7^9 6 33 7 CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE JNCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN 1891 BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE D^je-Due, PRINTED IN NO. 23293 PQ 6377!f55" ""'"'""" '■'''™^ "liflilmiiiiiiL imM m^"*^s Saavedra: 3 1924 026 375 745 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http ://www. arch i ve . o rg/detai Is/cu31 924026375745 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES SAAVEDRA OXFOED UNIVEKSITY PEESS LONDON EDINBURGH GLASGOW NEW YOEK TORONTO MELBOURNE BOMBAY HUMPHREY MILFORD M.A. PUBLISHER TO THE UKIVERSITY MIGUEL DE CERVANTES SAAVEDRA A MEMOIR BY JAMES FITZMAURICE KELLY F.B.A. GILMOUR PROFESSOR OF SPANISH IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL OXFORD AT THE CLARENDON PRESS 1913 A t l.x'^^c-u^Z S TO R. FOULCHi:-DELBOSC IN RECOGNITION OF HIS EMINENT SERVICES TO LEARNING AND IN MEMORY OF A TWENTY YEARS' FRIENDSHIP PKEFACE While Cervantes was still alive, a narrative of his experiences as a slave at Algiers was compiled by Diego de Haedo, Archbishop of Palermo, whose Topographia, e Mstoria general de Argel was completed by the end of 1604. The Archbishop died on July 5, 1608, and four years later his book appeared under the editorship of his nephew and namesake. Over a century passed before any consecutive account of Cervantes's life was published. Little anecdotes, mostly apocryphal, were invented about him, and were circulated in France and England respectively by such writers as Eapin and Motteux. But it was not till 1737-8 that any serious attempt was made to reconstruct Cervantes's biography. This preliminary essay by Gregorio Mayans y Siscar, the most promi- nent Spanish scholar of his time, will be found in the prolegomena to the London reprint oiBon Quixote issued by Jacob Tonson : naturally it contains much conjectural matter and some erroneous statements. In 1778 additional information concerning Cervantes was given by Juan Antonio Pellicer y Saforcada, who, in the Varias noticias literarias para las vidas de viii PKEFACE otros escritores espanoks which precede his Ensayo de una bihliotheca de tradudwes espanoks, included official documents which threw light on various incidents in Cervantes's career. One or two additional docu- ments were disclosed by Vicente de los Kios in the biographical sketch which he supplied to the edition of Bon Quixote published by the Eoyal Spanish Academy in 1780. Meanwhile, Pelhcer had con- tinued his researches, the useful results of which are embodied in the preliminaries to his edition of Bon Quixote, published in 1797-8; he disproved some current misconceptions, and did good service by substituting facts for surmises in many cases. Greater progress was made by Martin Fernandez de Navarrete in his Vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, issued by the Koyal Spanish Academy in 1819. In this scholarly work a careful collation of the available evidence placed Cervantes's biography on a solid basis. Its merits were at once recognized ; it took rank as the leading authority on the subject, and is the source of all the subsequent biographies of Cervantes published in many languages during the nineteenth century. No doubt, after 1819, further information on obscure points in Cervantes's life was furnished by Travadillo, Moran, Asensio y Toledo, Sigtienza and others ; but no substantial addition was made to PREFACE ix the facts collected by Navarrete, and these later discoveries were often ignored by foreign biographers who were content to produce diluted versions of Navarrete's work. No great advance was made during the ensuing seventy-eight years. At last, in 1897, the late Cristobal Perez Pastor edited a volume entitled Documentos cervantinos hasta ahora ineditos. Some of his theories, notably one referring to a supposititious edition of Don Quixote ascribed to the year 1604, were at once successfully challenged ; the value of the volume lay — not in such superfluous speculations, but — in the fifty-six contemporary documents brought to light by the zealous investiga- tor. These were followed in 1902 by one hundred and five more contemporary documents in a second series of Documentos cervantinos hasta ahora ineditos : in this supplementary collection the theory con- cerning the supposititious Don Quixote of 1604 was explicitly abandoned, corrections were supplied, missing links were made good, and, as before, a useful commentary was added. It is not too much to say that Perez Pastor did more than any other recent investigator — perhaps more than all other modern investigators put together — to fill up blanks in the record of Cervantes's life. The publication of the one hundred and sixty-one new documents revealed by Perez Pastor's researches A3 X PEEFACE made it imperative to write Cervantes's biography anew. Little, however, has been done in this direction beyond the summary of results put to- gether by Sr. D. Emilio Cotarelo y Mori imder the title of Efetnerides cervantinas, a small volume published shortly before the Cervantes tercentenary commemoration of 1905. Many of these results were utilized by the late Francisco Navarro y Ledesma in El Ingenioso Hidalgo Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, also issued in connexion with the tercentenary com- memoration of 1905. As might be inferred from the title, this reconstruction reverts too often to the hypothetical methods which Perez Pastor had made unnecessary. vJiT reading Navarro y Led esma, one^ can never feel sure whether a given statemeritjs established fact or a flight „ofJfancy. In the present volume I have eschewed .al l such decgrativa devices,-^^- Lhave-eschewed lite rary cri ti- c isnTj With Cervantes's works I have dealt in- detail elsewhere, and elsewhere I may deal with them again. In any case, criticism of Cervantes's literary achievement is never likely to be wanting. For the moment it seems to me more important to continue Navarrete's work, to place on record all that is positively known of Cervantes's life, to sift the guesses from the facts, and to establish the facts by such evidence as might satisfy a legal tribunal. PEEFACE xi In the process of examining the evidence some picturesque legends must be discarded. Carlyle is quoted-as-saying.: 'A certain strong man, of former time, fought stoutly at Lepa,nto, worked stoutly as Algerine slave ; stoutly delivered himself from such working; with stout cheerfulness endured famine and nakedness and the world's ingratitude ; and sitting in gaol, with one arm left him, wrote our joyfuUest, and aU but our deepest, modern book, and named it Don Quixote.' The details are not strictly accurate : Cervantes did not deliver him- self from slavery, was not treated with any special ingratitude by the world, did not lose one of his arms, and did not (so far as we know) write Don Quixote when in gaol. We must part with these pleasing inventions and others like them. It has often been said that, of the si x hundred and sixty-nine character s in Don Quixote, not one is wholly bad ; nor does jiature, irTwhose schboT Cervantes learned his hard Jesson, make men wholly good. A master in literature, a hero in battle, Cervantes had his share of human weakness, and his failings bring him into relation _ with such petty crea tures as ourselvesr They make him more real, more interesting, more sympath etic, and help to explain his bland forbearance in an age when urbanity and tolerance were as rare as they xii PKEFACE are now. My aim has been to give every known fact about Cervantes, suppressing nothing, extenu- ating nothing, unswayed as far as possible by the natural bias which we all have in favour of a great creative genius whose subtle charm has fascinated successive generations for three centuries. Against this inevitable prepossession I have been constantly on guard. As it happens, Cervantes needs no apologist : he is one of those rare men who can afford to have the whole truth told about them. In this belief I have tried to make my record as full and exact as possible. My best thanks are due to my friend Dr. Henry Thomas for the scrupulous care with which he has read the proofs of this memoir : without his vigilant aid I should have come short of such accuracy as may be attained in it. For help in drawing up the index I am much indebted to Miss Rachel Alcock. J. F.-K. The Old Hall; Aigbueth: Liveepool. June 20, 1913. THE PORTRAIT OF CERVANTES NOTE Thk frontispiece of this volume reproduces a picture •which was fii'st brought to notice in 1911. The original, a painting on wood, has been regarded as an authentic contemporary portrait of Cervantes. As such, it is assigned a conspicuous place in the main room of the Royal Spanish Academy, to which body the picture was generously pre- sented by its former owner, Sr. Albiol.^ Since the Royal Spanish Academy pretends to no authority in artistic matters, its conclusions respecting the authenticity of this alleged portrait of Cervantes must be received with some reserve. It will be observed that the painting, which purports to be signed by Juan de Jauregui, is dated 1600 and bears Cervantes's name. These inscriptions are said to be con- temporary with the portrait. But assertion is not proof, and the abundance of detail in these inscriptions may perhaps awaken, instead of allaying, doubts concerning the authenticity of the painting. In the first place, it is far from certain that Jauregui ever painted any likeness of Cervantes. The opinion that Jauregui did paint a portrait of Cervantes is based on a humorous, apologetic passage in the prologue to the Novelas exemplares : Quisiera yo, si fuera possible (Lector amantissimo) escusai-me de escriuir este prologo, porque no me fue tan bien con el que puse en mi don Quixote, que quedasse co ' Sr. Albiol is a professor in the School of Arts at Oviedo. Accord- ing to Sr. Sentenach, he was formerly a ' restaurateur de tableaux mciens a Madrid ' {Revue hispanique, Paris, 1911, vol. xxv, pp. 13-18). xiv THE POETEAIT OF CERVANTES gana de segundar con este. Desto tiene la culpa algun amigo de los muchos que en el discurso de mi vida he grangeado, antes con mi condicion, que eon mi ingenio : el qual amigo bien pudiera, como es vso, y costubre, grauarme, y esculpirme en la primera hoja deste libro, pues le diera, mi retrato el famoso don luan de Xaurigui, y con esto quedara mi ambicion satisfecha, y el desseo de algunos quel querrian saber, que rostro, y taUe tiene, quien se atreue a salir con tantas inuenciones en la pla^a del mundo, h, los ojos de las gentes, poniendo debaxo del retrato : Este que veys aqui de rostro aguileno, de cabello castano, frente lisa, y desembara^ada, de alegres ojos, y de nariz corba, aunque bien proporcionada : las barbas de plata, que no ha veynte anos que fueron de oro : los vigotes grandes, la boca pequenaj los dientes ni menudos, ni crecidos, porque no tiene sino seys, y essos mal acondiciados y peor puestos, porque no tienen correspondencia los vnos con los otros : el cuerpo entre dos estremos, ni grande, ni pequeiio : la color viua, antes blanca, que morena, algo cargado de espaldas, y no muy ligero de pies. Este digo que es el rostro del Autor de la Galatea, y de don Quixote de la Mancha, y del que hizo el viage del Parnaso, a imitacion del de Cesar Caporali Perusino, y otras obras que andan por ahi descarriadas, y quiza sin el nombre de su dueno. This passage, evidently written long after 1600,^ is not decisive. Taken in their obvious, natural sense, Cervantes's bantering words mean nothing more than that the curiosity of his readers as to his personal appeai-ance could be satisfied by applying to Jauregui who would willingly accept a com- mission to paint the author's portrait, which might be engraved later at the expense of a (purely fictitious) friend There is no proof that any portrait of Cervantes by Jauregui ' The first Aprobacion for the Novelas exemplares is dated July 9, 1612 ; the PrivUegio for Aragon is dated August 9, 1613. The prologue cannot well have been written after the latter date. It may hate been written earlier, to judge from the following passage : ' mi edaij no esta ya para burlarse con la otra vida, que al cinquenta y cinco d los anos gano por nueue mas, y por la mano.' If Cervantes was sixtj four years of age at the time, the prologue must have been written i 1611-12. THE POETEAIT OF CERVANTES xv was in existence when the prologue to the Novelas exem- plares was written. The production of such proof is mani- festly an indispensable preliminary towards establishing the authenticity of the Albiol painting. We cannot even be sure that this picture is by Jauregui. Its history, previous to 1911, is unknown. The test of comparison is impossible, for no other painting by Jauregui seems to have survived.^ The inscriptions on the picture do not help us. Take the date, for instance. We have no detailed information as to Cervantes 's movements in 1600 ; he was certainly in Seville on May 2, 1600, and he may have been there before and after this date in 1600 ; we do not know. It is likewise possible that Jauregui was in Seville in 1600. But there is no reason to think that Cervantes and Jauregui were then known to one another. The presumption is against any such idea. Jauregui's family were people of some social importance in Seville. Cervantes was apparently unknown outside the humble circle in which he moved. It is significant that his name is never mentioned by a single one of the many literary' ' Jose Jordan de Urries y Azara, Biografia y estudio crttico de Jdv/regui (Madrid, 1899), p. 12. 'Forzoso esconfesar con sentimiento que no se conservan los cuadros que debio pintar Jauregui, y que asi, en lo que atane a enaltecer su merito como pintor, tenemos que cenimos a las nofcicias que los libros nos han transmitido.' This is qualified by the following note : — ' Debo advertir, sin embargo, que el Sr. Asensio ha tenido la suerte, segiin me comunica, de ver uno que se conserva con la iirma de D. Juan.' No details are given as to the subject of this painting or its whereabouts. Jauregui's style can be judged only by the engraving of Lorenzo Ramirez de Prado's portrait in this author's nevrrjKovTapxoi dw Qvinqva- gintaMUiiAm Dvctor (Antverpi», 1612), and by the plates in Rev. Patris Ludovki ab Alcasar Siapalenm e Societate lesv Theologi, db in Prouincia Batica Saerce Scripturce Professoris Vestigatio Arcani Smsvs m Apocdhfpsi (Antverpiae, 1614). \ The engraving has been removed from the British Museum copy Of Ramirez de Prado's work. To judge from the incisions on f. 13, the portrait has been cut out rather recently. XVI THE PORTRAIT OF CERVANTES men resident in Seville at this period. There was nothing to recommend him to prosperous citizens. He was under a cloud. He had lost his modest employment. He had been in prison more than once. He had not yet published Don Quixote. He was obscure, living from hand to mouth. His history and circumstances were not such as to suggest that he was a desirable acquaintance for the son of well- to-do, ambitious parents. It is not easy to see why any one should have been tempted to paint Cervantes's portrait in the year 1600. The respective ages of Jauregui and Cervantes at this date are germane to the discussion. Jauregui, according to a certificate printed by his latest biographer,^ was baptized on November 24, 1583. Hence he would be (at most) seventeen in 1600. The date of his birth is not, however, free from doubt. In a legal document, dated May 11, 1609, Jauregui speaks of himself as being then twenty-foiu- years old.^ If this statement be correct, Jauregui would be (at most) fifteen in 1600. Seventeen or fifteen : the discrepancy is unimpoiiant, for the purpose of this discussion. Cervantes was (at least) fifty-two years old in 1600. We cannot reasonably assume any close personal relations, any inti- mate friendship, between a man of his age and position and a lad of Jauregui's age and position. The other inscriptions on the Albiol painting may be briefly considered. The word ' Don ' before Cervantes's Christian name attracts attention. Though 'Don' was beginning to be vulgarized towards the end of the sixteenth century, it was not likely to be loosely used by a youth of Jauregui's status. It is relevant to add that Cervantes never used the word ' Don ' in speaking of himself; that he is never called 'Don' in contemporary ' Jose Jordan de Un-ies y Azara, op. cit., p. 110. » Cristobal Pe'rez Pastor, Bibliografi'a madrileHa, Parte Tercera (Madrid, 1907), p. 206 : ' . . . atento a ser como soy de edad de veinte y quati-o aiios y menor de veinte y cinco ..." THE PORTEAIT OF CERVANTES xvii documents ; that his daughter refers to him as plain ' Senor de Cervantes ' ^ ; and that, as he himself records, the simple formula ' Senor Miguel de Cervantes ' was used by the friend mentioned in the prologue to Persiles y SigisTrmnda.^ Lastly, the orthography of the artist's surname — ' lauri- gui ' — is unexpected. It is asserted, indeed, that this form occurs in early documents, but those early documents have not been produced for inspection.^ However that may be, the surname appears as ' lauregui ' or ' lavregvi ' on the title-pages of the artist's literary publications.* An i is substituted for the e by Cervantes (in whose works the ' surname is printed ' Xaurigui '),® and this change of vowel would naturally be reproduced by anybody who, with the passage from the prologue to the Novelas exemplares in his mind, retouched the Albiol painting.