New
    World of Francis Bacon, for a long time have huddled along the East
    coast of the Shakespeare works, but now comes Francis Carr. Francis
    Carr has written an important book. With his book Who Wrote Don
    Quixote he strikes off into new territory making himself the Daniel
    Boone, or Simon Kenton of the vast unexplored continent of Francis
    Bacon's concealed writings. To most people Don Quixote is only a
    masterpiece, but Carr sees a mystery in addition to a masterpiece, and
    in his 198-page book Carr makes a full-scale study of this mystery.
    Carr believes Francis Bacon, not Miguel Cervantes, wrote Don Quixote,
    and in a foray, sure to evoke a sense of déjà vu in those pesky
    Baconians who keep pulling the scab off Stratfordian orthodoxy,
    he presents a great deal of evidence to support his contention.

    Carr notes in the case of Cervantes many suspicious circumstances
    reminiscent of those in the case of theShakespeare. Emerson said of
    William Shakespeare, "I cannot marry the man to his verse." Carr says
    of Cervantes I not only cannot marry the man to his prose, I cannot
    even marry his prose to his prose, noting that the sEVERal other works
    under Cervantes' name: The Exemplary Stories, The Tale of Foolish
    Curiosity, La Galatea, The Labor of Persiles, and so on, are of such
    a marked mediocrity they present irreconcilable differences with the masterpiece that is Don Quixote. As icing on the cake Carr observes,
    "There is no manuscript", no letter, no diary, no will, and no
    document that proves that Cervantes wrote Don Quixote", but the
    coup de grace comes when Carr shows us that the book itself states
    emphatically 33 times that Cid Hamet Benengeli, not Cervantes was
    the author. For example, the Thomas Shelton translation,
    in chapter 1 of Book 2 of the Part One of Don Quixote, says:

    . "The historie of Don-Quixote of the Mancha,
    . written by Cid Hamet Benegeli"

    Who was Cid Hamet Benegeli? The book tells that Cyd means Lord.
    Ben, of course, means son, and engeli means'of England'. So Cid Hamet
    Benegeli was Lord Hamet, son of England. Carr notes also that, "To a
    Frenchman, the name, if pronounced Don Quichotte, sounds like Don qui
    s'ôte , the knight who hides himself, or d'on qui s'ôte , by one who
    hides himself." So the book explicitly tells us that the real author
    one who hides himself, namely: LORD BACON, SON OF ENGLAND.

    Moreover, as Carr says, we are told 33 times in Don Quixote that Hamet
    is the real author, a number that has often been associated with
    Bacon. Carr notes that on the title page of the English edition of Don
    Quixote, published in 1612, the name of the publisher, Ed Blounte,
    appears (and also on the second part published in 1620). In view of
    the evidence that Bacon wrote Shakespeare, it is not surprising that
    Carr finds it suspicious that this is the same Ed Blount, who along
    with Isaac Jaggard, is listed as PRINTer of the 1623 First Folio
    edition of the collected works of William Shakespeare
    (and is listed in the colophon as one of the publishers).

    As further evidence that the real author is concealed Carr points to
    the title page of the first Spanish edition of Don Quixote. The title
    page shows a hooded falcon resting on the gloved hand of a man who is
    hidden from view within a cloud. There is a lion in the picture that
    ostensibly symbolizes England. But who is the hidden falconer? On the
    border around the inner picture are the words, "Post tenebras spero
    lucem", i.e., after darkness I hope for light. Signaling yet again
    that something is hidden here. But how can we solve this dark puzzle?
    Chapter 68 of the Second Part of Don Quixote gives us a clue. Don
    Quixote tells Sancho Panza, "Post tenebras spero lucem", and follows
    the Latin words with a translation, "after darkness I expect light."
    It seems that the explanation has been added to help the reader,
    but Sancho still does not understand. The clue comes at this point.
    Sancho launches into a tribute to sleep, and this tribute is
    virtually a paraphrase of the speech about sleep in Macbeth (which
    appeared a few years before the publication of Don Quixote):

    . Sleep that knits up thE RaVEllED slEaVE of caRE,
    . The death of each day's life, sore labour's bath,
    . Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course,
    . Chief nourisher in life's feast.

