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Sancho Departs; Altisidora's Serenade — Don Quixote

Don Quixote - Sancho Departs; Altisidora's Serenade

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

Don Quixote

Sancho Departs; Altisidora's Serenade

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

Summary

Sancho Departs; Altisidora's Serenade

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

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Hamete opens with a Moorish complaint that Part Two must stay on Quixote and Sancho without the novels of Part One, requests credit for what he refrains from writing, and calls the labour intolerable drudgery never equal to the author's pains, then records how written counsels dropped into the duke's hands, were read aloud by the duke, and Sancho was dispatched that evening to his island village with a great following.

Sancho, dressed as a lawyer on a mule with Dapple in silk trappings behind, tells Quixote the conducting majordomo is the Distressed One's face; Quixote says the devil will not carry him off yet and bids Sancho report his government, then weeps as Sancho kisses the duke and duchess hands and the household sees him off and Hamete promises two bushels of laughter from how he will govern.

Alone, Quixote refuses the duchess's four flower-like damsels, places a barrier between inclination and virtue, and will sleep in his clothes rather than be undressed; the duchess sends them away and he sups alone, swearing Clavileño was the quietest mount after the journey from Kandy and the duchess says Malambruno burned the horse to end his wandering and establish Quixote's valour by its ashes.

Undressing alone by two candles, he bursts two dozen stitches in a green stocking and would give silver for green silk; Hamete cries O poverty at cracked shoes, mismatched buttons, and crinkled ruffs while Quixote puts on Sancho's travelling boots and goes heavy-hearted to bed missing his squire.

From the grated window he hears Altisidora tell Emerencia she cannot sing since the stranger arrived; Emerencia bids her sing softly though the duchess sleep, and Altisidora's harp ballad mocks the knight in bed, offering petticoats, pearls, and to scratch his poll while naming herself at the end.

Don Quixote sneezes to show he hears, then shuts the window declaring himself dough and sugar-paste to Dulcinea alone, flint to all others, boiled or roast, chaste in spite of all enchanters, and stretches on his bed out of sorts while Hamete turns from the lonely knight to the great Sancho Panza's government.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Reading When Departure and Seduction Run in Parallel

What happens when Sancho departs to his sham island while Don Quixote stays behind for poverty, chastity, and Altisidora's garden serenade. Alone, Quixote refuses the duchess's four flower-like damsels, places a barrier between inclination and virtue, and will sleep in his clothes rather than be undressed; the duchess sends them away and he sups alone, swearing Clavileño was the quietest mount after the journey from Kandy and the duchess says Malambruno burned the horse to end his wandering and establish Quixote's valour by its ashes. That sham governorship and window romance are twin moves in one castle joke.

Coming Up in Chapter 97

The Sun is invoked as Sancho Panza takes possession of his island and begins governing with the majordomo's guidance What follows unsettles everything settled here.

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Original text
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Chapter 96

Sancho Departs; Altisidora's Serenade

LIV. HOW SANCHO PANZA WAS CONDUCTED TO HIS GOVERNMENT, AND OF THE STRANGE ADVENTURE THAT BEFELL DON QUIXOTE IN THE CASTLE It is stated, they say, in the true original of this history, that when Cide Hamete came to write this chapter, his interpreter did not translate it as he wrote it—that is, as a kind of complaint the Moor made against himself for having taken in hand a story so dry and of so little variety as this of Don Quixote, for he found himself forced to speak perpetually of him and Sancho, without venturing to indulge in digressions…

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"intolerable drudgery, the result of which was never equal to the author’s labour"

— Cide Hamete Benengeli (narrator)

Context: Hamete's complaint about writing Part Two

Meta frames Sancho's departure and Quixote's night.

In Today's Words:

Writing one subject forever is intolerable drudgery never equal to the labour 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

"the face of this majordomo of the duke’s here is the very face of the Distressed One."

— Sancho Panza

Context: As Sancho sets out to govern

The island joke stays in the same actor's hands.

In Today's Words:

This majordomo's face is the very face of the Distressed One 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

"I will sleep in my clothes, sooner than allow anyone to undress me."

— Don Quixote

Context: Refusing the duchess's damsels

Chastity becomes locked-door theatre.

In Today's Words:

I will sleep in my clothes sooner than let anyone undress me 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

"Urge me not to sing, Emerencia, for thou knowest that ever since this stranger entered the castle and my eyes beheld him, I cannot sing but only weep;"

— Altisidora

Context: In the garden before the ballad

The castle sets a love plot at the window.

In Today's Words:

Urge me not to sing, Emerencia, since this stranger entered I can only weep 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

Thematic Threads

When the Castle Sends the Governor and the Serenade

In This Chapter

Hamete opens with a Moorish complaint that Part Two must stay on Quixote and Sancho without the novels of Part One, requests credit for what he refrains...

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 Cide Hamete complain that writing only about Don Quixote and Sancho is 'intolerable drudgery' compared to including separate novels?

    ▶One way to read it

    Hamete finds it restrictive to focus on just two characters without the variety of standalone stories he used in Part One. He wants credit for what he restrains himself from writing.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    What does it reveal about the duke and duchess that they read Quixote's private counsels to Sancho and use them to fuel their entertainment?

    ▶One way to read it

    It shows their cruel voyeurism. They violate Quixote's privacy not from malice but from boredom, treating his sincere advice as material for their elaborate joke.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where do you see people today creating elaborate pranks or entertainment at someone else's expense, like the duke and duchess do?

    ▶One way to read it

    Social media pranks, reality TV shows, or workplace hazing often exploit someone's earnestness for others' amusement, turning genuine moments into public spectacle.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    How might someone today handle being serenaded or pursued when they want to stay faithful to someone far away?

    ▶One way to read it

    Like Quixote shutting his window, they might need clear boundaries and quick exits from tempting situations, focusing on their commitment rather than the flattery.

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does Quixote's response to Altisidora's serenade reveal about how idealism handles real temptation?

    ▶One way to read it

    True idealism doesn't negotiate with competing claims. Quixote declares himself 'dough and sugar-paste' to Dulcinea alone, showing that genuine commitment requires absolute boundaries.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Name the When the Castle Sends the Governor and the Serenade Move

Re-read the chapter summary and write down where when the castle sends the governor and the serenade 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 when the castle sends the governor and the serenade in your own life. What finally made the pattern impossible to ignore?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 97: Sancho Takes Possession of Barataria

The Sun is invoked as Sancho Panza takes possession of his island and begins governing with the majordomo's guidance What follows unsettles everything settled here.

Continue to Chapter 97
Previous
The Second Counsels to Sancho
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Sancho Takes Possession of Barataria
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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.

  • Don Quixote Study Guide
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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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