^ ' See the document quoted in the present volume, p. 213, n. 2 ; see also p. 139, n. 4. ' This prologue is reprinted in the present volume, p. 199, n. 2. ' Jauregui's name naturally occurs for the first time in his baptismal certificate. In the transcription published by Sr. D. Jose Jordan de Urries y Azara, the form of the surname is ' gauregui '. ' The surname is printed ' lauregui ' on the title-pages of the translation of Tasso's Aminta (Rome, 1607), the Discvrso poetico (Madrid, 1624), the Apologia par la verdad (Madrid, 1625), and the Memorial al rey nuestro senor (Madrid, 1625). ' lavregvi ' is the form used on the title-pages of the Bimas (Sevilla, 1618) and Orfeo (Madrid, 1624). An undated essay on painting has the following title-page : Do Ivan de lavregvi cavallerizo de la Beina nmestra senora, cuyas vni- uersales letras, y eminencia en la Pintura, han manifestado a este Reyno, y a las estranos ms nobles estudios. This essay is signed ' Don luan de lauregui '. " The passage in the prologue to the Novelas exemplares, where the form 'Xaurigui' occurs, has been printed above (pp. xiii-xiv). The form ' Xaurigui ' is found also in the Viage del Farnaso (Madrid, 1614), fol. 9 verso ; and in the Segmda Parte del Ingenioso Cavallero Don Qvixote de la Mancha (Madrid, 1615), fol. 242 verso. ' M. R. Foulch^-Delbosc points out {Revue hispaniqwe, New York- Paris, 1911, vol. XXV, p. 480) that the painting has been retouched. xviii THE POETEAIT OF CERVANTES These points are real difficulties. None of them, taken singly, is fatal. Yet their cumulative force is not to be denied. The alleged portrait has an inscription that confers on Cervantes the honorific ' Don ' which is never applied to him by any contemporary ; it bears a form of signature which the alleged artist did not habitually use ; it purports to have been painted by this ai-tist between the ages of fourteen and seventeen. On the other hand, the portrait is approved as genuine by the Royal Spanish Academy. We cannot, however, forget that this is not the first alleged portrait of Cervantes on which the Royal Spanish Academy has staked its credit.^ On its own admission, the Royal possibly during the latter half of the eighteenth century, with a view to making it accord more closely with Cervantes's description of himself. ' Sous I'epaisse couche de vernis dont on a gen^reusement reconvert le tableau, il est aise de distinguer des repeints : ces repeinte interessent toute la region sincipitale anterieure. Personne, a ma connaissance, ne les a signal^. La tete, avant cette retouche, avait un front d'une hauteur moyenne ; I'ancienne limite des cheveux est nettement visible, et le modele n'etait afflig^ d'aucun commencement de calvitie : or Cervantes avait la « frente lisa, y desembarafada ». II y a la une discordance qui, k mon avis, est une nouveUe marque d'in- authenticite. En efFet, la seule exphcation de ces malencontreux repeints est que, a une epoque qu'il reste a d^tenniner (peut-etre dans la seconde moiti^ du xvili^ siecle ?), quelqu'un qui connaissait le pro- logue des Novelas s'effor^a de mettre en harmonie le portrait ^crit du a Cervantes lui-raeme et le portrait d'un inconnu que, par caprice ou par int^ret, il avait r&olu de faire passer pour le portrait de I'auteur de Don Quichotte.. Dans ce cas, les inscriptions seraient contemporaines des repeints, car si les inscriptions avaient deja figure sur le portrait, nul ne se serait avise de retoucher celui-ci, et surtout de le retoucher a I'endroit indiqu^. Et la date de 1600, si Arange maintenant que nous Savons que Jauregui naquit en novembre 1583, s'explique aise-j ment si Ton veut bien se rappeler que jusqu'en 1899 on croyait que le peintre-poete Aait ne en 1570 ou vers 1570.' ^ The London edition of Don Quixote, published by Tonson in 1738, was furnished with a fancy portrait of Cervantes. The artist was, William Kent who, having nothing else to go upon, necessarily followed j the indications given by the author in the prologue to the Novdcm' exemplares. There was no attempt to pass off the portrait as anything: THE PORTRAIT OF CERVANTES xix Spanish Academy was mistaken in ITSO : it may be wrong again in 1912-13. The best experts are prone to err in these but what it was. Underneath George Vertue's engraving is the in- scription : Betrato de Cervantes de Saavedra por el mismo. When the Royal Spanish Academy was preparing the edition of Don Quixote issued in 1780, the Academicians endeavoured to find something more satisfactory than Kent's makeshift. Their inquiries led them to believe that an authentic contemporary portrait of Cervantes was in the possession of the Conde del Aguila. Aguila declared that h3 had bought the portrait in question from a Madrid picture-dealer who had sold it as a work by Alonso de Arco. This was embarrassing. As Arco was not born till 1625, he could never have seen Cervantes. Either the portrait was spui-ious or the attribution to Arco was The picture ascribed to Arco (who died in 1701) so closely resembled Kent's fancy portrait that it might be taken for a copy of the English engraving. It could not be contended that this Aguila painting, discovered in Spain shortly before 1780, had somehow become known in England to Kent some forty yeai-s earlier. Unwilling to draw the obvious conclusion that the Aguila painting was not by Arco, but by some unknown artist of later date who had simply copied Kent, the Academicians consulted Antonio Gonzalez and Andres de la Calleja — ' pintores de Camara de S. M. y Directores de la Real Academia de San Fernando.' Both these experts reported that the Aguila painting was much older than Kent's fancy portrait ; that it dated from the seventeenth century ; and that it belonged to the school of Vicencio Carducho and Eugenio Caxes, both of whom lived in the time of Philip IV. This theory, though it seemed to dispose of Kent's claim to priority, was disappointing. The portrait could not be from life, since Cervantes died five years before Philip IV came to the throne. But the Acade- micians could not bring themselves ^to reject the Aguila portrait altogether. With the report of the two experts before them, they came to the ingenious conclusion that the Aguila picture was a copy of some good original — possibly a portrait by Jauregui or Pacheco — painted during the lifetime of Cervantes. The Academy accepted the painting as a gift from the Conde del Aguila, and an engraving of it duly appeared in the 1780 edition of Don Quixote. This portrait is now universally admitted to be spui-ious. The experts consulted by the Academy were wrong, and the theory put forward by the Academy was untenable. XX THE PORTRAIT OF CERVANTES difficult matters of ascription, and even inexperienced laymen are not infallible. On the facts before us at present, it is impossible to declare positively that the Albiol painting is authentic. Proofs of its authenticity may be forthcoming later. Mean- while, the portrait is sufficiently interesting to deserve reproduction here. MEMOIR In this brief biographical essay an attempt is ) made to record the incidents of Cervantes's career, soj^^as they are jestablished by something like .^ satis factory ea iience. It will probably be impos- sible to avoid all mention of conjectures, some of them ingenious and even plausible. But these will be given in the notes rather than in the text, the m^a^sj^ect of which is to supply a _staitement uif iac±&»j^i:fiSfiaMJjyjfcrustwm^^ Hence, at the outset, we must exclude from consideration the too well known genealogical tree which purports to show Cervantes's descent from TeUo Murielliz, a shadowy ricohome of Castile who is alleged to have flourished towards the end of the tenth century. 1 This table of lineage is partly based on the work of the notorious pedigree-monger Eodrigo Mendez Silva,^ and is therefore of no authority. ' This genealogical tree will be found, inserted between pp. 592-3, in most copies of Martin Fernandez de Navarrete, Vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (Madrid, 1819) : see also the section of Navarrete's work entitled Ilustraciones y documentos, pp. 232-48. The floruit of Tello Murielliz is given as 988. * Rodrigo Mendez Silva, Ascendencia ilvstre, gloriosos hechos, y posteridad noble delfamoso Nvno Alfonso . . . (Madrid, 1648). 1497 B MIGUEL DE CERVANTES The data at our disposal do not enable us to trace Cervantes's ancestry further back than two genera- tions. We cannot follow up his family history beyond his grandfather, Juan de Cervantes, whose name is first found in a deed executed on May 13, 1533 1: in this deed Juan de Cervantes describes himself as a licenciado, then residing at Alcala de Henares.^ It may be taken that he was a licenciate of law ; for, when next we meet him (on December 1 and 19, 1545, and on March 1 and 18, 1546), we discover him attaching his signature to the capitular acts of Osuna, as one of three petty magistrates who heard appeals on the Andalusian estates of the fourth Conde de Urena — estates which included the districts of Osuna, El Arahal, Moron, Olvera, and Archidona.^ We have not yet learned when Juan de Cervantes was appointed to this small judicial post, nor when and why he ceased to hold it. His subsequent history remains obscure.* His name (as it seems to some ' Cristobal Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos hasta ahora ineditos (Madrid, 1897-1902), vol. I, pp. 1-3. ' Ibid., p. 1. ' . . . yo, el licenciado Juan de Qervantes, residente en la villa de Alcala de Henares . . .' ' Francisco Rodriguez Marin, Cervantes y la Universidad de Osuna in Homenaje d Menindez y Pelayo en el ano vigisimo de su profesorado (Madrid, 1899), vol. II, pp. 809-810. * There is nothing to support the idea that Juan de Cervantes was at any time cort-egidor of Osuna, as stated by the alfirez Luis de Pedrosa in the Informacion drawn up at Algiers on October 14, 1580 (Navarrete, op. cit., p. 246), and as repeated by P^rez Pastor {op. cit., vol. I, p. 221). ANCESTRY 3 good judges) is next encountered in a document dated October 9, 1555: here a Juan de Cervantes appears as supporting the claims of a certain Juan de Cardenas to a chaplaincy at Osuna. This Juan de Cervantes described himself as a lawyer, sixty-five years of age, residing at Cordoba.^ He is generally identified as Cervantes's grandfather, (1) because he has the same name, (2) because he belonged to the same profession, and (3) because his signature bears a striking resemblance to that of the Juan de Cervantes whose name is attached to the register of proceedings at Osuna for 1545-6.^ If this identifi- cation be correct — and it has not yet been challenged — it may be assumed provisionally that Cervantes's grandfather vpas born in or about the year 1490. ^ The names of Juan de Cervantes's parents, and the date of his death, are not known. ' Francisco Rodriguez Marin, Cervantes estudid en Sevilla (1564-5). Discurso leido . . . en la solemne inauguracidn del curso [del Ateneo y Sociedad de Excursiones] de 1900 & 1901 (Sevilla, 1901), p. 9. ' En las pruebas de Juan de Cardenas, natural de Cdrdoba, aspirante a una colegiatura del Mayor de Osuna, declaro en aquella ciudad, a 9 de cotubre de 1555, " el senor licenciado Juan de Cervantes, vezino de Cordoba, en la coUacidn de Santo Domingo e Santiago," y dijo, entre otras cosas, ser "de hedad de sesenta e cinco anos ".' " Ihid., pp. 9-10. 'Esta circunstancia, la de entenderse por el texto de la declaracion que el declarante era abogado, y la de estar sacada su firma, en el testimonio que he leido, en identica forma y con la propia abreviatura que el usaba {el licen " cervates) . . . parficenme indicios mas que vehementes de que el ex-gobernador del estado de Osuna y el sexagenario letrado de Cdrdoba fueron una persona misma.' ' Julio de Sigiienza, El licenciado Juan de Cervantes y su hija Dona Maria in La Bustracidn espanola y americana (September 22, 1887, pp. 167, col. 3—171, col. 1), alleges that Juan de Cervantes died in 1546, the year before his famous grandson was born. But the value b2 4 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES The date of his marriage and the name of his wife are Hkewise unknown to us. But, from the above-mentioned deed of May 13, 1533, it may be gathered that Juan de Cervantes was at this date the father of a son named Andres,^ and of a daughter named Maria. Beyond the statement in the pre- amble of the deed that Maria was under twenty-iive years of age on the day the document was signed, ^ there is no available information as to when either Andres or Maria de Cervantes was born. Nor is there any record of the birth or baptism of their brother Kodrigo, who is presumed to have been their junior. It has been asserted that Eodrigo was a licentiate, like his father. =* There is no proof that he held any such diploma, and in two legal docu- ments he speaks of himself as a medico gurujano * — of this assertion is somewhat dimiuished by the fact that Sr. Siguenza confused Juan de Cervantes with acertain Pedro de Cervantes, corregidor of Alcala de Henares. See Emilio Cotarelo y Mori, Efemdrides cer- vantinas 6 sea resumen cronoldgico de la vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saamdra (Madrid, 1905), pp. 9-10. • ' Andres de ^ervantes, hijo del dicho licenciado Qervantes ' is one of the witnesses to the deed drawn in favour of Dona Maria : see Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 3. It is inferred that this Andres had a son named Juan, for Cervantes's father refers to 'juan de fervantes mi sobrino ' in a power of attorney signed at Seville on October 30, 1564 (Rodriguez Marin, Cervantes estudio en Sevilla, p. 30). ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. 1, p. 1 ' . . . porque la dicha dona Maria mi hija no se puede obligar sin mi Ucencia por estar debaxo de la patria potestad e tambien por ser menor de edad de veinte y cinco anos . . . .' ' Ibid., p. 284. Perez Pastor thought that Rodrigo probably tooi a degree in law : see page 5, note 2, * Rodriguez Marin, Cervantes estudio en Sevilla, pp. 29-30. Both documents were signed at Seville on October 30, 1564. PARENTAGE 5 that is to say, an authorized medical practitioner of a humble type. At some place not yet ascertained, and presumably at some date not later than March, 1543,' Rodrigo de Cervantes^ married Leonor de Cor- tinas,^ daughter of Elvira de Cortinas.* Except that Elvira de Cortinas owned a patch of land at Arganda, we know nothing of the family into which Rodrigo de Cervantes married. Rodrigo de Cervantes and Leonor de Cortinas had issue : Andres,^ Andrea," ' See note 5 below, where the date of Andres de Cervantes's baptism is given. "^ He is called the ' licenciado Cervantes de Saavedra ' in a contract signed by his daughter Magdalena on August 11, 1599, fourteen years after his death : see Perez Pastor, Documentos cetvantinos, vol. I, p. 136. In contemporary documents his name appears as Rodrigo de Cervantes, without the title of licenciado. As to the use of the additional name of Saavedra, see Navarrete, Vida, pp. 237-9. ' The name of Leonor's father is not recorded. In the sixteenth century, and later, it was not uncommon in Spanish families for sons to take their father's surname, and daughters their mother's, but there was much confusion in this respect, for the practice was sometimes reversed, as in the case of Gongora. Juan Antonio Pellicer (Discurso preliminar to his edition of Don Quixote, Madrid, 1797-8, vol. I, p. cxciii) conjectures that Leonor was a native of Bara- jas, near Alcala de Henares. This guess was repeated by Navarrete {Vida, p. 9), and will be found in most biographies of Cervantes. * Elvira de Cortinas evidently died before December 2, 1566, for on that day her daughter Leonor signed a power of attorney in which she speaks of 'Elvira de Cortinas, mi senora y madre, que este en gloria ' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 2). ' Andres was baptized in the church of Santa Maria la Mayor at Alcala de Henares on December 12, 1543: the certificate is printed by Navarrete ( Vida, pp. 551-2). As Andr6s is not named in his father's will, made on June 8, 1585 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 83-6), it is supposed that he died before this date. ' Andrea seems to have been uncertain as to the date of her birth. On March 6, 1565, she declared before a notary that she was then about seventeen (Rodriguez Marin, Cervantes estudid en Sevilla, p. 32) on 6 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Loisa,! Miguel, Eodrigo,^ Magdalena,^ and Juan.