    (As an additional connection to the Shakespeare works it can be
    noted that the "POST TENEBRAS LUX; after darkness light" legend
    also appeared on the 1600 quarto edition of A Midsummer Nights
    Dream, PRINTed by James Roberts).

    Moreover, Carr establishes a timeline that demonstrates that the
    manuscript of Don Quixote was in England long before it was published
    in Spain. The manuscript of the first part of Don Quixote was in
    England eight or nine years before the book was published in Spain,
    and the second part was translated and registered in London within
    a month of the date it was licensed for publication in Spain. It is
    hardly necessary to note the impossibility implicit in the notion
    that the second part of Don Quixote could have been sent to England
    from Spain, and then translated and made ready for the publisher,
    all in the period of one short month.

    Don Quixote has two parts. The first part was published in Madrid in
    January of 1605. The second part was licensed for publication in
    Madrid on November 5, 1615. Shelton translated both English parts of
    Don Quixote. His first part was published in London in 1612. His
    second part was published in London in 1620. These are subsequent
    to the Spanish publication, HowEVER, Carr cites the following
    statement made by Shelton in his dedicatory letter
    to the first part of Don Quixote:

    "Having translated some five or six years ago,
    the Historie of Don Quixote, out of the Spanish Tongue,
    into English, in the space of forty days"

    This has a very strange implication. If the dedication was written in
    the same year as the publication this would mean the manuscript of the
    book was in London in 1606 or 1607. If the dedication was written when
    the book was registered, in January of 1611, the dates would 1605 or
    1606. On the other hand, Carr notes, the dedication is addressed to
    Lord Walden (Thomas Howard). Thomas Howard was Lord Walden up to 1603
    at which time he was created Earl of Suffolk, and since Shelton was
    dedicating the book to his patron we may be certain he would have been
    careful to get his patron's title right. This indicates the dedication
    was written prior to 1603. If the dedication was written in 1602 the
    "five or six years" would put the manuscript of the book in London in
    1597 or 1596, eight or nine years before it was published in Spain.
    The circumstances in regard to the second part of the book are also
    very suspicious. The second part of the book was registered at the
    Stationer's Company in London on December 5, 1615. It is impossible
    that the text for the second part could have been sent to London
    from Madrid and translated between November 5 and December 5.

    Carr shows this becomes even more suspicious when Thomas Shelton
    is put under the microscope. Carr says, "Who was Thomas Shelton?
    No one knows. Before and after the translation of
    the two parts of Don Quixote, he is an invisible man."

    It is generally acknowledged that the English translation by Thomas
    Shelton was the first translation of Don Quixote in any language, but
    Carr asks the question: was this the first translation from Spanish
    into English, or was the Spanish book actually the first translation
    from English into Spanish? Certainly, if Don Quixote actually
    originated in England the book must have been translated into Spanish
    at some time. Furthermore, since Arabia is used as a blind for
    England, any allusion in the book to this translation would be of
    a translation from Arabic into Spanish. Carr points out that the
    description of precisely such a translation can be found in the book
    itself. In Part One of Don Quixote, chapter 9, in Shelton's text,
    we find a description of the author himself "walking on
    the Exchange of Toledo" and encountering a boy who is selling
    "old quires and scroules written in Arabicall characters":

    "I looked about to view whether I could perceive any
    Moore translated Spaniard that could read them; nor was
    it very difficult to finde there Such an interpreter…
    I requested him to turne me all the Arabicall sheetes…
    That treated of Don-Quixote into Spanish.
    I would pay him What he listed for his paines…
    He translated all the worke in lesse than a moneth and a half."

    The time period given for the translation, Carr notes,
    is practically identical to the forty days given by Shelton
    for his translation of the book into English. Carr points
    that the period given strains credibility and
    was probably a deliberate ploy to move the reader
    to inquire further into the matter.

    A really curious feature of the second part of Don Quixote, noted
    by Carr, is the name of the neighbor of Don Quixote, Thomas Cecial.
    Sir Thomas Cecil was a neighbor and friend of Bacon's. When Bacon
    left Grays Inn for Twickenham in 1595 to escape the plague,
    Richard Cecil, the son of Thomas Cecil accompanied him.

