[BRARY [HE UNIVERSITY OF CAL [FORNIA LOS ANGELES GIFT OF Prof. Alexander G. Fits Short Histories of the Literatures of the World Edited by Edmund Gosse A HISTORY OF SPANISH LITERATURE BY JAMES FITZMAURICE-KELLY C. DE LA REAL ACADEM1A ESPANOLA NEW YORK AND LONDON D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 1921 COPYRIGHT, 1898, BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY. Printed in the United States of America PQ Tssll PREFACE SPANISH literature, in its broadest sense, might include writings in every tongue existing within the Spanish dominions ; it might, at all events, include the four chief languages of Spain. Asturian and Galician both pos- sess literatures which in their recent developments are artificial. Basque, the spoiled child of philologers, has not added greatly to the sum of the world's delight ; and even if it had, I should be incapable of undertaking a task which would belong of right to experts like Mr. Wentworth Webster, M. Jules Vinson, and Professor Schuchardt. Catalan is so singularly rich and varied that it might well deserve separate treatment : its in- clusion here would be as unjustifiable as the inclusion of Provengal in a work dealing with French literature. For the purposes of this book, minor varieties are neglected, and Spanish literature is taken as referring solely to Castilian the speech of Juan Ruiz, Cervantes, Lope de Vega, Tirso de Molina, Quevedo, and Calderon. At the close of the last century, Nicolas Masson de Morvilliers raised a hubbub by asking two questions in the Encyclopedic Methodique : "Mais que doit-on a 1'Espagne ? Et depuis deux siecles, depuis quatre, depuis six, qu'a-t elle fait pour 1'Europe ?" I have attempted an SSO i , VI PREFACE answer in this volume. The introductory chapter has been written to remind readers that the great figures of the Silver Age Seneca, Lucan, Martial, Quintilian were Spaniards as well as Romans. It further aims at tracing the stream of literature from its Roman fount to the channels of the Gothic period ; at defining the limits of Arabic and Hebrew influence on Spanish letters ; at refuting the theory which assumes the existence of immemorial romances, and at explaining the interaction between Spanish on the one side and Provencal and French on the other. It has been thought that this treatment saves much digression. Spanish literature, like our own, takes its root in French and in Italian soil ; in the anonymous epics, in the fableaux, as in Dante, Petrarch, and the Cinque Cento poets. Excessive patriotism leads men of all lands to magnify their literary history ; yet it may be claimed for Spain, as for England, that she has used her models without compromising her originality, absorbing here, annexing there, and finally dominating her first masters. But Spain's victorious course, splendid as it was in letters, arts, and arms, was comparatively brief. The heroic age of her literature extends over some hundred and fifty years, from the accession of Carlos Quinto to the death of Felipe IV. This period has been treated, as it deserves, at greater length than any other. The need of com- pression, confronting me at every page, has compelled the omission of many writers. I can only plead that I have used my discretion impartially, and I trust that no really representative figure will be found missing. PREFACE vii My debts to predecessors will be gathered from the bibliographical appendix. I owe a very special acknow- ledgment to my friend Sr. D. Marcelino Menendez y Pelayo, the most eminent of Spanish scholars and critics. If I have sometimes dissented from him, I have done so with much hesitation, believing that any independent view is better than the mechanical repetition of authoritative verdicts. I have to thank Mr. Gosse for the great care with which he has read the proofs ; and to Mr. Henley, whose interest in all that touches Spain is of long stand- ing, I am indebted for much suggestive criticism. For advice on some points of detail, I am obliged to Sr. D. Ram6n Menendez Pidal, to Sr. D. Adolfo Bonilla y San Martin, and to Sr. D. Rafael Altamira y Crevea. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. INTRODUCTORY I II. THE ANONYMOUS AGE (lI5O-I22O) 43 III. THE AGE OF ALFONSO THE LEARNED, AND OF SANCHO (1220-1300) 57 IV. THE DIDACTIC AGE (1301-1400) 74 V. THE AGE OF JUAN II. (1419-1454) 93 VI. THE AGE OF ENRIQUE IV. AND THE CATHOLIC KINGS (I454-I5I6) 109 VII. THE AGE OF CARLOS QUINTO (1516-1556) .... 129 VIII. THE AGE OF FELIPE II. (1556-1598) l6$ IX. THE AGE OF LOPE DE VEGA (1598-1621) . . . .211 X. THE AGE OF FELIPE IV. AND CARLOS THE BEWITCHED (I62I-I700) 275 XI. THE AGE OF THE BOURBONS (l70O-l8o8) .... 343 XII. THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 363 XIII. CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE 383 BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE 399 INDEX 413 A HISTORY OF SPANISH LITERATURE CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY THE most ancient monuments of Castilian literature can be referred to no time later than the twelfth cen- tury, and they have been dated earlier with some plausibility. As with men of Spanish stock, so with their letters : the national idiosyncrasy is emphatic almost violent. French literature is certainly more exquisite, more brilliant ; English is loftier and more varied ; but in the capital qualities of originality, force^s^/ truth, and humour, the Castilian finds no superior. * The Basques, who have survived innumerable onsets^, (among them, the ridicule of Rabelais and the irony of Cervantes), are held by some to be representatives of the Stone-age folk who peopled the east, north-east, and south of Spain. This notion is based mainly upon the fact that all true Basque names for cutting instru- ments are derived from the word aitz (flint). Howbeit, the Basques vaunt no literary history in the true sense. The Leloaren Cantua (Song of Leld) has been accepted as 2 SPANISH LITERATURE a contemporary hymn written in celebration of a Basque triumph over Augustus. Its date is uncertain, and its refrain of " Lelo" seems a distorted reminiscence of the Arabic catchword La ildh ilia 'lldh; but the Leloaren Cantua is assuredly no older than the sixteenth century. A second performance in this sort is the Altobiskarko Cantua (Song of Altobiskar). Altobiskar is a hill near Roncesvalles, where the Basques are said to have de- feated Charlemagne ; and the song commemorates the victory. Written in a rhythm without fellow in the Basque metres, it contains names like Roland and Ganelon, which are in themselves proofs of French origin ; but, as it has been widely received as genuine, the facts concerning it must be told. First written in French (circa 1833) by Franois Eugene Garay de Monglave, it was translated into very indifferent Basque by a native of Espelette named Louis Duhalde, then a student in Paris. The too-renowned Altobiskarko Cantua is therefore a simple hoax : one might as well attribute Rule Britannia to Boadicea. The conquerors of Koncesvalles wrote no triumphing song : three centuries later the losers immortalised their own over- throw in the Chanson de Roland, where the disaster is credited to the Arabs, and the Basques are merely mentioned by the way. Early in the twelfth century there was written a Latin Chronicle ascribed to Arch- bishop Turpin, an historical personage who ruled the see of Rheims some two hundred years before his false Chronicle was written. The opening chapters of this fictitious history are probably due to an anonymous Spanish monk cloistered at Santiago de Compostela; and it is barely possible that this late source was utilised by such modern Basques as Jose" Maria Goizcueta, who THE BASQUE FACTOR 3 retouched and " restored " the Altobiskarko Cantua in ignorant good faith. However that may prove, no existing Basque song is much more than three hundred years old. One single Basque of genius, the Chancellor Pero Lopez de Ayala, shines a portent in the literature of the fourteenth cen- tury ; and even so, he writes in Castilian. He stands alone, isolated from his race. The oldest Basque book, well named as Lingua Vasconum Primitice, is a collec- tion of exceedingly minor verse by Bernard Dechepare, cure of Saint-Michel, near Saint-Jean Pied de Port; and its date is modern (1545). Pedro de Axular is the first Basque who shows any originality in his native tongue ; and, characteristically enough, he deals with religious matters. Though he lived at Sare, in the Basses Pyrn6es, he was a Spaniard from Navarre ; and he flourished in the seventeenth century (1643). It is true that a small knot of second-class Basques the epic poet Ercilla y Zuniga, and the fabulist Iriarte figure in Castilian literature; but the Basque glories are to be sought in other fields in such heroic personages as Ignacio Loyola, and his mightier disciple Francisco Xavier. Setting aside devotional and didactic works, mostly translated from other tongues, Basque litera- ture is chiefly oral, and has but a formal connection with the history of Spanish letters. Within narrow geographical limits the Basque language still thrives, and on each slope of the Pyrenees holds its own against forces apparently irresistible. But its vitality exceeds its reproductive force : it survives but does not multiply. Whatever the former influence of Basque on Castilian an influence never great it has now ceased ; while Castilian daily tends to supplant (or, at least, to supple- 4 SPANISH LITERATURE ment) Basque. Spain's later invaders Iberians, Kelts, Phoenicians, Greeks, Carthaginians, Alani, Suevi, Goths, and Arabs have left but paltry traces on the prevailing form of Spanish speech, which derives from Latin by a descent more obvious, though not a whit more direct, than the descent of French. So frail is the partition which divides the Latin mother from her noblest daughter, that late in the sixteenth century Fernando P6rez de Oliva wrote a treatise that was at once Latin and Spanish : a thing intelligible in either tongue and futile in both, though held for praiseworthy in an age when the best poets chose to string lines into a poly- glot rosary, without any distinction save that of antic dexterity. For our purpose, the dawn of literature in Spain begins with the Roman conquest. In colonies like Pax Augusta (Badajoz), Caesar Augusta (Zaragoza), and Emerita Augusta (M6rida), the Roman influence was strengthened by the intermarriage of Roman soldiers with Spanish women. All over Spain there arose the odiosa cantio, as St. Augustine calls it, of Spanish children learning Latin ; and every school .formed a fresh centre of Latin authority. With their laws, the conquerors imposed their speech upon the broken tribes ; and these, in turn, invaded the capital of Latin politics and letters. The breath of Spanish genius informs the Latinity of the Silver Age. Augustus himself had named his Spanish freedman, Gains Julius Hyginus, the Chief Keeper of the Palatine Library. Spanish literary aptitude, showing stronger in the pro- digious learning of the Elder Seneca, matures in the altisonant rhetoric and violent colouring of the Younger, in Lucan's declamatory eloquence and metallic music, THE SPANISH ROMANS 5 in Martial's unblushing humour and brutal cynicism, in Quintilian's luminous judgment and wise senten- tiousness. All these display in germ the characteristic points of strength and weakness which were to be developed in the evolution of Spanish literature ; and their influence on letters was matched by their countrymen's authority on affairs. The Spaniard Balbus was the first barbarian to reach the Consulship, and to receive the honour of a public triumph ; the Spaniard Trajan was the first barbarian named Emperor, the first Emperor to make the Tigris the eastern boundary of his dominion, and the only Emperor whose ashes were allowed to rest within the Roman city- walls. And the victory of the vanquished was complete when the Spaniard Hadrian, the author of the famous verses " Animula vagula blandula, Hospes comesque carports, Qua nunc abtbis in loca, Pallidula rigida nudula, Nee, ut soles, dabis jocos?" himself an exquisite in art and in letters became the master of the world. Gibbon declares with justice that the happiest epoch in mankind's history is " that which elapsed from the death of Domitian to the accession of Commodus " ; and the Spaniard, accounting Marcus Aurelius as a son of C6rdoba, vaunts with reasonable pride, that of those eighty perfect, golden years, three- score at least were passed beneath the sceptre of the Spanish Caesars. Withal, individual success apart, the Spanish utterance of Latin teased the finer ear. Cicero ridiculed the accent 6 SPANISH LITERATURE aliquid pingue of even the more lettered Spaniards who reached Rome ; Martial, retired to his native Bilbi- lis, shuddered lest he might let fall a local idiom ; and Quintilian, a sterner purist than a very Roman, frowned at the intrusion of his native provincialisms upon the everyday talk of the capital. In Rome incorrections of speech were found where least expected. That Catullus should jeer at Arrius the forerunner of a London type in the matter of aspirates is natural enough ; but even Augustus distressed the nice grammarian. A fortiori, Hadrian was taunted with his Spanish solecisms. Inno- vation won the day. The century between Livy and Tacitus shows differences of style inexplicable by the easy theory of varieties of temperament; and the two centuries dividing Tacitus from St. Augustine are marked by changes still more striking. This is but another illustration of the old maxim, that as the speed of falling bodies increases with distance, so literary de- cadences increase with time. As in Italy and Africa, so in Spain. The statelier sermo urbanus yielded to the sermo plebeius. Spanish soldiers had discovered " the fatal secret of empire, that emper- ors could be made elsewhere than at Rome " ; no less fatal was the discovery that Latin might be spoken without regard for Roman models. As the power of classic forms waned, that of ecclesiastical examples grew. Church Latin of the fourth century shines at its best in the verse of the Christian poet, the Spaniard Prudentius : with him the classical rhythms persist as survivals. He clutches at, rather than grasps, the Roman verse tradi- tion, and, though he has no rhyming stanzas, he verges on rhyme in such performances as his Hymnus ad Galli Cantum. Throughout the noblest period of Roman THE GOTHIC FACTOR 7 poetry, soldiers, sailors, and illiterates had, in the versus saturnius, preserved a native rhythmical system not quan- titative but accentual ; and this vulgar metrical method was to outlive its fashionable rival. It is doubtful whether the quantitative prosody, brought from Greece by lit- erary dandies, ever flourished without the circle of pro- fessional men of letters. It is indisputable that the im- ported metrical rules, depending on the power of vowels and the position of consonants, were gradually super- seded by looser laws of syllabic quantity wherein accent and tonic stress were the main factors. When the empire fell, Spain became the easy prey of * northern barbarians, who held the country by the sword, and intermarried but little with its people. To the Goths Spain owes nothing but eclipse and ruin. No books, no inscriptions of Gothic origin survive ; the Gongoristic letters ascribed to King Sisebut are not his work, and it is doubtful if the Goths bequeathed more than a few words to the Spanish vocabulary. The defeat of Roderic by Tarik and Musa laid Spain open to the Arab rush. National sentiment was unborn. Witiza and Roderic were regarded by Spaniards as men in Italy and Africa regarded Totila and Galimar. The clergy were alienated from their Gothic rulers. Gothic favourites were ap- pointed to non-existent dioceses carrying huge revenues ; a single Goth held two sees simultaneously ; and, by way of balance, Toledo was misgoverned by two rival Gothic bishops. Harassed by a severe penal code, the Jew hailed the invading Arabs as a kindred, oriental, cir- cumcised race ; and, with the heathen slaves, they went over to the conquerors. So obscure is the history of the ensuing years that it has been said that the one thing certain is Roderic's name. Not less certain is it that, 8 SPANISH LITERATURE within a brief space, almost the entire peninsula was subdued. The more warlike Spaniards, " Patient of toil, serene among alarms, Inflexible in faith, invincible in arms," foregathered with Pelayo by the Cave of Covadonga, near Oviedo, among the Pyrenean chines, which they held against the forces of the Berber Alkamah and the renegade Archbishop, Don Opas. " Confident in the strength of their mountains," says Gibbon, these high- landers " were the last who submitted to the arms of Rome, and the first who threw off the yoke of the Arabs." While on the Asturian hillsides the spirit of Spanish nationality was thus nurtured amid convulsions, the less hardy inhabitants of the south accepted their defeat. The few who embraced Islamism were despised as Muladies ; the many, adopting all save the religion of their masters, were called Muzarabes, just as, during the march of the reconquest, Moors similarly placed in Christian provinces were dubbed Mud6jares. The literary traditions of Seneca, Lucan, and their brethren, passed through the hands of mediocrities like Pomponius Mela and Columella, to be delivered to Gaius Vettius Aquilinus Juvencus, who gave a rendering of the gospels, wherein the Virgilian hexameter is aped with a certain provincial vigour. Minor poets, not lacking in marmoreal grace, survive in Baron Hiibner's Corpus Inscriptionum Latinorum. Among the breed of learned churchmen shines the name of St. Damasus, first of Spanish popes, who shows all his race's zeal in heresy- hunting and in fostering monkery. The saponaceous eloquence that earned him the name of Auriscalpius matronarum (" the Ladies' Ear-tickler ") is forgotten ; but PRUDENTI US : OROSIUS 9 he deserves remembrance because of his achievement as an epigraphist, and because he moved his friend, St. Jerome, to translate the Bible. To him succeeds Hosius of Cordoba, the mentor of Constantine, the champion of Athanasian orthodoxy, and the presiding bishop at the Council of Nicaea, to whom is attributed the incor- poration in the Nicene Creed of that momentous clause, " Genitum non factum, consubstantialem Patri" Prudentius follows next, with that savour of the terrible and agonising which marks the Spagnoletto school of art; but to all his strength and sternness he adds a sweeter, tenderer tone. At once a Christian, a Spaniard, and a Roman, to Prudentius his birthplace is everfelix Tarraco (he came from Tarragona) ; and he thrills with pride when he boasts that Caesar Augusta gave his Mother- Church most martyrs. Yet, Christian though he be, the imperial spirit in him fires at the thought of the multitu- dinous tribes welded into a single people, and he plainly tells you that a Roman citizen is as far above the brute barbarian as man is above beast. Priscillian and his fellow-sufferer Latrocinius, the first martyrs slain by Christianity set in office, were both clerks of singular accomplishment. As disciple of St. Augustine, and comrade of St. Jerome, Orosius would be remembered, even were he not the earliest historian of the world. Like Prudentius, Orosius blends the passion of universal empire with the fervour of local sentiment. Good, haughty Spaniard as he is, he enregisters the battles that his fathers gave for freedom ; he ranks Numancia's name only below that of the world-mother, Rome ; and his heart softens towards the blind barbarians, their faces turned towards the light. Cold, austere, and even a trifle cynical as he is, Orosius' pulses io SPANISH LITERATURE throb at memory of Caesar ; and he glows on thinking that, a citizen of no mean city, he ranges the world under Roman jurisdiction. And this vast union of diverse races, all speaking one single tongue, all re- cognising one universal law, Orosius calls by the new name of Romania. Licinianus follows, the Bishop of Cartagena and the correspondent of St. Gregory the Great. A prouder and more illustrious figure is that of St. Isidore of Seville " beatus et lumen nosier Isidorus." Originality is not Isidore's distinction, and the Latin verses which pass under his name are of doubtful authenticity. But his encyclopaedic learning is amazing, and gives him place beside Cassiodorus, Boetius, and Martianus Capella, among the greatest teachers of the West. St. Braulius, Bishop of Zaragoza, lives as the editor of his master Isidore's posthumous writings, and as the author of a hymn to that national saint, Millan. Nor should we omit the names of St. Eugenius, a realist versifier of the day, and of St. Valerius, who had all the poetic gifts save the accomplishment of verse. Naturalised foreigners, like the Hungarian St. Martin of Dumi, Archbishop of Braga, lent lustre to Spain at home. Spaniards, like Claude, Bishop of Turin and like Prudentius Galindus, Bishop of Troyes, carried the national fame abroad : the first in writings which prove the permanence of Seneca's tradition, the second in polemics against the pantheists. More rarely dowered was Theodolphus, the Spanish Bishop of Orleans, dis- tinguished at Charlemagne's court as a man of letters and a poet ; nor is it likely that Theodolphus' name can ever be forgotten, for his exultant hymn, Gloria, laus, et honor, is sung the world over on Palm Sunday. And THE JEWISH REVIVAL n scarcely less notable are the composers of the noble Latin-Gothic hymnal, the makers of the Breviarum Gothicum of Lorenzana and of Arevalo's Hymnodia Hispanica. Enough has been said to show that, amid the tumult of Gothic supremacy in Spain, literature was pursued though not by Goths with results which, if not splendid, are at least unmatched in other Western lands. Doubtless in Spain, as elsewhere, much curious learning and inso- lent ignorance throve jowl by jowl. Like enough, some Spanish St. Ouen wrote down Homer, Menander, and Virgil as three plain blackguards ; like enough, the Spanish biographer of some local St. Bavo confounded Tityrus with Virgil, and declared that Pisistratus' Athenian contemporaries spoke habitually in Latin. The conceit of ignorance is a thing eternal. Withal, from the age of Prudentius onward, literature was sustained in one or other shape. For a century after Tarik's landing there is a pause, unbroken save for the Chronicle of the anony- mous Cordoban, too rashly identified as Isidore Pacensis. The intellectual revival appears, not among the Arabs, but among the Jews of Cordoba and Toledo ; this last the immemorial home of magic where the devil was reputed to catch his own shadow. It was a devout belief that clerks went to Paris to study " the liberal arts," whereas in Toledo they mastered demonology and forgot their morals. Cordoba's fame, as the world's fine flower, crossed the German Rhine, and even reached the cloister of Roswitha, a nun who dabbled in Latin comedies. The achievements of Spanish Jews and Spanish Arabs call for separate treatises. Here it must suffice to say that the roll contains names mighty as that of the Jewish poet and philosopher Ibn Gebirol or Avicebron (d. ? 1070), 12 SPANISH LITERATURE whom Duns Scotus acknowledges as his master ; and that of Judah ben Samuel the Levite (b. 1086), whom Heine celebrates in the Roman-zero: " Rein und ivahrhaft, sender Makel War sein Lied, wie seine Seele." In one sense, if we choose to fasten on his favourite trick of closing a Hebrew stanza with a romance line, Judah ben Samuel the Levite may be accounted the earliest of known experimentalists in Spanish verse ; and an Arab poet of Spanish descent, Ibn Hazm, anticipated the Catalan, Auzi'as March, by founding a school of poetry, at once mystic and amorous. But the Spanish Jews and Spanish Arabs gained their chief distinction in philosophy. Of these are Ibn Bajjah or Avempace (d. 1138), the opponent of al-Gazali and his mystico-sceptical method ; and Abu Bakr ibn al-Tufail (1116-85), the author of a neo - platonic, pantheistic romance entitled Risdlat Haiy ibn Yaksdn, of which the main thesis is that religious and philosophic truth are but two forms of the same thing. Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Rushd (1126-98), best known as Averroes, taught the doctrine of the universal nature and unity of the human intellect, accounting for individual inequalities by a fantastic theory of stages of illumination. Arab though he was, Averroes was more reverenced by Jews than by men of his own race ; and his permanent vogue is proved by the fact that Columbus cites him three centuries afterwards, while his teachings prevailed in the University of Padua as late as Luther's time. A more august name is that of "the Spanish Aristotle," Moses ben Maimon or Maimonides (1135-1204), the greatest of European Jews, the intellectual father, so MAIMONIDES 13 to say, of Albertus Magnus and St. Thomas of Aquin. Born at C6rdoba, Maimonides drifted to Cairo, where N he became chief rabbi of the synagogue, and served as Saladin's physician, having refused a like post in the household of Richard the Lion-hearted. It is doubtful if Maimonides was a Jew at heart ; it is un- questioned that at one time he conformed outwardly to Muhammadanism. A stinging epigram summarises his achievement by saying that he philosophised the Talmud and talmudised philosophy. It is, of course, absurd to suppose that his critical faculty could accept the childish legends of the Haggadah, wherein rabbis manifold report that the lion fears the cock's crow, that the salamander quenches fire, and other incredible puerilities. In his Yad ha-Hazakah (The Strong Hand) Maimonides seeks to purge the Talmud of its pilpulim or casuistic commentaries, and to make the book a sufficient guide for practical life rather than to leave it a dust-heap for intellectual scavengers. Hence he tends to a rational- istic interpretation of Scriptural records. Direct com- munion with the Deity, miracles, prophetic gifts, are not so much denied as explained away by means of a symbolic exegesis, infinitely subtle and imaginative. Spanish and African rabbis received the new teaching with docility, and in his own lifetime Maimonides' success was absolute. A certain section of his followers carried the cautious rationalism of the master to extremi- ties, and thus produced the inevitable reaction of the Kabbala with its apparatus of elaborate extravagances. This reaction was headed by another Spaniard, the Catalan mystic, Bonastruc de Portas or Moses ben Nahman (1195-1270); and the relation of the two leaders is exemplified by the rabbinical legend which I 4 SPANISH LITERATURE tells that the soul of each sprang from Adam's head : Maimonides, from the left curl, which typifies severity of judgment; Moses ben Nahman from the right, which symbolises tenderness and mercy. On literature the pretended "Arab influence," if it exist at all, is nowise comparable to that of the Spanish Jews, who can boast that Judah ben Samuel the Levite lives as one of Dante's masters. Judah ranks among the great immortals of the world, and no Arab is fit to loosen the thong of his sandal. But it might very well befall a second-rate man, favoured by fortune and occa- sion, to head a literary revolution. It was not the case in Spain. The innumerable Spanish-Arab poets, vul- garised by the industry of Schack and interpreted by the genius of Valera, are not merely incomprehensible to us here and now ; they were enigmas to most contemporary Arabs, who were necessarily ignorant of what was, to all purposes, a dead language the elaborate technical vocabulary of Arabic verse. If their own countrymen failed to understand these poets, it would be surprising had their stilted artifice filtered into Castilian. It is un- scientific, and almost unreasonable, to assume that what baffles the greatest Arabists of to-day was plain to a wan- dering mummer a thousand, or even six hundred, years ago. There is, however, a widespread belief that the metrical form of the Castilian romance (a simple lyrico- narrative poem in octosyllabic assonants) derives from Arabic models. This theory is as untenable as that which attributed Prove^al rhythms to Arab singers. No less erroneous is the idea that the entire assonantic system is an Arab invention. Not only are assonants common to all Romance languages ; they exist in Latin hymns composed centuries before Muhammad's birth, and THE ARAB FALLACY 15 therefore long before any Arab reached Europe. It is significant that no Arabist believes the legend of the " Arab influence " ; for Arabists are not more given than other specialists to belittling the importance of their subject. In sober truth, this Arab myth is but a bad dream of yesterday, a nightmare following upon an un- digested perusal of the Thousand and One Nights. Thanks to Galland, Cardonne, and Herbelot, the notion became general that the Arabs were the great creative force of fiction. To father Spanish romances and Provencal trobas upon them is a mere freak of fancy. The tacit basis of this theory is that the Span- iards took a rare interest in the intellectual side of Arab life ; but the assumption is not justified by evidence. Save in a casual passage, as that in the Cronica General on the capture of Valencia, the Castilian historians steadily ignore their Arab rivals. On the other hand, there is a class of romances fronterizos (border ballads), such as that on the loss of Alhama, which is based on Arabic legends ; and at least one such ballad, that of Abenamar, may be the work of a Spanish-speaking Moor. But these 1 are isolated cases, are exceptional solely as regards the source of the subject, and nowise differ in form from the two thousand other ballads of the Roman- ceros. To find a case of real imitation we must pass to the fifteenth century, when that learned lyrist, the Marques de Santillana, deliberately experiments in the measures of an Arab zajal, a performance matched by a surviving fragment due to an anonymous poet in the Cancionero de Linares. These are metrical audacities, resembling the revival of French ballades and rondeaux by artificers like Mr. Dobson, Mr. Gosse, and Mr. Henley in our own day. 1 6 SPANISH LITERATURE On the strength of two unique modern examples in the history of Castilian verse, it would be unjustifiable to believe, in the teeth of all other evidence, that simple strollers intuitively assimilated rhythms whose intricacy bewilders the best experts. This is not to say that Arabic popular poetry had no influence on such popular Spanish verse as the capias, of which some are appa- rently but translations of Arabic songs. That is an entirely different thesis ; for we are concerned here with literature to which the halting coplas can scarcely be said to belong. The " Arab influence " is to be sought elsewhere in the diffusion of the Eastern apologue, morality, or maxim, deriving from the Sanskrit. M. Bedier argues with extraordinary force, ingenuity, and learning, against the universal Eastern descent of the French fabliaux. How- ever that be, the immediate Arabic origin of such a col- lection as the Disciplina Clericalis of Petrus Alfonsus (printed, in part, as the Fables of Alfonce, by Caxton, 1483, in The Book of the subtyl Historyes and Fables of Esope), is as undoubted as the source of the apologue grafted on Castilian by Don Juan Manuel, or as the derivation of the maxims of Rabbi Sem Tom of Carri6n. To this extent, in common with the rest of Europe, Spain owes the Arabs a debt which her picaresque novels and comedies have more than paid ; but here again the Arab acts as a mere middleman, taking the story of Kalilah and Dimna from the Sanskrit through the Pehlev! version, and then passing it by way of Spain to the rest of the Continent. Nor should it be over- looked that Spaniards, disguised as Arabs, shared in the work of interpretation. It is less easy to determine the extent to which col- THE ARABIC INFLUENCE 17 loquial Arabic was used in Spain. Patriots would per- suade you that the Arabs brought nothing to the stock of general culture, and the more thoroughgoing insist that the Spaniards lent more than they borrowed. But the point may be pressed too far. It must be admitted that Arabic had a vogue, though perhaps not a vogue as wide as might be gathered from the testimony of Paulus Alvarus Cordubiensis, whose Indiculus Lumi- nosus, a work of the ninth century, taunts the writer's countrymen with neglecting their ancient tongue for Hebrew and Arabic technicalities. The ethnic influ- ence of the Arabs is still obvious in Granada and other southern towns ; and intermarriages, tending to strengthen the sway of the victor's speech, were common from the outset, when Roderic's widow, Egilona, wedded Abd al-Aziz, son of Musa, her dead husband's con- queror. An Alfonso of Le6n espoused the daughter of Abd Allah, Emir of Toledo ; and an Alfonso of Castile took to wife the daughter of an Emir of Seville. " The wedding, which displeased God," of Alfonso the Fifth's sister with an Arab (some say with al-Mansur), is sung in a famous romance inspired by the Cronica General. In official charters, as early as 804, Arabic words find place. A local disuse of Latin is proved by the fact that in this ninth century the Bishop of Seville found it needful to render the Bible into Arabic for the use of Muzdrabes ; and still stronger evidence of the low estate of Latin is afforded by an Arabic version of canonical decrees. It follows that some among the very clergy read Arabic more easily than they read Latin. Jewish poets, like Avicebron and Judah ben Samuel the Levite, sometimes composed in Arabic rather than in their native Hebrew ; and it is almost certain that the lays of the i8 SPANISH LITERATURE Arab rdwis radically modified the structure of Hebrew verse. Apart from the evidence of Paulus Alvarus Cor- dubiensis, St. Eulogius deposes that certain Christians he mentions Isaac the Martyr by name spoke Arabic to perfection. Nor can it be pleaded that this zeal was invariably due to official pressure : on the contrary, a caliph went the length of forbidding Spanish Jews and Christians to learn Arabic. Neither did the fashion die soon : long after the Arab predominance was shaken, Arabic was the modish tongue. Alvar Faftez, the Cid's right hand, is detected signing his name in Arabic characters. The Christian dinar, Arabic in form and superscription, was invented to combat the Almoravide dinar, which rivalled the popularity of the Constanti- nople besant ; and as late as the thirteenth century Spanish coins were struck with Arabic symbols on the reverse side. Yet, even so, the rude Latin of the unconquered north remained well-nigh intact. Save in isolated centres, it was spoken by countless Christians and by the Spaniards who had escaped to the African province of Tingitana. Vast deduction must be made from the jeremiads of Paulus Alvarus Cordubiensis. As he bewails the time wasted on Hebrew and Arabic by Spaniards, so does Avicebron lament the use of Arabic and Romance by Jews. " One party speaks Idumean (Romance), the other the tongue of Kedar (Arabic)." If the Arab flood ran high, the ebb was no less strong. Arabs tended more and more to ape the dress, the arms, the customs of the Spaniards ; and the Castilian-speaking Arab the moro latinado multiplied prodigiously. No small proportion of Arab writers Ibn Hazm, for example was made up of sons or grandsons of Spaniards, not unacquainted ALJAMfA 19 with their fathers' speech. When Archbishop Raimundo founded his College of Translators at Toledo, where Dominicus Gundisalvi collaborated with the convert Abraham ben David (Johannes Hispalensis), it might have seemed that the preservation of Arabic and Hebrew was secure. There and then, there could not have occurred such a blunder as that immortal one of the Capuchin, Henricus Seynensis, who lives eternal by mis- taking the Talmud " Rabbi Talmud " for a man. But no Arab work endures. And as with Arab philosophy in Spain, so with the Arabic language : its soul was required of it. Hebrew, indeed, was not forgotten ; and for Arabic, a revival might be expected during the Crusades. Yet in all Europe, outside Spain, but three isolated Arabists of that time are known William of Tyre, Philip of Tripoli, and Adelard of Bath ; and in Spain itself, when Boabdil surrendered in 1492, the tide had run so low that not a thousand Arabs in Granada could speak their native tongue. Nearly two centuries before (in 1311-12) a council under Pope Clement V. advised the establishment of Arabic chairs in the univer- sities of Salamanca, Bologna, Paris, and Oxford. Save at Bologna, the counsel was ignored ; and in Spain, where it had once swaggered with airs official, Arabic almost perished out of use. Save a group of technical words, the sole literary legacy bequeathed to Spain by the Arabs was their alphabet. This they used in writing Castilian, calling their transcrip- tion aljamia (a/ami = foreign), which was the original name of the broken Latin spoken by the Muzarabes. First introduced in legal documents, the practice was prudently continued during the reconquest, and, besides its secrecy, was further recommended by the fact that a 20 SPANISH LITERATURE special sanctity attaches to Arabic characters. But the peculiarity of aljamia is that it begot a literature of its own, though, naturally enough, a literature modelled on the Spanish. Its best production is the Poema de Yusuf; and it may be noted that this, like its much later fellow, La Alabama de Mahoma (The Praise of Muhammad), is in the metre of the old Spanish " clerkly poems" (pocslas de clereda). So also the Aragonese Morisco, Muhammad Rabadan, writes his cyclic poem in Spanish octosyllabics; and in his successors there are hendecasyllabics mani- festly imitated from a characteristic Galician measure (de gaita gallega). The subjects of the textos aljamiados are frankly conveyed from Western sources : the Com- pilation of Alexander, an orientalised version of the French ; the History of the Loves of Paris and Viana, a translation from the Provencal; and the Maid of Arca- yona, based on the Spanish poem Apolonio. In the /Cancionero de Baena appears Mahomat-el-Xartosse, with- / out his turban, as a full-fledged Spanish poet ; and the old tradition of servility is continued by an anonymous \ refugee in Tunis, who shows himself an authority on the \ plays and the lyric verse of Lope de Vega. It is therefore erroneous to suppose that the northern Spaniards on their southward march fell in with nume- rous kinsmen, of wider culture and of a higher civilisa- tion, whose everyday speech was unintelligible to them, and who prayed to Christ in the tongue of Muhammad. Such cases may have occurred, but as the rarest excep- tions. Not less unfounded is the theory that Castilian is a fusion of southern academic Arabic with barbarous northern Latin. In southern Spain Latin persisted, as Greek, Syriac, and Coptic persisted in other provinces of the Caliphate ; and in the school founded at Cordoba THE ARAB DECADENCE 21 by the Abbot Spera-in-Deo, Livy, Cicero, Virgil, Quin- tilian, and Demosthenes were read as assiduously as Sallust, Horace, and Terence were studied in the northern provinces. Granting that Latin was for a while so much neglected that it was necessary to translate the Bible into Arabic, it is also true that Arabic grew so forgotten* that Peter the Venerable was forced to translate the ^> Ku'ran for the benefit of clerks. Lastly, it must be borne in mind that the variety of Romance which finally prevailed in Spain was not the speech of the northern highlanders, but that of the Muzarabes of the south and the centre. Long before "the sword of Pelagius had been transformed into the sceptre of the Catholic kings," the linguistic triumph of the south was achieved. The hazard of war might have yielded another issue ; and to adopt another celebrated phrase of Gibbon's, but for the Cid and his successors, the Ku'ran might now be taught in the schools of Salamanca, and her pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised people the sanctity and truth of the revelation of Muhammad. As it chanced, Arabic was rebuffed, and the Latin speech (or Romance) survived in its principal varieties of Castilian, Galician, Catalan, and bable (Asturian). Gallic Latin had already bifurcated into the langue cToni and the langue d'oc, though these names were not applied to the varieties till near the close of the twelfth century. Two hundred years before Roderic's over- throw a Spanish horde raided the south-west of France, and, in the corner south of the Adour, reimposed a tongue which Latin had almost entirely supplanted, and which lingered solely in the Basque Provinces and in Navarre. In the eighth century this Basque invasion was avenged. The Spaniards, concentrating in the 22 SPANISH LITERATURE north, vacated the eastern provinces, which were there- upon occupied by the Roussillonais, who, spreading as far south as Valencia, and as far east as the Balearic Islands, gave eastern Spain a new language. Deriving from the langue d'oc, Catalan divides into pld Catald and Lemosi the common speech and the literary tongue. Vidal de Besalu calls his own Provencal language limosina or Umozi, and the name, taken from his popular treatise Dreita Maneira de Trobar, was at first limited to literary Provencal ; but endless confusion arises from the fact that when Catalans took to composing, their poems were likewise said to be written in lengua lemosina. The Galician, akin to Portuguese, though free from the nasal element grafted on the latter by Burgundians, is held by some for the oldest though clearly not the most virile form of Peninsular Romance. It was at least the first to ripen, and, under Prove^al guidance, Galician verse acquired the flexibility needed for metrical effects long before Castilian ; so that Castilian court- poets, ambitious of finer rhythmical results, were driven to use Galician, which is strongly represented in the Cancionero de Baena, and boasts an earlier masterpiece in Alfonso the Learned's Cantigas de Santa Maria, re- cently edited, as it deserved, after six centuries of wait- ing, by that admirable scholar the Marques de Valmar. Galician, now little more than a simple dialect, is artifici- ally kept alive by the efforts of patriotic minor poets ; but its literary influence is extinct, and the distinguished figures of the province, as Dona Emilia Pardo Bazan, naturally seek a larger audience by writing in Castilian. So, too, bable is but another dialect of little account, though a poet of considerable charm, Teodoro Cuesta (1829-95), has written in it verses which his own loyal THE TRIUMPH OF CASTILIAN 23 people will not willingly let die. The classification of other characteristic sub-genera Andalucian, Aragonese, Leonese belongs to philology, and would be, in any event, out of place in the history of a literature to which, unlike Catalan and unlike Galician, they have added nothing of importance. What befell in Italy and France befell in Spain. Partly through political causes, partly by force of superior culture, the language of a single centre ousted its rivals. As France takes its speech from Paris and the lie de France, as Florence domi- nates Italy, so Castile dictates her language to all the Spains. The dominant type, then, of Spanish is the Castilian, which, as the most potent form, has outlived its brethren, and, with trifling variations, now extends, not only over Spain, but as far west as Lima and Val- paraiso, and as far east as the Philippine Islands : in effect, "from China to Peru." And the Castilian of to-day differs little from the Castilian of the earliest monuments. The first allusion to any distinct variety of Romance is found in the life of a certain St. Mummolin who was Bishop of Noyen, succeeding St. Eloi in 659. A reference to the Spanish type of Romance is found as far back as 734 ; but the authenticity of the docu- ment is very doubtful. The breaking-up of Latin in Spain is certainly observable in Bishop Odoor's will under the date of 747. The celebrated Strasburg Oaths, the oldest of Romance instruments, belong to the year 842 ; and, in an edict of 844, Charles the Bald mentions, as a thing apart, " the customary language " usitato vocabulo of the Spaniards. There is, however, no exist- ing Spanish manuscript so ancient, nor is there any monument as old, as the Italian Carta di Capua (960). 3 24 SPANISH LITERATURE The British Museum contains a curious codex from the Convent of Santo Domingo de Silos, on the margin of which a contemporary has written the vernacuhr equiva- lent of some four hundred Latin words ; but this is no earlier than the eleventh century. The Charter called the Fuero de Avttts of 1155 (which is in bable or Asturian, not Castilian), has long passed for the oldest example of Spanish, on the joint and several authority of Gonzalez Llanos, Ticknor, and Gayangos ; but Fernandez-Guerra y Orbe has proved it to be a forgery of much later date. These intricate questions of authority and ascription may well be left unsettled, for legal documents are but the dry bones of letters. Castilian literature dates roughly from the twelfth century. Though no Castilian docu- ment of extent can be referred to that period, the Misterio de los Reyes Magos (The Mystery of the Magian Kings) and the group of cantares called the Poema del Cid can scarcely belong to any later time. These, probably, are the jetsam of a cargo of literature which has foundered. It is unlikely that the two most ancient compositions in Castilian verse should be precisely the two preserved to us, and it is manifest that the epic as set forth in the Poema del Cid could not have been a first effort. Doubtless there were other older, shorter songs or cantares on the Cid's prowess ; there unquestionably were songs upon Bernaldo de Carpio and upon the Infantes de Lara which are rudely preserved in asso- nantic prose passages of the Cronica General. An inge- nious, deceptive theory lays it down that the epic is but an amalgam of cantilenas, or short lyrics in the vulgar tongue. At most this is a pious opinion. To judge by the analogy of other literatures, it is safe THE MYTHIC CANTILENAS 25 to say that as verse always precedes prose (just as man feels before he reasons), so the epic everywhere precedes the lyric form, with the possible exception of hymns. The Poema del Cid, for instance, shows no trace of lyrical descent ; and it is far likelier that the many surviving romances or ballads on the Cid are detached fragments of an epic, than that the epic should be a +astiche of ballads put together nobody knows why, when, where, how, or by whom. But in any case the cantilena theory is idle ; for, since no cantilenas exist, no evidence is or can be forthcoming to eke out an attractive but unconvincing thesis. In default of testi- mony and of intrinsic probability, the theory depends solely on bold assertion, and it suffices to say that the cantilena hypothesis is now abandoned by all save a knot of fanatical partisans. The exploits of the battle-field would, in all likeli- hood, be the first subjects of song ; and the earliest singers of these deeds gesta would appear in the chieftain's household. They sang to cheer the free- booters on the line of march, and a successful foray was commemorated in some war-song like Dinas Vawr's : "Ednyfed, King of Dyfed, His head was borne before us; His wine and beasts stipplied our feasts, And his overthrow our chorus." Soon the separation between combatants and singers became absolute: the division has been effected in the interval which divides the Iliad from the Odyssey. Achilles himself sings the heroes' glories ; in the Odyssey the aotSo? or professional singer appears, to be succeeded by the rhapsode. Slowly there evolve in Spain, as elsewhere, two classes of artists known as 26 SPANISH LITERATURE trovadores and juglares. The trovadores are generally authors ; the juglares are mere executants singers, declaimers, mimes, or simple mountebanks. Of these lowlier performers one type has been immortalised in M. Anatole France's Le Jongleur de Notre Dame, a beautiful re-setting of the old story of El Tumbeor. But between trovadores and juglares it is not possible to draw a hard-and-fast line : their functions intermingled. Some few trovadores anticipated Wagner by eight or nine centuries, composing their own music-drama on a lesser scale. In cases of special endowment, the composer of words and music delivered them to the audience. Subdivisions abounded. There were the juglares or singing-actors, the remendadores or mimes, the cazurros or mutes with duties undefined, resembling those of the intelligent "super." Gifted juglares at whiles produced original work ; a trovador out of luck sank to delivering the lines of his happier rivals ; and a stray remendador struggled into success as a juglar. There were juglares de boca (reciters) and juglares de ptftola (musicians). Even an official label may deceive ; thus a " Gomez trovador" is denoted in the year 1197, but the likeli- hood is that he was a mere juglar. The normal rule was that the juglar recited the trovador 's verses ; but, as already said, an occasional trovador (Alfonso Alvarez de Villasandino, at Seville, in the fifteenth century, is a case in point) would declaim his own ballad. In the juglar' s hands the original was cut or padded to suit the hearers' taste. He subordinated the verses to the music, and gave them maimed, or arabesqued with estribillos (refrains), to fit a popular air. The mono- tonous repetition of epithet and clause, common to all THE JUGLAR 27 early verse, is used to lessen the strain on the juglar's memory. The commonest arrangement was that the juglar de boca sang the trovador's words, the juglar de ptfiola accompanying on some simple instrument, while the remendador gave the story in pantomime. All the world over the history of early literatures is identical. With the Greeks the minstrel attains at last an important post in the chieftain's train. Seated on a high chair inlaid with silver, he entertains the guests, or guards the wife of Agamemnon, his patron and his friend. Just so does Phemios sing amid the suitors of Penelope. It was not always thus. Bentley has told us in his pointed way that "poor Homer in those circum- stances and early times had never such aspiring thoughts" as mankind and everlasting fame ; and that " he wrote a sequel of songs and rhapsodies to be sung by himself for small earnings and good cheer, at festivals, and other days of merriment." This rise and fall occurred in Spain as elsewhere. For her early trovadores vrjuglares, as for Demodokos in the Odyssey, and as for Fergus Maclvor's sennachie, a cup of wine sufficed. " Dat nos del vino si non tenedes dinneros," says the juglar who sang the Cid's exploits : " Give us wine, if you have no money." Gon- zalo de Berceo, the first Castilian writer whose name reaches us, is likewise the first Castilian to use the word trovador in his Loores de Nuestra Seilora (The Praises of Our Lady) : "Aun merced te pido par el tu trobador" (Thy favour I irrplore for this thy troubadour.) But, though a priest and a trovador proud of his double office, Berceo claims his wages without a touch of false 28 SPANISH LITERATURE shame. In his Vida del glorioso Confesor Sancto Domingo de Silos he proves the overlapping of his functions by styling himself the saint's juglar ; and in the opening of the same poem he vouches for it that his song "will be well worth, as I think, a glass of good wine " : " Bien valdrd, comma creo, un vaso de bon vino" As popularity grew, modesty disappeared. The tro- vador, like the rest of the world, failed under the trials of prosperity. He became the curled darling of kings and nobles, and haggled over prices and salaries in the true spirit of "our eminent tenor." In a rich land like France he was given horses, castles, estates ; in the poorer Spain he was fain to accept, with intermittent grumblings, embroidered robes, couches, ornaments " muchos patios e sillas / guarnimientos nobres." He was spoon-fed, dandled, pampered, and sedulously ruined by the disastrous good-will of his ignorant betters. These could not leave Ephraim alone : they too must wed his idols. Alfonso the. Learned enlisted in the corps of trovadores, as Alfonso II. of Arag6n had done before him ; and King Diniz of Portugal followed the example. To pose as a trovador became in certain great houses a family tradition. The famous Constable, Alvaro de Luna, composes because his uncle, Don Pedro, the Archbishop of Toledo, has preceded him in the school. Grouped round the commanding figure of the Marques de Santillana stand the rivals of his own house-top : his grandfather, Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza ; his father, the Admiral Diego Furtado de Mendoza, a picaroon poet, spiteful, brutal, and witty ; his uncle, Pedro Velez de Guevara, who turns you a song of roguery or devotion with equal indifference and mastery. Santi- THE TROVADCR 29 liana's is "a numerous house, with many kinsmen gay" ; still, in all save success, his case typifies a dominant fashion. In the society of clerkly magnates the trovado^s ac- complishments developed ; and the equipped artist was expected to be master of several instruments, to be pat with litanies of versified tales, and to have Virgil at his finger-tips. Schools were founded where aspirants were taught to trobar and fazer on classic principles, and the breed multiplied till trovador and juglar pos- sessed the land. The world entire tall, short, old, young, nobles, serfs did nought but make or hear verses, as that trovador errant, Vidal de Besalu, records. It may be that Poggio's anecdote of a later time is literally true : that a poor man, absorbed in Hector's story, paid the spouter to adjourn the catastrophe from day to day till, his money being spent, he was forced to hear the end with tears. Troubadouring became at last a pestilence no less mischievous than its successor knight-errantry, and its net was thrown more widely. Alfonso of Aragon led the way with a celebrated Provengal ballad, wherein he avers that " not snow, nor ice, nor summer, but God and love are the motives of my song " : " Mas al meu chan neus ni glatz No m'ajuda, ri'estaz, Ni res, mas Dieus et amors." Not every man could hope to be a knight ; but all ranks and both sexes could and did sing of God and love. To emperors and princes must be added the lowlier figures of Berceo, in Spain, or to go afield for the extremest case the Joculator Domini, the inspired 3 o SPANISH LITERATURE madman, Jacopone da Todi, in Italy. With the juglar strolled the primitive actress, the juglaresa, mentioned in the Libre del Apolonio, and branded as " infamous " in Alfonso's code of Las Siete Partidas. At the court of Juan II., in the fifteenth century, the eccentric Garci Ferrandes of Jerena, a court poet, married a juglaresa, and lived to lament the consequences in a cantica of the Cancionero de Baena (No. 555). In northern Europe there flourished a tribe of jovial clerics called Goliards (after a mythical Pope Golias), who counted Catullus, Horace, and Ovid for their masters, and blent their anacreontics with blasphemy as in the Confessio Golia, wrongly ascribed to our Walter Map. The repute of this gentry is chronicled in the Canterbury Tales : " He was a jangler and a goliardeis, And that -was of most sin and harlotries" And the type, if not the name, existed in the Peninsula. So much might be inferred from the introduction and passage of a law forbidding the ordination of juglares ; and, in the Cancioneiro Portuguez da Vaticana (No. 931), Estevam da Guarda banters a juglar who, taking orders in expectance of a prebend which he never received, was prevented by his holy estate from re- turning to his craft. But close at hand, in the person of Juan Ruiz, Archpriest of Hita the greatest name in early Castilian literature is your Spanish Goliard incarnate. The prosperity of trovador *x\& juglar could not endure. First of foreign trovadores to reach Spain, the Gascon Marcabru treats Alfonso VII. (1126-57) almost as an equal. Raimbaud de Vaquerias, in what must be among the earliest copies of Spanish verse (not without a Galician THE TROVADOR 31 savour), holds his head no less high ; and the apotheosis of ihejuglar is witnessed by Vidal de Besalu at the court of Alfonso VIII. (1158-1214). " Unas novas vos vuelh comtar Que auzi dir a unjoglar En la cort del pus savi rei Que ancfos de neguna lei" " Fain would I give ye the verses which I heard recited by z.juglar at the court of the most learned king that ever any rule beheld." This was the "happier Age of Gold." A century and a half later, Alfonso the Learned, himself, as we have seen, a trovador, classes the juglar and his assistants los que son juglares, e los remendadores with the town pimp ; and fathers not themselves juglares are empowered to disinherit any son who takes to the calling against his father's will. The Villasandino, already mentioned, a pert Galician trovador at Juan II.'s court, was glad to speak his own pieces at Seville, and candidly avowed that, like his early predecessors, he "worked for bread and wine" " labro por pan e vino!' The foreign singer had received the half-pence ; the native received the kicks. And in the last decline the executants were blind men who sang before church- doors and in public squares, lacing old ballads with what they were pleased to call "emendations," or, in other words, intruding original banalities of their own. This decline of material prosperity had a most disastrous effect upon literature. A popular cantar or song was written by a poor man of genius. Accordingly he sold his copyright : that is to say, he taught his cantar to reciters, who paid in cash, or in drink, when they had it 32 SPANISH LITERATURE by heart, and thus the song travelled the country over- long with no author's name attached to it. More : re- peated by many lips during a long period of years, the form of a very popular cantar manifestly ran the risk of change so radical that within a few generations the original might be transformed in such wise as to be practically lost. This fate has, in effect, overtaken the great body of early Spanish song. It is beyond question that there once existed cantares (though we cannot fix their date) in honour of Bernaldo de Carpio, of Fernan Gonzalez, and of the Infantes de Lara ; the point as regards the Infantes de Lara is proved to demonstration in the masterly study of D. Ramon Menendez Pidal. The assonants of the original songs are found preserved in the chronicles, and no one with the most rudimentary idea of the conditions of Spanish prose-composition (whence assonants are banned with extreme severity) can suppose that any Spaniard could write a page of assonants in a fit of absent-mindedness. Two considerable cantares de gesta of the Cid survive as fragments, and they owe their lives to a happy accident the accident of being written down. They must have had fellows, but probably not an immense number of them, as in France. If the formal cantar de gesta died young, its spirit lived triumphantly in the set chronicle and in the brief romance. In the chronicle the author aims at closer exactitude and finer detail, in the romance at swifter movement and at greater picturesqueness of artistic incident. The term romanz or romance, first of all limited to any work written in the vernacular, is used in that sense by the earliest of all known troubadours, Count William of Poitiers. In the thirteenth century, romanz or romance acquires THE ROMANCES 33 a fresh meaning in Spain, begins to be used as an equi- valent for cat/tar, and ends by supplanting the word completely. Hence, by slow degrees, romance comes to have its present value, and is applied to a lyrico-narra- tive poem in eight-syllabled assonants. The Spanish Romancero is, beyond all cavil, the richest mine of ballad poetry in the world, and it was once common to declare that it embodied the oldest known examples of Castilian verse. As the assertion is still made from time to time, it becomes necessary to say that it is unfounded. It is true that the rude cantar was never forgotten in Spain, and that its persistence partly explains the survival of asso- nance in Castilian long after its abandonment by the rest of Europe. In his historic letter to Dom Pedro, Constable of Portugal, the Marques de Santillana speaks with a student's contempt of singers who, "against all order, rule, and rhythm, invent these romances and cantares wherein common lewd fellows do take delight." But no specimens of the primitive age remain, and no exist- ing romance is older than Santillana's own fifteenth century. The numerous Cancioncros from Baena's time to the appearance of the Romancero General (the First Part printed in 1602, with additions in 1604-14 ; the Second Part issued in 1605) present a vast collection of admirable lyrics, mostly the work of accomplished courtly versifiers. They contain very few examples of anything that can be justly called old popular songs. Alonso de Fuentes published in 1550 his Libro de los Cuarenta Cantos de Diversas y Peregrinas Historias, and in the following year was issued Lorenzo de Sepulveda's selection. Both pro- fess to reproduce the "rusticity" as well as the "tone and metre" of the ancient romances ; but, in fact, these 34 SPANISH LITERATURE songs, like those given by Escobar in the Romancero del Cid (1612), are either written by such students as Cesareo, who read up his subject in the chronicles, and imitated the old manner as best he could, or they are due to others who treated the oral traditions and pliegos sueltos (broadsides) of Spain with the same inspired freedom that Burns showed to the local ditties and chapbooks of Scotland. The two oldest romances bearing any author's name are given in Lope de Stiiftiga's Cancionero, and are the work of Carvajal, a fifteenth-century poet. Others may be of earlier date ; but it is impossible to identify them, inasmuch as they have been retouched and polished by singers of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. If they exist at all a matter of grave un- certainty they must be sought in the two Antwerp editions of Martin Nucio's Cancionero de Romances (one undated, the other of 1550), and in Esteban de Najera's Silva de Romances, printed at Zaragoza in 1550. There remains to say a last word on the disputed relation between the early Castilian and French litera- tures. Like the auctioneer in Middlemarch, patriots "talk wild" : as Amador de los Rios in his monu- mental fragment, and the Comte de Puymaigre in his essays. No fact is better established than the universal vogue of French literature between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, a vogue which lasted till the real supremacy of Dante and Boccaccio and Petrarch was reluctantly acknowledged. It is probable that Frederic Barbarossa wrote in Provencal ; his nephew, Frederic II., sedulously aped the Provencal manner in his Italian verses called the Lodi delta donna amata. Marco Polo, Brunetto Latini, and Mandeville wrote in French for the same reason that almost persuaded Gibbon to w r rite THE FRENCH INFLUENCE 35 his History in French. The substitution of the Gallic for the Gothic character in the eleventh century ad- vanced one stage further a process begun by the French adventurers who shared in the reconquest. With these last came the French jongleurs to teach the Spaniards the gentle art of making the chanson de geste. The very phrase, cantar de gesta, bespeaks its French source. As the root of the Cid epic lies in Roland, so the Mystery of the Magian Kings is but an offshoot of the Cluny Liturgy. The earliest mention of the Cid, in the Latin Chronicle of Almerta, joins the national hero, significantly enough, with those two unexampled paragons of France, Oliver and Roland. Another French touch appears in the Poem of Ferndn Gonzalez, where the writer speaks of Charlemagne's defeat at Roncesvalles, and laments that the battle was not an encounter with the Moors, in which Bernaldo del Carpio might have scattered them. But we are not left to conjecture and inference ; the presence of French jongleurs is attested by irrefragable evidence. 1 Sancho I. of Portugal had at court a French jongleur who in name, if in nothing else, somewhat resembled Guy de Maupas- sant's creation, " Bon Amis." It is not proved that Sordello ever reached Spain ; but, in the true manner of your bullying parasite, he denounces St. Ferdinand as one who " should eat for two, since he rules two kingdoms, and is unfit to govern one " : " E lo Rets castelds tank qden manje per dos, Quar dos regismes ten, ni per Pun non es pros" 1 See Mila y Fontanals, Los Trovadores en Espafta (Barcelona, 1889), and th* same writer's Resenya hist6rica y crilica dels antichs poetas Catalans in the third volume of his Obras completes (Barcelona, 1890). 36 SPANISH LITERATURE Sordello, indeed, in an earlier couplet denounces St. Louis of France as " a fool " ; but Sordello is a mere bilk and blackmailer with the gift of song. Among French minstrels traversing Spain are Pere Vidal, who vaunts the largesse of Alfonso VIII., and Guirauld de Calanson, who lickspittles the name of Pedro II. of Arag6n. Upon them followed Guilhem Azemar, a de'dasse' noble, who sank to earning his bread as a common jongleur, and later on there comes a crowd of singing-quacks and booth-spouters. It is usual to lay stress upon the influx of French among the pilgrims of the Milky Way on the road to the shrine of the national St. James at Santiago de Compostela in Galicia ; and it is a fact that the first to give us a record of this pious journey is Aimeric Picaud in the twelfth century, who unkindly remarks of the Basques, that "when they eat, you would take them for hogs, and when they speak, for dogs." This vogue was still undiminished three hundred years later when our own William Wey (once Fellow of Eton, and afterwards, as it seems, an Augus- tinian monk at Edyngdon Monastery in Wiltshire) wrote his Itinerary (1456). But though the pilgrimage to Santiago is noted as a peculiarly " French devotion " by Lope de Vega in his Francesilla (1620), it is by no means clear that the French pilgrims outnumbered those of other nations. Even if they did, this would not explain the literary predominance of France. This is not to be accounted for by the scampering flight of a horde of illiterate fakirs anxious only to save their souls and reach their homes : it is rather the natural result of a steady immigration of clerks in the suites of French bishops and princes, of French monks attracted by the spoil of Spanish monasteries, of French lords and knights INTERMEDIATE VERSE 37 and gentlemen who shared in the Crusades, and whose jongleurs, mimes, and tumblers came with them. Explain it as we choose, the influence of France on Spain is puissant and enduring. One sees it best when the Spaniard, natural or naturalised, turns crusty. Roderic of Toledo (himself an archbishop of the Cluny clique) protests against those Spanish juglares \vho cele- brate the fictitious victories of Charlemagne in Spain ; and Alfonso the Learned bears him out by deriding the songs and fables on these mythic triumphs, since the Emperor " at most conquered somewhat in Cantabria." A passage in the Cronica General goes to show that some, at least, of the early French jongleurs sang to their audi- ences in French clearly, as it seems, to a select, patrician circle. And this raises, obviously, a curious question. It seems natural to admit that in Spain (let us say in Navarre and Upper Aragon) poems were written by French trouveres and troubadours in a mixed hybrid jargon ; and the very greatest of Spanish scholars, D. Marcelino Menendez y Pelayo, inclines to believe in their possible existence. There is, in L' Entree en Espagne, a passage wherein the author declares that, besides the sham Chronicle of Turpin, his chief authorities are "dous dons clerges Can-gras et Gauteron, Can de Navaire et Gaulier d'Arragon." John of Navarre and Walter of Aragon may be, as Seftor Menendez y Pelayo suggests, two "worthy clerks" who once existed in the flesh, or they may be imaginings of the author's brain. More to the point is the fact that, unlike the typical chanson de geste, this Entree en Espagne has two distinct types of rhythm (the Alexandrine and the twelve-syllable line), as in the Poema del Cid ; and 38 SPANISH LITERATURE not less significant is the foreign savour of the language. All that can be safely said is that Senor Menendez y Pelayo's theory is probable enough in itself, that it is presented with great ingenuity, that it is backed by the best authority that opinion can have, and that it is in- capable of proof or disproof in the absence of texts. But if Spain, unlike Italy, has no authentic poems in an intermediate tongue, proofs of French influence are not lacking in her earliest movements. Two of the most ancient Castilian lyrics Razdn feita d' Amor and the Disputa del Alma are mere liftings from the French ; the Book of Apolonius teems with Provengalisms, and the poem called the History of St. Mary of Egypt is so gallicised in idiom that Mila y Fontanals, a ripe scholar and a true-blue Spaniard, was half inclined to think it one of those intermediary productions which are sought in vain. At every point proofs of French guidance confront us. Anxious to buffet and outrage his father's old trovador, Pero da Ponte, Alfonso the Learned taunts him with illiteracy, seeing that he does not compose in the Provencal vein : " Vos non trovades como proenqal" And, for our purpose, we are justified in appealing to Portugal for testimony, remembering always that Por- tugal exaggerates the condition of things in Spain. King Diniz, Alfonso the Learned's nephew, plainly indicates his model when in the Vatican Cancioneiro (No. 123) he declares that he " would fain make a love-song in the Provencal manner " : " Quer 1 eu, en maneyra de proen$al, Fazer agora um cantar (famor" LOST CANCIONEROS 39 And Alfonso's own Cantigas, honeycombed with Galli- cisms, are frankly Provengal in their wonderful variety of metre. Nor should we suppose that the Provengaux fought the battle alone : the northern trouveres bore their part. The French school, then, is strong in Spain, omni- potent in Portugal, and, were the Spanish Cancioneros as old as the Portuguese Song-book in the Vatican, we should probably find that the foreign influence was but a few degrees less marked in the one country than in the other. As it is, Alfonso the Learned ranks with any Portuguese of them all ; and it is reasonable to think that he had fellows whose achievement and names have not reached us. For Spanish literature and our- selves the loss is grave ; and yet we cannot conceive that there existed in early Castilian any examples com- parable in elaborate lyrical beauty to the cantars d'amigo which the Galician-Portuguese singers borrowed from the French ballettes. In the first place, if they had existed, it is next to incredible that no example and no tradition of them should survive. Next, the idea is intrinsically improbable, since the Castilian language was not yet sufficiently ductile for the purpose. Moreover, from the outset there is a counter-current in Castile. The early Spanish legends are mostly concerned with Spanish subjects. Apart from obvious foreign touches in the early recensions of the story of Bernaldo de Carpio (who figures as Charlemagne's nephew), the tone of the ballads is hostile to the French, and, as is natural, the enmity grows more pronounced with time. That national hero, the Cid, is especially anti-French. He casts the King of France in gaol ; he throws away the French King's chair with insult in St. Peter's. Still 4 40 SPANISH LITERATURE more significant is the fact that the character of French women becomes a jest. Thus, the balladist emphasises the fact that the faithless wife of Garci-Fernandez is French ; and, again, when Sancho Garcia's mother, like- wise French, appears in a romance, the singer gives her a blackamoor an Arab as a lover. This is primitive man's little way, the world over : he pays off old scores by deriding the virtue of his enemy's wife, mother, daughter, sister ; and in primitive Spain the French- woman is the lightning - conductor of international scandals, tolerable by the camp-fire, but tedious in print. In considering early Spanish verse it behoves us to denote facts and to be chary in drawing inferences. Thus, while we admit that the Poema del Cid and the Chanson de Roland belong to the same genre, we can go no further. It is not to be assumed that similarity of incident necessarily implies direct imitation. The introduction of the fighting bishop in the Cid poem is a case in point. His presence in the field may be almost certainly is an historic event, common enough in days when a militant bishop loved to head a charge ; and the chronicler may well have seen the exploits which he records. It by no means follows, and it is extravagant to suppose, that the Spanish juglar merely filches from the Chanson de Roland. That he had heard the Chanson is not only probable, but likely ; it is not, to say the least, a necessary consequence that he annexed an epi- sode as familiar in Spain as elsewhere. Nothing, if you probe deep enough, is new, and originality is a vain dream. But some margin must be left for personal experience and the hazard of circumstance ; and if we take account of the chances of coincidence, the debt of THE CASTILIAN REACTION 41 Castilian to French literature will appear in its due perspective. Nor must it be forgotten that from a very early date there are traces of the reflex action of Castilian upon French literature. They are not, indeed, many ; but they are authentic beyond carping. In the ancient Fragment de la Vie de Saint Fides dAgen, which dates from the eleventh century, the Spanish origin is frankly admitted : " Canson audi que bellantresca Quefo de razon espanesca" " I heard a beauteous song that told of Spanish things." Or, once more, in Adenet le Roi's Cleomades, and in its offshoot the Meliacin of Girard d'Amiens, we meet with the wooden horse (familiar to readers of Don Quixote) which bestrides the spheres and curvets among the planets. Borrowed from the East, the story is trans- mitted to the Greeks, is annexed by the Arabs, and is passed on through them to Spain, whence Adenet le Roi conveys it for presentation to the western world. More directly and more characteristically Spanish in its origin is the royal epic entitled Ans/i's de Carthage. Here, after the manner of your epic poet, chronology is scattered to the winds, and we learn that Charlemagne left in Spain a king who dishonoured the daughter of one of his barons ; hence the invasion by the Arabs, whom the baron lets loose upon his country as avengers. The basis of the story is purely Spanish, being a some- what clumsy arrangement of the legend of Roderic, Cora, and Count Julian ; the city of Carthage standing, it may be, for the Spanish Cartagena. Hence it is clear that the mutual literary debt of Spain and France is, at this early stage, unequally divided. Spain, like 42 SPANISH LITERATURE the rest of the world, borrows freely ; but, with the course of time, the position is reversed. Moliere, the two Corneilles, Rotrou, Sorel, Scarron, and Le Sage, to mention but a few eminent names at hazard, readjust the balance in favour of Spain ; and the inexhaustible resources of the Spanish theatre, which supply the arrangements of scores of minor French dramatists, are but a small part of the literature whose details are our present concern. CHAPTER II THE ANONYMOUS AGE 1150-1220 IN Spain, as in all countries where it is possible to observe the origin and the development of letters, the earliest literature bears the stamp of influences which are either epic or religious. These primitive pieces are characterised by a vein of popular, unconscious poetry, with scarce a touch of personal artistry ; and the ascrip- tion which refers one or other of them to an individual writer is, for the most part, arbitrary. Insufficiency of data makes it impossible to identify the oldest literary performance in Spanish Romance. Jews like Judah ben Samuel the Levite, and trovadores like Rambaud de Vaqueiras, arabesque their verses with Spanish tags and refrains ; but these are whimsies. Our choice lies rather between the Misterio de los Reyes Magos (Mystery of the Magian Kings) and the so-called Poema del Cid (Poem of the Cid). Experts differ concerning their respective dates ; but the liturgical derivation of the Misterio inclines one to hold it for the elder of the two. If Lidforss were right in attributing it to the eleventh century, the play would rank among the first in any modern language. Amador de los Ri'os dates it still further back. As these pretensions are excessive, the known facts may be briefly given. The Misterio follows upon a com- 44 SPANISH LITERATURE mentary on the Lamentations of Jeremiah, written by a canon of Auxerre, Gilibert 1'Universel, who died in 1134; and its existence was first denoted at the end of the last century by Felipe Fernandez Vallejo, Arch- bishop of Santiago de Compostela between 1798 and 1800, who correctly classified it as a dramatic scene to be given on the Feast of the Epiphany, and con- sidered it a version from some Latin original. Both conjectures have proved just. Throughout Europe the Christian theatre derives from the Church, and the early plays are but a lay vernacular rendering of models studied in the sanctuary. Simplified as the liturgy now is, the Mass itself, the services of Palm Sunday and Good Friday, are the unmistakable debris of an elabo- rate sacred drama. The Spanish Misterio proceeds from one of the Latin offices used at Limoges, Rouen, Nevers, Compiegne, and Orleans, with the legend of the Magi for a motive ; and these, in turn, are dramatic renderings of pious tradi- tions, partly oral, and partly amplifications of the apo- cryphal Protevangelium Jacobi Minoris and the Historia de Nativitate Maries et de Infantid Salvatoris. 