* June 30, 1605, she declared that she was then fifty years of age (see p. 60, n. 3). On these dates respectively she was twenty and sixty years old, having been baptized in the church of Santa Maria la Mayor at Aloala de Henares on November 24, 1544: the certificate is printed by Navarrete {Vida, p. 552). ^ Loisa was baptized in the church of Santa Maria la Mayor at Alcala de Henares on August 25, 1546 : the certificate is printed by Navarrete {Vida, p. 552). On February 11, 1565, Loisa joined the order of Barefooted Carmelites in the convent of the Conception (otherwise oi La Imagen) at Alcala de Henares, her name in religion being Sor Luisa de Belen. Naturally she enters but little into the history of the Cervantes family. It may, therefore, be convenient to give here the facts concerning her life as recorded (with superfluous hyperbolical comments) by Esteban Azana, Historia de la ciudad de Alcald de Henares [antigua Compluto) adicionada con una resena histdrico-geogrdfica de los pueblos de su partido judicial (Alcala de Henares and Madrid, 1882-3), vol. I, pp. 408-9. ' Por otra parte, la ilustre hermana de Cervantes, Luisa, que consta real y positiva- mente se liizo religiosa Carmelita, en el [convento] de la Concepcion de esta ciudad, vulgarmente de la Imagen prueba la existencia de esta famillia en la antigua Compluto. La vida religiosa de la hermana de Cervantes esta detallada en las siguientes lineas, que debemos a la amabilidad de la priora del convento, donde se lleva una apuntacior en un empergaminado cuaderno, de la entrada de cada monja, cargos que desempena y dia de su muerte, y que para que no falte algo de fatalidad en la vida de la hermana de Cervantes, cosa que pocas veces se repite en el monasterio, no se consigna en lo que pudiera Uamai-se biografia de esta religiosa el dia que ocurrid su muerte. He aqui lo que de ella se sabe en el convento. ' El once de febrero de 1565, tomaba el santo habito de cai-melita desoalza, en el convento referido en el pan-afo anterior, Luisa de Cervantes, hija de Rodrigo y de dona Leonor, conociendose en el claustro por Sor Luisa de Belen y Cervantes, la que asistio como religiosa, a la santa visita del aiio 1572, a los ocho anos de su ingreso en el monasterio y veinticinco de su edad ; tres afios despues fue nombrada sacristana, y en el aiio 1580 no presencio las elecciones, poi hallarse enferma, firmandose Clavaria en 1585 y asistiendo a la visitu del ano siguiente en que fue nombrada Tornera, siendo elegida Sul- priora en 1596, cuyo cargo ejerci6 hasta el 99 en que qued6 de Clavaria, siguiendo en el desempeiio de su nuevo empleo hasta 1602, en que fut elegida Priora, cargo en el que fue reelegida al tcrminar su nombra. BROTHERS AND SISTERS 7 It is with the fourth of these seven children that we are chiefly concerned here. miento en 1605 : volvi6 a flgurar corao Clavaria en 1608, apareciendo nuevamente en 1611 como Subpriora del convento ; tres anos despues, 6 sea en 1614 es nombrada Clavaria, cuyo cargo desempena por seis afios a cuya terminacion en 1620 es reelegida Priora. Asi consta clara y terminantemente en los libros de entradas y visitas 6 elecciones del citado convento de Alcala, y como es proverbial que en este Hstorico convento modelo de virtud por parte de sus religiosas, se ban dado siempre los empleos de responsabilidad, a aquellas monjas que mas acreditada ban tenido, su prudencia, su tacto y madurez de entendi- miento se desprende claramente que Luisa de Cervantes al figurar por tres veces como Priora, maximum de las que puede obtenerse tan bonroso cargo d parte de las veces que desempeno otros tambien importantes, fue una de las religiosas de mayor nombradia en el monasterio, y seguramente que su inteligencia femenil, participaria de la luminosa suflciencia de su ilustre hermano.' " Rodrigo was baptized in tbe churcb of Santa Maria la Mayor at Alcala de Henares on June 23, 1550 : tbe baptismal certificate is printed by Bamon Leon Mainez {Cenantes y su ipoca, Jerez de la Frontera, 1901-3, p. 104) vybo had previously communicated it to M. Paul Mirannes ( Un frere de Cervantes : documents inidits in La Nmivelle Revue, Paris, August 15, 1901, pp. 585-92). ' In ber will, made on October 11, 1610, Magdalena stated that she was a native of Valladolid (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 285) ; in her death-certificate, however, she is described as a native of Madrid (Crdnica de los Cervantistas, Cadiz, April 23, 1872, vol. I, p. 105). The year of ber birth is likewise uncertain. In one place P^rez Pastor (Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 225) suggests 1558 or 1559 as a likely date : in another (Ibid., vol. II, p. 350) be gives 1555 as an alternative. Magdalena's own ideas as to ber age varied from time to time. On May 7, 1575, she stated that she was less than twenty-five and more than sixteen {Ibid., vol. I, p. 23) ; on August 1, 1575, she stated that she was less than twenty-five and more than eighteen (Ibid., vol. I, p. 27) : apparently she was still a minor on June 29, 1578 (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 54-5). It would seem, then, that she cannot have been born after 1557, nor (if she may be trusted) before 1553. * Juan's existence is only known to us through the mention of him in his father's will (Ibid., vol. I, p. 85), dated June 8, 1585 : ' . . . dexo e nombro por mis herederos universales de todos mis bienes a Miguel MIGUEL DE CERVANTES II Miguel de Cervante&,^aavedra was baptized on Sunday, ^i3ctober 9, 1547) in the parish church of St, Mary the Greater at Alcala de Henares,i and we have his personal testimony also that he was born in this town. 2 As was the case with most Spaniards de Zerbantes e a Rodrigo de ^ervantes y a Juan de ^erbantea y a dona Andrea de Zerbantes e a dona Madalena de ^erbantes, mis hijos, e hijos de la dicha dona Leonor de Cortinas, mi muger. ..." Perez Pastor con- jectures {Ibid., vol. I, p. 333) that as Juan de Cervantes is not mentioned in the deeds executed by his mother and his sister Magdalena in 1598 (see p. 89, n. 2), he had died before this date. Possibly ; but neither of them refers in these documents to Andrea, Miguel, and Rodrigo, who were unquestionably alive at the time. ■^ Cervantes's baptismal certificate was first published in Agustin de Montiano y Luyando, Discurso II. sohre las tragedias espanolas (Madrid, 1753), p. 10. It has often been reproduced : perhaps the most convenient references are Navarrete (Vida,-p. 552), and Mainez {Cervantes y sii ^poca, p. 104). The latter gives the document as follows, after a copy made by Sr. D. Ramon Santa Maria on January 10, 1901 : ' domjngo nueve dias del mes de otubre Ano del senor de mill / e qnjs. e quarenta e siete anos fue baptizado miguel / hijo de Rodrigo de fervantes e su muger dona leonor fue/ron sus conpadres Ju" / pardo baptizole El R.*" senor br.^ / seRano Cura de nra. senora ts." baltasar vazqz. sacrista / e yo q. le baptize e firme de mj nobre. El bachillr. SeRano.' This is taken from the corresponding volume of the parish register, fol. 192 verso. It will be observed that the name ' Saavedra ' does not appear in the baptismal certificate, and, though it occurs on the title-pages of Cervantes's works (with the exception of the title-page of La Galatea, in which novel it is given at the end of the preface), it was often omitted by him when signing official and legal documents, However, as already stated (p. 5, n. 2), it would seem from the declaration made by Magdalena de Cervantes in 1599 that her father may have used the name of Saavedra occasionally. ^ Not at Seville, as was presumed by the judges who presided at the celebration in honour of St. Hyacinth at Saragossa in May 1595 {Eelacion de la festa que se ha hecho, &c., ^aragoca, 1595, p. 890), by BIETHPLACE 9 of his timfe) the actual date of his birth is not Nicolas Antonio {Bibliotheca Hispana, Roma, 1672-9, vol. II, p. 105), by Diego Ortiz de Zun^a (Annales eclesiasticos, y secvlares de la nwy noble, y mvy leal civdad de Sevilla, Madrid, 1677, p. 590, col. 2), and by Pedro Murillo Velarde {Oeographia historica, Madrid, 1752, vol. X, p. 28). Not at Toledo, as was thought by the contemporary actor-dramatist Andres de Claramonte [Letania moral, Sevilla, 1613, p. 482). Not at Esquivias, as alleged by Tomas Tamayo de Vargas in his unpublished Junta de libros la mayor que jamas ha visto Esparia (compiled in 1624). Not at Madrid, as implied by Lope de Vega (Lavrel de Apolo, Madrid, 1630, silva 8, f. 75 recto and verso), whose surmise is repeated by Gregorio Mayans y Siscar in his biography preceding the Vida y Jiechos del ingenioso hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha (Londres, 1738), vol. I, p. 2, par. 4, and p. 3, par. 7. Not at Lucena, as a local tradition would have it, according to Mayans y Siscar {loc. cit., p. 2, par. 3). Not at Consuegra, as has been suggested owing to the words — ' El Autor de los Quijotes ' — found on the margin of a certificate recording the baptism (Consuegra, September 1, 1556) of Miguel, son of Miguel Lopez de Cervantes and Maria de Figueroa (Navarrete, Vida, p. 556). Not at Alcazar de San Juan, as conjectured by Alonso Cano, after- wards Bishop of Segorve, on the strength of a certificate recording the baptism (Alcazar de San Juan, November 9, 1558) of Miguel, son of Bias de Cervantes Saavedra and Catalina Lopez (Josef Miguel de Flores, Aduana critica, . . . Hebdomadario de los sabios de Espana, Madrid, 1764, vol. Ill, p. 264). On the margin is written : 'Bste fue el autor de la Historia de Don Quixote.' Navarrete ascribes {Vida, p. 556) this marginal note to Bias Nasarre, the editor of Cervantes's plays ; Sr. Cotarelo y Mori thinks {Efemirides cervantinas, p. 18) that Nasarre was hoaxed by a local wag, then parish-priest at Alcazar de San Juan. The theory that this Miguel de Cervantes was the author of Don Quixote involves the conclusion that he fought at Lepanto before he was thirteen, and that his elegies on Isabel de Valois were written before he was ten. Yet it is held by some — amongst others by Juan Alvarez Guerra {Sol de Cervantes Saavedra, su verdadera patria Alc&zar de San Juan, Madrid, 1878) ; by Francisco Lizcano y Alaminos {Historia de la verdadera cuna de Miguel de Cervantes Saa- vedra y Lopez, autor del Don Quijote de la Mancha, con las metamdrfosis bucdlicas y gedrgicas de dicha obra. Vida y hechos del Principe de los Ingenios Espanoles, con una refutacidn analitica de las biografias que de 10 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES recorded.! No information reaches us as to how, and where, he passed his boyhood.^ There are este autor se han impreso hasta el dia, Madrid, 1892) ; by Antonio Castellanos (Apuntes sohre la verdadera patna de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Alcazar de San Juan, 1896) ; and by Jose Maria Riguera Montoro (Estudio acerca de la verdadera cuna y oriundez de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Segunda edici<5n, La Coruna, 1910). The last- named meets the chronological difficulties by asking (p. 10) : ' (, No tenia menos de 14 anos el humilde pastor David, cuando vencid el blasfemo e impio gigante Goliat ? ' According to an article by ' Doctor Pdstumo ' in El Heraldo de Madrid (Sunday, April 23, 1893),i the baptismal certificate in question is a forgery committed during the eighteenth century by an illiterate who, with the object of strengthening the case for his fabrication, is alleged to have falsified the entries which follow the entry concerning Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra y Lopez in the register of Alcazar de San Juan. The essen- tial paragraphs of 'Doctor Pdstumo's' article are reprinted by Manuel de Foronda in the first appendix to Cervantes en la Exposicidn Histdrico-Europea (Madrid, 1894), pp. 85-95. The claims formerly asserted on behalf of Herencia (Ciudad-Real) and Madridejos (Toledo) are now abandoned. All possible controversy is closed by the description which Cervantes gives of himself in his Informacion, dated Madrid, December 18, 1580 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 65) : ' Miguel de Qer- bantes, natural de Alcaic de Henares, residente en este corte, digo . . .' Apart from this decisive statement, there would be strong presump- tion in favour of Alcald. de Henares. The custom in Catholic countries is that children are baptized in the church of the parish in which they are born. Only special circumstances would justify a departure from the ordinary practice, as in the case of the Jesuit historian Mariana : see M. Georges Cirot, La Famille de Juan de Mariana in the Bulletin hispanique (Bordeaux, 1904), vol. VI, pp. 309-31. There were no such circumstances in Cervantes's case. ' From the fact that Cervantes bore the Christian name of Miguel, it has been conjectured that he was born on the Feast of St. Michael, Thursday, September 29, 1547. '^ It has been suggested (Rodriguez Marin, Cervantes estudid en Sevilla, p. 11) that all the Cervantes family moved to Cordoba in 1548, and remained there with Juan de Cervantes till after 1555. This is contradicted by the fact that the younger Rcdrigo de Cervantes was born at Alcala de Henares in 1550. EARLY CIECUMSTANCES 11 indications that his father, the elder Eodrigo de Cervantes, was a restless man, unsuccessful in his profession. He appears now in one place, now in another, and it is possible that, as his children grew up, one or other of them went with him occasionally on his journeys. He is found on October 30, 1564, at Seville,^ where he owned some house property,^ and it would appear that his wife was not at Seville with him at this date.'' Perhaps the family made their home, such as it was, in Madrid.* Early next year (February 11, 1565) the second daughter Loisa was professed at the Convent of the Barefooted Carmelites in Alcala de Henares,*^ but we are unable to say whether the elder Eodrigo de. Cervantes remained in Seville, or whether he returned to Alcala de ' Rodriguez Marin, Cervantes estudio en Sevilla, pp. 29-31. ^ Ibid., p. 29. In this document the elder Rodrigo de Cervantes acknowledges the receipt of a sum from his tenant Juan Mateo de Uruena, who had fallen behindhand with his rent : ' . . . que me pagays por mandamiento rrequisitorio del senor alcalde andres rodrigues por el pleito executivo que contra vos e siguido sobre la rrenta de tres meses de vnas casas que de mi teneys. . . .' ° Ibid., pp. 30-31. This is inferred from a power of attorney signed on October 30, 1564 by the elder Rodrigo de Cervantes, who authorizes his wife, Leonor de Cortinas, and his nephew, Juan de Cervantes, to receive money due to him. * This is implied by the evidence of two witnesses living in Madrid who, on December 22, 1569, deposed to having known the CeiTantes family for eight years. It might be argued that these witnesses made acquaintance with the family elsewhere, but this could scarcely apply to Alonso Getino de Guzman, a witness who was alguacil of Madrid, and must have resided there. Perez Pastor (Dociimentos cei-vantinos, vol. II, p. 351) sees no reason to doubt the evidence of these witnesses, and there is none. But, in the interest of the petitioner, their cue was to exaggerate the extent of their acquaintance with him. 5 See p. 6, n. 1. 12 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Henares to witness Loisa's profession. His eldest daughter Andrea was undoubtedly at Seville on March 6, 1565,i and, since she appeared as a third party in a suit in which her father was principal, the probability is that he was in Seville with her. Loisa (now Sor Loisa de Belen) had withdrawn from the world, and has no further place in this record Leaving her out of the question, it is uncertain whether the other members of the Cervantes family were often all gathered together under one roof At Madrid, on December 2, 1566, Leonor de Cortinas signed a power of attorney authorizing her husband to receive whatever was due to her from the estate of her mother,^ who had died recently ; and, as this instrument was witnessed by the younger Eodrigo de Cervantes, it has been inferred that his elder brother Miguel must have been away from Madrid at the time.^ But this inference may easily be mis- ' Rodriguez Marin, Cet-vanies estudid en Sevilla, pp. 31-2. ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 1-4. See also a document, dated December 19, 1566 (Ibid., \oi. II, pp. 5-8), acknow- ledging the receipt of twenty ducados from Andrea Rendero, to whom the elder Rodrigo and his wife had sold a small vineyard near the village of Arganda. Apparently members of the Cervantes family were in Madrid on January 9, 1567 ; on that day the elder Rodrigo there signed a document empowering Andres de Ozaeta to act for him in any lawsuits in which he might be concerned {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 9-10). ' Cotarelo y Mori, Efemindes cenmntinas, p. 28. But, as already stated (p. 11, n. 4), two witnesses — Alonso Getino de Guzman, alguacil of Madrid, and Pirro Boqui — gave evidence implying that Miguel de Cervantes and his parents had lived at Madrid since 1561 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 11-16). It may be noted that this Alonso Getino de Guzman was connected with the theatre, and to this extent shared the sympathies of ANDREA AND LOCADELO 13 taken. That other members of the Cervantes family- were (and had been for some time) living in Madrid appears from a singular deed of gift, dated June 9, 1568.1 In ^^i^ig (jge(j Andrea de Cervantes is repre- sented as receiving from a certain Juan Francisco Locadelo, an Italian formerly resident in Madrid, three hundred escudos, much wearing apparel, and a large amount of household furniture. These gifts were made (so the donor avowed) in recognition of the care with which Andrea had nursed him through a long illness, when he was a patient of her father's.