    In his Preface to The Reader the author of Don Quixote says:

    . "I tooke often times my pen in my hand, as not knowing
    what I should write, and being once in a muse with my paper
    before me, my pen in my eare, mine elbow on the table,
    and my hand on my cheeke, imagining what I might write."

    Carr notes that this seems to have been a habitual posture of
    Bacon since the memorial to Bacon erected by Sir Thomas Meautys
    in St Michael's Church, St Albans shows Bacon seated exactly
    as described in the preface to Don Quixote, and in the memorial
    Meautys describes this as the habitual posture of Bacon.
    Meautys tells us [He] "used to sit thus":

    Carr finds in Don Quixote some 70 quotations, or expressions, that are identical or similar to those that appear in the works of Bacon, or Shakespeare, Carr notes that in his De Augmentis Bacon says:

    . "Dramatic poesy, which has the theatre for its world, would be of
    excellent use if well directed. For the stage is capable of no small
    influence both of discipline and of corruption. Now of corruption in
    this kind we have enough, but the discipline has in our time been
    plainly neglected. The action of the theatre, though modern states
    esteem it but ludicrous unless it be satirical and biting, was
    carefully watched by the Ancients that it might improve mankind in
    virtue; and indeed many wise men and great philosophers have thought
    it to the mind as the bow to the fiddle."

    And in Shelton's Don Quixote we find the following:

    "Comedie, as Tully affirmes, ought to be a mirrour of mans life, a
    patterne of manners, and an Image of TRUTH. If wee would passé further
    to examine the divine Comedies that treate of God, or the lives of the
    Saints, what a multitude of false miracles doe the composers devise?

    . The auditour, having heard an artificiall and well ordered Comedy,
    . Would come away delighted with the *JESTs* , & instructed by the
    . TRUTHs thereof; wondering at the successes, grow discreeter by
    . the Reasons, warned by the deceits, become wise by others example,
    . Incensed against vice, and enamoured of virtue;
    . all which affects A good Comedie should stirre up in
    . the hearers minde, were he NEVER so grosse or clownish…
    . It is not possible for the bow to continue still bent:
    . nor can our Humane and fraile nature sustaine it selfe long,
    . without some Helpe of lawfull recreation."

    Carr examines the Spanish and English texts of Don Quixote in detail
    and finds numerous indications that the English text came first. Not
    only this, but he even examines the topology of Don Quixote and finds
    many indications that the landscape through which Don Quixote wanders
    in his quest is actually the landscape of England instead of the
    landscape of Spain. One example of this is the windmill episode,
    which has become the most celebrated incident in the whole work.

    Immediately before going forth on his adventure where he encountered
    the windmill Quixote's barber, cook, and niece have thrown out and
    burned his books, and even blocked up and hidden the door to his
    library. His niece tells him that an enchanter who rode on a serpent,
    has destroyed the books. She says his name was Muniaton, but Don
    Quixote says he was Freston. Then when he goes he comes to a landscape
    where there are 30 or 40 windmills, but Quixote says they are really
    giants. Carr notes that near the village of Friston in Sussex, a
    village that was originally spelt as Freston is a figure of a giant,
    227 feet high, known as the long Man of Wilmington, who according to
    one legend was the giant of Friston (Freston), nearby stood an old
    windmill, and there are a number of windmills in the neighborhood.
    Carr also notes that one of the traditional interpretations of the
    Long Man of Wilmington is that he is the Sun God, and that Muniaton
    can be interpreted to mean the wisdom-enhanced spirit of the Sun. So
    Carr says, "in the county of Sussex, in the south-eastern corner of
    England, only sixty miles from London, we are in a land of windmills,
    of giants, of old legends and tales of singlecombat." And he adds
    that nearby is a small, deep pool of clear water and that there
    was a legend that in ancient times a dragon, a creature of enormous
    size that had wings and looked like a serpent was wont to come
    forth from the depths of this hole and prey on the sheep
    in the neighboring areas.

    Charles Fort, aficionado of the roads less traveled, named one of his
    books, The Book of the Damned, because, he said, the facts in the book
    were damned to be ignored and excluded by mainstream scholars &
    scientists. Who Wrote Don Quixote may or may not be a book of
    the damned, but it is certainly a damned interesting book.
    As Francis Bacon said, "Some books are to be tasted, others

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