1 These Franco-Latin liturgical plays, here mentioned in the probable order of their composition during the eleventh and twelfth centuries, reached Spain through the Bene- dictines of Cluny ; and as in each original redaction there is a distinct advance upon its immediate predecessor, so in the Spanish rendering these primitive exemplars are developed. In the Limoges version there is no action, the rudimentary dialogue consisting in the allotment of liturgical phrases among the personages ; in the Rouen 1 Joannes Karl Thilo, Codex Apocryphus Novi Testamenti. Lipsiee, 1833. Pp. 254-261, 388-393. MISTERIO DE LOS MAGOS 45 office, the number of actors is increased, and Herod, though he does not appear, is mentioned ; a still later redaction brings the shepherds on the scene. The Spanish Misterio reaches us as a fragment of some hundred and fifty lines, ending at the moment when the rabbis consult their sacred books upon Herod's appeal to " the prophecies Which Jeremiah spake" Us provenance is proved by the inclusion of three Virgilian lines] (sEneid, viii. 112-114), lifted by t ne arranger of the Orleans rite. The Magi are mentioned by name, and one speech is given by Caspar : important points which help to fix the date of writing. A passage in Bede speaks of Melchior, senex et canus ; of Baltasar, fuscus, integre barbatus ; of Caspar, juvenis imberbis ; but this appears to be interpolated. The names likewise appear in the famous sixth-century mosaic of the Church of Sant' Apollinare della Citta at Ravenna ; and here, again, the insertion is probably a pious afterthought. If Hartmann be justified in his contention, that the tradi- tional names of the Magi were not in vogue till after the alleged discovery of their remains at Milan in 1158, the Spanish Misterio can be, at best, no older than the end of the twelfth century. Enough of it remains to show that the Spanish work- man improved upon his models. He elaborates the dramatic action, quickens the dialogue with newer life, and gives his scene an ampler, a more vivid atmos- phere. Led by the heavenly star, the three Magi first appear separately, then together ; they celebrate the birth of Christ, whom they seek to adore, at the end of their thirteen days' pilgrimage. Encountering Herod, 46 SPANISH LITERATURE they confide to him their mission ; the King conjures his "abbots" (rabbis), counsellors, and soothsayers to search the mystic books, and to say whether the Magis' tale be true. The passages between Herod and his rabbis are marked by intensity and passion, far ex- ceeding the Franco-Latin models in dramatic force ; and there is a corresponding progress of mechanism, distribution, and rapidity. There is even a breath of the critical spirit wholly absent from all other early mysteries, which accept the miraculous sign of the star with a simple, unquestion- ing faith. In our play, the first and third Magi wish to observe it another night, while the second King would fain watch it for three entire nights. Lastly, the scale of the Misterio is larger than that of any predecessor ; the personages are not huddled upon the scene at once, but appear in appropriate, dramatic order, delivering more elaborate speeches, and express- ing at greater length more individual emotions. This fragmentary piece, written in octosyllabics, forms the foundation-stone of the Spanish theatre ; and from it are evolved, in due progression, " the light and odour of the flowery and starry Autos" which were to enrapture Shelley. Important and venerable as is the Misterio, its freer treatment of the liturgy, its effectual blending of realism with devotion, and its swiftness of action are so many arguments against its reputed antiquity. It is still old if we adopt the conclusion that it was written some twenty years before the Poe-ma del Cid. This misnamed epic, no unworthy fellow to the Chan- son de Roland, is the first great monument of Spanish literature. Like the Misterio de los Reyes Magos, like so many early pieces, the Poema del Cid reaches us maimed POEMA DEL CID 47 and mutilated. The beginning is lost ; a page in the middle, containing some fifty lines following upon verse 2338, has gone astray from our copy ; and the end has been retouched by unskilful fingers. The unique manu- script in which the cantar exists belongs to the four- teenth century : so much is now settled after infinite disputes. The original composition is thought to date from about the middle third of the twelfth century (1135-75), som e fifty years after the Cid's death at Valencia in 1099. Hence the Poem of the Cid stands almost midway between the Chanson de Roland and the Niebelungenlied. Nevertheless, in its surviving shape it is the result of innumerable retouches which amount to botching. Its authorship is more than doubtful, for the Per Abbat who obtrudes in the closing lines is, like the Turoldus of Roland, the mere transcriber of an unfaithful copy. Our gratitude to Per Abbat is dashed with regret for his slapdash methods. The assonants are roughly handled, whole phrases are unintelligently repeated, are transferred from one line to another, or are thrust out from the text, and in some cases two lines are crushed into one. The prevailing metre is the Alexandrine or fourteen-syllabled verse, probably adopted in conscious imitation of that Latin chronicle on the conquest of Almerfa which first reveals the national champion under his popular title " Ipse Rodertcus, Mio Cid semper vocatus, De quo cantatur, quod ab hostibus haud superatus'^ However that may be, the normal measure is repro- duced with curious infelicity. Some lines run to twenty syllables, some halt at ten, and it cannot be doubted that many of these irregularities are results of careless 48 SPANISH LITERATURE copying. Still, to Per Abbat we owe the preservation of the Cid cantar as we owe to Sanchez its issue in 1779, more than half a century before any French chanson de gcste was printed. The Spanish epic has a twofold theme the exploits of the exiled Cid, and the marriage of his two (mythical) daughters to the Infantes de Carri6n. Diffused through Europe by the genius of Corneille, who conveyed his conception from Guillen de Castro, the legendary Cid differs hugely from the Cid of history. Uncritical scep- ticism has denied his existence ; but Cervantes, with his good sense, hit the white in the first part of Don Quixote (chapter xlix.). Unquestionably the Cicl lived in the flesh : whether or not his alleged achievements occurred is another matter. Irony has incidentally marked him for its own. The mercenary in the pay of Zaragozan emirs is fabled as the model Spanish patriot ; the plunderer of churches becomes the flower of orthodoxy ; the cunning intriguer who rifled Jews and mocked at treaties is trans- figured as the chivalrous paladin ; the unsentimental trooper who never loved is delivered unto us as the typical jeune premier. Lastly, the mirror of Spanish nationality is best known by his Arabic title (Sidi = lord). Yet two points must be kept in mind : the facts which discredit him are reported by hostile Arab his- torians ; and, again, the Cid is entitled to be judged by the standard of his country and his time. So judged, we may accept the verdict of his enemies, who cursed him as " a miracle of the miracles of God and the con- queror of banners." Ruy Diaz de Bivar to give him his true name was something more than a freebooter whose deeds struck the popular fancy : he stood for unity, for the supremacy of Castile over Le6n, and his THE CID AND ROLAND 49 example proved that, against almost any odds, the Spaniards could hold their own against the Moors. In the long night between the disaster of Alarcos and the crowning triumph of Navas de Tolosa, the Cid's figure grew glorious as that of the man who had never de- spaired of his country, and in the hour of victory the legend of his inspiration was not forgotten. From his death at Valencia in 1099, his memory became a national possession, embellished by popular poetic fancy. In the Poema the treatment is obviously modelled upon the Chanson de Roland. But there is a fixed intent to place the Spaniard first. The Cid is pictured as more human than Roland : he releases his prisoners without ransom ; he gives them money so that they may reach their homes. Charlemagne, in the Chanson, destroys the idols in the mosques, baptizes a hundred thousand Sara- cens by force, hangs or flays alive the recalcitrant ; the Cid shows such humanity to a conquered province that on his departure the Moors burst forth weeping, and pray for his prosperous voyage. The machinery in both cases is very similar. As the archangel Gabriel appears to Charlemagne, he appears likewise to the Cid Cam- peador. Bishop Turpin opens the battle in Roland, and Bishop Jerome heads the charge for Spain. Roland and Ruy Diaz are absolved and exhorted to the same effect, and the resemblance of the epithet curunez applied to the French bishop is too close to the coronado of the Spaniard to be accidental. But allowing for the fact that the Spanish juglar borrows his framework, his per- formance is great by virtue of its simplicity, its strength, its spirit and fire. Whether he deals with the hungry loyalty of the Cid in exile, or his reception into favour by an ingrate king ; whether he celebrates the overthrow So SPANISH LITERATURE of the Count of Barcelona or the surrender of Valencia ; whether he sings the nuptials of Elvira and Sol with the Infantes de Carri6n, or the avenging Cid who seeks reparation from his craven son-in-law, the touch is always happy and is commonly final. There is an unity of conception and of language which forbids our accepting the Poema as the work of several hands ; and the division of the poem into separate cantares is managed with a discretion which argues a single artistic intelligence. The first part closes with the marriage of the hero's daughters ; the second with the shame of the Infantes de Carri6n, and the proud an- nouncement that the kings of Spain are sprung from the Cid's loins. In both the singer rises to the level of his subject, but his chief est gust is in the recital of some brilliant deed of arms. Judge him when, in a famous passage well rendered by Ormsby, he sings the charge of the Cid at Alcocer : " With bucklers braced before their breasts, with lances pointing low, With stooping crests and heads dent down above the saddle-bow, All firm of hand and high of heart they roll upon the foe. And he that in a good hour was born, his clarion "voice rings out, And clear above the clang of arms is heard his battle-shout, ' Among them, gentlemen ! Strike home for the love of charity ! The Champion of Bivar is here Ruy Diaz I am hef Then bearing where Bermuez still maintains unequal fight, Three hundred lances down they come, their pennons flickering white; Down go three hundred Moors to earth, a man to every blow; And, when they wheel, three hundred more, as charging back they go. It was a sight to see the lances rise and fall that day ; The shivered shields and riven mail, to see how thick they lay; The pennons that went in snow-white come out a gory red; The horses running riderless, the riders lying dead; While Moors call on Muhammad, and ' St. James / ' the Christians cry" THE AUTHOR OF THE POEMA 51 Indubitably this (and it were easy to match it elsewhere in the Poemd) is the work of an original genius who re- deems his superficial borrowings of incident from Roland by a treatment all his own. That he knew the French models is evident from his skilful conveyance of the bear episode in Ider to his own pages, where the Cid encoun- ters the beast as a lion. But the language shows no hint of French influence, and both thought and expression are profoundly national. The poet's name is irrecover- able, but the internal evidence points strongly to the conclusion that he came from the neighbourhood of Medina Celi. The surmise that he was an Asturian rests solely upon the absence of the diphthong uefrom his lines, an inference on the face of it unwarrantable. Against this is the topographical minuteness with which the poet reports the sallies of the Cid in the districts of Castejon and Alcocer ; his marked ignorance of the country round Zaragoza and Valencia, his detailed description of the central episode the outrage upon the Cid's daughters in the wood of Corpes, near Berlanga ; and the important fact that the four chief itineraries in the Poema are charged with minutiae from Molina to San Esteban de Gormaz, while they grow vague and more confused as they extend towards Burgos and Valencia. The most probable con- jecture, then, is that the unknown maker of this primitive masterpiece came from the Valle de Arbujuelo ; and it is worth adding that this opinion is supported by the authority of Sr. Menendez Pidal. Perhaps the greatest testimony to the early poet's worth is to be found in this : that his conception of his hero has outlived the true historic Cid, and has forced the child of his imagination upon the acceptance of mankind. Even more fantastic is the personality of Ruy Diaz as 52 SPANISH LITERATURE rendered by the anonymous compiler of the Cronica Rimada (Rhymed Chronicle of Events in Spain from the Death of King Pelayo to Ferdinand the Great, and more especially of the Adventures of the Cid). The composi- tion which bears this clumsy and inappropriate title is better named the Cantar de Rodrigo, and consists of 1125 lines, preceded by a scrap of rugged prose. Not till after digressions into other episodes, and irrelevant stories of Miro and Bernardo, Bishops of Palencia, pro- bably fellow-townsmen of the compiler, does the Cid appear. He is no longer, as in the Poema, a popular hero, idealised from historic report ; he is a purely ima- ginary figure, incrusted with a mass of fables accumulated in course of time. At the age of twelve he slays G6mez G6rmaz (an almost impossible style, compounded of a patronymic and the name of a castle belonging to the Cid), is claimed by the dead man's daughter, weds her, vanquishes the Moors, and leads his King's Fernando's troops to the gates of Paris, defeating the Count of Savoy upon the road. One legend is heaped upon another, and the poem, the end of which is lost, breaks off with the Pope's request for a year's truce, which Fernando, acting as ever upon the Cid's advice, mag- nanimously extends for twelve years. It is hard to say whether the Cantar de Rodrigo as we have it is the production of a single composer, or whether it is a patchwork by different hands, arranged from earlier poems, and eked out by prose stories and by oral tradi- tions. The versification is that of the simple sixteen- syllabled line, each hemistich of which forms a typical romance line. This in itself is a sign of its later date, and to this must be added the traces of deliberate imita- tion of the Poema, and the writer's familiarity with such CANTAR DE RODRIGO 53 modern devices as heraldic emblems. Further, the use of a Provencal form like gensor, the unmistakable tokens of French influence, the anticipation of the metre of the clerkly poems, the writer's frank admission of earlier songs on the same subject, the metamorphosis of the Cid into a feudal baron, and, above all, the decadent spirit of the entire work : these are tokens which imply a relative modernity. Much of the obscurity of language, which has been mistaken for archaism, is simply due to the defects of the manuscript ; and the evidence goes to show that the Rodrigo, put together in the last decade of the twelfth century or the first of the thirteenth, was retouched in the fourteenth by Spanish juglares humili- ated by the recent French invasions. Even so, much of the primitive pastiche remains, and the Rodrigo, which is mentioned in the General Chronicle, interests us as being the fountain-head of those romances on the Cid whose collection we owe to that enthusiastic and most learned investigator, Madame Carolina Michaelis de Vasconcellos. Far inferior in merit and interest to the Poema, the Rodrigo ranks with it as representative of the submerged mass of cantares de gesta, and is rightly valued as the venerable relic of a lost school. To these succeed three anonymous poems, the Libra de Apolonio (Book of Apollonius), the Vida de Santa Maria Egipdaqua (Life of St. Mary the Egyptian), and the Libre dels Tres Reyes dorient (Book of the Three Eastern Kings), all discovered in one manuscript in the Escurial Library by Pedro Jose Pidal, and first published by him in 1844. The story of Apollonius, supposed to be a trans- lation of a Greek romance, filters into European literature by way of the Gesta Romanorum, is found even in Ice- landic and Danish versions, and is familiar to English 54 SPANISH LITERATURE readers ot Pericles. The nameless Spanish arranger of the thirteenth century (probably a native of Arag6n) gives the story of Apollonius' adventures with force and clearness, anticipating in the character of Tarsiana the type of Preciosa, the heroine of Cervantes' Gitanilla and of Weber's opera. Unfortunately the closing tags of moralisings on the vanity of life destroy the effect which the writer has produced by his free translation. His text is suffused with Provengalisms, and his mono- rhymed quatrains of fourteen syllables are evidence of French or Provencal origin. This metrical novelty, extending over more than six hundred stanzas, is pro- perly regarded by the author as his chief distinction, and he implores God and the Virgin to guide him in the exercise of the new mastery (nueva maestrid). It is fair to add that his experiment has the interest of novelty, that it succeeded beyond measure in its time, and that its monotonous vogue endured for some two hundred years. To the same period belongs the Vida de Santa Maria Egipciaqua, the earliest Castilian example of verses of nine syllables. In substance it is a version of the Vie de Saint Marie tEgyptienne, ascribed without much reason to the veritable Bishop of Lincoln, Robert Grosseteste (? 1175-1253), among whose Carmtna Anglo- Normannica the French original is interpolated. The Spanish version follows the French lead with almost pedantic exactitude ; but the metre, new and well suited to the common ear, is handled with an easy grace re- markable in a first effort. As happens with other works of this time, the title of the short Libre dels Tres Reyes dorient is misleading. The visit of the Magi is briefly dismissed in the first fifty lines, the poem turning chiefly LOPE DE MOROS 55 upon the Flight into Egypt, the miracle wrought upon the leprous child of the robber, and the identification of the latter with the repentant thief of the New Testament. Like its predecessor, this legend is given in nine-syllabled verse, and is undoubtedly borrowed from a French or Provencal source not yet discovered. In the Disputa del Alma y el Cuerpo (Argument be- twixt Body and Soul), a subject which passes into all mediaeval literatures from a copy of Latin verses styled Rixa Animi et Corporis, there is a recurrence, though with innumerable variants of measure, to the Alexandrine type. Thus it is sought to reproduce the music of the model, an Anglo-Norman poem, written in rhymed couplets of six syllables, and wrongly attributed to Walter Map. With it should go the Debate entre el Agua y el Vino (Debate between Water and Wine), and the first Castilian lyric, Razon feita cfAmor (the Lay of Love). Composed in verses of nine syllables, the poem deals with the meeting of two lovers, their colloquy, interchanges, and separation. Both pieces, discovered within the last seventeen years by M. Morel-Fatio, are the productions of a single mind. It is tempting to identify the writer with the Lope de Moros mentioned in the final line, "Lupus me fe$it de Moros" \ still the likelihood is that, here as elsewhere, the copyist has but signed his transcription. Whoever the author may have been and the internal evidence tends to show that he was a clerk familiar with French, Provencal, Italian, or Portuguese exemplars he shines by virtue of qualities which are akin to genius. His delicacy and variety of sentiment, his finish of workmanship, his deliberate lyrical effects, announce the arrival of the equipped artist, the craftsman no longer content with 56 SPANISH LITERATURE rhymed narration, the singer with a personal, distinctive note. Here was a poet who recognised that in literature the least moral of the arts the end justifies the means ; hence he transformed the material which he borrowed, made it his own possession, and conveyed into Castile a new method adapted to her needs. But time and language were not yet ripe, and the Spanish lyric flourished solely in Galicia : it was not to be trans- planted at a first attempt. Yet the attempt was worth the trial ; for it closes the anonymous period with a triumph to which, if we except the Poema del Cid t it can show no fellow. CHAPTER III THE AGE OF ALFONSO THE LEARNED, AND OF SANCHO 1220-1300 IF we reject the claim of Lope de Moros to be the author of the Razon feita a" A mor, the first Castilian poet whose name reaches us is GONZALO DE BERCEO (?ii98- ? 1264), a secular priest attached to the Benedictine monastery of San Millan de la Cogolla, in the diocese of Calahorra. A few details are known of him. He was certainly a deacon in 1220, and his name occurs in documents between 1237 and 1264. He speaks of his advanced age in the Vida de Santa Oria, Virgen, his latest and perhaps most finished work ; and his birthplace, Berceo, is named in his Historia del Setter San Milldn de Cogolla, as in his rhymed biography of St. Dominic of Silas. His copiousness runs to some thirteen thousand lines, including, besides the works already named, the Sacrificio de la Misa (Sacrifice of the Mass), the Martirio de San Lorenzo (Martyrdom of St. Lawrence), the Loores de Nuestra Settora (Praises of Our Lady), the Signos que aparscerdn ante del Juicio (Signs visible before the Judg- ment), the Milagros de Nuestra Senora (Miracles of Our Lady), the Duelo que hizo la Virgen Maria el dia de la Pasidn de su hijo Jesucristo (The Virgin's Lament on the day of her Son's Passion), and three hymns to the 57 58 SPANISH LITERATURE Holy Ghost, the Virgin, and God the Father. In most editions of Berceo there is appended to his verses a poem in his praise, attributed to an unknown writer of the fourteenth century. This poem is, in fact, conjectured to be an invention of Tomas Antonio Sanchez, the earliest editor of Berceo's complete works (1779). The chances are that Berceo and his writings had passed out of remembrance within two hundred years of his death, and he was evidently unknown to Santillana in the fifteenth century. But a brief extract from him is given in the Mois/n Segundo (Second Moses) of Ambrosio G6mez, published in 1653. With the exception of the Martirio de San Lorenzo, of which the end is lost, all Berceo's writings have been preserved, and he suffers by reason of his exuberance. He sings in the vernacular, he declares, being too unlearned in the Latin ; but he has his little pretensions. Though he calls himself -zjuglar, he marks the differences between his dictados (poems) and the cantares (songs) of a plain juglar, and he vindicates his title by that monotonous metre the cuaderna via which was taken up in the Libro de Apolonio and became the model of all learned clerks in the next generations. Berceo uses the rhythm with success, and if his results are not splendid, it was not because he lacked perseverance. On the contrary, his industry was only too formidable. And, as a little of the mono-rhymed quatrain goes far, he must have perished had he depended upon execution. Beside Dante's achievement, as Puymaigre notes, the paraphrases of Berceo in the Sacrificio de la Misa (stanzas 250-266) seem thin and pale ; but the comparison is unfair to the earlier Castilian singer, who died in his obscure hamlet without the advantage of Dante's splendid BERCEO 59 literary tradition. Berceo is hampered by his lack of imagination, by the poverty of his conditions, by the absence of models, by the narrow circle of his sub- jects, and by the pious scruples which hindered him from arabesquing the original design. Yet he pos- sesses the gifts of simplicity and of unction, and amid his long digressions into prosy theological commonplace there are flashes of mystic inspiration unmatched by any other poet of his country and his time. Even when his versification, clear but hard, is at its worst, he accomplishes the end which he desires by popular- ising the pious legends which were dear to him. He was not never could have been a great poet. But in his own way he was, if not an inventor, the chief of a school, and the necessary predecessor of such devout authors as Luis de Leon and St. Teresa. He was a pioneer in the field of devout pastoral, with all the defects of the inexperienced explorer ; and, for the most part, he had nothing to guide him but his own uncul- tured instinct. Some specimen of his work may be given in Hookham Frere's little-known fragmentary version of the Vida de San Milldn : " He walked those mountains -wild, and lived within that nook For forty years and more, nor ever comfort took Of offered food or alms, or human speech a lookj No other saint in Spain did such a penance brook. For many a painful year he pass' d the seasons there, And many a night consumed in penitence and prayer In solitude and cold, with want and evil fare, His thoughts to God-resigned, and free from human care. Oh ! sacred is the place, the fountain and the hill, The rocks where he reposed, in meditation still, The solitary shades through which he roved at will ; His presence all that place with sanctity did fill? 60 SPANISH LITERATURE This is Berceo in a very characteristic vein, dealing with his own special saint in his chosen way the way of the " new mastery " ; and he keeps to the same rhythm in the nine hundred odd stanzas which he styles the Milagros de Nuestra Seftora. Here his devotion inspires him to more conscientious effort ; and it has been sought to show that Berceo takes his tales as he finds them in the Miracles de la Sainte Vierge, by the French trouvere, Gautier de Coinci, Prior of Vic-sur-Aisne (1177-1236). Certain it is that Gautier's source, the Soissons manu- script, was known to Alfonso the Learned, who men- tions it in the sixty-first of his Galician songs as " a book full of miracles " : " En Seixons . . . un liuro a todo cheo de miragres." There were doubtless earlier Latin collections amongst others, Vincent de Beauvais' Speculum histo- riale and Pothon's Liber de miraculis Sanct resquestas, more or less ingenious ; but we cannot omit the name of the Carthusian, JUAN DE PADILLA (1468- 71522), who suffers from an admirer's indiscretion in calling him "the Spanish Homer." His Retablo de la Vida de Cristo versifies the Saviour's life in the manner of Juvencus, and his more elaborate poem, Los doce triunfos de los doce Apostoles, strives to fuse Dante's severity with Petrarch's grace. Rhetorical out of season, and tending to abuse his sonorous vocabulary, Padilla indulges in verbal eccentricities and in sudden drops from altisonance to familiarity ; but in his best passages his journey through hell and purgatory, guided by St. Paul he excels by force of vision, by his realisation of the horror of the grave, and by his vigorous transcription of the agonies of the lost. The allegorical form is again found in the Infierno del A -mor of Garci Sanchez de Bada- joz, who ended life in a madhouse. His presentation of Macias, Rodriguez del Padr6n, Santillana, and Jorge Manrique in thrall to love's enchantments, was to the taste of his time, and a poem with the same title, Infierno del Amor, made the reputation of a certain Guevara, whose scattered songs are full of picaresque and biting wit. For the rest, Sdnchez de Badajoz depends upon 120 SPANISH LITERATURE his daring, almost blasphemous humour, his facility in improvising, and his mastery of popular forms. Of the younger poetic generation, PEDRO MANUEL DE URREA (1486-? 1530) is the most striking artist. His Peregrinacidn d Jersuattn and his Penitencia de Amor are practically inaccessible, but his Cancionero displays an ingenious and versatile talent. Urrea's aristocratic spirit revolts at the thought that in this age of printing his songs will be read "in cellars and kitchens," and the publication of his verses seems due to his mother. His Fiestas de Amor, translated from Petrarch, are tedious, but he has a perfect mastery of the popular d&ima, and his villancicos abound in quips of fancy matched by subtleties of expression. Urrea fails when he closes a stanza with a Latin tag a dubious adonic, such as Dominus tecum. He fares better with his modification of Jorge Manrique's stanza, approving his skill in modu- latory effects. His most curious essay is his verse rendering of the Celestina's first act ; for here he antici- pates the very modes of Lope de Vega and of Tirso de Molina. But in his own day he was not the sole prac- titioner in dramatic verse. A distinct progress in this direction is made by RODRIGO COTA DE MAGUAQUE (fl. 1490), a convert Jew, who incited the mob to massacre his brethren. Wrongly reputed the author of the Coplas del Provincial, of Mingo Revulgo, and of the Celestina, Cota is the parent of fifty- eight quatrains, in the form of a burlesque wedding-song, recently discovered by M. Foulche-Delbosc. But Cota's place in literature is ensured by his celebrated Didlogo entre el Amor y un Viejo. In seventy stanzas Love and the Ancient argue the merits of love, till the latter yields to the persuasion of the god, who then derides the hoary ENCINA 121 amorist. The dialogue is eminently dramatic both in form and spirit, the action convincing, clear, and rapid, while the versification is marked by an exquisite melody. It is not known that the Didlogo was ever played, yet it is singularly fitted for scenic presentation. The earliest known writer for the stage among the moderns was, as we have already said, G6mez Man- rique; but earlier spectacles are frequently mentioned in fifteenth-century chronicles. These may be divided into entremeses, a term loosely applied to balls and tourneys, accompanied by chorus-singing ; and into momos, enter- tainments which took on a more literary character, and which found excuses for dramatic celebrations at Christ- mas and Eastertide. G6mez Manrique had made a step forward, but his pieces are primitive and fragmentary compared to those of JUAN DEL ENCINA (1468-1534). A story given in the scandalous Pleito del Manto reppjris that Encina was the son of Pero TorreTfas, arid another idle tale declares him to be Juan de Tamayo. The latter is proved a blunder; the former is discredited by Encina's solemn cursing of Torrellas. Encina passed from the University of Salamanca to the household of the Duke of Alba (1493), was present next year at the siege of Granada, and celebrated the victory in his Triunfo^de^ fama. Leaving for Italy in 1498, he is found at Rome in 1502, a favourite with that Spanish Pope, Alexander VI. He returned to Spain, took orders, and sang his first mass at Jerusalem in 1519, at which date he was ap- pointed Prior of the Monastery of Le6n. He is thought to have died at Salamanca. Encina began writing in his teens, and has left us over a hundred and seventy lyrics, composd before he was twenty-five years old. Nearly eighty pieces, with musical 122 SPANISH LITERATURE v settings by the author, are given in Asenjo Barbieri's Cancionero Musical. His songs, when jundisfigured by deliberate conceits, are full of devotional charm. Still, Enema abides with us in virtue of his eclogues, the first two being given in the presence of his patrons at Alba de Tormes, probably in 1492. His plays are four- teen in number, and were undoubtedly staged. Ticknor would persuade us that the seventh and eighth, though really one piece, " with a pause between," were separated by the poet " in his simplicity." Even Encina's simpli- city may be overstated, and Ticknor's "pause" must have been long : for the seventh eclogue was played in 1494, and the eighth in 1495. His eclogues are eclogues only in name, being dramatic presentations of primitive themes, with a distinct but simple action. The occasion is generally a feast-day, and the subject is sometimes sacred. Yet not always so : the Egloga de Fileno dra- matises the shepherd's passion for Lefira, and ends with a suicide suggested by the Celestina. In like wise, Encina's Pldcida y Vitoriano, involving two attempted suicides and one scabrous scene, introduces Venus and Mercury as characters. Again, the Aucto del Repelon dramatises the adventures in the market-place of two shepherds, Johan Paramas and Piernicurto ; while Cris- tinoy Febea exhibits the ignominious downfall of a would- be hermit in phrases redolent of Cota's Didlogo. Simple as the motives are, they are skilfully treated, and the ver- sification, especially in Pldcida y Vitoriano, is pure and elegant. Encina elaborates the strictly liturgical drama to its utmost point, and his younger contemporary, Lucas Fernandez, makes no further progress, for the obvious reason that no novelty was possible without incurring a charge of heresy. As Sr. Cotarelo y Mori has pointed AMADlS DE GAULA 123 out, the sacred drama remains undeveloped till the lives of saints and the theological mysteries are exploited by men of genius. Meanwhile, Encina has begun the move- ment which culminates in the autos of Calderon. In another direction, the Spanish version of Amadis de Gaula (1508) marks an epoch. This story was known to Ayala and three other singers in Baena's chorus ; and the probability is that the lost original was written in Portu- guese by Joham de Lobeira (1261-1325), who uses in the Colocci-Brancuti Canzoniere (No. 230) the same ritour- nelle that Oriana sings in Amadis. GARCIA ORDONEZ DE MONTALVO (fl. 1500) admits that three-fourths of his book is mere translation ; and it may be that he was not the earliest Spaniard to annex the story, which, in the first instance, derives from France. Amadis of Gaul is a British knight, and, though the geography is bewil- dering, "Gaul" stands for Wales, as "Bristoya" and " Vindilisora" stand for Bristol and Windsor. The chronology is no less puzzling, for the action occurs "not many years after the Passion of our Redeemer." Briefly, the book deals with the chequered love of Amadis for Oriana, daughter of Lisuarte, King of Britain. Spells incredible, combats with giants, miraculous inter- positions, form the tissue of episode, till fidelity is re- warded, and Amadis made happy. Cervantes' Barber, classing the book as "the best in that kind," saved it from the holocaust, and posterity has accepted the Barber's sentence. Amadls is at least the only chivalresque novel that man need read. The style is excellent, and, though the tale is too long- drawn, the adventures are interesting, the supernatural machinery is plausibly arranged, and the plot is skil- fully directed. Later stories are mostly burlesques of 124 SPANISH LITERATURE Amadis : the giants grow taller, the monsters fiercer, the lakes deeper, the torments sharper. In his Sergas de Esplandidn, Montalvo fails when he attempts to take up the story at the end of Amadis. One tedious sequel followed another till, within half a century, we have a thirteenth Amadis. The best of its successors is Luis Hurtado's (or, perhaps, Francisco de Moraes') Palmerin de Inglaterra, which Cervantes' Priest would have kept in such a casket as " that which Alexander found among Darius' spoils, intended to guard the works of Homer." Nor is this mere irony. Burke avowed in the House of Commons that he had spent much time over Palmerin, and Johnson wasted a summer upon Felixmarte de Hir- cania. Wearisome as the kind was, its popularity was so unbounded that Hieronym Sempere, in the Caballeria cristiana, applied the chivalresque formula to religious' allegory, introducing Christ as the Knight of the Lion, Satan as the Knight of the Serpent, and the Apostles as the Twelve Knights of the Round Table. Of its class, Amadis de Gaula is the first and best. From an earlier version of Amadis derives the Cdrcel de Amor of Diego San Pedro, the writer of some erotic verses in the Cancionero de burlas. San Pedro tells the story of the loves of Leriano and Laureola, mingled with much allegory and chivalresque sentiment. The construction is weak, but the style is varied, delicate, and distinguished. Ending with a panegyric on women, "who, no less than cardinals, bequeath us the theo- logical virtues," the book was banned by the Inquisition. But nothing stayed its course, and, despite all prohibi- tions, it was reprinted times out of number. The Cdrcel de Amor ends with a striking scene of suicide, which was borrowed by many later novelists. ROJAS 125 The first instance of its annexation occurs in the Tragicomedia de Calisto y Melibea, better known as the Celestina. This remarkable book, first published (as it seems) at Burgos, in 1499, has been classed as a play, or as a novel in dialogue. Its length would make it impossible on the boards, and its influence is most marked on the novel. As first published, it had sixteen acts, extended later to twenty-one, and in some editions to twenty-two. On the authority of Rojas, anxious as to the Inquisition, the first and longest act has been attributed to Mena and to Cota ; but the prose is vastly superior to Mena's, while the verse is no less inferior to the lyrism of Cota's Didlogo. There is small doubt but that the whole is the work of the lawyer FERNANDO DE ROJAS, a native of Montalban, who became Alcaide of Salamanca, and died, at a date unknown, at Talavera de la Reina. The tale is briefly told. Calisto, rebuffed by Melibea, employs the procuress Celestina, who arranges a meeting between the lovers. But destiny works a speedy expia- tion : Celestina is murdered by Calisto's servants, Calisto is accidentally killed, and Melibea destroys herself before her father, whom she addresses in a set speech suggested by the Cdrcel de Amor. Celestina is developed from Ruiz' Trota-conventos ; Rojas' lovers, Calisto and Meli- bea, from Ruiz' Mel6n and Endrina ; and some hints are drawn from Alfonso Martinez de Toledo. But, despite these borrowings, we have to deal with a completely original masterpiece, unique in its kind. We are no longer in an atmosphere thick with impossible monsters in incredible circumstances : we are in the very grip of life, in commerce with elemental, strait passions. Rojas is the first Spanish novelist who brings a con* 126 SPANISH LITERATURE science to his work, who aims at more than whiling away an idle hour. He is not great in incident, his plot is clumsily fashioned, the pedantry of his age fetters him ; but in effects of artistry, in energy of phrasing, he is un- matched by his coevals. Though he invented the comic type which was to become the gracioso of Calder6n, his humour is thin ; on the other hand, his realism and his pessimistic fulness are above praise. Choosing for his subject the tragedy of illicit passion, he hit on the means of exhibiting all his powers. His purpose is to give a transcript of life, objective and impersonal, and he fulfils it, adding thereunto a mysterious touch of sombre imagination. His characters are not Byzantine emperors and queens of Cornwall : he traffics in the passions of plain men and women, the agues of the love- sick, the crafts of senile vice, the venality and vauntings of picaroons, the effrontery of croshabells. Hence, from the first hour, his book took the world by storm, was imprinted in countless editions, was continued by Juan Sedefto and Feliciano da Silva the same whose " reason of the unreasonableness" so charmed Don Quixote was imitated by Sancho Muft6n in Lisandro y Roselia, was used by Lope de Vega in the Dorotea, and was passed from the Spanish stage to be glorified as Romeo and Juliet. Between the years 1508-12 was composed the anony- mous Cuestidn de Amor, a semi-historical, semi-social novel wherein contemporaries figure under feigned names, some of which are deciphered by the industry of Signer Croce, who reveals Belisena, for example, as Bona Sforza, afterwards Queen of Poland. Though much of its first success was due to the curiosity which commonly attaches to any roman a clef, it still interests PULGAR: COLUMBUS 127 because of its picturesque presentation of Spanish society in Italian surroundings, and the excellence of its Castilian style was approved by that sternest among critics, Juan de Valdes. History is represented by the Historia de los Reyes catdlicos of Andres Bernaldez (d. 1513), parish priest of Los Palacios, near Seville, who relates with spirit and simplicity the triumphs of the reign, waxing enthusiastic over the exploits of his friend Columbus. A more am- bitious historian is HERNANDO DEL PULGAR (1436-? 1492), whose Claras Varones de Castillo, is a brilliant gallery of portraits, drawn by an observer who took Perez de Guzman for his master. Pulgar's Crdnica de los Reyes catolicos is mere official historiography, the work of a flattering partisan, the slave of flagrant prejudice ; yet even here the charm of manner is seductive, though the perdurable value of the annals is naught. As a portrait- painter, as an intelligent analyst of character, as a wielder of Castilian prose, Pulgar ranks only second to his im- mediate model. He is to be distinguished from another Hernando del Pulgar (1451-1531), who celebrated the exploits of the great captain, Gonzalo de C6rdoba, at the request of Carlos V. In this case, as in so many others, the old is better. One great name, that of Christopher Columbus or CRISTOBAL COLON (1440-1506) is inseparable from those of the Catholic kings, who astounded their enemies by their ingratitude to the man who gave them a New World. Mystic and adventurer, Columbus wrote letters which are marked by sound practical sense, albeit couched in the apocalyptic phrases of one who holds himself for a seer and prophet. Incorrect, uncouth, and rugged as is his syntax, he rises on occasion to heights 128 SPANISH LITERATURE of eloquence astonishing in a foreigner. But it is per- haps imprudent to classify such a man as Columbus by his place of birth. An exception in most things, he "was probably the truest Spaniard in all the Spains ; and by virtue of his transcendent genius, visible in word as in action, he is filed upon the bede-roll of the Spanish glories. .tr CHAPTER VII THE AGE OF CARLOS QUINTO WITH the arrival of printing-presses in 1474 the diffusion of foreign models became general throughout Spain. The closing years of the reign of the Catholic Kings were essentially an era of translation, and this movement was favoured by high patronage. The King, Fernando, was the pupil of Vidal de Noya; the Queen, Isabel, studied under Beatriz Galindo, la latina ; and Luis Vives reports that their daughter, Mad Juana, could and did,/'^)^ deliver impromptu Latin speeches to the deputies of the Low Countries. Throughout the land Italian scholars preached the gospel of the Renaissance. The brothers Geraldino (Alessandro and Antonio) taught the children of the royal house. Peter Martyr, the Lombard, boasts that the intellectual chieftains of Castile sat, at his feet ; and he had his present reward, for he ended as Bishop of Granada. From the Latin chair in the University of Salamanca, Lucio Marineo lent his aid to the good cause ; and, in Salamanca likewise, the Portuguese, Arias Barbosa, won repute as the earliest good Penin- sular Hellenist. Spanish women took the fever of foreign culture. Lucia de Medrano and Juana de Contreras lectured to university men upon the Latin poets of the Augustan age. So, too, Francisca de Nebrija would 1 30 SPANISH LITERATURE serve as substitute for her father, ANTONIO DE NEBRIJA (1444-1522), the greatest of Spanish humanists, the author of the Arte de la Lengua Castellana and of a Spanish-Latin dictionary, both printed in 1492. Nebrija touched letters at almost every point, touching naught that he did not adorn ; he expounded his principles in the new University of Alcald de Henares, founded in 1508 by the celebrated Cardinal Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros (1436-1517). Palencia had preceded Nebrija by two years with the earliest Spanish-Latin diction- ary ; but Nebrija's drove it from the field, and won for its author a name scarce inferior to Casaubon's or Scaliger's. The first Greek text of the New Testament ever printed came from Alcala de Henares in 1514. In 1520 the re- nowned Complutensian Polyglot followed ; the Hebrew and Chaldean texts being supervised by converted Jews like Alfonso de Alcala, Alfonso de Zamora, and Pablo Coronel ; the Greek by Nebrija, Juan de Vergara, Demetrio Ducas, and Hernan Nunez, "the Greek Com- mander." Versions of the Latin classics were in all men's hands. Palencia rendered Plutarch and Josephus, Francisco Vidal de Noya translated Horace, Virgil's Eclogues were done by Encina, Caesar's Commentaries by Diego L6pez de Toledo, Plautus by Francisco L6pez Villalobos, Juvenal by Jer6nimo de Villegas, and Apuleius' Golden Ass by Diego Lopez de Cartagena, Archdeacon of Seville. Juan de Vergara was busied on the text of Aristotle, while his brother, Francisco de Vergara, gave Spaniards their first Greek grammar and translated Heliodorus. Nor was activity restrained to dead lan- guages : the Italian teachers saw to that. Dante was translated by Pedro Fernandez de Villegas, Archdeacon LEON HEBREO 131 of Burgos ; Petrarch's Trionfi by Antonio Obreg6n and Alvar Gomez ; and the Decamerone by an anonymous writer of high merit. If Italians invaded Spain, Spaniards were no less ready to settle in Italy. Long before, Dante had met with Catalans and had branded their proverbial stinginess : "I'avara poverta di Catalogna." A little later, and Boccaccio spurned Castilians as so many wild men : " semibarbari et efferati homines." Lorenzo Valla, chief of the Italian scholars at Alfonso V.'s Neapolitan court, denounced the King's countrymen as illiterates : " a studiis hmnanitatis abhorrentes'' Benedetto Gareth of Barcelona (1450-? 1514) plunged into the new current, forswore his native tongue, wrote his respectable Rime in Italian, and re-incarnated himself under the Italian form of Chariteo. A certain Jusquin Dascanio is re- presented by a song, half-Latin, half-Italian, in Asenjo Barbieri's Cancionero Musical de los Siglos xv. y xvi. (No. 68), and a few anonymous pieces in the same collection are written wholly in Italian. The Valencian, Bertomeu Gentil, and the Castilian, Tapia, use Italian in the Cancionero General of 1527, the former succeeding so far that one of his eighteen Italian sonnets has been accepted as Tansillo's by all Tansillo's editors. The case of the Spanish Jew, Judas Abarbanel, whom Chris- tians call Le6n Hebreo, is exceptional. Undoubtedly his famous Dialoghi di amore, that curious product of neo - platonic and Semitic mysticism which charmed Abarbanel's contemporaries no less than it charmed Cervantes, reaches us in Italian (1535). Yet, since it was written in 1502, its foreign dress is the chance result of the writer's expulsion from Spain with his brethren in 1492. It is unlikely that Judas Abarbanel should 1 32 SPANISH LITERATURE have mastered all the secrets of Italian within ten years : that he composed in Castilian, the language most familiar to him, is overwhelmingly probable. But the Italian was met on his own ground. The Neapolitan poet, Luigi Tansillo, declares himself a Spaniard to the core : " Spagnuolo cPaffezione" And, later, Panigarola asserts that Milanese fops, on the strength of a short tour in Spain, would pretend to forget their own speech, and would deliver themselves of Spanish words and tags in and out of season. Mean- while, Spanish Popes, like Calixtus III. and Alexander VI., helped to bring Spanish into fashion. It is unlikely that the epical Historia Parthenopea (1516) of the Sevillan, Alonso Hernandez, found many readers even among the admirers of the Great Captain, Gonzalo de C6rdoba, whose exploits are its theme ; but it merits notice as a Spanish book issued in Rome, and as a poor imitation of Mena's Trescientas, with faint suggestions of an Italian environment. A Spaniard, whom Encina may have met upon his travels, introduced Italians to the Spanish theatre. This was KAKTOLOME TORRES NAHARRO, a native of Torres, near Badajoz. Our sole information concerning him comes from a Letter Prefatory to his works, written by one Barbier of Orleans. The dates of his birth and death are unknown, and no proof supports the story that he was driven from Rome because of his satires on the Papal court. Neither do we know that he died in extreme poverty. These are baseless tales. What is certain is this : that Torres Naharro, having taken orders, was captured by Algerine pirates, was ransomed, and made his way to Rome about the year 1513. Further, we know that he lived at Naples in the service of Fabrizio Colonna, and that his collected plays were published at TORRES NAHARRO 133 Naples in 1517 with the title of Propaladia, dedicated to Francisco Davalos, the Spanish husband of Vittoria Colonna. That Torres Naharro was a favourite with Leo X. rests on no better basis than the fact that in the Pope's privilege to print he is styled dilectus filius. His friendly witness, Barbier, informs us that, though Torres Naharro was quite competent to write his plays in Latin, he chose Castilian of set purpose that "he might be the first to write in the vulgar tongue." This phrase, taken by itself, implies ignorance of Encina's work ; in any case, Torres Naharro develops his drama on a larger scale than that of his predecessor. His Prohemio or Preface is full of interesting doctrine. He divides his plays into five acts, because Horace wills it so, and these acts he calls jornadas, " because they re- semble so many resting-points." The personages should not be too many : not less than six, and not more than twelve. If the writer introduces some twenty charac- ters in his Tinellaria, he excuses himself on the ground that " the subject needed it." He further apologises for the introduction of Italian words in his plays : a conces- sion to " the place where, and the persons to whom, the plays were recited." Lastly, Torres Naharro divides dramas into two broad classes : first, the comedia de noticia, which treats of events really seen and noted ; second, the comedia de fantasia, which deals with feigned things, imaginary incidents that seem true, and might be true, though in fact they are not so. Of the comedia de fantasia Torres Naharro is the earliest master. He adventures on the allegorical drama in his Trofea, which commemorates the exploits of Manoel of Portugal in Africa and India, and brings Fame and Apollo upon the stage. The chivalresque 134 SPANISH LITERATURE drama is represented by him in such pieces as the Serafina, the Aquilana, the Himenea ; while he examples the play of manners by the Jacinta and the Soldadesca, Each piece begins with an in troy to or prologue, wherein indulgence and attention are requested ; then follows a concise summary of the plot ; last, the action opens. The faults of Torres Naharro's theatre are patent enough: his tendency to turn comedy to farce, his inclination to extravagance, his want of tact in crowding his stage as in the Tinellaria with half-a-dozen characters chattering in half-a-dozen different languages at once. Setting aside these primitive humours, it is impos- sible to deny that Torres Naharro has a positive, as well as an historic value. His versification, always in the Castilian octosyllabic metre, with no trespassing on the Italian hendecasyllabic, is neat and polished, and, though far from splendid, lacks neither sweetness nor speed ; his dialogue is pointed, opportune, dramatic ; his characters are observed and are set in the proper light. His verses entitled the Lamentaciones de Amor are in the old, artificial manner ; his satirical couplets on the clergy are vigorous and witty attacks on the general life of Rome ; his devout songs are neither better nor worse than those of his contemporaries ; and his sonnets two in Italian, one in a mixture of Italian and Latin are mere curiosities of no real worth, yet they testify to the writer's uncommon versatility. Versatile Torres Naharro unquestionably was, and his gift serves him in the plays for which he is remembered. He is the first_Srjaniard to realise his personages, to create character on the boardsj the first to build a plot, to maintain an interest of action by variety of incident, to polish an intrigue,, to concentrate his powers within manageable limits, to... GIL VICENTE 135 view stage-effects from before the curtain. In a word, Torres Naharro knew the stage, its possibilities, and its resources. For his own age and for his opportunities he knew it even too well ; and his Himenea the theme of which is the love of Himeneo for Febea, with the interposition of Febea's brother, petulant as to the "point of honour" is an isolated masterpiece, unrivalled tilTthe time of_Lo_p_e de_Veg_a.. The accident that Torres Naharro's Propaladia was printed in Italy ; the misfor- tune that its Spanish reprints were tardy, and that his plays were too complicated for the primitive resources of the Spanish stage : these delayed the development of the Spanish theatre by close on a century. Yet the fact remains : to find a match for the Himenea we must pass to the best of Lope's pieces. Thus the Spaniard in Italy. In Portugal, likewise, he made his way. GIL VICENTE (1470-1540), the Portuguese dramatist, wrote forty-two pieces, of which ten are wholly in Castilian, while fifteen are in a mixed jargon of Cas- tilian and Portuguese which the author himself ridicules as aravia in his Auto das Fadas. An important histori- cal fact is that Vicente's earliest dramatic attempt, the Monologo da Visitaqdo, is in Castilian, and that it was actually played the first lay piece ever given in Portu- gal on June 8, 1502. Its simplicity of tone and elegance of manner are reminiscent of Encina, and it can scarce be doubted that Vicente's imitation is deliberate. Still more obvious is the following of Encina's eclogues in Vicente's Auto pastoril Castelhano and the Auto dos Reis Matgos, where the legend is treated with Encina's curious touch of devotion and modernity, the whole closing with a song in which all join. Once again Encina's influence is manifest in the Auto da Sibilla Cassandra, wherein 10 I 3 6 SPANISH LITERATURE Cassandra, niece of Moses, Abraham, and Isaiah, is wooed by Solomon. In Amadis de Gaula and in Dom Duardos there is a marked advance in elaboration and finish ; and in the Auto da F/ Vicente proves his independence by an ingenuity and a fancy all his own. Here he displays qualities above those of his model, and treats his subject with such brilliancy that, a century and a half later, Calder6n condescended to borrow from the Portuguese the idea of his auto entitled El Lirio y la Azucena. Gil Vicente is technically a dramatist, but he is not dra- matic as Torres Naharro is dramatic. His action is slight, his treatment timid and conventional, and he is more poetic than inventive ; still, his dramatic songs are of singular beauty, conceived in a tone of mystic lyricism unapproached by those who went before him, and sur- passed by few who followed. That Vicente was ever played in Spain is not known ; but that he influenced both Lope de Vega and Calder6n is as sure as that he himself was a disciple of Encina. A more immediate factor in the evolution of Spanish letters was the Catalan Boscd, whom it is convenient to call by his Castilian name, JUAN BoscAN ALMOGAVER (? 1490-1542). A native of Barcelona, Boscan served as a soldier in Italy, returned to Spain in 1519, and, as we know from Garcilaso's Second Eclogue, was tutor to Fernando Alvarez de Toledo, whom the world knows as the Duque de Alba. Roseau's earliest verses are all in the old manner ; nor does he venture on the Italian hendecasyllabic till the year 1526, just before resigning his guardianship of Alba. His con- version was the work of the Venetian ambassador, Andrea Navagiero, an accomplished courtier, ill repre- sented by his Viaggiofatto in Spagna. Being at Granada BOSCAN 137 in the year 1526, Navagiero met Boscan, who has left us an account of the conversation : "Talking of wit and letters, especially of their varieties in different tongues, he inquired why I did not try in Castilian the sonnets and verse-forms favoured by distinguished Italians. He not only suggested this, but pressed me urgently to the attempt. Some days later, I made for home, and, be- cause of the length and loneliness of the journey, think- ing matters over, I returned to what Navagiero had said, and thus I first attempted this sort of verse ; finding it hard at the outset, since it is very intricate, with many peculiarities, varying greatly from ours. Yet, later, I fancied that I was progressing well, perhaps because we all love our own essays ; hence I continued, little by little, with increasing zeal." This passage is a locus classicus. Ticknor justly observes that no single foreigner ever affected a national literature more deeply and more instantly than Navagiero, and that we have here a first- hand account, probably unique in literary history, of the first inception of a revolution by the earliest, if not the most conspicuous, actor in it. We have at last reached the parting of the ways, and Boscan presents himself as a guide to the Promised Land. The astonishing thing is that Boscan, a Barcelonese by birth and residence, ignores Auzi'as March. There were many Italianates before Boscan as Francisco Imperial and Santillana ; but their hour was not propitious, and Boscan is with justice regarded as the leader of the movement. He was not a poet of singular gifts, and he had the disadvantage of writing in Castilian, which was not his native language ; but Boscan had the wit to see that Castilian was destined to suoremacy, and he mastered it for his purpose with 138 SPANISH LITERATURE that same dogged perseverance which led him to under- take his more ambitious attempt unaided. He does not, indeed, appear to have sought for disciples, nor were his own efforts as successful as he believed : "perhaps because we all love our own essays." His Castilian prose is evidence of his gift of style, and his translation of Castiglione's Cortegiano is a triumph of rendering fit v ' to take its place beside our Thomas Hoby's version of the same original. But, it must be said frankly, that Boscan's most absolute success is in prose. Herrera bitterly taunts him with decking himself in the precious robes of Petrarch, and with remaining, spite of all that he can do, "a foreigner in his language." And the charge is true. In verse Boscan's defects grow very visible: his hardness, his awkward construction, his un- refined ear, his uncertain touch upon his instrument, his boisterous execution. Still, it is not as an original genius that Boscan finds place in history, but rather as an initiator, a master-opportunist who, without persua- sion, by the sheer force of conviction and example, led a nation to abandon the ancient ways, and to admit the potency and charm of exotic forms. That in itself constitutes a title, if not to immortality at least, to remembrance. Boscan's influence manifested itself in diverse ways. His friend, Garcilaso de la Vega, sent him the first edition of Castiglione's Cortegiano, printed at Venice in 1528. This "the best book that ever was written upon good breeding," according to Samuel Johnson- was triumphantly translated into Castilian by Boscan at Garcilaso's prayer ; and, though Boscan himself held translation to be a thing meet for " men of small parts," his rendering is an almost perfect performance. BOSCAN 139 Moreover, it was the single work published by him (1534), for his poems appeared under his widow's care. Once more, in an epistle directed to Hurtado de Men- doza, Boscan re-echoes Horace's note of elegant sim- plicity with a faithfulness not frequent in his work ; and, lastly, it is known that he did into Castilian an Euripidean play, which, though licensed for the press, was never printed. Truly it seems that Boscan was conscious of his very definite limitations, and that he felt the necessity of a copy, rather than a direct model. If it were so, this would indicate a power of conscious selection, a faculty for self-criticism which cannot be traced in his published verses. His earlier poems, written in Castilian measures, show him for a man destitute of guidance, thrown on his own resources, a perfectly undistinguished versifier with naught to sing and with no dexterity of vocalisation. Yet, let Boscan betake himself to the poets of the Cinque Cento, and he flashes forth another being : the dauntless adventurer sailing for unknown continents, inspired by the enthusiasm of immediate suggestion. His Hero y Leandra is frankly based upon Musaeus, and it is characteristic of Boscan's mode that he expands Musaeus' three hundred odd hexameters into nigh three thousand hendecasyllabics. Professor Flamini has de- monstrated most convincingly that Boscan followed Tasso's Favo/a, but he comes far short of Tasso's variety, distinction, and grace. He annexes the Italian blank verse the versi sciolti as it were by sheer force, but he never subdues the metre to his will, and his monotony of accent and mechanical cadence grow insufferable. Not only so : too often the very pretence of inspiration dis- solves, and the writer descends upon slothful prose, 140 SPANISH LITERATURE sliced into lines of regulation length, honeycombed with flat colloquialisms. Conspicuously better is the Octava Rima an allegory embodying the Court of Love and the Court of Jealousy, with the account of an em- bassage from the former to two fair Barcelonese rebels. Of this performance Thomas Stanley has given an English version (1652) from which these stanzas are taken : " In the bright region of the fertile east Where constant calms smooth Aeav'n's unclouded brow, There lives an easy people, vovJd to rest, Who on love only all their hours bestow : By no unwelcome discontent opprest, No cares save those that from this passion flow, Here reigns, here ever uncontrolled did reign; The beauteous Queen sprung from the foaming main. Her hand the sceptre bears, the crown her head, Her willing vassals here their tribute pay : Here is her sacred power and statutes spread, Which all with cheerful forwardness obey : The lover by affection hither led, Receives relief, sent satisfied away : Here all enjoy, to give their last flames ease, The pliant figure of their mistresses . . . Love every structure offers to the sight, And every stone his soft impression wears. The fountains, moving pity and delight, With amorous murmurs drop persuasive tears. The rivers in their courses love invite, Love is the only sound their motion bears. The winds in whispers soothe these kind desires, And fan with their mild breath LovJs glowing fires" Ticknor ranks this as "the most agreeable and original of Boscan's works," and as to the correctness of the first BOSCAN 141 adjective there can be no two opinions. But concerning Boscan's originality there is much to say. Passage upon passage in the Octavo. Rima is merely a literal rendering of Bembo's Stanze, and the translation begins undis- guised at the opening line. Where the Italian writes, " Ne I'odorato e lucido Oriente" the Spaniard follows him with the candid transcription, "En el lumbroso y fertil Oriente" ; and the imitation is further tesselated with mosaics conveyed from Claudian, from Petrarch, and Ariosto. None the less is it just to say that the conveyance is executed with considerable almost with masterly skill. The borrowing nowise belittles Boscan ; for he was not did not pose as a great spirit with an original voice. He makes no claim whatever, he seeks for no applause the shy, taciturn experimentalist who published never a line of verse, and piped for his own delight. Equipped with the ambition, though not with the accomplishment, of the artist, Boscan has a prouder place than he ever dreamed of, since he is confessedly the earliest repre- sentative of a new poetic dynasty, the victorious leader of a desperately forlorn hope. That title is his laurel and his garland. He led his race into the untrodden ways, triumphing without effort where men of more strenuous faculty had failed ; and his results have suc- cessfully challenged time, inasmuch as there has been no returning from his example during nigh four hundred years. Not a great genius, not a lordly versifier, endowed with not one supreme gift, Boscan ranks as an unique instance in the annals of literary adventure bj virtue of his enduring and irrevocable victory. His is the foremost post in point of time. In point of absolute merit he is easily outshone by his younger 1 42 SPANISH LITERATURE comrade, GARCILASO DE LA VEGA (1503-36), the bearer of a name renowned in Spanish chronicle and song. Grandson of Perez de Guzman, Garcilaso entered the Royal Body-guard in his eighteenth year. He quitted him like the man he was in crushing domestic rebellion, and, despite the fact that his brother, Pedro, served in the insurgent ranks, Garcilaso grew into favour with the Emperor. At Pavia, where Francis lost all save honour, Gar- cilaso distinguished himself by his intrepidity. For a moment he fell into disgrace because of his connivance at a secret marriage between his cousin and one of the Empress' Maids of Honour : interned in an islet on the Danube, Danubio, rio divino, he calls it, he there composed one of his most admired pieces, richly charged with exotic colouring. His imprisonment soon ended, and, with intervals of service before Tunis, and with spells of embassies between Spain and Italy, his last years were mostly spent at Naples in the service of the Spanish Viceroy, Pedro de Toledo, Marque's de Villafranca, father of Garcilaso's friend, the Duque de Alba. In the Pro- ven9al campaign the Spanish force was held in check by a handful of yeomen gathered in the fort of Muy, between Draguignan and Fre"jus. Muy recalls to Spanish hearts such memories as Zutphen brings to Englishmen. In itself the engagement was a mere skirmish : for Garci- laso it was a great and picturesque occasion. The ac- counts given by Navarrete and Garcfa Cerezeda vary in detail, but their general drift is identical. The last of the Spanish Caisars named his personal favourite, the most dashing of Spanish soldiers and the most distinguished of Spanish poets, to command the storm ing-party. Doffing his breastplate and his helmet that he might be seen GARCILASO 143 by all beholders by the Emperor not less than by the army Garcilaso led the assault in person, was among the first to climb the breach, and fell mortally wounded in the arms of Jer6nimo de Urrea, the future translator of Ariosto, and of his more intimate friend, the Marques de Lombay, whom the world knows best as St. Francis Borgia. He was buried with his ancestors in his own Toledo, where, as even the grudging Gongora allows, every stone within the city is his monument. His illustrious descent, his ostentatious valour, his splendid presence, his seductive charm, his untimely death : all these, joined to his gift of song, combine to make him the hero of a legend and the idol of a nation. Like Sir Philip Sidney, Garcilaso personified all accom- plishments and all graces. He died at thirty-three : the fact must be borne in mind when we take account of his life's work in literature. Yet Europe mourned for him, and the loyal Boscan proclaimed his debt to the brilliant soldier-poet. Pleased as the Catalan was with his novel /? experiments, he avows he would not have persevered " but for the encouragement of Garcilaso, whose decision not merely to my mind, but to the whole world's is to be taken as final. By praising my attempts, by showing the surest sign of approval through his acceptance of my example, he led me to dedicate myself wholly to the undertaking." Boscan and Garcilaso were not divided by death. The former's widow, Ana Giron de Rebolledo, gave her husband's verses to the press in 1543 > an( ^ more jealous for the fame of her husband's friend than were any of his own household, she printed Garcilaso's poems in the Fourth Book. Garcilaso is eminently a poet of refinement, distinction, and cultivation. What Boscan half knew, Garcilaso knew f-fwr vu*s*r Jr**** *~ 144 SPANISH LITERATURE to perfection, and his accomplishment was wider as well as deeper. 1 Living his last years in Naples, Garcilaso had caught the right Renaissance spirit, and is beyond all question the most Italianate of Spanish poets in form and substance. He was not merely the associate of such expatriated countrymen as Juan de Valdes : he was the friend of Bembo and Tansillo, the first of whom calls him the best loved and the most welcome of all the Spaniards that ever came to Italy. To Tansillo, Gar- cilaso was attached by bonds of closest intimacy, and the reciprocal influence of the one upon the other is manifest in the works of both. This association would seem to have been the chief part of Garcilaso's literary training. His few flights in the old Castilian metres, his songs and villancicos, are of small importance ; his finest efforts are cast in the exotic moulds. It is scarcely an exaggeration to say that fundamentally he is a Nea- politan poet. The sum of his production is slight : the inconsider- able villanctcos, three eclogues, two elegies, an epistle, five highly elaborated songs, and thirty-eight Petrarchan sonnets. Small as is his work in bulk, it cannot be denied that it was like nothing before it in Castilian. 1 Garcilaso's forty-eight Latin stanzas, written after the Danubian imprison- ment, are sufficiently unknown to justify a brief quotation here. They occur in Antonius Thylesius' Opera (Naples, 1762), pp. 128-129: Garcilassi di Vega Toletani ad Antonium Thylcsium : " Uxore, natis, fratribus et solo Exul relictis, frigida per loca Musarum alumnus, barbarorum Ferre superbiam, et insolenles Mores coactusjam didici, et invia Per saxa voce in geminantia Fletusque, sub rauco querelas Murmure Danubii levare." GARCILASO 145 Auzi'as March, no doubt, had earlier struck a similar note in Catalan, and Garcilaso, who seems to have read everything, imitates his predecessor's harmonies and cadences. His trick of reminiscence is remarkable. Thus, his first eclogue is plainly suggested by Tansillo ; his second eclogue is little more than a rendering in verse of picked passages from the Arcadia of Jacopo Sannazaro ; while the fifth of his songs La Flor de Gnido is a most masterly transplantation of Bernardo Tasso's structure to Castilian soil. And almost every page is touched with the deliberate, conscious elegance of a student in the school of Horace. In simple execution Garcilaso is impeccable. The objection most commonly made is that he surrenders his personality, and converts himself into the exquisite echo of an exhausted pseudo- classic convention. And the charge is plausible. It is undeniably true that Garcilaso's distinction lacks the force of real simplicity, that his eternal sweetness cloys, and that the thing said absorbs him less than the manner of saying it. He would have met the criticism that he was an artificial poet by pointing out that, poetry being an art, it is of essence artificial. That he was an imitative artist was his highest glory : by imitating foreign models he attained his measure of originality, enriching Spain, with not merely a number of technical forms but a new poetic language. Without him Boscan must have failed in his emprise, as Santillana failed before him. Besides his technical perfection, Garcilaso owned the poetic temperament a temperament too effeminately delicate for the vulgarities of life. As he tells us in his third eclogue, he lived, " now using the sword, now the pen : " " Tomando ora la espada, ora lapluma." I 4 6 SPANISH LITERATURE But the clank of the sabre is never heard in the fiery soldier's verse. His atmosphere is not that of battle, but is rather the enchained lia/e of an Arcadia which never was nor ever could be in a banal world. As thus, in Wiffen's version : "Here ceased the youth his Doric madrigal, And sighing, with his last laments let fall A shower of tears ; the solemn mountains round, Indulgent of his sorrow, tossed the sound Melodious from romantic steep to steep, In mild responses deep; Sweet Echo, startingjrom her couch of moss, Lengthened the dirge; and tenderest Philomel, As pierced with grief and pity at his loss, Warbled divine reply, nor seemed to trill Less than Jove's nectar from her mournful bill. What Nemoroso sang in sequel, tell, Ye sweet-voiced Sirens of the sacred hill? This is, in a sense, " unnatural " ; but if_we jrgLJto. condemn it as such, we must even reject the whole school of pastoral, a convention of which the six- teenth century was enamoured. When Garcilaso intro- duced himself as Salicio, and, under the name of Nemoroso, presented Boscan (or, as Herrera will have it, Antonio de Fonseca), he but took the formula as he found it, and translated it in terms of genius. He was '- consciously returning upon nature ; not upon the mate- rial facts of existence as if is, but upon a figmentary nature idealised into a languid and ethereal beauty. He sought for effects of suavest harmony, embodying in his song a mystic neo-platonism, the morbidezza of " love in the abstract," set off by grace and sensibility and elfin music. It may be permissible for the detached critic to appreciate Garcilaso at something less than his GARCILASO 147 secular renown, but this superior attitude were unlawful and inexpedient for an historical reviewer. Time and unanimity settle many questions : and, after all, on a matter concerning Castilian poetry, the unbroken verdict of the Castilian-speaking race must be accepted as weighty, if not final. Garcilaso may not be a supreme singer : he is at least one of the gi-eaieJ of the Spanish poets. Choosing to reproduce the almost inimitable cadences of the Virgilian eclogue, he achieves his end with a dexterity that approaches genius. Others before him had hit upon what seemed " pretty i' the Mantuan " : he alone suggests the secret of Virgil's brooding, incom- municable, and melancholy charm. What Boscan saw to be possible, what he attempted with more good-will than fortune, that Garcilaso did with an instant and peremptory triumph. He naturalised the sonnet, he enlarged the framework of the song, he invented the ode, he so bravely arranged his lines of seven and eleven syllables that the fascination of his harmonies has led historians to forget Bernardo Tasso's priority in discover- ing the resources of the lira. In rare, unwary moments, he lets fall an Italian or French idiorn^ nor is he always free from the pedantry of his time ; but absolute perfec- tion is jiot of this world, and is least to be asked of one who, writing in moments stolen from the rough life of camps, died at thirty-three, full of immense promise and immense possibilities. To speculate upon what Garcilaso might have become is vanity. As it is, he survives as the Prince of Italianates. the acknowledged master of the Cinque Cento form. Cervantes and Lope de Vega, agreed upon nothing else, are at one in holding him for the first of Castilian poets. With slight reservations, their judgment has been sustained, and even to-day the . 