^ Cervantes. Gretino de Guzman appears in 1579 as being responsible for the building and expenses of the Corral de la Cruz (Perez Pastor, Nuevos datos acerca del histrionismo espanol en los siglos XVI y XVII (Segunda Sirie) in the Bulletin hispanigue (1906), vol. VIII, p. 76. ' P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 8-14. ^ Ibid., vol. I, p. 8. ' Sepan quantos esta carta de donacion ynrevo- cable vieren, como yo, Juan Locadelo, residente al presente en esta villa de Madrid y corte de su magestad, digo : que por quanto yo tengo mucha obligacion e soy en mucho cargo a la senora dona Andrea de ^ervantes, hija de Eodrigo de ^ervantes, residente en esta dicha villa e corte, ansi porque estando yo ausente de mi natural en esta tierra me ha regalado y curado algunas enfermedades que he tenido assi ella como su padre e hecho por mi y en mi utilidad otras muchas cosas de que yo tengo obligacion a lo remunerar y gratifioar por ende en la via e forma que haya mejor lugar de derecho, e cumpliendo lo susodicho otorgo e conozco por esta presente carta que hago giucia y donacion a la dicha senora dona Andrea de ^ervantes pura perfecta ynrebocable que llama el derecho entre vivos para ella e sus herederos y sufesores presentes y por venir y para quien ella quisiere e por bien tuviere es a saber de los bienes e cosas siguientes. . . .' Here follows a list of Locadelo's presents, which are said to be given to Andrea from motives of gratitude, and to enable her to marry. This is followed by provisions against interference on the part of her father, brothers, and other persons ; in case of such interference the deed of gift is cancelled. U MIGUEL DE CERVANTES These are the only details, trivial but perhaps; significant enough, which reach us concerning the Cervantes family during the score of years which followed Miguel de Cervantes's birth.^ Apart from one juvenile composition discovered some fourteen years ago by M. Foulche-Delbosc,^ we know nothing of Cervantes from the day of his baptism till he comes into sight again after the death of Philip II's third wife, Isabel de Valois, on October 3, 1568. In com- memoration of her Cervantes wrote a coph, four re- dondillas, and an elegy (probably also a sonnet), which were printed next year (1569) in the Hystoria y relacio verdadera de la enfermedad felicissimo transito, y szimp- tuosas exequias funehres de la Serenissima Beyna de Espana dona Isabel de Valoys nuestra Senora, a volume edited by a Madrid schoolmaster named Juan Lopez de Hoyos,'' who calls the young versifier his beloved pupil.* The phrase is complimentary, but its pre- ^ Rodriguez Marin conjectures (Cervantes estudid en Sevilla, pp. 20- 5) that Cervantes went to the Jesuit school at Seville in 1564-5, and quotes in support of his view a passage from El Cologuio de los Perns. Tomas Gonzalez, once Professor of Rhetoric at Salamancia, assured Navarrete {Vida, p. 271) that he had found Cervantes's name registered as a student of philosophy in that university for two years, during which (or part of which) Cervantes lived in the Calle de Moros. The entry has not been seen since the time of Gonzalez. Da. Blanca de los Rios de Lamp^rez Q Estudid Cervantes en Salamanca ? in Del siglo de oro, Madrid, 1910, pp. 141-94) believes that Cervantes studied at Salamanca, but would fix the date from about 1582 to 1584. ' Revue hispanique (Paris, 1899), vol. VI, pp. 508-9. 2 Crist6bal Perez Pastor, Bibliografia madrileHa 6 descripcidn de las obras impresas en Madrid [siglo XVI], (Madrid, 1891), pp. 10-11. * In the Tahla at the end of the volume edited by Lopez de Hoyos, Cervantes is referred to aa 'roiamado discipulo'; on the verso of f. 147 (misprinted 138) he is called ' nuestro charo y amado discipulo '. LOPEZ DE HOYOS 15 cise meaning is not plain. It was used in 1668-9 when Cervantes was twenty-one, and, as he was then too old to be at school, it probably refers to the past. Had Cervajitesbeen^a^upiXundfirLopez de_ HoYos before the latter became head master of the sc hool at Madrid in J aiiuary, 156B^"" Did lie study privately with Lopez de Hoyos after this date, or did he act as an assistant-master under him between January and November of that year ? Some colour may seem to be lent to this last supposition by the epigraph to one of Cervantes's poems, said to be written en nombre de todo el estudw.^ What weight attaches to this heading? Are the words to be taken in their most literal sense? Do they mean that Cervantes had some professional connexion with Lopez de Hoyos's school ? To these questions we can give no satisfactory answer. Cervantes was now long past the age when he might be expected to earn his own living, and, no doubt, he would willingly have earned it by school- mastering, or by any other humble, honest occupa- tion. He was not free to pick and choose. Though the elder Eodrigo de Cervantes seems to have owned ^ Perez Pastor, Doeumentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 355 (item 21). Assuming that Cervantes was with his family at Madrid as early as 1561 (see p. 12, n. 2), Perez Pastor suggests {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 351-2 and 357) that he studied at the Estudio de la Villa under Geronimo Ramirez in 1562-3, under Francisco del Bayo in 1567, and for a few months only under Lopez de Hoyos. ^ This epigraph occurs on the verso of f. 157 of the volume edited by Lopez de Hoyos : ' La elegia que en nombre de todo el estudio el sobredicho [Miguel de Cervantes] compuso . . .' 16 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES (or, at least, to have had some interest in) houses at Seville, and though he had an occasional windfall like the modest inheritance from Elvira de Cortinas which came to him through his wife, his circum- stances did not allow of his doing much for his children. The conditions under which Andrea de Cervantes had accepted Locadelo's gifts could scarcely fail to gall any honourable youth. Nothing could be more natural than that an upright young man, with a spice of adventure in his nature, should break away from such compromising surroundings, and seek to push his fortune abroad. Cervantes did this, and perhaps left Spain before his verses on Isabel de Valois appeared in print. ^ III We next hear of him in Italy. ^ How he made his way there is unknown : so is the exact date of his arrival. Long afterwards, he wrote that he had 1 It seems that Lopez de Hoyos's Historia was not published till about the autumn of 1569. The Tasa is dated August 30, 1569: see Perez Pastor, Bibliografia madrilena 6 deseripcidn de las obras impresas en Madrid \siglo XVI\ (Madrid, 1891), pp. 10-11. Cervantes's elegiacs on Isabel de Valois will be found in 06ms com- pletas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 413-21. ^ Geronimo Moran, Vida de Miguel Cervantes Saavedra (Madrid, 1867), pp. 134-5, prints a document ordering the arrest of a certain Myguel de Zerbantes who had wounded one Antonio de Sigura at Madrid, and had been sentenced to exile for ten years, after having his right hand chopped off by the public executioner. The document is dated September 15, 1569. There is nothing to identify Sigura's opponent with our Cervantes, and we have nothing to show that the condemned man fled to Italy. However, there are no chronological IN KOME 17 been camarero in Eome to Cardinal Giulio Acquaviva^; it is on record that Acquaviva was sent to Spain by Pius V on a special mission, that he reached Madrid on October 13, 1568,^ and that his return passport was made out on December 2 of the same year.^ But there is no reason to suppose that Acquaviva — not yet a cardinal* — was aware of Cervantes's exis- tence at this time.^ The first proof of Cervantes's diflBculties in the way of accepting the view that our Cervantes was the offender. This opinion is held by several writers, notably by Dona Blanca de los Rios de Lamperez, Del siglo de oro (Madrid, 1910), pp. 147-8. A similar escapade, regarded as a personal reminiscence, is related of Don Fernando de Saavedra by Margarita in Cervantes's play El gallardo espanol (ff. 20 verso and 21 recto of editio princeps) : Quede, si mal no me acuerdo, en vna mala respuesta, que dio mi bizarro hermano a vn Cauallei'o de prendas. El qual por satisfazerse muy mal herido le dexa, * ausentose, y fuesse a Italia, segun despues tuue nueuas. 1 The statement occurs in Cervantes's dedication of La Galatea (1585) to Abbot (afterwards Cardinal) Ascanio Colonna : ' . . . lun- tando a esto el effecto de reuerecia que hazian en mi animo, las cosas (que como en prophecia) oy muchas vezes dezir de V. S. lUustrissi. al cardenal de Aquauiua, siedo yo su camarero en Roma . . .' ' Ricardo de Hinojosa, Los despachos de la diplomacia pontificia en Espana. Memoria de una mision oficial en el arehivo secreto de la Santa Sede (Madrid, 1896), vol. I, pp. 185-6. ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 284. Perez Pastor (Documentos cervantinos, vol, II, p. 364) makes the probable suggestion that the peremptory phrase— »MeZ»a dlld. — printed by Navarrete should read vuelve alld. * Acquaviva did not become cardinal till May 15, 1570. ' Perez Pastor {Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 358-61) assumes that Lopez de Hoyos was in great favour with Cardinal Espinosa, that he interested the cardinal in the young Cervantes, and thus contrived to introduce the latter into Acquaviva's household. The only basis for these assumptions is that in the following year Lopez de Hoyos 1497 C 18 MIGUEL DE CEEVANTES being in Italy occurs in a document (dated Decern: ber 22, 1569) ^ which establishes, so far as common repute can do so, his limpiem de sangre, and it describes Cervantes as then living in Kome.^ What took him there is not clear, ^ nor can we say precisely when he was in Acquaviva's household.* It is no less difficult to discover the exact date dedicated to Espinosa the Historia which contained Cervantes's verses on the late queen. This is not enough to build a case on. It is true that Lopez de Hoyos dedicated two other works to Espinosa three years later (Perez Pastor, Bihliografia madrilena [Siglo XVI], pp. 28- 30). But clearly this does not prove the existence of any special intimacy between prelate and schoolmaster. * Perez Pastor, Documenios cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 11-16. As already noted (pp. 11, n. 4, and 12, n. 3), one of the vritnesses called was Alonso Getino de Guzman, alguacil of Madrid ; the other two vritneBses were Pirro Boqui and Francisco Mujaqui, both Italians. Getino de Guzman and Boqui declared that they had known the elder Bodrigo de Cervantes and his family for eight years previous to December 22, 1569. " Ibid., vol. II, p. 11. 'Rodrigo de ^erbantes, andante en corte, digo que Miguel de ^erbantes, mi hijo e de dona Leonor de Cortinas, mi lejitima muger, estante en corte Bomana, le conviene probar e averiguar como es hijo legitime mio e de la dicha mi muger y quel, ni yo, ni la dicha mi muger, ni mis padres ni aguelos, ni los de la dicha mi muger hayan sido ni semos moros, judios, converses ni reconcilia- dos por el santo Oficio de la Inquisiciou ni por otra ninguna justicia de caso de infamia, antes han sido e somos muy buenos cristianos viejos, limpios de todo raiz ; a V. M. pido mande liacer infonnacion de los testigos que acerca de lo susodicho preeentare ..." ' M. Alfred Morel-Fatio (Cervantes et les cardinaux AcquaviM et Cdlonna in the Bulletin hispanique, Bordeaux, 1906, vol. VIII, p. 256) suggests that Cervantes enlisted as a supernumerary in Diego de Urbina's company towards the end of 1568. * M. Paul Groussac (Une Enigme littit-aire. Le 'Don Quichotte' d'Avellaneda, Paris, 1903, p. 40 n.) suggests that Cervantes did not enter Acquaviva's household till the latter became a cardinal (May 15, 1570). M. Morel-Fatio (Bulletin hispanique, vol. VIII, p. 256) concius. Hence Cervantes's period of service would be somewhere between May 15, 1570, and July 21| 1574 (the date of Acquaviva's death). ENLISTMENT 19 of his enlistment in the Spanish army. His father gives it to be understood that his son was a soldier as early as 1568,^ and Cervantes himself uses w^ords which seem to confirm this statement.^ If this be so, we are more than ever in the dark as to the period of Cervantes's service with Acquaviva, There is no independent testimony to show that he enlisted before the autumn of 1570/ and the record of his ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 315, and Sr. D. Pedro Torres Lanzas in the Revista de Archivos, Bihliotecas y Museos (Numero Extraordinario en conmemoracidn del centenario del Quijote), May 1905, p^ 347. The former is easily accessible : I quote from the latter, who gives a fuller and apparently more correct transcript : ' llustre senor : — Rodrigo de cerbantes, estante en esta corte, digo : que a miguel de cerbantes, mi hijo, que al presente esta cautibo en Argel, y a mi, como su padre, combiene aueriguar y probar conio el dicho miguel de cerbantes, mi hijo, a seruido a su magestad de diez a£os a esta parte, hasta que abra dos anos que le cautibaron en la galera del sol en que benia carrillo de quesada ; y sirvio en todas las ocaciones que en el dicho tiempo se ofrecieron en ytalia, y en la goleta, y tunez, y en la batalla nabal, en la qual salid herido de dos arca- 1 buzazos,y estropeada la mano hizquierda, de la qual no se puede serbir; ; en lo qual lo hizo como muy buen soldado, sirviendo a su magestad.' This declaration, made on March 17, 1578, implies that Cervantes enlisted not later than March 1568. Attention may here be drawn to the assertion in the king's cidula of December 5, 1576 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 38), that both Miguel and Rodrigo had served in Italy and Flanders. The information no doubt came from Dona Leonor de Cortinas. We have no confirmation of the statement that Cervantes served in Flanders. ^ Navarrete, Vida, pp. 812-13, and Torres Lanzas, Revista de Archivos, Bihliotecas y Museos, May 1905, pp. 345-6. This Informacion, presented by Cervantes on May 21, 1590, is printed in full later (p. 76, n. 1). In it Cervantes speaks of having served for twenty-two years ; accord- ingly he would have enlisted not later than May 1568. It is right to observe that other statements in this Informacion seem confused, and are perhaps a little misleading. ■■' Navarrete, Vida, pp< 291-2 ; Torres Lanzas, Revista de Archivos, Bibliotecas y Museos, May 1905, p. 349. One of the witnesses called c2 20 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES early service in the ranks is too fragmentary to be clear.i Did he take part in the expedition which failed to relieve Cyprus in September 1670? 2 Inferences may be drav^n one way or the other from Cervantes's misty topography in El Amante liberal, but positive evidence is wanting. ^ There by Cervantes's father in 1578 was the alferez Mateo de Santisteban, who deposed, in answer to the third interrogatory, that he had been at Lepanto with Cervantes, and that Cervantes had served in Diego de Urbina's company a year earlier. Another alfirez testified at Algiers on October 10, 1580, that he had known Cervantes ' de diez anos i esta parte ' (Navarrete, Vida, p. 332 ; Torres Lanzas, loc. cit., p. 864), and, though he does not say that they made acquaintance in the ranks, this seems to be implied. ^ Santisteban informs us (see previous note) that Cervantes belonged to Diego de Urbina's company, which formed part of Miguel de Mon- cada's regiment. The Captive, when telling the story of his adventures in the First Part oiDon Quixote (chap, xxxix), refers to Diego deUrbina as ' a famous captain of Guadalajara '. The chronology of this part of Cervantes's career is involved. If he first joined the Spanish army in 1568 as a soldierin Urbina's company, he cannot have joined in Italy, for Urbina's company -was in Spain at that date, and did not leave for Italy till the summer of 1571, less than four months before Lepanto was fought : compare Navarrete, Vida, p. 18, with the Informacidn de testigos hecha por Juan Bautista Villa- nueva ante el Gcibernador de Valencia en 1583, acerca de sus seivicios en la hatalla de Lepanto y en otras jomadas printed by Jose Maria Torres in the Bevista de Valencia (Valencia, 1880-1), vol. I, pp. 48-56. Yet we have evidence that Cervantes was in Rome before December 22, 1569. M. Morel-Fatio, however, suggests [Bulletin hispanique, vol. VIII, p. 256) that Urbina's company, while in Spain, had a depot in Italy. Sr. Cotarelo y Mori imagines (Efemirides cervantinas, pp. 42-3) that Cervantes joined Urbina's company before 1571, resigned, and rejoined it at this date, or that (more probably) he had served in some other company till 1571 when he procured a transfer to Urbina's company. * Nicosia was stormed on September 9, 1570 ; the allied fleet had gone no further than Castelrosso on September 21. ' Sr. Cotarelo y Mori states {EfemMdes cervantinas, p. 41) that Cervantes, ' according to his explicit words,' took part in Marcantonio Colonna's abortive relief expedition. He refers to the Informad&i LEPANTO 21 is, however, no doubt that he was on board the Marquesa at the battle of Lepanto (October 7, l^JZfl-) ^ ; thatTthough suffering from fever, he indignantly reie^ecl the advice of his comrades to remain below, declanng that he had rather^ dje for -his God and his king thanj ^ftftp undfir-rnvfir^ and begging to be placed in the most dangerous position ^ ; that he was told off by the captain of a galley (the Sancto Pietro) to command a party of twelve men in a long-boat on the left wing of the Christian fleetj^* and that he received three gunshot wounds — two in the chest, of May 21, 1590. This docnment does not mention Cyprus, but Cervantes's words, as given by Castaneda (see below, n. 2), imply that Lepanto was not his first battle. 