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26 pages 52 minutes read

José Zorrilla y Moral

Don Juan Tenorio

Fiction | Play | Adult | Published in 1844

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Part IChapter Summaries & Analyses

Part I Summary

One night during carnival season, a masked Don Juan Tenorio arrives at the Hosteria del Laurel (Laurel Tavern). The young gallant writes a mysterious letter, commanding his servant, Marcos Ciutti, to deliver it to a certain “Doña Inés” and bring back a reply. Meanwhile, more masked revelers converge upon the Laurel Tavern; many are Don Juan’s own friends and acquaintances, eager to learn the result of a wager made a year ago between Don Juan and another gallant, Don Luis Mejía. Also among the throng are Don Gonzalo de Ulloa—comendador mayor (a high-ranking official) of the order of Calatrava—and Don Diego Tenorio. Each has his own reasons for attempting to discern Don Juan’s true character.

When 8pm arrives, it is revealed that Don Juan and Don Luis wagered which of them could do more harm in twelve months: Don Luis states, “By the book, and we ended up betting we two which of us would best know how to effect the worst, with the best of luck, in the space of a single year, meeting again today, here, to prove it” (19). Before an avid audience, the two men meet, unmask, and regale each other with tales of their misdeeds during the past year, which include seductions, abandonments, brawls, duels, killings, and thefts.

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