148 SPANISH LITERATURE sweet-voiced, amatorious paladin leaves an abiding im- press upon the character of his national literature. An early sectary of the school is discovered in the person of the Portuguese poet, FRANCISCO DE SA DE MIRANDA (1495-1558), who so frequently forsakes his native tongue that of 189 pieces included in Mine. Caro- lina Michaelis de Vasconcellos' edition, seventy-four are in Castilian. S3. de Miranda's early poems written before 1532 the Fdbula de Mondego, the Can-do d Virgeni, and the eclogue entitled Aleixo are in the old manner. His later works, such as Nemoroso, with innumerable sonnets and the three elegies composed between 1552 and 1555, are all undisguised imitations of Boscan and Garcilaso, for whom the writer professes a rapturous enthusiasm. Sa de Miranda ranks among the six most celebrated Portu- guese poets; and, stranger though he be, even in Castilian literature he distinguishes himself by his correctness of form, by his sincerity of sentiment, and by a genuine love of natural beauty very far removed from the falsetto admiration too current among his contemporaries. The soldier, GUTIERRE DE CETIXA (1520-60) is an- other partisan of the Italian school. Serving in Italy, he pursued his studies to the best advantage, and won friendship and aid from literary magnates like the Prince of Ascoli, and Diego Hurtado de Mendoza ; but sol- diering was little to his taste, and, after a campaign in Germany, Cetina retired to his native Seville, whence he passed to Mexico about the year 1550. He is known to have written in the dramatic form, but no specimen of his drama survives, unless it be sepultured in some ob- scure Central American library. Cetina is a copious sonneteer who manages his rhyme-sequences with more variety than his predecessors, and his songs and madri- CETINA: ACUftA 149 gals are excellent specimens of finished workmanship. His general theme is Arcadian love the beauty of Aman'ilida, the piteous passion of the shepherd Silvio, the grief of the nymph Flora for Menalca. His treat- ment is always ingenious, his frugality in the matter of adjectives is edifying, though it scandalised the exuberant Herrera, who, as a true Andalucian, esteems emphasis and epithet and metaphor as the three things needful. Cetina's sobriety is paid for by a certain preciosity of utterance near akin to weakness ; but he excels in the sonnet form, which he handles with a mastery superior to Garcilaso's own, and he adds a touch of humour un- common in the mannered school that he adorns. . FERNANDO DE ACUNA (? 1500-80) comes into notice as the translator of Olivier de la Mar6he's popular allegorical poem, the Chevalier De'lib/re, a favourite with Carlos Quinto. The Emperor is said to have amused himself by translating the French poem into Spanish prose, and to have commissioned Acuna to a poetic version. A courtier like Van Male gives us to under- stand that some part of Acufla's Caballero determinado is based upon the Emperor's prose rendering, and the insinuation is that Acuna and his master should share the praise of the former's exploit. This pleasant tale is scarce plausible, for we know that the Caesar never mastered colloquial Castilian, and that he should shine in its literary exercise is almost incredible. Be that as it may, Acufla's Caballero determinado, a fine example of the old quintillas, met with wide and instant appre- ciation ; yet he never sought to follow up his triumph in the same kind. The new influence was irresist- ible, and Acuna succumbed to it, imitating the lira of Garcilaso to the point of parody, singing as " Damon in ISO SPANISH LITERATURE absence," practising the pastoral, aspiring to Homer's dignity in his blank verses entitled the Contienda de Ayax Telamonio y de Ulises. Three Castilian cantos of Boiardo's Orlando Innamorato won applause in Italy ; but Acufla's best achievements are his sonnets, which are almost always admirable. One of them contains a line as often quoted as any other in all Castilian verse : " Un Monarca, un Imperio^ y una Espada" "One Monarch, one Empire, and one Sword." And this pious aspiration after unity had perhaps been ful- filled if Spain had abounded with such prudent and accomplished figures as Fernando de Acufia. A more powerful and splendid personality is that of the illustrious DIEGO HURTADO DE MENDOZA (1503- J/ I 575)> one f t ne greatest figures in the history of Spanish^ politics and letters. Educated for the Church at the University of Salamanca, Mendoza preferred the career of arms, and found his opportunity at Pavia and in the Italian wars. Before he was twenty-nine he was named Ambassador to the Venetian Republic, became the patron of the Aldine Press, and studied the classics with all the ardour of his temperament. One of the few Spaniards learned in Arabic, Mendoza was a dis- tinguished collector : he ransacked the monastery of Mount Athos for Greek manuscripts, secured others from Sultan Suliman the Magnificent, and had almost all Bessarion's Greek collection transcribed for his own library, now housed in the Escorial. The first complete edition of Josephus was printed from Mendoza's copies. He represented the Emperor at the Council of Trent, and saw to it that Cardinals and Archbishops did what Spain expected of them. In 1547 he was appointed MENDOZA: CASTILLEJO 151 Plenipotentiary to Rome, where he treated Pope Julius: III. as cavalierly as his Holiness was accustomed to treat his own curates. In 1554 Mendoza returned to Spain, and the accession of Felipe II. in 1556 brought his public career to a close. He is alleged to have been Ambassador to England ; and one would fain the report were true. His wit and picaresque malice are well shown in his old-fashioned redondillaSj which delighted so good a judge as Lope de Vega, and his real strength lay in his management of these forms. But his long Italian resi- dence and his sleepless intellectual curiosity ensured his experimenting in the high Roman manner. Tibullus, Horace, Ovid, Virgil, Homer, Pindar, Anacreon : all these are forced into Mendoza's service, as in his epistles and his Fdbula de Adonis, Hipomenes y Atalanta. It cannot be said that he is at his best in these pseudo- classical performances, and he dares to eke out his hendecasyllabics by using a final palabra aguda ; but the extreme brilliancy of the humour carries off all technical defects in the burlesque section of his poems, which are of the loosest gaiety, most curious in a retired proconsul. Yet, if Mendoza, who excelled in the old, felt compelled to pen his forty odd sonnets in the new style, how strong must have been its charm ! Whatever his formal defects, Mendoza's authority was decisive in the contest between the native and the foreign types of verse : he helped to secure the latter's definitive triumph. The greatest rebel against the invasion was CRISTOBAL DE CASTILLEJO (? 1494-1556), who passed thirty years ^ abroad in the service of Ferdinand, King of Bohemia. Mush, of Jiis Jife was actually spent in Italy, but he kept his national spirit almost absolutely free from the foreign influence. If he compromises at all, the furthest 152 SPANISH LITERATURE he can go is in adopting the mythological machinery favoured by all contemporaries, and even for this he could plead respectable Castilian precedent ; _but in the matter of form, Castillejo is cruelly intransigent. Boscan is his especial butt. " El mismo confesarA Que no sabe donde vet " "He himself will confess that he knows not whither he goes." That, indeed, appears to have been Castillejo's fixed idea on the subject, and he expends an infinite deal of sarcasm and ridicule upon the apostates who, as he thinks, hide their poverty of thought in tawdry motley. His own subjects are perfectly fitted to treatment in the villancico form, and when he is not simply improper as in El Sermdn de los Sermones his verses are remarkable for their sprightly grace and bitter-sweet wit, which can, at need, turn to rancorous invective or to devotional demureness. Had he lived in Spain, it is probable that Castillejo's mordant ridicule might have delayed the Italian supremacy. As it was, his flouts and jibes arrived too late, and the old patriot died, as he had lived, a bril- liant, impenitent, futile Tory. In one of his sonnets, conceived in the most mis- chievous spirit of travesty, Castillejo singles out for reprobation a poet named Luis de Haro, as one of the Italian agitators. Unluckily Haro's verses have prac- tically disappeared from the earth, and the few speci- mens preserved in Naj era's Cancionero are banal exercises in the old Castilian manner. A practitioner more after p Castillejo's heart was the ingenious Antonio de Villegas (fl. 1551), whose Inventario, apart from tedious para- phrases of the tale of Pyramus and Thisbe in the style VILLEGAS: SILVESTRE 153 of Bottom the Weaver, contains many excellent society- verses, touched with conceits of extreme sublety, and a few more serious efforts in the form of d/cimas, not without a grave urbanity and a penetration of their own. Francisco de Castilla, a contemporary of Villegas, vies with him in essaying the hopeless task of bringing the old rhythms into new repute ; but his Teorica de virtudes, dignified and elevated in style and thought, had merely a momentary vogue, and is now unjustly considered a mere bibliographical curiosity. A student in both schools was the Portuguese GRE- GORIO SILVESTRE (1520-70), choirmaster and organist in the Cathedral of Granada, who, beginning with a boy's admiration for Garci Sanchez and Torres Naharro, prac- tised the redondilla with such success as to be esteemed an expert in the art. A certain Pedro de Caceres y Espi- nosa, in a Discurso prefixed to Silvestre's poems (1582), tells us that his author "imitated Crist6bal de Castillejo, in speaking ill of the Italian arrangements," and that he cultivated the novelties for the practical reason that they were popular. It is certain that Silvestre is as attractive in the new as in the old kind, that his elegance never obscures his simplicity, that he shows a rare sense of ordered outline, an exceptional finish in the technical details of both manners. His conversion is the last that need be recorded here. The villancico still found its supporters among men of letters, and, as late as the seventeenth century, both Cervantes and Lope de Vega profess a platonic attachment to it and kindred metres ; but the public mind was set against a revival, and Cer- vantes and Lope were forced to abandon any idea (if, indeed, they ever entertained it) of breathing life into these dead bones. 154 SPANISH LITERATURE Didactic prose was practised, according to the old tra- dition, by Juan L6pez de Vivero Palacios Rubios, who published in 1524 his Tratado del esfuerzo btflico heroico, a pseudo-philosophic inquiry into the origin and nature of martial valour, written in a clear and forcible style. Francisco L6pez de Villalobos (1473-1549), a Jewish convert attached to the royal household as physician, began by translating Pliny's Amphitruo in such fashion as to bring down on him the thunders of Herndn Nuftez. Villalobos works the didactic vein in his rhymed Sumario de Medicina which Ticknor ignores, though he mentions its late derivatives, the Trescientas preguntas of Alonso L6pez de Corelas (1546) and the Cuatrocientas respuestas of Luis de Escobar (1552). But the witty physician's most praiseworthy performance is his Tratado de las tres Grandes namely, talkativeness, obstinacy, and laughter where his familiar humour, his frolic, fantasy, and perverse acuteness far outshine the sham philosophy and the magisterial intention of his other work. A graver talent is that of Fernando Perez de Oliva (1492-1530), once lecturer in the University of Paris, and, later, Rector of Salamanca, who boasts of having travelled three thousand leagues in pursuit of culture. His Didlogo de la Dignidad del H ombre, written to show that Castilian is as good a vehicle as the more fashionable Latin for the discussion of transcendental matters, is an excellent example of cold, stately, Cice- ronian prose, and the continuation by his friend, Fran- cisco Cervantes de Salazar, is worthy of the beginning ; but the hold of ecclesiastical Latin was too fast to be loosed at a first attempt. Oliva's reputation is strictly Spanish : not so that of Carlos Quinto's official chronicler, ANTONIO DE GUEVARA 155 GUEVARA (d. 1545), a Franciscan monk who held the bishopric of Mondonedo. His Reloj de Principes (Dial of Princes), a didactic novel with Marcus Aurelius for its hero, was originally composed to encourage his own patron to imitate the virtues of the wisest ancient. Un- luckily, however, Guevara passed his book off as authentic history, alleging it to be a translation of a non-existent manuscript in the Florentine collection. This brought him into trouble with antagonists as varied as the court- fool, Francesillo de Zuftiga, and a Sorian professor, the Bachelor Pedro de Rhua, whose Cartas censorias un- masked the imposture with malignant astuteness. But this critical faculty was confined to the Peninsula, and North's English translation, dedicated to Mary Tudor, popularised Guevara's name in England, where he is believed by some authorities to have exercised considerable influence on the style of English prose. This, however, is not the place to discuss that most difficult question. An instance of Guevara's better manner is offered by his D/cada de los CSsares, though even here he interpolates his own unscrupulous inven- tions and embellishments, as he also does in his Familiar Epistles, Englished by Edward Hellowes, Groom of the Leash, from whose version an illustration may be bor- rowed: "The property of love is to turn the rough into plain, the cruel to gentle, the bitter to sweet, the un- savoury to pleasant, the angry to quiet, the malicious to simple, the gross to advised, and also the heavy to light. He that loveth, neither can he murmur of him that doth anger him : neither deny that they ask him : neither resist when they take from him : neither answer when they reprove him : neither revenge if they shame him : neither yet will he be gone when they send him away." 156 SPANISH LITERATURE These pompous commonplaces abound in the Familiar Epistles, which, though still the most readable of Guevara's performances, are tedious in their elaborate accumula- tion of saws and instances, unimpressively collected from the four quarters of the earth. But the rhetorical letters went the round of the world, were translated times out of number, and were commonly called "The Golden Letters," to denote their unique worth. More serious and less attractive historians are Pedro Mexia (1496-1552), whose Historia Imperial y Cesdrea is a careful compilation of biographies of Roman rules from Caesar to Maximilian, and Floriin de Ocampo (1499-1555), canon of Zamora, and an official chronicler, who, taking the Deluge as his starting-point, naturally enough fails to bring his dry-as-dust annals later than Roman times, and endeavours to follow the critical canons of his time with better intention than perform- ance. The Comentarios de la Guerra en Alemania of Luis de Avila y Ziifiiga are valuable as containing the evidence of an acute, direct observer of events ; but Avila's exaggerated esteem for his master causes him to convert his history into an elaborate apology. Carlos Quinto's own dry criticism of the book is final : "Alex- ander's achievements surpassed mine but he was less lucky in his chronicler." The conquest of America begot a crowd of histories, of which but few need be named here. Gonzalez Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes (1478-1557), once secretary to the Great Captain, gives an official picture of the New World in his Historia general y natural de Indtas, and a similar study from an opposed and higher point of view is to be found in the work of Bartolome" de las Casas, Bishop of Chiapa (1474-1566), whose passionate eloquence on behalf of the American CORTES: BERNAL DIAZ 157 Indians is displayed in his Brevisima relation de la de- struction de Indias (1552) ; but here again history declines into polemics, the offices of judge and advocate over- lapping. The' famous HERNAN CORTES (1485-1554), El Conquistador, was a man of action ; but his official reports on Mexico and its affairs are drawn up with exceeding skill, and in energy of phrase and luminous concision may stand as models in their kind. Cortes found his panegyrist in his chaplain, Francisco Lopez de G6mara (1519-60), whose interesting Conquista de Mejico is an uncritical eulogy on his chief, .whom he extols at the expense of his brother adventurers. The antidote was supplied by BERNAL DIAZ DEL CASTILLO (fl. 1568), whose Historia verdadera de la conquista de la Nueva Esparta is a first-class example of military indig- nation. "Here the chronicler G6mara in his history says just the opposite of what really happened. Whoso reads him will see that he writes well, and that, with proper information, he could have stated his facts correctly : as it is, they are all lies." The manifest honesty and simplicity of the old soldier, who shared in one hundred and nineteen engagements and could not sleep unless in armour, are extremely winning ; his prolix ingenuousness has been admirably rendered in our day by a descendant of the Conquistadores, M. Jose Maria Heredia, whose French version is a triumph of translation. V* A Incredible tales from the Western Indies stimulated the popular appetite for miracles in terms of fiction. Paez de Ribera added a sixth book to Amadis, under the title of Florisando (1510); Feliciano de Silva wrote a seventh, ninth, tenth, and eleventh Lisuarte (1510), Amadis de Gretia (1530), Florisel de Niquea (1532), and 158 SPANISH LITERATURE Rogcl de Grecia; and he would certainly have supplied the eighth book had he not been anticipated by Juan Diaz with a second Lisuarte. Parallel with Amadis ran the series of Palmerin de Oliva (1511), which tradition ascribes to an anonymous lady of Augustobriga, but which may just as well be the work of Francisco Vazquez de Ciudad Rodrigo, as it is said to be in its first descend- ant Primaledn (1512). Polindo (1526) continues the tale, and an unknown author pursues it in the Cronica del muy valiente Platir (1533), while Palmerin de Inglaterra (1547-48) closes the cycle. Curious readers may study this last in the English version of Anthony Munday (1616), who commends it as an excellent and stately history, "wherein gentlemen may find choice of sweet inventions, and gentlewomen be satisfied in courtly ex- pectations." These are but a few of the extravagances of the press, and the madness spread so wide that Carlos Quinto, admirer as he was of Don Belianis de Grecia, was forced to protect the New World against invasion by books of this class. Scarcely less numerous are the continuations of the Celestina, due to the indefatigable Feliciano de Silva, to Caspar G6mez de Toledo, to Sancho Mufloz, and others. A new species begins with the first picaroon novel, Lazarillo de Tonnes y long ascribed to Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, an attribution now commonly rejected on the authority of that distinguished Spanish scholar, M. Alfred Morel-Fatio. There is something to be said in favour of Mendoza's claim which may not be said for lack of space. As to Lazarillo de Tormes, authorship, date and place of publication are all uncertain : the three earliest editions known appeared at Antwerp, Burgos, and Alcala de Henares in 1554. It is the autobiography of Lazaro, THE PICARESQUE NOVEL 159 son of the miller, Tome Gonzalez, and the trull, Antonia Perez. He describes his adventures as leader of a blind man, as servant to a miserly priest, to a starving gentle- man, to a beggar-monk, to a vendor of indulgences, to a signboard painter, to an alguazil, ending his career in a Government post un oficio real as town-crier of Toledo. There we leave him " at the height of all good fortune." Lazaro's experience with the hungry hidalgo may be quoted from the admirable archaic rendering by David Rowland, of Anglesea : " It pleased God to accomplish my desire and his together, for when as I had begun my meat, as he walked, he came near to me, saying : ' Lazaro, I pro- mise thee thou hast the best grace in eating that ever I did see any man have ; for there is no man that seest thee eat, but seeing thee feed, shall have appetite, although they be not a-hungered.' Then would I say to myself, ' The hunger which thou sustainest causeth thee to think mine so beautiful.' Then I trusted I might help him, seeing that he had so helped himself, and had opened me the way thereto. Wherefore I said unto him, ' Sir, the good tools make the workmen good : this bread hath good taste, and this neat's-foot is so well sod, and so cleanly dressed, that it is able, with the flavour of it only, to entice any man to eat of it.' 'What ? is it a neat's- foot ? ' ' Yes, sir.' ' Now, I promise thee it is the best morsel in the world : there is no pheasant that I would like so well.' ' I pray thee, sir, prove of it better and see how you like it.' . . . Whereupon he sitteth down by me, and then began to eat like one that hath great need, gnawing every one of those little bones better than any greyhound could have done for life, saying, 'This is a singular good meal : by God, I have eaten it with a good 160 SPANISH LITERATURE stomach, as if I had eaten nothing all this day before.' Then I, with a low voice, said, ' God send me to live long as sure as that is true.' And, having ended his victuals, he commanded me to reach him the pot of water, which I gave him even as full as I had brought it from the river. . . . We drank both, and went to bed, as the night before, at that time well satisfied. And now, to avoid long talk, we continued after this sort eight or nine days. The poor gentleman went every day to brave it out in the street, to content himself with his accustomed stately pace, and always I, poor Lazaro, was fain to be his purveyor." Written in the most debonair, idiomatic Castilian, Lazarillo de Tonnes condenses into nine chapters the cynicism, the ...wit, and the resource of an observer of genius. After three hundred years, it survives all its rivals, and may be read with as much edification and amusement as on the day of its first appearance. It set a fashion, a fashion that spread to all countries, and finds a nineteenth-century manifestation in the pages of Pickwick ; but few of its successors match it in satirical humour, and none approach it in pregnant concision, where_no word is superfluous, and where every word tells with consummate effect. Whoever wrote the book, he fixed for ever the type of the comic prose epic as rendered by the needy, and he did it in such wise as to defy all competition. Yet ill-advised competitors were found : one, who has the grace to hide his name, at Antwerp, continuing Lazaro's adventures by exhibiting the gay scamp as a tunny, and a certain Juan de Luna, who, so late as 1620, converted Lazaro to a sea-monster on show. Mysticism finds two distinguished exponents, of whom JUAN DE AVILA fry/vc ' 161 the earlier is the Apostle of Andalucia, the Venerable JUAN DE AVILA (1502-69), a priest, who, educated at the University of Alcala, is famous for his sanctity, his evangelic missions in Granada, Cordoba, and Seville. The merest accident prevented his sailing for the New World in the suite of the Bishop of Tlaxcala, and his inopportune fervour led to his imprisonment by the Inquisition. Most of his religious treatises, beautiful as they are, are too technical for our purpose here ; but his Cartas Espirituales are redolent of religious unction com- bined with the wisest practical spirit, the most sagacious counsel, and the rarest loving-kindness. Long practice in exhorting crowds of unlettered sinners had purged Juan de Avila's style of the Asiatic exuberance in favour with Guevara and other contemporaries ; and, though he considered letters a vanity, his own practice shows him to be a master in the accommodation of the lowliest, most familiar language to the loftiest subject. In the opposite camp is JUAN DE VALDES (d. 1541), attached in some capacity to the court of Carlos Quinto, and suspect of heterodox tendencies in the eyes of all good Spaniards. Francisco de Encinas reports that Valdes found it convenient to leave Spain on account of his opinions ; but, as his twin-brother, Alfonso, con- tinued in the service of Carlos Quinto, and as Juan himself lived unmolested at Rome and Naples from 1531 to his death, this story cannot be accepted. None the less is it certain that Valdes, possibly through his friend- ship with Erasmus, was drawn into the current of the Reformation. His earliest work, written, perhaps, in col- laboration with his brother, is the anonymous Didlogo de M er curio y Caron (1528), an ingenious fable in Lucian's manner, abounding in political and religious malice, 1 62 SPANISH LITERATURE charged with ridicule of abuses in Church and State. Apart from its polemical value, it is indisputably the finest prose performance of the reign. Boscdn's ver- sion of the Cortegiano most nearly vies with it ; but Valds excels Boscan in the artful construction of his periods, in the picturesqueness and moderation of his epithets, in the variety of his cadence, and in the re- fined selection of his means. It is possible that Cer- vantes, at his best, may match Valdes ; but Cervantes is one of the most unequal writers in the world, while Valdc's is one of the most scrupulous and vigilant. Hence, sectarian prejudice apart, Valdes must be ac- counted, if not absolutely the first, at least among the very first masters of Castilian prose. A curious fact in connection with one of Valdes' most popular works, the Ciento y diez Consideraciones divinas, is that it has never been printed in its original Castilian. 1 Even so the book was translated into English by Nicholas Farrer (1638), and found favour in the eyes of George Herbert, who commends Signior lohn Valdesso as "a true servant of God," " obscured in his own country," and brought by God " to flourish in this land of light and region of the Gospel, among His chosen." It may be expedient to give an illustration of Valdes from the version to which Herbert stood sponsor : " Here I will add this. That, as liberality is so annexed to magna- nimity that he cannot be magnanimous that is not liberal, so hope and charity are so annexed unto faith that it is impossible that he should have faith who hath not hope and charity ; it being also impossible that one should be 1 Bochmer gives thirty -nine Consuieracidnes in the Tratatidos (Bonn, 1880); for the sixty-fifth see Mene'ndez y Pelayo, Historia de los Heterodoxos Espailoles /Madrid, 1880), vol. ii. p. 375. JUAN DE VALDES 163 just without being holy and pious. But of these Chris- tian virtues they are not capable who have not experience in Christian matters, which they only have who, by the gift of God and by the benefit of Christ, have faith, hope, and charity, and so are pious, holy, and just in Christ.'* The Arian flavour of this work explains its non-appear- ance in Castilian, and we must suppose that Herbert esteemed it for its austere doctrinal asceticism rather than its crude anti-trinitarianism. A Quaker before his time, Valdes owes no small part of his recent vogue to Wiffen, who first heard of the Consideraciones through a Friend as an "old work by a Spaniard, which represented es- sentially the principles of George Fox." Whatever its defects, it is the one logical presentation of the dogmas of German mysticism, at the same time that it is a powerful, searching psychological study of the springs of motives and the innermost recesses of the human heart. In another and a less contested field, we owe to Valdes the admirable Didlogo de la Lengua, written at Naples in 1535-36. The personages are four : two Italians, named Marcio and Coriolano ; and two Spaniards, Vald6s him- self, and a Spanish soldier, called indifferently Pacheco and Torres. For all purposes this dialogue is as im- portant a monument of literary criticism as was the conversation in Don Quixote's library between the Priest and the Barber. In almost every case posterity has rati- fied the personal verdict of Valdds, who approves himself the earliest, as well as one of the most impartial and most penetrating among Spanish critics. Moreover, he conducts his dialogue with extraordinary dramatic skill in the true vein of highest comedy. The courtly grace of the two Italians, the military swagger of Pacheco, the 1 64 SPANISH LITERATURE unwearied sagacity, the patrician wit and disdainful coolness of Valde"s himself, are given with incomparable lightness of touch and felicity of accent. For the first time in Castilian literature we have to do with a man of letters, urbane from study, and accomplished from commerce with a various world. Vald^s overtops all the literary figures of Carlos Quinto's reign in natural gift and acquired accomplishment ; nor in later times do we easily find his match. CHAPTER VIII THE AGE OF FELIPE II. 1556-1598 IN Spain, as elsewhere, the secular battle waged between classicism and romanticism. As poets sided with Boscan and Garcilaso, or with Castillejo, so dramatists declared for the uso antiguo or for the uso nuevo. The partisans of the " old usage " put their trust in prose translations. We have already seen that the roguish Villalobos trans- lated the Amphitruo of Plautus, and Perez de Oliva not only repeated the performance, but gave a version of Euripides' Hecuba. Encina's successor was found in the person of Miguel de Carvajal, whose Josefina deals, in classic fashion, with the tale of Joseph and his brethren. Carvajal draws character with skill, and his dialogue lives ; but he is best remembered for his division of the play into four acts. Editions of Vasco Diaz Tanco de Fregenal are of such extreme rarity as to be practically inaccessible. So are the Vidriana of Jaime de Huete and the Jacinta of Agusti'n Ortiz two writers who are counted as followers of Torres Naharro. A farce by the brilliant reactionary, Crist6bal de Castillejo, entitled Costanza, is only known in extract, and is as remark- able for ribaldry as for good workmanship. The Preteo y Tibaldo of Pero Alvarez de Ayllon and the Silviana of Luis Hurtado are insipid pastorals. Many contemporary 165 1 66 SPANISH LITERATURE plays, known only by rumour, have disappeared sup- pressed, no doubt, because of their coarseness. Torres Naharro's Propaladia was interdicted in 1540, and, eight years later, the Cortes of Valladolid petitioned that a stop be put to the printing of immoral comedies. The prayer was heard. Scarce a play of any sort survives, and the few that reach us exist in copies that are almost unique. The time for the stage was not yet. It is possible that, had Carlos Quinto resided habitually in some Spanish capital, a national theatre might have grown up ; but the lack of Court patronage and the classical superstition delayed the evolution of the Spanish drama. This comes into being during the reign of Felipe el Prudente. Encina's precedence in the sacred pastoral is granted ; but his eclogues were given before small, aristocratic audiences. We must look elsewhere for the first popular dramatist, and Lope de Vega, an expert on theatrical matters, identifies our man. "Comedies," says Lope, " are no older than Rueda, whom many now living have heard." The gold-beater, LOPE DE RUEDA (fl. 1558), was a native of Seville. A prefatory sonnet to his Medora, written by Francisco Ledesma, informs us that Rueda died at C6rdoba, and Cervantes adds the detail that he was buried in the cathedral there. This would go to show that a Spanish comedian was not then a pariah ; unluckily, the cathedral archives do not corroborate the story. Taking to the boards, Lope de Rueda rose to be an autor de comedias an actor-manager and playwright. Cervantes, who speaks enthusiastically of Rueda's acting, describes the material conditions of the scene. " In the days of this famous Spaniard, the whole equipment of an autor de comedias could be put in a bag : it consisted LOPE DE RUEDA 167 of four white sheepskins edged with gilt leather, four beards and wigs, and four shepherd's-staves, more or less. . . . No figure rose, or seemed to rise, from the bowels of the earth or from the space under the stage, which was built up by four benches placed square-wise, with four or six planks on top, about four hand's-breadths above ground. Still less were clouds lowered from the sky with angels or spirits. The theatrical scenery was an old blanket, hauled hither and thither by two cords. This formed what they called the vestuario, behind which were the musicians, who sang some old romance without a guitar." This account is substantially correct, though official documents in the Seville archives go to prove that Cervantes unconsciously exaggerated some details a thing natural enough in a man recalling memories fifty years old. A passage in the Cronica del Condestable Miguel Lucas Iranzo implies that women appeared in the early momos or entremeses. But Spaniards inherited the Arab notion that women are best indoors. The fact that Rueda was the first man to choose his pitch in the public place, and to appeal to the general, would explain his substitution of boys for girls in the female characters. Rueda was the first in Spain to bring the drama into the day. One of his personages in Eufemia the servant Vallejo makes a direct appeal to the public : "Ye who listen, go and dine, and then come back to the square, if you wish to see a traitor's head cut off and a true man set free." Thenceforward the theatre becomes a popular institution. Lope de Rueda is often called el excelente poeta, and his verse is exampled in the Prendas de Amor, as also in the Didlogo sobre la Invention de las Calzas. The Farsa del Sordo t included by the Marques de la Fuensanta del 12 1 68 SPANISH LITERATURE Valle in his admirable new edition of Rueda's works, is almost certainly due to another hand. Cervantes com- mends Rueda's versos pastoriles, but these only reach us in the fragment which Cervantes himself quotes in Los Bafios de ArgeL Still, it is not as a poet that Rueda lives : he is rightly remembered as the patriarch of the Spanish stage. For his time and station he was well read : Lopez Madera will have it that he knew Theocritus, and it may be so. More manifest are the Plautine touches in the paso which Moratfn names El Rufidn Cobarde, with its bully, Sigtienza, a lineal descendant of the Miles Glo- riosus. It has been inferred that, in choosing Italian themes, Rueda followed Torres Naharro. This gives a wrong impression, for his debt to the Italians is far more direct. The Eufemia takes its root in the Decamerone, being identical in subject with Cymbeline ; the Armelina is compounded of Antonio Francesco Ranieri's Attilia, with Giovanni Maria Cecchi's Servigiale ; the Engaflos is a frank imitation of Niccolo Secchi's Commedia degli Inganni; and the Medora is conveyed straight from Gigio Arthenio Giancarli's Zingara. 1 Neither in his fragments of verse nor in his Italian echoes is the true Rueda revealed. His historic im- portance lies in his invention of the paso a dramatic 1 The sources are carefully traced by L. A. Stiefel in the Zeitschrift fur Romanischc Philologie (vol. xx. pp. 183 and 318). One specimen suffices here : GlANCARLI, iii. 1 6. Falisco. Padrone, o che la imagi- natione m'inganna, o pur quella e la vuestra Madonna Angelica. Cassandra. Sarebbe gran cosa che RUEDA, Escena iii. Falisco. Senor, la vista 6 la imagi- nacion me engaua 6 es aquella vuestra muy querida Angelica. Casandro. Gran cosa seria si la laimaginationeinganassameanchora, imaginacion no te enganase, antes perch' io voleva dirloti, etc. \ yo te lo queria decir, etc. LOPE DE RUEDA 169 interlude turning on some simple episode : a quarrel between Torubio and his wife Agueda concerning the price of olives not yet planted, an invitation to dinner from the penniless licentiate Xaquima. Rueda's most spirited work is given in the Deleitoso Compendia (1567)^ and in the Registro de Representantes (1570), both pub- lished by his friend, Juan de Timoneda. In a longer flight the effect is less pleasing ; the prose Coloquio de Camila and its fellow, the Coloquio de Timbrta, are long PUSOS, complicated in development and not drawn to scale. Still, even here there is a keen dramatic sense of situation ; while the comic extravagance of the themes farcical incidents in picaresque surroundings is set off by spirited dialogue and vigorous style. Rueda_Jiad clearlyread the Celestina to his profit ; and his prose, with its archaic savour, is of great purity and power. The patriotic Lista comes as near flat blasphemy as a good Spaniard may by mentioning Rueda in the same breath as Cervantes, and that the latter learned much from his predecessor is manifest ; but the point need be pressed no further. Considerable as were Rueda's positive qualities of gay wit and inventive resource, his highest merit lies in this, that he laid the foundation- stone of the actual Spanish theatre, and that his dramatic system became a capital factor in his people's intellectual history. He found instant imitators : one in a brother actor- manager, Alonso de la Vega (d. 1566), whose Tolomea is adapted from Medora ; the other in Luis de Miranda (fl. 1554), who dramatised the story of the Prodigal, to which, in a monstrous fit of realism, he gave a contem- porary setting. Of Pedro Navarro or Naharro, whom Cervantes ranks after Rueda, naught survives. Francisco 1 70 SPANISH LITERATURE de Avendafto's verse comedy concerning Floriseo and Blancaflor had long since been forgotten were it not for the fact that here, for the first time, a Spanish play is divided into three acts a convention which has en- dured, and for which later writers, like Artieda, Virues, and Cervantes, ingenuously claimed the credit. JUAN DE TIMONEDA (d. ? 1598), the Valencian bookseller who printed Rueda's pasos, is a sedulous mimic in every sort. He began by arranging Plautus' Comedy of Errors in Los Menecmos ; his Cornelia is based upon Ariosto's Nigromante ; and his Oveja Perdida adapts an early morality on the Lost Sheep with scarcely a suggestion of original treatment. Torres Naharro is the inspira- tion of Timoneda's Aurelia; but his chief tempter \vas Lope de Rueda. In the volume entitled Turiana (1565), issued under the anagrammatic name of Joan Diamonte, he attempts the paso (which he also calls the entremes) to good purpose. An imitator he remains ; but an imitator whose pleasant humour takes the place of invention, and whose lively prose dialogue is in ex- cellent contrast with his futile verse. His Patraiiuelo, a collection of some twenty traditional stories, is a well-meant attempt to satisfy the craving created by Lazarillo de Tormes. If Timoneda experimented in every field, it is not unjust to infer that, taking the tradesman's view of literature, he was moved less by intelligent curiosity than by the desire to supply his customers with novelties. Withal, if he be not individual, his unpolished drolleries are vastly more engaging than the ambitious triflings of many con- temporaries. Pacheco, the father-in-law of Veldzquez, notes that Juan de Malara (1527-71) composed "many tragedies" MALARA: CUEVA 171 both in Latin and Castilian ; and Cueva, in his Ejemplar poetico, gives the number hyperbolically : " En el teatro mil tragedias puso" That Malara, or any one save Lope de Vega, " placed a thousand tragedies on the boards," is incredible ; but by general consent his fecundity was prodigious. None of his plays survives, and we are left to gather, from a chance remark of the author's, that he wrote a tragedy entitled Absalon and another drama called Locusta. His repute as a poet must be accepted, if at all, on autho- rity ; for his extant imitations of Virgil and renderings of Martial are mere technical exercises. For us he is best represented by his Filosofia vulgar (1568), an ad- mirable selection made from the six thousand proverbs brought together by Hernan Nunez, who thus continued what Santillana had begun. A contemporary, Blasco de Garay (fl. 1553), had striven to prove the resources of the language by printing, in his Cartas de Refranes, three ingenious letters wholly made up of proverbial phrases ; and in our own day the incomparable wealth of Cas- tilian proverbs has been shown in Sbarbi's Refranero General and in Haller's Altspanische SpricJitworter. But no later and fuller collection has supplanted Malara's learned and vivacious commentary. His friend, JUAN DE LA CUEVA DE GAROZA of Seville (71550-? 1606), matched Malara in productiveness, and perhaps surpassed him in talent. Little is known of Cueva's life, save that he had certain love passages with Bri'gida Lucia de Belmonte, and that he became almost insane for a short while after her death. He distin- guishes himself by his independence of the Senecan example, which he roundly declares to be at once in- i;2 SPANISH LITERATURE artistic and tedious (cansada cosa), and by urging the Spanish dramatists to abjure abstractions and to treat national themes without regard for Greek and Latin superstitions. Incident, character, plot, situation, variety : these are to be developed with small regard for " the unities" of the classic model. And Cueva carried out his doctrines. Ignoring Carvajal, he took a special pride in reducing plays from five acts to four, and he enriched the drama by introducing a multitude of metrical forms hitherto unknown upon the stage. The cunning fable of the people la ingeniosa fdbula de Espafia is illus- trated in his Siete Infantes de Lara, in his Cerco de Zamora (Siege of Zamora), where he utilises subjects enshrined in romances which half his audience knew by heart. It is literally true that he had been preceded by Bartolome Palau, who, as far back as 1524, had written a play on a national subject the Historia de la gloriosa Santa Orosia, published in 1883 by Fernandez-Guerra y Orbe ; but this was an isolated, fruitless essay, whereas Cueva's was a deliberate, well-organised attempt to shape the drama anew and to quicken it into active life. Nor did Cueva's mission end with indicating the possibilities of dramatic motive afforded by heroico-popular songs and legends. His Saco de Roma y Muerte de Borbon exploits an historical actuality by dramatising Carlos Quinto's Italian triumphs (1527-30) ; and his El In- famador (The Calumniator) not merely foreshadows the comedia de capa y espada, but gives us in his libertine, Leucino, the first sketch of the type which Tirso de Molina was to eternalise as Don Juan. It is certain that Cueva was often less successful in per- formance than in doctrine, and that his gods and devils, his saints and ruffians, too often talk in the same lofty BERMUDEZ: ARTIEDA 173 vein the vein of Juan de la Cueva. It is no less certain that he improvises recklessly, placing his characters in difficulties whence escape is impossible, and that he takes the first solution that offers a murder, a supernatural interposition with no heed for plausibility. But his bombast is the trick of his school, and, to judge by his epical Conqiiista de la Betica (1603), he showed remark- able self-suppression in his plays. In his later years, after visiting the Western Indies, he seems to have abandoned the theatre which he had so courageously developed, and to have wasted himself upon his epic and the poor confection of old ballads which he pub- lished in the ten books entitled Coro Febeo de Romances historiales. Yet, despite these backslidings, he merits gratitude for his dramatic initiative. The Galician Dominican, Ger6nimo Bermudez (1530- 89), apologises for his presentation in Castilian of the Nise Lastimosa, which he published under the name of Antonio de Silva in 1577. Bermudez has seemingly done little more than rearrange the Inez de Castro of the dis- tinguished Portuguese poet, Antonio Ferreira, who had died eight years earlier. Though this " correct " play has tirades of remarkable beauty in the Senecan manner, its loose construction unfits it for the stage. All that it contains of good is due to Ferreira, and its continuation the Nise Laureada is a mere collection of incoherent extravagances and brutalities, conceived in Thomas Kyd's most frenzied mood. The Captain ANDRES KEY DE ARTIEDA (1549-1613) is said to have been born at Valencia, and he certainly died there ; yet Lope de Vega, once his friend, speaks of him as a native of Zaragoza. Artieda was a brilliant soldier, who received three wounds at Lepanto, and his con- i 74 SPANISH LITERATURE spicuous bravery was shown in the Low Countries, where he swam the Ems in mid-winter under the enemy's fire, with his sword between his teeth. 'He is known to have written plays entitled Amadis de Gaula and Los Encantos de Merlin, but his one extant drama is Los Amantes : the first appearance on the stage of those lovers of Teruel who were destined to attract Tirso de Molina, Montalban, and Hartzenbusch. Artieda is essentially a follower of Cueva's, and he has something of his model's clumsy manipulation ; but his dramatic instinct, his pathos and tenderness, are his personal en- dowment. In his own day he was an innovator in his kind : his opposition to the methods of Lope made him unpopular, and condemned him to an unmerited neglect, which he bitterly resented in the miscellaneous Discursos, eplstolas y epigramas, published by him (1605) under the name of Artemidoro. Another dramatist and friend of Lope de Vega's was the Valencian Captain CRISTOBAL DE VlRUfis (1550-1610), Artieda's comrade at Lepanto and in the Low Countries. Unfortunately for himself, Viru6s had his share of learning, and misused it in his Semiramis, an absurd medley of pedantry and horror. His Atila Furioso, involving more slaughter than many an outpost en- gagement, is the maddest caricature of romanticism. He appears to think that indecency is comedy, and that the way to terror lies through massacre. It is the eternal fault of Spain, this forcing of the note ; and it would seem that Virues repented him in Elisa Dido, where he returns to the apparatus of the Senecan school. Yet, with all their defects, his earlier attempts were better, inasmuch as they presaged a new method, and a determination to have done with a sterile formula. He VIRUES: ARGENSOLA 175 essayed the epic in his Historia del Monserrate, and once more courted disaster by his choice of subject : the outrage and murder of the Conde de Barcelona's daughter by the hermit Juan Gan'n, the Roman pilgrimage of the assassin, and the miraculous resurrection of his victim. As in his plays, so in his epic, Virues is an inventor without taste, brilliant in a single page and intolerable in twenty. His tactless fluency bade for applause at any cost, and his incessant care to startle and to terrify results in a monstrous monotony. Yet, if he failed himself, his exaggerated protest encouraged others to seek a more perfect way, and, though he had no direct influence on the stage, he is interesting as an embodied remonstrance. His mantle was caught by Joaqum Romero de Cepeda of Badajoz (fl. 1582), whose Selvajia is a dramatic arrangement of the Celestina, with extravagant episodes suggested by the chivalresque novels ; and in the oppo- site camp is the Aragonese LUPERCIO LEONARDO DE ARGENSOLA (1559-1613), whom Cervantes esteemed almost as good a dramatist as himself which, from Cervantes' standpoint, is saying much. Cervantes praises Argensola, not merely because his plays " delighted and amazed all who heard them," but for the practical reason that "these three alone brought in more money than thirty of the best given since their time." If it be un- charitable to conceive that this aims at Lope de Vega, we are bound to suppose that Argensola's popularity was immense. It was also fleeting. His Fills has dis- appeared, and his Isabela and Alejandro, were not printed till 1772, when Lopez de Sedano included them in his Parnaso Espaiiol. The Alejandro, is a tissue of butcheries, and the Isabela is scarcely better, the nine chief charac- 1 76 SPANISH LITERATURE ters being killed out of hand. Argensola's excuse is that he was only a lad of twenty when he perpetrated these iniquities ; where, for the rest, he already proves him- self endowed with that lyrical gift which was to win for him the not excessive title of "the Spanish Horace." But he was never reconciled to his defeat as a drama- tist, and he avenged himself in 1597 by inditing a spiteful letter to the King, praying that the prohibition of plays on the occasion of the Queen of Piedmont's death should be made permanent. The urbanity of men of letters is, it will be seen, constant everywhere. The school founded by Boscdn and Garcilaso spread into Portugal, and bifurcated into Spanish factions settled in Salamanca and in Seville. BALTASAR DE ALCAZAR (1530-1606), who served under that stout sea-dog the Marques de Santa Cruz, is technically an adherent of the Sevillan sect ; but his laughing muse lends herself with an ill grace to artificial sentiment, and is happiest in stinging epigrams, in risky jests, and in gay romances. DiEGO GiR6N (d. 1590), a pupil of Malara's, is an ardent Italianate : prompt to challenge comparison with Gar- cilaso by reproducing Corydon and Tirsis from the seventh Virgilian eclogue, to mimic Seneca "him of C6rdoba dead" or to echo the note of Giorolamo Bosso. His verses, mostly hidden away among the annotations made by Herrera in his edition of Garcilaso, deserve to be better known for specimens of sound craftsmanship. The greatest poet of the Sevillan group is indisputably FERNANDO DE HERRERA (1534-97), who comes into touch with England as the writer of an eulogy on Sir Thomas More. Cleric though he were, Herrera dedi- HERRERA 177 cated much of his verse (1582) to Leonor de Milan, Condesa de Gelves, wife of Alvaro de Portugal, himself a fashionable versifier. Herrera being a clerk in minor orders, the situation is piquant, and opinions differ as to whether his erotic songs are, or are not, platonic. It is another variant of the classic cases of Laura and Petrarch, of Catalina de Atayde and Camoes. All good Sevillans contend that Herrera, as the chief of Spanish petrarquistas, indited sonnets to his mistress in imitation of the master : " So the great Tuscan to the beauteous Laura Breathed his sublime, his wonder-working song." Disguised as Eliodora, Leonor is Herrera's firmament : his luz, sol, estrella light, sun, and star. And no small part of the love-sequence is passionless and even frigid. Yet not all the elegies are compact of conceit ; a genuine emotion bursts forth elsewhere than in the famous line : " Now sorrow passes : now at length I live" In view of the poet's metaphysical refinements no de- cisive judgment is possible, and the dispute will continue for all time ; perhaps the real posture of affairs is indi- cated by Latour's happy phrase concerning Herrera's "innocent immorality." Fine as are isolated passages in these "vain, amato- rious" rhapsodies, the true Herrera is best revealed in his ode to Don Juan de Austria on the occasion of the Moorish revolt in the Alpujarra, in his elegy on the death of Sebastian of Portugal at Alcazar al-Kebir, in his song upon the victory of Lepanto. In patriotism Herrera found his noblest inspiration, and in these three great pieces he attains an exceptional energy and con- ciseness of form. He sings the triumph of the true 1 78 SPANISH LITERATURE faith with an Hebraic fervour, a stateliness derived from biblical cadences, as he mourns the overthrow of Chris- tianity, "the weapons of war perished," in accents of profound affliction. His sincerity and his lyrical splen- dour place him in the foremost rank of his country's singers ; and hence his title of El divino. Differing in temperament from Garcilaso, Herrera may be considered as the true inheritor of his predecessor's unfulfilled renown. Two of his finest sonnets one to Carlos Quinto, the other to Don Juan de Austria are superior to any in Garcilaso's page. The latter may be exampled here in Archdeacon Churton's rendering : " Deep sea, whose thundering waves in tumult roar, Call forth thy troubled spirit bid him rise, And gaze, with terror pale, and hollow eyes, On floods all flashing fire, and red with gore. Lo ! as in list enclosed, on battle-floor Christian and Sarzan, life and death the prize, Join conflict : lo ! the battered Paynim flies; The din, the smouldering flames, he braves no more. Go, bid thy deep-toned bass with voice of power Tell of this mightiest victory under sky, This deed of peerless valour's highest strain; And say a youth achieved the glorious hour, Hallowing thy gulf with praise that ner shall die, The youth of Austria, and the might of Spain" Herrera takes up the tradition of his forerunner, per- fects his form, imparts a greater sonority of expression, a deeper note of pathos and dignity. The soldier, with his languid sentiment, might be the priest ; the priest, with his martial music, might be the soldier. Yet Herrera's fealty never wavers ; for him there is but one model, one pattern, one perfect singer. " In our Spain," he avers, "Garcilaso stands first, beyond compare." And HERRERA 179 in this spirit, aided by suggestions from the poet's son- in-law, Puerto Carrero, aided also by illustrations from the whole Sevillan group, Francisco de Medina, Diego Giron, Francisco Pacheco, and Crist6bal Mosquera de Figueroa, Herrera undertook his commentary, Anota- ciones d las obras de Garcilaso de la Vega (1580). Its publication caused one of the bitterest quarrels in Spanish literary history. Four years earlier Garcilaso had been edited by the learned Francisco Sanchez (1523-1601), commonly called El Brocense, from Las Brozas, his birthplace, in Extre- madura ; and an excitable admirer of the poet, Fran- cisco de los Cobos, denounced Sanchez for exhibiting his author's debts by means of parallel passages. The partisans of Sanchez took Herrera's commentary as a challenge, and were not mollified by the fact that He- rrera nowhere mentioned Sanchez by name. It had been bad enough that an Extremaduran pundit should edit a Castilian poet ; that a mere Andaluci'an should repeat the outrage was insufferable. It was as though an Eng- lishman edited Burns. The Clan of Clonglocketty (or of Castile) rose as one man, and Herrera was flagellated by a tribe of scurrilous, illiterate patriots. Among his more urbane opponents was Juan Fernandez de Velasco, Conde de Haro, son of the Constable of Spain, who published his Observaciones under the pseudonym of Prete Jacopi'n, and was rapturously applauded for calling Herrera an ass in a lion's skin. It is discouraging to record that Haro's impertinence went through several editions, while Herrera's commentary has never been reprinted. 1 Yet this monument of enlightened learning 1 I learn that D. Marcelino Menendez y Pelayo is preparing a new edition of the Anotaciones. 1 8o SPANISH LITERATURE reveals its author, not only as the best lyrist, but as the acutest critic of his age. Cervantes knew it almost by heart, and he honoured it by writing his dedication of Don Quixote to the Duque de Bejar in the very words of Medina's preface and of Herrera's epistle to the Marques de Ayamonte. So that, since countless readers have admired a passage from the Anotaciones without knowing it, Herrera the prose-writer has enjoyed a vicarious immortality. The most eminent poet of the Salamancan school is Luis PONCE DE LE<5N (1529-91), a native of Belmonte de Cuenca, who joined the Augustinian order in his eighteenth year, and became professor of theology at the University of Salamanca in 1561. He soon found himself in the midst of a theological squabble as to the comparative merits of the Septuagint and the Hebrew MSS. Rivals spread the legend fatal in Spain that he was of Jewish descent, and that he conspired with the Hebrew professors, Martinet de Cantalapiedra and Grajal, in interpreting Scripture accbrding to Jewish traditions* His chief opponent was Le6n de Castro, who held the Greek chair. Public discussions were the fashion, and debates waxed acrimonious, after the custom of pro- fessors at large. On one occasion Luis de Leon went so far as to threaten Castro with the public burning of the latter's treatise on Isaiah. Castro was not the man to flinch, and anticipated his enemy by denouncing Fray Luis to the Inquisition. The matter would doubtless have ended here, had it not been discovered that Fray Luis had translated the Song of Solomon into Castilian : a grave offence in the eyes of the Holy Office, which, rejecting the Lutheran formula of "every man his own pope," forbade the circulation of Bibles in the verna- LUIS DE LE6N 181 cular. In March 1572 Luis de Leon was arrested, and was kept a prisoner by the local authorities for four and a half years, during which he was baited with questions calculated to convict him of heresy and to involve his friend Benito Arias Montano. Notwithstanding the efforts of Bartolome Medina and his brother-Domini- cans, Fray Luis was acquitted on December 7, 1576. Judged by modern standards, he was harshly treated ; but toleration is a modern birth, begotten by indif- ference and fear. In the sixteenth century men believed what they professed, and acted on their beliefs the Spaniards by imprisoning their own countryman, Luis de Leon ; Calvin by burning Harvey's forerunner, the Spaniard Miguel Servet. Fray Luis was the last of men to whine and whimper : he was judged by the tribunal of his own choosing, the tribunal with which he had menaced Castro: and the result vindicated his choice. 1 Ex forti dulcedo. The indomitable nobility of his char- acter is visible in the first words he uttered on his return to the chair which Salamanca had kept for him : "Gentlemen, as we were saying the other day." In 1591 he was elected Vicar-General of Castile, was chosen Provincial of his order, and was then commanded, against his will, to publish all his writings. He died ten days later. In prison Fray Luis wrote his celebrated treatise, the greatest of Spanish mystic books, Los Nombres de Cristo, a series of dissertations, in Plato's manner, on the sym- bolic value of such names of Christ as the Mount, the Shepherd, the Arm of God, the Prince of Peace, the Bridegroom. Published in 1583, the exposition is cast 1 For a full and very able account of the proceedings, see Alejandro Arango y Escandon's Ensayo histArico (Mejico, 1866). 1 82 SPANISH LITERATURE in the form of a dialogue, in which Marcelo, Sabino, and Julian examine the theological mysteries implied by the subject. With Fray Luis's theology we have no concern ; nor with his learning, save in so far as it is curious to see the Hellenic-Alexandrine leaven working through in his imitation of St. Clement's Epistle to the Corinthians. But his concise eloquence and his classic purity of expression rank him among the best masters of Castilian prose. The like great qualities are shown in his Exposicidn del libro de Job, drawn up by request of Santa Teresa's friend, Sor Ana de Jesus, and in his rendering of and commentary on the Song of Solomon, which he holds for an emblematic eclogue to be interpreted as a poetic foreshadowing of the Divine Espousal of the Church with Christ. A book still held in great esteem is his Perfecta Casada (The Perfect Wife), suggested, it may be, by Luis Vives' Christian Woman, and composed (1583) for the benefit of Maria Varela Osorio. It is not, indeed, " That hymn for which the whole world longs, A worthy hymn in woman 's praise." It is rather a singularly brilliant paraphrase of the thirty- first chapter of the Book of Proverbs, a code of practical conduct for the ideal spouse, which may be read with delight even by those who think the friar's doctrine reactionary. Great in prose, Luis de Le6n is no less great in verse. With San Juan de la Cruz he heads the list of Spain's lyrico-mystical poets. Yet he set no value on his poems, which he regarded as mere toys of childhood : so that their preservation is due to the accident of his collecting them late in life to amuse the leisure LUIS DE LE6N 183 of the Bishop of C6rdoba. We owe their publication to Quevedo, who issued them in 1631 as a counterblast to culteranismo. Of the three books into which they are divided, two consist of translations from Virgil, Horace, Tibullus, Euripides, and Pindar ; and from the Psalms, the Book of Job, and St. Thomas of Aquin's Pange lingua. " I have tried," says Fray Luis of his sacred renderings, "to imitate so far as I might their simple origin and antique flavour, full of sweetness and majesty, as it seems to me ; " and he succeeds as greatly in the primitive unction of the one kind as in the faultless form of the other. Still these are but inspired imita- tions, and the original poet is to be sought for in the first book. Some idea of his ode entitled Noche Serena may be gathered from Mr. Henry Phillips' version of the opening stanzas : " When to the heavenly dome my thoughts take flight, With shimmering stars bedecked, ablaze with light) Then sink my eyes down to the groitnd, In slumber wrapped, oblivion bound, Enveloped in the gloom of darkest night. With love and pain assailed, with anxious care, A thousand troubles in my breast appear, My eyes turn to a flowing rill, Sore sorrow's tearful floods distil, While saddened, mournful words my woes declare. Oh, dwelling fit for angels ! sacred fane / The hallowed siirine where youth and beauty reign! Why in this dungeon, plunged in night, The soul thafs born for Heaven's delight Should cruel Fate withiioldfrom its domain ? " In his Profeda del Tajo (Prophecy of the Tagus) Luis de Le6n displays a virility absent from his other pieces, and ' 1 84 SPANISH LITERATURE the impetuosity of the verse matches the speed which he attributes to the Saracenic invaders advancing to the overthrow of Roderic ; and, if he still abide by his Horatian model, he introduces an individual treatment, a characteristic melody of his own invention. A famous devout song, A Cristo Crucifijado (To Christ Crucified), appears in all editions of Fray Luis ; but as its authen- ticity is disputed some ascribing it to Miguel Sanchez its quotation must be foregone here. The ode Al Apartamiento (To Retirement) exhibits the contemplative vein which distinguishes the singer, and, as in the Ode to Salinas, seems an early anticipation of Wordsworth's note of serene simplicity. Luis de Le6n is not splendid in metrical resource, and his adherence to tradition, his indifference to his fame, his ecclesiastical estate, all tend to narrow his range of subject ; yet, within the limits marked out for him, he is as great an artist and as rich a voice as Spain can show. In the same year (1631) that Quevedo issued Luis de Le6n's verses, he also published an exceedingly small volume of poems which he ascribed to a Bachelor named FRANCISCO DE LA TORRE (1534-? 1594). From this arose a strange case of mistaken identity. Quevedo's own account of the matter is simple : he alleges that he found the poems " by good luck and for the greater glory of Spain" in the shop of a bookseller, who sold them cheap. It appears that the Portuguese, Juan de Almeida, Senhor de Couto de Avintes, saw them soon after Torre's death, that he applied for leave to print them, and that the official licence was signed by the author of La Araucana, Ercilla y Zuftiga, who died in 1595. For some reason Almeida's purpose miscarried, and, when Quevedo found the manuscript in 1629, Torre was gene- TORRE AND QUEVEDO 185 rally forgotten. Quevedo solved the difficulty out of hand in the high editorial manner, evolved the facts from his inner consciousness, and assured his readers that the author of the poems was the Francisco de la Torre who wrote the Vision deleitablel- Ticknor lays it down that "no suspicion seems to have been whispered, either at the moment of their first publication, or for a long time afterwards," of the correctness of this attribution ; and he implies that the first doubter was Luis Jose Velazquez, Marques de Valdeflores, who, when he reprinted the book in 1753, started the theory that the poems were Quevedo's own. This is not so. Quevedo's mistake was pointed out by Manuel de Faria y Sousa in his commentary to the LusiadaSj printed at Madrid in 1639. That Quevedo should make a Bachelor of a man who had no uni- versity degree, that he should call the writer of the Vision deleitable Francisco when in truth his name was Alfonso, were trifles : that he should antedate his author by nearly two centuries this was a serious matter, and Faria y Sousa took pains to make him realise it. It must have added to the editor's chagrin to learn that Torre had been friendly with Lope de Vega, who could have given accurate information about him ; but Lope and Quevedo were not on speaking terms, owing to the mischief-making of the former's parasite, Perez de Montalban. Quevedo had made no approach to Lope ; Lope saw the blunder, smiled, and said nothing in public. Through Pe"rez de Montalban the facts reached Faria y Sousa, who exulted over a mistake which was, indeed, unpardonable. The discomfiture was complete : for the first and last time in his life Quevedo was dumb 1 The Christian name of the author of the Visi6n ddeiiable was Alfonso. 1 86 SPANISH LITERATURE before an enemy. Meanwhile, Velazquez' theory has found some favour with L6pez Sedano and with many foreign critics : as, for example, Ticknor. What we know of Francisco de la Torre is based upon the researches of Quevedo's learned editor, Aure- liano Ferndndez-Guerra y Orbe. 1 A native of Torre- laguna, he matriculated at Alcala de Henares in 1556, fell in love with the " Fills rigurosa" whom he sings, served with Carlos Quinto in the Italian campaigns, returned to find Filis married to an elderly Toledan millionaire, remained constant to his (more or less) platonic flame, and ended by taking orders in his despair. The unadorned simplicity of his manner is at the remotest pole from Quevedo's frosty brilliancy. No small proportion of his sonnets is translated from the Italian. Thus, where Benedetto Varchi writes " Questa e, Tirsi, quel fonte in cut solea" Torre follows close with " Jista es, Tirsi, la fuente do solia]" and when Giovanni Battista Amalteo celebrates " La viva neve e le vermiglie rose" the Spaniard echoes back " La blanca nieve y la purpiirea rosa" Schelling finds the light fantastic rap- ture of the Elizabethan lover expressed to perfection in the eighty-first of Spenser's Amoretti : line for line, and almost word for word, Torre's twenty-third sonnet is identical, and, when we at length possess a critical edition of Spenser, it will surely prove that both poems derive from a common Italian source. Such examples are numerous, and are worth noting as germane to the general question. No man in Europe was more original than Quevedo, none less disposed to lean on 1 See the second volume (pp. 79-104) of the Discursos leidos en las re- cepcionts fiiblicas que ha celebrado desde 1847 la Real Academia Espafiola (Madrid, 1861). FIGUEROA 187 Italy. To conceive that he should seek to reform culteranismo by translating from Italians of yesterday, or to suppose that he knowingly passed as original work imitations made by a man who ex hypothesi died before his models were born, is to believe Quevedo a clumsy trickster. That conclusion is un- tenable ; and Torre deserves all credit for his graceful renderings, as for his more original poems gallant, tender, and sentimental. He is one of the earliest Spanish poets to choose simple, natural themes the ivy fallen to the ground, the widowed song-bird, the wounded hind, the charms of landscape and the enchantment of the spring. A smaller replica of Garcilaso, with a vision and personality of his own : so Francisco de la Torre appears in the perspective of Castilian song. An allied poet of the Salamancan school is Torre's friend, FRANCISCO DE FIGUEROA (1536-? 1620), a native of Alcala de Henares, whom his townsman Cervantes introduces in the pastoral Galatea under the name of Tirsi. Little is recorded of his life save that he served as a soldier in Italy, that he studied at Rome, Bologna, Siena, and perhaps Naples, that the Italians called him the Divino (the title was sometimes cheaply given), and that some even ranked him next to Petrarch. He returned to Alcala, where he married " nobly," as we are told ; and he is found travelling with the Duque de Terranova in the Low Countries about 1597. On his deathbed he bethought him of Virgil's example, and ordered that all his poems should be burned ; those that escaped were published at Lisbon in 1626 by the historian Luis Tribaldos de Toledo, who reports what little we know concerning the writer. That he versi- 1 88 SPANISH LITERATURE fied much in Italian appears from Juan Verzosa's evidence : "El lingua perges alterna pangere versus." And a vestige of the youthful practice is preserved in the elegy to Juan de Mendoza y Luna, where one Spanish line and two Italian lines compose each tercet. One admirable sonnet is that written on the death of the poet's son, Garcilaso de la Vega el Mozo, who, like his famous father, fell in battle. Figueroa's bent is towards the pastoral ; he sings of sweet repose, of love's costly glory, of Tirsi's pangs, of Fileno's passion realised, and of ingrata Fili. His points of resemblance with Torre are many ; but his talent is more original, his mood more melancholy, his taste finer, his diction more exquisite. He ranks so high among his country's singers, it is not incredible that he might take his stand with the greatest if we possessed all his poems, instead of a few numbers saved from fire. And, as it is, he deserves peculiar praise as the earliest poet who, fol- lowing Boscan and Garcilaso, mastered the blank verse, \vhose secrets had eluded them. He avoids the subtle peril of the assonant ; he varies the mechanical uni- formity of beat or stress ; and, by skilful alternations of his caesura, diversifies his rhythm to such harmonic purpose as no earlier experimentalist approaches. At his hands the most formidable of Castilian metres is finally vanquished, and the verso suelto is established on an equality with the sonnet. That alone ensures Figueroa's fame : he sets the standard by which suc- cessors are measured. Ariosto's vigorous epical manner is faintly suggested in twelve cantos of the Angelica, by a Seville doctor, Luis BARAHONA RUFO 189 BARAHONA DE SOTO (fl. 1586). Lope de Vega, in the Laurel de Afolo, praises " The doctor admirable Whose page of gold The story of Medora told," and all contemporaries, from Diego Hurtado de Mendoza downwards, swell the chorus of applause. The priest who sacked Don Quixote's library softened at sight of Barahona's book, which he calls by its popular title, the Ldgrimas de Angelica (Tears of Angelica) : " I should shed tears myself were such a book burned, for its author is one of the best poets, not merely in Spain, but in all the world." Cervantes was far from strong in criticism, and he proves it in this case. The Angelica, which purports to continue the story of Orlando Furioso itself a continuation of the Orlando Innamorato looks mean beside its great original. Yet, though Barahona fails in epic narrative, his lyrical poems, given in Espinosa's Flores de poetas ilustres, are full of grace and melody. The epic's fascination also seduced the C6rdoban, JUAN RUFO GUTIERREZ. We know the date of neither his birth nor his death, but he must have lived long if his collection of anecdotes, entitled Las seiscientas Apo- tegmas, were really published in 1548. His Austriada, printed in 1584, takes Don Juan de Austria for its hero, and contains some good descriptive stanzas ; but Rufo's invention finds no scope in dealing with contemporary matters, and what might have been a useful chronicle is distorted to a tedious poem. Great part of the Austriada is but a rhymed version of Mendoza's Guerra de Granada, which Rufo must have seen in manuscript. When, leaving Ariosto in peace, he becomes himself, as in the 1 90 SPANISH LITERATURE verses at the end of the Apotegmas, he gives forth a natural old-world note, reminiscent of earlier models than Boscdn and Garcilaso. Since Luis de Zapata (1523-? 1600) wrote an epic history of the Emperor, the Carlos famoso, he must have read it ; and it is possible that Cervantes (who delighted in it) was familiar with its fifty cantos, its forty thousand lines. It is more than can be said of any later reader. Zapata wasted thirteen years upon his epic, and witnessed its failure ; but he was undismayed, and lived to maltreat Horace it sounds incredible beyond all expectation. It is another instance of a mistaken calling. The writer knew his facts, and had a touch of the historic spirit. Yet he could not be content with prose and history. A nearer approach to the right epical poem is the Araucana of ALONSO DE ERCILLA Y ZUNIGA (1533-95), who appeared as Felipe II.'s page at his wedding with Mary Tudor in Winchester Cathedral. From England he sailed for Chile in 1554, to serve against the Arau- canos, who had risen in revolt ; and in seven pitched battles, not to speak of innumerable small engagements, he greatly distinguished himself. His career was ruined by a quarrel with a brother-officer named Juan de Pineda ; he was judged to be in fault, was condemned to death, and actually mounted the scaffold. At the last moment the sentence was commuted to exile at Callao, whence Ercilla returned to Europe in 1562. With him he brought the first fifteen cantos of his poem, written by the camp-fire on stray scraps of paper, leather, and skin. The first book ever printed in America was, as we learn from Seflor Icazbalceta, Juan de Zumdrraga's Breve y compendiosa Doctrina Cristiana. The first literary work of real merit com- ERCILLA 191 posed in either American continent was Ercilla's Araucana. It was published at Madrid in 1569 ; and continuations, amounting to thirty-seven cantos in all, followed in 1578 and 1590. Ercilla never forgave what he thought the injustice of his general, Garcia Hurtado de Mendoza, Marques de Canete, and carefully omits his name throughout the Araucana. The omission cost him dear, for he was never employed again. His is an exceeding stately poem on the Chilian revolt ; but epic it is not, whether in spirit or design, whether in form or effect. In the Essay Prefatory to the Henriade, Voltaire condescends to praise the Araucana, the name of which has thus become familiar to many ; and, though he was probably writing at second hand, he is justified in extolling the really noble speech which Ercilla gives to the aged chief, Colocolo. It is precisely in declamatory eloquence that Ercilla shines. His technical craftsmanship is sound, his spirit admirable, his diction beyond reproach, or nearly so ; and yet his work, as a whole, fails to im- press. Men remember isolated lines, a stanza here and there ; but the general effect is blurred. To speak truly, Ercilla had the orator's temperament, not the poet's. At his worst he is debating in rhyme, at his best he is writing poetic history ; and, though he has an eye for situation, an instinct for the picturesque, the historian in him vanquishes the poet. He himself was vaguely conscious of something lacking, and he strove to make it good by means of mythological episodes, visions by Bellona, magic foreshadowings of victory, digressions defending Dido from Virgil's scandalous tattle. But, since the secret of the epic lies not in machinery, this attempt at reform failed. Ercilla's first 1 9 2 SPANISH LITERATURE part remains his best, and is still interesting for its martial eloquence, and valuable as a picture of heroic barbarism rendered by an artist in ottava rima who was : also a vigilant observer and a magnanimous foe. His omission of his commander's name was made good by <4 copious Chilian poet, Pedro de Ona, in his Arauco domado (1596), which closed with the capture of " Richerte Aquines " (as who should say Richard Hawkins) ; and, in the following year, Diego de Santisteban y Osorio added a fourth and fifth part to the original Araucana. Neither imitation is of real poetic worth, and, as versi- fied history, they are inferior to the Elegias de Varones ilustres de Indias of Juan de Castellanos (? 1510-? 