English, asked by gd276001, 4 months ago

Those who will give correct answers i will mark him/her as brainliest plss give me answer ​

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Answered by Kelsey45
2

Answer: It is because he suffered damage to the head

Answered by farhan6478
0

Answer:

Don Quixote spent much of his time reading romances about the feats of noble knights doing good, and protecting the vulnerable. These highly idealized, unrealistic stories presented the world as much more exciting and alluring than it really is, filled with creatures like monsters and giants that must be vanquished. They also depicted, through the knights, people as better than they really are: brave, loyal, and filled with the desire to do good and protect others. This world was so much more desirable than the world Quixote really lived in that it affected his mind. He longed so badly for the world to be a different, more ideal place, that he finally went mad and decided to be the change he wanted to see. To do so, he convinced himself that the world really was like the idealized world of romances, that he was a knight, and that he could go around the countryside doing noble deeds.

Of course, the humor and the pathos come from the fact that the world is just as sordid and uninteresting as it ever has been. Windmills are windmills, not giants, and people don't understand his dream, taking advantage of him, laughing at him, and beating him up.

How to fill the gap between the world as it is and how we would wish it to be is a perennial problem, which is why Don Quixote's story still resonates so strongly with us.

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