1 The alferez Santisteban (Navarrete, Vida, p. 292 ; Torres'Lanzas, loc. cit., p. 349) testified that Cervantes was on board the Marquesa. ■' Navarrete, Vida, p. 317 ; Torres Lanzas, loc. cit., p. 349. Santiste- ban's reply to the fourth interrogatory administered by Cervantes's father is as follows : ' . . . saue y es verdad, que quando se rresconoscid el armada del turco, en la dicha batalla nabal, el dicho miguel de cerbantes estaua malo y con calentura, y el dicho su capitan y este testigo e otros muchos amigos suyos le dixeron " que pues estaua enfermo y con calentura, que se estubiese quedo, abaxo en la camara de la galera", y el dicho miguel de cerbantes respondid, "que que dirian del, e que no hacia lo que debia, e que mas queria morir peleando por dies e por su Rei, que no meterse so cubierta . . . ".' This is confirmed by another witness, the alfirez Gabriel de Castaneda, who reports Cervantes as saying (Navarrete, Vida, p. 318 ; Torres Lanzas, loc. cit., p. 350) : 'senores, en todas las ocafiones que asta oi en dia se an ofrescido de guerra a su magestad y se me a mandado, e servido niuy bien, como buen soldado ; y ansi, agora, no are menos, aunque este enfermo e con calentura ; mas vale pelear en servicio de dios e de su magestad, e morir por ellos, que no baxarme so cubierta.' ' Santisteban says (Navarrete, Vida, p. 317 ; Torres Lanzas, loc. cit., p. 349) that Cervantes ' peleo como baliente soldado ... en el lugar del esquife, como su capitan lo mando y le dio hoiden con otros soldados'. Castaiieda confirms this (Navarrete, Firfa, p. 318 ; Torres Lanzas, loc. cit., p. 351): ' ... el dicho capitan le entrego el lugar del 22 MIGUEL DE CEKVANTES and one which maimed his left hand for life.^ The victorious fleet, under Don John of Austria, made esquife con dooe soldados, adonde bi6 este testigo que pele6 muy balientemente como buen soldado . . . ' ' It is often said that Cervantes lost his left band at Lepanto, and he is frequently represented in portraits and statues as having only one hand. But it is by no means clear that his left hand or arm ■was amputated. Perhaps the balance of evidence inclines the other way. No doubt the Duque de Sessa recommended Cervantes (Navarrete, Vida, p. 314 ; Torres Lanzas, Revista de Archivos, &c., 1905, p. 346) on the plea that he had ' lost a hand ' in the king's service. This statement was made on July 25, 1578, and Cervantes seems to confirm it in hislnformacion of May 21, 1590 (Navarrete, Vida, p. 312; Torres Lanzas, Bevista de Archivos, Sec, 1905, p. 345), by declaring that he had 'lost a hand' (perdio vna mano) at Lepanto. Yet this is not so decisive as might be imagined, In his interrogatories of March 17, 1578 (Navarrete, Vida, p. 315 ; Torres Lanzas, Revista de Archivos, &c., 1905, p. 347), Cervantes's father says that his son's left hand wa« maimed {estropeada la mano hizguierda), and Cervantes, through the mouth of Mercury in the Viage del Pamaso, says (cap. I. vv. 215-16) ' very much the same thing— that he 'lost the movement of the left hand for the glory of the right '. The actual facts of the case are given by Beltran del Salto y de Castilla, who, in answer to interrogatories administered to him at Madrid on April 1, 1578 (Navarrete, Vida, p. 289; Torres Lanzas, Revista de Archivos, &c., 1905, p. 353), said that Cervantes's wounds deprived him of the full use of his left hand {salid herido de una mano, de tal manera questd manco de ella y que este testigo le ha bisto que de la dieha m,ano hizquierda estd manco, de tal manera, que no la puede mandar). This is what we should guess from subsequfent events. A one-handed private, unable to handle a gun readily, would scarcely have been re-engaged for active service. Cervantes, as we shall see, was re- engaged, was transferred to another regiment at a higher rate of pay, and took part in more than one expedition during the next four years. We may take it, then, that his left hand, though maimed, was not amputated. Curiously enough, the misunderstanding as to Cervantes's wounds began in his lifetime. At Madrid, on November 9, 1576, a Valencian notary named Antonio Marco (who had been captured on the Sol) deposed that it was Cervantes's younger brother Rodrigo who had his left hand maimed at Lepanto : Antonio Marco said not a word to indicate that Miguel de Cervantes was mutilated (Perez Pastor, CONVALESCENCE 23 for Messina. There, no doubt, Cervantes had his wounds attended to, and during his convalescence —which may have been passed elsewhere ^ — received several small grants in aid.^ He was Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 45-6). But it is plain that Marco was either a bad observer or a worse witness. To judge from the king's cidula of December 5, 1576 {Ibid., vol. II, p. 83), Dona Leonor imagined that one of her sons had had a hand amputated, and that the other was crippled {al uno dellos le cortaron una mano y al otro mancaron) ; but her statement carries no weight, as she had not seen either of her sons since they went soldiering. Alonso Fernandez de Avellaneda, author of the spurious continuation of Don Quixote published in 1614, taunted Cervantes with having only one hand (see p. 185, n. 2) ; but no importance attaches to the jibe, for it is doubtful whether Avellaneda ever saw Cervantes. His information is obviously derived from Cervantes's description of himself in the preface to the Novelas exemplares, where, undoubtedly, he speaks of having lost his left hand at Lepanto through a gunshot wound {Perdi'o en la batalla Naual de Lepanto la mano yzguierda de vn arcdbu^azo). But against this must be set the formal statement in the Informacion of October 10, 1580 (Navarrete, Vida, p. 326 ; Torres Lanzas, Revista de Archivos, &c., May 1905, p. 858) : here Cervantes speaks positively of his hands (in the plural) being tied behind him {mandandole . . . atar las manos atras), and this is perfectly consistent with Beltran del Salto's statement. That Cervantes's left hand was not amputated seems proved by the fact that he himself describes it as being seized by the admiring student whom he met on the road from Esquivias to Madrid shortly before his death : see the Prologue to Persiles y Sigis- munda quoted on p. 199, n. 2. ^ The wounded men in Urbina's company are said to have passed their period of convalescence in Calabria : ' . . . despues del dicho vencimiento la dicha armada de su magestad fue a la dicha ciudad de Mezina a donde fue curado el dicho proponente, y de alii fueron a Rijols en la Calabria, donde inverno dicha companya . . . ' (Jos^ Maria Torres, Aclaraciones d la vida de Cervantes, in the Revista de Valencia, 1880-1, vol. I, p. 49). I presume ' Rijols ' to be Reggio di Calabria. ' Navarrete, Vida, pp. 294-5. The grants in aid (all made during the early part of 1572) were as follows : twenty ducados on January 15, twenty ducados on January 23, twenty ducados on March 9, and twenty- two ducados on March 17. 24 MIGUEL DE CEKYANTES thought fit to return to duty on, or before, April 29, 1572,' at an increased rate of pay,^ in Lope de Pigueroa's regiment,^ and, as evidence of a later date shows, he was drafted to Manuel Ponce de Leon's company,* stationed at Naples. It has been thought that Cervantes's brother Rodrigo arrived in Italy before June 1572.^ He ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 294. The official record shows that on, or hefore, 4.pril29, 1572, it had heen decided to transfer Cervantes to Figueroa's 'eirio : ' A 29 de dicho mes (abril de 1572) se ordeno a los oficiales de la irmada que asienten en los libros de su cargo & Miguel de Cervantes ;res scudos de ventaja al mes en el tercio de J). Lope de Figueroa en a compania que le seiialaren.' The last six words imply that the luthorities had not yet settled upon the company to which Cervantes ihoukl be posted. '' See the phrase in the previous note: ' tres scudos de ventaja al mes.' ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 294. * Ibid., p. 294. ' En dicho dia (11 de hebrero de 1573 en Napoles) ;e ordeno a los oficiales de la armada que libren a Miguel de Cervantes, loldado de la compania de Don Manuel Ponce de Leon, diez scudos a )uena cuenta de lo que se le dete.' ° Benedetto Croce, Due illustrazioni al ' Viaje del Parnaso' del Cei- The gardener Juan served as scapegoat : he was hung up by one foot and thus suifocated.^ This is a striking story, which would be in- credible if it were not fully corroborated. It is strange that so many prisoners could have been hidden for seven months without their being missed. It is strange that Cervantes should have been able to feed them there for this length of time without being detected. It is strange that he had the means to purchase the large supplies necessary for such a purpose, for we know that he had to clothe and feed himself, and that he was hard set to do this.^ But, ' Cervantes (Ibid. , pp. 324 and 356) says that Hassan placed him ' en su baiio cargado de cadenas y hierros con intencion todauia de casti' garle '. Haedo's account (f. 185 recto) is that Hassan wished to entrap Cervantes into compromising Fray George Oliuar, the Mercenarian monk : ' y como con todas sus amenazas, nunca otra cosa pudiesse sacar de Miguel Ceruantes, sino que el, y no otro fuera el autor deste negocio (cargandose como hombre noble a si solo la culpa) embiole a meter en su bano, tomandole tambien por esclauo, aunque despues a el, y a otros tres o quatro huuo de boluer por fuer9a, alos patrones cuyos eran . . . De las cosas que en aquella cueua sucedieron en el discurso de los siete meses que estos Christianos estuuieron en ella, y del cauti- uerio, y hazanas de Miguel de Ceruantes se pudiera hazer vna pai'ti- cular hystoria. Dezia Asan Baxa Rey de Argel ; que como el tuuiesse guardado al estropeado Espaiiol tenia seguros sus Christianos, baxeles y aun a toda la ciudad : tanto era lo que temia las trayas de Miguel de Ceruantes, ... y el remedio £[ tuuo para assegurarse del, fue copralle de Bu amo por 500. escudos en q se auia cSsertado, y luego le acerrojo, y le tuuo en la carcel muchos dias . . .' ^ Haedo, Topographia, f. 185 recto : ' Finalmente el jardinero fue ahorcado por vn pie, y murio ahogado de la sangre. Era de nacion Nauarro, y muy buen Christiano.' ^ This is disclosed in the evidence given at Madrid on December 19, 1580, by Francisco de Aguilar (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. 1, p. 68) : ' . . . sabe que quedo [Cervantes] a deber mas, mas no THE DEY OF ALGIEES 39 strange as the circumstances may be, they are re- lated by Cervantes himself, and his testimony is amply confirmed by a dozen credible witnesses. We must therefore accept this version of events as essentially true, and can only speculate as to Hassan's reasons for sparing his captive's life. Those who record Hassan's clemency in this case are also those who describe him as an ogre.^ Was his cupidity even greater than his cruelty? Did he spare Cer- vantes, hoping to obtain an exceptionally high ransom for him? Was he moved by a genuine admiration for the courage of his captive? Was he, in fact, less black than Spanish fancy painted se acuerda que tantos, a mercaderes e personas que iban a la dicha cibdad de Argel que se los habian prestado para comer porque el moro que le tenia cautivo no le daba de comer ni vestir . . .' Rodrigo de Chaves testified in the same sense at the same place a day earlier {Ibid., vol. I, p. 67) : ' sabe este testigo . . . que quedo el dicho Miguel de Qerbantes a deber mas de mill reales, los quales le habian prestado algunos mercaderes christianos, que iban a la dicha cibdad, para comer j otras oosas para pasar su cautiverio, porque el moro que le tenia cautivo no le daba de comer en todo el tiempo que fue cautivo . . .' ' Don Quixote, Part 1, chapter xl. Cervantes described Hassan in his Informacion at Algiers on October 10, 1580: ' el Rei Hajan hera tan cruel que por solo huirse un cristiano, e porque alguno le encubriese 6 favoresciese en la huida, mandaua ahorcar vn hombre, 6 por lo menos cortarle las orejas y las narices ' (Navarrete, Vida, p. 323 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 356). Alonso Aragones testified at Algiers that no one expected Cervantes to escape alive from Hassan's clutches : ' que si el n'ey le auia a las manos, no escaparia con la vida, 6 por lo menos syn orejas y narizes, por ser la condicidn del dicho rrey tan cruel . . .' (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 330-1 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., pp. 361-2). Sosa thought Cervantes's good fortune extraordinary ; ' sin duda el escapd de una buena, porque pensamos todos le mandase matar el rrey ' (Na- varrete, Vida, p. 343 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 394). 40 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES him ? To these obvious questions we can give no reply. It is possible that Eodrigo de Cervantes took with him to Spain the appeal in verse which his brother wrote to Mateo Vazquez. ^ However these tercets were sent, Cervantes can scarcely have expected them to have much practical effect. They had none. During the iive ensuing months, Cervantes was kept manacled by Hassan, and had leisure to mature another plan of escape. Early in March 1578, while still imprisoned, he secretly dispatched a meS' senger to Oran with letters addressed to acquaint ances there, and a petition to Martin de Cordoba, commander of the Spanish garrison there. Cervantes urged that spies, or confidential agents, should be sent to Algiers to help him and three of his fellow- prisoners to get away.^ His messenger was arrested near Oran, was sent back to' Algiers, and brought before Hassan who, on seeing the letter, sentenced the bearer to impalement, and Cervantes to two ' Obras completas de Cenantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 449-56. ^ Navairete,F!ia,p. 324; Torres Lanzas, ojj. c!V.,pp. 856-7. Cervantes describes the circumstances as follows : ' auiendole el rrey mandado meter en su banc cargado de cadenas y hierros con intcncion todauia de castigarle, al cabo de cinco meses, el dicho miguel de serbantes, con el mesmo zelo del seruicio de dios e do su magestad y de hazer bien a cristianos, estando ansi enceiTado envio vn moro &. oran, secretamente, con carta al seiior marquis don martin de cordoba, general de oran y de sus fuerfas, y a otras personas principales, sus amigOE y conoscidos de oran, para que le enviasen alguna espia d espias, y personas de fiar que con el dicho moro viniesen A argel y le llevasen a el y a otros tres caballeros principales que cl Rei en su banc thenia.' THE LICENTIATE GIKON 41 thousand blows. The Moor met death stoically. The punishment seems to have been remitted in Cervantes's case ^ : we are not told why. We have no further news of him till October 1578, when Cervantes signed a petition in favour of a saintly Mercenarian monk, Fray George Olivar, who was held as hostage in Algiers.^ Another year had almost passed before Cervantes found a fresh opportunity of planning a dash for Spain. By September 1679, he had fallen in with a renegade from Granada — the Licentiate Giron, known as Abdaharraman. The fact that Giron, like 'El Dorador', responded to advances by professing his wish to revert to Christianity did not suffice to in- spire confidence ^ ; but preliminary inquiries satisfied ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 324 ; Torres Lanzas, 02). cit., p. 357. Cer- vantes's words are : ' ... el dicho nioro, llevando las dichas cartas a oran, fue tornado de otros moros a la entrada de oran, y sospechando del mal por las cartas que le hallaron, le prendieron y le traxeron a este argel, a Haf an Baxa, el qual, vistas las cartas y viendo la forma y nombre del dieho miguel de serbantes, a el moro mando empalai-, el qual murio con mucha constanoia, sin manifestar cosa alguna ; y al dicho miguel de cerbantes mandd dar dos mil palos.' ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 234-7. ' Cervantes puts the facts thus (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 324-5 ; Torres Lanzas, oy. cit., p. 357) : ' . . ..despues en el ano de mil e quinientos y setenta y nueve, en el mes de setienibre, estando en este avgel vn rrenegado denascion espanol, y que dezia que su jmdre hera de osuna, y el ser natural de granada, y siendo cristiano se llamaba el licenciado girdn, el cual se uino a hacer moro a esta tierra de argel, y en moro se llamaba abdaha-rramen ; entendiendo el dicho miguel de serbantes quel dicho rrenegado mostraua arrepentimiento de lo que avia fecho en hazerse moro, y deseo de bolverse a espana, por munchas vezes le exorto y animo & que se bolviese a la fee de nuestro senor jesucristo ; y para esto hizo con Onofre Ejarque, mercader de Valencia que entonces se hallava en este argel, diese dineros, como did mas de mill e 42 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Cervantes as to Giron's good faith/ and finally the pair arranged with two Valencian traders in Algiers — Onofre Exarque and Baltasar de Torres ^ — for the purchase of an armed frigate which should rescue sixty of the chief prisoners. The frigate was bought, and success seemed assured, when the scheme was wrecked through the perfidy of a certain Doctor Juan Blanco de Paz, a native of Montemolin, who was said to have been a Dominican at Salamanca. For reasons unfathomable, Blanco de Paz disclosed the plot to a Florentine renegade named Cayban, and later on to Hassan.'' Hassan resolved to wait till the conspirators committed themselves further ; the plotters, however, discovered that he had wind of trezientas doblas para que comprase vna fragata armada, persua- diendole que ninguna otra cosa podia ha zer mas honrosa, ni al seruicio de dios y de su magestad mas acepta, lo qual ansi se hizo ; y el diclio rrenegado comprd la dicha fragata de doze bancos y la puso a punto, governandose en todo por el consejo y orden del dicho miguel de serbantes . . .' ' Luis de Pedrosa assured Cervantes of Giron's trustworthiness (Navarrete, Vida, p. 338 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 387) : ' . . . este dicho testigo le rrespondio que el dicho renegado hera persona de autoridad y tenia buenas prendas demas de tener buenos propositos . , .' '■* Alonso Aragones mentions Onofre Exarque and Baltasar de Torres as sharing in the plot (Navarrete, Vida, p. 831 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 362). What part Torres played is not clear. The money (1,800 doblas) was supplied by Exarque. " Cervantes tells the story in these words (Navarrete, Vida, p. 325 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 357) : ' . . . estando todo este negocio a punto y en tan buenos terminos, que sin falta subcediera como estauahordenado, el negocio fue descubierto y manifiesto al rrey Hafan, que hera deste argel, i segiin fama piiblica y notoria se lo enbi6 a dezir por Cayban, renegado florentin, y despues en persona se lo confirmo el doctor juan bianco de paz, natural de la villa de montemolin, junto a el Llerena, que dizen auer sido frayle profeso de la horden de santo domingo en santisteban de salamanca ..." BEFORE THE DEY 43 their plans, and Exarque, alarmed for his own safety, tried to get Cervantes out of the way by offering to pay his ransom.