1590), a priest who in youth had served in America, and who rhymed his reminiscences with a conscientious regard for fact more laudable in a chronicler than a poet. But we turn from these elaborate historical failures to religious work of real beauty, and the first that offers itself is the famous sonnet "To Christ Cruci- fied," familiar to English readers in a free version ascribed to Dryden : " O God, Thou art the object of my love, Not for the hopes of endless joys above, Nor for the fear of endless pains below Which those -who love Thee not must undergo : For me, and such as me, Thou once didst bear The ignominious cross, the nails, the spear, A thorny crown transpierced Thy sacred brow, IVhat bloody sweats from every member flow ! For me, in torture Thou resign* st Thy breath, Nailed to the cross, and sav'dst me by Thy death : Say, can these sufferings fail my heart to move? What but Thyself can now deserve my love? SANTA TERESA 193 Such as then was and is Thy love to me, Such is, and shall be still, my love to Thee. Thy love, O Jesus, may I ever sing, O God of love, kind Parent, dearest King." The authorship is referred to Ignacio Loyola, to Fran- cisco Xavier, to Pedro de los Reyes, and to the Seraphic Mother, SANTA TERESA DE JESUS, whose name in the world was Teresa de Cepeda y Ahumada (1515-82). None of these attributions can be sustained, and No me mueve, mi Dios, para quererte must be classed as anony- mous. 1 Yet its fervour and unction are such as to suggest its ascription to the Saint of the Flaming Heart. Santa Teresa is not only a glorious saint and a splendid figure in the annals of religious thought : she ranks as a miracle of genius, as, perhaps, the greatest woman who ever handled pen, the single one of all her sex who stands beside the world's most perfect masters. Macaulay has noted, in a famous essay, that Protestantism has gained not an inch of ground since the middle of the sixteenth century. Ignacio Loyola and Santa Teresa are the life and brain of the Catholic reaction : the former is a great party chief, the latter belongs to mankind. Her life in all its details may be read in Mrs. Cunning- hame Graham's minute and able study. Here it must suffice to note that she sallied forth to seek martyrdom at the age of seven, that she entered literature as the writer of a chivalresque romance, and that in her sixteenth year she made her profession as a nun in the Carmelite con- vent of her native town, Avila. Years of spiritual aridity, of ill-health, weighed her down, aged her prematurely. But nothing could abate her natural force ; and from 1 A very able discussion of these ascriptions is presented by M. Foulch^- Delbosc in the Revue hispanique (1895), vo '- " PP- 120-45. I 9 4 SPANISH LITERATURE 1558 to the day of her death she marches from one victory to another, careless of pain, misunderstanding, misery, and persecution, a wonder of valour and devotion. " Scarce has she blood enough to make A guilty sword blush for her sake; Yet has a heart dares hope to prove How much less strong is Death than Love , . . Love toucKt her heart, and lo ! it beats High, and burns with such brave heats, Such thirst to die, as dares drink up A thousand cold deaths in one cup." What Crashaw has here said of her in verse he repeats in prose, and the heading of his poem may be quoted as a concise summary of her achievement : " Foundress of the Reformation of the Discalced Carmelites, both men and women ; a woman for angelical height of specula- tion, for masculine courage of performance more than a woman ; who, yet a child, outran maturity, and durst plot a martyrdom." And all the world has read with ever-growing admiration the burning words of Crashaw's " sweet incendiary," the " undaunted daughter of desires," the " fair sister of the seraphim," " the moon of maiden stars." Simplicity and conciseness are Santa Teresa's dis- tinctive qualities, and the marvel is where she acquired her perfect style. Not, we may be sure, in the numerous prose of Amadis. Her confessor, the worthy Gracian, took it upon him to "improve" and polish her periods; but, in a fortunate hour, her papers came into the hands of Luis de Leon, who gave them to the press in 1588. Himself a master in mysticism and literature, he per- ceived the truth embodied later in Crashaw's famous line : " O 'tis not Spanish but 'tis Heaven she speaks." SANTA TERESA 195 Her masterpiece is the Castillo interior, of which Fray Luis writes : " Let naught be blotted out, save when she herself emended : which was seldom." And once more he commends her to her readers, saying : " She, who had seen God face to face, now reveals Him unto you." With all her sublimity, her enraptured vision of things heavenly, her " large draughts of intellectual day," Santa Teresa illustrates the combination of the loftiest mysticism with the finest practical sense, and her style varies, takes ever its colour from its subject. Familiar and maternal in her letters, enraptured in her Conceptos del Amor de Dios, she handles with equal skill the trifles of our petty lives and to use Luis de Le6n's phrase "the highest and most generous philosophy that was ever dreamed." And from her briefest sentence shines the vigorous soul of one born to govern, one who governed in such wise that a helpless Nuncio denounced her as "restless, disobedient, contumacious, an inven- tress of new doctrines tricked out with piety, a breaker of the cloister-rule, a despiser of the apostolic precept which forbiddeth a woman to teach." Santa Teresa taught because she must, and all that she wrote was written by compulsion, under orders from her superior. She could never have understood the female novelist's desire for publicity ; and, had she realised it, merry as her humour was, she would scarcely have smiled. For she was, both by descent and temperament, a gentlewoman de sangre muy limpia, as she writes more than once, with a tinge of satisfaction which shows that the convent discipline had not stifled her pride of race any more than it had quenched her gaiety. She always remembers that she comes from Castile, and the fact is evidenced in her writings, with 196 SPANISH LITERATURE their delicious old-world savour. Boscan and Garcilaso might influence courtiers and learned poets ; but they were impotent against the brave Castilian of Sor Teresa de Jesus, who wields her instrument with incomparable mastery. It were a sin to attempt a rendering of her artless songs, with their resplendent gleams of ecstasy and passion. But some idea of her general manner, when untouched by the inspiration of her mystic nuptials, may be gathered from a passage which Froude has Englished : "A man is directed to make a garden in a bad soil overrun with sour grasses. The Lord of the land roots out the weeds, sows seeds, and plants herbs and fruit- trees. The gardener must then care for them and water them, that they may thrive and blossom, and that the Lord may find pleasure in his garden and come to visit it. There are four ways in which the watering may be done. There is water which is drawn wearily by hand from the well. There is water drawn by the ox-wheel, more abundantly and with greater labour. There is water brought in from the river, which will saturate the whole ground ; and, last and best, there is rain from heaven. Four sorts of prayer correspond to these. The first is a weary effort with small returns ; the well may run dry : the gardener then must weep. The second is internal prayer and meditation upon God ; the trees will then show leaves and flower-buds. The third is love of God. The virtues then become vigorous. We converse with God face to face. The flowers open and give out fragrance. The fourth kind cannot be described in words. Then there is no more toil, and the seasons no longer change ; flowers are always blowing, and fruit ripens perennially. The soul enjoys undoubting certi- SANTA TERESA 197 tude ; the faculties work without effort and without consciousness ; the heart loves and does not know that it loves ; the mind perceives, yet does not know that it perceives. If the butterfly pauses to say to itself how prettily it is flying, the shining wings fall off, and it drops and dies. The life of the spirit is not our life, but the life of God within us." And, as Santa Teresa excelled in spiritual insight, so she has the sense of affairs. Durtal, in M. Joris-Karl Huysmans' En Route, first says of her : " Sainte Terese a explore plus a fond que tout autre les regions in- connues de 1'ame ; elle en est, en quelque sorte, la geographe; elle a surtout dress6 la carte de ses poles, marque les latitudes contemplatives, les terres interi- eures du ciel humain." And he shows the reverse of the medal : " Mais quel singulier melange elle montre aussi, d'une mystique ardente et d'une femme d'affaires froide ; car, enfin, elle est a double fond ; elle est contemplative hors le monde et elle est 6galement un homme d'etat : elle est le Colbert feminin des cloitres." The key to Durtal's difficulties is given in the Abbe GeVresin's remark, that the perfect balance of good sense is one of the distinctive signs of the mystics. In Santa Teresa's case the sign is present. An uninquiring world may choose to think of her as a fanatic in vapours and in ecstasies. Yet it is she who writes, in the Camino de Perfection : " I would not have my daughters be, or seem to be, women in anything, but brave men." It is she who holds that " of revelations no account should be made " ; who calls the usual convent life " a short- cut to hell" ; who adds that "if parents took my advice, they would rather marry their daughters to the poorest of men, or keep them at home under their own eyes." I 9 8 SPANISH LITERATURE Her position as a spiritual force is as unique as her place in literature. It is certain that her "own dear books " were nothing to her ; that she regarded litera- ture as frivolity ; and no one questions her right so to regard it. But the world also is entitled to its judg- ment, which is expressed in different ways. Jeremy Taylor cites her in a sermon preached at the opening of the Parliament of Ireland (May 8, 1661). Protestant England, by the mouth of Froude, compares Santa Teresa to Cervantes. Catholic Spain places her manu- script of her own Life beside a page of St. Augustine's writing in the Palace of the Escorial. In some sense we may almost consider the Ecstatic Doctor, SAN JUAN DE LA CRUZ (1542-91), as one of Santa Teresa's disciples. He changed his worldly name of Juan de Yepes y Alvarez for that of Juan de la Cruz on joining the Carmelite order in 1563. Shortly after- wards he made the acquaintance of Santa Teresa, and, fired by her enthusiasm, he undertook to carry out in monasteries the reforms which she introduced in con- vents. In his Obras espirituales (1618) mysticism finds its highest expression. There are moments when his prose style is of extreme clearness and force, but in many cases he soars to heights where the sense reels in the attempt to follow him. St. John of the Cross holds, with the mystics of all time, with Plotinus and Bohme and Swedenborg, that "by contemplation man may become incorporated with the Deity." This is a hard saying for some of us, not least to the present writer, and it were idle, in the circumstances, to attempt criticism of what for most men must remain a mystery. Yet in his verse one seizes the sense more easily ; and his high, amorous music has an individual melody of SAN JUAN DE LA CRUZ 199 spiritual ravishment, of daring abandonment, which is not all lost in Mr. David Lewis' unrhymed version of the Noche oscura del Alma (Dark Night of the Soul) : " In an obscure night. With anxious love inflamed, O happy lot! Forth unobserved I "went, My house being now at rest. - In that happy night, In secret, seen of none, Seeing nought but myself, Without other light or guide Save that which in my heart was burning. That light guided me More surely than the noonday sun To the place where he was waiting forme Whom I knew well, And none but he appeared. O guiding night ! O night more lovely than the dawn I night that hast united The lover with his beloved And charged her with her love. On my flowery bosom, Kept whole for him alone, He reposed and slept : 1 kept him, and the waving Of the cedars fanned him. Then his hair floated in the breexe That blew from the turret; He struck me on the neck With his gentle hand, And all sensation left me. 14 200 SPANISH LITERATURE / continued in oblivion lost, My head was resting on my love; I fainted at last abandoned, And, amid the lilies forgotten, Threw all my cares away." St. John of the Cross has absorbed the mystic essence of the Song of Solomon, and he introduces infinite new harmonies in his re-setting of the ancient melody. The worst that criticism can allege against him is that he dwells on the very frontier line of sense, in a twilight where music takes the place of meaning, and words are but vague symbols of inexpressible thoughts, intolerable raptures, too subtly sensuous for transcription. The Unknown Eros, a volume of odes, mainly mystical and Catholic, by Coventry Patmore, which has had so con- siderable an influence on recent English writers, was a deliberate attempt to transfer to our poetry the methods of St. John of the Cross, whose influence grows ever deeper with time. The Dominican monk whose family name was Sarria, but who is only known from his birthplace as Luis DE GRANADA (1504-88), is usually accounted a mystic writer, though he is vastly less contemplative, more didactic and practical, than San Juan de la Cruz. He is best known by his Guia de Pecadores, which Regnier made the favourite reading of Macette, and which Gorgibus recommends to Celie in Sganarelle :- " La Guide des pe"cheurs est encore un bon livre : Cest la qu'en peu de temps on apprend a bien vivre." \ his Unluckily for Granada, his Guia de Pecadores and Tratado de la Oracion y Meditacidn were placed on the Index, chiefly at the instigation of that hammer of heretics, Melchor Cano, the famous theologian of the LUIS DE GRANADA 201 Council of Trent. Certain changes were made in the text, and the books were reprinted in their amended form ; but the suspicion of iluminismo long hung over Granada, whose last years were troubled by his rash simplicity in certifying as true the sham stigmata of a Portuguese nun, Sor Maria de la Visitaci6n. The story that Granada was persecuted by the Inquisition is imaginary. His books have still an immense vogue. His sincerity, learning, and fervour are admirable, and his forty years spent between confessional and pulpit gave him a rare knowledge of human weakness and a mastery of eloquent appeal. He is not declamatory in the worst sense, though he bears the marks of his training. He sins by abuse of oratorical antithesis, by repetition, by a certain mechanical see-saw of the sentence common to those who harangue multitudes. Still, the sweetness of his nature so flows over in his words that didacticism becomes persuasive even when he argues against our strongest prepossessions. It may interest to quote a passage from the translation made by that Francis Meres whose Palladis Tamia contains the earliest reference to Shakespeare's " sugared sonnets " : "This desire which doth hold many so resolutely to their studies, and this love of science and knowledge under pretence to help others, is too much and super- fluous. I call it a love too much and desire superfluous ; for when it is moderate and according to reason, it is not a temptation, but a laudable virtue and a very profitable exercise which is commended in all kind of men, but especially in young men who do exercise their youth in that study, for by it they eschew many vices and learn that whereby they will counsel themselves and others. 202 SPANISH LITERATURE But unless it be moderately used it hurteth devotion. . . . There be some that would know for this end only, that they might know and it is foolish curiosity. There be some that would know, that they might be known and it is foolish vanity ; and there be some that would know, that they might sell their knowledge for money or for honours and it is filthy lucre. There be also some that desire to know, that they may edify and it is charity. And there are some that would know, that they may be edified and it is wisdom. All these ends may move the desire, and, in choice of these, a man is often deceived, when he considereth not which ought especially to move ; and this error is very dangerous." This distrust of profane letters is yet more marked in the Augustinian, PEDRO MAL6N DE CHAIDE of Cas- cante (1530-? 1590), who compares the "frivolous love- books" of Boscdn, Garcilaso, and Montemor and the "fabulous tales and lies" of chivalresque romance to a knife in a madman's hand. His practice clashes with his theory, for his Conversion de la Magdalena, written for Beatriz Cerdan, is learned to the verge of pedantry, and his elaborate periods betray the imitation of models which he professed to abhor. More ascetic than mystic, Mal6n de Chaide lacks the patrician ease, the tolerant spirit of Juan de Avila, Granada, and Leon ; but his austere doctrine and sumptuous colouring have ensured him permanent popularity. His admirable verse para- phrases of the Song of Solomon have much of the unction, without the sensuous exaltation, of Juan de la Cruz. A better representative of pure mysticism is the Extremaduran Carmelite, JUAN DE LOS ANGELES (fl. 1595), whose Triumphos del Amor de Dios is a pro- found psychological study, written under the influence ARIAS MONTANO 203 of Northern thinkers, and not less remarkable for beauty of expression than for impassioned insight. With him our notice of the Spanish mystics must close. It is difficult to estimate their number exactly ; but since at least three thousand survive in print, it is not surprising that the most remain unread. A breath of mysticism is met in the few Castilian verses of the brilliant humanist, BEXITO ARIAS MONTANO (1527-98), who gave up to scholarship and theology what was meant for poetry. His achievement in the two former fields is not our concern here, but it pleases to denote the ample inspi- ration and the lofty simplicity of his song, which is hidden from many readers, and overlooked even by literary historians, in Bohl de Faber's Floresta de rimas antiguas. The pastoral novel, like the chivalresque romance, reaches Spain through Portugal. The Italianised Spaniard, Jacopo Sannazaro, had invented the first example of this kind in his epoch-making Arcadia (1504) ; and his earliest follower was the Portuguese, Bernardim Ribeiro (? 1475- 71524), whose Menina e mo$a transplants the prose pastoral to the Peninsula. This remarkable book, which derives its title from the first three words of the text, is the undoubted model of the first Castilian prose pastoral, the unfinished Diana Enamorada. This we owe to the Portuguese, JORGE DE MONTEM6R (d. 1561), whose name is hispaniolised as Montemayor. There is nothing strange in this usage of Castilian by a Portuguese writer. We have already recorded the names of Gil Vicente, Sa de Miranda, and Silvestre among those of Castilian poets ; the lyrics and comedies of Camoes, the Austriada of Jeronimo Corte Real, continue a tradition which begins 204 SPANISH LITERATURE as early as the General Cancioneiro of Garcia de Resende (1516), wherein twenty-nine Portuguese poets prefer Castilian before their own language. A Portuguese writer, Innocencio da Silva, has gone the length of asserting that Montemdr wrote nothing but Castilian. This only proves that Silva had not read the Diana, which contains two Portuguese songs, and Portuguese prose passages spoken by the shepherd, Danteo, and the shepherdess, Duarda. Nor is Silva alone in his bad eminence ; the date of the earliest edition of the Diana is commonly given as 1542. Yet, as it contains, in the Canto de Orpheo, an allusion to the widowhood of the Infanta Juana (1554), it must be later. The time of publication was probably 1558-59,! some four or five years after the printing of his Cancionero at Antwerp. Little is known of Montemdr's life, save that he was a musician at the Spanish court in 1548. He accompanied the Infanta Juana to Lisbon on her marriage to Dom Joao, returning to Spain in 1554, when he is thought to have visited England and the Low Countries in Felipe II.'s train. He was murdered in 1651, apparently as the result of some amour. Faint intimations of pastoralism are found in such early chivalresque novels as Florisel de Niquea, where Florisel, dressed as a shepherd, loves the shepherdess, Sylvia. Ribeiro had introduced his own flame in Menina e moqa in the person of Aonia, and Montem6r follows with Diana. The identification of Aonia with the Infanta Beatriz, and with King Manoel's cousin, Joana de Vilhena, has been argued with great heat: in Montemor's case the lady is said to 1 The question is discussed in the J?evue hispanique (1895), v l- " PP- 304-". MONTEM6R 20$ have been a certain Ana. Her surname is withheld by the discreet Sepiilveda, who records that she was seen at Valderas by Felipe III. and his queen in 1603. In all pastoral novels there is a family likeness, and Montemor is not successful in avoiding the insipidity of the genre. He endeavours to lighten the monotony of his shepherds by borrowing Sannazaro's invention of the witch whose magic draughts work miracles. This wonder-worker is as convenient for the novelist as she is tedious for the reader, who is forced to cry out with Don Quixote's Priest : " Let all that refers to the wise Felicia and the enchanted water be omitted." The bold Priest would further drop the verses, honouring the book for its prose, and for being the first of its class. Montemor accepts the convention by making his shep- herds Sireno, Silvano, and the rest mouth it like grandiloquent dukes ; but the style is correct, and pleas- ing in its grandiose kind. The Diana's vogue was im- mense : Shakespeare himself based the Two Gentlemen of Verona upon the episode of the shepherdess Felismena, which he had probably read in the manuscript of Bar- tholomew Young, whose excellent version, although not printed until 1598, was finished in 1583; and Sidney, whose own pastoral is redolent of Montemor, has given Sireno's song in this fashion : " Of this high grace with bliss conjoined No further debt on me is laid, Since that is self-same metal coin'd, Sweet lady, you remain u< ell paid. For, if my place give me great pleasure, Having before me Nature's treasure, In face and eyes unmatched being. You have the same in my hands, seeing What in your face mine eyes do measure. 206 SPANISH LITERATURE Nor think the match unevenly made. That of those beams in you do tarry ; The glass to you but gives a shade ; To me mine eyes the true shape carry : For such a thought most highly prized. Which ever hath Love 's yoke despised. Better than one captiv'dperceiveth^ Though he the lively form receiveth, The other sees it but disguised" Montem6r closes with the promise of a sequel, which never appeared. But, as his popularity continued, pub- lishers printed new editions, containing the story of Abindarraez and Jarifa, boldly annexed from Villegas' Inventario, which was licensed so early as 1551. The tempting opportunity was seized by Alonso Perez, a Salamancan doctor, whose second Diana (1564) is ex- tremel/dull, despite the singular boast of its author that it contains scarcely anything "not stolen or imitated from the best Latins and Italians." Perez alleges that he was a friend of Montemor's ; but, as that was his sole qualification, his third Diana written, though " not added here, to avoid making too large a volume " has fortunately vanished. In this same year, 1564, appeared Caspar Gil Polo's Diana, a continuation which, says Cer- vantes, should be guarded "as though it were Apollo's" the praise has perplexed readers who missed the pun on the author's name. The merits of Polo's sequel, excellent in matter and form, were recognised, as Pro- fessor Rennert notes, by Jer6nimo de Texeda, whose Diana (1627) is a plagiary from Polo. Though the contents of the one and the other are almost identical, Ticknor, considering them as independent works, finds praise for the earlier book, and blame for the later. An odd, mad freak is the versified Diez libros de Fortuna de ZURITA 207 Amor (1573), wherein Frexano and Floricio woo For- tuna and Augustina in Arcadian fashion. Its author, the Sardinian soldier, Antonio Lo Frasso, shares with Ave- llaneda the distinction of having drawn Cervantes' fire his one title to fame. Artificiality reaches its full height in the Pastor de Filida (1582) of Luis Galvez de Mont- alvo, who presents himself, Silvestre, and Cervantes as the (Dresden) shepherds Siralvo, Silvano, and Tirsi. Almost every Spanish man of letters attempted a pastoral, but it were idle to compile a catalogue of works by authors whose echoes of Montemor are merely mechani- cal. The occasion of much ornate prose, the pastoral lived partly because there was naught to set against it, partly because born men of action found pleasure in literary idealism and in "old Saturn's reign of sugar- candy." Its unreality doomed it to death when Aleman and others took to working the realistic vein first struck in Lazarillo de Tormes. Meanwhile the spec- tacle of love-lorn shepherds contending in song scan- dalised the orthodox, and the monk Bartolome Ponce produced his devout parody, the Clara Diana d lo divino (1599) in the same edifying spirit that moved Sebastian de Cordoba (1577) to travesty Boscan's and Garcilaso's works d lo divino, trasladadas en materias cristianas. Didactic prose is practised by the official chronicler, JERONIMO DE ZURITA (1512-80), author of the Anales de la Corona de Aragon, six folios published between 1562 and 1580, and ending with the death of Fernando. Zurita is not a great literary artist, nor an historical portrait-painter. Men's actions interest him less than the progress of constitutional growth. His conception of history, to give an illustration from English literature, 208 SPANISH LITERATURE is nearer Freeman's than Froude's, and he was admirably placed by fortune. Simancas being thrown open to him, he was first among Spanish historians to use original documents, first to complete his authorities by study in foreign archives, first to perceive that travel is the complement of research. Science and Zurita's work gain by his determination to abandon the old plan of beginning with Noah. He lacks movement, sympathy, and picturesqueness ; but he excels all predecessors in scheme, accuracy, architectonics qualities which have made his supersession impossible. Whatever else be read, Zurita's Anales must be read also. His con- temporary, AMBROSIO DE MORALES (1513-91), nephew of PeYez de Oliva, was charged to continue Ocampo's chronicle. His nomination is dated 1580. His authori- tative fragment, the result of ten years' labour, combines eloquent narrative with critical instinct in such wise as to suggest that, with better fortune, he might have matched Zurita. Hurtado de Mendoza as a poet belongs to Carlos Quinto's period. Even if he be not the author of Lazarillo, he approves himself a master of prose in his Guerra de Granada, first published at Lisbon by the editor of Figueroa's poems, Luis Tribaldos de Toledo, in 1627. Mendoza wrote his story of the Morisco rising (1568-71) in the Alpujarra and Ronda ranges, while in exile at Granada. On July 22, 1568 (if Fourquevaulx' testimony be exact), a quarrel arose between Mendoza and a young courtier, Diego de Leiva. The old soldier he was sixty-four disarmed Leiva, threw his dagger out of window, and, by some accounts, sent Leiva after it. This, passing in the royal palace at Madrid, was flat lese majesty to be expiated by Mendoza's exile. To this MENDOZA 209 lucky accident we owe the Guerra de Granada, written in the neighbourhood of the war. Mendoza writes for the pleasure of writing, with no polemical or didactic purpose. His plain-speaking con- cerning the war, and the part played in it by great personages whom he had no cause to love, accounts for the tardy publication of his book, which should be considered as a confidential state-paper by a diplomatist of genius. Yet, though he wrote chiefly to pass the time, he has the qualities of the great historian knowledge, impartiality, narrative power, condensation, psychological insight, dramatic apprehension, perspective and elo- quence. His view of a general situation is always just, and, though he has something of the credulity of his time, his accuracy of detail is astonishing. His style is a thing apart. He had already shown, in a burlesque letter addressed to Feliciano de Silva, an almost unique capacity for reproducing that celebrity's literary manner. In his Guerra de Granada he repeats the performance with more serious aim. One god of his idolatry is Sallust, whose terse rhetoric is repeatedly echoed with unsurpassable fidelity. Another model is Tacitus, whose famous description of Germanicus finding the unburied corpses of Varus' legions is annexed by Mendoza in his account of Arcos and his troops at Calalm. This is neither plagiarism nor unconscious reminiscence ; it is the deliberate effort of a prose connoisseur, saturated in antiquity, to impart the gloomy splendour of the Roman to his native tongue. To say that Mendoza succeeded were too much, but he did not altogether fail ; and, despite his occasional Latinised construction, his Guerra de Granada lives not solely as a brilliant and picturesque transcription. It is also a masterly example of idiomatic 210 SPANISH LITERATURE Castilian prose, published without the writer's last touches, and, as is plain, from mutilated copies. 1 Men- doza may not be a great historian : as a literary artist he is extremely great. 1 See two very able studies in the Revue hispanique (vol. i. pp. 101-65, and vol. ii. pp. 208-303), by M. Foulche-Delbosc, whose edition of the Guerra de Granada is now printing. CHAPTER IX THE AGE OF LOPE DE VEGA 1598-1621 THE death of Felipe II. in 1598 closes an epoch in the history of Castilian letters. Not merely has the Italian influence triumphed definitively : the chivalresque romance has well-nigh run its course ; while mysti- cism and the pastoral have achieved expression and acceptance. Moreover, the most important of all de- velopments is the establishment of the stage at Madrid in the Teatro de la Cruz and in the Teatro del Principe. There is evidence to prove that theatres were also built at Valencia, at Seville, and possibly at Granada. Nor was a foreign impulse lacking. Kyd's Spanish Tragedy records the invasion of England by Italian actors : " The Italian tragedians were so sharp of 'wit, That in one hour's meditation They could perform anything in action." In like wise the famous Alberto Ganasa and his Italian histrions revealed the art of acting to the Spains. Thence- forth every province is overrun by mummers, as may be read in the Viaje entretenido (1603) of Agustin de Rojas Villandrando, who denotes, with mock-solemn precision, the nine professional grades. There was the solitary stroller, the bululu, tramping 212 SPANISH LITERATURE from village to village, declaiming short plays to small audiences, called together by the sacristan, the barber, and the parish priest, who pidiendo limosna en un som- brero passed round the hat, and sped the vagabond with a slice of bread and a cup of broth. A pair of strollers (such as Rojas himself and his colleague Ri'os) was styled a Plaque, and did no more than spout simple entremeses in the open. The cangarilla was on a larger scale, numbering three or four actors, who gave Timoneda's Oveja Perdida, or some comic piece wherein a boy played the woman's part. Five men and a woman made up the carambaleo, which performed in farmhouses for such small wages as a loaf of bread, a bunch of grapes, a stew of cabbage ; but higher fees were asked in larger villages six maravedfs, a piece of sausage, a roll of flax, and what not. Though " a spider could carry " its pro- perties, says Rojas, yet the carambaleo contrived to fill the bill with a set piece, or two autos, or four entremeses. More pretentious was the garnacha, with its six men, its "leading lady," and a boy who played the ingenue. With four set plays, three autos, and three entremeses it would draw a whole village for a week. A large choice of pieces was within the means of the seven men, two women, and a boy that made up the bojiganga, which journeyed from town to town on horseback. Next in rank came the fardndula, the stepping-stone to the lofty compania of sixteen players, with fourteen "supers," capable of producing fifty pieces at short notice. To such a troupe, no doubt, belonged the Toledan Naharro, famous as an interpreter of the bully, and as the foremost of Spanish stage-managers. " He still further enriched theatrical adornment, substituting chests and trunks for the costume-bag. Into the body CERVANTES 2 i 3 of the house he brought the musicians, who had hitherto sung behind the blanket. He did away with the false beards which till then actors had always worn, and he made all play without a make-up, save those who per- formed old men's parts, or such characters as implied a change of appearance. He introduced machinery, clouds, thunder, lightning, duels, and battles ; but this reached not the perfection of our day." This is the testimony of the most renowned person- ality in Castilian literature. MIGUEL DE CERVANTES SAAVEDRA (1547-1616) describes himself as a native of Alcala de Henares, in a legal document signed at Madrid on December 18, 1580 : the long dispute as to his birthplace is thus at last settled. His stock was pure Castilian, its solar being at Cervatos, near Reinosa: the connection with Galicia is no older than the four- teenth century. His family surname of Cervantes pro- bably comes from the castle of San Cervantes, beyond Toledo, which was named after the Christian martyr Servandus. The additional name of Saavedra is not on the title-page of the writer's first book, the Galatea, However, Miguel de Cervantes uses the Saavedra in a petition addressed to Pope Gregory XIII. and Felipe II. in October 1578; and, as Cervantes was not then, though it is now, an uncommon name, the addition served to distinguish the author from contemporary clansmen. He was the second (though not, as heretofore believed, the youngest) son of Rodrigo de Cervantes Saavedra and of Leonor Cortinas. Of the mother we know nothing : garrulous as was her famous son, he nowhere alludes to her, nor did he follow the usual Spanish prac- tice by adding her surname to his own. The father was a licentiate of laws, so it is conjectured. Research only 214 SPANISH LITERATURE yields two facts concerning him : that he was incurably deaf, and that he was poor. Cervantes' birthday is unknown. He was baptized at the Church of Santa Marfa Mayor, in Alcala de Henares, on Sunday, October 9, 1547. One Tomas Gonzalez asserted that he had found Cervantes' name in the matriculation lists of Salamanca University ; but the entry has never been verified since, and its report lacks probability. If Cervantes ever studied at any university, we should expect to find him at that of his native town, Alcala de Henares. His name does not appear in the University calendar. Though he made his knowledge go far, he was anything but learned, and college witlings bantered him for having no degree. No information exists concerning his youth. He is first mentioned in 1569, when a Madrid dominie, Juan L6pez de Hoyos, speaks of him as " our dear and beloved pupil " ; and some conjecture that he was an usher in Hoyos' school. His earliest literary performance is discovered (1569) in a collection of verses on the death of Felipe II.'s third wife. The volume, edited by Hoyos, is entitled the His- toriay relation verdadera de la enfermedad,felidsimo trdnsito y suntuosas exequias funebres de la Serenisima Reina de Espana, Dona Isabel de Valois. Cervantes' contributions are an epitaph in sonnet form, five redondillas, and an elegy of one hundred and ninety-nine lines : this last being addressed to Cardinal Diego de Espinosa in the name of the whole school en nombre de todo el estudio. These poor pieces are reproduced solely because Cer- vantes wrote them : it is very doubtful if he ever saw them in print. He is alleged to have been guilty of lese-majestt in Hurtado de Mendoza's fashion ; but this is surmise, as is also a pendant story of his love pas- CERVANTES THE SOLDIER 215 sages with a Maid of Honour. It is certain that, on September 15, 1569, a warrant was signed for the arrest of one Miguel de Cervantes, who was condemned to lose his right hand for wounding Antonio de Sigura in the neighbourhood of the Court. There is nothing to prove that our man was the culprit ; but if he were, he had already got out of jurisdiction. Joining the household of the Special Nuncio, Giulio Acquaviva, he left Madrid for Rome as the Legate's chamberlain in the December of 1568. He was not the stuff of which chamberlains are made ; and in 1570 he enlisted in the company commanded by Diego de Urbina, captain in Miguel de Moncada's famous infantry regiment, at that time serving under Marc Antonio Colonna. It is worth noting that the Galatea is dedicated to Marc Antonio's son, Ascanio Colonna, Abbot of St. Sophia. In 1571 Cervantes fought at Lepanto, where he was twice shot in the chest and had his left hand maimed for life : " for the greater honour of the right," as he loved to think and say with justifiable vainglory. That he never tired of vaunting his share in the great victory is shown by his frequent allusions to it in his writings ; and it should almost seem that he was prouder of his nickname the Cripple of Lepanto than of writing Don Quixote. He served in the engage- ments before Navarino, Corfu, Tunis, the Goletta ; and in all he bore himself with credit. Returning to Italy, he seems to have learned the language, for traces of Italian idioms are not rare even in his best pages. From Naples he sailed for Spain in September 1575, with recommendatory letters from Don Juan de Austria and from the Neapolitan Viceroy. On September 26, his caravel, the Sol, was attacked by Moorish pirates, and, 15 216 SPANISH LITERATURE after a brave resistance, all on board were carried as prisoners into Algiers. There for five years Cervantes abode as a slave, writing plays between the intervals of his plots to escape, striving to organise a general rising of the thousands of Christians. Being the most danger- ous, because the most heroic of them all, he became, in some sort, the chief ot his tellows, and, after the failure of several plans for flight, was held hostage by the Dey for the town's safety. His release was due to accident. On September 19, 1580, the Redemptorist, Fray Juan Gil, offered five hundred gold ducats as the ransom of a private gentleman named Jer6nimo Palafox. The sum was held insufficient to redeem a man of Palafox's posi- tion ; but it sufficed to set free Cervantes, who was already shipped on the Dey's galley bound for Con- stantinople. 1 He is found at Madrid on December 19, 1580, and it is surmised that he served in Portugal and at the Azores. There are rumours of his holding some small post at Oran : however that may be, he returned to Spain, at latest, in the autumn of 1582. And hence- forth he belongs to literature. The plays written at Algiers are lost ; but there survive two sonnets of the same period dedicated to Rufino de Chamber/ (1577). A rhymed epistle to the Secretary of State, Mateo Vazquez, also belongs to this time. We must suppose Cervantes to have written copiously on re- gaining his liberty, since Galvez de Montalvo speaks of him as a poet of repute in the Pastor de Filida (1582) ; but the earliest signs of him in Spain are his eulogistic sonnets in Padilla's Romancero and Rufo Gutierrez' Austri- ada, both published in 1583. Padilla repaid the debt by 1 In Felipe II. 's time the normal value of an esctido de oro was 8s. 4^d. The actual exchange value varied between seven and eight shillings. THE GALATEA 217 classing the sonneteer among " the most famous poets of Castile." In December 1584, Cervantes married Catalina de Palacios Salazar y Vozmediano, a native of Esquivias, eighteen years younger than himself. It is often said that he wrote the Galatea as a means of furthering his suit. It may be so. But the book was not printed by Juan Gracian of Alcala de Henares till March 1585, though the aprobacion and the privilege are dated Feb- ruary i and February 22, 1584. In the year after his marriage, Cervantes' illegitimate daughter, Isabel de Saavedra, was born. We shall have occasion to refer to her later. Our immediate concern is with the Primera Parte de Galatea, an unfinished pastoral novel in six books, for which Cervantes received 1336 reales from Bias de Robles ; a sum which, with his wife's small dowry, en- abled him to start housekeeping. 1 As a financial specula- tion the Galatea failed : only two later editions appeared during the writer's lifetime, one at Lisbon in 1590, the other at Paris in 1611. Neither could have brought him money ; but the book, if it did nothing else, served to make him known. He trimmed his sails to the popular breeze. Montemor had started the pastoral fashion, Perez and Caspar Gil Polo had followed, and Gdlvez de Montalvo maintained the tradition. Later in life, in the Coloquio de los Perros (Dialogue of the Dogs), Cervantes made his Berganza say that all pastorals are "vain imaginings, void of truth, written to amuse the idle " ; yet it may be doubted if Cervantes ever lost the pastoral taste, though his sense of humour forced him to see the absurdity of the convention. 1 One real de vel!6n = 34 maravedis = 2 pence, 2 farthings, and f of a farthing. One real de plata = 2 reales de velldn. Unless otherwise stated, a real may be taken to mean a real de plata. 2i8 SPANISH LITERATURE It is very certain that he had a special fondness for the Galatea: he spared it at the burning of Don Quixote's library, praised its invention, and made the Priest exhort the Barber to await the sequel which is foreshadowed in the Galatea's text. This is again promised in the Dedica- tion of the volume of plays (1615), in the Prologue to the Second Part of Don Quixote (1615), and in the Letter Dedicatory of Persiles y Sigismunda, signed on the writer's deathbed, April 19, 1616. For thirty-one years Cervantes held out the promise of the Galatea's Second Part : five times did he repeat it. It is plain that he thought well of the First, and that his liking for the genre was incorrigible. His own attempt survives chiefly because of the name on its title-page. Pastorals differ little in essentials, and the kind offers few openings to Cervantes' peculiar humoristic genius. Like his fellow - practitioners, he crowds his stage with figures : he presents his shep- herds Elicio and Erastro warbling their love for Galatea on Tagus bank ; he reveals Mirenio enamoured of Silveria, Leonarda love-sick for Salercio, Lenio in the toils of Gelasia. Hazlitt, in his harsh criticism of Sidney's Arcadia, hits the defects of the pastoral, and his censures may be justly applied to the Galatea. There, as in the English book, we find the " original sin of allitera- tion, antithesis, and metaphysical conceit " ; there, too, is the "systematic interpolation of the wit, learning, ingenuity, wisdom, and everlasting impertinence of the writer." Worst of all are "the continual, uncalled-for interruptions, analysing, dissecting, disjointing, murder- ing everything, and reading a pragmatical, self-sufficient lecture over the dead body of nature." But if Cervantes sins in this wise, he sins of set purpose and in good com- THE GALATEA 219 pany. In his Fourth Book, he interpolates a long dis- quisition on the Beautiful which he calmly annexes from Judas Abarbanel's Dialoghi. As Sannazaro opens his A rcadia with Ergasto and Selvaggio, so Cervantes thrusts his Elicio and Erastro into the foreground of the Gala- tea ; the funeral of Meliso is a deliberate imitation of the Feast of Pales ; and, as the Italian introduced Carmosina Bonifacia under the name of Amaranta, the Spaniard perforce gives Catalina de Palacios Salazar as Galatea. Nor does he depart from the convention by placing him- self upon the scene as Elicio, for Ribeiro and Montemdr had preceded him in the characters of Bimnardel and Sereno. Lastly, the idea and the form of the Canto de Caliope, wherein the uncritical poet celebrates whole tribes of contemporary singers, are borrowed from the Canto del Turia, which Gil Polo had interpolated in his Diana. Prolixity, artifice, ostentation, monotony, extravagance, are inherent in the pastoral school ; and the Galatea savours of these defects. Yet, for all its weakness, it lacks neither imagination nor contrivance, and its em- broidered rhetoric is a fine example of stately prose. Save, perhaps, in the Persiles y Sigismunda, Cervantes never wrote with a more conscious effort after excellence, and, in results of absolute style, the Galatea may com- pare with all but exceptional passages in Don Quixote. Yet it failed to please, and the author turned to other fields of effort. His verses in Pedro de Padilla's Jardin Espiritual (1585) and in L6pez Maldonado's Cancionero (1586) denote good-nature and a love of literature; and in both volumes Cervantes may have read companion- pieces written by a marvellous youth, Lope de Vega, whom he had already praised as he praised everybody in the Canto de Caliope. He could not foresee that in the 220 SPANISH LITERATURE person of this boy he was to meet his match and more. Meanwhile in 1587 he penned sonnets for Padilla's Grandezas y Excelencias de la Virgen, and for Alonso de Barros' Filosofia cortesana. Verse-making was his craze ; and, in 1588, when the physician, Francisco Diaz, pub- lished a treatise on kidney disease Tratado nuevamente impreso acerca de las enfermedades de los rifiones the unwearied poetaster was forthcoming with a sonnet pat to the strange occasion. Still, though he cultivated verse with as sedulous a passion as Don Quixote spent on Knight - Errantries, he recognised that man does not live by sonneteering alone, and he tried his fate upon the boards. He died with the happy conviction that he was a dramatist of genius ; his contemporaries ruled the point against him, and posterity has upheld the decision. He tells us that at this time he wrote between twenty and thirty plays. We only know the titles of a few among them the Gran Turquesca, the Jerusale'n, the Batalla Naval (attributed by Morati'n to the year 1584), the Amaranta and the Basque Amoroso (referred to 1586), the Arsinda and the Confusa (to 1587). It is like enough that the Batalla Naval was con- cerned with Lepanto, a subject of which Cervantes never tired ; the Arsinda existed so late as 1673, when Juan de Matos Fragoso mentioned it as "famous" in his Corsaria Catalana; and our author himself ranked the Confusa as " good among the best." The touch of self-complacency is amusing, though one might desire a better security than Bardolph's. Two surviving plays of the period are El Trato de Argel and La Numancia, first printed by Antonio de Sancha in 1784. The former deals with the life of the <^t* w Christian slaves in Algiers, and recounts the passion CERVANTES THE DRAMATIST 221 of Zara the Moor for the captive Aurelio, who is en- amoured of Silvia. We must assume that Cervantes thought well of this invention, since he utilised it some thirty years later in El Amante Liberal; but the play is merely futile. The introduction of a lion, of the Devil, and of such abstractions as Necessity and Opportunity, is as poor a piece of machinery as theatre ever saw ; the versification is rough and creaking, improvised without care or conscience ; the situations are arranged with a glaring disregard for truth and probability. Like Paolo Veronese, Cervantes could rarely resist the temptation of painting himself into his canvas, and in El Trato de Argel he takes care that the prisoner Saavedra should declaim his tirade. The piece has no dramatic interest, and is valuable merely as an over-coloured picture of vicissitudes by one who knew them at first-hand, and who presented them to his countrymen with a more or less didactic intention. Yet, even as a transcript of manners, this luckless play is a failure. A finer example of Cervantes' dramatic power is the Numana'a f on which Shelley has passed this generous judg- ment : " I have read the Numancza, and, after wading through the singular stupidity of the First Act, began to be greatly delighted, and at length interested in a very high degree, by the power of the writer in awakening pity and admiration, in which I hardly know by whom he is excelled. There is little, I allow, to be called poetry in this play ; but the command of language and the har- mony of versification is so great as to deceive one into an idea that it is poetry." Nor is Shelley alone in his ad- miration. Goethe's avowal to Humboldt is on record: " Sogar habe ich . . . neulich das Trauerspiel Numancia von Cervantes mit vielem Vergniigen gelesen;" but eight 222 SPANISH LITERATURE years later he confided a revised judgment to Riemer. The gushing school of German Romantics waxed deli- rious; in praise. Thus Friedrich Schlegel surpassed him- self by calling the play "godlike"; and August Schlegel, not content to hold it for a dramatic masterpiece, would persuade us to accept it for great poetry. Even Sismondi declares that " le frisson de 1'horreur et de 1'effroi devient presque un supplice pour le spectateur." Raptures apart, the Numancia is Cervantes' best play. He has a grandiose subject : the siege of Numantia, and its capture by Scipio Africanus after fourteen years of resistance. On the Roman side were eighty thousand soldiers ; the Spaniards numbered four thousand or less ; and the victors entered the fallen city to find no soul alive. With scenes of valour is mingled the pathetic love-story of Morandro and Lyra. But, once again, Cervantes fails as a dramatic artist ; one doubts if he knew what a plot was, what unity of conception meant. He has scenes and episodes of high excellence, but they are detached from the main composition, and produce all the bad effect of a portrait painted in different lights. Abstractions fill the stage War, Sickness, Hunger, Spain, the river Duero. But the tirades of rhetoric are unsurpassed by anything from Cervantes' pen, and Marquino's scene with the corpse in the Second Act is pregnant with a suggestion of weirdness which Mr. Gibson has well conveyed : Marquino. " What! Dost not answer? Dost not live again, Or haply hast thou tasted death once more? Then will I quicken thee anew with pain, And for thy good t^e gift of speech restore. Since thou art one of us, do not disdain To speak and answer \ as I now implore; . . . THE NUMANCIA 223 Ye spirits vile, it worketh not ye trust ! But wait, for soon the enchanted water here Will show my will to be as strong and just As yours is treacherous and insincere. And though tiiis flesh were turned to very dust, Yet being quickened by this lash austere, Which cuts with cruel rigour like a knife, / It will regain a new though fleeting life. Thou rebel soul, seek now the home again Thou leftest empty these few hours ago. The Body. Restrain the fury of thy reckless pain ; Suffice it, O Marquino, man of woe, What I do suffer in the realms obscure, Nor give me pangs more fearful to endure. Thou errest, if thou thinkest that I crave This painful, pinched, and narrow life I have, Which even now is ebbing fast away, . . . Since Death a second time, with bitter sway, Will triumph over me in life and soul, And gain a double palm, beyond control. For he and others of the dismal band, Who do thy bidding subject to thy spell, Are raging round and round, and waiting stand, Till I shall finish what I have to tell. . . . The Romans ne'er shall victory obtain O'er proud Numantia ; still less shall she A glorious triumph o'er her foemen gain ; ^Twixt friends and foes, both have to a degree, Think not that settled peace shall ever reign Where rage meets rage in strife eternally. The friendly hand, with homicidal knife, Will slay Numantia and will give her life. [He hurls himself into the sepulchre, and says : I say no more, Marquino, time is fleet; The Fates will grant to me no more delay, And, though my wort's may seem to thee deceit, Thou' It find at last the truth of what I say" Even in translation still more in the original the rhetoric of this passage is imposing ; yet we perceive rhetoric to be contagious when Ticknor asserts that 224 SPANISH LITERATURE "there is nothing of so much dignity in the incantation* of Marlowe's Faustus" Still more amazing is Ticknor's second appreciation : " Nor does even Shakspeare de- mand from us a sympathy so strange with the mortal head reluctantly rising to answer Macbeth's guilty question, as Cervantes makes us feel for this suffering spirit, recalled to life only to endure a second time the pangs of dissolution." The school is decently interred which mistook critics for Civil Service Commissioners, and Parnassus for Burlington House. It is impossible to compare Cervantes' sonorous periods and Marlowe's majestic eloquence, nor is it less unwise to match his moving melodrama against one of the greatest tragedies in the world. His great scene has its own merit as an artificial embellishment, as a rhetorical adornment, as an exercise in bravura ; but the episode is not only out of place where it is found it leads from nowhere to nothing. More dramatic in spirit and effect is the speech declaimed by Scipio when the last Numantian, Viriato, hurls himself from the tower : " O matchless action, -worthy of the meed Which old and -valiant soldiers love to gain / Thou hast achieved a glory by thy deed, Not only for Numantia, but for Spain ! Thy -valour strange, heroical in deed, Hath robbed vie of my rights, and made them -vain; For with thy fall thou hast upraised thy fame. And le-uelled do-wn my victories to shame / Oh, could Numantia gain -what she hath lost, I would rejoice, if but to see thee there! For thou hast reaped the gain and honour most Of this long siege, illustrious and rare ! Bear thou, O stripling, bear away tiie boast, Enjoy the glory which the Heavens prepare, For thou hast conquered, by thy very fall, Him who in rising Jalleth worst of all" THE NUMANCIA 225 Here, once more, we are dealing with a passage which gains by detachment from its context. To speak plainly, the interest of the Numanda is not dramatic, and its ver- sification, good of its kind, may easily be overpraised, as it was by Shelley. First and last, the play is a devout and passionate expression of patriotism ; and, as such, the writer's countrymen have held it in esteem, never claiming for it the qualities invented by well-meaning foreigners. Lope de Vega and Calder6n still hold the stage, from which Cervantes, the disciple of Viru^s, was driven three centuries ago ; and they survive, the one as an hundredfold more potent dramatist, the other as an infinitely greater poet. Yet, like the ghost raised by Marquino, Cervantes was to undergo a momentary resurrection. When Palafox (and Byron's Maid) held Zaragoza, during the War of Independence, against the batteries of Mortier, Junot, and Lannes, the Numanda was played within the besieged walls, so that Spaniards of the nineteenth century might see that their fathers had known how to die for freedom. The tragedy was re- ceived with enthusiasm ; the marshals of the world's Greatest Captain were repulsed and beaten ; and Cer- vantes' inspiriting lines helped on the victory. In life, he had never met with such a triumph, and in death no other could have pleased him better. He asserts, indeed, that his plays were popular, and he may have persuaded himself into that belief. His idolaters preach the legend that he was driven from the boards by that " portent of genius," Lope de Vega. This tale is a vain imagining. Cervantes failed so wretchedly in art that in 1588 he left the Madrid stage to seek work in Seville ; and no play of Lope's dates so early as that, save one written while he was at school. In June 1588, 226 SPANISH LITERATURE Cervantes became Deputy-Purveyor to the Invincible Armada, and in May 1590 he petitioned for one of four appointments vacant in Granada, Guatemala, Cartagena, and La Paz. But he never quite abandoned literature. In 1591 he wrote a romance for Andre's de Villalba's Flor de varios y nuevos romances, and, in the following year, he contracted with the Seville manager, Rodrigo Osorio, to write six comedies at fifty ducats each no money to be paid unless Osorio should rank the plays " among the best in Spain." No more is heard of this agreement, and Cervantes disappears till 1594, when he was ap- pointed tax-gatherer in Granada. Next year he com- peted at a literary tournament held by the Dominicans of Zaragoza in honour of St. Hyacinth, and won the first prize three silver spoons. His sonnet to the famous sea-dog, Santa Cruz, is printed in Cristobal Mosquera de Figueroa's Comentario en breve Compendia de Disciplina militar (1596), and his bitter sonnet on Medina Sidonia's entry into Cadiz, already sacked and evacuated by Essex, is of the same date. In 1597, being in Seville about the time of Herrera's death, Cervantes wrote his sonnet in memory of the great Andalucian. In September of this year the sonneteer was imprisoned for irregularities in his accounts, due to his having entrusted Government funds to one Sim6n Freire de Lima, who absconded with the booty. Re- leased some three months later, Cervantes was sent packing by the Treasury, and was never more employed in the public service. Lost, as it seemed, to hope and fame, the ruined man lingered at Seville, where, in 1598, he wrote two sonnets and a copy of quintillas on Felipe II.'s death. Four years of silence were followed by the inevitable sonnet in the second edition of Lope de DON QUIXOTE 227 Vega's Dragontea (1602). It is certain that all this while Cervantes was scribbling in some naked garret ; but his name seemed almost forgotten from the earth. In 1603 he was run to ground, and served with an Exchequer writ concerning those outstanding balances, still unpaid after nearly eight years. He must appear in person at Valladolid to offer what excuse he might. Light as his baggage was, it contained one precious, immediate jewel the manuscript of Don Quixote. The Treasury soon found that to squeeze money from him was harder than to draw blood from a stone : the debt remained unsettled. But his journey was not in vain. On his way to Valladolid, he found a publisher for Don Quixote. The Royal Privilege is dated September 26, 1604, and in January 1605 the book was sold at Madrid across the counter of Francisco de Robles, bookseller to the King. Cervantes dedicated his volume, in terms boldly filched from Herrera and Medina, to the Duque de Be"jar. In a previous age the author's kinsman had anticipated the compliment by addressing a gloss of Jorge Manrique's Coplas to Alvaro de Stuftiga, second Duque de Bejar. It is difficult to say when Don Quixote was written ; later, certainly, than 1591, for it alludes to Bernardo de la Vega's Pastor de Iberia, published in that year. Legend says that the First Part was begun in gaol, and so Lang- ford includes it in his Prison Books and their Authors. The only ground for the belief is a phrase in the Pro- logue which describes the work as "a dry, shrivelled, whimsical offspring . . . just what might be begotten in a prison." This may be a mere figure of speech ; yet the tradition persists that Cervantes wrote his master- piece in the cellar of the Casa de Medrano at Arga- masilla de Alba. Certain it is that Argamasilla is Don 228 SPANISH LITERATURE Quixote's native town. The burlesque verses at the end indicate precisely that "certain village in La Mancha, the name of which," says Cervantes dryly, " I have no desire to recall." Quevedo witnesses that the fact was accepted by contemporaries, and topography puts it beyond doubt. The manuscript passed through many hands before reaching the printer, Cuesta: whence a double mention of it before publication. The author of the Picara Justina, who anticipated Cervantes' poor device of the versos de cabo roto truncated rhymes in Don Quixote, ranks the book beside the Celestina, Laza- rillo de Tormes, and Guzman de Alfarache ; yet the Picara Justina was licensed on August 22, 1604. The title falls from a far more illustrious pen : in a private letter written on August 14, 1604, Lope de Vega observes that no budding poet " is so bad as Cervantes, none so silly as to praise Don Quixote" There will be occasion to return presently to this much-quoted remark. Clearly the book was discussed, and not always ap- proved, by literary critics some months before it was in print : but critics of all generations have been taught that their opinions go for nothing with the public, which persists in being amused against rules and dogmas. Don Quixote carried everything before it : its vogue almost equalled that of Guzman de Alfarache, and by July a fifth edition was preparing at Valencia. Cervantes has told us his purpose in plain words: "to diminish the authority and acceptance that books of chivalry have in the world and among the vulgar." Yet his own avowal is rejected. Defoe averred that Don Quixote was a satire on Medina Sidonia; Landor applauded the book as "the most dexterous attack ever made against the worship of the Virgin " ; and such later crocheteers as Rawdon DON QUIXOTE 229 Brown have industriously proved Sancho Panza to be Pedro Franqueza, and the whole novel to be a burlesque on contemporary politics. 1 Cervantes was unlucky in life, nor did his misfortunes end with his days. Posthumous idolatry seeks to atone for contemporary neglect, and there has come into being a tribe of ignorant fakirs, assuming the title of " Cervantophils," and seeking to convert a man of genius into a common Mumbo-Jumbo. A master of invention, a humourist beyond compare, an expert in ironic ob- servation, a fellow meet for Shakespeare's self: all that suffices not for these fanatical dullards. Their deity must be accepted also as a poet, a philosophic thinker, a Puritan tub-thumper, a political reformer, a finished scholar, a purist in language, and not least amazing an ascetic in private morals. A whole shelf might be filled with works upon Cervantes the doctor, Cervantes the lawyer, the sailor, the geographer, and who knows what else ? Like his contemporary Shakespeare, Cer- vantes took a peculiar interest in cases of dementia ; and, in England and Spain, the afflicted have shown both authors much reciprocal attention. We must even take Cervantes as he was : a literary artist stronger in practice than in theory, great by natural faculty rather than by acquired accomplishment. His learning is naught, his reasonings are futile, his speculation is banal. In short passages he is one of the greatest masters of Castilian prose, clear, direct, and puissant : but he soon tires, and is prone to lapse into Italian idioms, or into irritating sentences packed with needless relatives. Cervantes lives not as a great practitioner in style, a sultan of epithet though none could better him when 1 See The Athenaum, April 12, April 19, and May 3, 1873. 230 SPANISH LITERATURE he chose; nor is he potent as a purely intellectual in- fluence. He is immortal by reason of his creative power, his imaginative resource, his wealth of invention, his penetrating vision, his inimitable humour, his boundless sympathy. Hence the universality of his appeal : hence the splendour of his secular renown. It is certain that he builded better than he knew, and that not even he realised the full scope of his work : we know from Goethe that the maker has to be taught his own meaning. The contemporary allusions, the sly hits at foes, are mostly mysteries for us, though they amuse the laborious leisure of the commentator. Chivalresque romances are with last year's snows : but the interest of Don Quixote abides for ever. Cervantes set out intend- ing to write a comic short story, and the design grew under his hand till at length it included a whole Human Comedy. He himself was as near akin to Don Quixote as a man may be : he knew his chivalresque romances by heart, and accounted Amadis de Gaula as "the very best contrived book of all those of that kind." Yet he has been accused by his own people of plotting his country's ruin, and has been held up to contempt as "the headsman and the ax of Spain's honour." Byron repeats the ridiculous taunt : " Cervantes smiled Spain's chivalry away; A single laugh demolished the right arm Of his own country; seldom since that day Has Spain had heroes. While Romance could charm, The world gave ground before her bright array; And therefore have his volumes done such harm, That all their glory, as a composition, Was dearly purchased by his land 's perdition? The chivalresque madness was well-nigh over when our DON QUIXOTE 231 author made his onset : he but hastened the end. After the publication of Don Quixote, no new chivalresque romance was written, and only one the Caballero del Febo (1617) was reprinted. And the reason is obvious. It was not that Cervantes' work was merely destructive, that he was simply a clever artist in travesty : it was that he gave better than he took away, and that he revealed himself, not only to Spain, but to the world, as a great creative master, and an irresistible, because an universal, humourist. There is endless discussion as to the significance of his masterpiece, and the acutest critics have uttered " great argument about it and about." That an allegory of human life was intended is incredible. Cervantes presents the Ingenious Gentleman as the Prince of Courtesy, affable, gallant, wise on all points save that trifling one which annihilates Time and Space and changes the aspect of the Universe : and he attaches to him, Sancho, self-seeking, cautious, practical in presence of vulgar opportunities. The types are eternal. But it were too much to assume that there exists any conscious symbolic or esoteric purpose in the dual presentation. Cervantes is inspired solely by the artistic intention which would create personages, and would divert by abundance of ingenious fantasy, by sublimation of char- acter, by wealth of episode and incident, and by the genius of satiric portraiture. He tessellates with what- soever mosaic chances to strike his fancy. It may be that he inlays his work with such a typical sonnet as that which Mr. Gosse has transferred from the twenty-third chapter of Don Quixote to In Russet and Silver an excellent example, which shall be quoted here : 16 232 SPANISH LITERATURE " When I was marked for suffering, Love forswore All knowledge of my doom : or else at ease Love grows a cruel tyrant, hard to please; Or else a chastisement exceeding sore A little sin hath brought me. Hush ! no more ! Love is a god! all things he knows and sees, And gods are bland and mild ! Who then decrees The dreadful woe I bear and yet adore ? If I should say, O Phyllis, that 'twas thou, I should speak falsely, since, being wholly good Like Heaven itself, from thee no ill may come. There is no hope; I must die shortly now, Not knowing why, since sure no witch hath brewed The drug that might avert my martyrdom" Hereunto the writer adds reminiscences of slavery, picaresque scenes observed during his vagabond life as tax-gatherer, tales of Italian intrigue re-echoed from Bandello, flouts at Lope de Vega, a treasure of adven- tures and experience, a strain of mockery both individual and general. Small wonder if the world received Don Quixote with delight ! There was nothing like unto it before : there has been nothing to eclipse it since. It ends one epoch and begins another : it intones the dirge of the mediaeval novel : it announces the arrival of the new generations, and it belongs to both the past and the coming ages. At the point where the paths diverge, Don Quixote stands, dominating the entire land- scape of fiction. Time has failed to wither its variety or to lessen its force, and posterity accepts it as a masterpiece of humoristic fancy, of complete obser- vation and unsurpassed invention. It ceases, in effect, to belong to Spain as a mere local possession, though nothing can deprive her of the glory of producing it. Cervantes ranks with Shakespeare and with Homer as a citizen of the world, a man of all times and countries, CERVANTES IN JAIL 233 and Don Quixote, with Hamlet and the Iliad, belongs to universal literature, and is become an eternal pleasaunce of the mind for all the nations. Cervantes had his immediate reward in general acceptance. Reprints of his book followed in Spain, and in 1607 the original was reproduced at Brussels. The French teacher of Spanish, Cesar Oudin, inter- polated the tale of the Curious Impertinent between the covers of Julio Ifriguez de Medrano's Silva Curiosa, published for the second time at Paris in 1608 ; in the same year Jean Baudouin did this story into French, and in 1609 an anonymous arrangement of Marcela's story was Gallicised as Le Meurtre de la Fid/lit/ et la Defense de I* Honneur. This sufficed for fame : yet Cer- vantes made no instant attempt to repeat his triumph. For eight years he was silent, save for occasional copies of verse. The baptism of the future Felipe IV., and the embassy of Lord Nottingham best known as Howard of Effingham, the admiral in command against the Invin- cible Armada are recorded in courtly fashion by the anonymous writer of a pamphlet entitled Reladon de lo sucedido en la Ciudad de Valladolid, G6ngora, who dealt with both subjects, flouts Cervantes as the pamphleteer ; but the authorship is doubtful. Cervantes is next heard of in custody on suspicion of knowing more than he chose to tell concerning the death of Caspar de Ezpeleta, in June 1605. Legend makes Ezpeleta the lover of Cer- vantes' natural daughter, Isabel de Saavedra : " the point of honour" at once suggests itself, and the incident has inspired both dramatists and novelists. A conspiracy of silence on the part of biographers has done Cervantes much wrong, and is responsible for exaggerated stories of his guilt. He was discharged after inquiry, and seems 234 SPANISH LITERATURE to have been entirely innocent of contriving Ezpeleta's end. Many romantic stories have gathered about the personality of Isabel: she has been passed upon us as the daughter of a Portuguese " lady of high quality," and the prop of her father's declining days. These are idolatrous inventions : we now know for certain that her mother's name was Ana Franca de Rojas, a poor woman married to Alonso Rodriguez, and that the girl herself (who in 1605 was unable to read and write) was indentured as general servant to Cervantes' sister, Magdalena de Soto- mayor, in August 1599.* Thence she passed to Cervantes' household, and it is even alleged that she was twice married in her father's lifetime. She has been so pic- turesquely presented by imaginative " Cervantophils," that it is necessary to state the humble truth here and now, for the first time in English. Thus the grotesque travesty of Cervantes as a plaster saint returns to the Father of Lies, who begat it. Confirmation of his ex- ploits as a loose liver in gaming-houses is afforded by the Memorias de Valladolid, now among the manuscripts in the British Museum. 2 Such diversions as these left him scant time for litera- ture. The space between 1605 and 1608 yields the pitiful show of three sonnets in four years : To a Hermit, To the Conde de Saldana t To a Braggart turned Beggar. Even this last is sometimes referred to Quevedo. It should hardly seem that prosperity suited Cervantes. Meanwhile, his womenfolk gained their bread by taking in the Marques de Villafranca's sewing. Still, he made no sign : the author of Don Quixote sank lower 1 See Cristobal Perez de Pastor's Documentor cervantinos hasta ahora inidilos (Madrid, 1897), pp. 135-137. J British Museum Add. MSS., 20, 812. THE NOVELAS EXEMPLARES 235 and lower, writing letters for illiterates at a small fee. The Letter to Don Diego de Astudillo Carrillo, the Story of what happens in Seville Gaol (a sequel to Cristobal de Chaves' sketch made twenty years before), the Dialogue between Sillenia and Selanto, the three entremeses entitled Dona Justtna y Calahorra, Los Mirones, and Los Re- franes all these are of doubtful authenticity. In April 1609, Cervantes took a thought and mended : he joined Fray Alonso de la Purificaci6n's new Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament, and in 1610 wrote his sonnet in memory of Diego Hurtado de Mendoza. In 1611 he entered the Academia Selvaje, founded by that Fran- cisco de Silva whose praises were sung later in the Viaje del Parnaso, and he prepared that unique com- pound of fact and fancy, the rarest humour and the most curious experience his twelve Novelas Exemplares, which were licensed on August 8, 1612, and appeared in 1613. These short tales were written at long intervals of time, as the internal evidence shows. In the forty-seventh chapter of Don Quixote there is mention by name of Rinconete y Cortadillo, a picaresque story of extraordinary brilliancy and point included among the Exemplary Novels; and a companion piece is the Coloquio de los Perros, no less a masterpiece in little. Monipodio, master of a school for thieves ; his pious jackal, Ganchuelo, who never steals on Friday ; the tipsy Pipota, who reels as she lights her votive candle these are triumphs in the art of portraiture. Not even Sancho Panza is wittier in reflection than the dog Berganza, who reviews his many masters in the light of humorous criticism. No less distinguished is the presentation, in El Casamiento En- ganoso, of the picaroons Campuzano and Estefania de Caicedo ; and as an exercise in fantastic transcription 236 SPANISH LITERATURE of mania the Licenciado Vidriera lags not behind Don Quixote. So striking is the resemblance that some have held the Licentiate for the first sketch of the Knight ; but an attentive reading shows that he was not conceived till after Don Quixote was in print. In 1814, Agustfn Garcfa Arrieta included La Tiafingida (The Mock Aunt) among Cervantes' novels, and, in a more complete form, it now finds place in all editions. Admirable as the story is, the circumstance of its late appearance throws doubt on its authenticity ; yet who but Cervantes could have written it ? Perhaps the surest sign of his success is afforded by the quality and number of his northern imitators. " The land that cast out Philip and his God Grew gladly subject where Cervantes trod" Despite assertions to the contrary, his Gitanilla is no original conception, for the character of his gipsy, Preciosa, is developed from that of Tarsiana in the Apolonio ; yet from Cervantes' rendering of her, which " Gave the glad watchword of the gipsies' life, Where fear took hope and grief took joy to wife" and from his tale entitled La Fuerza de la Sangre, Middle- ton's Spanish Gipsy derives. From Cervantes, too, Weber takes his opera Preciosa, and from Cervantes comes Hugo's Esmeralda. In Las dos Doncellas Fletcher, who had already used Don Quixote in the Knight of the Burning Pestle, finds the root of Love's Pilgrimage ; from El Casa- miento Enganoso he takes his Rule a Wife and Have a Wife; and from La Seflora Cornelia he borrows his Chances. And, as Fielding had rejoiced to own his debt to Cer- vantes, so Sir Walter has confessed that " the Novelas of THE VIAJE DEL PARNASO 237 that author had first inspired him with the ambition of excelling in fiction." The next performance shows Cervantes tempting fate as a poet. His Viaje del Parnaso (1614) was suggested by the Viaggio di Parnaso (1582) of the Perugian, Cesare Caporali, and is, in effect, a rhymed review of contem- porary poets. Verse is scarcely a lucky medium for Cervantic irony, and Cervantes was the least critical of men. His poem is interesting for its autobiographic touches, but it degenerates into a mere stream of eulogy, and when he ventures on an attack he rarely delivers it with force or point. He thought, perhaps, to put down bad poets as he had put down bad prose- writers. But there was this difference, that, though admirable in prose, he was not admirable in verse. In the use of the first weapon he is an expert ; in the prac- tice of the second he is a clever amateur. Cervantes satirising in prose and Cervantes satirising in verse are as distinct as Samson unshorn and Samson with his hair cut. Fortunately he appends a prose postscript, which reveals him in his finest manner. Nor is this surprising. Apollo's letter is dated July 22, 1614 ; and we know that, two days earlier, Sancho Panza had dictated his famous letter to his wife Teresa. The master had found him- self once more. The sequel to Don Quixote, promised in the Preface to the Novelas, was on the road at last. Meanwhile he had busied himself with a sonnet to be published at Naples in Juan Domingo Roncallolo's Varias Aplicaciones, with quatrains for Barrio Angulo, and stanzas in honour of Santa Teresa. Moreover, the success of the Novelas induced him to try the theatre again. In 1615 he published his Ocho Comedias,y ocho Entremeses nuevos. The eight set pieces 238 SPANISH LITERATURE are failures ; and when the writer tries to imitate Lope de Vega, as in the Laberinto de Amor, the failure is con- spicuous. Nor does the introduction of a Saavedra among the personages of El Gallardo Espailol save a bad play. But Cervantes believed in his eight comedias, as he believed in the eight entremeses which are imitated from Lope de Rueda. These are sprightly, unpreten- tious farces, witty in intention and effect, interesting in themselves and as realistic pictures of low life seen and rendered at first hand. Of these farcical pieces one, Pedro de Urdemalas, is even brilliant. While Cervantes was writing the fifty-ninth chapter of Don Quixote's Second Part, he learned that a spurious continuation had appeared (1614) at Tarragona under the name of Alonso Fernandez de Avellaneda. This has given rise to much angry writing. Avellaneda is doubtless a pseudonym. The King's confessor, Aliaga, has been suspected, on the ground that he was once nicknamed Sancho Panza, and that he thus avenged himself : the idea is absurd, and the fact that Avellaneda makes Sancho more offensive and more vulgar than ever puts the theory out of court. Lope de Vega is also accused of being Avellaneda, and the charge is based on this : that (in a private letter) he once spoke slightingly of Don Quixote, The personal relations between the two greatest Spanish men of letters were not cordial. Cer- vantes had ridiculed Lope in the Prologue to Don Quixote, had belittled him as a playwright, and had shown hostility in other ways. Lope, secure in his high seat, made no reply, and in 1612 (in another private letter) he speaks kindly of Cervantes. " Cervantophils " insist upon being too clever by half. They first assert that the outward form of Avellaneda's book was an AVELLANEDA 239 imitation of Don Quixote, and that the intention was " to pass off this spurious Second Part as the true one " ; they then contend that Avellaneda's was " a deliberate attempt to spoil the work of Cervantes." These two statements are mutually destructive : one must necessarily be false. It is also argued, first, that Avellaneda's is a worthless book ; next, that it was written by Lope, the greatest figure, save Cervantes, in Spanish literature. Lope had many jealous enemies, but no contemporary hints at such a charge, and no proof is offered in sup- port of it now. Indeed the notion, first started by Mainez, is generally abandoned. Other ascriptions, in- volving Blanco de Paz, Ruiz de Alarcdn, Andres Perez, are equally futile. The most plausible conjecture, due to D. Marcelino Menendez y Pelayo, is that Avellaneda was a certain Aragonese, Alfonso Lamberto. Lamberto's very obscurity favours this surmise. Had Avellaneda been a figure of great importance, he had been unmasked by Cervantes himself, who assuredly was no coward. We owe to Avellaneda a clever, brutal, cynical, amus- ing book, which is still reprinted. Nor is this our only debt to him : he put an end to Cervantes' dawdling and procured the publication of the second Don Quixote. Cervantes left it doubtful if he meant to write the sequel ; he even seems to invite another to undertake it. Nine years had passed, during which Cervantes made no sign. Avellaneda, with an eye to profit, wrote his continuation in good faith, and his insolent Preface is explained by his rage at seeing the bread taken out of his mouth when the true sequel was announced in the Preface to the Novelas. Had not his intrusion stung Cervantes to the quick, the second Don Quixote might have met the fate of the second Galatea promised for thirty years and never finished. 