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The Book Burning — Don Quixote

Don Quixote - The Book Burning

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

Don Quixote

The Book Burning

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Analysis by the Wide Reads editorial team·Reviewed against the source text·Updated December 3, 2025

Summary

The Book Burning

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

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While Don Quixote sleeps, the curate, barber, housekeeper, and niece enter the library that poisoned his mind. The housekeeper brings holy water against magician revenge. The niece and housekeeper demand total destruction; the curate insists on reading titles first. What follows is not ignorant zealotry but a literary trial run by men who know these romances intimately.

Book by book they judge. Amadis of Gaul is spared as the best of its kind. Esplandian flies out the window to start the bonfire pile. Palmerin of England is preserved like a treasure. Tirante el Blanco excites the curate with knights who eat, sleep, and die in beds. Pastoral poetry survives with cuts. The women keep calling for the yard; the men keep finding exceptions.

By the end the curate is exhausted. He condemns every remaining volume as contents uncertified, sight unseen. Then the barber holds up The Tears of Angelica, and even the tired judge weeps at the thought of burning a great poet. The chapter ends with verdicts pronounced and piles growing in the yard while Quixote still sleeps, the stories already inside him.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Recognizing Curated Destruction

When someone you love is spiraling, the first impulse is to delete whatever fed the obsession. The curate and barber spare Amadis and Cervantes's Galatea while Esplandian flies into the yard, then condemn every unchecked title as contents uncertified until The Tears of Angelica forces one last reprieve. Ask whether you are removing a source or treating a mind that has already absorbed the source.

Coming Up in Chapter 7

Don Quixote erupts mid-dream shouting for knights to join the tourney, halting the curate's midnight book examination; by morning the barber seals the library door.

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Original text
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Chapter 06

The Book Burning

OF THE DIVERTING AND IMPORTANT SCRUTINY WHICH THE CURATE AND THE BARBER MADE IN THE LIBRARY OF OUR INGENIOUS GENTLEMAN He was still sleeping; so the curate asked the niece for the keys of the room where the books, the authors of all the mischief, were, and right willingly she gave them. They all went in, the housekeeper with them, and found more than a hundred volumes of big books very well bound, and some other small ones. The moment the housekeeper saw them she turned about and ran out of the room, and came back immediately with a saucer…

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Key Quotes & Analysis

"Here, your worship, señor licentiate, sprinkle this room; don’t leave any magician of the many there are in these books to bewitch us in revenge for our design of banishing them from the world."

— The Housekeeper

Context: Before the library scrutiny begins

She treats the books as active supernatural threats. Fear of the object replaces diagnosis of the reader.

In Today's Words:

Bless the room before we touch them, or the magic in these pages will curse us for burning them The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today, wherever someone bends circumstances to fit a story they cannot put down The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today,

"open the window and fling it into the yard and lay the foundation of the pile for the bonfire we are to make."

— The Curate

Context: Sentencing Esplandian after sparing Amadis

Even the literary judge burns by lineage. Merit saves the father; the son goes to the pile.

In Today's Words:

Throw it out the window and start the bonfire stack The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today, wherever someone bends circumstances to fit a story they cannot put down The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today, wherever someone bends circumstances to fit a story they

"That Cervantes has been for many years a great friend of mine, and to my knowledge he has had more experience in reverses than in verses."

— The Curate

Context: Examining The Galatea

The author enters his own novel to joke about failure. Friendship buys mercy censorship would deny strangers.

In Today's Words:

I know Cervantes. Life beat him harder than poetry ever rewarded him The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today, wherever someone bends circumstances to fit a story they cannot put down The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today, wherever someone bends circumstances to fit a

"decided that, “contents uncertified,” all the rest should be burned; but just then the barber held open one, called “The Tears of Angelica."

— Narrator

Context: Closing movement when the curate is too tired to keep judging

Fatigue ends nuance. Batch condemnation arrives until one famous title forces a last exception.

In Today's Words:

He gave up reading and ordered the rest burned unseen, until one book title stopped him cold The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today, wherever someone bends circumstances to fit a story they cannot put down The same dynamic turns up in offices, relationships, and public life today, wherever someone

Thematic Threads

Curated Destruction

In This Chapter

While Don Quixote sleeps, the curate, barber, housekeeper, and niece enter the library that poisoned his mind.

Development

This chapter pushes the pattern into visible action and consequence.

In Your Life:

You may recognize this pattern when stress removes the polite version of a situation.

Identity

In This Chapter

Characters defend who they are or who they pretend to be when challenged.

Development

Fantasy and reality collide around name, rank, and role.

In Your Life:

You might cling to a version of yourself that no longer matches your choices.

Class

In This Chapter

Rank, money, and reputation decide who is heard, protected, or punished.

Development

Social order shapes every rescue, betrayal, and humiliation here.

In Your Life:

You see this when status decides whose account of events becomes official.

You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.

  1. 1

    Why does the housekeeper bring holy water and a sprinkler to the library before the book burning begins?

    ▶One way to read it

    She fears the books contain magicians who might bewitch them in revenge for destroying the volumes. Her superstition treats literature as literally magical.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    What does it reveal that the curate knows these romance books so well he can quote characters and plot details from memory?

    ▶One way to read it

    The supposed cure for Don Quixote's madness comes from someone equally steeped in the same stories. The curate's expertise undermines his authority as rational judge.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where do you see people today demanding total destruction while experts insist on making careful distinctions?

    ▶One way to read it

    Social media debates where some call for complete boycotts while others argue for nuanced evaluation, like discussions about problematic authors or controversial films.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    If you had to choose between preserving something you love that others consider harmful, what would guide your decision?

    ▶One way to read it

    Consider whether the harm is proven or assumed, who benefits from preservation versus destruction, and whether partial solutions exist like the curate's editing approach.

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does the curate's exhaustion at the end suggest about the relationship between stories and the people who try to control them?

    ▶One way to read it

    Stories resist easy categorization and exhaust those who try to judge them systematically. The curate's final blanket condemnation reveals the futility of controlling narrative influence.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Name the Curated Destruction Move

Re-read the chapter summary and write down where curated destruction first appears, who pays for it, and who benefits from keeping it going. Then write one sentence you could say to interrupt the pattern without shaming the person caught in it.

Consider:

  • •Separate the person's worth from the pattern's cost
  • •Notice who has power to stop or fuel the scene
  • •Ask what truth would require someone to give up

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you saw curated destruction in your own life. What finally made the pattern impossible to ignore?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 7: The Enchanter's Revenge

Don Quixote erupts mid-dream shouting for knights to join the tourney, halting the curate's midnight book examination; by morning the barber seals the library door.

Continue to Chapter 7
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The Enchanter's Revenge
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Study guides, teaching tools, themes, and the full library.More ways to read Don Quixote: study guides, teaching tools, and the wider library.

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Life-skill deep dives in Don Quixote

  • ChivalryExplore how Don Quixote examines what happens when outdated codes of honor meet modern reality—and what remains valuable.
  • FriendshipExplore how the friendship between Don Quixote and Sancho Panza reveals what true companionship means across differences.
  • Idealism vs RealityExplore how Don Quixote teaches the tension between noble ideals and practical reality—when to hold onto your vision and when to adapt.
  • Living Inside a NarrativeExplore Part II
  • Madness and SanityExplore how Don Quixote blurs the line between madness and sanity—questioning who truly sees the world more clearly.
  • The Power of StoriesExplore how Don Quixote reveals how stories shape identity, reality, and action—for better and worse.
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