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Don Quixote - The Braying Town and the Divining Ape

Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

Don Quixote

The Braying Town and the Divining Ape

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Summary

The Braying Town and the Divining Ape

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

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A traveler tells Don Quixote the story of two town officials who lost a donkey and discovered they could bray perfectly while searching for it. Their innocent talent becomes the town's shame when neighboring villages mock them by braying whenever they see the townspeople. What started as a helpful skill turns into a source of ridicule and even armed conflict between communities. Meanwhile, Master Pedro arrives at the inn with his famous puppet show and a supposedly fortune-telling ape. The ape amazes everyone by 'predicting' that Don Quixote is a great knight and that Sancho's wife Teresa is at home working with flax and drinking wine. Don Quixote remains suspicious, theorizing that Master Pedro has made a deal with the devil to give the ape its powers, since it only knows past and present events, not the future. When asked about Don Quixote's mysterious experience in the Cave of Montesinos, the ape cryptically says it was part true, part false. The chapter explores how our talents can become burdens, how communities create their own identities through shared experiences (even embarrassing ones), and how easily people are deceived by clever tricks that prey on their desire to know the unknown. It shows Don Quixote's continuing struggle to distinguish reality from illusion, while demonstrating that even the most gullible people can sometimes see through deception.

Coming Up in Chapter 98

Master Pedro's puppet show is about to begin, featuring the dramatic tale of Melisendra's rescue. But will Don Quixote be able to simply watch the performance, or will his knight-errant nature compel him to intervene in what he sees unfolding before his eyes?

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Original text
complete·2,853 words
L

V. OF HOW THE GREAT SANCHO PANZA TOOK POSSESSION OF HIS ISLAND, AND OF HOW HE MADE A BEGINNING IN GOVERNING O perpetual discoverer of the antipodes, torch of the world, eye of heaven, sweet stimulator of the water-coolers! Thimbraeus here, Phœbus there, now archer, now physician, father of poetry, inventor of music; thou that always risest and, notwithstanding appearances, never settest! To thee, O Sun, by whose aid man begetteth man, to thee I appeal to help me and lighten the darkness of my wit that I may be able to proceed with scrupulous exactitude in giving an account of the great Sancho Panza’s government; for without thee I feel myself weak, feeble, and uncertain.

1 / 18

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Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Recognizing Talent Weaponization

This chapter teaches how to identify when others turn your strengths into weapons against you.

Practice This Today

This week, notice when someone uses your positive qualities as criticism—like calling your thoroughness 'obsessive' or your helpfulness 'meddling'—and practice naming the pattern out loud.

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"The tale of my wonders must be taken more leisurely and not standing"

— The storyteller

Context: When Don Quixote eagerly asks to hear his story immediately

Shows how good storytellers control the pace and setting to maximize impact. The man knows his story is worth the wait and creates anticipation by making Don Quixote help with chores first.

In Today's Words:

Hold on, this is a good story and I'm going to tell it right - sit down and get comfortable first.

"Don Quixote's bread would not bake, as the common saying is, until he had heard and learned the curious things promised"

— Narrator

Context: Describing Don Quixote's impatience to hear the promised story

Uses a folk saying to show how curiosity can consume us completely. Don Quixote can't focus on anything else until he gets the information he was promised.

In Today's Words:

Don Quixote couldn't concentrate on anything else until he heard what the guy had promised to tell him.

"It was part true and part false"

— The divining ape (through Master Pedro)

Context: When asked about Don Quixote's experience in the Cave of Montesinos

A perfect non-answer that sounds wise but says nothing definitive. This response lets people interpret it however they want while protecting the fortune-teller from being wrong.

In Today's Words:

Some of it happened, some of it didn't - you figure out which parts.

Thematic Threads

Identity

In This Chapter

The town's identity becomes defined by their embarrassing braying ability, showing how communities can become trapped by single defining characteristics

Development

Builds on Don Quixote's struggle with knight identity, now showing how group identity can also become a burden

In Your Life:

You might find your workplace or family defining you by one mistake or quirk rather than your full capabilities

Deception

In This Chapter

Master Pedro's 'fortune-telling' ape uses clever observation and general statements to appear magical, preying on people's desire to know the unknown

Development

Continues the theme of reality versus illusion, but shifts from Don Quixote's self-deception to others deceiving him

In Your Life:

You encounter this in psychics, social media 'experts,' or anyone who uses vague statements to seem more knowledgeable than they are

Social Expectations

In This Chapter

The townspeople feel shame about their braying because of how others perceive them, showing how external judgment shapes self-worth

Development

Deepens the exploration of how society's opinions influence individual behavior and community dynamics

In Your Life:

You might avoid activities you enjoy or hide parts of your personality because of how others might judge you

Class

In This Chapter

Master Pedro profits from entertaining the upper classes with tricks that exploit their curiosity and gullibility

Development

Shows how class dynamics create opportunities for manipulation and entertainment across social boundaries

In Your Life:

You see this in how different social classes are entertained differently, and how 'common sense' varies by social position

Human Relationships

In This Chapter

The conflict between towns shows how shared experiences can both unite communities internally and divide them from outsiders

Development

Explores how relationships form around shared identity markers, even embarrassing ones

In Your Life:

You might find your strongest bonds with people who share your struggles, mistakes, or unusual experiences

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

Discussion Questions

  1. 1

    How did the town officials' ability to bray perfectly go from being helpful to becoming a source of shame?

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why do you think neighboring towns chose braying as their way to mock these people? What does this reveal about how communities create identity through shared experiences?

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where have you seen people's strengths or unique qualities turned against them in your workplace, school, or community?

    application • medium
  4. 4

    If you discovered you had a talent that others might use to embarrass you, how would you decide when and with whom to share it?

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does Master Pedro's puppet show trick teach us about why people want to believe in fortune-telling and easy answers, even when they're suspicious?

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Map Your Talent Vulnerabilities

List three of your strongest skills or unique qualities. For each one, write down how someone could potentially use that strength against you or turn it into criticism. Then identify one trusted person you could safely share each talent with and one situation where you'd want to keep it private.

Consider:

  • •Consider both obvious talents and subtle strengths others might not immediately notice
  • •Think about past situations where your abilities were criticized or minimized
  • •Remember that the same trait can be seen as positive or negative depending on who's judging

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when someone used one of your strengths against you. How did you handle it, and what would you do differently now?

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Coming Up Next...

Chapter 98: When Reality and Fantasy Collide

Master Pedro's puppet show is about to begin, featuring the dramatic tale of Melisendra's rescue. But will Don Quixote be able to simply watch the performance, or will his knight-errant nature compel him to intervene in what he sees unfolding before his eyes?

Continue to Chapter 98
Previous
The Art of Questioning Truth
Contents
Next
When Reality and Fantasy Collide

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