240 SPANISH LITERATURE As it is, the hurried close of the Second Part is below the writer's common level, as when he rages at Avellaneda, and wishes that the latter's book be " cast into the lowest pit of hell." But this is its single fault, which, for the rest, is only found in the last fourteen chapters. The previous fifty-eight form an almost impeccable master- piece. As an achievement in style, the Second excels the First Part. The parody of chivalresque books is less insistent, the interest is larger, the variety of episode is ampler, the spirit more subtly comic, the new characters are more convincing, the manner is more urbane, more assured. Cervantes' First Part was an experiment in which he himself but half believed ; in the Second he shows the certainty of an accepted master, confident of his intention and his popularity. So his career closed in a blaze of triumph. He had other works in hand : a play to be called El Engano d los Ojos, the Semanas del Jar din, the Famoso Bernardo, and the eternal second Galatea. These last three he promises in the Preface to Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda (1617), a pos- thumous volume "that dares to vie with Heliodorus," and was to be " the best or worst book ever written in our tongue." Ambitious in aim and in manner, the Persiles has failed to interest, for all its adventures and scapes. Yet it contains perhaps the finest, and cer- tainly the most pathetic passage that Cervantes ever penned the noble dedication to his patron, the Conde de Lemos, signed upon April 19, 1616. In the last grip of dropsy, he gaily quotes from a romance remembered from long ago : " Puesio ya el pit en el estribo " " One foot already in the stirrup." With these words he LOPE DE VEGA 241 smilingly confronts fate, and makes him ready for the last post down the Valley of the Shadow. He died on April 23, nominally on the same day as Shakespeare, whose death is dated by an unreformed calendar. They were brethren in their lives and afterwards. Montes- quieu, in the Lettres Persanes, makes Rica say of the Spaniards that " le seul de leurs livres qui soit bon est celui qui a fait voir la ridicule de tous les autres." If he meant that Don Quixote was the one Spanish book which has found acceptance all the world over, he spoke with equal truth and point. A single author at once national and universal is as much as any literature can hope to boast. In his own day Cervantes was shone down by the ample, varied, magnificent gifts of LOPE FELIX DE VEGA CARPIO (1562-1635) : a very "prodigy of nature," as his rival confesses. A prodigy he was from his cradle. At the age of five he lisped in numbers, and, unable to write, would bribe his schoolmates with a share of his break- fast to take down verses at his dictation. He came of noble highland blood, his father, Felix de Vega, and his mother, Francisca Fernandez, being natives of Carriedo. Born in Madrid, he was there educated at the Jesuit Colegio Imperial, of which he was the wonder. All the accomplishments were his : still a child, he filled his copy-books with verses, sang, danced, handled the foil like a trained sworder. His father, a poet of some ac- complishment, died early, and Lope forthwith determined to see the world. With his comrade, Hernando Muftoz, he ran away from school. The pair reached Astorga, and turned back to Segovia, where, being short of money, they tried to sell a chain to a jeweller, who, suspecting something to be wrong, informed the local Dogberry. 242 SPANISH LITERATURE The adventurous couple were sent home in charge of the police. Lope's earliest surviving play, El verdadero Amante, written in his thirteenth year, is included in the fourteenth volume of his theatre, printed in 1620. Nicolas de los Rfos, one of the best actor-managers of his time, was proud to play in it later ; and, crude as it is in phrasing, it manifests an astonishing dramatic gift. The chronology of Lope's youth is perplexing, and the events of this time are, as a rule, wrongly given by his biographers, even including that admirable scholar, Cayetano Alberto de la Barrera y Leirado, whose Nueva Biografia is almost above praise. In a poetic epistle to Luis de Haro, Lope asserts that he fought at Terceira against the Portuguese: "in my third lustre" en tres lustros de mi edad primera : and Ticknor is puzzled to reconcile this with facts. It cannot be done. Lope was fifteen in 1577, and the expedition to the Azores occurred in 1582. The obvious explanation is that Lope was in his fourth lustre, but that, as cuatro would break the rhythm of the line, he wrote tres instead. Some little licence is admitted in verse, and literal interpreters are peculiarly liable to error. At the same time, it should be said that Lope is coquettish as regards his age. Thus, he says that he was a child at the time of the Armada, being really twenty-six ; and that he wrote the Dragontea in early youth, when, in fact, he was thirty- five. This little vanity has led to endless confusion. It is commonly stated that, on Lope's return from the Azores, he entered the household of GenSnimo Manrique, Bishop of Avila, who sent him to Alcala de Henares. That Lope studied at Alcala is certain ; but under- graduates then matriculated earlier than they do now. When Lope's first campaign ended he was twenty-one, i LOPE THE SOLDIER 243 and therefore too old for college. He was a Bachelor before ever he went to the wars. The love-affair, re- counted in his Dorotea, is commonly said to have pre- vented his taking orders at Alcala : in truth, he never saw the lady till he came back from the Azores ! He became private secretary to Antonio Alvarez de Toledo y Beaumont, fifth Duque de Alba, and grandson of the great soldier ; but the date cannot be given precisely. As far back as 1572 he had translated Claudian's Rape of Proserpine into Castilian verse, and we have already seen him joined with Cervantes in penning compliment- ary sonnets for Padilla and L6pez Maldonado(i584). It may be that, while in Alba's service, he wrote the poems printed in Pedro de Moncayo's Flor de varios romances (1589). The history of these years is obscure. It is usually asserted that, while in Alba's service, about the year 1584-5, Lope married, and that he was soon afterwards exiled to Valencia, whence he set out for Lisbon to join the Invincible Armada. This does not square with Lope's statement in the Dedication of Querer la propia Desdicha to Claudio Conde. There he alleges that Conde helped him out of prison in Madrid, a service repaid by his helping Conde out of the Serranos prison at Valencia, and he goes on to say that " before the first down was on their cheeks " they went to Lisbon to embark on the Armada. He nowhere alleges that they started from Valencia, or that the journey followed the banishment. In an eclogue to the same Conde, Lope avers that he joined the Armada to escape from Filis (otherwise Dorotea), and he adds : " Who could have thought that, returning from the war, I should find a sweet wife ? " The question would be pointless if Lope were already 244 SPANISH LITERATURE married. Moreover, Barrera's theory that the intrigue with Dorotea ended in 1584 is disproved by the fact that the Dorotea contains allusions to the Conde de Melgar's marriage, which, as we know from Cabrera, took place in 1587. What is certain is that Lope went aboard the San Juan, and that during the Armada expedition hz used his manuscript verses in Filis's praise for gun- wads. He was a first-class fighting-man, and played his part in the combats up the Channel, where his brother was killed beside him during an encounter between the San Juan and eight Dutch vessels. Disaster never quenched his spirit nor stayed his pen ; for, when what was left of the defeated Armada returned to Cadiz, he landed with the greater part of his Hermosura de Angelica eleven thousand verses, written between storm and battle, in continuation of the Orlando Furioso. First published in 1602, the Angelica comes short of Ariosto's epic nobility, and is unrelieved by the Italian's touch of ironic fantasy. Nor can it be called successful even as a sequel : its very wealth of invention, its redundant episodes and innumerable digressions, contribute to its failure. But the verse is singularly brilliant and effective, while the skill with which the writer handles proper names is almost Miltonic. Returned to Spain, Lope composed his pastoral novel, the Arcadia, which, however, remained unpublished till 1598. Ticknor believed it "to have been written almost immediately " after Cervantes' Galatea : this cannot be, for the Arcadia refers to the death of Santa Cruz, which occurred in 1588, and it discusses in the conventional manner Alba's love-affairs of 1589-90. The Arcadia, where Lope figures as Belardo, and Alba as Amfris tnso, THE DRAGONTEA 245 makes no pretence to be a transcript of manners or life, and it is intolerably prolix withal. Yet it goes beyond its fellows by virtue of its vivid landscapes, its graceful, flowing verse, and a certain rich, poetic, Latinized prose, here used by Lope with as much artistry as he showed in his management of the more familiar kind in the Dorotea. Its popularity is proved by the publication of fifteen editions in its author's lifetime. About the year 1590 he married Isabel de Urbina, a distant connection of Cervantes' mother, and daughter of Felipe II.'s King- at-Arms. Hereupon followed a duel, wherein Lope wounded his adversary, and, earlier escapades being raked up, he was banished the capital. He spent some time in Valencia, a considerable literary centre ; but in 1594 he signed the manuscript of his play, El Maestro de danzar, at Tormes, Alba's estate, whence it is inferred that he was once more in the Duke's service. A new love- affair with Antonia Trillo de Armenta brought legal troubles upon him in 1596. His wife apparently died in 1597. The first considerable work printed with Lope's name upon the title-page was his Dragontea (1598), an epic poem in ten cantos on the last cruise and death of Francis Drake. We naturally love to think of the mighty seaman as the patriot, the chiefest of Britannia's bulwarks, as he figures in Mr. Newbolt's spirited ballad : "Drake lies in his hammock till the great Armadas come . . . Slung at-ween the round shot, listeniri for the drum . . . Call him on the deep sea, call him up the Sound, Call him when ye sail to meet the foe; Where the old trades plyirf and the oldjlagflyin\ They shall find him *ware an' waking, as they found him long ago" Odd to say, though, Lope has been censured for not 246 SPANISH LITERATURE viewing Drake through English Protestant spectacles. Seeing that he was a good Catholic Spaniard whom Drake had drummed up the Channel, it had been curious if the Dragontea were other than it is : a savage denunciation of that Babylonian Dragon, that son of the devil whose piracies had tormented Spain during thirty years. The Dragontea fails not because of its national spirit, which is wholly admirable, but because of its excessive emphasis and its abuse of allegory. Its author scarcely intended it for great poetry ; but, as a patriotic screed, it fulfilled its purpose, and, when reprinted, it drew an approving sonnet from Cervantes. The Dragontea was written while Lope was in the household of the Marque's de Malpica, whence he passed as secretary to the lettered Marque's de Sarria, best known as Conde de Lemos, and as Cervantes' patron. In 1599 he published his devout and graceful poem, San Isidro, in honour of Madrid's patron saint. Popular in subject and execution, the San Isidro enabled him to repeat in verse the triumph which he had achieved with the prose of the Arcadia. From this day forward he was the admitted pontiff of Spanish literature. His marriage with Juana de Guardo probably dates from the year 1600. An example of Lope's art in manipulating the sonnet-form is afforded by Longfellow's Englishing of The Brook : " Laugh of the mountain ! lyre of bird and tree / Pomp of the meadow ! mirror of the morn! The soul of April, unto whom are born The rose and jessamine, leaps wild in thee ! Although, wherever thy devious current strays, The lap of earth with gold and silver teems, To me thy clear proceeding brigJiter seems Than golden sands that charm each shepherd's gaze. LOPE'S SONNETS 247 How without guile thy bosom, all transparent As the pure crystal, lets the curious eye Thy secrets scan, thy smooth, round pebbles count ! How, without malice murmuring, glides thy current! sweet simplicity of days gone by ! Thou shurist the haunts of man, to dwell in limpid 'fount '/" Two hundred sonnets in Lope's Rimas are thought to have been issued separately in 1602 : in any case, they were published that year at the end of a reprint of the Angelica. They include much of the writer's sincerest work, earnest in feeling, skilful and even distinguished as art. One sonnet of great beauty To the Tomb of Teodora Urbina has led Ticknor into an amusing error often reproduced. He cites from it a line upon the "heavenly likeness of my Belisa," notes that this name is an anagram of Isabel (Lope's first wife), and pronounces the performance a lament for the poet's mother-in-law. The Latin epitaph which follows it contains a line, " Exactis nondum complevit mensibus annum" showing that the supposed mother-in-law died in her first year. Manifestly the sonnet refers to the writer's daughter, and, as always happens when Lope speaks from his paternal heart, is instinct with a passionate tenderness. To 1604 belong the five prose books of the Peregrino en su patria, a prose romance of Panfilo's adventures by sea and land, partly experienced and partly contrived ; but it is most interesting for the four autos which it includes, and for its bibliographical list of two hundred and thirty plays already written by the author. His quenchless ambition had led him to rival Ariosto in the Angelica: in the twenty cantos of his Jerusalen Conquistada he dares no less greatly by challenging Tasso. Written 17 248 SPANISH LITERATURE in 1605, the Jerusalen was withheld till 1609. Styled a " tragic epic " by its creator, it is no more than a fluent historico-narrative poem, overlaid with embellish- ments of somewhat cheap and obvious design. In 1612 appeared the Four Soliloquies of Lope de Vega Carpio : his lament and tears while kneeling before a crucifix begging pardon for his sins. These four sets of redondillas with their prose commentaries were amplified to seven when republished (1626) under the pseudonym of Gabriel Padecopeo, an obvious anagram. The deaths of Lope's wife and of his son Carlos inspired the Pastores de Bel/n, a sacred pastoral of supreme simplicity, truth, and beauty as Spanish as Spain herself which contains one of the sweetest numbers in Castilian. The Virgin lulls the Divine Child with a song in Verstegan's manner, which Ticknor has rendered to this effect : " Holy angels and blest, Through those palms as ye sweep Hold their branches at rest, For my babe is asleep. And ye Bethlehem palm-trees^ As stormy winds rush In tempest and fury, Your angry noise hush; More gently, more gently, Restrain your wild sweep j Hold your branches at rest, My babe is asleep. My babe all divine, With earths sorrows oppressed^ Seeks in slumber an instant His grievings to rest; He slumbers, he slumbers, Oh, hush, then, and keep Your branches all still, My babe is asleep ! LOPE THE PRIEST 249 Cold blasts wheel about kirn, A rigorous storm, And ye see how, in vain, I would skelter his form. Holy angels and blest, As above me ye sweep, Hold these branches at rest, My babe is asleep ! " Lope lived a life of gallantry, and troubled his wife's last years by his intrigue with Marfa de Lujan. This lady bore him the gifted son, Lope Felix, who was drowned at sea, and the daughter Marcela, whose admirable verses, written after her profession in the Convent of Barefoot Trinitarians, proclaim her kinship with the great enchanter. A relapsing, carnal sinner, Lope was more weak than bad : his rare intellectual gifts, his renown, his overwhelming temperament, his seductive address, his imperial presence, led him into temptation. Amid his follies and sins he preserved a touching faith in the invisible, and his devotion was always ardent. Upon the death of his wife in 1612 or later, he turned to religion with characteristic im- petuosity, was ordained priest, and said his first mass in 1614 at the Carmelite Church in Madrid. It was an ill-advised move. Ticknor, indeed, speaks of a " Lope, , no longer at an age to be deluded by his passions " ; but no such Lope is known to history. While a Familiar of the Inquisition the true Lope wrote love- letters for the loose -living Duque de Sessa, till at last his confessor threatened to deny him absolution. Nor is this all : his intrigue with Marta de Nevares Santoyo, wife of Roque Hernandez de Ayala, was notorious. The pious Cervantes publicly jeered at the fallen priest's "continuous and virtuous occupation," 250 SPANISH LITERATURE forgetting his own coarse pranks with Ana de Rojas ; and G6ngora hounded his master down with a copy of venomous verses passed from hand to hand. Those who wish to study the abasement of an august spirit may do so in the filtimos Amores de Lope de Vega Carpio, forty-eight letters published by Jos6 Ibero Ribas y Canfranc. 1 If they judge by the standard of Lope's time, they will deal gently with a miracle of genius, unchaste but not licentious ; like that old Dumas, who, in the matters of gaiety, energy, and strength is his nearest modern compeer. His sin was yet to find him out. He vanquished every enemy : the child of his old age vanquished him. Devotion and love-affairs served not to stay his pen. His Triunfo de la fe en el Japdn (1618) is interesting as an example of Lope's practice in the school of historical prose, stately, devout, and elegant. In honour of Isidore, beatified and then canonised, he presided at the poetic jousts of 1620 and 1622, witnessing the triumph of his son, Fe"lix Lope ; standing literary god- father to the boyish Calderon ; declaiming, in the char- acter of Tome Burguillos, the inimitable verse which hit between wind and water. Perhaps Lope was never happier than in this opportunity of speaking his own witty lines before the multitude. His noble person, his facility, his urbane condescension, his incomparable voice, which thrilled even clowns when he intoned his mass all these gave him the stage as his own posses- sion. Heretofore the common man had only read him: 1 This is taken by all English writers, and appears in the British Museum Catalogue, as a real name. I only reveal an open secret if I point out that it is a perfect anagram for Francisco Asenjo Barbieri, the excellent scholar to whom we owe the Cancionero musical de lot siglos xv. y xvi. and the new edition of Encina's theatre. THE FILOMENA 251 once seen and heard, Lope ruled Castilian literature as Napoleon ruled France. His Filomena (1621) contains a poetic defence of him- self (the Nightingale) against Pedro de Torres Ramila (the Thrush), who, in 1617, had violently attacked Lope in his Spongia, which seems to have vanished, and is only known by extracts embodied in the Expostulatio Spongicz, written by Francisco L6pez de Aguilar Coutino under the name of Julius Columbarius. Polemics apart, the chief interest of the Filomena volume lies in its short prose story, Las Fortunas de Diana, an experiment which the author repeated in the three tales La Desdicha por la honra, La prudente Venganza, and Guzman el Bravo appended to his Circe (1624), a poem, in three cantos, on Ulysses his adventures. The five cantos of the Triunfos divinos are pious exercises in the Petrarchan manner, with forty-four sonnets given as a postscript. Five cantos go to make up the Corona Trdgica (1627), a religious epic with Mary Stuart for heroine. Lope has been absurdly censured for styling Queen Elizabeth a Jezebel and an Athaliah, and for regarding Mary as a Catholic martyr. This criticism implies a strange intel- lectual confusion ; as though a veteran of the Armada could be expected to write in the spirit of a Clapham Evangelical ! Religious squabbles apart, he had an old score to settle ; for " Where are the galleons of Spain?" was a question which troubled good Spaniards as much as it delighted Mr. Dobson. Dedicated to Pope Urban VIII., the poem won for its author the Cross of St. John and the title of Doctor of Divinity. Three years later he issued his Laurel de Apolo, a cloying 252 SPANISH LITERATURE eulogy on some three hundred poets, as remarkable for its omissions as for its flattering of nonentities. The Dorotea (1632), a prose play fashioned after the model of the Celestina, was one of Lope's favourites, and is interesting, not merely for its graceful, familiar style, retouched and polished for over thirty years, but as a piece of self-revelation. The Rimas del licenciado Tomd de Burguillos (1634) closes with the mock-heroic Gato- maquia, a vigorous and brilliant travesty of the Italian epics, replenished with such gay wit as suffices to keep it sweet for all time. Lope de Vega's career was drawing to its end. The elopement, with a court gallant, of his daughter, Antonia Clara, broke him utterly. 1 He sank into melancholy, sought to expiate by lashing himself with the discipline till the walls of his room were flecked with his blood. Withal he wrote to the very end. On August 23, 1635, s he composed his last poem, El Siglo de Oro. Four days later he was dead. Madrid followed him to his grave, and the long procession turned from the direct path to pass before the window of the convent where his daughter, Sor Marcela, was a nun. A hundred and fifty-three Spanish authors bewailed the Phoenix in the Fama pdstuma, and fifty Italians published their laments at Venice under the title of Essequie poetiche. Lope left no achievement unattempted : the epic, Homeric or Italian, the pastoral, the romantic novel, poems narrative and historical, countless eclogues, epistles, not to speak of short tales, of sonnets innu- merable, of verses dashed off on the least occasion. His 1 The seducer is conjectured to be Olivares' son-in-law, the Duque de Medina de las Torres. LOPE'S VERSATILITY 253 voluminous private letters, full of wit and malice and risky anecdote, are as brilliant and amusing as they are unedifying. It is sometimes alleged that he deliberately capped Cervantes' work ; and, as instances in this sort, we are bid to note that the Galatea was followed by Dorotea, the Viaje del Parnaso by the Laurel de Apolo. In the first place, exclusive "spheres of influence" are not recognised in literature ; in the second, the observa- tion is pointless. The Galatea is a pastoral novel, the Dorotea is not; the first was published in 1585, the second in 1632. Again, the Viaje del Parnaso appeared in 1614, the Laurel de Apolo in 1630. The first model was the Canto del Turia of Gil Polo. It would be as reasonable that is to say, it would be the height of unreason to argue that Persiles y Sigismunda was an attempt to cap the Peregrino en su patria. The truth is, that Lope followed every one who made a hit : Heliodorus, Petrarch, Ariosto, Tasso. A frank success spurred him to rivalry, and the difficulty of repeating it was for him a fresh stimulus. Obstacles existed to be vanquished. He was ever ready to accept a challenge ; hence such a dexterous tour deforce as his famous Sonnet on a Sonnet ', imitated in a well-known rondeau by Voiture, translated again and again, and by none more successfully than by Mr. Gibson : " To "write a sonnet doth Juana press me, I've never found me in such stress and pain j A sonnet numbers fourteen lines 'tis plain, And three are gone ere I can say, God bless me / / thought that spinning rhymes might sore oppress me, Yet here Fin midway in the last quatrain; And, if the foremost tercet I can gain, The quatrains need not any more distress me. 254 SPANISH LITERATURE To the first tercet I have got at last, And travel through it with such right good-will. That with this line I've finished it, / ween. I'm in the second 'now ', and see how fast The thirteenth line comes tripping from my quill Hurrah, 'tis done ! Count if there be fourteen / " The foregoing list of Lope's exploits in literature, cur- tailed as it is, suffices for fame ; but it would not suffice to explain that matchless popularity which led to the publication suppressed by the Inquisition in 1647 of a creed beginning thus : " I believe in Lope de Vega the Almighty, the Poet of heaven and earth." So far we have but reached the threshold of his temple. His unique renown is based upon the fact that he created a national theatre, that he did for Spain what Shakespeare did for England. G6mez Manrique and Encina led the way gropingly ; Torres Naharro, though he bettered all that had been done, lived out of Spain ; Lope de Rueda and Timoneda brought the drama to the people ; Artieda, Virues, Argensola, and Cervantes tore their passions to tatters in conformity with their own strange precepts, which the last-named would have enforced by a literary dictatorship. Moreover, Argensola and the three veterans of Lepanto wrote to please themselves : Lope invented a new art to enchant mankind. And he succeeded beyond all ambition. Nor does he once take on the airs of philosopher or pedant : rather, in a spirit of self- mockery, he makes his confession in the Arte Nuevo de hacer Comedias (New Mode of Playwriting), which his English biographer, Lord Holland, translates in this wise : " Who writes by rule must please himself alone, Be damrid without remorse, and die unknown. LOPE'S FACILITY 255 Such force has habit for the untaught fools, Trusting their own, despise the ancient rules. Yet true it is, I too have written plays. The wiser few, who judge with skill, might praise j But when I see how show (and nonsense) draws The crowds and more than all the fair's applause, Who still are forward with indulgent rage To sanction every master of the stage, I, doontd to write, the public taste to hit, Resume the barbarous taste 'twas vain to quit : I lock up every rule before I write, Plautus and Terence drive from out my sight, . . . To vulgar standards then I square my play, Writing at ease; for, since the public pay, 'Tis just, methinks, we by their compass steer, And write the nonsense that they love to hear" Thus Lope in his bantering avowal of 1609. Yet what takes the form of an apology is in truth a vaunt ; for it was Lope's task to tear off the academic swaddling-bands of his predecessors, and to enrich his country with a drama of her own. Nay, he did far more : by his single effort he dowered her with an entire dramatic literature. The very bulk of his production savours of the fabulous. In 1603 he had already written over two hundred plays ; in 1609 the number was four hundred and eighty-three ; in 1620 he confesses to nine hundred ; in 1624 he reaches one thousand and seventy ; and in 1632 the total amounted to one thousand five hundred. According to Montalban, editor of the Fama ptistuma, the grand total, omitting entremeses, should be one thousand eight hundred plays, and over four hundred autos. Of these about four hun- dred plays and forty autos survive. If we take the figures as they stand, Lope de Vega wrote more than all the Elizabethan dramatists put together. Small wonder that Charles Fox was staggered when his nephew, Lord 256 SPANISH LITERATURE Holland, spoke of Lope's twenty million lines. Facility and excellence are rarely found together, yet Lope com- bined both qualities in such high degree that any one with enough Spanish to read him need never pass a dull moment so long as he lives. Hazlitt protests against the story which tells that Lope wrote a play before breakfast, and in truth it rests on no good authority. But it is history that, not once, but an hundred times, he wrote a whole piece within twenty- four hours. Working in these conditions, he must needs have the faults inseparable from haste. He repeats his thought with small variation ; he utilises old solutions for a dramatic impasse ; and his phrase is too often more vigorous than finished. But it is not as a master of artistic detail that Lope's countrymen place him beside Cervantes. First, and last, and always, he is a great creative genius. He incarnates the national spirit, adapts popular poetry to dramatic effects, substitutes characters for abstractions, and, in a word, expresses the genius of a people. It is true that he farely finds a perfect form for his utterance, that he constantly approaches perfection without quite attaining unto it, that his dramatic instinct exceeds his literary execution. Yet he survives as the creator of an original form. His successors improved upon him in the matter of polish, yet not one of them made an essential departure of his own, not one invented a radical variant upon Lope's method. Tirso de Molina may exceed him in force of conception, as Ruiz de Alarc6n outshines him in ethical significance, in exposi- tion of character ; yet Tirso and Alarc6n are but develop- ing the doctrine laid down by the master in El Castigo sin Venganza the lesson of truth, realism, fidelity to the actual usages of the time. Tirso, Alarc6n, and Calder6n LOPE'S INVENTION 257 are a most brilliant progeny ; but the father of them all is the unrivalled Lope. He seized upon what germs of good existed in Torres Naharro, Rueda, and Cueva ; but his debt to them was small, and he would have found his way without them. Without Lope we should have had no Tirso, no Calderon. 1 Producing as he produced, much of his work may be considered as improvisation ; even so, he takes place as the first improvisatore in the world, and compels recognition as, so to say, "a natural force let loose." He imagined on a Napoleonic scale ; he contrived inci- dent with such ease and force and persuasiveness as make the most of his followers seem poor indeed ; and his ingenuity of diversion is miraculously fresh after nearly three hundred years. His gift never fails him, whether he deal with historical tragedy, with the heroic legend, with the presentation of picaresque life, or with the play of intrigue and manners the comedia de capa y espada. This last, "the cloak and sword play" is as much his personal invention as is the gracioso the comic character as is the enredo the maze of plot as is the " point of honour," as is the feminine interest in his best work. Hitherto the woman had been allotted a secondary, an incidental part, ludicrous in the entremh, sentimental in the set piece. Lope, the expert in gallantry, in manners, in observation, placed her in her true setting, as an ideal, as the mainspring of dramatic motive and of chivalrous conduct. He professed an abstract approval of the classic models ; but his natural 1 Lope's popularity spread as far as America. Three of his plays were translated into the nahuatl dialect by Bartolome" Alba. See Jose Mariano Beristain de Souza's Biblioteca Hispano- Americana (Mexico, 1816), voL L p. 64. 258 SPANISH LITERATURE impulse was too strong for him. An imitatoi" he could not be, save in so far as he, in his own phrase, " imitated men's actions, and reproduced the manners of the age." He laid down rules which in practice he flouted ; for he realised that the business of the scene is to hold an audience, is to interest, to surprise, to move. He could not thump a pulpit in an empty hall : he perceived that a play which fails to attract is for the playwright's purpose a bad play. He can be read with infinite pleasure ; yet he rarely attempted drama for the closet. Emotion in action was his aim, and he achieved it with a certainty which places him among the greatest gods of the stage. It is difficult to fix upon the period when Lope's dramatic genius was accepted by his public : 1592 seems a likely date. He took no interest in publishing his plays, though El Perseguido was issued by a Lisbpn pirate so early as 1603. Eight volumes of his theatre were in print before he was induced in 1617 to authorise an edition which was called the Ninth Part, and after 1625 he printed no more dramatic pieces, despite the fact that he produced them more abundantly than ever. We may, perhaps, assume that the best of his work has reached us. Among the finest of his earlier efforts is justly placed El Acero de Madrid (The Madrid Steel), from which Moliere has borrowed the Medecin malgrf !ut, and the opening scene, as Ticknor renders it, admirably illustrates Lope's power of interesting his audience from the very outset by a situation which explains itself. Lisardo, with his friend Riselo, enamoured of Belisa, awaits the latter at the church-door, and, just as Riselo declares that he will wait no more, Belisa enters with her pious aunt, Teodora, as duena : LOPE'S DIALOGUE 259 Teodor^ Show more of gentleness and modesty ; Of gentleness in walking quietly, Of modesty in looking only down Upon the earth you tread. Belisa. ' Tis what I do. Teodora, What ? When you're looking straight towards that man? Belisa. Did you not bid me look upon the earth ? And what is he but just a bit of it? Teodora. / said the earth whereon you tread, my niece. Belisa. But that whereon I tread is hidden quite With my own petticoat and walking-dress. Teodora. Words such as these become no well-bred maid. But, by your mother's blessed memory, r II put an end to all your pretty tricks; What ? You look back at him again. Belisa. Who? If Teodora. Yes, you; and make him secret signs besides. Belisa. Not I ! 'Tis only that you troubled me With teasing questions and perverse replies, So that I stumbled and looked round to see Who would prevent my fall. Riselo (to Lisardo). She falls again. Be quick and help her. Lisardo (to Belisa). Pardon me, lady, And forgive my glove. Teodora. Who ever saw the like ? Belisa. / thank you, sir; you saved me from a fall. Lisardo. An angel, lady, might have fallen so, Or stars that shine with heaven's own blessed light. Teodora. /, too, can fall; but 'tis upon your trick. Good gentleman, farewell to you ! Lisardo. Madam, Your servant. (Heaven save us from such spleen /) Teodora. A pretty fall you made of it ; and now I hope You'll be content, since they assisted you. Belisa. And you no less content, since now you have The means to tease me for a week to come. Teodora. But why again do you turn back your head? Belisa. Why, sure you think it wise and wary To notice well the place I stumbled at, Lest I should stumble there when next I pass. 260 SPANISH LITERATURE . Teodora. Mischief befall you ! But I knoiv your ways ! You'// not deny this time you looked upon the youth ? Belisa. Deny it? No! Teodora. You dare confess it, then ? Belisa. Be sure I dare. You saw him help me; And would you have me fail to thank him for it? Teodora. Go to ! Come home ! come home ! " This is a fair specimen, even in its sober English dress, of Lope's gallant dialogue and of his consummate skill in gripping his subject. No playwright has ever shown a more infallible tact, a more assured confidence in his own resources. He never attempts to puzzle his audience with a dull acrostic : complicated as his plot may be (and he loves to introduce a double intrigue when the chance proffers), he exposes it at the outset with an obvious solution ; but not one in twenty can guess precisely how the solution is to be attained. And, till the last moment, his contagious, reckless gaiety, his touches of perplexing irony, his vigilant invention, help to thrill and vivify the interest. Yet has he all the defects of his facility. In an indif- ferent mood, besieged by managers for more and more plays, he would set forth upon a piece, not knowing what was to be its action, would indulge in a triple plot of baffling complexity eked out by incredible episodes. Even his ingenuity failed to find escape from such unprepared situations. Still it is fair to say that such instances are rare with him : time upon time his dra- matic instinct saved him where a less notable inventor must have succumbed. He could create character ; he was an artist in construction ; he knew what could, and could not, be done upon the stage. Like Dumas, he needed but " four trestles, four boards, two actors, and a passion " ; and, at his best, he rises to the greatest occa- LOPE'S FAULTS AND VIRTUES 261 sion. In a single scene, in an act entire, you shall read him with wonder and delight for his force and truth and certainty. Yet the trail of carelessness is upon his last acts, and his conscience sometimes sleeps ere his cur- tain falls. The fact that he thought more of a listener than of ten readers comes home to a constant student. Lope had few theories as to style, and he rarely aims at sheer beauty of expression, at simple felicity of phrase. Hence his very cleverness grows wearisome at last. But, after all, he must be judged by the true historic standard : his achievement must be compared with what preceded, not with what came after him. Tirso de Molina and Calderon and Moreto grew the flower from Lope's seed. He took the farce as Lope de Rueda left it, and transformed its hard fun by his humane and sparkling wit. He inherited the cold mediaeval morality, and touched it into life by the breath of devout imagina- tion. He re-shaped the crude collection of massacres which Virues mistook for tragedy, and produced effects of dread and horror with an artistry of his own devising, a selection, a conscience, a delicate vigour all unknown until he came. And for the comedia de capa y espada, it springs direct from his own cunning brain, unsuggested and even unimagined by any forerunner. It were hopeless to analyse any part of the immense theatre which he bequeathed to the world. But among his best tragedies may be cited EL Castigo sin Venganza, with its dramatic rendering of the Duke of Ferrara sen- tencing his adulterous wife and incestuous son to death. Among his historic dramas none surpasses El Me/or Alcalde el Key, with its presentation of the model Spanish heroine, Elvira ; of the feudal baron, Tello ; and of the King as the buckler of his people, the strong man doing 262 SPANISH LITERATURE justice in high places : a most typical piece of character, congenial to the aristocratic democracy of Spain. A more morbid version of the same monarchical senti- ment is given in La Estrella de Sevilla, the argument of which is brief enough for quotation. King Sancho el Bravo falls enamoured of Busto Tavera's sister, Estrella, betrothed to Sancho Ortiz de las Roelas. Having vainly striven to win over Busto, the King follows the advice of Arias, corrupts her slave, enters Estrella's room, is there discovered, is challenged by Busto, and escapes with a sound skin. The slave, confessing her share in the scheme, is killed by the innocent heroine's brother. Meanwhile, the King determines upon Busto's death, summons Sancho Ortiz, and bids him slay a certain criminal guilty of lese-majesti. Herewith the King offers Sancho a guarantee against consequences. Sancho Ortiz destroys it, saying that he asks for nothing better than the King's word, and ends by begging the sovereign to grant him the hand of an unnamed lady. To this the King accedes, and he hands Sancho Ortiz a paper containing the name of the doomed man. After much hesitation and self-torment, Sancho Ortiz resolves to do his duty to his King, slays Busto, is seized, refuses to explain, undergoes sentence of death, and is finally pardoned by King Sancho, who avows his own guilt, and endeavours to promote the marriage between Sancho Ortiz and Estrella. For an obvious reason they refuse, and the curtain falls upon Estrella's determination to get her to a nunnery. Thus baldly told, the story resembles a thousand others ; under Lope's hand it throbs with life and movement and emotion. His dialogue is swift and strong and appropriate, whether he personifies the blind LOPE'S IMITATORS 263 passion of the King, the incorruptibility of Busto, the feudal ideal of Sancho Ortiz, or the strength and sweetness of Estrella. Of dialogue he is the first and best master on the Spanish stage : more choice, if less powerful, than Tirso ; more natural, if less altisonant, than Calderon. The dramatic use of certain metrical forms persisted as he sanctioned it : the decimas for laments, the romance for exposition, the lira for heroic declamation, the sonnet to mark time, the redondilla for love-passages. His lightness of touch, his gaiety and resourcefulness are exampled in La Dama Melindrosa (The Languishing Lady), as good a cloak-and-sword play as even Lope ever wrote. His gift of sombre conception is to be seen in Dineros son Calidad (Money is Rank), where his contrivance of the King of Naples' statue addressing Octavio is the nearest possible approach to Tirso's figures of the Commander and of Don Juan. Whether or not Tirso took the idea from Lope cannot well be decided ; but if he did so, he was no worse than the rest of the world. For ages dramatists of all nations have found Lope de Vega "good to steal from," and in many forms he has diverted other countries than the Spains. Alexandre Hardy is said by tradition to have exploited him vigorously, and probably we should find the imitations among Hardy's lost plays. Jean Mairet is reputed to have borrowed generously, and an undoubted follower is Jean Rotrou, many of whose pieces from the early Occasions perdues and La belle. Alfrede to his last effort, Don Lope de Cardonne are boldly annexed from Lope. D'Ouville, in Les Moris vivants and in Aimer sans savoir qui, exploited Lope to the profit of French playgoers. It is a rash con- 18 264 SPANISH LITERATURE jecture which identifies the Wild Gallant with the Galdn cscarmentado, inasmuch as the latter play is even still " inedited," and could scarcely have reached Dryden ; but it cannot be doubted that when the sources of our Restoration drama are traced out, Lope will be found to rank with Calder6n, and Moreto, and Rojas Zorrilla. Yet his chief glory must, like Burns's, be ever local. Cervantes, for all his national savour, might conceivably belong to any country ; but Lope de Vega is the in- carnate Spains. His gaiety, his suppleness, his adroit construction, his affluence, his realism, are eminently Spanish in their strength ; his heedless form, his jour- nalistic emphasis, his inequality, his occasional incoher- ence, his anxiety to please at any cost, are eminently Spanish in their weakness. He lacks the universal note of Shakespeare, being chiefly for his own time and not for all the ages. Shakespeare, however, stands alone in literature. It is no small praise to say that Lope follows him on a lower plane. There are two great creators in the European drama : Shakespeare founds the English theatre, Lope de Vega the Spanish, each interpreting the genius of his people with unmatched supremacy. And unto both there came a period of eclipse. That very generation which Lope had be- wildered, dominated, and charmed by his fantasy turned to the worship of Calder6n. Nor did he profit by the romantic movement headed by the Schlegels and by Tieck. For them, as for Goethe, Spanish literature was incarnated by Cervantes and by Calder6n. The immense bulk of Lope's production, the rarity of his editions, the absence of any representative translation, caused him to be overlooked. To two men to Augustfn Duran in Spain and to Grillparzer in Germany LOPE'S ACHIEVEMENT 265 he owes his revival ; l and, in more modest degree, Lord Holland and George Henry Lewes have furthered his due recognition. The present tendency is, perhaps, to overrate him, and to substitute uncritical adoration for uncritical neglect. Yet he deserves the fame which grows from day to day ; for if he have bequeathed us little that is exquisite in art as Los Pastores de Betin the \vorld is his debtor for a new and singular form of dramatic utterance. In so much he is not only a great executant in the romantic drama, a virtuoso of unexcelled resource and brilliancy. He is something still greater : the typical representative of his race, the founder of a great and comprehensive genre. The genius of Cervantes was universal and unique ; Lope's was unique but national. Cervantes had the rarer and more perfect endowment. But they are immortals both ; and, paradox though it may seem, a second Cervantes is a likelier miracle than a second Lope de Vega. In 1599, the year following upon the issue of Lope's Dragontea, the picaresque tradition of Lazarillo de Tormes was revived by the Sevillan MATEO ALEMAN (fl. ? 1550- 1609) in the First Part of his Atalaya de la Vida humana: Vida del Ptcaro Guzman de Alfarache. The alternative title the Watch-Tower of Human Life was rejected by the reading public, which, to the author's annoyance, insisted on speaking of the Picaro or Rogue. Little is known of Aleman's life, save that he took his Bachelor's degree at Seville in 1565. He is conjectured to have visited Italy, perhaps as a soldier, is found serving in the Treasury so early as 1568, and, after twenty years, left 1 See M. Farinelli's learned study, Grillparztr und Lope de Vega (Berlin, 1894). 266 SPANISH LITERATURE the King's service as poor as he entered it. A passage in his Ortografla Castellana, published at Mexico in 1609, is thought to show that he was a printer ; but this is surmise. That he emigrated to America seems certain ; but the date of his death is unknown. His Guzman de Alfarache is an amplified version of Lazaro's adventures ; and, though he adds little to the first conception, his abundant episode and interminable moralisings hit the general taste. Twenty-six editions, amounting to some fifty thousand copies, appeared within six years of the first publication : not even Don Quixote had such a vogue. Nor was it less fortunate abroad. In 1623 it was admirably translated by James Mabbe in a version for which Ben Jonson wrote a copy of verses in praise of " this Spanish Proteus; who, though writ But in one tongue, was formed with the worlds wit; And hath the noblest mark of a good book, That an ill man dares not securely look Upon it, but will loathe, or let it pass, As a deformed face doth a true glass" It is curious to note that Mabbe's rendering appeared in the same year as Shakespeare's First Folio, to which Ben Jonson also contributed ; but while the Rogue reached its fourth edition in 1656, the third edition of the First Folio was not printed till 1664. The pragmatical cant and the moral reflections which weary us as much as they wearied the French trans- lator, Le Sage, were clearly to the liking of Ben Jonson and his contemporaries. Guzman's experiences as boots at an inn, as a thief in Madrid, as a soldier at Genoa, as a jester at Rome, are told with a certain impudent spirit ; but the "moral intention" of the author obtrudes itself MATED ALEMAN 267 with an insistence that defeats its own object, and the subsidiary tales of Dorido and Clorinia, of Osmi'n and Daraja a device imitated in Don Quixote are digres- sions of neither interest nor relevancy. The popularity of the book was so great as to induce imitation. While Aleman was busied with his devout Vida de San Antonio de Padua (1604), or perhaps with his fragmentary versions of Horace, a spurious sequel was published (1601) by a Valencian lawyer, Juan Marti, who took the pseudonym of Mateo Lujan de Sayavedra. Marti had somehow man- aged to see Aleman's manuscript of the Second Part, and, in so much, his trick was far baser than Avellaneda's. Aleman's self-control under greater provocation contrasts most favourably with Cervantes' petulance. In the true Second Part he good-humouredly acknowledges his com- petitor's "great learning, his nimble wit, his deep judg- ment, his pleasant conceits"; and he adds that "his discourses throughout are of that quality and condition that I do much envy them, and should be proud that they were mine." And having thus put his rival in the wrong, Aleman proceeds to introduce among his person- ages a Sayavedra who would pass himself off as a native of Seville : " but all were lies that he told me ; for he was of Valencia, whose name, for some just causes, I conceal." Sayavedra figures as Guzman's bonnet and jackal till he ends by suicide, and he is made to supply whatever entertainment the book contains. Far below Lazarillo de Tormes in caustic observation and in humour, Guzman de Alfarache is a rapid and easy study of black- guardism, forcible and diverting despite its unctuousness, and written in admirable prose. So much cannot be claimed for the Picara Justina (1605) of Francisco Lopez de TJbeda, who is commonly 268 SPANISH LITERATURE identified as the Dominican, ANDRS PREZ, author of a Vida de San Raymundo de Peftafort and of other pious works. His Picara Justina was long in maturing, for he confesses to having "augmented after the publication of the admired work of the picaro," Guzman ; whom Justina, in fact, ends by marrying. Pe"rez has acquired a notorious reputation for lubricity ; yet it is hard to say how he came by it, since he is no more indecent than most picaresque writers. He lacks wit and invention ; his style, the most mannered of his time, is full of pedantic turns, unnatural inversions and verbal eccen- tricities wherewith he seeks to cover his bald imagi- nation and his witless narrative. But his freaks of vocabulary, his extravagant provincialisms, lend him a certain philological importance which may account for the reprints of his volume. It may be added that, in his Picara, P6rez anticipates Cervantes' trifling find of the versos de cabo roto ; and, from the angry attack upon the monk in the Viaje del Pamaso, it seems safe to infer that Cervantes resented being forestalled by one who had probably read the Quixote in manuscript. 1 A more successful attempt in the same kind is the Reladones de la Vida del Escudero Marcos de Obregon by Vicente Espi.nel (? 1544-1634), a poor student at Sala- manca, a soldier in Italy and the Low Countries, and finally a priest in Madrid. His Diversas Rimas (1591) are correct, spirited exercises, in new metrical forms, including versions of Horace which, in the last century, gave rise to a bitter polemic between Iriarte and L6pez de Sedano. Moreover, Espinel is said to have added a 1 It seems probable that Cervantes and Pe*rez were both anticipated by Alonso Alvarez de Soria, who was finally hanged. See Bartolome Jose Gallardo, Ensayo de una Bibliottca Espaftola (Madrid, 1863, vol. i., col. 285). PfiREZ DE HITA 269 fifth siring to the guitar. But it is by his Marcos de Obrezon (1618) that he is best knnwn. Voltaire alleged that Gil Bias was a mere translation of Marcos de Obregon, but the only foundation for this pretty exercise in fancy is that Le Sage borrowed a few incidents from Espinel, as he borrowed from Velez de Guevara and others. The book is excellent of its kind, brilliantly phrased, full of ingenious contrivance, of witty obser- vation, and free from the long digressions which disfigure Guzman de Alfarache. Espinel knew how to build a story and how to tell it graphically, and his artistic selection of incident makes the reading of his Marcos a pleasure even after three centuries. As the picaresque novel was to supply the substance of Charles Sorel's Francion and of Paul Scarron's Roman Comzque, so the Almahide of Mile. d,e Scudery and the Zayde of Mme. de Lafayette find their root in the Hispano-Mauresque historical novel. This invention we owe to GINKS PEREZ DE HITA of Murcia (ft*. 1604), a soldier who served in the expedition against the Moris- cos during the Alpujarra rising. His Guerras civiles de Granada was published in two parts the first in 1595, and the second, which is distinctly inferior, in 1604. The author's pretence of translating from the Arabic of a supposititious Ibn Hamin is refuted by the fact that the authority of Spanish chroniclers is continually cited as final, and the fact that the point of view is conspicuously Christian. Some tittle of history there is in Perez de Hita, but the value of his work lies in his own fantastic transcription of life in Granada during the last weeks before its surrender. Challenges, duels between Moorish knights, personal encounters with Christian champions, harem intrigues, assassinations, jousts, sports, and festivals 2/o SPANISH LITERATURE held while the enemy is without the gates such circum- stances as these make the texture of the story, which is written with extraordinary grace and ease. Archaeolo- gists join with Arabists in censuring Perez de Hita's detail, and historians are scandalised by his disdain for facts ; yet to* most of us he is more Moorish than the Moors, and his vivid rendering of a great and ancient civilisation on the eve of ruin is more complete and impressive than any that a pile of literal chronicles can yield. As a literary artist he is better in his first part than in his second, where he is embarrassed by a knowledge of events in which he bore a part ; yet, even so, he never fails to interest, and the beauty of his style would alone suffice for a reputation. A story of doubtful authority represents Scott as saying that, if he had met with the Guerras civiles de Granada in earlier days, he would have chosen Spain as the scene of a Waverley Novel. Whatever be the truth of this report, we cannot doubt that Sir Walter must have read with delight his predecessor's brilliant performance in the province of the historical novel. The Rototancefo General, published at Madrid in 1600, and amplified in the reprint of 1604, is often described as a collection of old ballads, made in continuation of the anthologies arranged by Nucio and Najera. Old, as applied to romances, has a relative meaning ; but even in the lowest sense the word can scarcely be used of the songs in the Romancero General, which is very largely made up of the work of contemporary poets. Another famous volume of lyrics is Pedro Espinosa's Flares de Poetas ilustres de Espafla (1605), which includes specimens of Camoes, Barahona de Soto, Lope de Vega, G6ngora, Quevedo, Salas Barbadillo, and others of less account. ANTONIO P^REZ 271 Of minor singers, such as L6pez Maldonado, the friend of Cervantes and of Lope, there were too many ; but Maldonado's Cancionero (1586) reveals a combination of sincerity and technical excellence which distinguishes him from the crowd of fluent versifiers typified by Pedro de Padilla. Devout songs, as simple as they are beautiful, are found in the numbers of Juan L6pez de tlbeda and of Francisco de Ocana, who may be studied in their respective cancioneros (1588, 1604), or much more briefly, and perhaps to better purpose in Rivade- neyra's Romancero y Cancionero sagrados. The chief of these pious minstrels was JOSE DE VALDIVIELSO (? 1560-1636), the author of a long poem entitled Vida, Excelencias y Muerte del gloriosisimo Patriarca San Jose" ; but it is neither by this tedious sacred epic nor by his twelve autos that Valdivielso should be judged. His lyrical gift, scarcely less sweet and sincere than Lope's own, is best manifested in his Romancero Espiritual, with its romances to Our Lady, its pious villancicos on Christ's birth, which anticipate the mingled devotion and famili- arity of Her rick's Noble Numbers. ANTONIO PREZ (1540-1611), once secretary to Felipe II., and in all probability the King's rival in love, figures here as a letter-writer of the highest merit. No Spaniard of his age surpasses him in clearness, vigour, and variety. Whether he attempt the vein of high gallantry, the flattery of " noble patrons," the terrorising of an enemy by hints and innuendos, his phrase is always a model of correct and spirited expression. In a graver manner are his Relaciones and his Memorial del hecho de su causa, which combine the dignity of a statesman with the ingenuity of an attorney. But in all circumstances Perez never fails to interest by the happy novelty of his thought, the 272 SPANISH LITERATURE weighty sententiousness of his aphorisms, and by his unblushing revelation of baseness and cupidity. To this period belongs also the Centon Epistolario, a series of a hundred letters purporting to be written by Fernan Gomez de Cibdareal, physician at Juan II.'s court. It is obviously modelled upon the Crdnica of Juan II.'s reign, and the imitation goes so far that, when the chronicler makes a blunder, the supposed letter- writer follows him. The Centon Epistolario is now ad- mitted to be a literary forgery, due, it is believed, to Gil Gonzalez de Avila, who wrote nothing of equal excellence under his own name. In these circumstances the Centon loses all historic value, and what was once cited as a monument of old prose must now be considered as a clever mystification perhaps the most perfect of its kind. Contemporary with Cervantes and Lope de Vega was the greatest of all Spanish historians, JUAN DE MARIANA (1537-1624). The natural son of a canon of Talavera, Mariana distinguished himself at Alcah^de Henares, was brought under the notice of Diego Lainez, General of the Jesuits, and joined the order, whose importance was * whence he passed to Sicily and Paris. In 1574 he re- A' ^\ /growing daily. At twenty-four Mariana was appointed professor of theology at the great Jesuit College in Rome, V turned to Spain, and was settled in the Society's house at Toledo. He was appointed to examine into the charges made by Leon de Castro against Arias Montano, whose Polyglot Bible appeared at Antwerp in 1569-72. Montano was accused of adulterating the Hebrew text, and among the Jesuits the impression of his trickery was general. After a careful examination, extending over two years, Mariana pronounced in Montano's favour. MARIANA 273 In 1599 there appeared his treatise entitled De Rege, with official sanction by his superiors. No Spaniard raised his voice against the book ; but its sixth chapter, which laid it down that kings may be put to death in certain circumstances, created a storm abroad. It was sought to prove that, if Mariana had never written, Ravaillac would not have assassinated Henri IV.; and, eleven years after publication, Mariana's book was publicly burned by the hangman. His seven Latin treatises, published at Koln in 1609, do not concern us here ; but they must be mentioned, since two of the essays one on immor- tality, the other on currency questions led to the writer's imprisonment. The main work of Mariana's lifetime was his Historia de Espana y written, as he says, to let Europe know what Spain had accomplished. It was not unnatural that, with a foreign audience in view, Mariana should address it in Latin ; hence his first twenty books were published in that language (1592). But he bethought him of his own country, and, in a happy hour, became his own translator. His Castilian version (1601) almost amounts to a new work ; for, in translating, he cut, amplified, and corrected as he saw fit. And in subsequent editions he continued to modify and improve. The result is a masterpiece of historic prose. Mariana was not minute in his methods, and his contempt for literal accuracy comes out in his answer to Lupercio de Argensola, who had pointed out an error in detail : " I never pretended to verify each fact in a history of Spain ; if I had, I should never have finished it." This is typical of the man and his method. He makes no pretence to special research, and he accepts a legend if he honestly can : even as he follows a common literary convention when he 274 SPANISH LITERATURE writes speeches in Livy's manner for his chief personages. But while a score of writers cared more for accuracy than did Mariana, his work survives not as a chronicle, but as a brilliant exercise in literature. His learning is more than enough to save him from radical blunders ; his impartiality and his patriotism go hand in hand ; his character-drawing is firm and convincing ; and his style, with its faint savour of archaism, is of unsurpassed dig- nity and clearness in his narrative. He cared more for the spirit than for the letter, and time has justified him. "The most remarkable union of picturesque chronicling with sober history that the world has ever seen " in such words Ticknor gives his verdict ; and the praise is not excessive. CHAPTER X THE AGE OF FELIPE IV. AND CARLOS THE BEWITCHED " ./ ^3~ rf 1621-1700 THE reign of Felipe IV. opens with as fair a promise of achievement as any in history. At Madrid, in the third and fourth decades of the seventeenth century, the court of the Grand Monarque was anticipated and perhaps outdone. We are inclined to think of Felipe as Velazquez has presented him, on his " Cordo- bese barb, the proud king of horses, and the fittest horse for a king " ; and to recall the praise which William Cavendish, first Duke of Newcastle, lavished on his horsemanship : " The great King of Spain, deceased, did not only love it and understand it, but was absolutely the best horseman in all Spain." Yet is it a mistake to suppose him a mere hunter. Art and letters were his constant care ; nor was he without a touch of individual accomplishment. He was not content with instructing his Ministers to buy every good picture offered in foreign markets : his own sketches show that he had profited by seeing Velazquez at work. It is no small point in his favour to have divined at a glance the genius of the unknown Sevillan master, and to have appointed him scarcely out of his teens court-painter. He likewise collated 275 X 276 SPANISH LITERATURE the artist, Alonso Cano, to a canonry at Granada, and, when the chapter protested that Cano had small Latin and less Greek, the King's reply was honourable to his taste and spirit : " With a stroke of the pen I can make canons like you by the score ; but Alonso Cano is a miracle of God." He would even stay the course of justice to protect an artist. Thus, when Velazquez's master, the half-mad Herrera, was charged with coin- ing, the monarch intervened with the remark : " Remem- ber his St. Hermengild." Music becalmed the King's fever, and the plays at the Buen Retiro vied with the masques of Whitehall. His antechambers were thronged with men of genius. Lope de Vega still survived, his glory waxing daily, though the best part of his life's work was finished. Velez de Guevara was the royal chamberlain ; Gongora, the court chaplain, hated, envied, and admired, was the dreaded chief of a combative poetic school ; his disciple, Villamediana, struck terror with his vitriolic epigrams, his rancorous tongue ; the aged Maria- na represented the best tradition of Spanish history ; Bartolome' de Argensola was official chronicler of Arag6n; Tirso de Molina, Ruiz de Alarc6n, and Rojas Zorrilla filled the theatres with their brilliant and ingenious fancies ; the incorruptible satirist, Quevedo, was private secre- tary to the King ; the boyish Calder6n was growing into repute and royal favour. Of the Aragonese playwright, Lupercio Leonardo de Argensola, we have already spoken in a previous chapter. is brother, BARTOLOM LEONARDO DE ARGENSOLA (1562-1631), took orders, and, through the influence o the Duque de Villahermosa, was named rector of the town whence his patron took his title. His earliest work, the Conquista de las Islas Molucas (1609), written by THE ARGENSOLAS 277 order of the Conde de Lemos, is uncritical in conception and design ; but the matter of its primitive, romantic, and even sentimental legends derives fresh charm from the author's apt and polished narrative. In 1611 he and his brother accompanied Lemos to Naples, thereby stirring the anger of Cervantes, who had hoped to be among the Viceroy's suite, as appears from a passage in the Viaje del Parnaso, which roundly insinuates that the Argensolas were a pair of intriguers. The dis- appointment was natural ; yet posterity is even grateful for it, since a transfer to Naples would certainly have lost us the second Don Quixote. Doubtless the Argen- solas, who were of Italian descent, were better fitted than Cervantes for commerce with Italian affairs, and Barto- lome made friends on all sides in Naples as in Rome. On his brother's death in 1613, he became official chronicler of Arag6n, and, in 1631, published a sequel to Zurita, the Angles de Arag6n, which deals so minutely with the events of the years 1516-20 as to become wearisome^ dejscite all Argensola's grace of manner, i'he &imas of the two brothers, published posthumously in 1634 by Lupercio's son, Gabriel Leonardo de Albi6n, was stamped with the approval of the dictator, Lope de Vega, who declared that the authors "had come from Arag6n to reform among our poets the Castilian language, which is suffering from new horrible phrases, more puzzling than enlightening." This is an overstatement of a truth, due to Lope's aversion from Gongorism in all its shapes. Horace is the model of the Argensolas, whose renderings of the two odes Ibam forte via sacra and Beatus ille are among the happiest of versions. Their sobriety of thought is austere, and their classic correctness of diction is in 278 SPANISH LITERATURE curious contrast with the daring innovations of their time. Lupercio has a polite, humorous fancy, which shows through Mr. Gibson's translation of a well-known sonnet : " / must confess, Don John, on due inspection, That dame Elvira 's charming red and white, Though fair they seem, are only hers by right, In that her money purchased their perfection ; But thou must grant as well, on calm reflection, That her sweet lie hath such a lustre bright, As fairly puts to shame the paler light, And honest beauty of a true complexion ! And yet no wonder I distracted go With such deceit, when 'tis within our ken That nature blinds us with the self-same spell; For that blue heaven above that charms us so, Is neither heave nor blue ! Sad pity then That so much beauty is not truth as well" manifold interests in politics, in history, and in the theatre left him little time for poetry, and a large proportion of his verses were destroyed after his / / Jp death ; still, partially represented as he is, the pretty wit, the pure idiom, and elegant form of his lyrical pieces vindicate his title to rank among Castilian poets of the second order. As for Bartolome', he resembles his brother in natural faculty, but His fibre is stronger. A hard, dog- matic spirit, a bigot in his reverence for convention, an idolater of Terence, with a stern, patriotic hatred of novelties, he was regarded as the standard-bearer of the anti-Gongorists. Too deeply ingrained a doctrinaire to court popularity, he was content with the applause of a literary clique, and had practically no influence on his * * -i _ _________ """ "* "" '" ' *^ ^* age._ Yet his precept was valuable, and his practice, always sound, reaches real excellence in such devout numbers as his Sonnet to Providence. GONGORA 279 Much meritorious academic verse is found in the works of other contemporary writers, though most rivals lapse into errors of taste and faults of expression from which the younger "Argensola is honourably free. But no great leader is formed in the school of prudent cor- rectness, and by temperament, as well as by training, the Rector of Villahermosa was unfit to cope with so virile and so combative a genius as Luis DE ARGOTE Y G6NGORA>*r-"- (1561-1627), the ideal chief of an aggressive movement.. Son of Francisco de Argote, Corregidor of Cordoba, and of Leonora de G6ngora, he adopted his mother's name, partly because of its nobility and partly because of its euphony. In his sixteenth year G6ngora left his native C6rdoba to read law at Salamanca, with a view to follow- ing his father's profession ; but his studies were never serious, and, though he took his bachelor's degree, he gave most of his time to fencing and to dancing. To the consternation of his family, he abandoned law and announced himself as a professional poet. So early as 1585 Cervantes names him in the Canto de Caliope as a rare and matchless genius raro ingenio sin segundo and, though flattery from Cervantes is too indis- criminating to mean much, the mention at least implies that G6ngora's promise was already recognised. Few details of his career are with us, though rumour tells of platonic love-passages with a lady of Valencia, Luisa de Cardona, who finally entered a convent in Toledo. His repute as a poet, aided by his mother's connection with the ducal house of Almod6var, won for him a lay canonry in 1590, and this increase of means enabled him to visit the capital, where he was instantly hailed as a wit and as a brilliant poet. His fame had hitherto been local ; with the publication of his verses in Espinosa's Floresde Poetas. 19 280 SPANISH LITERATURE ilustres (1605), it passed through the whole of Spain. In the same year, or at latest in 1606, G6ngora was ordained priest. His private life was always exemplary, and this, together with his natural harshness, perhaps explains his intolerance for the foibles of Cervantes and of Lope. When the favourite, the Duque de Lerma, fell from power, G6ngora attached himself to Sandoval, who nominated him to a small prebend at Toledo. As chap- lain to the King, the poet's circle of friends enlarged, and his literary influence grew correspondingly. In 1626 he had a cerebral attack, during which the phy- sicians of the Queen attended him. The story that he died insane is a gross exaggeration : he lingered on a year, having lost his memory, died of apoplexy at Cordoba on May 23, 1627, and is buried in the St. Bartholomew Chapel of the cathedral. An entremes entitled La destrucci6n de Troya, a play called Las Firmezas de Isabela (written in collaboration with his brother, Juan de Argote), and a fragment, the Comedia Venatoria, remain to show that Gongora wrote for the stage. Whether he was ever played is doubtful, and, in any case, his gift is not dramatic. He was so curiously careless of his writings that he never troubled to print or even to keep copies of them, and a remark which he let fall during his last illness goes to show his artistic dissatisfaction : " Just as I was beginning to know something of the first letters in my alphabet does God call me to Himself: His will be done!" His poems circulated mostly in manuscript copies, which underwent so many changes that the author often knew not his own work when it returned to his hands ; and, but for the piety of Juan L6pez de Vicuna, G6ngora might be for us the shadow of a great name. Lopez de 'Jt&fe GONGORA'S FIRST MANNER 281 Vicuna spent twenty years in collecting his scattered verse, which he published in the very year of the poet's death, under the resounding title of Works in Verse of the Spanish Homer. A later and better edition was pro- duced by Gonzalo de Hoces y Cordoba (1633). G6ngora began with the lofty ode, as a strict observer of literary tradition, a reverent imitator of Herrera's heroics. His earliest essays are not very easy to dis- tinguish from those of his contemporaries, save that his tone is nobler and that his execution is more conscien- tious. He was a craftsman from the outset, and his technical equipment is singularly complete. So far was he from showing any freakish originality, that he is open to the reproach of undue devotion to his masters. His thought is theirs as much as are his method, his form, his ornament, his ingenuity. An example of his early style is his Ode to the Armada, of which we may quote a stanza from Churton's translation : " O Island, once so Catholic, so strong, Fortress of Faith, now Heresy's foul shrine, Camp of trained war, and Wisdom's sacred school ; The time hath been, such majesty was thine, The lustre of thy crown was first in song. Now the dull weeds that spring by Stygian pool Were fitting wreath for thee. Land of the rule Of Arthurs, Edwards, Henries ! Where are they? Their Mother where, rejoicing in their sway, Firm in the strength of Faith f To lasting shame Condemned, through guilty blame Of her who rules thee now. O hateful Queen, so hard of heart and brow, Wanton by turns, and cruel, fierce, and lewd, Thou distaff on the throne, true virtues bane, Wolf-like in every mood, May Heaven 's just fiame on thy false tresses rain/* 282 SPANISH LITERATURE This is excellent of its kind, and among all Herrera's imitators none comes so near to him as Gongora in lyrical melody, in fine workmanship, in ji certain clear distinction of utterance. Yet already there are hints of qualities destined to bear down their owner. Not con- tent with simple patriotism, with denunciation of schism and infidelity, G6ngora foreshadows his future self as a very master of gibes and sneers. The note of alti- sonance, already emphatic in Herrera, is still more forced in the young Cordoban poet, who adds a taste for far- fetched conceits and extravagant metaphor, assuredly not learned in the Sevillan school. Rejecting experiments in the stately ode, he for many years continued his practice in another province of verse, and by rigorous discipline he learned to excel in virtue of his fine simplicity, his graceful imagery, and his urbane wit. It should seem that intellectual self-denial cost him little, for his trans- formations are among the most complete in literary history. Consider, for instance, the interval between the emphatic dignity of his Armada ode and the charm- ing fancy, the distinguished cynicism of Love in Reason, as Archdeacon Churton gives it : " / love thee, but let love be free : I do not ask, 1 would not learn, What scores of rival hearts for thee Are breaking or in anguish burn. You die to tell, but leave untold, The story of your Red- Cross Knight, Who proffered mountain-heaps of gold If he for you might ride and fight; Or how the jolly soldier gay Would wear your colours, all and some; But you disdain \i their trumpefs bray, And would not hear their tuck of drum. . GGNGORAS SECOND MANNER 283 We love ; but 'tis the simplest case : The faith on which our hands have met Isjix'd, as wax on deeds of grace, To hold as grace, but not as debt. For well I wot that nowadays Lovers conquering bow is soonest bent By him whose valiant hand displays The largest roll of yearly rent. . . , So let us follow in the fashion, Let love be gentle, mild, and cool : For these are not the days of passion, But calculation's sober rule. Your grace will cheer me like the sun; But I can live content in shades. Take me : you'll find when all is done, Plain truth, and fewer serenades." Even in translation the humorous amenity is not alto- gether lost, though no version can reproduce the technical perfection of the original. For refined wit and brilliant effect Gongora has seldom been exceeded ; yet his fighter pieces i ailed to bring mm trie renown and the high promotion which he expected. He feigned to despise popularity, declaring that he " desired to do something that would not be for the general " ; but none was keener than he in courting applause on any terms. He would dazzle and surprise, if he could not enchant, his public, and forthwith he set to founding .