^ Cervantes reassured the nervous trader, and went into hiding at a friend's.^ He was soon missed, but, on being called by the town crier, gave himself up. With his hands tied behind his back, and a halter round his neck to remind him that he was near the gallows, Cervantes faced Hassan's cross-examination. He followed his cus- tomary tactics, assured the Dey that the coming of the frigate was unknown to any one then in Algiers, and that he had never had any accomplices — except four Gentlemen of Quality who had since got free. His story was apparently improvised without any close relation to facts, but help came to him from the enemy's camp. A Murcian renegade ^ named Morato Eaez Maltrapillo intervened in his favour, and perhaps this intercession, together with the ' According to Cervantes, Exarque feared the possibility of revela- tions being made under torture, and, as much for his own sake as for the prisoner's, ' coniptio y rrogo y persuadio a el dicho miguel de serbantes se fuese a espana en vnos navios que estauan para partir y que el pagaria su rescate ' (Navarrete, Vida, p. 326 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 358). " The friend was Diego Castellano who says (Navarrete, Vida, p. 332 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 367; : ' . . . este testigo le tuuo escondido al dicho miguel de serbantes en cierta banda secreta y le fue auisar lo que pasaua . . .' ^ The evidence of Diego Castellano (Navarrete, Vida, p. 332 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 367) is that Cervantes ' se atreuio a ir delante del rrey, . . . y asi se puso en las manos de vn arraez muy grande amigo del rrej, que se dice moro atarraez maltrapillo, renegado espanol . . .' Possibly the name of Zoraida's father in the Captive's story, and the allusion to the renegade who read her letters, are reminiscences of this episode. 44 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES gallant effrontery of Cei-vantes's replies,^ saved him again from death. But he was clearly dangerous, and Hassan kept him in irons for the next five months. For the rest, Giron was exiled to Tetuan,^ and Blanco de Paz, after a bullying attempt to place the burden of his own treachery on Domingo de Becerra,^ was suitably rewarded * with a gold escudo and a pot of butter/ ' Alonso Aragories speaks (Navarrete, Vida, p. 331 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 362) of Cervantes ' dando tales salidas a las preguntas quel rrey le hazia, quel dicho rrey quedo confuse y satisfeoho, sin poder averiguar la uerdad, la qual el ya saui'a por rrelacion del dicho juan bianco de paz '. ' See Juan de Valcazar's testimony (Navarrete, Vida,y. 384; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 375) : ' lo supo del propio rrenegado espafiol, que hera su amigo y no le thenia nada eucubierto ; y sobre eUo fue desterrado de argel, y asi se fue para el rreyno de fez, y esta en el dicho tituan.' ° Rodrigo de Chaves affirms (Navarrete, Vida, p. 333 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 369) that Blanco de Paz, with whom the witness had formerly been on intimate terms, tried to throw the blame on Domingo Becerra, ' amenazandole que le auia de cruzar la cara porque el hera el que auia quitado la libertad a el y a los demas, lo qual parescio despues ser uerdad, quel dicho juan bianco hera el que lo auia manifestado al dicho rrey y no el dicho dotor bezerra . . .' ' Alonso Aragones (Navarrete, Vida, p. 330 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 361) speaks as follows : ' se supo por publica boz y fama que vn juan bianco de paz que este testigo a oydo dezir fue frayle de santo domingo, profeso en santisteban en salamanca, lo auia descubierto y que le auian dado vn escudo de oro y vna jarra de manteca . . .' ^ The sequence of events is related by Cervantes in his Iiiformacion (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 326-7 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 358) : ' a cabo de poco tiempo el rrei mando con publico preg6n buscar a el dicho niiguel de serbantes que se auia escondido hasta uer el movimiento que el rrei hazia, so pena de la vida a quien le tuviese escondido. . . •' ' . . . viendo el dicho miguel de serbantes el cruel bando que contra quien le tuviese escondido se avia hechado, por respecto que no viniese mal a un cristiano que le thenia escondido, y themiendo FRAY JUAN GIL 45 Cervantes's trials in Algiers were coming to an end. On May 29, 1580, Antonio de la Bella and Juan Gil, two Trinitarian monks, landed in Algiers,^ and began negotiations to secure the release of some of the captives. By August 3 a group of 108 prisoners were ransomed,^ and started with Antonio de la Bella on their return to Spain.' Juan Gil remained behind to bargain with Hassan, and by September 15 he had ransomed seven more prisoners.* The ransoming was, of course, a ques- tion of money, and the Trinitarians seem, as a rule, to have gone on the principle of freeing as many tambien que si el no parescia, el rrei buscaria otro a quien atormentai' de quien saber la verdad del caso, luego de su propia voluntad se fue a presentar ante el rrei, e que amenasandole el dicho rrei con muchos tormentos, que le discubriese la verdad de aquel caso y que gente Uevaua consigo, y mandandole por mas atemorisarle, poner vn cordel a la garganta y atar las manos atras, como que le querian ahorcar, el dicho miguel de serbanfces nunca quiso nombrar ni condenar a alguno, diziendo siempre al Rey, con mucha constancia, quel fuera el autor y otros quatro caballeros que se auian ydo en libertad, los quales auian de ir con el, y que si mas gente avia de llevar, que ninguno lo sabia ni avia de saber hasta el mesmo dia ; por lo cual el dicho rrei se yndigno mucho contra el, biendo quan diferenfce respondia de lo que le estaua ynformado por el dicho doctor juan bianco ; y ansi lo mandd meter en la carcel de los moros que estaua en su mesmo palacio y mandd con gran rrigor le tubiesen a buen recaudo, en la qual carcel le tubo cinco meses con cadenas y grillos, donde paso muchos trauajos, con yntencion de lleuarle a constantinopla . . .' ' Perez Pastor, Documentos eervantinos, vol. I, p. 248. They brought with them 190,000 maravedis granted for the ransoming of Christians on August 31, 1579, and paid over to Fray Juan Gil on September 4 of that year (Ibid., vol. II, pp. 63-9). ° Perez Pastor, Documentos cei-vaniinos, vol. I, p. 248. ' Ibid., vol. I, p. 248. They landed in a storm at the Grao de Valencia on August 5, 1580. ' Ibid., vol. I, p. 248. 46 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES prisoners as possible with the sums entrusted to them. Thus the cheapest slave was likely to be released soonest. Cervantes must have deplored Hassan's high estimate of him when, on September 3, he was called upon to witness a document relat- ing to the release of a prisoner who lived with him — Diego de Benavides, whose price was fixed at 250 escudos.^ Twice that sum was asked for Cervantes. It was not forthcoming; the amount painfully got together by the Cervantes family (3,300 reales),^ though increased by a charitable gift ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 56-7, 240, 249. ^ The efforts of Cervantes's family to secure his release may he briefly recorded. On November 28, 1576, Dona Leonor de Cortinas, accompanied by her guarantor Alonso Getino de Gru/.man (see p. 12, n. 3), stated that the Consejo de Cruzada had advanced her 60 escudos on her undertaking to refund the money within a year if, during the interval, it had not been applied to the ransom of Miguel and Rodrigo, both of vyhom were then prisoners in Algiers (Pdrez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 29-32). She must have had private information that her petition had been favourably received, for this conditional grant of 60 escudos was not officially announced till December 6, 1576 (Ibid., vol. II, pp. 33-5). By June 29, 1578, Cervantes's parents and his sister Magdalena had deposited 1,077 reales with the Mercenarian Fray Geronimo de Villalobos, to whom Andrea also undertook to pay 200 ducados—i\i& whole to be devoted to ransoming Miguel (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 53-5), as Rodrigo had been released the year before (see p. 34). Villalobos, it was agreed, should entrust the money to a Valencian trader named Hernando de Torres, who undertook to effect the ransom, and to pay whatever additional sum might be required for the purpose. Evidently the project miscarried, for no more is heard of it. At some date previous to November 30, 1578, backed by a certificacion of the Duque de Sessa and by other witnesses, Doiia Leonor de Cortinas (whose name is wrongly given in the consulta as ' Contreras ') applied for aprivilegio to export from Valencia to Algiers goods to the value of 8,000 ducados (' ocho mil ducados de mercadurias o la cantidad que vuestra magestad fuere servido'). The Consejo de Guerra recom- NEGOTIATIONS FOR RANSOM 47 of 250 reales from Francisco Caramanchel's fund and by a grant of 250 reales from the Trinitarian mended her for a privilegio up to the amount of 2,000 ducados (Eevista de Archivos, Bibliotecas y Museos, December 31, 1883, pp. 423-4). Her object was to raise money by selling this privilegio to a practical trader, and apply the amount towards ransoming Miguel de Cervantes. On December 6, 1578, a real cidula to the Duque de Najera, Captain- General of Valencia, gave effect to the recommendation of the Consejo de Guerra [Ibid., p. 424). Dona Leonor, however, was unable to find security, and, on March 5, 1579, the privilegio was prolonged for a period of six months {Ibid., p. 425). Another real Mula (August 19, 1579) granted a further extension of the privilegio for six months, on the strength of Dona Leonor's plea that she was a widow whose poverty prevented her from raising the 2,000 rfwcodos necessary to buy the goods for export (Ibid., pp. 425-6). For one reason or another she was unable to utilize this privilegio till some years after Miguel de Cervantes was ransomed (1580). On August 25, 1582, she signed a power of attorney authorizing Juan Fortunyo of Valencia to dispose of the privilegio to one of his fellow-traders in that city (Perez Pastor, Documenios cervaniinos, vol. I, pp. 81-2), but this plan evidently came to nothing. Strictly speaking, the privilegio had lapsed, as the con- ditions on which it had been granted were unfulfilled ; still it seems to have been revived, and another extension of six months was granted on August 11, 1584 (Supplement to the Bevista de Archivos, Bibliotecas y Museos, March 15, 1872, p. 4). By the following December 13, Dona Leonor had sold her interest in the privilegio to Francisco de Laguiar ; by December 14,Laguiar had chartered a boat called the Sancta Maria ySent Nicolau to make the journey to Algiers under the command of its owner Dimete Leon, and by December 24 goods (mostly cloth) to the value of 2,125 livres reales (de Valencia) were on board {Ihid., p. 7). So much for Dona Leonor's experiences as a trader. Meanwhile, her experiences in other directions were scarcely less harassing. On February 28, 1579, the Consejo de Cruzada called upon her to refund the 60 escudos (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 47-8) granted conditionally on December 5, 1576. On March 16, 1579, she filed a reply stating that 30 escudos had gone towards ransoming Rodrigo, while the other 30 had been entrusted to Villalobos, as a contribution to Miguel's ransom: she pleaded for a prolongation of time on the ground of poverty, and on the same day an extension of three or four months was granted {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 49-50). On March 24, 1579, she asked for a further extension of four months, stating that she expected her son to be ransomed very 48 MIGUEL DE CEEV ANTES Order, fell short of the price demanded by about 2970 reales or 220 escmlos.^ Juan Gil made special efforts to release the prisoners who belonged to Hassan, and he redoubled these efforts now that Hassan's period of office in Algiers was rapidly drawing to a close. Hassan's appointment as Day shortly (con bvevedad, a phrase to which Cervantes himself was much addicted), and the Consejo de Cruzada seems to have acceded to her petition {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 51-2}. On March 28, Dona Leonor re- quested that the previous cedula should be returned to her so that she might transfer the 30 escudos from the Mercenarians to the Trini- tarians {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 53-4). Her prayer must have been granted, for on July 31, 1579, the Trinitarians Fray Juan Gil and Fray Anton de la Bella received 250 ducados from Doiia Leonor, and 50 ducados from her daughter Andrea {Ihid., vol. 11, pp. 55-9 and 60-2). See also Mainez, Ceiiiantes y su epoca, p. 202. ^ Navarrete (Vida, p. 371) makes up the amount, approximately, with the following items : — la. La madre y hermana de Cervantes habian entregado para su rescate 300 ducados, que a 11 reales hacen 3300 cs. 2a. Fue ayudado con la limosna de Francisco Caraman- chel, domestico de Don Inigo de Cardenas Zapata, del consejo de S. M., con 50 doblas, que son . 250 rs. 3a. De la limosna general de la 6rden fue ayudado con otras 50 doblas 250 rs. 4a. Se buscaron prestados entre mereaderes 200 escudos, que a 135 dsperos cada una hacen 29700 asperos, y por consiguiente 2970 ra. Total . 6770 rs. PIrez Pastor points out {Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 251-2) that, in the second item above, Navarrete's condensation of a phrase in Cervantes's ransom-certificate is somewhat misleading. After ' Caramanchel ' the words should read — ' de que es patron el muy illustre senor don Inigo ', &c. Caramanchel had died previous to this date, leaving a sum which produced 90,000 maravedis yearly : accord- ing to the terms of his will the interest was to be applied to ransoming prisoners, and to helping orphan spinsters to marry. RANSOM NEGOTIATIONS 49 of Algiers was to expire within little more than a fortnight after Benavides's release. But he was not to be outwitted at a bargain, not to be hustled into closing with the first offer. In conversation with Fray Juan Gil he spoke handsomely of his slaves as persons of consideration, gentlemen for none of whom would he take less than 500 escudos, while he fixed the ransom of a certain Geronimo Palafox at 1,000 escudos.^ He was in no haste to sell : at the worst he could take his slaves with him to Turkey. There was no chance of raising the 1,000 escudos asked for Palafox. Cervantes was for sale at half the price/ and towards his release Fray Juan Gil had 280 escudos in hand. Only 220 escudos were ' See Pedro de Rivera's Testimonio de las diUgencias hechas para el rescate de algunos cautivos (drawn up at Algiers, March 5, 1581), printed by Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 74-80. The relevant passage (pp. 77-8) is as follows : ' destos susodichos el dicho padre redentor trato una y muchas veces, en presencia de mi el dicho notario, de sua rescates, y el dicho Rey Hassam Baja le dijo a el dicho Padre Pray Juan Gil muchas veces que sus cristianos que eran hombres graves e que no tenia cristiano que no fuese caballero, que a ninguno dellos daria menos de en quinientos escudos de Espafia en oro e que el dicho Don Jeronimo de Palafox no le daria menos de mil escudos, per ser hombre de gi-ande rescate e ser caballero.' 2 Ibid; vol. I, p. 78. After the passage quoted in the previous note, Rivera continues : ' del qua] hago fe que el dicho Padre redentor did por el [Palafox] quinientos escudos, e no le quiso dar, e asi se los llevo todos a Constantinopla, por que el dicho Padre Fray Juan Gil, redentor susodicho, dijo no tenia tanta cantidad que dar por los res- cates destos cristianos, ni ayuda de sus deudos para sus rescates, ni se hallaba al presente con tanta cantidad de escudos para dar por los rescates de los tales, e ansi rescato a Miguel de Cervantes, natural de Alcala de Henares, por quinientos escudos en oro, e ai no los diera en oro no se le dieran, e dellos el dicho Padre busco entre moros a trueco de doblas con sus intereses.' 