Classics and the Western Canon discussion
Discussion - Don Quixote
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I'm confused and a little disappointed
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Dianna
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Jul 30, 2009 07:36AM

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isn't the second part in your book? my book is part one and part two.
do you remember the scene when dq was maliciously strung up at the inn, left to hang with his feet barely touching rocinante, i think? that was one of the scenes some people felt was similar to the crucifixion in its description. how did you book describe that scen?


Dianna: now, that is weird (that you missed that part somehow); the scene is stretched through several chapters (at least two if I remember right). It was a big issue for DQ, quite understandably: hung by his hands all night from a window... don't blame him for being pissed off (although he explained it of course with some "wicked and jealous magic" :D).
That reminded me of something, a bit OFF, so I apologize. I have my own books (in two parts/volumes), but for some reason I wanted to print out a few parts from a Hungarian library site that theoretically has the whole novel on in my translation. For some mysterious reasons they contracted some of the chapters into, say, 3-4 paragraphs... I have no clue why and why exactly those chapters (among them of course some of those that I find the most intriguing, like the wonderful analysis of the frustrating way the mass media works - around chapter 48 if I remember right). It made me mad, the fact that they do such a thing (can't stand the idea of "simplified" version of any kind of book).
OK, OFF is done, now: ON. I am very curious what happened to Dianna's copy.


Dianna: yes, that's the part you thought you had missed.

"he was standing on Rocinante, his entire arm inside the o;pening and his wrist tied to the lock on the door, extremely uneasy and fearful that if Rocinante moved to one side or the other, he would be left hanging by his arm and so he did not dare move at all...snip(some men came to the inn and one of their horses smelled rocinante and went to her) as soon as the horse moved slightly, DQ's feet. which were close together, slipped from the saddle, and he would have landed on the ground if he had not been hanging by his arm" this caused him so much pain that he believed his hand was being cut off at the wrist or that his arm was being pulled out of its socket; he was left dangling so close to the ground that the tips of his toes brushed the earth,...snip,...he struggled all he could to stretch even farther and touch down, just as those subjected to the torture of the strappado,...
Does that help any?
Books mentioned in this topic
Reina roja (other topics)From Hell (other topics)
El misterio de Marie Rogêt (other topics)