-+ the school which bears the name of culteranismo. We ;r ' do not know precisely when he first practisecTuT this vein ; but it seems certain that he was anticipated by a young soldier, Luis de Carrillo y Sotomayor (1583- 1610), whose posthumous verses were published by his brother at Madrid in 1611. Carrillo had served in Italy, where he came under the spell of Giovanni Battista 284 SPANISH LITERATURE Marino, then at the height of his influence ; and the Obras of Carrillo contain the first intimations of the new manner. Many of Carrillo's poems are admirable for their verbal melody, his eclogues being distinguished for simple sincerity of sentiment and expression. But these passed almost unnoticed, for Carrillo was only doing well what Lope de Vega was doing better ; and in fact it seems likely that the merits of the dead soldier- poet were unjustly overlooked by a generation which was content with two editions of his works. He found, however, a passionate admirer in Gongora, who perceived in such work as Carrillo's Sonnet to the Patience of his Jealous Hope the possibilities of a revolu- tion^ When Carrillo writes of " the proud sea bathing the blind forehead of the deaf sky," he is merely setting down a tasteless conceit, which gains nothing by a forced inversion of phrase ; but, as it happened, conceit of this sort was a novelty in Spain, and G6ngora, who had already shown a tendency to preciosity in Espinosa's collection, resolved to develop Carrillo's innovation. Few questions are more debated and less understood than this of Gongorism. So good a critic as Karl Hillebrand gives forth this strange utterance : " Not only Italian and German Marinists were imitators of Spanish Gongorists : even your English Euphuism of Shakespeare's time had its origin in the culteranismo of Spain." One hardly likes to accuse Hillebrand. of writing nonsense, but he certainly comes near, perilously near it in this case. Lyly's Euphues was published in 1579, while Gongora was still a student at Salamanca, and Shakespeare died nearly twelve years before a line of G6ngora's later poems was in print. Spanish scholars, indeed, disclaim responsibility for Euphuism in any EUPHUISM AND GONGORISM 285 shape. They refuse to admit that Lord Berners' or North's translations of Guevara could have produced the effects ascribed to them ; and they argue with much reason that Gongorism is but the local form of a disease which attacked all Europe. However that may be, there can exist no possible connection between English Euphuism and Spanish Gongorism, save such as comes from a common Italian origin. Gongorism derives directly from the Marinism propagated in Spain by Carrillo, though it must be confessed that Marino's extravagances pale beside those of Gongora. This, in fact, is no more than we should expect, for Marino's conceits were, so to say, almost natural to him, while Gongora's are a pure effect of affectation. He wilfully got rid of his natural directness, and g:ive himself to cultivating artificial antithesis, violent inver- sions of words and phrases, exaggerated metaphors piled upon sense tropes devoid of meaning. Other poets appealed to the vulgar : he would charm the cultivated los cultos. Hence the name culteranismo. 1 At the same time it is fair to say that he has been blamed for more crimes than he ever committed. Ticknor, more than most critics, loses his head when- ever he mentions Gongora's name, and holds the Spaniard up to ridicule by printing a literal translation of his more daring flights. Thus he chooses a passage from the first of the Soledades, and asserts that G6ngora sings the praise of " a maiden so beautiful, that she might parch up Norway with her two suns, and bleach Ethiopia with her two hands." Perhaps no poet that 1 According to Lope de Vega, the word culteranismo was invented by Jimenez Paton, Villamediana's tutor. 236 SPANISH LITERATURE ever lived would survive the test of such bald, literal rendering as this, and a much more exact notion of the Spanish is afforded by Churton : " Her twin-born sun-bright eyes Might turn to summer Norway's wintry skies; And the white "wonder of her snowy hand Blanch with surprise the sons of Ethiopian land" Another sonnet on Luis de Bavia's Historia Pontifical is presented in this fashion : "This poem which Bavia has now offered to the world, if not tied up in numbers, yet is filed down into a good arrangement, and licked into shape by learning ; is a cultivated history, whose grey-headed style, though not metrical, is combed out, and robs three pilots of the sacred bark from time, and rescues them from oblivion. But the pen that thus immortalises the heavenly turnkeys on the bronzes of its history is not a pen, but the key of ages. It opens to their names, not the gates of failing memory, which stamps shadows on masses of foam, but those of immor- tality." This, again, is translation of a kind of a kind very current among fourth-form boys, and, perpetrated by such an excellent scholar as Ticknor, is to be accepted as intentional caricature of the original. Once more the loyal Churton shall elucidate his author : " This offering to the world by Bavia brought Is poesy, by numbers unconfined; Such order guides the masters march of mind, Suck skill refines the rich-drawn ore of thought. The style, the: matter, gray experience tauglit, Arfs rules adorn' d what metre might not bind: The tale halh baffled time, that thief unkind, And from Oblivion 's bonds with toil hath brought THE SOLEDADES 287 Three helmsmen ofihe sacred barque ; the pen, That so these heavenly wardens doth enhance, No pen, but rather key of 'Fame 's proud dome, Opening her everlasting doors to men, Is no poor drudge recording things of chance, Which paints her shadowy forms on trembling foam" Still, when all allowance is made, it must be confessed that G6ngora excels in hiding his meanings. By many his worst faults were extolled as beauties, and there was formed a school of disciples who agreed with Le Sage's Fabrice in holding the master for "le plus beau gnie que 1'Espagne ait jamais produit." But G6ngora was not to conquer without a struggle. One illustrious writer was an early convert : Cervantes proclaimed himself an admirer of the Polifemo, which is among the most diffi- cult of G6ngora's works. Pedro de Valencia, one of Spain's best humanists, was the first to denounce G6n- gora's transpositions, licentious metaphors, and verbal inventions as manifested in the Soledades (Solitary Musings), round which the controversy Taged hottest. Within twenty-five years of Gongora's death the first Soledad found an English translator in the person of Thomas Stanley (1651), who renders in this fashion: "'Twos now the blooming season of the year, And in disguise Europas ravisher {His brow arm d with a crescent, with such beams Encompast as the sun unclouded streams The sparkling glory of the zodiac.') led His numerous herd along the azure mead. When he, whose right to beauty might remove The youth of Ida from the cup of Jove, ShipwrecKt, rcpulJd, and absent, did complain Of his hard fate and mistress's disdain; With such sad sweetness that the winds, and sea, In sighs and murmurs kept him company. . . . 288 SPANISH LITERATURE By this time night begun fungild the skies, /fills from the sea, seas from the hills arise, Confusedly unequal; when once more The unhappy youth invested in the poor Remains of his late shipwreck, through sharp briars And dusky shades up the high rock aspires. The steep ascent scarce to be reacKd by aid Of wings he climbs, less weary than afraid. At last he gains the top ; so strong and high As scaling dreaded not, nor battery, An equal judge the difference to decide ' Twixt the mute load and ever-sounding tide. His steps now move secured; a glimmering light (The Pharos of some cottage} takes his sight." And so on in passages where the darkness grows denser at every line. "Cest 1'obscurite qui en fait tout le merite," as Fabrice observes when Gil Bias fails to understand his friend's sonnet. Valencia's protest was followed by another from the Sevillan, Juan de Jauregui, whose preface to his Rimas (1618) is a literary manifesto against those poems "which only contain an embellishment of words, being phan- toms without soul or body." Jauregui returned to the attack in his Discurso poetico (1623), a more formal and elaborate indictment of the whole Gongoristic move- ment. This treatise, of which only one copy is known to exist, has been reprinted with some curtailments by Sr. Menendez y Pelayo in his Histona de las Ideas Esttticas en Espaila. It deserves study no less for its sound doc- I trine than for the admirable style of the writer, whose courtesy of tone makes him an exception among the polemists of his time. As Jauregui represents the oppo- sition of the Seville group, so Manuel Faria y Sousa, the editor of the Lusiadas, speaks in the name of Portugal. Faria y Sousa's theory of poetics is the simplest possible : G6NGORA AND LOPE 289 there is but one great poet in the world, and his name is Camoes. Faria y Sousa transforms the Lusiadas into a dull allegory, where Mars typifies St. Peter ; he writes down Tasso as " common, trivial, not worth mentioning, poor in knowledge and invention " ; and, in accordance with these principles, he accuses Gdngora of being no allegorist, and protests that to rank him with Camoes is to compare " Marsyas to Apollo, a fly to an eagle." A more formidable opponent for the Gongorists was Lope de Vega, who was himself accused of obscurity and affectation. Bouhours, in his Maniere de bien penser dans les ouvrages d'esprit (1687), tells that the Bishop of Belley, Jean-Pierre Camus, meeting Lope in Madrid, cross-examined him as to the meaning of one of his sonnets. With his usual good-nature, the poet listened, and " ayant left et releu plusieurs fois son sonnet, avoua sincerement qu'il ne 1'entendoit pas luy mesme." It must have irked his inclination to take the field against Gongora, for whom he had a strong personal liking : " He is a man whom I must esteem and love, accepting from him with humility what I can understand, and admiring with veneration what I cannot understand." Yet he loved truth (as he understood it) more than he loved Socrates. " You can make a culto poet in twenty- four hours : a few inversions, four formulas, six Latin words, or emphatic phrases and the trick is done," he writes in his Respuesta ; and he follows up this plain speaking with a burlesque sonnet. Of Faria y Sousa and his like, G6ngora made small account : he fastened upon Lope as his victim, pursuing him with unsleeping vindictiveness. There is something pathetic in the Dictator's endeavours to soften his perse- cutor's heart. He courts Gongora with polite flatteries in 2QO SPANISH LITERATURE print; he dedicates to G6ngora the play, Amor secreto ; he writes G6ngora a private letter to remove a wrong impression given by one Mendoza ; he repeats G6ngora's witty sayings to his intimates ; he makes personal over- tures to G6ngora at literary gatherings ; and, if G6ngora be not positively rude, Lope reports the fact to the Duque de Sessa as a personal triumph : " Estd mas humane conmigo, que le debo de haber parepdo mas ombre de bien de lo que tt me ymaginava " (" He is gentler with me, and I must seem to him a better fellow than he thought "). Despite all his ingratiating arts, Lope failed to conciliate his foe, who rightly regarded him as the chief obstacle in culteranismd s road. The relentless riddlemonger lost no opportunity of ridiculing Lope and his court in such a sonnet as the following, which Churton Englishes with undisguised gusto : " Dear Geese, whose haunt is where weak waters flow, From rude Castilian well-head, cheap supply, That keeps your flowery Vega never dry, True Vega, smooth, but somewhat flat and low ; Go ; dabble, play, and cackle as ye go Down that old stream of gray antiquity; And blame the waves of nobler harmony, Where birds, whose gentle grace you cannot know, Are sailing. Attic wit and Roman skill Are theirs; no swans that die in feeble song, But nursed to life by Heliconian rill, Where Wisdom breathes in Music. Cease your wrong, Flock of the troubled pool : your vain endeavour Will doom you else to duck and dive for ever." The warfare was carried on with singular ferocity, the careless Lope offering openings at every turn. " Remove those nineteen castles from your shield," sang G6ngora, deriding Lope's foible in blazoning his descent. The GONGORISM TRIUMPHANT 291 amour with Marta Nevares Santoyo was the subject of obscene lampoons innumerable. A passage in the Filo- mena volume arabesques the story of Perseus and Andro- meda with a complimentary allusion to an anonymous poet whose name Lope withheld : " so as not to cause annoyance." G6ngora's copy of the Filomena exists with this holograph annotation on the margin: "If you mean yourself, Lopillo, then you are an idiot without art or judgment." Yet, despite a hundred brutal per- sonalities, Lope went his way unheeding, and on G6n- gora's death he penned a most brilliant sonnet in praise of that " swan of Betis," for whom his affection had never changed. Gongora lived long enough to know that he had triumphed. Tirso de Molina and Calder6n, with most of the younger dramatists, show the culto influence in many plays ; Jauregui forgot his own principles, and accepted the new mode ; eyen_Lqpe himself^ in _ passages of his later writings, yielded to preciosity. Quevedo began by quoting Epictetus's aphorism : Scholasticum esse animal quod ab omnibus irridetur. And he renders the Latin in his own free style : " The culto brute is a general laughing-stock." But the " culto brute " smiled to see Quevedo given over to conceptismo, an affectation not less disastrous in effect than G6ngora's own. Mean- while enthusiastic champions declared for the Cordoban master. Martin de Angulo y Pulgar published his Epis- tolas satisfactorias (1635) in answer to the censures of the learned Francisco de Cascales ; Pellicer preached the Gongoristic gospel in his Lecciones solemnes (1630) ; the Defence of the Fable of Pyramus and Thisbe fills a quarto by Cris!6bal de Salazar Mardones (1636) ; Garcia de Salcedo Coronel's huge commentaries (1636-46) are I u. 292 SPANISH LITERATURE perhaps, more obscure than anything in his author's text ; and, so far away as Peru, Juan de Espinosa Medrano, Rector of Cuzco, published an Apologetico en favor de Don Luis de Gongora, Principe de los Poetas Lyricos de Espana (1694). There came a day when, as Salazar y Torres informs us, the Polifemo and the Sole- dades were recited on Speech-Day by the boys in Jesuit schools. It took Spain a hundred years to rid her veins of the Gongoristic poison, and Gongorism has now become, in Spain itself, a synonym for all that is bad in literature. Undoubtedly G6ngora did an infinite deal of mischief : I rty* s tricks f transposition were too easily learned by t V^ those hordes of imitators who see nothing but the obvious, and his verbal audacities were reproduced by men without a tithe of his taste and execution. And yet, though it be an unpopular thing to confess, one has a secret sympathy with him in his campaign. Lope de Vega and Cervantes are as unlike as two men may be ; but they are twins in their slapdash methods, in their indifference to exquisiteness of form. Their fatal faci- lity is common to their brethren : threadbare phrase, accepted without thought and repeated without heed, is, as often as not, the curse of the best Spanish work. It was, perhaps, not altogether love of notoriety which seduced G6ngora into Carrillo's ways. He had, as his earliest work proves, a sounder method than his fellows and a purer artistic conscience. No trace of care- lessness is visible in his juvenile poems, written in an obscurity which knew no encouragement. It is just to believe that his late ambition was not all self-seeking, and that he aspired to renew, or rather to enlarge, the poetic diction of his country. ( 1596-1 669) shows rare poetic qualities in his Eroticas 6 Amatorias (1617), in which he announces himself as the rising sun. Sicut sol matu- tinus is printed on his title-page, where those waning stars, Lope, Calder6n, and Quevedo, are also supplied CONCEPTISMO 299 with a prophetic motto: Me surgente, quid istcz? His imitations of Anacreon and Catullus are done with amaz- ing gusto, all the more wonderful when we remember that his " sweet songs and suave delights " were written at fourteen, retouched and published at twenty. But Villegas is one of the great disappointments of Castilian literature : he married in 1626, deserted verse for law, and ended life a poor, embittered attorney. The Sevillan canon and royal librarian, FRANCISCO DE RIOJA (? 1586- 1659), follows the example of Herrera, his sonnets and silvas being distinguished for their correct form and their philosophic melancholy. But Rioja has been un- lucky. One poem, entitled Las Ruinas de Itdlica, has won for him a very great reputation ; and yet, in fact, as Fernandez-Guerra y Orbe has proved, the Ruinas is due to Rodrigo Caro (1573-1647), the archaeologist who wrote the Memorial de Utrera and the Antigiiedades de Sevilla. Adolfo de Castro goes further, ascribing the Epistola moral d Fabio to Pedro Fernandez de Andrado, author of the Libro de la Gineta. Thus despoiled of two admir- able pieces, Rioja is less important than he seemed thirty years since ; yet, even so, he ranks, with the Prfncipe de Esquihche (1581-1658) and the Conde de Rebolledo (1597-1676), among the sounder influences of his time. The Segovian poet, Alonso de Ledesma Buitrago (1552-1623), founded the school of conceptismo with its metaphysical conceits, philosophic paradoxes, and sen- tentious moralisings, as of a Seneca gone mad. His Concept os espirituales and Juegos de la Noche Buena (1611) lead up to the allegorical gibberish of his Monstruo Imaginado (1615), and to the perveried f _jj^Qr^iity of Alonso de Bonilla's Nuevo Jardin de Flores divinas (1617). Conceptismo was no less an evil than culteranismo, but it 300 SPANISH LITERATURE was less likely to spread : the latter played with words, the former with ideas. A bizarre vocabulary was enough for a man to pass -asculto; the conceptista must he equipped with various learning, and must have a smattering of philosophy. Under such chiefs as Ledesina and Bonilla the new mania must have died ; but conceptismo was in the air, and, as Carrillo seduced G6ngora, so Ledesma captured FRANCIS GOMEZ DE QUEVEDO Y VILLEGAS (1580-1645): (it should be said, however, that Quevedo nowhere mentions Ledesma by name). Like Lope, like Calder<5n, Quevedo was a highlander. His family boasted the punning motto : " I am he who stopped el que vedo the Moors' advance." His father (who died early) and mother both held posts at court. At Alcali de Henares, from 1596 onwards, Quevedo took honours in theology, law, French, Latin, Greek, Arabic, and Hebrew. He is also said to have studied medicine ; and certainly he hated Sangrado as Dickens hated Bumble. When scarcely out of his teens he corresponded with Justus Lipsius, who hailed him as /xeya KvSos 'Ifirjptov, and at Madrid he speedily became the talk of the town. Strange stories were told of him : that he had pinked his man at Alcala, that he ran Captain Rodrfguez through the body rather than yield him the wall, that he put an escaped panther to the sword, that he disarmed the famous fencing-master, Pacheco Narvaez. This last tale is true, and is curious in view of Quevedo's physical defects. His reply to Vicencio Valerio in Su Espada por Santiago is well known: "He says I hobble, and can't see. I should lie from head to foot if I denied it : my eyes and my gait would contradict me." For all his short sight and clubbed feet, he was ever too ready with his rapier. On Maundy Thursday, 1611, QUEVEDO 301 he witnessed a scuffle between a man and woman during Tenebrae in St. Martin's Church. He intervened, the argument was continued outside, swords were crossed, and Quevedo's opponent fell mortally wounded. As the man was a noble, Quevedo prudently escaped from possible consequences to Sicily. He returned to his estate, La Torre de Juan Abad, in 1612, but soon wearied of country life, and was sent on diplomatic missions to Genoa, Milan, Venice, and Rome. On Osuna's promotion to Naples, Quevedo became Finance Minister, proving himself a capable administrator. In 1618 he meddled in the Spanish plot which forms the motive of Otway's Venice Preserved, and, disguised as a beggar, escaped from the bravos told off to murder him. His public career ended at this time, for his subsequent appoint- ment as Felipe IV.'s secretary was merely nominal. In 1627 he shared in a furious polemic. Santa Teresa was canonised in 1622, and, at the joint instance of Carmelites and Jesuits, was made co-patron of Spain with Santiago. The Papal Bull (July 31, 1627) divided Spain into two camps. Quevedo, who was of the Order of Santiago " red with the blood of the brave " took up the cudgels for St. James, was branded a " hypocritical blackguard " by one party, and was extolled by the other as the " Captain of Combat," " the Ensign of the Apostle." He shamed Pope, King, Olivares, the religious, and half the laity, and the Bull was withdrawn (June 28, 1630). The victory cost him a year's exile, and when Olivares offered him the embassy at Genoa, he refused it, on the ground that he did not wish to have his mouth thus closed. After his unlucky marriage to Esperanza de Mendoza, widow of Juan Ferndndez de Heredia, he began a cam- paign against the royal favourite. Olivares' turn came 302 SPANISH LITERATURE in December 1639, when the King found by his plate a copy of verses urging him to cease his extravagance and to dismiss his incapable ministers. Quevedo was per- haps rightly suspected of writing these lines, was arrested at midnight, and was whisked away, half dressed, to the monastery of St. Mark in Le6n. For four years he was imprisoned in a cell below the level of the river, and, when released after Olivares' fall in 1643, his health was broken. A flash of his old humour appears in his reply to the priest who begged him to arrange for music at his funeral : " Nay, let them pay that hear it." As a prose writer he began with a Life of St. Thomas of Villanueva (1620), and ended with a Life of St. Paul the Apostle (1644). These, and his other moralisings Virtue Militant, the Cradle and the Tomb call for no notice here. The Politica de Dios (1618) is apparently an abstract plea for absolutism ; in fact, it exposes the weak- ness of Spanish administration just as the Marcus Brutus (1644) is a vehicle for opinions on contemporary politics. Learned and acute, these treatises show Quevedo's con- cern for his country's future, and a passage in his sixty- eighth sonnet forecasts the future of the Spanish colonies : " 'Tis likelier far, O Spain ! that what thou alone didst take from all, all will take from thee alone "- " Y es mdsfacil! oh Espana fen muchas modas Que lo que d todos les quitaste sola, Te puedan d ti sola guitar todos" The prophecy is just being fulfilled, and the chief interest of Quevedo's prose treatises lies in their conceptismo the flashy epigram, the pompous paradox, the strained antithesis, the hairsplitting and refining in and out of season. It was vain for Quevedo to edit Luis de Leon THE BUSC6N : THE VISIONS 303 and Torre as a protest against Gongorism, for in his own practice he substituted one affectation for another. The true and simpler Quevedo is to be sought else- where. His picaresque Historia de la Vida del Buscon, best known by its unauthorised title, El Gran Tacano (The Prime Scoundrel), though not published till 1626, was probably written soon after 1608. Pablo, son of a barber and a loose woman, follows a rich schoolfellow to Alcali, where he shines in every kind of devilry. Thence he passes into a gang of thieves, is imprisoned, lives as a sham cripple, an actor, a bravo, and finally his author being weary of him emigrates to America. There is no attempt at creating character, no vulgar ob- trusion of Alemdn's moralising tone : such amusement as the novel contains is afforded by the invention of heartless incident and the acrid rendering of villany. The harsh jeering, the intense brutality, the unsympathetic wit and art of the Buscon, make it one of the cleverest books in the world, as it is one of the cruellest and coarsest in its misanthropic enjoyment of baseness and pain. No less characteristic of Quevedo are his Suenos (Visions), printed in 1627. These fantastic pieces are really five in number, though most collections print seven or eight ; for the Infierno Enmendado (Hell Reformed) is not a vision, but is rather a sequel to the Politica de Dios ; the Casa de Locos de Amor is probably the work of Quevedo's friend, Lorenzo van der Hammen ; and the Fortunacon Seso was not written till 1635. Quevedo himself calls the SueHo de la Muerte (Vision of Death) the fifth and last of the series. Satire in Lucian's manner had already been in- troduced into Spanish literature by Valde"s in the Didlogo de Mercurio y Caron, in the Crotalon (which most autho- rities ascribe to Crist6bal de Villal6n), and in the Coloquio 304 SPANISH LITERATURE de los Perros. In witty observation and ridicule of whole sections of society, Quevedo almost vies with Cervantes, though his unfeeling cynicism gives his work an indi- vidual flavour. His lost poets are doomed to hear each other's verses for eternity, his statesmen jostle bandits, doctors and murderers end their careers as brethren, comic men dwell in an inferno apart lest their jokes should damp hell's fires, grim jests which may be read in Roger L'Estrange's spirited amplification. Quevedo's serious poems suffer from the conceptismo which disfigures his ambitious prose ; his wit, his com- plete knowledge of low life, his mastery of language show to greater advantage in his picaroon ballads and exercises in lighter verse. His freedom of tone has brought upon him an undeserved reputation for ob- scenity ; the fact being that lewd, timorous fellows have fathered their indecencies upon him. A passage from his Last Will of Don Quixote may be cited, as Mr. Gibson gives it, to illustrate his natural method : " Up and answered Sancho Panza; List to what he said or sung, With an accent rough and ready And a forty-parson tongue: "Tt's not reason, good my master, When thou goest forth, I wis, To account to thy Creator, Thou shouldst utter stuff like this} As trustees, name thou the Curate Who confesscth thee betimes, And Per Anton, our good Provost, And the goat-herd Gaffer Grimes; Make clean sweep of the Esplandians, Who have dinned us with their clatter; Call thou in a ghostly hermit, Who may aid thee in the matter} GUILLEN DE CASTRO 305 ' Well thou speakest] up and answered Don Quixote, nowise dumb ; ' Hie thee to the Rock of Dolour ; Bid Beltenebros to come ! ' " Overpraised and overblamed, Quevedo attempted too much. He had it in him to be a poet, or a theologian, or a stoic philosopher, or a critic, or a satirist, or a statesman : he insisted on being all of these together, and he has paid the penalty. Though he never fails ignominiously, he rarely achieves a genuine success, and the bulk of his writing is now neglected because of its local and ephemeral interest. Yet he deserves honour as the most widely-gifted Spaniard of his time, as a strong and honest man in a corrupt age, and as a brilliant writer whose hatred of the commonplace beguiled him into adopting a dull innovation. It is not likely that his numerous inedited lyrics will do more than increase our knowledge of Gongora's and Mont- alban's failings ; but the two plays promised by Sr. Menendez y Pelayo Como ha de ser el Privado and Pero Vazquez de Escamilla cannot but reveal a new aspect of a many-sided genius. Quevedo was not, however, known as a dramatist to the same extent as the Valencian, GUILLEN DE CASTRO Y BELLVIS (1569-1631), an erratic soldier who has achieved renown in and out of Spain. Castro is sometimes cre- dited with the Prodigio de los Monies, whence Calder6n derived his Mdgico Prodigioso, but the Prodigio is almost certainly by Lope. Castro's fame rests on his Mocedades del Cid(T\\& Cid's First Exploits), a dramatic adaptation of national tradition in Lope's manner. Ximena, daughter of Lozano, loves Rodrigo before the action begins, and, on Lozano's death by Rodrigo's hand, her passion and 306 SPANISH LITERATURE her duty are in conflict. Rodrigo's victories against the Moors help to expiate his crime : on a false rumour of his death, Ximena avows her love for him, and patriotism combines with inclination to yield a dramatic ending. Corneille, treating Castro's play with the freedom of a man of genius, founded the French school of tragedy ; but not all his changes are improvements. By limiting the time of action he needlessly emphasises the difficulty of the situation. Castro's device is sounder when he prolongs the space which shall diminish Ximena's filial grief and increase her admiration of the Cid. The strife between love and honour exists already in the Spanish, and Corneille's merit lies in his suppression of Castro's superfluous third act, in his magnificent rhetoric, be- side which the Spaniard's simplicity seems weak. But though Castro wrote no masterpiece, he begot one based upon his original conception, and some of Cor- neille's most admired tirades are but amplified trans- lations. Less remarkable as a playwright than as a novelist, the lawyer, TJTTIS_ .Vjjjijgz^njjt. ^ TTEV ^M_( T 57 Q - T ^43); is reputed to have written no fewer than four hundred pieces for the stage. Of these, eighty survive, mostly on historic themes, which as in El Valor no tiene Edad are treated with tiresome extravagance ; but the most diffi- cult critics have found praise for Mas peso, el Key que la Sangre (King First, Blood Second). The story is that, in the thirteenth century, Guzman the Good held Tarifa for King Sancho ; the rebel Infante, Don Juan, called upon him to surrender under pain of his son's death ; for answer, Guzman threw his dagger over the battle- ment, and saw the boy murdered before his eyes. Rarely has the old Castilian tradition of loyalty to the King been VELEZ DE GUEVARA 307 presented with more picturesque force, and few scenes in any dramatic literature surpass that last one on the raising of the siege, when Guzman points to his child's corpse. Velez de Guevara collaborated with Rojas Zo- rrilla and Mira de Amescua in The Devil's Suit against the Priest of Madrilejos, a play in which a lunatic girl saves her life by pleading demoniacal possession. The idea is characteristic of Guevara's uncanny invention ; but the Inquisition frowned upon stage representatives of exor- cism, and, though the author's orthodoxy was not ques- tioned, the play was withdrawn. He is best remembered for his satire El Diablo Cojuelo (1641), which describes observations taken during a flight through the air by a student who releases the Lame Devil from a flask, and is repaid by glimpses of life in courts and slums and stews. Le Sage, in his Diable Boiteux, has greatly im- proved upon the first conception ; but the original is of excellent humour, and the style is as idiomatic as the best Castilian can be. Felipe IV. is said to have smiled only three times in his life twice at quips by Guevara, who was his chamberlain. Of all Lope's imitators the most undisguised is the son of the King's bookseller, Doctor JUAN PEREZ DE MONTALBAN (1602-38), who became a priest of the Con- gregation of St. Peter in 1625. His father was plain Juan Perez (as who should say John Smith), and the son was cruelly bantered for his airs and graces: "Put Doctor in front and Montalban behind, and plebeian Perez shines an aristocrat." It was rumoured that his Orfeo (1624), written to compete with Jduregui, was really Lope's work, given by the patriarch to start his favourite in life. The story is probably false, for the verse lacks Lope's ease and grace ; but the Orfeo won Montalban 308 SPANISH LITERATURE a name, and there is no such luck for modern minor poets in 1625 a Peruvian merchant expressed his ad- miration by settling a pension on the young priest. Montalban lived in closest intimacy with Lope, who taught his young admirer stagecraft, and helped him with introductions to managers. Unluckily he sought to rival his master in fecundity as well as in method, and the effort broke him. He is often credited with writing the Tribunal of Just Vengeance, a work which describes Quevedo as " Master of Error, Doctor of Impudence, Licentiate of Buffoonery, Bachelor of Filth, Professor of Vice, and Archdevil of Mankind." Quevedo, on his side, had a grievance, inasmuch as Perez, the bookseller, had pirated the Buscon. He prophesied that Montalbin would die a lunatic, and, in fact, his words came true. Pellicer credits Montalban with literary theories of his own, but they are mere repetitions of Lope's precepts in the Arte Nuevo. Like his master, Montalban has a keen eye for a situation, for the dramatic value of a popular story, as he shows in his Amantes de Teruel, those eternal types of constancy ; but he writes too hurriedly, with more ambition than power, is infected with culteratusmo, and, though he apes Lope with superficial success in his secular plays, fails utterly when he attempts the sacred drama. His own age thought most highly of No hay Vida como la Honra, one of the first pieces to have a "run" on the Spanish stage; but the Amantes is his best work, and its vigorous dialogue may still be read with emotion. These lovers of Teruel were also staged by a man of genius whose pseudonym has completely overshadowed his family name of Gabriel Tellez. The career of TiRSO TIRSO DE MOLINA 309 DE MOLINA (1571-1648) is often dismissed in six lines packed with errors ; but the publication of Sr. Cotarelo y Mori's study has made such summary treatment im- possible in the future. Writers whose imagination does service for research have invented the fables that Tirso led a scandalous, stormy life, and that the repent- ant sinner took orders in middle age. These legends are baseless, and are conceived on the theory that Tirso's outspoken plays imply a deep knowledge of human nature's weak side and of the shadiest picaresque cor- ners. It appears to be forgotten that Tirso spent years in the confessional : no bad position for the study of frailty. It seems certain that he was born at Madrid, and that he studied at Alcala is clear from Mati'as de los Reyes' dedication of El Agravio agraviado. The date of his profession is not known ; but he is named as a Mercenarian monk and as " a comic poet " by the actor- manager, Andres de Claramonte y Corroy, in his Letania moral, written before 1610, though not printed till 1613. His holograph of Santa Juana is dated in 1613 from Toledo, where he also wrote his Cigarrales. Passages in La Gallega Mari Hernandez imply a residence in Galicia. That he lived in Seville, and visited the island of Santo Domingo, is certain, though the dates are not known. In 1619 he was Superior of the Mercenarian convent at Trujillo, an appointment which implies that he was a monk of long standing. In 1620 Lope dedi- cated to him Lo Fingido verdadero, and in the same year Tirso returned the compliment by dedicating his Villana de Vallecas to Lope. Though he competed in 1622 at the Madrid feasts in honour of St. Isidore, he failed to receive even honourable mention. Ten years later he became official chronicler of his order, and showed his 310 SPANISH LITERATURE opinion of his predecessor, Alonso Rem6n with whom he has been confounded, even by Cervantes by re- writing Rem6n's history. In 1634 ne was ma de Definidor General for Castile, and his name reappears as licenser of books, or in legal documents. He died on March 21, 1648, being then Prior at Soria, renowned as a preacher of most tranquil, virtuous life, the very opposite of what ignorant fancy has feigned of him. He is known to have written plays so recently as 1638, for the holograph of his Quinas de Portugal bears that date ; but the pre- face to the Deleitar Aprovechado shows that his popularity was on the wane in 1635. His last years were given to writing a Genealogia del Conde de Sdstago and the chronicle of the Mercenarian Order. Tirso's earliest printed volume is his Cigarralesde Toledo (1621 or 1624), so called from a local Toledan word for a summer country-house set down in an orchard. The book is a collection of tales and verse, supposed to be recited during five days of festivity which have fol- lowed a wedding. Tirso, indeed, announces stories and verse which shall last twenty days ; yet he breaks off at the fifth, announcing a Second Part, which never ap- peared. Critics profess to find in Tirso's tales some traces of Cervantes, who is praised in the text as the " Spanish Boccaccio " : the influence of the Italian Boccaccio is far more obvious throughout, and save for a tinge of Gongorism Los Tres Maridos burlados might well pass as a splendid adaptation from the Decamerone, Still, even in the Cigarrales the born play- wright asserts himself in C6mo han de ser los Amigos, in El Celoso prudente, and in one of Tirso's most brilliant pieces, El Vergonsoso en Palacio. A second collection entitled Deleitar Aprovechado (Business with Profit), TIRSO'S THEATRE 311 issued in 1635, contains three pious tales of no great merit, and several autos, one of which El Colmenero divino is Tirso's best attempt at religious drama. Essentially a dramatist, he is to be but partially studied in his theatre, of which the first part appeared in 1627, the third in 1634, the second and fourth in 1635, and the fifth in 1637. A famous play is the Condenado por Desconfiado (The Doubter Damned), of which some would deprive Tirso ; yet the treatment is specially charac- teristic of him. Paulo, who has left the world for a hermitage, prays for light as to his future salvation, dreams that his sins exceed his merits, and is urged by the devil to go to Naples to seek out Enrico, \vhose ending will be like his own. Paulo obeys, discovers Enrico to be a rook and bully, and in despair takes to a bandit's life. Meanwhile Enrico shows a hint of virtue by refusing to slay an old man whose appearance re- minds the bully of his own father, and kills the master who taunted him with flinching from a bargain. He escapes to where Paulo and his gang are hidden. Garbed as a hermit, Paulo vainly exhorts Enrico to confess, though the criminal finally repents, and is seen by Pedrisco Paulo's servant passing to heaven. Duped by the devil, Paulo refuses to believe Pedrisco's story, and dies damned through his own distrust and pride. The substance of this play, which is contrived with abounding skill and theological knowledge, is the old conflict between free-will and predestination. Some would ascribe the play to Lope, because the pastoral scenes are in his manner, but the notion that Lope would publish under Tirso's name is untenable. Sr. Menendez y Pelayo will not be suspected of a prejudice against Lope ; and he avers, in so many words, that the only 312 SPANISH LITERATURE playwright in Spain with enough theology to write the Condenado was Tirso, who, had he written nothing else, would rank among the greatest Spanish dramatists. The piece which has won Tirso immortality is his Burlador de Sevilla y Convidado de Piedra (The Seville Mocker and the Stone Guest), first printed at Barcelona in 1630 as the seventh of Twelve New Plays by Lope de Vega Carpio y and other Authors ; and the omission of the Burlador from all authorised editions has led critics of authority to question Tirso's authorship. 1 The dis- covery in 1878 of a new version caused Manuel de la Revilla to declare that the play was by Calder6n, on the ground that Calder6n's name is on the title-page, and that Calderdn never trespassed on other men's property. This is an overstatement : to mention but a few instances, Calderon's A Secreto Agravio Secreta Venganza is rearranged from Tirso's Celoso prudent e ; his Secreto d Voces from Tirso's Amar por Arte mayor, while the second act of Calder6n's Cabellos de Absalon is lifted, almost word for word, from the third act of Tirso's Venganza de Tamar. On the whole, then, Tirso may be taken as the creator of Don Juan. No analysis is needed of a play with which Mozart, the most Athenian of musicians, has familiarised mankind ; nor is transla- tion possible in the present corrupt state of the text. Whether or not there existed an historic Don Juan at Plasencia or at Seville is doubtful, for folklorists have found the story as far away from Spain as Iceland is ; but it is Tirso's glory to have so treated it that the world has accepted it as a purely Spanish conception. The Festin de Pierre (1659) by Dorimond, the Fils 1 See M. Farinelli's learned study, Don Giovanni: Note critiche (Torino, 1896), pp. 37-39. DON JUAN 313 Criminel (1660) of De Villiers, the Dom Juan (1665) of Moliere, the Nouveau Festin de Pierre (1670) of Rosi- mond, and the arrangement of Thomas Corneille, are but pale reflections of the Spanish type which passes onward from Shadwell's Libertine (1676) till it reaches the hands of Byron and Zorrilla and Barbey d'Aur6- villy and Flaubert (whose posthumous sketch comes closer back to the original). Of these later artists not one has succeeded in matching the patrician dignity, the infernal, iniquitous valour of the original. To have created a universal type, to have imposed a character upon the world, to have outlived all rivalry, to have achieved in words what Mozart alone has expressed in music, is to rank among the great creators of all time. If Tirso excelled in sombre force, he was likewise a master in the lighter comedy of El Vergonzoso en Palacio, where Mireno, the Shy Man at Court, is rendered with rare sympathetic delicacy, and in the farcical intrigue of Don Gil de las Calzas verdes (Don Gil of the Green Breeches), where the changes of Juana to Elvira or to Don Gil are such examples of subtle, gay ingenuity as delight and bewilder the reader no less than the comic trio of the Villana de Vallecas, or the picture of unctuous hypocrisy in Marta la piadosa. Tirso's fate was to be forgotten, not merely by the public, but by the very dramatists who used his themes ; and, as in Lope's case, the neglect is partly due to the rarity of his editions. Yet, even so, his eclipse is unaccountable, for his various gifts are hard to match in any litera- ture. He has not the disconcerting cleverness of Lope, nor has he Lope's infinite variety of resource ; more- over, his natural frankness has won him a name for 314 SPANISH LITERATURE indecency. Yet has he imagination, passion, individual vision, knowledge of dramatic effect. He could create character, and his women, if less noble, are more real than Lope's own in their frank emotion and seductive abandonment. At whiles his diction tends to Gongor- ism, as when in El Amor y la Amistad a personage, at sight of a mountain, babbles of " the lofty daring of the snow, the pyramid of diamond " ; but this is ex- ceptional, and his hostility to culteranismo inspired G6n- gora to write more than one stinging epigram. Tirso had not Lope's matchless facility, and, considering the maturity of the Spanish genius, it is strange that he should have written no play before 1606 or 1608. Moreover, he composed by fits and starts in moments snatched from duty, and, beginning late, he ended early. Even in these circumstances he could boast in 1621 that he had produced three hundred plays a number afterwards raised to four hundred. Only some eighty survive : in other words, four-fifths of his theatre has vanished, and the loss is surely great for those who would fain know every aspect of his genius. But enough remains to justify his high position, and his fame, like Lope's, grows from day to day. Of such dramatists as the courtly Antonio Hurtado de Mendoza (? 1590-1 644), and the festive Luis Belmontey Bermudez (1587-? 1650) mere mention must suffice : the former's Querer por sdlo querer may be read in an excel- lent version made by Sir Richard Fanshawe during his imprisonment " by Oliver, after the Battail of Worcester." Antonio Mira de Amescua (? 1578-1640), chaplain of Felipe IV., mingled the human with the divine, was praised by all contemporaries from Cervantes onwards, had the right lyrical note, and, if his plays were collected, RUIZ DE ALARC6N 315 might prove himself worthy of his dramatic fame; as it is, he is best known as a playwright from whom Calder6n, Moreto, and Corneille have borrowed themes. A more original talent is shown by JUAN Ruiz DE ALARCON (? 1581-1639), whose father was administrator of the Tlacho mines in Mexico. Ruiz de Alarcdn left Mexico for Spain in 1600, and studied at Salamanca for five years ; he returned to America in 1608 in the hope of being elected to a University chair, but the deformity a hunched back with which he was taunted his life long was against him, and he made for Spain in 1611. He entered the household of the Marques de Salinas, wrote some laudatory decimas for the Desengano de la Forluna in 1612, and next year produced his first play, the Seme/ante de si mismo, founded, like Tirso's Celosa de si misma, on the Curious Impertinent. It was no great success, but it made him known and hated. He was far too ready to attack others, being himself most vulner- able. Cristobal Suarez de Figueroa, who had jeered at Cervantes for " writing prologues and dedications when at death's door," spoke for others besides himself when he lampooned Alarc6n as "an ape in man's guise, an impudent hunchback, a ludicrous deformity." Tirso befriended the Mexican, while Mendoza, Lope, Quevedo, and the rest scourged him mercilessly ; and when his Antecristo (which Voltaire used in Mahomet] was played, a band of rioters ruined the performance by squirting oil on the spectators and firing squibs in the pit. Yet the women always crowded the house when his name was in the bill, and they made his fortune by contriving that his play, Siempre aynda la Verdad probably written in collaboration with Tirso should be given at court in 1623. Three years later he was named Member of 316 SPANISH LITERATURE Council for the Indies. His collected pieces were pub- lished in 1628 and 1634. Ruiz de Alarc6n was never popular in the sense that Lope and Calder6n were popular ; still, he had his successes, and no Spanish dramatist is better reading. Compared with his rivals he was sterile, for the total of his plays is less than thirty, even if we accept all the doubtful pieces ascribed to him. Lope excels him in invention, Tirso in force and fun, Calder6n in charm ; Ruiz de Alarc6n is less intensely national than these, and the very individuality the extraileza which Mont- alban noted with perplexity, makes him almost better appreciated abroad than at home. Corneille has based French tragedy upon Guillen de Castro's Mocedades del Cid; French comedy is scarcely less influenced by his adaptation of the Menteur from Ruiz de Alarcon's Verdad Sospechosa (Truth Suspected). Garcia has lied all his life, lies to his father, his friends, his betrothed, lies to him- self, and defeats his own purpose by his ingenuity. He would speak the truth if he could, but he has no talent that way. Why trouble with truth when lying comes easier ? His father, Beltrdn, perceives that the miser enjoys money, that murder slakes vengeance, that the drunkard grows glorious with wine ; but his son's failing is beyond him. The noble Philistine has not the artist's soul, and cannot understand why Garcfa should lie for lying's sake, against his own interest. Throughout the play Ruiz de Alarc6n is never once at fault, and the gay ingenuity with which he enforces the old moral, that honesty is the best policy, is equalled by his masterly creation of character. Ethics are his preoccupation ; yet, though almost all his plays seek to enforce a lesson, he nowhere descends to pulpiteering or merges the dra- ALARCCN'S THEATRE 317 matist in the teacher. While in Las Paredes Oyen (Walls have Ears) and in El Examen de Maridos (Husbands Proved) the triumph of the Verdad Sospechosa is re- peated, the more national play is admirably exampled in El Tejedor de Segovia (The Weaver of Segovia) and Ganar Amigos (How to Win Friends). There are greater Spanish playwrights than Ruiz de Alarcon : there is none whose work is of such even excellence. In so early a piece as the Cuevade Salamanca, though there is manifest technical inexperience, the mere writing is almost as good as in La Verdad Sospechosa. The very infertility at which contemporaries mocked is balanced by equality of execution. Lope and Calder6n have written better pieces, and many worse : no line that Ruiz de Alarcon published is unworthy of him. While his contemporaries were content to improvise at ease, he sat aloof, never joining in the race for money and applause, but filing with a scrupulous conscience to such effect that all his work endures. His chief titles to fame are his power of creating character and his high ethical aim. But he has other merits scarcely less rare : his versifica- tion is of extreme finish, and his spirited dialogue, free from any tinge of Gongorism, is a triumph of fine idiom over perverse influences which led men of greater natural endowment astray. His taste, indeed, is almost unerring, and it goes to form that sober dignity, that individual tone, that uncommon counterpoise of faculties which place him below and a little apart from the two or three best Spanish dramatists. If there be an exotic element in the quality of Ruiz de Alarcon's distinction as in his frugal dramatic method, the espanolismo of the land is incarnate in the genius of PEDRO CALDERON DE LA BARCA HENAO DE LA BARREDA 318 SPANISH LITERATURE Y RiAfJo (1600-1681), the most representative Spaniard of the seventeenth century. His father was Secretary to the Treasury, and, on this side, CaldenSn was ahighlander, like Santillana, Lope, and Quevedo ; he inherited a strain of Flemish blood through his mother, who claimed de- scent from the De Mons of Hainault. He was educated at the Jesuit Colegio Imperial in Madrid, and fond bio- graphers declare that he studied civil and canon law at Salamanca; this is mere assertion, unsupported by any proof. Though he is said to have written a play, El Carro del Cielo, at thirteen, he was not very precocious for a Spaniard, his first authentic appearances being made at the Feast of St. Isidore in 1620 and 1622. On the latter occasion he won the third prize, and was praised by the good-natured Lope as one " who in his tender years earns the laurels which time commonly awards to grey hairs." His Boswell, Vera Tasis, reports that he served in Milan and Flanders from 1625 to 1635 ; but there must be an error of date, for in 1629 he is found at Madrid drawing his sword upon the actor, Pedro de Villegas, who had treacherously stabbed Calderon's brother, and who fled for sanctuary to the Trinitarian Church. The Gongorist preacher, Paravi- cino, referred to the matter in public ; Calder6n replied by scoffing at "sermons of Barbary," and was sent to gaol for insulting the cloth. Pellicer signals another outburst in 1640, when the dramatist whipped out his sword at rehearsal and came off second best. These are pleasing incidents in a career of sombre respectability, though one half fears that the second is fiction. In 1637 Calder6n was promoted to the Order of Santiago, and in 1640 he served with his brother knights against the Catalan rebels, hastily finishing his Certamen de Amor CALDERON 319 y Celos (Strife of Love and Jealousy) so as to share in the campaign. He was sent to Madrid on some mili- tary mission in 1641 ; received from the artillery fund a monthly pension of thirty gold crowns ; was ordained priest in 1651 ; was made chaplain of the New Kings at Toledo in 1653 ; became honorary chaplain to Felipe IV. in 1663, when he joined the Congregation of St. Peter, which elected him its Superior in 1666. On taking orders, Calderon's intention was to forsake the secular stage, but he yielded to the King's command, and, so late as 1680, celebrated Carlos II.'s wedding with Marie Louise de Bour- bon. " He died singing, as they say of the swan," wrote Soli's to Alonso Carnero. When death took him he was busied with an auto, which was finished by Melchor de Le6n a fit ending to a happy, blameless life. Calder6n's prose writings are small in volume and in importance. The description (written under the name of his colleague, Lorenzo Ramirez de Prado) of the entry into Madrid of Felipe IV.'s second queen is an official performance. More interest attaches to a treatise on the dignity of painting, first printed in the fourth volume of Francisco Mariano Nifo's Cajon de Sastre literato (1781): "Painting," says Calder6n, "is the art of arts, dominating all others and using them as handmaids." He had an admirable gift of appreciation, and he proves it by rescuing from the oblivion of the Cancionero General such a ballad as Escriba's, which he quotes in Manos Blancos no ofenden, and again in El Mayor Mon- struo de los Celos. Churton's version of the song is not unhappy : " Come, death, ere step or sound I hear, Unknown the hour, unfett the pain; Lest the "wild joy to feel thee near, Should thrill me back to life again. 320 SPANISH LITERATURE Come, sudden as the lightning-ray, When skies are calm and air is still; E'en from the silence of its way, More sure to strike where'er it will. Such let thy secret coming be. Lest -warning make thy summons vain, And joy to find myself with thee Call back life's ebbing tide again" A great lyric poet, his lyrics are mostly included in his plays. One ballad, supposed to be a description of himself, written at a lady's request, is often quoted, and has been well Englished by Mr. Norman MacColl ; it is, however, unauthentic, being due to a Sevillan contem- porary, Carlos Cepeda y Guzman. 1 The earliest play printed with Calder6n's name is El Astrologo fingido (1632), and from 1633 onwards collected editions of his works were published ; but he had no personal concern in these issues, which so presented him that, as he pro- tested, he could not recognise himself. Though he printed a volume of autos in 1676, he was so indifferent as to the fate of his secular plays that he never troubled to collect them. Luckily, in 1680 he drew up a list of his pieces for the Duque de Veragua, the descendant of Columbus, and upon this foundation Vera Tasis constructed a posthumous edition in nine volumes. Roughly speak- ing, we possess one hundred and twenty formal plays, and some seventy autos, with a few entremeses of no great account. Calderon has been fortunate in death as in life ; for though his vogue never quite equalled that of his great predecessor, Lope, it proved far more enduring. From 1 Cp. Mr. Norman MacColl's Select Plays of Calderon (London, 1888), pp. xxvi.-xxx., and Gallardo's Ensayo de una Biblioteca Espanola (Madrid, 1866), vol. ii. col. 367, 368. CALDER6N AND SHELLEY 321 Lope's death to the close of the seventeenth century, Calder6n was chief of the Spanish stage ; and, though he underwent a temporary eclipse in the eighteenth century, his sovereignty was restored in the nineteenth by the enthusiasm of the German Romantics. He has suffered more than most from the indiscretion of ad- mirers. When Sismondi pronounced him simply a clever playwright, " the poet of the Inquisition," he was no further from the truth than the extravagant Friedrich Schlegel, who proclaimed that "in this great and divine master the enigma of life is not merely expressed, but solved " : thus placing him above Shakespeare, who (so raved the German) only stated life's riddle without attempting a solution. James the First once said to the ambassador whom Ben Jonson called " Old ^Esop Gondomar : " I know not how, but it seems to be the trade of a Spaniard to talk rodo- montade." It was no less the trade of the German Romantic, who mistook lyrism for scenic presentation. Nor were the Germans alone in their enthusiasm. Shelley met with Calderon's ideal dramas, read them "with inexpressible wonder and delight," and was tempted "to throw over their perfect and glowing forms the grey veil of my own words." The famous speech of the Spirit replying, in the Mdgico Prodigioso, to Cyprian's question, " Who art thou, and whence comest thou?" has become familiar to every reader of English literature : " Since thou desires t, I will then unveil Myself to thee ; -for in myself I am A world of happiness and misery; This I have lost, and that I must lament For ever- In my attributes I stood 322 SPANISH LITERATURE So high and so heroically great, In lineage so supreme, and with a genius Which penetrated with a glance the world Beneath my feet, that was by my high merit. A King whom I may call the King of kings, Because all others tremble in their pride Before the terrors of his countenance In his high palace roofed with brightest gems Of living light call them the stars of heaven Named me his counsellor. But the high praise Stung me with pride and envy, and I rose In mighty competition, to ascend His seat, and place my foot triumphantly Upon his subject thrones. Chastised, I know The depth to which ambition falls : too mad Was the attempt, and yet more mad were now Repentance of the irrevocable deed ; Therefore I close this ruin with the glory Of not to be subdued, before the shame Of reconciling me with him who reigns By coward cession. Nor was I alone, Nor am I now, nor shall I be alone; And there was hope, and there may still be hope, For many suffrages among his vassals Hailed me their lord and king, and many still Are mine, and many more shall be. Thus vanquished, though in fact victorious, I left his seat of empire" This " grey veil " serves but to heighten the noble poetic quality which turned a cooler head than Shelley's. Goethe was moved to tears, and, though towards the end he perceived the mischief wrought in Germany by the uncritical idolatry of Calder6n, he never ceased to ad- mire the only Spanish poet that he really knew. And in our time men like Schack and Schmidt have dedicated their lives to the propagation of the Calderonian gospel. Some part of the poet's fame is due to his translators, CALDERON'S QUALITIES 323 some also to the fact that for a long time there was no rival in the field. To the rest of Europe he has stood for Spain. Readers could not divine (and in default of editions they could not contrive to learn) that Calder6n, great as he is, comes far short of Lope's freshness, force, and invention, far short of Tirso's creative power and impressive conception. But Spaniards know better than to give him the highest place among their dramatic gods. He is too brilliant to be set aside as a mere follower of Lope's, for he rises to heights of poetry which Lope never reached ; yet it is simple history that he did but develop the seed which Lope planted. He made no attempt and there he showed good judgment to reform the Spanish drama ; he was content to work upon the old ways, borrowing hints from his predecessors, and, in a lazy mood, incorporating entire scenes. If we are to believe Viguier and Philarete Chasles, he went so far as to annex Corneille's Heraclius (1647), and publish it in 1664 as En esta vida todo es verdad y todo es mentira (In this Life All's True and All's False) ; but, as he knew no French, the chances are that both plays derive from a common source Mira de Amescua's Rueda de lafortuna (1614). In attempts to create character he almost always fails, and when he succeeds as in El Alcalde de Zala- mea he succeeds by brilliantly retouching Lope's first sketch. Goethe hit Calder6n's weak spot with the re- mark that his characters are as alike as bullets or leaden soldiers cast in the same mould ; and the constant lyrical interruptions go to show that he knew his own strength. Others might match and overcome him as a playwright : there was none to approach him in such magnificent lyrism as he allots to Justina in El Mdgico Prodigioso to be quoted here in FitzGerald's rendering : 324 SPANISH LITERATURE " Who that in his hour of glory Walks the kingdom of the rose, And misapprehends the story Which through all the garden blows; Which the southern air who brings It touches, and the leafy strings Lightly to the touch respond; And nightingale to nightingale Answering a bough beyond. . . . Lo! the golden Girasolt, That to hint by whom she burns, Over heaven slowly, slowly, As he travels, ever turns, And beneath the wat*ry main When he sinks, would follow fain, Follow fain from west to east, And then from east to west again. . . . So for her who having lighted In another heart the fire, Then shall leave it unrequited In its ashes to expire : After her that sacrifice Through the garden burns and cries, In the sultry, breathing air, In the flowers that turn and stare. . . " Such songs as these are, perhaps, better to read than to hear, and Calder6n is careful to supply a more popular interest. This he finds in three sentiments which are still most characteristic of the Spanish temperament : personal loyalty to the King, absolute devotion to the Church, and the "point of honour." Through good report and evil, Spain has held by the three principles which have made and undone her. These three sources of inspiration find their highest expression in the theatre of Calder6n. A favourite with Felipe IV., a courtly poet, if ever one there were, he becomes the mouth- piece of a nation when he deifies the King in the THE POINT OF HONOUR 325 Principe Constante, in La Banda y la Flor (The Scarf and the Flower), in Gudrdate de la Agua mansa (Beware of Still Water), and in a score of plays. Ticknor speaks of " CaldenSn's flattery of the great " : he over- looks the social condition implied in the title of Rojas Zorrilla's famous play, Del Rey abajo Ninguno (Nobody, under the King). A titular aristocracy, shorn of all power, counted for less than a foreigner can conceive in a land where half the population was noble, and the reverence which was centred on the person of the Lord's anointed evolved into a profound devotion, a fantastic passion as exaggerated as anything in Amadis. A Church which had inspired the seven-hundred-years' battle against the Moors, which had produced miracles of holiness and of genius like Santa Teresa and San Juan de la Cruz, which had stemmed the flood of the Reformation and rolled it back from the Pyrenees, was regarded as the one moral authority, the sole possible form of religion, and as the symbol of Latin unity under Spain's headship. The "point of honour" the vengeance wrought by husbands, fathers, and brothers in the cases of women found in dubious circumstances is harder to explain, or, at least, to justify ; yet even this was a perverted outcome of chivalresque ideals, very acceptable to men who esteemed life more cheaply than their neighbours. Calder6n's treatment of such a situation may be followed in FitzGerald's version of El Pintor de su Deshonra. The husband, who has slain his wife and her lover, confronts her father and friends : Prince. " Whoever dares Molest him, answers it to me. Open the door. But what is this f [Belardo unlocks the door. 326 SPANISH LITERATURE Juan (coming out). A picture Done by the Painter of his own Dishonour, In blood. I am Don Juan Roca. Such revenge As each would have of me now let him take As far as our life holds Don Pedro, who Gave me that lovely creature for a bride, And 1 return him a bloody corpse; Don Luis, who beholds his bosom 's son Slain by his bosom friend; and you, my lord, Who, for your favours, might expect apiece In some far other style than this. Deal with me as you list; 'twill be a mercy To swell this complement of death with mine; For all I had to do is done, and life Is worse than nothing now. Prince. Get you to horse And leave the wind behind you. Luis. Nay, my lord; Whom should he fly from ? Not from me at least, Who lotfd his honour as my own, and would Myself have helped him in a just revenge Et?n on an only son. Pedro. I cannot speak, But I bow down these miserable grey hairs To other arbitrament than the sword, Eitn to your Highness* justice. Prince. Be it so. Meanwhile Juan. Meanwhile, my lord, let me depart '/ Free, if you will, or not. But let me go, Nor wound these fathers with the sight of me, Who has cut off the blossom of their age Yea, and his own, more miserable than them all. They know me : that I am a gentleman, Not cruel, nor without what seenfd due cause Put on this bloody business of my honour; Which having done, I will be answerable Here and elsewhere, to all for all. Pnnce. Depart In peace. Juan. In peace! Come, Leonelo? THE EVOLUTION OF THE AUTOS 327 Similar motives are used by Lope de Vega and Tirso de Molina, both priests and grey-beards ; but the effect is more emphatic in Calder6n, and so early as 1683 his "immorality" was severely censured on the occasion of Manuel de Guerra y Ribera's eulogistic aprobacion. In this matter, as in most others, he is satisfied to follow and to exaggerate an existing convention. His heroes are untouched by Othello's sublime jealousy : they kill their victims in cold blood as something due to the self-respect of gentlemen placed in an absurd position. He rehandles the theme in A Secreto Agravio Secreta Venganza and in El Medico de su Honra ; but the right emotion is rarely felt by the reader, since Calderon himself is seldom fired by real passion, and writes his scene as a splendid exercise in literature. His genius is most visible in his autos sacramentales, a dramatic form peculiar to Spain. The word auto is first applied to any and every play ; then, the meaning be- coming narrower, an auto is a religious play, resembling the mediaeval Mysteries (Gil Vicente's Auto de San Martinho is probably the earliest piece of this type). Finally, a far more special sense is developed, and an auto sacramental comes to mean a dramatised exposition of the Mystery of the Blessed Eucharist, to be played in the open on Corpus Christi Day. The Dutch traveller, Frans van Aarssens van Sommelsdijk, has left an account of the spectacle as he saw it when Calder6n was in his prime. Borne in procession through the city, the Host was followed by sovereigns, courtiers, and the multitude, with artificial giants and pasteboard monsters tarascas at their head. Fifers, bandsmen, dancers of decorous measures accompanied the train to the cathedral. In the afternoon the assembly met in the public square, 328 SPANISH LITERATURE and the auto was played before the King, who sat beneath a canopy, the richer public, which lined the balconies, and the general, which rilled the road. Even for an educated Protestant nothing is easier than to confound an auto sacramental with a comedia devota or a comedia de santos : thus Bouterwek, in his History, and Longfellow, in his Outre- Her, have mistaken the Devocidn de la Cruz for an auto. The distinction is radical. The true auto has no secondary interest, has no mundane personages : its one subject is the Eucharistic Mystery exposed by allegorical characters. Denis Florence M'Carthy's version of Los Encantos de la Culpa (The Sorceries of Sin) enables English readers to judge the genre for themselves : Sin. "... Smell, come here, and with thy sense Test this bread, this substance, tell me Is it bread or flesh ? The Smell. Its smell Is the smell of bread. Sin. Taste, enter; Try it thou. The Taste. Its taste Is plainly that of bread. Sin, Touch, come; -why tremble f Say whafs this thou touchest. The Touch Bread. Sin. Sight, declare what thou discernest In this object. The Sight. Bread alone. Sin. Hearing, thou, too, break in pieces This material, 'which, as flesh, Faith proclaims, and penance preacheth; Let the fraction by its noise Of their error undeceive them : Say, is it so ? The Hearing. Ungrateful Sin, Though the noise in truth resembles That of bread when broken, yet CALDERtfN'S AUTOS 329 Faith and Penance teach us better. It is fleshy and what they call it I believe : that Faith asserteth Aught, is proof enough thereof. The Understanding. This one reason brings contentment Unto me. Penance. O man, why linger, Now that Hearing hath firm fetter* d To the Faith thy Understanding? QuickC regain the saving vessel Of the sovereign Church, and leave Sin's so highly sweet excesses. Thou, Ulysses, Circe's slave, Fly this false and" fleeting revel, Since, how great her power may de, Greater is the power of Heaven^ And the true Jove's mightier magic Will thy virtuous purpose strengthen. The Man. Yes, thou'rt right, O Understanding; Lead in safety hence my senses. All. Let us to our ship; for here All is shadowy and unsettled? As a writer of autos Calder6n is supreme. Lope, who outshines him at so many points, is far less dexterous than his successor when he attempts the sacramental play. This kind of drama would almost seem created for the greater glory of Calderon. The personages of his worldly plays, and even of his comedias devotas, tend to become personifications of revenge, love, pride, charity, and the rest. His set pieces are disfigured by want of humour and by over-refinement faults which turn to virtues in the autos, where abstractions are wedded to the noblest poetry, where the Beyond is brought down to earth, and where doctrinal subtleties are embellished with miraculous ingenuity. To assert that Calderon is incomparably great in the autos is to 330 SPANISH LITERATURE imply some censure of his art in his secular dramas. The monotony and artifice of his sacramental plays might be thought inherent to the species, were not these two notes characteristic of his whole theatre. Nor is it an explanation to say that much writing of autos had affected his general methods ; for not merely are the secular plays more numerous they are also mostly earlier than the autos, whose real defects are a lack of dramatic interest, an appeal to a taste so local and so temporary that they are now as extinct in Spain as are masques in England. Still the passing fashions xvhich produced Comus in the north, and the Encantos de la Culpa or the Cena de Baltasar in the south, are justified to all lovers of great poetry. The autos lingered on the stage till 1765, but their genuine inspiration ended with Calder6n, who, in all but a literal sense, may be held for their creator. Lope de Vega is the greatest of Spanish dramatists ; Calder6n is amongst those who most nearly approach him. Lope incarnates the genius of a nation ; Calderon expresses the genius of an age. He is a Spaniard t;> the marrow, but a Spaniard of the seventeenth century a courtier with a turn for culteranisnw, averse from the picaresque contrasts which lend variety to Lope's scene and to Tirso's. His interpretation of existence is so idealised that his stage becomes in some sort the apotheosis of his century. His characters are not so much men and women, as allegorical types of men and women as Calder6n conceived them. It is not real life that he reveals, for he regarded realism as ignoble and unclean : he offers in its place a brilliant pageant of abstract emotions. He is not a universal dramatist : he ranks with the greatest writers for the THE ALCALDE DE ZALAMEA 331 Spanish stage, inasmuch as he is the greatest poet using the dramatic form. And, leaving aside his anachronisms and jumblings of mythology, he is a scrupulous artist, careful of his literary form and of his construction. The finished execution of his best passages is so irre- sistible that FitzGerald declared Isabel's characteristic speech in the Alcalde de Zalamea to be " worthy of the Greek Antigone " : " Oh, never, never might the light of day arise and show me to myself in my shame ! O fleeting morning star, mightest thou never yield to the dawn that even now presses on thine azure skirts ! And thou, great Orb of all, do thou stay down in the cold ocean foam ; let Night for once advance her trembling empire into thine ! For once assert thy voluntary power to hear and pity human misery and prayer, nor hasten up to proclaim the vilest deed that Heaven, in revenge on man, has written on his guilty annals. Alas ! even as I speak, thou liftest thy bright, inexorable face above the hills." Contrast with this impassioned lament (a little toned down in FitzGerald's version) the aphoristic wisdom of Pedro Crespo's counsel to his son in the same play : " Thou com'st of honourable if of humble stock ; bear both in mind, so as neither to be daunted from trying to rise, nor puffed up so as to be sure to fall. How many have done away the memory of a defect by carrying themselves modestly, while others, again, have gotten a blemish only by being too proud of being born without one. There is a just humility that will maintain thine own dignity, and yet make thee insensible to many a rub that galls the proud spirit. Be courteous in thy manner, and liberal of thy purse ; for 'tis the hand to the bonnet, and in the pocket, that makes friends in this world, of which to gain one good, 332 SPANISH LITERATURE all the gold the sun breeds in India, or the universal sea sucks down, were a cheap purchase. Speak no evil of women ; I tell thee the meanest of them deserves our respect ; for of women do we not all come ? Quarrel with no one but with good cause. ... I trust in God to live to see thee home again with honour and advancement on thy back." Had Calder6n always maintained this level, he would be classed with the first masters of all ages and all countries. His blood, his faith, his environment were limitations which prevented his becoming a world-poet; his majesty, his devout lyrism, his decorative fantasy suffice to place him in the foremost file of national poets. But he was not so national that foreign adaptors left him untouched : thus D'Ouville annexed the Dama Duende under the title of L Esprit follet, which reappears as Killigrew's Parson's Wedding ; thus Dryden's Evening's Love is Calder6n done from Cor- neille's French ; thus Wycherley's Gentleman Dancing Master derives from El Maestro de danzar. Yet, though Calderdn's plots may be conveyed, his substance cannot be denationalised, being, as he is, the sublimest Catholic poet, as Catholicism and poetry were understood by the Spaniards of the seventeenth century : a local genius of intensely local savour, exercising his dramatic in local forms. Archbishop Trench has suggested that in the three great theatres of the world the best period covers h'ttle more than a century, and he proves his thesis by a reference to dates. ^Eschylus was born B.C. 525, and Euripides died B.C. 406 : Marlowe was born in 1564, and Shirley died in 1666 : Lope was born in 1562, and Calder6n died in 1681. With Calder6n the heroic age ROJAS ZORRILLA 333 of the Spanish theatre reached a splendid close. He chanced to outlive his Toledan contemporary, FRANCISCO _ DE RQJAS ZORRILLA (1607-? 