60 MIGUEL DE CEKVANTES needed to make up the necessary amount, and this balance was subscribed by the Christian traders in Algiers.^ Hassan was to leave for Constantinople on September 19, 1580, and his preparations were complete. His slaves were duly shipped, Cervantes among them, in chains and irons. Before the galley sailed. Fray Juan Gil paid over the 500 escudos, and — after the officers on board had received their customary tip of nine doblas — Cervantes was set free.2 Had the Spanish traders in Algiers been less open-handed, Cervantes would probably have passed into slavery at Constantinople, and died obscure.^ ^ This is disclosed in the certificate (see note 3 below). '^ Cervantes in his seventeenth interrogatory -writes (Navarrete, Vida, p. 327 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit, p. 358) : ' con yntencion de lleuarle a constantinopla, donde si alia le lleuaran no podia tener jamas libertad, ni la tuviera sino fuera quel muy Reverendo sefior padre fray juan gil redenctor de los cativos de espana por su magestat, movido de compasion de ver en los peligros en que estaua el dicho miguel de serbantes, y de los muchos trauajos que avia pasado, con muchos ruegos e ymportunaciones y con dar quinientos escudos de ore, en oro, al dicho rrey, le dio libertad el mismo dia y punto quel dicho Rei Hajan alzaba bela para bolverse en constantinopla.' Alonso Aragones speaks of Cervantes being five months in jail—' y de alii traydo a una galera donde estaua con dos cadenas y unos grilles' {Ibid., pp. 331 and 362 respectively). Antonio de Sosa testifies (Ibid., pp. 345 and 395 respectively) as follows : ' y cierto le llevara a constantinopla y nunca tubiera libertad si el muy rreverendo senor padre fray juan gil . . . el dia mismo quel mismo rrey A9an se partio para Constantinopla, que fue a los diez y nueve de setiembre no le rescatara en quinientos escudos de oro.' Cervantes was a captive for almost exactly five years (September 26, 1575, to September 19, 1580) : in the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares he speaks of being in captivity for five years and a half. '' The certificate of Cervantes's ransom was published by Josef Miguel de Flores in the Aduana critica, donde se han de registrar todas las Piezas Literarias, cuyo despacho se soliciia en esta Cotie. Hebdoma- RANSOMED 51 Before he left for Spain he had accounts to settle. ' El Dorador ', indeed, was soon out of reach, for he dario de los sabios de Espana (Madrid, 1764), vol. Ill, p. 274 ; by Juan Antonio Pellioev y Saforcada in his Ensayo de una hibliotheca de tra- ductores espanoles . . . Preceden varias noticias literarias para las vidas de otros escritores espanoles (Madrid, 1778), pp. 195-6 ; and by Vicente de lea Rios on pp. clxxxiv-clxxxv of the Vida de Miguel de Cervantes which precedes ffie edition of Don Quixote published by the Spanish Academy at Madrid in 1780. Unfortunately it is not reproduced in full by Navarrete, and it may therefore be convenient to reprint the document as given by Sr. D. Ramon Leon Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 194 : ■ En la 5iudad de argel a diez E / nueve dias de el mes de septienbre (de 1580) / En Presen^ia de mi el dicho notario / El muy rreuerendo padre frai / juan gil rredentor suso dicho rrescato / a miguel de zeruantes natur/al de alcala de henares de he/dad de treinta e vn anos hijo / de rrodrigo de jeruantes E / de dona leonor de cortinas / vesino de la villa de madrid mediano / de cuerpo bien barbado estrope/ ado de el brajo y mano yzquierda / captiuo en la galera del sol / yendo de napoles a Espana, don/de estuuo mucho tienpo En seruifio / de su magestad perdiose a veinte e seis / de septienbre del ano de mill / y quinientos E setenta y finco. estaua en / poder de a9an baja rrey. costo / su rrescate quinientos eseudos de oro / En oro no le queria dar su pa/tron si no le dauan eseudos de oro / En oro de espana porque si no le / Ueuaua a constantinolla / y asi atento esta nejesidad E / que este xpiano no se perdiese / En tierra de moros se busca/ron Entre mercaderes du/9ientos E veinte eseudos a rrajon / cada vno de fiento y veinte e 9in/co asperos porque los demas que / fueron dufientos y ochenta / avia de limosna de la rreden/fion y los dichos quinientos es/cudos son e ha^en doblas a rra/fon de a fiento e treinta e finco as/peros cada escudo mill e tresfientos / y quarenta doblas. tuuo de ad/jutorios tresfientos ducados que / son e hayen doblas de argel con/tado cada rreal de a quatro A / quarenta e siete asperos se/tef ientos y setenta e finco e veinte / y finco dineros. fue ayudado con/lalimosnadefrancisco de caramanchel/de que es patron EI muy jllustre senor don inigo / de cardenas yapata del consejo / de su magestad con finquenta doblas e de / la limosna general de la horden fue ayu/dado con otras finquenta las demas / rrestantes a oumpli- miento de las myl / E tresgientas y quarenta hifo o/bligajion de pagallas a la dicha horden / por ser marauedis Para otros cap/tiuos que dieron deudos en espana / para sus rrescates e por no cstar / a el £ 2 52 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES died appropriately enough on September 30, 1580, three years to a day after his apostasy and betrayal of the cave plot.^ There remained the more formid- able Blanco de Paz,^ who had recently been posing as a commissary of the Inquisition. Though unable to produce his papers when challenged,^ Blanco de presents En este argel no se an rres/calado y estar*bligada la dicha liorden / a boluer a las partes su dinero / no rrescatando Ids tales cap/tivos E mas se dieion nueve do/bias a los ofifiales de la galera / del dicho rrey ajan baja que pidieron / de sus derechos. En fee de lo cual lo fiima/ron de sus nonbres testigos alonso de berdugo £ / francisoo de aguilar, miguel de molina, / Rodrigo de frias, xpianos, frai juan gil / paso ante mi pedro de rriuera notario / apostolico. /' ' So Antonio de Sosa deposes (Navarrete, Vida, p. 343 ; Torresi Lanzas, op. cit., p. 394) : ' . . . se que ansi como el prometio a otros hacerse moro, se hizo despues y biuio moro tres anos, hasta que murid en el mismo dia que descubrio este negocio al rrey Hajan, que fue el dia de san geronimo, postrero de setiembre . . . ' ^ We know from Sosa's answer to the fifteentb interrogatoiy that Cervantes went in dread of Blanco de Paz : ' y tenia gran temor el miguel de ceruantes, con rrazon, que le viniese de aquello algun gran mal y perdida de la vida.' " Sosa's statement (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 346-7; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 396) in replying to the twenty-second interrogatory is explicit : ' se que es verdad que el dicho juan bianco de paz, este mes de Julio pasado y el de agosto se hazia y publicaba en este argel por comisario del santo oflcio, y como tal rrequirio al muy rreverendo padre fray juan gil del horden de la santisima trinidad, rredentor dc los captivos, y a su companero cl padre fray antonio de la villa y a los padres teatinos de portugal que entonces aqui se hallaban rrcdi- miendo captivos, que le diesen obediencia y le conosoiesen por tal, y les hizo a todos hazer de eso sus actos firmados de todos, y tambien a mi me rrequirid dia del apostol Santiago . . . que le diese tambien la misma obediencia ; y demandandole yo me mostrase con que poderes hera el comisario del santo oficio, me dixo, que no los tenia aqui . . . y lo mismo se que le rrequirio despues el senor padre juan gil rredentor de espana, y que le mostrase los poderes que tenia y el no los mostr6, y dixo no los toner.' Diego Castellano states that he was present when Fray Juan Gil called on Blanco de Paz to produce his papers {Ibid., pp. 332 and 368 respectively). BLANCO DE PAZ 63 Paz acted as one having authority, inquired curiously into other people's morals, and directed special attention to Cervantes,^ attempting to suborn wit- nesses against him,^ and spreading rumours likely to discredit him in Spain. » These manoeuvres had one good result. Cervantes met them by asking Fray Juan Gil to hold an inquiry on the whole matter of his conduct at Algiers, and drew up a list of twenty- five interrogatories dealing with the main points.* In the presence of Fray Juan Gil, and of Pedro de Kivera (notary apostolic in Algiers), twelve witnesses ' Here, again, Sosa puts the facts clearly : ' . . . con todo, e sabido quel dicho juan bianco, usando todavia de oficio de comi- sario del santo oficio, avia tornado muchas ynformaciones contra muchas personas ; j particularmente contra los que tenia per enemigos, y como contra el dicho Miguel de cervantes, con el qual tenia enemistad ' (Ibid., pp. 347 and 396 respectively). ' Diego Castellano testified that Blanco de Paz tried to corrupt a Sardinian, Captain Domingo Lopino, ' con muchas mandas de rvuegos y sobomos y proniesas, de darle 6 hazerle dar libertad y diez doblas.' Lopino himself appeared to confirm this statement, describing the advances made to him by Blanco de Paz (Navarrete, VIda, pp. 382-3, 336 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., pp. 368, 378-80). ^ These attempts are mentioned by Lopino (see previous note). The Carmelite Fray Feliciano Enriquez deposed (Navarrete, Vida, p. 339 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 391) to not knowing that Blanco de Paz had been trumping up charges against Cervantes, but the witness added significantly that he had at one time been on bad terms with Cervantes on account of ugly rumours about him communicated by a certain person (' estuuo un poco de tiempo muy enemigo con el dicho miguel de serbantes ; y en esta razon, oyo este testigo a una persona dezir algunas cosas viciosas y feas contra dicho miguel de serbantes '). On inquiry Enriquez found the rumours to be false. * The Informacion, containing the interrogatories in full, is printed by Navarrete, Vida, pp. 319-48, and by Torres Lanzas in the Bevista de Archivos, Biblioteeas y Museos (Niamero Extraordinario en con- memoracidn del centenario del Quijote), May 1905, pp. 354-97. 54 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES supported the views suggested in the interrogatories,' and finally Fray Juan Gil himself spoke in high terms of Cervantes's character. ^ The inquiry re- dounded to Cervantes's credit. It proved that his comrades regarded him as a man of exceptional virtue, kindliness, courage, and perso naXcharqi ^ ; it ' The testimony of eleven witnesses (Alonso Aragones of Cordoba, Ensign Diego Castellano of Toledo, Rodrigo de Chaves of Badajoz, Hernando de Vega of Cadiz, Juan de Valcazar of Malaga, Captain Domingo Lopino of Sardinia, Fernando de Vega of Toledo, Cristobal de Villalon of Valbuena (near Valladolid), Diego de Benavides of Baeza, Ensign Luis de Pedrosa of Osuna, and Fray Feliciano Enriquez of Tepes) is conveniently summarized by Navarrete, Vida, pp. 330-9. Antonio de Sosa, who was imprisoned in chains while the inquiry was held, replied to the interrogatories in writing (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 341-8 ; Torres Lanzas, op. eit, pp. 898-7). ^ The promdencia of Fray Juan Gil (October 22, 1580) is printed by Navarrete, Vida, pp. 339-41, and Torres Lanzas, op. cit., pp. 392-3. The relevant passage reads thus : ' yten, de la misma manera doy fee y testimonio, que dende el tiempo que estoy en este argel haziendo la rredencion por mandado de su magestad que son seis meses e tratado y conversado y comunicado particular y familiarmente al dicho Migel de cerbantes, en cuyo favor se hizo esta ynformacion, y le conozco por muy onrado que a seruido muchos aiios a su Magestad ; y particular- mente en este su captiverio a hecho cosas por donde meresce que su Magestad le haga mucha merced, como mas largamente constaporlos testigos arriba escriptos . . . y si tal en sus obi-as y costumbres no fuera, ni fuera por tal, tenido y rreputado de todos yo nole admitieraen mi conuersacion y familiaridad . . . ' ' Fray Feliciano Enriquez (Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 391) praises Cervantes for his ' hidalgo proceder, ciistiano, y honesto y virtuoso'; Valcazar {Ibid., p. 375) notes that Cervantes was remarkable for his virtuous life : ' en hazer bien y limosnas a pobres cautivos, sustentan- doles de comer y pagandoles sus jornadas, para hefeto de hebitar de que sus patrones no les maltratasen de darles palos y otros malos trata- mientos ' ; Pedrosa says {Ihid., p. 888) ' en estremo tiene especial gracia en todo, porques tan discreto y auisado que pocos ay que le Ueguen.' Benavides states {Ibid., p. 885) that, when he inquired as to the most important prisoners in Algiers, he was told ' que principalmente estaua vno muy cabal, noble y virtuoso y era de muy buena condicion AN UNOFFICIAL INQUIEY 55 further proved that Blanco de Paz was generally disliked as a mean creature, and, perhaps, as an unworthy priest.^ On October 13 Cervantes attached his name as witness to the ransom certificate of an elderly prisoner named Juan Gutierrez, an old soldier suffering from cataract. ^ He had lodged with Diego de Benavides while Fray Juan Gil was holding his inquiry — from October 10 to October 22.'' His y amigo de otros caballeros, lo qual se dixo por el dieho miguel de serbantes.' There is, of course, abundant evidence to prove Cervantes's coolness and courage. • The twenty-fifth interrogatory (Navarrete, Vida, p. 329 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., pp. 359-60) states the case against Blanco de Paz : ■ yten : si saben 6 an oydo descir quel dicho doctor juan bianco, en todo el tiempo que a side cativo en argel, que sera tres aiios y mas, a sido hombre rreboltoso, enemistado con todos, que nunca dixo misa en todo este tiempo, ni le an visto rresar oras canonicae, ni confesar, ni visitar 6 consolar enfermos cristianos, como lo acostumbran a hazer otros sacerdotes cristianos ; antes siendo rreprendido del mal exemplo que dava, de dos rreligiosos, en el baiio del Rei, donde el susodicho abitaba, a el amo [uno ?] de ellos dio vn bofeton, y a el otro de cofes, por donde di(5 grande escandalo y le tubieron en mala rveputacion.' • For the rest it may be convenient to refer, for corroboration, to the evidence as summarized by Navarrete. Chaves indicates (p. 333) that Blanco de Paz was given to personal violence ; Lopino speaks generally (p. 336) to his misconduct, and Sosa says (pp. 347-8) that he had heard similar stories about Blanco de Paz from other Christians who came to visit him in prison. ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 58-9. ' Possibly Cervantes and Benavides lodged together before October 10, 1580. See Benavides's evidence before Fray Juan Gil (Navarrete, Vida, p. 337 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit, p. 385) : "... el dicho miguel de servantes, usando de sus buenos terminos, se le ofrecid con su posada, rropa y dineros que le tubiese ; y asi lo llevo consigoy lo tiene en su compania, donde comen de presents juntos y estan en un aposento donde le haze mucha merced ; en lo cual este testigo hallo padre y madre, por ser nuebo en la tierra hasta que dios sea seruido que aya navios para irse a espana ambos a dos ..." 56 MIGUEL DE CEKV ANTES character once cleared, there was nothing to keep him in Algiers, and two days later — October 24— he embarked for Spain on a ship belonging to Maese Anton Frances. 