1661), from whose Traicion ff" busca el Castigo Le Sage has arranged his Trattre punt, and Vanbrugh his False Friend. A courtly poet, and a Commander of the Order of Santiago, Rojas Zorrilla collaborated with fashionable writers like Velez de Guevara, Mira de Amescua, and Calder6n, of whom he is accounted a disciple, though his one great tragedy has real individual power. His two volumes of plays (1640, 1645) reveal him as a most ingenious dramatist, who carries the " point of honour " further than Calder6n in his best known play, Del Rey abajo ninguno, a charac- teristically Spanish piece. Garcia de Castanar, appa- rently a peasant living near Toledo, subscribes so generously to the funds for the expedition to Algeciras that King Alfonso XI. resolves to visit him in disguise. Garcia gets wind of this, and receives his guests honour- ably, mistaking Mendo for Alfonso. Mendo conceives a passion for Blanca, Garcfa's wife, and is discovered by the husband at Blanca's door. As the King is inviolate for a subject, Garcia resolves to slay Blanca, who escapes to court. Garcia is summoned by the King, finds his mistake, settles matters by slaying Mendo in the palace, and explains to his sovereign (and his audience) that none under the King can affront him with impunity. Rojas Zorrilla's style occasionally inclines to cultera- nismo ; but this is an obvious concession to popular taste, his true manner being direct and energetic. His clever construction and witty dialogue are best studied in Lo que son Mujeres (What Women are) and in Entre Bobos anda el Juego (The Boobies' Sport). A very notable talent is that of AGUSTIN MORETO Y 334 SPANISH LITERATURE CAVA&A (1618-69), whose popularity as a writer of cloak- and-sword plays is only less than Lope's. In 1639 Moreto graduated as a licentiate in arts at Alcala de Henares. Thence he made his way to Madrid, where he found a protector in Calder6n. He published a volume of plays in 1654, and is believed to have taken orders three years later. Moreto is not a great inventor, but so far as con- cerns stage-craft he is above all contemporaries. In El Desctin con el Desctin (Scorn for Scorn) he borrows Lope's Milagros del Desprecio (Scorn works Wonders), and it is fair to say that the rifacimento excels the ori- ginal at every point. Diana, daughter of the Conde de Barcelona, mocks at marriage : her father surrounds her with the neighbouring gallants, among whom is the Conde de Urgel. Urgel's affected coolness piques the lady into a resolve to captivate him, and she so far succeeds as to lead him to avow his love for her : he escapes rejection by feigning that his declaration was a jest, and the dramatic solution is brought about by Diana's surrender. The plot is ordered with consum- mate skill, the dialogue is of the gayest humour, the characters more life-like than any but Alarcon's ; and as evidence of the playwright's tact, it is enough to say that when Moliere, in his Princesse (flide, strove to repeat Moreto's exploit he met with ignominious disaster. In the delicacy of touch with which Moreto handles a humorous situation he is almost unrivalled ; and in the broader spirit of farce, his graciosos comic characters, generally body-servants to the heroes are admirable for natural force and for gusts of spontaneous wit. In El Undo Don Diego he has fixed the type of the fop con- vinced that he is irresistible, and the presentation of fatuity which leads Don Diego into marriage with a MORETO 335 serving-wench (whom he mistakes for a countess) is among the few masterpieces of high comedy. Moreto's historical plays are of less universal interest ; in this kind, El Rico Hombre de Alcald is a powerful and sympathetic picture of Pedro the Cruel the strong man doing justice on the noble, Tello Garcia from the standpoint of the Spanish populace, which has ever respected el Rey justi- ciero. In his later years Moreto betook him to the comedia devota; his San Francisco de Sena is extravagantly and almost ludicrously devout, as in the scenes where Fran- cisco wagers his eyes, loses, is struck blind, and repents on recovering his sight. The devout play was not Moreto's calling : in his first and best manner, as a master of the lighter, gayer comedy, he holds his own against all Spain. Among the followers of Calder6n are Antonio Cuello (d. 1652), who is reported to have collaborated with Felipe IV. in El Conde de Essex ; Alvaro Cubillo de Aragon (fl. 1664), whose Perfecta Casada is a good piece of work ; Juan Matos Fragoso (? 1614-92), who bor- rowed and plagiarised with successful audacity ; but these, with many others, are mere imitators, and the Spanish theatre declines lower and lower, till in the hands of Carlos II.'s favourite, Francisco Antonio Bances Candamo (1662-1704), it reaches its nadir. The last good playwright of the classic age is ANTONIO DE SOLIS Y RIVADENEIRA (1610-86), who, by the accident of his long life, lends a ray of renown to the deplorable reign of Carlos II. His dramas are excellent in construction and phrasing, and his Amor al uso was popular in France through Thomas Corneille's adaptation. But his title to fame rests, not on verse, but on prose. His Historia de la Conquista de Mejico (1684) is 336 SPANISH LITERATURE a most distinguished performance, even if we compare it with Mariana's. Seeing that Solfs lived through the worst periods of Gongorism, his style is a marvel of purity, though a difficult critic might well condemn its cloying suavity. Still, his work has never been displaced since its first appearance, for it deals with a very pic- turesque period, is eloquent and clear, and is almost excessively patriotic in tone and spirit. Gibbon, in his sixty-second chapter, mentions "an Aragonese history which I have read with pleasure " the Expedition de los catalanes y aragoneses contra turcos y griegos by Francisco de Moncada, Conde de Osuna (1586-1635). "He never quotes his authorities," adds Gibbon ; and, in fact, Mon- cada mostly translates from Ramon Muntaner's Catalan Crdnica, though he translates in excellent fashion. Diego de Saavedra Fajardo (1584-1648) writes with force and ease in his uncritical Corona Gdtica, and in his more interesting literary review, the Republica literaria ; his freedom from Gongorism is explained by the fact that he passed most of his life out of Spain. The Portuguese, FRANCISCO MANUEL DE MELO (1611-66), is ill repre- sented by his Historia de los Movimientos, Separation y Guerra de Cataluna (1645), where he is given over to both Gongorism and conceptisnto : in his native tongue as in his Apologos Dialogaes he writes with simplicity, strength, and wit. Melo's life was unlucky : when he was not being shipwrecked, he was in jail on suspicion of being a mur- derer ; and being out of jail, he was exiled to Brazil. His reward is posthumous : both Portuguese and Spaniards hold him for a classic, and Sr. Menendez y Pelayo even compares him to Quevedo. Another man of Portuguese birth has won immortality outside of literature ; yet there is ground for thinking that VELAZQUEZ 337 DIEGO RODRIGUEZ DE SILVA Y VELAZQUEZ (1599-1660) had the sense for language as for paint. His Memoria de las Pinturas (1658) exists in an unique copy published at Rome under the name of his pupil, Juan de Alfaro, though its substance is unscrupulously embodied in Francisco de los Santos' Description Breve of the Escorial. Formally, it is a catalogue ; substantially, it expresses the artist's judgment on his great predecessors. Thus, of Paolo Veronese's Wedding Feast he writes : " There are admirable heads, and almost all of them seem por- traits. Not that of the Virgin : she has more reserve, more divinity : though very beautiful, she corresponds fittingly to the age of Christ, who is beside her a point which most artists overlook, for they paint Christ as a man, and His Mother as a girl." The great realist speaks once more in describing Veronese's Purification: "The Virgin kneels . . . holding on a white cloth the Child naked, beautiful, and tender with a restlessness so suited to his age that He seems more a piece of living flesh than something painted." And, in the same spirit, he writes of Tintoretto's Washing of the Feet: "It is hard to believe that one is looking at a painting. Such is the truth of colour, such the exactness of perspective, that one might think to go in and walk on the pavement, tessellated with stones of divers colours, which, diminish- ing in size, make the room seem larger, and lead you to believe that there is atmosphere between each figure. The table, seats (and a dog which is worked in) are truth, not paint. . . . Once for all, any picture placed beside it looks like something expressed in terms of colour, and this seems all the truer." Strangely enough, this writing of Velazquez is ignored by most, perhaps by all, of his biographers; yet it deserves a passing reference as a 338 SPANISH LITERATURE model of energetic expression in a time when most pro- fessional men of letters were Gongorists or conceptistas. A certain directness of style is found in Ger6nimo de Alcala Yanez y Ribera's Alonso, Mozo de muchos Amos (1625), in Alonso de Castillo Sol6rzano's Gardufia de Seville (the Seville Weasel, 1634), m * ne Siglo Pitagorico (1644) of the Segovian Jew, Antonio Enn'quez G6mez, and in the half-true, half -invented Vida y Hechos de Estebanillo Gonzdlez (1646) all picaresque tales, clever, amusing, and improper, on the approved pattern. But the pest of preciosity spread to fiction, is conspicuous in the Espanol Gerardo of Gonzalo de Cespedes y Meneses, and steadily degenerates till it becomes arrant nonsense in the Varies Efectos de Amor (1641) of Alonso de Alcald y Herrera five stories, in each of which one of the vowels is omitted. Alcala, however, had neither talent nor influence. The Aragonese Jesuit, BALTASAR GRACiAn. (1601-58), had both, and his vogue is proved by nume- rous editions, by translations, by such references as that in the Entretiens of Bouhours, who proclaims him " le sublime'' Addison thrice mentions him with respect in the Spectator, and it is suggested that Rycaut's rendering of the Criticon may have given Defoe the idea of Man Friday. In the present century Schopenhauer vowed that the Criticon was " one of the best books in the world," and Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff, taking his cue from Schopenhauer, has extolled Gracian with some vehemence. Gracian seems to have been indifferent to popularity, and his works, published somewhat against his will by his friend, Vincencio Juan de Lastanosa, were mostly issued under the name of Lorenzo Gracian. His first work was El Hfroe (1630), an ideal rendering of the 4bJs* f with time, for the posthumous reprint of the Pottica (1789) shows an increase of anti-national spirit ; but on this point it is hard to judge, inasmuch as his pupil and editor, Eugenic de Llaguno y Amfrola (a strong French partisan, who translated Racine's Athalie in 1754), is sus- pected of tampering with this text, as he adulterated that of Diaz Gamez' Cronica del Conde de Buelna. Luzan's destructive criticisms are always acute, and are generally just. Lope is for him a genius of amazing force and variety, while Calder6n is a singer of exquisite music. With this ingratiating prelude, he has no diffi- culty in exposing their most obvious defects, and his attack on Gongorism is delivered with great spirit. It is in construction that he fails : as when he avers that the ends of poetry and moral philosophy are identical, thut Homer was a didactic poet expounding political and transcendental truths to the vulgar, that epics exist for the instruction of monarchs and military chiefs, that the period of a play's action should correspond precisely with the time that the play takes in acting. Luzan's rigorous logic ends by reducing to absurdity the didac- tic theories of the eighteenth century ; yet, for all his logic, he had a genuine love of poetry, which induced 348 SPANISH LITERATURE him to neglect his abstract rules. It is true that he scarcely utters a proposition which is not contradicted by implication in other parts of his treatise. Neverthe- less, his book has both a literary and an historic value. Written in excellent style and temper, with innumerable parallels from many literatures, the Pottica served as a manifesto which summoned Spain to fall into line with academic Europe ; and Spain, among the least academic because among the most original of countries, ended by obeying. Her old inspiration had passed away with her wide dominion, and Luzan deserves credit for lending her a new opportune impulse. He was not to win without a battle. The official licensers, Manuel Gallinero and Miguel Navarro, took public objection to the retrospective application of his doctrines, and a louder note of opposition was sounded in a famous quarterly, the Diario de los Literates de Espafta, founded in 1737 by Juan Martinez Salafranca and Leopoldo Ger6nimo Puig. Though the Diario was patronised by Felipe V., though its judgments are now universally accepted, it came before its time : the bad authors whom it victimised combined against it, and, as the public remained indifferent, the review was soon suspended. Even among the contributors to the Diario, Luzan found an ally in the person of the clerical lawyer, JOSE GERARDO DE HERVAS Y COBO DE LA TORRE (d. 1742), author of the popular Sdtira contra los nialos Escritores de su Ttemfo. Hervs, who took the pseu- donym of Jorge Pitillas, wrote with boldness, with critical sense, with an ease and point and grace which engraved his verse upon the general memory ; so that to this day many of his lines are as familiar to Spaniards as are Pope's to Englishmen. They err who hold with Ticknor FEIJ6O: SARMIENTO 349 that Hervas imitated Persius and Juvenal: in style and doctrine his immediate model was Boileau, whom he adapts with rare skill, and without any acknowledg- ment. He carries a step further the French doctrines, insinuated rather than proclaimed in the Poetica, and, though he was not an avowed propagandist, his sarcastic epigrams perhaps did more than any formal treatise to popularise the new doctrines. A reformer on the same lines was the Benedictine, X^//I BENITO GERONIMO FEIJOO Y MONTENEGRO (1675-1764), whose Teatro crltico and Cartas eruditas y curiosas were as successful in Spain as were the Tatler and Spectator in England. Feij6o's style is laced with Gallicisms, and his vain, insolent airs of infallibility are antipathetic ; / yet though his admirers have made him ridiculous byTXt. calling him " the Spanish Voltaire," his intellectual curiosity, his cautious scepticism, his lucid intelligence, his fine scent for a superstitious fallacy, place him among the best writers of his age. A happy instance - of his skill in exposing a paradox is his indictment ofA'^r? Rousseau's Discours sur les Sciences et les Arts. His be* rancorous tongue raised up crowds of enemies, who scrupled not to circulate vague rumours as to his heretical tendencies : in fact, his orthodoxy was as unimpeachable as were the services which he rendered / to his country's enlightenment. His cause, and the cause of_learning generally, were championed by the Galician, Pedro Jose Garcia y Balboa, best known as MARTIN SARMIENTO (1695-1772), the name which he bore in the Benedictine order. Sarmiento's erudition is at least equal to Feijoo's, and his industry is matched by the variety of his interests. As a botanist he won the admiration and friendship of Linn6 ; Feij6o's Teatro 350 SPANISH LITERATURE critico owes much to his unselfish supervision ; yet, while his name was esteemed throughout Europe, he shrank from domestic criticism, and withheld his mis- cellaneous works from the press. He owes his place in literature to his posthumous Memorias para la historia de la Poesiay Poetas espafioles, which, despite its excessive local patriotism, is not only remarkable for its shrewd insight, but forms the point of departure for all later studies. Not less useful was the life's work of GREGORIO MAYANS Y SISCAR (1699-1781), who was the first to print Juan de Valdes' Didlogo de la Lengua, who was the first biographer of Cervantes, and who edited Luis Vives, Luis de Le6n, Monde 1 jar, and others. Though much of Mayans' writing has grown obsolete in its methods, he is honourably remembered as a pioneer, and his Origenes de la Lengua castellana is full of wise suggestion and acute divination. P: Prominent among Luzan's followers in the self-con- stituted Academia del Buen Gusto is BLAS ANTONIO NASARRE Y FERRIZ (1689-1751), an industrious, learned polygraph who carried party spirit so far as to reproduce Avellaneda's spurious Don Quixote (1732), on the specific ground that it was in every way superior to the genuine sequel. Cervantes, indeed, was an object of pitying contempt to Nasarre, who, when he reprinted Cervantes' plays in 1749, contended that they not only were the worst ever written, but that they were a heap of follies deliberately invented to burlesque Lope de Vega's theatre. Of the same school is Lope's merciless foe, AGUSTfN MONTIANO Y LUYANDO (1697-1765), author of two poor tragedies, the Virginia and the Atanlfo, models of dull academic correctness. Yet he found an illus- trious admirer in the person of Lessing, who, by his ISLA 351 panegyric on Montiano in the Theatralische Bibliotek, remains as a standing example of the fallibility of the greatest critics when they pronounce judgment on foreign literatures. Even more exaggerated than Mon- tiano was the Marques de Valdeflores, Luis JOSE VELAZ- QUEZ DE VELASCO (1722-72), whom we have already seen ascribing Torre's poems to Quevedo, an error almost sufficient to ruin any reputation. Velazquez expressed his general literary views in his Origenes de la Poesia castellana (1749), which found an enthusi- astic translator in Johann Andreas Dieze, of Gottingen. Velazquez develops and emphasises the teaching of his predecessors, denounces the dramatic follies of Lope and Calder6n, and even goes so far as to regret that Nasarre should waste his powder on two common, discredited fellows like Lope and Cervantes. It is im- possible for us here to record the polemics in which Luzan's teaching was supported or combated ; defective as it was, it had at least the merit of rousing Spain from her intellectual torpor. Some effect of the new criticism is seen in the works of the Jesuit, JOSE FRANCISCO DE ISLA (1703-81), whose finer humour is displayed in his Triunfo del Amor y de la Lealtad (1746), which professes to describe the pro- clamation at Pamplona of Ferdinand VI.'s accession. The author was officially thanked by Council and Chapter, and some expressed by gifts their gratitude for his handsome treatment. As Basques joke with difficulty, it was not until two months later that the Triunfo (which bears the alternative title of A Great Day for Navarre) was suspected to be a burlesque of the proceedings and all concerned in them. Isla kept his countenance while he assured his victims of his entire 352 SPANISH LITERATURE good faith ; the latter, however, expressed their slow- witted indignation in print, and brought such pressure to bear that the lively Jesuit who kept up the farce of denial till the last day of his life was removed from Pamplona by his superiors. The incorrigible wag de- parted to become a fashionable preacher; but his sense of humour accompanied him to church, and was displayed at the cost of his brethren. Paravicino, as we have already observed, introduced Gongorism into the pulpit, and his lead was followed by men of lesser faculty, who reproduced " the contortions of the Sibyl without her inspiration." By degrees preaching almost grew to be a synonym for buffoonery, and by the middle of the eighteenth century it was as often as not an occasion for the vulgar profanity which pleases devout illiterates. It is impossible to cite here the worst excesses ; it is enough to note that a " cultured " congregation applauded a preacher who dared to speak of "the divine Adonis, Christ, enamoured of that singular Psyche, Mary ! " Bishops in their pastorals, monks like Feijoo in his Cartas eruditas, and laymen like Mayans in his Orador Cristiano (1733), strove ineffectually to reform the abuse : where exhortation failed, satire succeeded. Isla had witnessed these pulpit extravagances at first hand, and his six quarto volumes of sermons none of them in- spiring to read, however impressive when delivered show that he himself had begun by yielding to a mode from which his good sense soon freed him. His Historia del famoso Predicador Fray Gerundio de Campazas, alias Zotes (1758), published by Isla under the name of his friend, Francisco Lob6n de Salazar, parish priest of Aguilar and Villagarcia del Campo, is an attempt to do for pulpit profanity what Don Quixote had done for FRAY GERUNDIO 353 chivalresque extravagances. It purports to be the story of a peasant-boy, Gerundio, with a natural faculty for clap-trap, which leads him to take orders, and gains for him no small consideration. A passage from the sermon which decided Gerundio's childish vocation may be quoted as typical : " Fire, fire, fire ! the house is a-flame ! Domus mea, domus orationis vocabitur. Now, sacristan, peal those resounding bells : in cymbalis bene sonantibus. That's the style : as the judicious Picinelus observed, a death-knell and a fire-tocsin are just the same. Lazarus amicus noster dormit. Water, sirs, water ! the earth is consumed quis dabit capiti meo aquam. . . . Stay ! what do I behold ? Christians, alas ! the souls of the faithful are a-fire \-fidelium anima. Molten pitch feeds the hungry flames like tinder : requiescat in pace, id est t in pice, as Vetablus puts it. How God's fire devours ! ignis a Deo Hiatus. Tidings of great joy ! the Virgin of Mount Carmel descends to save those who wore her holy scapular : scapulis suis. Christ says : ' Help in the King's name ! ' The Virgin pronounceth : ' Grace be with me !' Ave Maria." And so forth at much length. Isla fails in his attempt to solder fast impossibilities, to amalgamate rhetorical doctrine with farcical burlesque ; nor has his book the saving quality of style. Still, though it be too long drawn out, it abounds with an emphatic, violent humour which is almost irresistible at a first reading. The Second Part, published in 1770, is a work of supererogation. The First caused a furious contro- versy in which the regulars combined to throw mud at the Jesuits with such effect that, in 1760, the Holy Office intervened, confiscated the volume, and forbade all argu- ment for or against it. Ridicule, however, did its work in surreptitious copies ; so that when the author was 354 SPANISH LITERATURE expelled from Spain with the rest of his order in 1765, Fray Gerundio and his like were reformed characters. In 1787 Isla translated Gil Bias, under the impression that he was " restoring the book to its native land." The suggestion that Le Sage merely plagiarised a Spanish original is due in the first place to Voltaire, who made it, for spiteful reasons of his own, in the famous Siecle de Louis XIV. (1751). As some fifteen or twenty episodes are unquestionably borrowed from Espinel and others, it was not unnatural that Spaniards should (rather late in the day) take Voltaire at his word ; none the less, the character of Gil Bias himself is as purely French as may be, and Le Sage vindicates his originality by his distinguished treatment of borrowed matter. Isla's ver- sion is a sound, if unnecessary, piece of work, spoiled by the inclusion of a worthless sequel due to the Italian, Giulio Monti. The action of French tradition is visible in NICOLAS FERNANDEZ DE MoRATfN (1737-80), whose Hormesinda (1770), a dramatic exercise in Racine's manner, too highly rated by literary friends, was condemned by the public. His prose dissertations consist of invectives against Lope and Calderon, and of eulogies on Luzan's cold verse. These are all forgotten, and Morati'n, who remained a good patriot, despite his efforts to Gallicise himself, sur- vives at his best in his brilliant panegyric on bull-fighting the Fiesta de Toros en Madrid whose spirited quin- tillas, modelled after Lope's example, are in every Spaniard's memory. Moratm's friend, JOSE DE CADALSO__Y VAZQUEZ (1741- lr 1782), a colonel in the Bourbon Regiment, after passing most of his youth in Paris, travelled through England, Germany, and Italy, returning as free from national CADALSO 355 prejudices as a young man can hope to be. A certain elevation of character and personal charm made him a force among his intimates, and even impressed strangers ; as we may judge by the fact that, when he was killed at the siege of Gibraltar, the English army wore mourning for him. His more catholic taste avoided the exaggerations of Nasarre and Moratin ; he found praise for the national theatre, and many of his verses imply close study of Villegas and Quevedo. Even so, his attachment to the old school was purely theoretical. His knowledge of English led him to translate in verse as Luzan had already translated in prose passages from Paradise Lost ; his sepulchral Noches Lugubres, written upon the death of his mistress, the actress Maria Ignacia Ibanez, are plainly inspired by Young's Night Thoughts ; his Cartas Marruecas derive from the Lettres Persanes ; his tragedy, Don Sancho Garcia, an attempt to put in practice the canons of the French drama, transplants to Spain the rhymed couplets of the Parisian stage. The best example of Cadalso's cultivated talent is his poem entitled Eruditos d la Violeta, wherein he satirises pretentious scholarship with a light, firm touch. In curious contrast with Cadalso's Don Sancho Garcia is the Raquel (1778) of his friend VICENTE ANTONIO GARCIA^/ DE LA HUERTA Y MuNOZ (1734-87), whose troubles would seem to have affected his brain. Though Huerta brands Corneille and Racine as a pair of lunatics, he is a strait observer of the sacred " unities " : in all other respects in theme, monarchical sentiment, sono- rity of versification Raquel is a return upon the ancient classic models._ Its disfavour among foreign critics is inexplicable, for no contemporary drama equals it in national savour. Huerta's good intention exceeds his 356 SPANISH LITERATURE performance in the Theatro Hespailol, a collection (in seventeen volumes) of national plays, arranged without much taste or knowledge. This involved him in a bitter controversy, which pro- bably shortened his life. Prominent among his enemies was the Basque, FELIX MARIA DE SAMANIEGO (1745- 1801), whose early education was entirely French, and who regarded Lope much as Voltaire regarded Shakespeare. Though Huerta's intemperance lost him his cause, Sama- niego's real triumph was in another field than that of controversy. His Fdbulas (1781-94), mostly imitations or renderings of Phaedrus, La Fontaine, and Gay, are almost the best in their kind simple, clear, and forc- ible. A year earlier than Samaniego, the Jesuit Lasala, of Bologna, had translated the fables of Lukman al- Haklm into Latin, and, in 1784, Miguel Garcia Asensio published a Castilian version. It does not appear that Samaniego knew anything of Lasala, nor was he dis- turbed by Garcia Asensio's translation. Before the latter was in print, he was annoyed at finding himself rivalled by TOMAS DE IRIARTE Y OROPESA (1750-91), who had begun his career as a prose translator of Moliere and Voltaire, and had charmed or at least had drawn effusive compli- ments from Metastasio with a frigid poem, La Miisica (1780). In the following year Iriarte published his Fdbulas literarias, putting the versified apologue to doc- trinal uses, censuring literary faults, and expounding what he held to be true doctrine. He took most pride in his plays, El SeHorito mimado and La Seflorita mat criada ; yet the Spoiled Young Gentleman and the Ill- bred Young Lady are forgotten somewhat unjustly by all but students, while the wit and polish of the fables have earned their author an excessive fame. Iriarte was, in the f, n JOVE-LLANOS 357 best sense, an " elegant " writer. Unluckily for himself and us, much of his short life was, after the eighteenth- century fashion, wasted in polemics with able, learned ruffians, of whom Juan Pablo Forner (1756-97) is the most extreme type. Forner's versified attack on Iriarte, El Asno erudito, is one of the most ferocious libels ever printed. Literary men the world over are famous for their manners : Spain is in this respect no better than her neighbours, and the abusive personalities which form a great part of her literary history during the last century are now the driest, most vacant chaff imaginable. In pleasing contrast with these irritable mediocrities is the figure of CASPAR MELCHOR DE JOVE-LLANOS (1744- 1811), the most eminent Spaniard of his age. Educated for the Church, Jove- Llanos turned to law, was appointed magistrate at Seville in his twenty-fourth year, was trans- ferred to Madrid in 1778, became a member of the Council of Orders in 1780, was exiled to Asturias on the fall of Cabarriis in 1790, and seven years later was appointed Minister of Justice. The incarnation of all that was best * in the liberalism of his time, he was equally odious to re- actionaries and revolutionists. A stern moralist, he strove ' to end the intrigue between the Queen and the notorious Godoy, Prince of the Peace, and at the latter's instance was dismissed from office in 1798. He passed the years 1801-8 a prisoner in the Balearic Islands, returning to find Spain under the heel of France. His prose writings, political, economic, and didactic, do not concern us here, though their worth is admitted by good judges. Jove- Llanos is most interesting because of his own poetic achievement, and because of his influence on the group of Salamancan poets. His play, El Delincuente Honrado (1774), is a doctrinaire exercise in the manner of Diderot's 358 SPANISH LITERATURE Fits Naturel; it shows considerable knowledge of dramatic effect, and its sentimental, sincere philanthropy persuaded audiences in and out of Spain to accept Jove-Llanos for a dramatist. At most he is a clever playwright. Yet, though not an artist in either prose or verse, though far from irreproachable in diction, he occasionally utters a pure poetic note, keen and vibrating in satire, noble and austere in that Epistle to the Duque de Veragua, which, by common consent, best reflects the tranquil dignity of his temperament. Jove-Llanos' official position, his high ideals, his know- ledge, discernment, and wise counsel were placed at the service of JUAN MELENDEZ VALDES (1754-1817), the chief poet of the Salamancan school, who came under his influ- ence in or about 1777. Jove-Llanos succeeded by sheer force of character : Mel6ndez was a weather-cock at the mercy of every breeze. A writer of erotic verses, he thought of taking orders ; a pastoral poet, he turned to philosophy by Jove-Llanos' advice; unfortunate in his marriage, discontented with his professorship at Sala- manca, he dabbled in politics, becoming, through his friend's patronage, a government official : and when Jove- Llanos fell, Melendez fell with him. It is hard to decide whether Melendez was a rogue or a weakling. Upon the French invasion, he began by writing verses calling his people to arms, and ended by taking office under , * the foreign government. He fawned upon Joseph Bona- parte, whom he vowed "to love each day," and he hailed . the restoration of the Spanish with patriotic enthusiasm. > Finally, the dishonoured man fled for very shame and safety. Loving iniquity and hating justice, he died in exile at Montpellier. He, typifies the fluctuations of his time. His natural t;^ MELE~NDEZ VALDES 359 bent was towards pastoralism, as his early poems, modelled on Garcilaso and on Torre, remain to prove; he took to liberalism at Jove-Llanos' suggestion, as he would have taken to absolutism had that been the craze of the moment ; he read Locke, Young, Turgot, and Condorcet at the instance of his friends. " Obra soy tuya " ("I am thy handiwork"), he writes to Jove-Llanos. He was ever the handiwork of the last comer : a shadow of ,, insincerity, of pose, is over all his verse. Yet, like his countryman Lucan, Melendez demonstrates the truth that a worthless creature may be, within limits, a genuine poet. He has neither morals nor ideas; he has fancy, ductility, clearness, music, charm, and a picturesque vision of natural detail that have no counterpart in his period. Compared with his brethren of the Salaman can '"55(1 school with Diego Tadeo Gonzalez (1733-94), with Jos6 Iglesias de la Casa (1753-91), even with Nicasio Alvarez de Cienfuegos (1764-1809) Melendez appears a veritable giant. He was not quite that any more than they were pigmies ; but he had a spark of genius, while their faculty was no more than talent. 1 His one distinct failure was when he ventured on the boards with his Wedding 1 Feast of Camacho, founded on Cervantes' famous story, though even here the pastoral passages are pleasing, if inappropriate. It is to his credit that his theme is national, while his general dramatic sym- pathies were, like those of his associates, French. Luzan and his followers found it easier to condemn the ancient masterpieces than to write masterpieces of their own. Their function was negative, destructive ; yet when the 1 For two singularly acute critical studies by M. E. Merime'e on Jove- Llanos and Melendez Valdes, see the Revue hispanique (Paris, 1894). vol. i. pp. 34-68, and pp. 217-235. 24 ?> C^_ LSI**-/ 360 SPANISH LITERATURE prohibition of az/tar was procured in 1765 by Jose Clavijo y Fajardo (1730-1806) whose adventure with Louise Caron, Beaumarchais' sister, gave Goethe a sub- ject they hoped to force a hearing for themselves. They overlooked the fact that there already existed a national dramatist named RAM6N DE LA CRUZ Y CAXO (1731-? 95), who had the merit of inventing a new genre, which, being racy of the soil, was to the popular taste. Convention had settled it that tragedies should present the misfortunes of emperors and dukes ; that comedies should deal with the middle class, their senti- mentalities and foibles. Cruz, a government clerk, with sufficient leisure to compose three hundred odd plays, f became in some sort the dramatist of the needy, the / A . disinherited, the have-nots of the street. He might very well sympathise with them, for he was always v pinched for money, and died so destitute that his widow had not wherewith to bury him. Beginning, like the rest of the world, with French imitations and renderings, he turned to representing the life about him in short farcical pieces called sainetes a perfect develop- ment of the oldpasos. In the prologue to the ten-volume edition of his sainetes (1786-91), Cruz proclaims his own merit in a just and striking phrase " I write, and truth dictates to me." His gaiety, his picaresque enjoyment, his exuberant humour, his jokes and puns and quips, lend an extraordinary vivacity to his presentation of the most trifling incidents. He might have been as he began by being a pompous prig and bore, preaching high doctrine, and uttering the platitudes, which alone were thought worthy of the sock and buskin. He chose the better part in rendering what he knew and under- stood and saw, in amusing his public for thirty years, THE YOUNGER MORATlN 361 and in bequeathing a thousand occasions of laughter to the world. He wrote with a reckless, contagious humour, with a comic brio which anticipates Labiche ; and, unambitious and light-hearted as Cruz was, we may learn more of contemporary life from El Prado por la Noche and Las Tertulias de Madrid than from a moun- tain of serious records and chronicles. In the following generation LEANDRO FERNANDEZ DE MORATIN (1760-1828) won deserved repute as a play- wright. His father, the author of Hormesinda, made a jeweller's apprentice of the boy who, in 1779 and 1782, won two accesits from the Academy. He thus attracted the notice of Jove-Llanos, who secured his appointment as Secretary to the Paris Embassy in 1787. His stay in France, followed by later travels through England, the Low Countries, Germany, and Italy, completed his educa- tion, and obtained for him the post of official translator. His exercises in verse are more admirable than his prose version of Hamlet, which offended his academic theories in every scene. Moliere, who w r as his ideal, has no more faithful follower than the younger Moratfn. His transla- tions of LEcole des Maris and Le Medecin malgre" lui belong to his later years ; but his theatre, including those most striking pieces El Si de las Ninas (The Maids' Consent) and La Mojigata (The Hypocritical Woman), reflects the master's humour and observa- tion. The latter comedy (1804) brought him into trouble with the Inquisition ; the former (1806) estab- lished his fame by its character-drawing, its grace- ful ingenuity, and witty dialogue. His fortunes, which seemed assured, were wrecked by the French war. Moratfn was always timid, even in literary combats : he now proved himself that very rare thing among Spaniards 362 SPANISH LITERATURE a physical coward. He neither dared declare for his country nor against it, and went into hiding at Vitoria. He finally accepted the post of Royal Librarian to Joseph Bonaparte, and when the crash came he de- camped to Peniscola. These events turned his brain. All efforts to help him (and they were many) proved useless. He wandered as far as Italy to escape imagi- nary assassins, and finally settled in Bordeaux, where he believed himself safe from the conspirators. El Si de las Ninas is an excellent piece among the best, and is sufficient to persuade the most difficult reader that Leandro Moratfn was one of nature's wasted forces. He must have won distinction in any company : in this dreary period he achieves real eminence. No prose-writer of the time rises to Isla's level. His brother Jesuit, Lorenzo Hervds y Panduro (1735-1809), is credited by Professor Max Miiller with "one of the most brilliant discoveries in the history of the science of language," and may be held for the father of com- parative philology ; but his specimens and notices of three hundred tongues, his grammars of forty languages, his classic Catdlogo de las lenguas de las naciones conocidas (1800-5) appeal more to the specialist than to the lover of literature. Yet in his own department there is scarcely a more splendid name. CHAPTER XII THE NINETEENTH CENTURY INTELLECTUAL interaction between Spain and France is an inevitable outcome of geographical position. To the one or to the other must belong the headship of the Latin races ; for Portugal is, so to say, but a prolongation of Galicia, while the unity of Italy dates from yesterday. This hegemony was long contested. During a century and a half, fortune declared for Spain : the balance is now redressed in France's favour. The War of the Succes- sion, the invasion of 1808, the expedition of 1823, the con- trivance of the Spanish marriages show that Louis XIV., Napoleon I., Charles X., and Louis-Philippe dared risk their kingdoms rather than loosen their grip on Spain. More recent examples are not lacking. The primary occasion of the Franco-German War in 1870-71 was the proposal to place a Hohenzollern on the Spanish throne, and the Parisian outburst against " Alfonso the Uhlan " was an expression of resentment against a Spanish King who chafed under French tutelage. Since there is no ground for believing that France will renounce a tradi- tional diplomacy maintained, under all forms of govern- ment, for over two centuries, it is not rash to assume that in the future, as in the past, intellectual development will tend to coincide with political influence. French literary fashions affect all Europe more or less: they affect Spain more. 363 364 SPANISH LITERATURE It is a striking fact that the great national poet of the War of Independence should be indisputably French in .-; all but patriotic sentiment. MANUEL Jos QUINTANA (1772-1857) was an offshoot of the Salamancan school, a friend of Jove-Llanos and of Melendez Valdes, a fol- lower of Raynal and Turgot and Condorcet, a " philo- sopher" of the eighteenth-century model. Too much stress has, perhaps, been laid on his French construc- tions, his acceptance of neologisms : a more radical fault is his incapacity for ideas. Had he died at forty his fame would be even greater than it is ; for in his last years he did nothing but repeat the echoes of his youth. At eighty he was still perorating on the rights of man, as though the world were a huge Jacobin Convention, as though he had learned and forgotten nothing during half a century He died, as he had lived, convinced that a few changes of political machinery would ensure a perpetual Golden Age. It is not for his Duque de Viseo, a tragedy based on M. G. Lewis's Castle Spectre, nor by his Ode to Juan de Padilla, that Quintana is re- membered. The partisan of French ideas lives by his Call to Arms against the French, by his patriotic cam- paign against the invaders, by his prose biographies of the Cid, the Great Captain, Pizarro, and other Spaniards of the ancient time. We might suspect, if we did not know, Quintana's habit of writing his first rough drafts in prose, and of translating these into verse. Though he proclaimed himself a pupil of Melendez, nature and love are not his true themes, and his versification is curiously unequal. Patriotism, politics, philanthropy are his inspirations, and these find utterance in the lofty rhetoric of such pieces as his Ode to Guzman the Good and the Ode on the Invention of Printing. Unequal, un- QUINTANA: GALLEGO 365 restrained, never exquisite, never completely admirable for more than a few lines at a time, Quintana's pas- sionate pride of patriotism, his virile temperament, his individual gift of martial music have enabled him to express with unsurpassed fidelity one very conspicuous aspect of his people's genius. Another patriotic singer is the priest, JUAN NlCASlO GALLEGO (1777-1853), who, like many political liberals,'? was so staunchly conservative in literature that he con- demned Notre Dame de Paris in the very spirit of an alarmed Academician. Slight as is the bulk of his writ- ings, Gallego's high place is ensured by his combination of extreme finish with extreme sincerity. His elegy On the Death of the Duquesa de Frias is tremulous with the accent of profound emotion ; but he is even better known by El Dos de Mayo, which celebrates the historic rising of the second of May, when the artillerymen, Jacinto Ruiz, Luis Daoiz, and Pedro Velarte, "by their refusal to surrender their three guns and ten cartridges to the French army, gave the signal for the general rising of the Spanish nation. His ode A la defensa de Buenos Aires, against the English, is no less distinguished for its heroic spirit. There is a touch of irony in the fact that Gallego should be best represented by his denunciation of the French, whom he adored, and by his denunciation of the British, who were to assist in freeing his country. Time has misused the work of FRANCISCO MARTINEZ DE LA ROSA (1788-1862) who at one time was held by / Europe as the literary representative of Spain. No small part of his fame was due to his prominent position in Spanish politics ; but the disdainful neglect which has overtaken him is altogether unmerited. Not being an original genius, his lyrics are but variations of earlier ' 366 SPANISH LITERATURE melodies : thus the Ausencia de la patria is a metrical exercise in Jorge Manrique's manner ; the song which commemorates the defence of Zaragoza is inspired by Quintana ; the elegy On the Death of the Duquesa de Frias, far short of Gallego's in pathos and dignity, is redolent of Melendez. His novel, Doila Isabel de So/is, is an artless imitation of Sir Walter Scott ; nor are his de- clamatory tragedies, La Viuda de Padilla and Moraima, of perdurable value any more than his Moratinian plays, such as Los Celos Infundados. Martinez de la Rosa's exile passed in Paris led him to write the two pieces by which he is remembered : his Conjuracion de Venecia (1834), and his Aben-Humeya (the latter first written f --in French, and first played at the Porte Saint-Martin ijr in 1830) denote the earliest entry into Spain of French romanticism, and are therefore of real historic import- ance. Fate was rarely more freakish than in placing this modest, timorous man at the head of a new lite- rary movement. Still stranger it is that his two late romantic experiments should be the best of his manifold work. But he was not fitted to maintain the leadership which circumstances had allotted to him, and romanticism found a more popular expi tent in Angel de Saavedra, DUQUE V DE RIVAS (i79i-i865),|"he very type of the radical noble. His exile in France and in England converted him from a follower of Melendez and Quintana to a sectary of Chateaubriand and Byron. His first essays in the new vein were an admirable lyric, Al faro de Malta, and El Moro expdsito, a narrative poem undertaken by the advice of John Hookham Frere. Brilliant passages of poetic dic- tion, the semi-epical presentation of picturesque national legends, are Rivas' contribution to the new school. He RIVAS: BLANCO 367 went still further in his famous play, Don Alvaro (1835), an event in the history of the modern Spanish drama corresponding to the production of Hcrnani at the Theatre Franais. The characters of Alvaro, of Leonor, and of her brother Alfonso Vargas are, if not inhuman, all but titanic, and the speeches are of such magniloquence as man never spoke. But for the Spaniards of the third decade, Rivas was the standard-bearer of revolt, and : f Don Alvaro, by its contempt for the unities, by its alternation of prose with lyrism, by its amalgam of the grandiose, the comic, the sublime, and the horrible, en- chanted a generation of Spanish play-goers surfeited with the academic drama. To English readers of Mr. Gladstone's essay, the Canon ,/, ' of Seville, Jos MARIA BLANCO (1775-1841), is familiar by the alias of Blanco White. It were irrelevant to record here the lamentable story of Blanco's private life, or to follow his religious transformations from Catholicism to Unitarianism. A sufficient idea of his poetic gifts is afforded by an English quatorzain which has found favour with many critics : " Mysterious light ! When our first parent knew Thee, from report divine, and heard thy name, Did he not tremble for this lovely frame, This glorious canopy of light and blue ? Yet 'neath a curtain of translucent dew Bathed in the rays of the great setting flame, Hesperus, with the host of heaven, came, And lo ! Creation -widened in man's view. Who could have thought such darkness lay concealed Within thy beams, O Sun f or who could find, Whilst fly, and leaf, and insect stood revealed, That to such countless orbs thou madest us blind? Why do we then shun death with anxious strife? If light can thus deceive, wherefore not life? " 368 SPANISH LITERATURE This is as characteristic as his Oda d Carlos III. or the remorseful Castilian lines on Resigned Desire, penned within a year of his death. A very similar talent was that of Blanco's friend, ALBERTO LISTA (1775-1848), also a Canon of Seville Cathedral, a most accomplished singer, whose golden purity of tone compensates for a deficient volume of voice and an affected method. But, save for such a fragment of impassioned, plangent melody as the poem A la Muerte de Jesus, Lista is less known as a poet than as a teacher of remarkable in- fluence. His Lecciones de Literatura Espaiiola did for Spain what Lamb's Specimens of English Dramatic Poets did for England, and his personal authority over some of the best minds of his age was almost as complete in scope as it was gentle in exercise and excellent in effect. The most famous of his pupils was Josfi DE ESPRON- CEDA (1810-42), who came under Lista at the Colegio de San Mateo, in Madrid, where the boy, who was in perpetual scrapes through idleness and general bad con- duct, attracted the rector's notice by his extraordinary poetic precocity. Through good and evil report Lista held by Espronceda to the last, and was perhaps the one person who ever persuaded him from a rash pur- pose. At fourteen Espronceda joined a secret society called Los Numantinos, which was supposed to work for liberty, equality, and the rest. The young Numantine was deported to a monastery in Guadalajara, where, on the advice of Lista (who himself contributed some forty octaves), he began his epical essay, El Pelayo. Like most other boys who have begun epics, Espronceda left his unfinished, and, though the stanzas that remain are of a fine but unequal quality, they in no way foreshadow the chief of the romantic school. ESPRONCEDA 369 Returning to Madrid, Espronceda was soon con- cerned in more conspiracies, and escaped to Gibraltar, whence he passed to Lisbon. A suggestion of the Byronic pose is found in the story (of his own telling) that, before landing, he threw away his last two pesetas, " not wishing to enter so great a town with so little money." In Lisbon he met with that Teresa who figures so prominently in his life ; but the Government was once more on his track, and he fled to London, where Byron's poems came upon him with the force of a revelation. In England he found Teresa, now married, and eloped with her to Paris, where, on the three "glorious days" of July 1830, he fought behind the barricades. The overthrow of Charles X. put such heart into the Spanish emigrados that, under the leadership of the once famous Chapalangarra Joaqufn de Pablo they determined to raise all Spain against the monarchy. The attempt failed, Chapalangarra was killed in Navarre, and Espronceda did not return to Spain till the amnesty of 1833. He obtained a commission in the royal body- guard, and seemed on the road to fortune, when he was cashiered because of certain verses read by him at a political banquet. He turned to journalism, incited the people to insurrection by articles and speeches, held the streets against the regular army in 1835-36, shared in the liberal triumph of 1840, and, on the morrow of the suc- cessful revolution which he had organised, pronounced in favour of a republic. He was appointed Secretary to the Embassy at the Hague in 1841, returning to Spain shortly afterwards on his election as deputy for Almerfa. He died after four days of illness on May 23, 1842, in his thirty-third year, exhausted by his stormy life. A most formidable journalist, a demagogue of con- 370 SPANISH LITERATURE summate address, a man-at-arms who had rather fight than not, Espronceda might have cut out for himself a new career in politics or might have died upon the scaffold or at the barricades. But, so far as concerns poetry, his work was done: an aged Espronceda is as inconceivable as an elderly Byron, a venerable Shelley. Byron was the paramount influence of Espronceda's life and works. The Conde de Toreno, a caustic poli- tician and man of letters, who was once asked if he had read Espronceda, replied : " Not much ; but then I have read all Byron." The taunt earned Toreno "insolent fool with heart of slime " a terrific invective in the first canto of El Diablo Mundo : " A I necio audaz de corazdn de cieno, A quien Human el Conde de Toreno." The gibe was ill-natured, but Espronceda's resentment goes to show that he felt its plausibility. If Toreno meant that Espronceda, like Heine, Musset, Leopardi, and Push- kin, took Byron for a model, he spoke the humble truth. Like Byron, Espronceda became the centre of a legend, and so to say he made up for the part. He advertised his criminal repute with manifest gusto, and gave the world his own portrait in the shape of pale, gloomy, splendid heroes. Don Felix de Montemar, in El Estu- diante de Salamanca, is Don Juan Tenorio in a new environment "fierce, insolent, irreligious, gallant, haughty, quarrelsome, insult in his glance, irony on his lips, fearing naught, trusting solely to his sword and courage." Again, in the famous declamatory address To Jarifa, there is the same disillusioned view of life, the same lust for impossible pleasures, the same picturesque ESPRONCEDA 371 mingling of misanthropy and aspiration. Once more, the Fabio of the fragmentary Diablo Mundo is replen- ished with the Byronic spirit of defiant pessimism, the Byronic intention of epical mockery. And so through- out all his pieces the protagonist is always, and in all ess-jntials, Jose de Espronceda. Whether any writer or, at all events, any but the very greatest has ever succeeded completely .in shed- ding his own personality is doubtful. Espronceda, at least, never attempted it, and consequently his dramatic pieces Dofia Blanco, de Borbon, for example were fore- doomed to fail. But this very force of temperament, this very element of artistic egotism, lends life and colour to his songs. The Diablo Mundo, the Estudiante de Salamanca, ostensibly formed upon the models of Goethe, and Byron, and Tirso de Molina, are utterances, of individual impressions, detached lyrics held together by the merest thread. Scarcely a typical Spaniard in life or in art, Espronceda is, beyond all question, the most distinguished Spanish lyrical poet of the century. His abandonment, his attitude of revolt, his love of love and licence one might even say his turn for debauchery and anarchy are the notes of an epoch rather than the characteristics of a country ; and, in so much, he is cosmopolitan rather than national. But the merciless observation of El Verdugo (The Executioner), the idealised conception of Elvira in El Estudiante de Salamanca, are strictly representative of Quevedo's and of Calderdn's tradition; while his arti-^ ficial but sympathetic rhetoric, his resonant music, his; brilliant imagery, his uncalculating vehemence, bear, upon them the stamp of all his race's faults and virtues. In this sense he speaks for Spain, and Spain repays him 372 SPANISH LITERATURE by ranking him as the most inspired, if the most unequal, of her modern singers. Pf His contemporary, the Catalan, MANUEL DE CABANYES (1808-1833), died too young to reveal the full measure of his powers, and his Preludios de mi lira (1833), though warmly praised by Torres Amat, Joaquin Roca y Cornet, and other critics of insight, can scarcely be said to have won appreciation. Cabanyes is essentially a poet's poet, inspired mainly by Luis de Leon. His felicities are those of the accomplished student, the expert in technicalities, the almost impeccable artist whose hendecasyllabics, A Cintio, rival those of Leopardi in their perfect form and intense pessimism ; but as his life was too brief, so his production is too" frugal and too exquisite for the general, and he is rated by his promise rather than by his actual achievement. Mild y Fontanals and Sr. Menendez y Pelayo have striven to spread Cabanyes' good report, and they have so far succeeded that his genius is now admitted on all hands ; but his chill perfection makes no appeal to the mass of his countrymen. Espronceda's direct successor was JOSE ZORRILLA (1817-1893), whose life's story may be read in his own Recuerdos del tiempo viejo (Old-time Memories). It was his misfortune to be concerned in politics, for which he was unfitted, and to be pinched by continuous poverty, which drove him in 1855 to seek his fortune in Mexico, whence he returned empty-handed in 1866. His closing years were somewhat happier, inasmuch as a pension of 30,000 reales, obtained at last by strenuous parliamentary effort, freed him from the pressure of actual want. It may be that it came too late, and that Zorrilla's work suffers from his straitened circumstances ; but this is diffi- cult to believe. He might have produced less, might have ZORRILLA 373 escaped the hopeless hack-work to which he was com- pelled ; but a finished artist he could never have become, for, by instinct as by preference, he was an improvisatore. The tale that (like Arthur Pendennis) he wrote verses to fit engravings is possibly an invention ; but the inventor at least knew his man, for nothing is more intrinsically probable. ^v*x-^ m-., His carelessness, his haste, his defective execution are superficial faults which must always injure Zorrilla in the esteem of foreign critics ; yet it is certain that the charm which he has exercised over three generations of Spaniards, and which seems likely to endure, implies the possession of considerable powers. And Zorrilla had three essential qualities in no common degree : national spirit, dramatic insight, and lyrical spontaneity. He is an inferior Sir Walter, with an added knowledge of the theatre, to which Scott made no pretence. His Leyenda de Alkamar, his Granada, his Leyenda del Cid were popu- lar for the same reason that Marmion and the Lady of the Lake were popular : for their revival of national legends in a form both simple and picturesque. The fate that overcame Sir Walter's poems seems to threaten Zorrilla's. Both are read for the sake of the subject, for the brilliant colouring of episodes, more than for the beauty of treat- ment, construction, and form ; yet, as Sir Walter sur- vives in his novels, Zorrilla will endure in such of his plays as Don Juan Tenorio, in El Zapatero y el Rey, and in Traidor, inconfeso, y mdrtir. His selection of native themes, his vigorous appeal to those primitive sentiments which are at least as strong in Spain as elsewhere courage, patriotism, religion have ensured him a vogue so wide and lasting that it almost approaches immor- tality. In the study Zorrilla's slap-dash methods are 374 SPANISH LITERATURE often wearisome ; on the stage his impetuousness, his geniality, his broad effects, and his natural lyrism make him a veritable force. Two of Zorrilla's rivals among contemporary dramatists may be mentioned : ANTONIO GARCIA GUTIERREZ (1813-1884), the author of El Tro- vador, and JUAN EUGENIC HARTZENBUSCH (1806-1880), whose Amantes de Teruel broke the hearts of senti- mental ladies in the forties. Both the Trovador and the Amantes are still reproduced, still read, and still praised by critics who enjoy the pleasures of memory and association ; but a detached foreigner, though he take his life in his hand when he ventures on the con- fession, is inclined to associate Garcfa Gutierrez and Hartzenbusch with Sheridan Knowles and Lytton. A much superior talent is that of the ex-soldier, MANUEL BRETON DE LOS HERREROS (1796-1873), whose humour and fancy are his own, while his system is that of the younger Moratin. His Escuela del Matrimonio is the most ambitious, as it is the best, of those innumer- able pieces in which he aims at presenting a picture of average society, relieved by alternate touches of ironic and didactic purpose. Bret6n de los Herreros wrote far too much, and weakens his effects by the obtrusion of a flagrant moral ; but even if we convict him as a cari- caturist of obvious Philistinism, there is abundant re- compense in the jovial wit and graceful versification of his quips. To him succeeds Tomas Rodriguez Rubi (1817-1890), who aimed at amusing a facile public in such a trifle as El Tejado de Vidrio (The Glass Roof), or at satirising political and social intriguers in La Rueda de Fortuna (Fortune's Wheel). j,^. A Cuban like GERTRUDIS GO"MEZ DE AVELLANEDA (1816- 1873), who spent most of her life in ^pain, may for our LOPEZ DE AYALA 375 purposes be accounted a Spanish writer. The proverbial gallantry of the nation and the sex of the writer account for her vogue and her repute. If such a novel as Sab, with its protest against slavery and its idealised presenta- tion of subject races, be held for literature, then \ve must so enlarge the scope of the word as to include Uncle Tom's Cabin. Another novel, Espatolino, reproduces George Sand's philippics against the injustice of social arrangements, and re-echoes her lyrical advocacy of freedom in the matter of marriage. The Sra. Ave- llaneda is too passionate to be dexterous, and too preoccupied to be impressive ; hence her novels have fallen out of sight. That she had real gifts of fancy and melody is shown by her early volume of poems (1841), and by her two plays, Alfonso Munio and Baltasar ; yet, on the boards as in her stories, she is inopportune, or, in plainer words, is a gifted imitator, following the changes of popular taste with some hesitation, though with a gracefulness not devoid of charm. With her may be mentioned Carolina Coronado (b. 1823), a refined poetess with mystic tendencies, whose vogue has so diminished that to the most of Spaniards she is scarcely more than an agreeable reminiscence. It is possible that the adroit politician, ADELARDO LOPEZ DE AYALA (1828-1879), who passed from one party to another, and served a monarch or a republic with equal suppleness, might have won enduring fame as a drama- tist and poet had he been less concerned with doctrines and theses. He was so intent on persuasion, so mindful of the arts of his old trade, so anxious to catch a vote, that he rarely troubled to draw character, contenting himself with skilful construction of plot and arrangement of incident. His Tanto por Ciento and his Consuelo are 25 376 SPANISH LITERATURE astute harangues in favour of high public and private morals, composed with extraordinary care and laudable purpose. If mere cleverness, a scrupulous eye to detail, a fine ear for sonorous verse could make a man master of the scene, L6pez de Ayala might stand beside the greatest. His personages, however, are rather general types than individual characters, and the persistent sar- casm with which he ekes out a moral degenerates into ponderous banter. None the less he was a force during many years, and, though his reputation be now some- what tarnished, he still counts admirers among the middle-aged. A very conspicuous figure on the Spanish scene during the middle third of the century was MANUEL TAMAYO Y BAUS (1829-1898), who, beginning with an imitation of Schiller in Juana de Arco (1847), passed under the in- fluence of Alfieri in Virginia (1853), venturing upon the national classic drama in La Locura de Amor (1855), the most notable achievement of his early period. The most ambitious, and unquestionably the best, of his plays is Un drama nuevo (1867), with which his career practically closed. He effaced himself, was content to live on his reputation and to yield his place as a popular favourite to so poor a playwright as Jose Echegaray. Compared with his successor, Tamayo shines as a veritable genius. Sprung from a family of actors, he gauged the possi- bilities of the theatre with greater exactness than any rival, and by his tact he became an expert in staging a situation. But it was not merely to inspired mechanical dexterity that he owed the high position which was allowed him by so shrewd a judge as Manuel de la Revilla : to his unequalled knowledge of the scene he joined the forces of passion and sympathy, the power of SELGAS: B^CQUER 377 dramatic creation, and a metrical ingenuity which en- chanted and bewildered those who heard and those who read him. ^Ic-t There is a feminine, if not a falsetto timbre in the voice of JOSE SELGAS Y CARRASCO (1824-1882), a writer on the staff of the fighting journal, El Padre Cobos, and a government clerk till Martinez Campos transfigured him into a Cabinet Minister. Selgas' verse in the Prima- vera is so charged with the conventional sentiment and with the amiable pessimism dear to ordinary readers, that his popularity was inevitable. Yet even Spanish indulgence has stopped short of proclaiming him a great poet, and now that his day has gone by, he is almost as unjustly decried as he was formerly over-praised. Though not a great original genius, he was an accomplished ver- sifier whose innocent prettiness was never banal, whose simplicity was unaffected, whose faint music and caress- ing melancholy are not lacking in individuality and fascination. A more powerful poetic impulse moved the Sevillan, GUSTAVO ADOLFO BECQUER (1836-1870). An orphan in his tenth year, Becquer was educated by his godmother, a well-meaning woman of some position, who would have made him her heir had he consented to follow any regular profession or to enter a merchant's office. At eighteen he arrived, a penniless vagabond, in Madrid, where he underwent such extremes of hardship as helped to shorten his days. A small official post, which saved /^ him from actual starvation, was at last obtained for him, but his indiscipline soon caused him to be set adrift. He maintained himself by translating foreign novels, by journalistic hack-work in the columns of El Contem- poraneo and El Museo Universal, till death delivered him. 378 SPANISH LITERATURE The three volumes by which he is represented are made up of prose legends, and of poems modestly entitled Rimas. Though Hoffmann is Becquer's intel- lectual ancestor in prose, the Spaniard speaks with a personal accent in such examples of morbid fantasy as Los Ojos Verdes, wherein Fernando loses life for the sake of the green-eyed mermaiden : as the tale of Man- rique's madness in El Rayo de Luna (The Moonbeam), as the rendering of Daniel's sacrilege in La Rosa de Pasidn. And as Hoffmann influences Becquer's dreamy prose, so Heine influences his Rimas. It is argued that, since Becquer knew no German, he cannot have read Heine an unconvincing plea, if we remember that Byron's example was followed in every country by poets ignorant of English. Howbeit, it is certain that Heine has had no more brilliant follower than Becquer, who, however, substitutes a note of fairy mystery for Heine's incomparable irony. His circumstances, and the fact that he did not live to revise his work, account for occasional inequalities of execution which mar his magical music. To do him justice, we must read him in a few choice pieces where his apparently simple rhythms and suave assonantic cadences express his half-delirious visions in terms of unsurpassable artistry. At first sight one is deceived into thinking that the simplicity is a spontaneous result, and there has arisen a host of imitators who have only contrived to caricature Becquer's defects. His merits are as purely personal as Blake's, and the imitation of either poet results almost inevitably in mere flatness. During the nineteenth century Spain has produced no more brilliant master of prose than MARIANO Jos DE LARRA (1809-1837), son of a medical officer in the LARRA 379 French army. It is a curious fact that, owing to his early education in France, Larra one of the most idiomatic writers should have been almost ignorant of Spanish till his tenth year. Destined for the law, he was sent to Valladolid, where he got entangled in some love affair which led him to renounce his career. He took to literature, attempting the drama in his Maa'as, the novel in El Doncel de Don Enrique el Doliente : in neither was he successful. But if he could not draw character nor narrate incident, he could observe and satirise with amazing force and malice. Under the name of Figaro * and of Juan Perez de Munguia he won for himself such prominence in journalism as no Spaniard has ever equalled. Sp_anish politics, the weaknesses of the national character, are exposed in a spirit of ferocious bitterness peculiar to the writer. His is, indeed, a de- pressing performance, overcharged with misanthropy ; yet for unflinching courage, insight, and sombre humour, Larra has no equal in modern Spanish literature, and scarcely any superior in the past. In his twenty-eighth year he blew out his brains in consequence of an amour in which he was concerned, leaving a vacancy which has never been filled by any successor. It is gloomy work to learn that all men are scoundrels, and that all evils are irremediable : these are the hopeless doctrines which have brought Spain to her present pass. Yet it is impossible to read Larra's pessimistic page without admiration for his lucidity and power. An essayist of more patriotic tone is SERAFIN ESTE- BANEZ CALDERON (1799-1867), whose biography has 1 M. Morel-Fatio points out that Figaro, which seems so Castilian by association, is not a Castilian name. See his Etudes stir fEspagne (Paris, 1895), vo '- i- P-76. If it be not Catalan, if Beaumarchais invented it, it is among the most successful of his coinage. 380 SPANISH LITERATURE been elaborately written by his nephew, Antonio Canovas del Castillo, the late Prime Minister of Spain. Estebanez' verses are well-nigh as forgotten as his Conquista y Pdrdida de Portugal, and his Escenas Anda- luzas (1847) have never been popular, partly through fault of the author, who enamels his work with local or obsolete words in the style of Wardour Street, and who assumes a posture of superiority which irritates more than it amuses. A record of Andalucfan manners and of fading customs, the Escenas has special value as embodying the impression of an observer who valued picturesqueness valued it so highly, in fact, that one is haunted (perhaps unjustly) by the suspicion that he heightened his tones for the sake of effect. Another series of " documents " is afforded by RAM6N DE MESO- NERO ROMANOS (1803-82), who is often classed as a follower of Larra, whereas the first of his Esctnas Matri- tenses appeared before Larra's first essays. He has no trace of Larra's energetic condensation, tending, as he does, to a not ungraceful diffuseness ; but he has be- queathed us a living picture of the native Madrid before it sank to being a poor, pale copy of Paris, and has enabled us to reconstruct the social life of sixty years since. Mesonero, who has none of Estebanez' airs and graces, though he is no less observant, and is probably more accurate, writes as a well-bred man speaks simply, naturally, directly ; and those qualities are seen to most advantage in his Memorias de un Setenton, which are as interesting as the best of reminiscences can be. These records of customs and manners influenced a writer of German origin on her father's side, Cecilia Bohl de Faber, who was thrice married, and whom it is convenient to call by her pseudonym, FERNAN CABA- FERNAN CABALLERO ,381 LLERO (1796-1877), a village in Don Quixote's country. Her first novel, La Gaviota (1848), has probably been more read by foreigners than any Spanish book of the century, and, with all its sensibility and moralisings, we can scarcely grudge its vogue ; for it is true to common life as common life existed in an Andalucian village, and its style is natural, if not distinguished. Even in La Gaviota there is an air of unreality when the scene is shifted from the country to the drawing-room, and the suspicion that Fernan Caballero could invent without observing deepens in presence of such a wooden lay-figure as Sir George Percy in dementia. Her didactic bent increased with time, so that much of her later work is bedevilled with sermons and gospellings ; yet so long as she deals with the rustic episodes which were her earliest memories, so long as she is content to report and to describe, she produces a delightful series of pic- tures, touched in with an almost irreproachable refine- ment. She is not far enough from us to be a classic ; but she is sufficiently removed to be old-fashioned, and she suffers accordingly. Still it is safe to prophesy that La Gaviota will survive most younger rivals. In all likelihood PEDRO ANTONIO DE ALARCON (1833- 1891), who, like most literary Spaniards, injured his work by meddling in politics, will live by his shorter, more unambitious stories. His Escdndolo (1875), after creating a prodigious sensation as a defence of the Jesuits from an old revolutionist, is already laid aside, and La Prddiga is in no better case. The true Alarc6n is revealed in El Sombrero de tres Ptcos, a picture of rustic manners, rendered with infinite enjoyment and merry humour ; in the rapid, various sketches entitled Historietas Nacionales; and in that gallant, picturesque account of the Morocco 382 SPANISH LITERATURE campaign called the Diario de un Testigo de la Guerra en Africa as vivid a piece of patriotic chronicling as these latest years have shown. Of graver prose modern Spain has little to boast. Yet the Marques de Valdegamas, JUAN DONOSO CORTS (1809-1853) has written an Ensayo sobre el Catolicismo, el Liberalismo y el Socialismo, which has been read and ap- plauded throughout Europe. Donoso, the most intoler- ant of Spaniards, overwhelms his readers with dogmatic statement in place of reasoned exposition ; but he writes with astonishing eloquence, and with a superb convic- tion of his personal infallibility that has scarcely any match in literature. At the opposite pole is the Vich priest, JAIME BALMES Y USPIA (1810-48), whose Cartas a un Esceptico and Criteria are overshadowed by his Pro- testantismo comparado en el Catolicismo t a performance of striking ingenuity, among the finest in the list of modern controversy. Donoso denounced man's reason as a gin of the devil, as a faculty whose natural tendency is towards error. Balmes appeals to reason at every step of the road. With him, indeed, it is unsafe to allow that two and two are four until it is ascertained what he means to do with that proposition ; for his subtlety is almost uncanny, and his dexterity in using an opponent's admission is surprising. If anything, Balmes is even too clever, for the most simple-minded reader is driven to ask how it is possible that any rational being can hold the opposite view. Still, from the Catholic standpoint, Balmes is unanswerable, and in Spain at least he has never been answered, while his vogue abroad has been very great. Setting aside its doctrinal bearing, his treatise is a most striking example of destructive criticism and of marshalled argument. CHAPTER XIII CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE To write an account of contemporary literature is an undertaking not less tempting than to write the history of contemporary politics. Its productions are likely to be familiar to us ; its authors have probably expressed ideas with which we are more or less in sympathy ; and in dealing with these we are free from the burdens of authority and tradition. On the other hand, criticism of contemporaries is so prone to be coloured by the pre- judice of sects and cliques, that the liberal historian of the past is in danger of exhibiting himself as a blind observer of the present, or as a ludicrous prophet of the future. A book on current literature is often, like Hansard, a melancholy register of mistaken forecasts. Probably no critic of 1820 would have ventured to place Keats among the greatest poets of the world. But the risk of failing to recognise a Keats is, in the nature of things, very slight ; and for our present purpose we are only concerned with those who, by general admission, are among the living influences of the moment, the chiefs of a generation which is now almost middle-aged. No Spaniard would contest the title of the Asturian, RAMON DE CAMPOAMOR Y CAMPOOSORIO (b. 1817), to be considered as the actual doyen of Spanish literature. He purposed entering the Society of Jesus in his youth, then 384 SPANISH LITERATURE turned to medicine as his true vocation, and finally gave himself up to poetry and politics. A fierce conservative, Campoamor has served as Governor of Alicante and Valencia, and has combated democracy by speech and pen ; but he has never been taken seriously as a politician, and his few philosophic essays have caused his ortho- doxy to be questioned by writers with an imperfect sense of humour. His controversy with Valera on metaphysics and poetry is a manifest joke to which both writers have lent themselves with an affectation of profound solemnity ; and it may well be doubted if Campoamor's professed convictions are more than occasions for humoristic ingenuity. He has attempted the drama without success in such pieces as El Palacio de la Verdad and in El Honor. So also in the eight cantos of a grandiose poem entitled El Drama Universal (1873) he has failed to impress with his version of the posthumous loves of Honorio and Soledad, though in the matter of technical execution nothing finer has been accomplished in our day. His chief distinction, according to Peninsular critics, is that he has invented a new poetic genre under the names of doloras, humoradas or pequenos poemas (short poems). It is not, however, an easy matter to distinguish any one of these from its brethren, and Campoamor's own explanation lacks clearness when he lays it down that a dolora is a dramatised humorada, and that a pcqueno poema is an amplified dolora. This is to define light in terms of darkness. An acute critic, M. Peseux-Richard, has noted that this definition is not only obscure, but that it is an evident after-thought. 1 The dolora is the first in order of invention, and it is also the performance 1 See the Revue hispaniqut (Paris, 1894), vol. i. pp. 236-257. CAMPOAMOR 385 upon which, to judge by his Pottica, Campoamor sets most value. What, then, is a dolora ? It is, in fact, a " transcendental " fable in which men and women, their words and acts, are made to typify eternal "verities": a poem which aims at brevity, delicacy, pathos, and philosophy in an ironical setting. The "transcendental" truth to be conveyed is the supreme point : exquisiteness of form is unimportant. M. Peseux-Richard dryly remarks that humoradas are as old as anything in literature, and that Campoamor's exploit consists in inventing the name, not the thing. This is true ; and it is none the less true that the writing of doloras (and the rest), after the recipe of the master, has become a plague of recent Spanish literature. Fortunately Campoamor is better than his theories, which, if he were consistent, would lead him straight to conceptismo. Doubtless, at whiles, he con- descends upon the banal, mistakes sentimentalism for sentiment, substitutes a commonplace for an aphorism, a paradox for an epigram ; doubtless, also, he is wanting in the right national note of exaltation and rhetorical splendour. But for all his profession of indifference to form, he is at his best a most accomplished craftsman, an admirable artist in miniature, an expert in the art of concise expression, and, in so much, a healthy influence though not without a concealed germ of evil. For if in his own hands the ingenious antithesis often reaches the utmost point of condensation, in the hands of imitators it is degraded to an obscure conceit, a rhymed conun- drum. His vogue has always been considerable, and he is one of the few Spanish poets whose reputation extends beyond the Pyrenees ; still, he is not in any sense a national poet, a characteristic product of the soil, and 386 SPANISH LITERATURE with all his distinguished scepticism, his picturesque pessimistic pose, and his sound workmanship, he is more likely to be remembered for a score of brilliant apophthegms than for any essentially poetic quality. It was as a poet that JUAN VALERA Y ALCALA GALIANO (b. 1827) made his first appearance in literature in 1856. Few in Europe have seen more aspects of life, or have snatched more profit from their opportunities. Born at C6rdoba, educated at Malaga and Granada, Valera has so enjoyed life from the outset that his youth is now the subject of a legend. Passing from law to diplomacy, he learned the world in the legations at Naples, Lisbon, Rio Janeiro, Dresden, St. Petersburg ; he helped to found El Contemporanto, once a journal of great influence ; he entered the Cortes, and became minister at Frankfort, Washington, Brussels, and Vienna. His native subtlety, his cosmopolitan tact, have served him no less in literature than in affairs. To literature he has given the best that is in him. He has protested, with the ironical humility in which he excels, against the public neglect of hi& poems ; and when one reflects upon what has found favour in this kind, the protest is half justified. Valera's verses, falling short as they do of inspired perfection, are wrought with curious delicacy of technique. But his very cultivation is against him : such poems as Sueiios or Ultimo Adios or El Fuego divino, admirable as they are, recall the work of predecessors. Memories of Luis de Le6n, traces of Dante and Leopardi, are encountered on his best page ; and yet he brings with him into modern verse qualities which, in the actual stage of Spanish literature, are of singular worth repose and refinement and dignity and metrical mastery. As a critic his diplomatic training has been a hin- VALERA 387 drance to him. He rarely writes without establishing some ingenious and suggestive parallel or pronouncing some luminous judgment ; but he is, so to say, in fear of his own intelligence, and his instinctive courtesy, his desire to please, often stay him from arriving at a clear conclusion. His manifold interests, the incomparable beauty of his style, his wide reading, his cold lucidity, are an almost ideal equipment for critical work. Expert in ingratiation as he is, his suave complaisance becomes a formidable weapon in such a performance as the Cartas Americanas, where excessive urbanity has all the effect of commination : you set the book down with the im- pression that the writers of the South American continent have been complimented out of existence by a stately courtier. But whatever reserves may be made in praising the poet and the critic, Valera's triumph as a novelist is in- contestable. Mr. Gosse has so introduced him to English readers as to make further criticism almost superfluous. Valera, for all his polite scepticism, is a Spaniard of the best : a mystic by intuition and inheritance, a doubter by force of circumstances and education. He himself has told us in the Comendador Mendoza how Pepita Jimenez came into life as the result of much mystic reading, which held him fascinated but not captive ; and were we to accept his humorous confession literally, we should take it that he became a novelist by accident. It is, how- ever, true that when he wrote Pepita Jimenez he still had much to learn in method. Writers with not a tithe of his natural gift would have avoided his obvious faults his digressions, his episodes which check the current of his story. But Pepita Jim/nez, whatever its defects, is of capital importance in literary history, for from its publi- 388 SPANISH LITERATURE cation dates the renaissance of the Spanish novel. Here at last was a book owing nothing to France, taking its root in native inspiration, arabesquing the motives of Luis de Granada, Le6n, Santa Teresa, displaying once more what Coventry Patmore has well described as " that complete synthesis of gravity of matter and gaiety of manner which is the glittering crown of art, and which, out of Spanish literature, is to be found only in Shakespeare, and even in him in a far less obvious degree." And Valera has continued to progress in art. In construction, in depth, in psychological insight, Dona Luz exceeds its predecessor, as the Comendador Mendoza outshines both in vigour of expression, in tragic con- ception, in pathetic sincerity. Las Ilusiones del Doctor Faustina has found less favour with critics and with general readers, perhaps because its humour is too re- fined, its observation too merciless, its style too subtle. Nor is Valera less successful in the short story, and in the dialogue, in which sort Asclepigenia may be held for an absolute masterpiece in little. His work lies before us, complete for all purposes ; for though he still pub- lishes for our delight, advancing age compels him to dictate instead of writing a harassing condition for an artist whose talent is free from any touch of declamation. It is hard for us who have undergone the spell of Prospero, who have been fascinated by his truth and grace and sympathy, to judge him with the impartiality of posterity. But we may safely anticipate its general verdict. It may be that some of his improvisations will lack durability; but these are few. Valera, like the rest of the world, is entitled to be judged at his best, and his best will be read as long as Spanish literature endures ; for he is PEREDA 389 not simply a dexterous craftsman using one of the noblest of languages with an exquisite delicacy and illimitable variety of means, nor a clever novelist exer- cising a superficial talent, nor even (though he is that in a very special sense) the leader of a national revival. He is something far rarer and more potent than an accomplished man of letters : a great creative artist, and the embodiment of a people's genius. A less cosmopolitan, but scarcely less original talent is that of JOSE MARIA DE PEREDA (b. 1834), who comes, like so many distinguished Spaniards, from " the moun- tain." Born at Polanco, trained as a civil engineer in his province of Santander, Pereda was and, perhaps, still is, theoretically a stout Carlist, an intransigent ultramontane whose social position has enabled him to despise the politics of expediency. His earliest essays in a local newspaper, La Abeja Montanesa, attracted no attention ; nor was he much more fortunate with his amazingly brilliant Escenas Montaftesas (1864). Fernan Caballero, and a gentle sentimentalist now wholly for- gotten, Antonio Trueba (1821-89), satisfied readers with graceful insipidities, beside which the new-comer's manly realism seemed almost crude. The conventional villager, simple, Arcadian, and impossible, held the field ; and Pereda's revelation of unveiled rusticity was esteemed displeasing, unnecessary, inartistic. He had to educate his public. From the outset he found a few enthusiasts to appreciate him in his native province ; and, by slow degrees, he succeeded in imposing himself first upon the general audience, and then, with much more difficulty, upon official critics. It is commonly alleged against him that even in his more ambitious novels in Don Gonzalo Gonzalez de la Gonzolera, in Pedro Sanchez, where he deals 390 SPANISH LITERATURE with town life, and in Sotileza, which is salt with the sea his personages are local. The observation is intended as a reproach ; but, in truth, Pereda's men and women are only local as Sancho Panza and Maritornes are local local in particulars, universal as types of nature. His true defects are his tendency to abuse his knowledge of dialect, to insist on a moral aim, to caricature his villains. These are spots on the sun. On the whole, he pictures life as he sees it, with unblenching fidelity; his people live and move ; and not least he is a master of nervous, energetic phrase. No writer outdoes him as a landscape- painter in rendering the fertile valleys, the cold hills, the vexed Cantabrian sea, to which he returns with the inti- mate passion of a lover. The representative of a younger school is BENITO PEREZ GALDOS (b. 1845), who left the Canary Islands in his nineteenth year with the purpose of reading law in Madrid. A brief trial of journalism, previous to the revolution of 1868, led to the publication of his first novel, La Fontana de Oro (1870), and since 1873 he has shown a wondrous persistence and suppleness of talent. His Episodios Nacionales alone fill twenty volumes, and as many more exist detached from that series. He has com- posed the modern national epic in the form of novels: novels which have for their setting the War of Independ- ence, and the succeeding twenty years of civil combat ; novels in which not less than five hundred characters are presented. Gald6s is in singular contrast with his friend Pereda. The prejudiced Tory has educated his public ; the Liberal reformer has been educated by his contem- poraries. Gald6s has always had his fingers on the general pulse ; and when the readers in the late seventies wearied of the historico-political novel, Gald6s was ready with La GALD6S: ALAS 391 Familia de Leon Roch, with Gloria, and with Dona Per- fecta, in which the religious difficulty is posed ten years before Robert Elsmere was written. His third stage of development is exampled in Fortuna y Jacinta, a most forcible study of contemporary life. A prolific inventor, a minute observer of detail, Galdos combines realism with fantasy, flat prose with poetic imagination, so that he succeeds best in drawing psychological eccentricities like Angel Guerra. He is perhaps too Spanish to endure translation, too prone to assume that his readers are familiar with the minutiae of Peninsular life and history, and his construction, broad as it is, lacks solidity ; but that he deserves the greater part of his fame is unques- tionable, and if there be doubters, Fortuna y Jacinta and Angel Guerra are at hand to vindicate the judgment. In all the length and breadth of Spain no writer (with the possible exception of that slashing, incorrigible, brilliant reviewer, Antonio de Valbuena) is better known and more feared than LEOPOLDO ALAS (b. 1852), who / uses the pseudonym of Clarin. Alas is often accused of fierce intolerance as a critic"; and the charge has this much truth in it that he is righteously, splendidly in- tolerant of a pretender, a mountebank, or a dullard. He may be right or wrong in judgment ; but there is some- thing noble in the intrepidity with which he handles an established reputation, in the infinite malice with which he riddles an enemy. An ample knowledge of other literatures than his own, a catholic taste, as pretty a wit as our days have seen, and a most combative, gallant spirit make him a critical force which, on the whole, is used for good. He is not mentioned here, however, as the formidable gladiator of journalism, but as the author of one of the best contemporary novels. La Regenta 26 I ./ f i V . 392 SPANISH LITERATURE (1884-1885) is, in the first place, a searching analysis of criminal passion, marked by fine insight ; and the exami- nation of false mysticism which betrays Ana Ozores is among the subtlest, most masterly achievements in recent literature. Gald6s is realistic and persuasive : Alas is real and convincing. He has not the cunning of the con- triver of situations, and as he never condescends to the novelist's artifice, he imperils his chance of popularity. In truth, far from enjoying a vulgar vogue, La Regenta has had the distinction of being condemned by critic- asters who have never read it. Su unico Hijo, and the collection of short stories entitled Pipd, interesting and finished in detail, are of slighter substance and value. The duties of a law professorship at the University of Oviedo, the tasks of journalism, have occupied Alas during the last four years. Literature in Spain is but a poor crutch, and even the popular Valera has told us that he must perish did he depend upon his pen. Spanish men of letters have to be content with fame. Meanwhile, it is known that Alas is at work upon the long-promised EsperaindeOj in which we may fairly hope to find a com- panion to La Regenta. Of ARMANDO PALACIO VALORS (b. 1853) it can hardly be said that he has fulfilled the promise of Marta y Maria and La Hermana de San Sulpicio. Alas, with whom Palacio Vald^s collaborated in a critical review of the literature of 1881, has succeeded in absorbing the good elements of the modern French naturalistic school without losing his Spanish savour. Palacio Valdes has surrendered great part of his nationality in Espuma and in La Fe, which might, with a change of names, be taken for translations of French novels. He has abun- dant cleverness, a sure hand in construction, a distinct DONA EMILIA PARDO BAZAN 393 power of character-drawing, which have won him more consideration out of Spain than in it, and he has a fair claim to rank as the chief of the modern naturalistic school. His most distinguished rival is the Galician, the Sra. Quiroga, better known by her maiden name of EMILIA PARDO BAZAN (b. 1851), the best authoress that Spain has produced during the present century. Her earliest effort was a prize essay on Feij6o (1876), followed by a volume of verses which I have never seen, and upon which the writer is satisfied that oblivion should scatter its poppy. She pleases most in picturesque de- scription of country life and manners in her province, of scenes in La Coruna, which she glorifies in her writings as Marineda. Her foundation of a critical review, the Nuevo Teatro Critico, written entirely by herself, showed confidence and enterprise, and enabled her to propagate her eclectic views on life and art. Women have hitherto been more impressionable than original, and Dona Emilia has been drawn into the French naturalistic current in Los Pazos de Ulloa (1886) and in La Madre Naturaleza (1887). Both novels contain episodes of remarkable power, and La Madre Naturaleza is an almost epical glorification of primitive instincts. But Spain has a native realism of her own, and it is scarcely probable that the French variety will ever supersede it. It is as a naturalistic novelist that the Sra. Pardo Bazan is gener- ally known ; but the fashion of naturalism is already passing, and it is by the rich colouring, the local know- ledge, the patriotic enthusiasm, and the exact vision of such transcripts of local scene and custom as abound in De mi tierra that she best conveys the impressions of an exuberant and even irresistible temperament. What Pereda has accomplished for the land of the mountain 394 SPANISH LITERATURE the Sra. Pardo Bazan has, in lesser measure, done tor Galicia. One must hold it against her that she should have aided in establishing the trivial vogue of the Jesuit, Luis COLOMA (b. 1851), whose Pequefleces (1890) caused more sensation than any novel of the last twenty years. Palacio Vald6s has been severely censured for writing, in Espuma, of "society" in which he has never moved. "What," asked Isaac Disraeli, "what does my son know about dukes ? " The Padre Coloma's acquaintance with dukes is extensive and peculiar. Born at Jerez de la Frontera, he came under the influence of Fernan Caba- llero, whom he has pictured in El Viernes de Dolores, and with whom he collaborated in Juan Miseria. His lively youth was spent in drawing-rooms where Alfonsist plots were hatched ; and when, at the age of twenty-three, he joined the Society of Jesus after receiving a mys- terious bullet-wound which brought him to death's door, he knew as much of Madrid "society" as any man in Spain. His literary mission appears to be to satirise the Spanish aristocracy, and Pequefteces is his capital effort in that kind. An angry controversy followed, in which Valera made one of his few mistakes by taking the field against Coloma, who, with all his superficial smart- ness, is a special pleader and not an artist. A roman a clef is always sure of ephemeral success, and readers were too intent on identifying the originals of Currita Albornoz and Villamelon to observe that Pequeneces was a hasty improvisation, void of plot and character and truth and style. Certain scenes are good enough to pass as episodical caricatures, and had the Padre Coloma the endowment of wit and gaiety and distinction, he might hope to develop into a clerical Gyp. As it is, he has ECHEGARAY 395 shot his bolt, achieved a notoriety which is even now fading, and is in a fair way to be dethroned from his position by Vicente Blasco Ibdnez, the author of Flor de Mayo, and by Juan Ochoa, the writer of Un Alma de Dios. These two novelists, the rising hopes of the immediate future, are rapidly growing in repute as in accomplish- ment. Narcis Oiler y Moragas (b. 1846) has shown singular gifts in such tales as L'Escanya-pobres, Vilaniu, and Viva Espanya. But, as he writes in Catalan, we have no immediate concern with him here. Of the modern Spanish theatre there is little originality to report. Tamayo's successor in popular esteem is Josfi ECHEGARAY (1832), who first came into notice as a mathematician, a political economist, a revolutionary orator, and a minister of the short - lived republic. Writing under the obvious anagram of Jorge Hayeseca, Echegaray first attempted the drama so late as 1874, and has since then succeeded and failed with innumerable pieces. He is essentially a romantic, as he proves in La Esposa del Vengador and in Locura 6 Santidad ; but there is nothing distinctively national in his work, which continually reflects the passing fashions of the moment. His plays are commonly well constructed, as one might expect from a mathematician applying his science to the scene, and he has a certain power of gloomy realisation, as in El Gran Galeoto, which moves and impresses ; yet he has created no character, he delights in cheap effects, and when he betakes himself to verse, is prone to a banality which is almost vulgar. A delightfully middle- class writer, his appreciation by middle-class audiences calls for no special comment. It even speaks for itself. The drama has also been attempted by CASPAR NUNEZ 396 SPANISH LITERATURE DE ARCE (b. 1834), whose Haz de Lefla, in which Felipe II. figures, is the most distinguished historical drama of the century, written with a reserve and elegance rare on the modern Spanish stage. Nunez de Arce, however, though he began with a successful play in his fifteenth year, was well advised when he forsook the scene and gave himself to pure lyrism. His disillusioning political experiences as Secretary of State for the Colonies have reduced him to silence during the last few years. He was born to sing songs of victory, to be the poet of ordered liberty, and circumstances have cast his lot in times of disaster and revolutionary excess. He has had no opportunity of celebrating a national triumph, and his hopes of a golden age, to be brought about by a few constitutional changes, have been grievously dis- appointed. Yet it is as a political singer that he has won a present fame and that he will pass onward to renown. His Idilio is a rustic love story of fine sim- plicity, of an impressive, pure realism which lifts it above the common level of pastoral poems, and its sincerity, its austere finish, are characteristic of the poet, who is always a scrupulous artist, a passionate devotee and observer of nature, as he has proved once more in La Pesca. In Raimundo Lulio, Nunez de Arce's superb execution is displayed with a superb result which almost tempts the coldest reader into pardoning the confusion of two separate themes alle- gory and amorism. But a political poet he remains, and the famous Gritos de Combate (1875), in which he denounces anarchy, pleads for freedom and for concord, with a civic courage beyond all praise, is a lasting monu- ment in its kind. Modern Castilian shows no poetic figure to compare with him, and the only promises of V MENENDEZ Y PELAYO 397 our time are Jacinto Verdaguer and Joan Maragall, two Catalan singers who fall without our limit. The present century has produced no great Spanish historian, though there has been an active movement of historical research, headed by scholars like Fidel Fita, specialists like Cardenas, Azcarate, Costa, Perez Pujol, Ribera, Jimenez de la Espada, Fernandez Duro, and Hinojosa, all of whom have produced brilliant mono- graphs, or have accumulated valuable materials for the Mariana of the future. In criticism also there has been a marked advance of scholarship and tolerance, thanks to the example of MARCELINO MENENDEZ Y PELAYO (b. 1856), whose extraordinary learning and argumentative acuteness were first shown in his Ciencia Espanola (1878), and his Historia de los Heterodoxos Espailoles (i 880-81). Since then the slight touch of acerbity, of provincial narrowness, has disappeared, the writer's talent has matured, and, starting as the standard-bearer of an aggressive party, anxious to recover lost ground, his sympathies have widened as his erudition has taken deeper root, till at the present moment he is accepted by his ancient foes as the most sagacious and accomplished of Spanish critics. His Odas, Epistolas y Tragedias, is a signal instance of technical excellence in versification, containing as good a version of the Isles of Greece as any foreigner has achieved. But, after all, it is not as poet, but as critic, as literary historian, that he is hailed by his countrymen as a prodigy. He has, perhaps, under- taken too much, and the editing of Lope de Vega may cause the Historia de las Ideas Esteticas en Espana to remain an unfinished torso ; but his example and influence have been wholly exercised for good, and are evident in the excellent work of the younger generation the work of 398 SPANISH LITERATURE Emilio Cotarelo y Mori, of Rafael Altamira y Crevea, of Ramon Mene"ndez Pidal. It would be a singular thing if the bright, improvident Spain, which to most of us stands for the embodiment of reckless romanticism, were to produce a race of writers of the German type, a breed absorbed in detail and minute observation ; and as a nation's genius is no more subject to change than is the temperament of individuals, the development may not come to pass. But, as the century closes, the tendency inclines that way. BIBLIOGRAPHICAL " NOTE' GEORGE TlCKNOR'S great History of Spanish Literature (Boston, 1872) is the widest survey of the subject ; it should be read in the Castilian version of Pascual de Gayangos and Enrique de Vedia (I85I-56), 1 or in the German of Nikolaus Heinrich Julius (Leipzig, 1852), both of which contain valuable supplementary matter. Ludwig Gustav Lemcke shows taste and learning and independence in his Handbuch der spanischen Literatur (Leipzig, 1855-56). On a smaller scale are Eugene Baret's Histoire de la literature espagnole (1863), the volume contributed by Jacques Claude Bemogeot to Victor Duruy's series entitled Histoire des literatures etrangtres (1880), Licurgo Cappelletti's Letteratura spagnuola (Milan, 1882), and Mr. H. Butler Clarke's Spanish Literature (1893). Ferdinand Wolfs Studien zur Geschichte der spanischen und portugiesischen National- literatur (Berlin, 1859) is a most masterly study of the early period ; the Castilian version by D. Miguel de Unamuno, with notes by D. Marcelino Mene"ndez y Pelayo (1895-96), corrects some of Wolfs conclusions in the light of recent research. The Darstellung der spanischen Literatur im Mittelalter (Mainz, 1846), by Ludwig Clarus, whose real name was Wilhelm Volk, is learned and suggestive, though too enthusiastic in criticism. Josd Amador de los Rfos' seven volumes, entitled Historia critica de la literatura espanola (1861-65), end with the reign of the Catholic Kings : an alphabetical index would greatly increase the value of this monumental work. The Comte Theodore Joseph Boudet de Puymaigre's two volumes, Les uieux auteurs castillans (1888-90), give the facts in a very agreeable, unpretentious way. Among current handbooks by Spanish authors, those by Antonio Gil y Zdrate (1844), Manuel de la Revilla and Pedro de Alcantara 1 Unless otherwise stated, it is to be understood that, of the books named in this list, the Spanish are issued at Madrid, the English at London, and the French at Paris. 399 400 BIBLIOGRAPHY Garcia (1884), F. Sdnchez de Castro (1890), and Prudencio Mudarra y Pdrraga (Sevilla, 1895), are well-meant, and are, one hopes, useful for examination purposes. Jose Ferndndez-Espino's Curso historico- critico (Sevilla, 1871) is excellent ; but it ends with Cervantes' prose works, and makes no reference to the Spanish theatre. On the drama there is nothing to match Adolf Friedrich von Schack's Geschichte der dramatischen Literatur und Kunst in Spanien (Berlin, 1845-46) and his Nachtrage (Frankfurt am Main, 1854). Romualdo Alvarez Espino's Ensayo histdrico-critico del teatro espanol (Cddiz, 1876), containing long extracts from the chief drama- tists, is serviceable to beginners. The late Cayetano Barrera's Catd- logo bibliogrdfico y biogrdfico del teatro antiguo espanol (1860) is in- valuable : lack of funds causes the supplement to remain " inedited." In bibliography Castilian is richer than English. Nicola's Antonio's Bibliotheca Hispana Nova (1783-88) and Bibliotheca Hispana Vetus (1788) are wonderful for their time. Bartolome" Jos Gallardo's Ensayo de una Biblioteca espanola de libros raros y curiosos (1863-89) owes much to its editors, the Marque's de la Fuensanta del Valle and D. Jose" Sancho Raydn. For old editions Pedro Salvd y Mallen's Catdlogo de la biblioteca de Salvd (Valencia, 1872) may be consulted. An admirable monthly bibliography of new books is issued by D. Rafael Altamira y Crevea in his Revista critica de historia y litera- tura espaiiolas, portuguesas e" hispano-americanas. Murillo's monthly Bolettn is a mere sale list. M. Foulche"-Delbosc's Revue hispanique and Sr. Altamira's Revista critica are specially dedicated to our subject ; the zeal and self- sacrifice of both editors have earned the gratitude of all students of Spanish literature. MM. Gaston Paris' and Paul Meyer's Romania frequently contains admirable essays and reviews by MM. Morel- Fatio, Cornu, Cuervo, and others ; as much may be said for Gustav Grober's Zeitschrift fur romanische Philologie (Halle), and for the Giomale storico della letteratura italiana (Torino), edited by MM. Francesco Novati and Rodolfo Renier. Sr. Menendez y Pelayo's Historia de las Ideas esteticas en Espana (1883-91) touches literature at many points, and abounds in acute and suggestive reflections. Two treatises by M. Arturo Farinelli, Die Beziehungen zwischen Spanien und Deutschland in der Litteratur der beiden Lander (Berlin, 1892), and Spanien und die spanische Litteratur im Lichte der deutschen Kritik und Poesie (Berlin, 1892), are remark- able for curious learning and appreciative criticism. The best general collection of classics is Manuel Rivadeneyra's BIBLIOGRAPHY 401 Biblioteca de Au tores espanoles (1846-80), which consists of seventy- nine volumes. Sr. Menendez y Pelayo's Antologia de poetas Uricos castellanos (1890-96) is supplied with very learned and elaborate introductions. CHAPTER I The Leloaren Cantua and Altobiskar Cantua are given, with English renderings, in Mr. Wentworth Webster's admirable Basque Legends (1879); an exposure of the Altobiskar hoax by the same great authority is printed in the Academy of History's Boletin (1883). Rafael and Pedro Rodriguez Mohedano display much discursive, un- critical erudition in their ten-volumed Historia literaria en Espaiia (1768-85), which deals only with the early period. A recent study (1888) on Prudentius by the Conde de Vinaza deserves mention. Migne's Patrologia Latina includes the chief Spanish Fathers. In the fourth volume of Charles Garner's and Arthur Martin's Nouveaux Melanges d'archeologie, d'histoire, et de litterature sur le moyen dge (1877) there is a brilliant essay on the Gothic period by the Rev. Pere Jules Tailhan, to whom we also owe a splendid edition of the Rhymed Chronicle, the Epitoma Imptratorum (Paris, 1885), by the Anonymous Writer of Cordoba. For the Spanish Jews, Hirsch Gratz' Geschichte der Juden von den dltesten Zeiten bis auf die Gegenwart (Leipzig, 1865-90) is the best guide. Salomon Munk's Melanges tie philosophie juivc et arabe (1857) is not yet superseded, and Abraham Geiger's Divan des Casti- lier Abu 'I Hassan Juda ha Levi (Breslau, 1851) contains information not to be found elsewhere. M. Kayserling's Biblioteca Espanola PortugezaJudaica (Strassburg, 1890) is extremely valuable. Two works by Reinhart Pieter Anne Dozy are authoritative as regards the Arab period : the Histoire des Rfussulmans d'Espagne (Leyde, 1861), and the Recherches sur thistoire politique et litte'raire de r Espagne pendant le moyen dge (1881). The first edition of the Re- cherches (Leyde, 1849) embodies many suggestive passages cancelled in the reprints. Schack's Poesie und Kunst der Araber in Spanien und Sicilien (Stuttgart, 1877) is a good general survey, a little too enthu- siastic in tone ; it greatly gains in the Castilian version, made from , the first edition, by D. Juan Valera (1867-71). Nicolas Lucien Leclerc's Histoire de la me'decine arabe (1876) is of much wider scope than its title implies, and may be profitably consulted on Arab achievements in other fields. Francisco Javier Simonet states the 402 BIBLIOGRAPHY case against the predominance of Arab culture in the preface to his Glosario de voces ibe"ricas y latinas usadas entre los Muzdrabes (1888). D. Julian Ribera's learned Ortgenes de la justicia en Aragdn (Zara- goza, 1897) deals with the facts in a more judicial spirit. Of special monographs Ernest Renan : s Averroes et F Averroiisme (1866) is a recognised classic. The greater part of the codex from the Convent of Santo Domingo de Silos, now in the British Museum (Add. MSS. 30, 853), has been published by Dr. Joseph Priebsch in the Zeitschrijt, vol. xix. As regards the Provencal influence in the Peninsula, Manuel MiM y Fontanals' 'Irovadores en Espana (Barcelona, 1887) is a definitive work. Eugene Baret's Espagne et Provence (1857) is pleasing but superficial. Theophilo Braga's learned introduction to the Cancioneiro Portuguez da Vaticana (Lisbon, 1878) is brilliantly suggestive, though inaccurate in detail. The counter-current from Northern France, as it affects the epic, is treated in Mila y Fontanals' Poesia heroico- popular castellana (Barcelona, 1874). CHAPTER II The Misterio de los Reyes Magos is most accessible in Amador de los Rfos' Historia, vol. iii. pp. 658-60, and in K. A. Martin Hart- mann's dissertation, Ueber das altspanische Dreikonnigsspiel { Bautzen, 1879). The Swedish scholar, Eduard Lidforss, printed the Misterio in the Jahrbuch fiir romanische und englische Literatur (Leipzig, 1871), vol. xii., and Professor Georg Baist's diplomatic edition ap- peared at Erlangen in 1 879. Arturo Grafs Studii drammatici (Torino, 1878) contains an interesting essay on the Magi play ; M. Morel- Fatio's article in Romania, vol. ix., and Baist's review in the Zeii- schrift, vol. iv., are both important. D'Ancona's Origini dd teatro italiano (Torino, 1891) discusses the question of the play's date with much shrewdness and caution. The most convenient reference for the Poema del Cid is to Riva- deneyra, vol. Ivii. D. Ramon Menendez Pidal's edition (1898) super- sedes all others : next, in order of merit, come Karl Vollmoller's (Halle, 1879), Eduard Lidforss', called Cantares de Myo Cid (Lund, 1895), and Mr. Archer Huntington's (New York, 1897). The Cantar de Rodrigo is in Rivadeneyra, vol. xvi. ; vol. Ivii. contains the Apolonio, the Vida de Santa Maria Egipciacqua, and the Tres Reyes dorient. The sources of Santa Maria Egipciacqua are indicated by Adolf BIBLIOGRAPHY 403 Mussafia in the Sitzungsberichte of the Vienna Academy of Sciences, vol. clxiii. For the Disputa del Alma y Cuerpo see the Zeitschrift, vol. Ix. M. Morel-Fatio edited the Debate entre el Agua y el Vino and the Razon feita de Amor in Romania, vol. xvi. Most of the foregoing may be read in extract in Egidio Gorra's excellent antho- logy, Lingua e Letteratura Spagnuola delle origini (Milan, 1898). CHAPTER III Most of the writers referred to in this chapter are included in Rivadeneyra, vols. li. and Ivii. A valuable article on Berceo by D. Francisco Fernandez y Gonzalez, now Dean of the Central Univer- sity, was published in La Razon (1857) : a translated fragment of Berceo is given by Longfellow in Outre-Mer. Gautier de Coinci's Les tirades de la Sainte Vierge were edited by the Abbe Alexandre Eusebe Poquet (1857) in a somewhat prudish spirit. M. Morel- Fatio's study on the Libro de Alexandre, printed in the fourth volume of Romania, is an extremely thorough performance. Alfonso's Siete Partidas (1807) and the Fuero Juzgo (1815) have been issued by the Spanish Academy ; his scientific work is partially represented by Manuel Rico y Sinobas' five folios entitled Libras del Saber de Astronomia (1863-67). There is no modern edition of his histories, and a reprint is greatly needed : the inaugural speech of D. Juan Facundo Riano, read before the Academy of History (1869), traces the sources with great ability and learning. The translations in which Alfonso shared are best read in Hermann Knust's Mittei- lungen aus dem Eskorial (vol. cxli. of the publications issued by the Stuttgart Literarischer Verein), and in Knust's Dos Obras diddcticas y dos Leyendas (1878). Alfonso's Cantigas de Santa Maria have been published by the Spanish Academy (1889) in two of the handsomest volumes ever printed ; the Marque's de Valmar has edited the text, and supplied an admirable introduction and apparatus. Fadrique's Engannos e Assayamientos de las Mogieres is to be sought in Domenico Comparetti's Ricerche intorno al libro di Sin- dibad( Milan, 1869). The questions arising out of the Gran Conquista. de Ultramar are discussed by M. Gaston Paris, with his usual lucidity and learning, in Romania, vols. xvii., xix., and xxii. 404 BIBLIOGRAPHY CHAPTER IV Most of the poems mentioned are printed in Rivadeneyra, vol. Ivii. Solomon 's Rhymed Proverbs are included by Antonio Paz y Melia in Opusculos literarios de los siglos XIV.-XVJ. (1892). The Poema de /os/ has been reproduced in Arabic characters by Heinrich Morf (Leipzig, 1883) as part of a Gratulationsschrift from the University of Bern to that of Zurich. Juan Manuel's writings were edited by Gayangos in Rivadeneyra, vol. li. : we owe his Libro de Caza to Professor Georg Baist (Halle, 1880), and a valuable edition of the Libro del Caballero et del Escudero to S. Grafenberg (Erlangen, 1883). Alfonso XL's handbook on hunting is given by Gutierrez de la Vega in the third volume of the Biblioteca Venatoria (Madrid, 1879). Ayala's history forms vols. i. and ii. of Eugenic de Llaguno Amirola's Cronicas Espanolas (Madrid, 1779)- CHAPTER V The Comte de Puymaigre's La Cour litte"raire de Don Juan IL (1873) is an excellent general view of the subject. D. Emilio Cotarelo y Mori's Don Enrique de Villena (1896) is a very learned and interest- ing study. Villena's Arte Cisoria was reprinted so recently as 1879. The Libro de los Gatos and Clemente Sanchez' Enxemplos are in Rivadeneyra, vol. li. ; the latter were completed by M. Morel-Fatio in Romania^ vol. vii. Mr. Thomas Frederick Crane's Excmpla of Jacques Vitry (published in 1890 for the Folk- Lore Society) will be found useful by English readers. Baena's Candonero (1851) was edited by the late Marque's de Pidal : the large-paper copies contain a few loose pieces, omitted from the ordinary edition which was reprinted by Brockhaus in a cheap form at Leipzig in 1860. D. Antonio Paz y Melia's Obras de Juan Rodri- guez de la Cdmara (1884) is a good example of this scholar's con- scientious work. Amador de los Rfos' edition of the Obras del Marque's de Santillana (1852) is complete and minute in detail. There is no good edition of Juan de Mena's works ; I have found it most convenient to use that published by Francisco Sanchez (1804). The Coplas de la Panadera will be found in Gallardo, vol. i. cols. 613-617- Juan II.'s Crdnica is printed by Rivadeneyra, vol. Iviii. ; the others BIBLIOGRAPHY 405 those of Clavijo, Gdmez, Lena are in Llaguno y Amirola's Crdnicas Espanolas, already named. Llaguno also reprinted Pe"rez de Guzman's Generaciones at Valencia in 1790. No modern editor has had the spirit to reissue Martinez de Toledo's Corbacho, nor did even Ticknor possess a copy. The edition of Logrono (1529) is convenient. The Visidn deleitable is in Rivade- neyra, vol. xxxvi. I know no later edition of Lucena's Vita Beata than that of Zamora, 1483. CHAPTER VI Hernando del Castillo's Cancionero General should be read in the fine edition (1882) published by the Sociedad de Bibliofilos Espafioles ; the Cancionero de burlas in Luis de Usoz y Rio's reprint (London, 1841). The Marques de la Fuensanta del Valle and D. Jose Sancho Rayon edited Lope de Stuniga's Cancionero in 1872. While the present volume has been passing through the press, M. Foulche'- Delbosc has, for the first time, published the entire text of the Coplas del Provincial in the Revue hispanique, vol. v. The Coplas de Mingo Revulgo, Cota's Didlogo, and Jorge Manrique's Coplas are best read in D. Marcelino Mene*ndez y Pelayo's Antologia, vols. iii. and iv. An additional piece of Cota's, discovered by M. Foulche"-Delbosc, has been printed in the Revue hispanique, vol. i. ; and to D. Antonio Paz y Melia is due the publication of G6mez Manrique's Cancionero (1885). Inigo de Mendoza and Ambrosio Montesino are represented in Riva- deneyra, vol. xxxv. Miguel del Riego y Nunez' edition of Padilla appeared at London in 1841 in the Coleccidn de obras poSticas espanolas. Pedro de Urrea's Cancionero (1876) forms the second volume of the Biblioteca de Escritores Aragoneses. Encina's Teatro complete has been admirably edited (1893) by Francisco Asenjo Barbieri : a sug- gestive and penetrating criticism by Sr. Cotarelo y Mori appeared in Espaiia Moderna (May 1894). Palencia is to be studied sufficiently in his Dos Tratados (1876), arranged by D. Antonio Maria Fable". The Cronica of Lucas Iranzo was given by the Academy of History (1853) in the Memorial his I orico espanol, Amadis de Gaula is most easily read in Rivadeneyra, vol. xl., which is preceded by a very instructive preface, the work of Gayangos. The derivation of the Amadis romance is ably discussed from different points of view by Eugene Baret in his Etudes sur la redaction espagnole de F Amadis de Gaule (1853); by Theophilo Braga in his Historia das novelas portuguezas de cavalleria (Portft, 406 BIBLIOGRAPHY 1873) ; an d by Luclwig Braunfels in his Kritischer Versuch iiber den Roman Amadis von Gallien (Leipzig, 1876). The fourth volume of Ormsby's Don Quixote (1885) contains an exhaustive bibliography of the chivalresque novels, most of which are both costly and worth- less. Of the Celcstina. there are innumerable editions ; the handiest is that in Rivadeneyra, vol. iii. A reprint of Mabbe's splendid English version (1631) was included by Mr. Henley in his Tudor Translations (1894). D. Marcelino Mene"ndez y Pelayo's brilliant essay on Rojas is reprinted in the second series of his Estudios de critica literaria (1895). Bernaldez' Historia de los Reyes catolicos (Granada, 1856) has been carefully produced by Miguel Lafuente y Alcantara. Pulgar's Claras Varones was inserted at the end of Llaguno y Amirola's edition of the Centon epistolario (1775). It is quite impossible to give any notion of the immense mass of literature concerning Columbus ; but anything bearing the names of Martin Fernandez de Navarrete or of Mr. Henry Harrisse is entitled to the greatest respect. CHAPTER VII M. Morel-Fatio's DEspagne au 16' el 17' sihle (Heilbronn, 1878) is invaluable for this period and the succeeding century. Dr. Adam Schneider's Spaniens Anteil an der deutschen Litteratur des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts (Strassburg, 1898) is a work of immense industry, containing much curious information in a convenient form. English readers will find an excellent summary of the literary history of this time in Mr. David Hannay's Later Renaissance (1898). Manuel Cafiete, whose Teatro espanol del siglo XVI. (1885) is useful but ill arranged, included a single volume of Torres Naharro's Propaladia among the Libras de Antaiio so long ago as 1880; the second is still to come, and those who would read this dramatist must turn to the rare sixteenth-century editions. Perhaps the best reprint of Gil Vicente is that issued at Hamburg in 1834 by Jose" Victorino Barreto Feio and Jose" Gomes Monteiro ; a most complete account of Vicente, his environment and influence, is given by Theophilo Braga in the seventh volume of his learned Historia de la littera- tura portuguesa (Porto, 1898). Boscdn's Castilian version of the Cortegiano was reissued in 1873 ; the completest edition of his verse is that published by Professor Knapp (of Yale University), issued at Madrid in 1 873. Professor Flamini's Studi di storia letteraria italiana e straniera (Livorno, 1895) contains a very scholarly essay on the BIBLIOGRAPHY 407 debt of Boscdn to Bernardo Tasso. The poems of Garcilaso are in Rivadeneyra, vols. xxxii. and xlii. ; but a far pleasanter book to handle is Azara's edition (1765). Benedetto Croce's study entitled Intorno al soggiorno di Garcilaso de la Vega in Italia (1894) appeared origin- ally in the Rassegna storica napoletana di lettere ed arte (a magazine which deserves to be better known in England than it is). Croce's researches have been printed apart, and we may look forward to his publishing others no less important. Jeremiah Holmes Wiffen's biography and translation of Garcilaso (1823) are defective, but nothing better exists in English. Few poets in the world have been so fortunate in their editors as Sa de Miranda. Mme. Carolina Michaelis de Vasconcellos' reprint (Halle, 1881), with its very learned apparatus of introduction, notes, and variants, is a real achievement unsurpassed in the history of editing. A fine edition of Gutierre de Cetina has been published (Seville, 1895) with a scholarly introduction by D. Joaquin Hazanas y la Rua. Acuna's works appeared at Madrid in 1804 ; his Contienda de Ayax is in the second volume of Ldpez de Sedano's Parnaso Espaiiol (1778). Concerning Mendoza, the reader may profitably turn to Charles Graux' Essai sur les origines du fona grec de PEscorial (1880), published in the Bibliotheque de FEcole des Hautes Etudes. Professor Knapp edited Mendoza's verses in 1877: a creditable piece of work, though inferior to his edition of Boscan. Castillejo and Silvestre are exampled in Rivadeneyra, vol. xxxii. Of Villegas' Inventario there is no modern reprint. Guevara is sufficiently represented in Rivadeneyra, vol. Ixv. ; the English versions by Lord Berners, North, Fenton, Hellowes, and others, are of exceptional merit and interest. The most important historians of the Indies are reprinted by Rivadeneyra, vols. xxii. and xxvi. Amador de los Rios edited Oviedo for the Academy of History in 1851-55. Very full details con- cerning Corte"s are given by Prescott in his classic book on Peru, and Sir Arthur Helps' Life of Las Casas (1868) is a pleasing piece of partisanship. Lazarillo de Tormes should be read in Mr. Butler Clarke's beautiful reproduction of the princeps (1897). M. Morel-Fatio's essay in the first series of his Etudes surPEspagne (1895) is exceedingly ingenious, but, like all negative criticism, it is somewhat unconvincing. His guess that Lazarillo was written by some one connected with the Valde"s clique does not seem very happy, but even a conjecture by M. Morel-Fatio carries great weight. Eduard Bohmer gives a very full bibliography of Juan de Valdes 27 408 BIBLIOGRAPHY in his Biblioteca Wiffeniana (Strassburg, 1874). Benjamin Barren Wiffen had for Valde"s a kind of cult which found partial expression in his quarto Life and Writings of Juan Valdh^ otherwise Valdesio (1865). But it is impossible to give more minute references to the voluminous literature which deals with Valdes and his brother Alfonso. An historical essay by Manuel Carrasco, published at Geneva in 1880, is interesting as the work of a modern Spanish Protestant. CHAPTER VIII The Marques de la Fuensanta del Valle's edition of Lope de Rueda (1894) lacks an introduction, but it is in other respects as good as possible. D. Angel Lasso de la Vega y Arguelles has published a Historia y Juicio critico de la Escuela Pottica Sevillana (1871), which is useful, and even exhaustive, though far too eulogistic in tone. The Argensolas may be conveniently studied in Rivadeneyra, vol. xlii., which is supplemented by the Conde de Vinaza's collection of the Poesias sueltas (1889). Minor dramatists still await republication. Herrera is easiest read in Rivadeneyra, vol. xxxii. ; M. Morel- Fatio's critical edition of the Lepanto Ode (Paris, 1893) is of great merit, and an essay on Herrera by M. Edouard Bourciez in the Annales de la Faculty des lettres de Bordeaux (1891) is acute and suggestive. Vicente de la Fuente is the editor of Santa Teresa's writings in Riva- deneyra, vols. liii. and Iv. The biography by Mrs. Cunninghame Graham (1894), a work both learned and picturesque, presents rather the woman of genius than the canonised saint. The text of the remaining mystics will, with few exceptions, be found in Rivadeneyra, vols. vi., viii., ix., xxvii., and xxxii. The lesser lights exist only in editions of great rarity. Torre's verses are most accessible in Velazquez* edition (1753). Of Figueroa there is no recent reprint, though a poor selection is offered by Rivadeneyra, vol. xlii., which also includes Rufo Gutierrez' minor verse : his Austriada is given in vol. xxix., and Ercilla's Araucana in vol. xvii. The Catdlogo razonado biogrdfico y biblio- grdfico of the Portuguese authors who wrote in Spanish is due (1890) to Domingo Garcia Peres. The Barcelona reprint (1886) of Montemor is easily found: Professor Hugo Albert Rennert's monograph, 1 he Spanish Pastoral Romances (Baltimore, 1892), is extremely thoroiv -h. Zurita is best read in the princeps* A new edition of Mendoza's BIBLIOGRAPHY 409 Guerra de Granada is urgently called for, and is now being passed through the press by M. Foulche-Delbosc. Mendoza's burlesque of Silva will be found in Paz y Melia's Sales Espanolas (1890). CHAPTER IX Henceforward the task of the bibliographer is lighter ; for, though Cervantes, Lope, and later writers are the subjects of an enormous mass of literature, and are reprinted in editions out of number, it will only be necessary to name the most important. The twelve quartos which 'form the Obras Completas (1863-64) of Cervantes are open to much damaging criticism ; but they contain all his writings, except the conjectural pieces gathered together by D. Adolfo de Castro in his Varias obras ineditas de Cervantes (1874). For a most exhaustive bibliography of Cervantes' writings (Barcelona, 1895) we are indebted to the late D. Leopoldo Rius y Llosellas : a posthumous volume is to follow, but even in its present incomplete state Rius' book is worth more than all previous attempts put together. Editions of Don Quixote abound, and of these Diego Clemencin's (1833-39) deserves special mention for its very learned commentary. A new edition, in course of issue by Mr. David Nutt (1898), presents a text freed from arbitrary emendations which have crept in without authority. Fer- nndez de Navarrete's biography (1819) is still unequalled. Shelton's early English version (1612-20) has been reprinted by Mr. Henley in his series of Tudor Translations (1896). Of later renderings John Ormsby's (1885) is much the best, and is prefaced by a very judicious account of Cervantes and his work. Duffield (1881) and Mr. H. E. Watts (1894) have translated Don Quixote in a spirit of enthusiasm. The Numantia (1885) and Viaje del Parnaso (1883) were both admir- ably rendered by the late James Young Gibson. Sr. Mene*ndez y Pelayo's paper on Avellaneda appeared in Los Lunes de El Impartial (February 15, 1897). The Obras of Lope, now printing under the editorship of D. Marcelino Mendndez y Pelayo, will be definitive ; but as yet only eight quartos (including Barrera's Nueva Biografia) are available. Lope's Obras sueltas (1776-79) fill twenty-one volumes; but the best refer- ence for readers is to Rivadeneyra, vols. xxiv., xxxv., xxxvii., xli., and xlii., where Lope is incompletely but sufficiently exhibited. M. Arturo Farinelli's Grillparzer und Lope de Vega (Berlin, 1894) is most excel- 410 BIBLIOGRAPHY lent. Edmund Borer's Die Lope-de- Vega Litteratur in Deutschland (1877) is a praiseworthy compilation. Ormsby's article in the Quarterly Review (October 11894) is, as might be expected from him, most exact and learned. I am especially indebted to it. As to the picaresque novels, Guzntdn is in Rivadeneyra, vol. iii. ; the Picara Justina in vol. xxxiii., and Marcos de Gbregdn in vol. xviii. A thoughtful and appreciative study on Mateo Alema'n has been privately printed at Seville (1892) by D. Joaquin Hazanas y la Rua. Antonio Pe"rez and Gine"s Pe'rez de Hita are to be read in Rivade- neyra, vols. xiii. and iii. : Mariana fills vols. xxx. and xxxi., but the two noble folios of 1780 are in every way preferable. CHAPTER X The early editions of Gongora are named in the text ; Rivadeneyra, vol. xxxii., reprints him in unsatisfactory fashion, but there is nothing better. Forty-nine inedited pieces by Gongora have been recently published by Professor Rennert in the Revue hispanique, vol. iv. Churton's essay on Gongora (1862) is learned, spirited, and interest- ing. Villamediana figures in Rivadeneyra's forty-second volume : D. Emilio Cotarelo y Mori's minute and judicious study (1886) is ex- tremely important. Lasso de la Vega's monograph, already cited, on the Sevillan school, should be consulted for the poets of that group. Villegas and the minor poets may be read in Rivadeneyra, vol. xlii. Rioja has been admirably edited by Barrera (1867), who has supplied a most scholarly biography and bibliography : the additional poems issued in 1872 are more curious than valuable. Quevedo's prose works were edited by Aureliano Fernlndez-Guerra y Orbe with great skill and accuracy in Rivadeneyra, vols. xxiii. and xlviii. ; his verse has been printed in vol. Ixix. by Florencio Janer, who was not the man for the task. The new and complete edition, issued by the Sociedad de Bibliofilos Andaluces, and edited by D. Marcelino Mene"ndez y Pelayo, promises to be admirable, and will include much new matter for instance, a pure text of the Buscon. As yet but one volume (1898) has been issued to subscribers. M. Ernest Merime'e, the author of an excellent monograph on Quevedo (1886), has given us a critical edition of Castro's Mocedades del Cid (Toulouse, 1890). V&ez de Guevara and Montalbdn are exampled in Rivade- neyra, vol. xlv. : the prose of the former is in vol. xviii. Hartzenbusch's twelve-volume edition of Tirso de Molina (1839-42) BIBLIOGRAPHY 411 is incomplete, but it is greatly superior to the selection in Rivade- neyra, vol. v. D. Emilio Cotarelo y Mori's monograph on Tirso (1893) contains many new facts, stated with great precision and lucidity. Hartzenbusch's edition of Ruiz de Alarcon in Rivadeneyra, vo . xx., is the best and fullest. Calderon's editions are numerous, but none are really good. Keil's (Leipzig, 1827) is the most complete ; Hartzenbusch's, which fills vols. vii., ix., xii., and xiv. of Rivadeneyra, is the easiest to obtain, and is sufficient for most purposes. Mr. Norman MacColl's Select Plays of Calderon (1888) deserves special mention for its excellent introduction and judicious notes. M. Morel- Fatio's edition of El MAgico Prodigioso is a model of skill and accuracy. Two small col- lections of Calderon's verse were published at Ccidiz, 1845, and at Madrid, 1881. Archbishop Trench's monograph (1880) and Miss E. J. Hasell's study (1879) are deservedly well known. D. Marcelino Mene"ndez y Pelayo's lectures, Calderon y su Teatro (1881) are full of sound, impartial criticism. Friedrich Wilhelm Valentin Schmidt's Die Schauspiele Calderon 's (Elberfeld, 1857) maintains its place by virtue of its sound and sympathetic criticism. The history of the autos is fully given by Eduardo Gonzalez Pedroso in Rivadeneyra, vol. Iviii. Edmund Borer's Die Calderon- Litleratur in Deutschland (Leipzig, 1881) is useful and unpretending. D. Antonio Sanchez Moguel's study (1881) of the relation between the Mdgico Prodigioso and Goethe's Faust is learned and ingenious, and D. Antonio Rubio y Lluch's Sentimiento del }lonor en el Teatro de Calderon (Barcelona, 1882) is a very suggestive essay. The select plays of Rojas Zorrilla and Moreto are contained in Rivadeneyra, vols. xxxix. and liv. There exists no good edition of Gracian : Carl Borinski's study entitled Baltasar Gracidn und die Hoflitteratur in Deutschland (Halle, 1894) is a very commendable book, and M. Arturo Farinelli's criticism in the Revista critica, vol. ii., is not only learned, but is warm in its appreciation of Gracidn's perverse talent. CHAPTER XI An almost complete record of eighteenth-century literature is sup- plied by Sr. D. Leopoldo Augusto de Cueto, Marques de Valmar, in his Historica Critica de lapoesia caste liana en el siglo XVIII. (1893), a revised and augmented edition of the classic preface to Rivadeneyra, 412 BIBLIOGRAPHY vols. Ixi., Ixiii., and Ixvii. D. Emilio Cotarelo y Mori's invaluable Iriarte y su e"poca (1897) sheds much light on the literary history of the period, and D. Marcelino Mene"ndez y Pelayo's Historia de las Ideas esttticas en Espana (vol. iii. part ii., 1886) should be read as a complement to all other works. Antonio Maria Alcald Galiano's Historia de la literatura espanola, francesa, tnglesa, / italiano en el siglo XVI I I. (1845) is acute, but somewhat obsolete. I should recommend as an honest, useful monograph the life of Sarmiento published under the title of El Gran Gallego (La Coruna, 1895) by D. Antolin Lopez Pelaez. CHAPTERS XII AND XIII The only summary of the period is Padre Francisco Blanco Garcfa's Literatura Espaiiola en el siglo XIX. (1891): it is extremely un- critical, and is marred by violent personal prejudices intemperately expressed. But it has the merit of existing, and embodies useful information in the way of facts. Gustave Hubbard's Histoire de la literature conttmporaine en Espagne (1876) and Boris de Tannen- berg's La Pohie castellane contemporaine (1892) are pleasant but slight. Pedro de Novo y Colsdn's Autores dramdticos contemporaneos yjoyas del teatro espanol del siglo XIX. (1881-85), w 'th a preface by Antonio Canovas del Castillo, is conscientiously put together, and will be found very serviceable. INDEX ABARBANEL, Judas, 131, 219 Abraham ben David, 19 Acuna, Fernando de, 149-150 Adenet le Roi, 41 Alabanza de Mahoma, 20 Alarcon, Pedro Antonio de, 381-382 Alas, Leopoldo, 391-392 Alba, Bartolome, 257 Alcala, Alfonso de, 130 Alcala y Herrera, Alonso de, 338 Alcazar, Baltasar de, 176 Aleman, Mateo, 264-267 Alexander, Letters of, 63, 65 Alexandre, Libra de, 62, 63, 65 Alfonso II. of Aragon, 28, 29 Alfonso the Learned, 28, 30, 38, 60, 63-72 Alfonso XL, 85 Aljamia, 19-20 Altamira y Crevea, Rafael, 398 Altobiskarko CantTta, 2 Al-Tufail, 12 Alvarez de Ayllon, Pero, 165 Alvarez de Cienfuegos, Nicasio, 359 Alvarez de Toledo, Gabriel, 346 Alvarez de Villasandino, Alfonso, / 26, 31 Alvarez Gato, Juan, 112 Amadisde Gaula, 91, 97, 106, 123-124 Amadis de Grecia, 1 06, 157 Amador de los Rios, Jose, 34, 43, 107 Amalteo, Giovanni Battista, 186 Anales Toledanos, 62 Andujar, Juan de, 109 Angeles, Juan de los, 202 Angulo y Pulgar, Martin de, 291 Ansfis de Carthage, 41 Antonio, Nicolas, 343 Apolonio, Libra de, 20, 30, 38, 53-54 Arab influence, 14-19 Arevalo, Faustino, II Argensola. See Leonardo de Argensola Argote, Juan de, 280 Argote y G6ngora, Luis, 143, 233, 250, 270, 276, 279-294 Arguijo, Juan de, 298 Arias Montano, Benito, 181, 202- 203, 272 Artieda. See Rey de Artieda Asenjo Barbieri, Francisco, 19, 131, 250 Avellaneda. See Fernandez de Avel- laneda Avellaneda. See Gomez de Avel- laneda Avempace, 12 Avendano, Francisco de, 170 Averroes, 12 Avicebron, n, 17, 18 Avila, Juan de, 161 Avila y Zuniga, Luis, 156 Aviles, Fuero de, 24 Axular, Pedro de, 3 Ayala. See Lopez de Ayala Azemar, Guilhem, 36 BAENA, Juan Alfonso de, 95, 96 Baist, Professor, 82 Balbus, 5 Balmes y Uspia, Jaime, 382 413 414 INDEX Bances Candamo, Francisco Antonio, 335 Barahona de Soto, Luis, 189, 270 Barcelo, Francisco, 118 Barlaam and fosaphat, Legend of, 83,96 Barrera y Leirado, Cayetano Alberto de la, 242, 244 Barrientos, Lope de, 95. Basque influence, 3-4 Baudouin, Jean, 233 Bavia, Luis de, 286 Bechada, Gregoire de, 72 Be"cquer, Gustavo Adolfo, 377-378 Bedier, M. Joseph, 16 Belianls de Grecia, 1 58 Belmonte y Bermudez, Luis, 314 Bembo, Pietro, 144 Berague, Pedro de, 87 Berceo, Gonzalo de, 27, 28, 29, 57-6i Beristain de Souza Fernandez de Lara, Jose Mariano, 257 Bermudez, Geronimo, 173 Bernaldez, Andres, 127 Blanco, Jose" Maria, 367-368 Blasco Ibanez, Vicente, 395 Bocados de Oro. See Boniufn Bohl de Faber, Cecilia. See Caba- llero Bohl de Faber, Johan Nikolas, 203 Bohmer, Eduard, 162 Bonilla, Alonso de, 299 Bonium, 63, 73 Boscan Almogaver, Juan, 136-141, '43 Bouterwek, Friedrich, 289 Braulius, St., 10 Breton de los Herreros, Manuel, 374 Burke, Edmund, 124 Byron, Lord, 230, 313, 370 CABALLERO, Fernan, 380-381, 389 Cabanyes, Manuel de, 372 Cabo roto, Versos de, 228, 268 Caceres y Espinosa, Pedro de, 153 Cadalso y Vazquez, Jose de, 355 Calanson, Guirauld de, 36 Calderon de la Barca Henao de la Barreda y Riano, Pedro, 85, 136, 225, 250, 256, 261, 276, 317-332 Camoes, Luis de, 115, 177, 203, 270 Campoamor y Campoosorio, Ramon de, 383-386 Camus, Jean-Pierre, 289 Cancioneiro Portuguez da Vaticana, 30, 71 Cancionero de Baena, 30, 33, 96-98 Cancionero de bur las, 109, 112, 124 Cancionero de Linares, 15 Cancionero de Lope de Stuniga t 34 Cancionero General, 109 Cancionero Musical, 119, 122, 131 Canizares, Jose de, 345 Cano, Alonso, 276 Cano, Melchor, 200 Cantilenas, 24-25 Canzoniere Colocci-Brancufi, 123 Carlos Quinto, 142, 149 Caro, Rodrigo, 249 Carrillo, Alonso, 65, 114 Carrillo y Sotomayor, Luis de, 28^-* 284 Carvajal, 34, no. Carvajal, Miguel de, 165, 172 Casas, Bartolome" de las, 156 Cascales, Francisco de, 291, 293 Castellanos, Juan de, 192 Castellvi, Francisco de, 118 Castilla, Crdnica de, 103 Castilla, Francisco de, 153 Castillejo, Cristobal de, 151-152, 165 Castillo Solorzano, Alonso de, 338 Castro, Adolfo de, 299 Castro y Bellvis, Guillen de, 305-306 Cecchi, Giovanni Maria, 168 Celestina, 107, 120, 125-126 Centon Epistolario, 272 INDEX 415 Cepeda y Guzman, Carlos, 320 Cervantes de Salazar, Francisco, 154 Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de, 180, 215-241, 249, 253, 267, 268, 276, 278, 289, 350 Cespedes y Meneses, Gonzalo de, 338 Cetina, Gutierre de, 148-149 Chaves, Cristobal de, 235 Chivalresque novels, 157-158 Churton, Edward, 178, 281, 282-283, 286, 290, 319-320 Cid, Crdnica dd, 103 Cid, Poema del, 24, 25, 40, 46-51 Cienfuegos. See Alvarez de Cien- fuegos Civillar, Pedro de, 118 Claramonte y Corroy, Andres, 309 Claude, Bishop, 10 Clavijo. See Gonzalez de Clavijo Clavijo y Fajardo, Jose, 360 Cobos, El Padre, 377 Cobos, Francisco de los, 179 Coloma, Luis, 394 Columbarius, Julius, 251 Columbus, Christopher, 12, 127-128 Columella, Lucius Junius Modera- tus, 8 Concepcion, Juan de la, 346 Conceptismo, 299-300 Contreras, Juana de, 129 Cordoba, Martin de, 68 Cordoba, Sebastian de, 207 Corneille, Pierre, 306, 345 Corneille, Thomas, 313, 335 Cornu, Professor, 86 Coronado, Carolina, 375 Coronel, Pablo, 130 Corral, Pedro de, 93 Corte Real, Jeronimo, 203 Cortes, Hernan, 157 Cota de Maguaque, Rodrigo de, HO, I20-I2I Cotarelo y Mori, Emilio, 122, 309, 398 Covarrubias y Horozco, Sebastian, 344 Croce, Benedetto, 126 Crotaidn, El, 303 Cruz, San Juan de la, 182, 198-200 Cruz y Cano, Ramon de la, 360-361 Cubillo de Aragon, Alvaro, 335 Cuello, Antonio, 335 CuestiSn de Amor, 126-127 Cueva de la Garoza, Juan de la, 171- 173 Culteranismo, 283-285 Cunninghame Graham, Mrs., 193 DAM ASUS, St., 8-9 Danza de la Muerte, 87-88 Dascanio, Jusquin, 131 Davidson, Mr. John, 70 Debate entre el Agiiay el Vino, 55 Dechepare, Bernard, 3 Defoe, Daniel, 228 Diamante, Juan Bautista, 345 Diario de los Literates de Espafia, 348 Diaz del Castillo, Bernal, 157 Diaz Gamez, Gutierre, 105, 106, 347 Diaz Tanco de Fregenal, Vasco, 164 Diez Mandamientos, 62 Diniz, King of Portugal, 28, 38 Disputa del Almay el Cuerpo, 55 Dobson, Mr. Austin, 15, 251 Doce Sabios, Libra de los, 63 Dominicus Gundisalvi, 19 Donoso Cortes, Juan, 382 D'Ouville, Antoine Le Metel, 263, 332 Dryden, John, 192, 264, 332 Ducas, Demetrio, 130 Duhalde, Louis, 2 Duran, Agustin, 93, 264 ECHEGARAY, JoSC, 376, 395 Encina, Juan del, in, 121-123, I 3> 135 4i6 INDEX Enrique IV., Cr6nica de, 117 Enriquez del Castillo, Diego, 117 Enriquez Gomez, Antonio, 338 Ercilla y Zufriga, Alonso de, 3, 184, 190-192 Ertnitaflo, Revelacion de un, 88 Escobar, Juan de, 34 Escobar, Luis de, 154 Escriba, Comendador de, 319 Espinosa, Pedro de, 189, 270, 279 Espinosa Medrano, Juan de, 291 Espronceda, Jos de, 368-372 Esquilache, Principe de (Francisco de Borja), 299 Este"banez Calder6n, Serafin, 379- 3 8o Estebanillo Gonzdles, Vida y Hechos de, 338 Eugenius, St., 10 Eulogius, St., 1 8 Eximenis, Francisco, 107 FADRIQUE, the Infante, 72, 78 Fanshawe, Richard, 314 Faria y Sousa, Manuel, 185, 288- 289 Farinelli, M. Arturo, 265, 312 Feijoo y Montenegro, Benito Ger6- ninio, 349 Ferdinand, St., 35, 62, 63 Ferndn Gonzalez, Poema de, 35 Fernandez, Lucas, 122 Fernandez de Andrado, Pedro, 299 Fernandez de Avellaneda, Alonso, 238-240, 350 Fernandez de Moratm, Leandro, 361 362 Fernandez de Moratin, Nicolas Mar- tin, 354 Fernandez de Oviedo y Valds, Gon- zalez, 156 Fernandez de Palencia, Alfonso, 117, Fernandez de Toledo, Garci, 68 Fernandez de Villegas, Pedro, 118, 130 Fernandez-Guerra y Orbe, Aureliano, 24, 172, 299 Fernandez Vallejo, Felipe, 44 Ferreira, Antonio, 173 Fernis, Pero, 97 Figueroa, Francisco de, 187 FitzGerald, Edward, 323, 324, 325, 326, 331, 332 Flamini, Professor, 139 Flaubert, Gustave, 313 Florisando, 157 Florisel de Niquea, 106, 157 Forner, Juan Pablo, 357 Foulche"-Delbosc, M. R., 120, 193, 210 French influence, 35-42 Frere, John Hookham, 59 Froude, James Anthony, 196-197 Fuentes, Alonso de, 33, 65 Fuero fuzgo, 62 Furtado de Mendoza, Diego, 28 GALLEGO, Juan Nicasio, 365 Gallinero, Manuel, 348 Galvez de Montalvo, Luis, 207, 216 Garay, Blasco de, 171 Garay de Monglave, Fra^ois Eugene, 2 Garcia Arrieta, Agustin, 237 Garcia Asensio, Miguel, 356 Garcia de la Huerta y Munoz, Vicente Antonio, 355-356 Garcia de Santa Maria, Alvar, 102, 1 08 Garcia Gutierrez, Antonio, 374 Gareth, Benedetto, 131 Garnett, Dr. Richard, 344 Gatos, Libra de las, 96 Gautier de Coinci, 60, 6 1 Gayangos, Pascual de, 24, 83 INDEX 417 Gentil, Bertomeu, 131 Geraldino, Alessandro, 129 Geraldino, Antonio, 129 Giancarli, Gigio Arthenio, 168 Gibson, James Young, 222, 223, 224, 253, 278, 304 Girard d' Amiens, 41 Giron, Diego, 176, 179 Goethe, Johan Wolfgang von, 221, 230, 323 Goizcueta, Jose Maria, 2 G6mara. See Lopez de Gomara G6mez, 26, 74 Gomez, Alvar, 118, 131 Gomez, Ambrosio, 58 Gomez, Pero, 65, 74 Gomez de Avellaneda, Gertrudis, 374-375 Gomez de Cibdareal, Fernan, 272 Gomez de Quevedo y Villegas, Fran- cisco, 96, 183, 184, 185, 1 86, 187, 228, 270, 277, 291, 300-305, 308, 345 Gongora. See Argote y Gongora Gonzalez, Diego Tadeo, 359 Gonzalez de Avila, Gil, 272 Gonzalez de Clavijo, Ruy, 105 Gonzalez de Mendoza, Pedro, 28 Gonzalez Llanos, Rafael, 24 Gosse, Mr. Edmund, 15, 231, 344, 387 Gower, John (the first English author translated into Castilian), 98 Gracian, Baltasar, 338-340 Gran Cvnquit-ta de Ultramar, 72 Granada, Luis de, 200-202 Grant Duff, Sir M. E., 33-8 Grillparzer, Franz, 265 Grosseteste, Robert, 54 Guarda, Estevam del, 30 Guerra y Ribera, Manuel de, 327 Guevara, 119 Guevara, Antonio de, 154-156 Guevara, Luis. See Velez Guevara Guillen de Segovia, Pedro, 116 HADRIAN, 5, 6 Hammen, Lorenzo van der, 303 Hardy, Alexandra, 263 Haro, Conde de, 179 Haro, Luis de, 152 Hartzenbusch, Juan Eugenic, 96, 174, 374 Hebreo, Le6n. See Abarbanel Hellowes, Edward, 155 Henley, Mr. William Ernest, 15 Henricus Seynensis, 19 Herbert, George, 162 Heredia, Jose* Maria, 157 Hernandez, Alonso, 132 Herrera, Fernando, 138, 146, 149, 176-180, 281, 282 Hervas y Cobo de la Torre, Jose" Gerardo de, 348-349 Hervas y Panduro, Lorenzo, 362 Hoces y Cordoba, Gonzalo de, 281 Holland, Lord, 254, 256, 265 Hosius, 9 Hiibner, Baron Emil, 8 Huete, Jaime de, 165 Hurtado, Luis, 124, 165 Hurtado de Mendoza, Antonio, 314 Hurtado de Mendoza, Diego, 139, 148, 150-151, 189, 208-210, 235 Hussain ibn Ishak, 63, 73 Huysmans, M. Joris-Karl, 197 Hyginus, Gaius Julius, 4 IBN HAZM, 12, 18 Icazbalceta, Joaquin Garcia, 190 Iglesias de la Casa, Jose, 359 Imperial, Francisco, 97-98, 137 Iniguez de Medrano, Julio, 233 Iranzo y Crdnica del Condestable Miguel Lucas, 117, 167 Iriarte y Oropesa, Tomas de, 3, 268, 356-357 Isaac the Martyr, 1 8 Isidore, St., 10 INDEX Isidore Pacensis, II Isla, Francisco Jose 1 de, 351-354 y AGUILAR, Juan de, 288, 298, 307 Jimenez de Cisneros, Francisco, 130 Jimenez de Rada, Rodrigo, 62, 67, 68 Jimenez Paton, Bartolome, 285, 295 Johnson, Samuel, 124, 138 Jose, Poema de. See Yusuf Josephus, 150 Jove-Llanos, Caspar Melchor de, 357- 358 Juan II., Cr6nica de, 100-101 Juan Manuel, 16, 80-85 Judah ben Samuel the Levite, 12, 14, 17, 43 Juglares, 2631 Juvencus, Vettius Aquilinus, 8 Kabbala, the, 13 Kalilah and Dimnah, 65, 71, 78 Killigrew, Thomas, 332 LAFAYETTE, Madame de, 269 Lamberto, Alfonso, 239 Landor, Walter Savage, 228 Larra, Mariano Jose de, 96, 97, 378- 379 Latini, Brunetto, 65 Latrocinius, 9 Lazarillo de Tormes, 80, 158-160 Ledesma, Francisco, 166 Ledesma Buitrago, Alonso de, 299 Leloaren Canlua, 1-2 Lena. See Rodriguez de Lena Leon, Luis Ponce de, 180-184, I 9-n 195 Le6n y Mansilla, Jose, 346 Leonardo de Albion, Gabriel, 277 Leonardo de Argensola, Bartolome, 276-279 Leonardo de Argensola, Lupercio, 175-1/6, 276-278 Lesage, 42, 85, 269, 307, 354 Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim, 350, 351 L'Estrange, Roger, 304 Lewes, George Henry, 265 Licinianus, 10 Lidforss, Professor, 43 Lista, Alberto, 169, 368 Lisuarte, 157, 158 Llaguno y Amirola, Eugenio, 347 Lo Frasso, Antonio, 207 Loaysa, Jofre de, 68 Lobeira, Joham, 123, 153 Lobo, Eugenio Gerardo, 346 Lockhart, James Gibson, 93 Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 115, 328 Lope de Moros, 55, 57 Lope de Vega. See Vega Carpio Lopez de Aguilar Coutino. See Columbarius Lopez de Ayala, Adelardo, 375-376 L6pez de Ayala, Pero, 3, 74, 88-92 Lopez de Cartagena, Diego, 130 Lopez de Corelas, Alonso, 1 54 Lopez de Gomara, Francisco, 157 Lopez de Sedano, Jose 1 , 175, 187, 268 Lopez de Toledo, Diego, 130 Lopez de Ubeda, Francisco. See Perez, Andres Lopez de Ubeda, Juan, 271 Lopez de Vicuna, Juan, 280-281 Lopez de Villalobos, Francisco, 130, 154 Lorenzana y Buitron, Francisco An- tonio, II Lorenzo Segura de Astorga, Juan, 63 Loyola, St. Ignacio, 3, 193 Lucan, 4, 8 Lucena, Juan de, 107, roS Lujan de Sayavedra, Maleo. See Marti Lull, Ram6n, 73, 82 Luna, Alvaro de, 28 INDEX 419 Luna, Cronica de Alvaro de, 102- 103 Luzan Claramunt de Suelves y Gurrea, Ignacio, 346-348 M'CARTHY, Denis Florence, 328- 329 MacColl, Mr. Norman, 320 Macfas, 96-97, 119 Magos, Misterio de los Reyes, 24, 35, 43-46 Mahomet-el-Xartosse, 20 Maimonides, 12-14 Mainez, Ramon Leon, 239 Mairet, Jean, 263 Malara, Juan de, 170-171, 176 Maldonado, L6pez, 219, 243 Malon de Chaide, Pedro, 202 Manrique, Gomez, 112-114, 2 54 Manrique, Jorge, 114-116, 1 19, 227 Maragall, Joan, 397 Marcabrii, 30 March, Auzias, 12, 136, 145 Marche, Olivier de la, 149 Marcus Aurelius, 5 Maria de Jesus de Agreda, Sor, 340 Maria del Cielo, Sor, 346 Maria Egipciacqua, Vida de Santa, 38,54 Mariana, Juan de, 63, 272-274, 276 Marineo, Lucio, 129 Marti, Juan, 267 Martial, 5, 6 Martin of Dumi, St., 10 Martinez, Fernan, 67 Martinez de la Rosa, Francisco, 365- 366 Martinez de Medina, Gonzalo, 98 Martinez de Toledo, Alfonso, 107 Martinez Salafranca, Tuan, 348 Martyr, Peter, 128 Matos Fragoso, Juan de, 220, 335 Mayans y Siscar, Gregorio, 350, 352 Medina, Francisco, 179 Medrano, Lucia, 129 Mela, Pomponius, 8 Melendez Valdes, Juan, 358-359 Melo, Francisco Manuel de, 336 Mena, Juan de, 100-102 Mendoza, friigo de, 118 Menendez Pidal, Ramon, 32, 51, 398 Menendez y Pelayo, Marcelino, 37, 38, 117, 179, 239, 288, 311, 336, 345. 372, 397-39* Meres, Francis, 201 Merimee, Ernest, 359 Mesonero Romanos, Ramon de, 380 Mexia, Hernan, 1 12 Mexia, Pedro, 156 Michaelis de Vasconcellos, Mme., 86, 148 Mila y Fontanals, Manuel, 35, 38, 372 Milton, John, 346, 355 Mingo Revulgo, Coplas de, in Mira de Amescua, Antonio, 307, 314 Miranda, Luis de, 169 Moliere, 42, 258, 313, 334, 345, 361 Molina, Argote de, 81, 101 Molinos, Miguel de, 341-342 Moncada, Francisco de, 336 Mondejar, Marques de, 343 Montalban. See PeVez de Montalban Montalvo. See Ord6nez de Montalvo Montemor, Jorge, 115, 203-206 Montesino, Ambrosio, 118 Monti, Giulio, 354 Montiano y Luyando, Agustin, 344 Montoro, Anton de, in, 112 Moraes, Francisco de, 124 Morales, Ambrosio de, 208 Moratin. See Fernandez de Moratfn Morel-Fatio, M. Alfred, 55, 96, 158, 378 Moreto y Cavana, Agustin, 261, 333- 335 Morley, Mr. John, 340 420 INDEX Mosquerade Figueroa, Cristobal, 179, 226 Muhammad Rabadan, 20 Munday, Anthony, 158 Mufion, Sancho, 126 Muntaner, Ramon, 336 NAHARRO, Pedro, 169, 212 Nahman, Moses ben, 13-14 Najera, Esteban de, 34, 152, 270 Nasarre y Ferruz, Bias Antonio, 350 Navagiero, Andrea, 136, 137 Navarro, Miguel, 348 Nebrija, Antonio de, 93, 130 Nebrija, Francisca de, 129 Nieremberg, Juan Eusebio, 340 Nifo, Francisco Mariano, 319 North, Thomas, 155 Nucio, Martin, 34, 270 Nunez, Hernan, 130, 154, 171 Nunez de Arce, Caspar, 395-396 Nunez de Villaizan, Juan, 91 OBREG6N, Antonio, 131 Ocampo, Florian de, 156 Ocana, Francisco de, 271 Ochoa, Juan, 395 Odo of Cheriton, 96 Olid, Juan de, 117 Oliva. See Perez de Oliva Oiler y Moragas, Narcis, 395 Omerique, Hugo de, 343 Ona, Pedro de, 192 Ordonez de Montalvo, Garcia, 123- 124 Ormsby, John, 50 Orosius, Paulus, 9-10 Ortiz, Agustin, 165 Oudin, Cesar, 233 Oviedo. See Fernandez de Oviedo PACHECO, Francisco, 170, 179 Padilla, Juan de, 1 19 Padilla, Pedro de, 216, 219, 243 Paez de Ribera, 157 Paez de Ribera, Ruy, 98 Palacio Valdes, Armando, 392-393 I'alacios Rubios, Juan Lopez de Vivero, 154 Palau, Bartolome, 172 Palencia. See Fernandez de Palencia Palmtrin de Inglaterra, 1 58 Palmerin de Oliva, 1 58 Panadera, Capias de la, 101 Paravicino y Arteaga, Hortensio Felix, 297, 319 Pardo Bazan, Emilia, 22, 393-394 Paredes, Alfonso de, 65 Paris, M. Gaston, 72 Patmore, Coventry, 200 Paulus Alvarus Cordubiensis, 17, 18 Pellicer, Casiano, 318 Pellicer de Salas y Tobar, Jose, 65, 95, 291, 308 Per Abbat, 47 Peralta Barnuevo, Pedro de, 345 Pereda, Jose Maria de, 389-390 Pe"rez, Alonso, 206 Pe"rez, Andres, 228, 239, 268 PeVez, Antonio, 271-272 Perez, Suero, 68 Pe"rez de Guzman, Fernan, 103-104, 142 Perez de Hita, Gines, 269-270 P6rez de Montalban, Juan, 307-308 Perez de Oliva, Fernando, 4, 154 Perez Galdos, Benito, 390-391 Peseux-Richard, M. H., 384, 385 Peter the Venerable, 21 Petrus Alphonsus, 16, 78 Phillips, Mr. Henry, 183 Picaud, Aimeric, 36 Pitillas, Jorge. See Hervas y Cobo de la Torre Platir, Crdnica del muy valiente, 158 Pleito del Manto, 112, 121 Polindo, 158 Polo, Caspar Gil, 206 INDEX 421 Ponce, Bartolome, 207 Ponte, Pero da, 38 Poridat de las Poridades, 63 Prete Jacopin. See Haro, Conde de Pftmaleon, 158 Priscillian, 9 Proverbs, Spanish, 171 Provincial, Capias del, IIO, 112, 117 Prudentius, Clemens Aurelius, 6, 9 Prudentius Galindus, 10 Puig, Leopoldo Geronimo, 348 Pulgar, Hernando del, in, 127 Puymaigre, Comte de, 34, 58 Querellas, Libra de, 65 Quevedo. See G6mez de Quevedo Quintana, Manuel Jose, 364-365 Quintilian, 5, 6 RACINE, Jean, 345 Raimundo, 19 Ramirez de Prado, Lorenzo, 319 Ramos del Manzano, Francisco, 343 Ranieri, Antonio Francesco, 168 Rasis, 91 Rebolledo, Conde de, 299 Rernon, Alonso, 310 Rennert, Professor, 206 Resende, Garcia de, 205 Revilla, Manuel de la, 312, 376 Rey de Artieda, Andres, 173-174 Reyes, Matias de los, 309 Reyes, Pedro de los, 193 Rhua, Pedro de, 155 Ribas y Canfranc, Jos Ibero, 250 Rioja, Francisco de, 299 Rivas, Duque de, 366-367 Rivers, Lord, 73 Roca y Serna, Ambrosio, 297 Rodrigo, Cantar de, 51-53 Rodriguez de la Camara, Juan, 96, 97, "9 Rodriguez de Lena, Pero, 105 Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez, Diego, 337-338 Rodriguez Rubi, Tomas, 374 Rogel de Grecia, 158 Rojas, Agustin de, 211 Rojas, Fernando de, 125-126 Rojas Zorrilla, Francisco de, 95, 276, 307, 325, 333 Romancero General, 33, 93, 270 Romances, Spanish, 32-34 Romero de Cepeda, Joaquin, 175 Roswitha, 11 Rotrou, Jean, 263 Rowland, David, 159-160 Rueda, Lope de, 166-169, 254, 261 Rufo Gutierrez, Juan, 189-190, 216 Ruiz, Jacobo, 67 Ruiz, Juan, 30, 76-80, 84, 107 Ruiz de Alarcon y Mendoza, Juan, 95. 239, 256, 276, 315-317 SA DE MIRANDA, Francisco de, 148 Saavedra Fajardo, Diego de, 336 Salas Barbadillo, Alonso de, 270 Salazar Mardones, Cristobal de, 291 Salazar y Hontiveros, Jose de, 345 Salazar y Torres, Agustin de, 291- 298 Salcedo Coronel, Garcia de, 291 Salom6n, Proverbios en Rimo de, 75 91 Samaniego, Felix Maria de, 356 San Juan, Marques de, 345 Sanchez, Clemente, 96 Sanchez, Francisco, 179 Sanchez, Miguel, 184 Sanchez, Tomas Antonio, 48, 58 Sanchez de Badajoz, Garci, 119 Sanchez de Tovar, Fernan, 91 Sanchez Talavera, Ferrant, 91, 98 Sancho IV., 72-73 Sannazaro, Jacopo, 145 Santillana, Marques de, 15, 28, 33, 58, 79, 98-100, 119, 137 422 INDEX Santisteban y Osorio, Diego, 192 Sarmiento, Martin, ill, 349 Sbarbi, Jose Maria, 171 Scarron, Paul, 42, 269 Schack, Adolf Friedrich von, 14, 323 Schopenhauer, Arthur, 338 Scott, Sir Walter, 270, 366 Scudery, Mile, de, 269 Secchi, Niccolo, 168 Sedeno, Juan, 1 26 Selgas y Carrasco, Jose, 377 Sem Tob, 16, 87, 113 Sempere, Hieronym, 124 Seneca, the Elder, 4 Seneca, the Younger, 4, 8, IO, 73> 176 Sepulveda, Lorenzo, 33 Shakespeare, William, 205 Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 46, 221, 321- 322 Sidney, Philip, 143, 205 Siete Partidas, Las, 66-67 Silva, Feliciano de, 126, 157, 158 Silvestre, Gregorio, 115, 153 Sisebut, 7 Solis y Riradeneira, Antonio de, 335-33 Sordello, 35 Sorel, Charles, 42, 269 Spera-in-Deo, 21 Stanley, Thomas, 140, 287 Stuniga, Lope de, 34, 109 Suarez de Figueroa, Cristobal, 315 TAMAYO Y BAUS, Manuel, 376-377 Tansillo, Luigi, 132, 144 Tapia, Juan de, 109 Taylor, Jeremy, 198 Tellez, Gabriel See Tirso de Molina Teresa, Santa, 182, 193-198, 301 Tesoro, the, 65, 72 Texeda, Jeronimo de, 206 Theodolphus, Bishop, 10 Thylesius, Antonius, 144 Ticknor, George, 24, 65, 89, 118, 122, 137, 140, 154, 206, 242, 244, 247, 249, 258, 259, 274, 285, 325, 348 Timoneda, Juan de, 170 Tirso de Molina, 174, 256, 261, 263, 267, 308-314, 3'5 Todi, Jacopone da, 30, 118 Torre, Alfonso de la, 108 Torre, Francisco de la, 184-187 Torrellas, Pero, no, 112, 121 Torres Naharro, Bartolome, 132-135, 1 66, 1 68, 170, 254 Torres Ramila, Pedro de, 251 Torres y Villarroel, Diego de, 346 Trajan, 5 Tribaldos de Toledo, Luis, 187, 208, 296 Trovadores, 26-31 Trueba, Antonio, 389 Turpin, Archbishop, 2 Tuy, Lucas de, 67 URREA, Jeronimo de, 143 Urrea, Pedro Manuel de, 120 VALBUENA, Antonio de, 391 Valdes, Juan de, 126-127, 144, 161- 164, 33 Valdivielso, Jose de, 271 Valencia, Pedro de, 287, 288 Valera y Alcala Galiano, Juan, 14, 384, 386-389 Valerius, St., no Valladolid, Juan de, 109, in Valmar, Marques de, 22 Vanbrugh, John, 333 Vaqueiras, Raimbaud de, 30, 43 Varchi, Benedetto, 186 Vazquez de Ciudad Rodrigo, Fran- cisco, 158 Vega, Alonso de, 169 Vega, Bernardo de la, 227 INDEX 423 Vega, Garcilaso de la, 136, 138, 141- 148, 178-179, 207 Vega Carpio, Lope Felix de, 20, 97, J 36, !75> !85, 189, 219, 225, 226, 238, 239, 241-265, 270, 280, 350 Velazquez. See Rodriguez de Silva y Velazquez Velazquez de Velasco, Luis Jose, 69, 185, 35 Velez de Guevara, Luis, 269, 276, 306-307 Venegas de Henestrosa, Luis, 115 Verdaguer, Jacinto, 397 Vergara, Francisco de, 130 Vergara, Juan de, 130 Vicente, Gil, 135 Vidal, Pere, 36 Vidal de Besalu, Ramon, 22, 29 Vidal de Noya, Francisco, 129, 130 Vierge Maria, Trobes en lahors de la, 118 Villalobos. See Lopez de Villalobos Villalon, Cristobal de, 303 Villamediana, Conde de, 276 Villapando, Juan de, 100 Villasandino. See Alvarez de Villa- sandino Villegas, Antonio de, 152-153, 206 Villegas, Esteban Manuel de, 298- 299 Villegas, Jeronimo, 130 Villena, Enrique de, 94-96 Villena, Marques de, 343-344 Virues, Cristobal de, 170, 174-175, 254, 261 Vives, Luis, 129, 182 Voiture, Vincent de, 255 Voltaire, 191, 269, 315, 354 WEY, William, 36 Wiflfen, Benjamin Barren, 163 Wiffen, Jeremiah Holmes, 146 Wycherley, William, 332 XAVIER, St. Francisco, 3, 193 YANEZ, Rodrigo, 86 Yanez y Ribera, Ger6nimo de Alcala. 338 Young, Bartholomew, 299 Yusuf, Poema de, 20, 75 ZAMORA, Alfonso de, 130 Zamora, Egidio de, 68 Zapata, Luis de, 190 Zorrilla, Jose, 313, 372-374 Zumarraga, Juan de, 190 Zuniga, Francesillo de, 155 Zurita, Jeronimo, 207-208 (18) THE END . ' t LL