1 With him sailed five other Chris- tians^ who had likewise been ransomed by Fray Juan Gil. 3 The vessel put in at Denia * ; before December 1,5 Cervantes was in Valencia ; and by December 18, 1580, he had returned to Madrid, and had lodged an Informacion concerning his release from slavery." V No doubt he was overjoyed to meet again the members of his family who had stood by him loyally, and had done what their small means allowed to procure his ransom. But the happiness of family gatherings is seldom unalloyed. Cervantes found ' Perez Pastor, Doctimentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 250. ^ We may assume from Benavides's statement, quoted on p. 55, n. 3, that he was one of the five. Another was a Portuguese named Francisco de Aguilar, who declared on December 19, 1580 [Ibid., vol. I, p. 68), that ' se rescataron a un tiempo el y el dicho Cerbantes y vinieron juntos en una nao del dicho eautiverio '. That Rodrigo de Chaves was a third we know from Cervantes's deposition of the same date (Ibid., vol. I, p. 71): ' . . . se rescato al tiempo que se rescatd el dicho Rodrigo de Chaves e vinieron juntos en un baxel hasta Denia que es en el reino de Valencia ..." ' Fray Juan Gil paid 15 doblas for their passage [Ibid., vol. I, p. 250) ; he himself remained in Algiers till March 12, 1581. * See Cervantes's testimony respecting Rodrigo de Chaves, quoted in note 2 above. " On this date, before Rodrigo de Vera, Juan de Estefano and Mateo Pasqual deposed to having seen Cervantes recently in Valencia after his release from Algiers (P6rez Pastor, Doctimentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 61-3). « Ihld., vol. T, p. 65. EETURN TO SPAIN 57 his parents ageing. His father's deafness cannot have promoted conversation. ^ His brother Rodrigo seems to have been absent, serving in the ranks. His sister Magdalena, after some passages — financial in appearance, but perhaps also tender — with Alonso Pacheco Portocarrero,^ was now preparing some- ' The deafness of the elder Rodrigo de Cervantes dated back, apparently, to 1575. On September 30 of that year he is mentioned as reading a legal document aloud, instead of having it read to him, as seems to have been usual (Ibid., vol. I, p. 31). His deafness is expressly mentioned in another legal document dated May 11, 1578 (Ibid., vol. I, p. 52) : ' . . . el dicho Rodrigo de ^eruantes por ser sordo tomo esta escriptura e la leyo y entendio el efecto della y dixo que asi lo otorgaba e otorgd e firmdlo.' ' As already noted (p. 26, n. B), this Alonso Pacheco Portocarrero was the eldest son of the Pedro Portocarrero who was in command at La Goleta when the fort fell (August 22, 1574), before the arrival of the relief expedition in which, it will be remembered, Cervantes took part. Pedro Portocarrero was then captured, became the property of Sinan Pasha, and died in slavery some months later— at a date not known precisely, but undoubtedly before May 1575. The facts concerning Alonso Pacheco Portocarrero's relations with Magdalena de Cervantes are involved. They may be briefly summarized as follows : — In 1574, or earlier, Pacheco Portocarrero undertook, for reasons not disclosed, to pay Magdalena de Cervantes a sum of 500 ducados on the death of his father. The news of Don Pedro's death evidently reached Madrid before May 7, 1575, for in a document of that date Pacheco Portocarrero speaks of his father as dead, acknowledges his debt to Magdalena, and binds himself to settle it before July 25, 1575, under penalty of paying double the amount (Perez Pastor, Documentos cer- rantinos, vol. I, pp. 18-20). Perhaps, as has been suggested, it was thought advisable to conceal the fact that a married man like Pacheco Portocarrero was undertaking to pay sums of money to an unmarried woman like Magdalena de Cervantes (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 226-7). At any rate, on the same day (May 7, 1575), Magdalena signed a document authorizing a Florentine (with the singularly un-Italian name of Felipe Lopez) to collect from Pacheco Portocarrero 500 ducados— a sum which, so Magdalena swore, she owed to Lopez (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 21-4). Whether this is truth or fiction we cannot say : no 58 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES thing unpleasantly like an action for breach of promise of marriage against a certain Juan Perez de more is heard of the matter. That Pacheco Portocarrero defaulted appears from a document dated August 1, 1575: herein Magdalena de Cervantes consented to extend the time of payment till Decemher 25, 1580 (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 25-7). She seems to have regretted her leniency, for— at some date previous to September 28, 1575— she obtained a writ of execution against Pacheco Portocarrero. The issue of the writ was illegal, as she had already granted her debtor an extension of time till Christmas 1580. It is possible that other considerations may also have influenced Magdalena de Cervantes. In any case, on September 28, 1575, she consented to sign a deed whereby she agreed to have the writ cancelled, and to pay all costs of the execution, so far as it had been levied : she also undertook to grant Pacheco Portocan-ero an extension of time, the term of which is not specified in the deed (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 28-31). Two days later— September 30, 1575— Pacheco Porto- carrero, on his side, waived his right to the extension of time till Christmas 1580, and pledged himself to pay the 500 ducados within two years (perhaps earlier, if he succeeded in obtaining a real cedula entitling him to cut down certain trees on his estate at Jerez de los Caballeros). Failing this, Magdalena was to be free to send a collector to recover the debt at Jerez de los Caballero?, Pacheco Portocarrero binding himself to pay the agent's expenses at the rate of a ducado a day {Ibid., vol. I, pp. 32-6). Pacheco Portocarrero's wife (Dona Angela de Arellano, daughter of the Conde del Castellai-) must have been failing in health while these legal parleyings were going on : she died on January 12, 1576. Spanish writers hint that Magdalena de Cervantes hoped to become Pacheco Portocarrero's second wife. It seems incredible that such a mesalliance can ever have crossed his mind. The fact remains that, though Pacheco Portocarrero did not pay his debt to Magdalena when his time expired on September 30, 1577, she did not proceed against him as before. On December 23, 1577, Pacheco Portocarrero made a settlement on Dona Mariana de Cespedes, and no doubt his marriage with her must be referred to this date, or a little later {Ibid., vol. II, p. 376, nn. 1 and 3). There was no reason for further forbearance on Magdalena's part. On May 11, 1578, she commissioned one Alonso de Cordova to go to Jerez de los Caballeros, to collect the debt due by Pacheco Portocarrero, and to recover expenses on the scale set forth in the deed of September 30, 1575 {Ibid., vol. I, pp. 50-2). It has been conjectured that Cordova succeeded in his mission (Emilio DOMESTIC DIFFICULTIES 59 Alcega.^ His sister Andrea,^ after similar mysterious adventures with the same Alonso Pacheco Porto- Cotarelo y Mori, Efemmdes cervantinas,-^. 56). There is no documen- tary proof that Pacheco Portocarrero discharged his debt before his death, which occurred on Januaiy 15, 1597 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 376). It may be noted that, as early as May 7, 1575, Magdalena de Cervantes appears in legal documents as Madalena Pimentel de Soto- mayor (Ibid., vol. I, p. 18). It is not clear how she came by this name : in after years she seems to have continued to call herself Sotomayor. ' Juan Perez de Alcega, a Basque from Azpeitia, had been grefer to Anne of Austria, Philip IPs fourth wife (d. October 26, 1580), and aspired to be controller in the household of the Infantas. A mature philanderer, he had promised marriage to Magdalena de Cervantes, and afterwards wished to break off the engagement. Magdalena replied by moving the Vicar-General of Madrid to compel the man to fulfil his promise. Perez de Alcega oifered 300 ducados by way of com- pensation if he were released from his engagement: one hundred ducados to be paid in ready money, another hundred within eight months, and the last instalment four months later. Magdalena de Cervantes accepted these terms on August 22, 1581 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 75-8). Perez de Alcega died on November 9, 1587 (Ibid., vol. II, pp. 384-6). ' Andrea's transactions with Alonso Pacheco Portocarrero had begun before August 27, 1571. Previous to that date she appears to have sold him a crystal rosary, a gold Agnus Dei, a gold chain, and a gold necklace jewelled with pearls, rubies, emeralds, and diamonds. For these articles Pacheco Portocarrero undertook to pay 500 ducados within a certain limit of time : as might be expected, he did not pay, and took no steps in the matter till August 1, 1575, the very day on which Andrea's sister Magdalena granted him an extension of time to pay his debt to her. It would seem as though neither Andrea nor Magdalena was aware of the other's relations with Alonso Pacheco Portocarrero. On August 1, 1575, Pacheco Portocarrero signed a deed acknowledg- ing his debt to Andrea, and undertaking to pay 250 ducados by Christmas 1577, and the remaining 250 ducados a year later; he inserted in the deed an odd reference to his peculiar obligations to Andrea (' la mucha obligacion e cargos en que os soy, que suman e montan mucho mas que valen los dichos quinientos ducados'). 60 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES carrero, was living in poverty/ apart from her parents,^ with a daughter whose father it is not easy to identify.^ But, even had his home been What these obligations were we have no means of knowing (Perez Pastor, Documentor cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 25-8). Neither can we say whether Alonso Paeheco Poi-tocarrero paid Andrea, or not : if he did, we should be able to guess the source of the 50 ducados which Andrea gave Fray Juan Gil and Fray Anton de la Bella on July 31, 1579, as her contribution towards Cervantes's ransom. This was not the only occasion on which Andrea sold jewels to a Portocarrero. She had a lawsuit pending with Alonso's brother, Pedro Portocarrero, concerning jewels and money, and on October 12, 1571, authorized three procuradores to act in this case, as well as other cases in which she might be engaged (Ihid., vol. II, pp. 17-19). ' As far back as September 1, 1573, Andrea was working as a seam- stress, and on this date took an apprentice named Isabel de Alvear {Ibid., vol. I, pp. 15-17). ^ On July 23, 1577, Andrea, on her own responsibility, took a year's lease of a house in the Calle de la Reina, at an annual rental of 140 ducados {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 38-40). ' The existence of this girl is first disclosed in a document dated October 10, 1576 {Ibid., vol. I, p. 37) : herein Andrea asks to be named guardian of her daughter, Costanza de Figueroa, a child between six and twelve years of age, and the owner apparently of some little property. It is noticeable that the child is called Costanza de Figueroa, and that Andrea does not describe herself as wife or widow of anybody. When next mentioned— in 1596 — the daughter, though still called Costanza de Figueroa, is said to be ' hija de Nyculas de Ovando ' {Ibid., vol. I, p. 108). Beyond the fact that Ovando was alleged to be dead on December 3, 1596, nothing is known of him. In 1605 the daughter gave her name as Costanza de Ovando (7Wrf., vol. II, p. 514). In the matter of proper names, however, Spanish usage fluctuates so much that it would be unsafe to draw any deductions from the foregoing circumstances. Sr. Cotarelo y Mori di-aws attention {EfemMdes cenantinas, p. 67) to a phrase used by Cervantes in his Informacion of 1590 (Navarrete, Vido, pp. 312-13) : ' . . . ^1 y un hermano suyo, que tambien ha servido a V. M. en las mismas jornadas, y fueron lleuados a Argel, donde gastaron el patrimonio que tenian en rescatarse, y toda la hacienda de sus padres y las dotes de dos hermanas doncellas que tenia, las cuales qucdaron pobres por rescatar ANDEEA AND HER DAUGHTER 61 more attractive, Cervantes v^ras not free to remain in it. He could not afford to be idle. ^ a sus hermanos ..." From the three words printed in italics, Sr. Cotarelo y Mori draws the conclusion that Costanza de Figueroa was an illegitimate daughter of Andrea's, and that her father was Nicolas de Ovando. Sr. Cotarelo y Mori quotes, in confirmation of his view, Andrea de Cervantes's description of herself before the Alcalde of Valladolid on June 30, 1605 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cei-vantinos, vol. II, p. 517) : ' Preguntada coino se llama y que edad y estado tiene, dixo que se llama dona Andrea de Cervantes, viuda, muger que fue de Sante Ambrosio, florentin, y que antes fue desposada y con- certada con Niculas de Ovando, y es de edad de cinquenta anos.' Sr. Cotarelo y Mori deduces from this that Costanza was the illegitimate child of Nicolas de Ovando and Andrea de Cervantes. It may be so, but we cannot feel sure of it. In his Infonnacion Cervantes writes in a somewhat rhetorical tone, and aims, as most petitioners do, at effect rather than at dismal accuracy. Neither should we put entire trust in the statement of Andrea at Valladolid : as she then gave her age as fifty, when she was really close on sixty-one, she is not to be taken too literally. The truth is that we do not know who Costanza's father was, nor when and where (if ever anywhere) he married Andrea. According to her mother's statement on October 10, 1576, Costanza was then over six and under twelve years of age : that is, she was not born before October 1564 nor after October 1570. It is impossible to say what importance attaches to the fact that Locadelo's unaccountable gift to Andrea was made between these dates— on June 9, 1568. ' Small indications serve to show that the Cei-vantes family were constantly in straits for money. Thus Rodrigo de Cervantes and his wife Leonor de Cortinas borrowed a sura of money from an old-clothes man named Hernando de las Barcenas : the couple repaid most of the amount, and then fell behindhand. "We find them both signing a document on September 16, 1573, and undertaking to pay the balance (12 ducados) before Christmas (Perez Pastor, Documentos cetvantinos, vol. II, pp. 20-8). There are other indications that the elder Rodrigo de Cervantes had occasional dreams of affluence. On October 20, 1576, he gave a power of attorney to two persons living near Granada, authorizing them to ask for execution to be levied on the property of the Licentiate Pedro Sanchez de Cordova of Granada on account of a sum of 800 ducadoe overdue (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 42-3). Manifestly nothing was done, and, 62 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES On February 9, 1581, his mother presented the certificate of his ransom to the Consejo de Cruzada, and obtained a quittance. ^ We may, perhaps, pre- sume that Cervantes had hoped to obtain some official employment through the letters of recom- mendation which he had received five years or so earlier from Don John of Austria and the Duke of Sessa. It does not appear that these letters were of great use : they did not obtain for Cervantes any permanent employment. A phrase in his Infor- macion of 1590 suggests, at fii'st sight, that he served in Portugal and in the Azores ^ ; but the phrase is worded rather loosely, and was probably meant by the writer to apply to his brother Eodrigo. It cannot well apply to Cervantes himself : he did not on February 25, 1577, the elder Eodrigo de Cervantes empowered one Gaspar de Baeza to act for him in the matter (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 47-9). What are we to think of this ? Was the debt a fiction of the old man's brain, distraught at the notion of having two sons in slavery at Algiers? Had he ever been in a position to lend such a sum as 800 ducados to his friends ? Did Sanchez de Cordova really owe him the money ? If it was not in repayment of a sum lent that the elder Rodrigo de Cervantes claimed the 800 ducados, what services can he have rendered to Sanchez de Cordova that placed the latter in his debt to this amount ? Is there any reason to suppose that he ever met Sanchez de Cordova personally ? These questions, easy to ask, are hard to answer. The fact that Andrea knew one of Sanchez de Cordova's men-servants (Alonso Gutierrez de Cumbres) and called him in to witness Locadelo's deed of gift on June 9, 1568 (Ibid., vol. I, p. 14), does not help us to ascertain whether Andrea's father knew Gutierrez de Cumbres's master. ' Ibid., vol. II, pp. 70-4. ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 313 ; Torrez Lanzas, op. cit., p. 346 : ' . . . y dpspues de liuertados fueron a seruir a V. M. en el reyno de Portugal y a las terceras con el marques de Santa cruz . . .' IN PORTUGAL 63 leave Algiers till the Portuguese campaign was over, and, though we have no precise account of his doings at the time of the expeditions to the Azores, it seems likely that he was engaged in pursuits less picturesque than soldiering. ^ It is true that we first hear of him again in Por- tugal, but not as a soldier. At Thomar, on May 21, 1581, he was paid fifty ducados on account, to enable him to go to Oran — ' a ciertas cosas de nuestro servicio', as the real cedula says with provoking reticence.2 From a statement made by Cervantes nine years later in his Informcicion, it would seem that he acted as king's messenger, carrying dis- ' Perez Pastor, Do:umentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. xi-xii : ' Casi todos los bidgrafos de Cervantes ban sostenido que este asisti6 a la Jornada de la Tercera, fundandose en que asi lo indica en el pedimento de la Informacidn del ano 1590 ; pero si tenemos en cuenta que en dicho documento van englobados los servicios de Miguel y Rodrigo de Cervantes, y por ende que es facil atribuir al uno los bechos del otro bermano, que Miguel estaba en Tomarpor Mayo de 1581, en Cartagena a fines de Junio de este ano, ocupado en cosas del servicio de S. M., y en Madrid por el otono de 1583; que el Marques de Santa Cruz, despues de baber reducido la Tercera y otras islas, entro en Cadiz el 15 de Septiembre del dicho ano, se hace casi imposible que Miguel de Cervantes pudiera asistir a dicba Jornada.' ' Moran, Vidade Miguel Cervantes Saaredra{Ma,dnd, 1867), pp. 339- 40): 'ElRey. Lope Giner,pagadordenuestrasbarmada8 en Cartagena, yo vos mando que de qualesquier mrs. de vuestro cargo, dels y pagueis a Miguel de Cervantes cincuenta ducados . . . que se los mandamos librar a cumplimiento de cien ducados de que le babemos heebo merced de ayuda de eosta, por una vez teniendo consideracion, a que va a ciertas cosas de nuestro servicio ; . . . y tomad su carta de pago, 6 de quien su poder oviere, en la qual y esta nuestra cedula, tomando la razon de ella Cristoval de Heredia nuestro vebedor de las dicbas harmadas, mandamos que os reciban y pasen en cuenta sin otro re- caudo alguno. Fecba en Tomar a veinte y uno de mayo de mil quinientoB ocbenta y uno.— Yo el Rey.' 64 MIGUEL DE CEEV ANTES patches from the alcaide of Mostaganem.^ Whatever his errand, he was back in Spain before long : on June 26, at Cartagena, he was paid the balance of fifty ducados due for the expenses of his journey.^ No further employment in the public service was found for him at the moment. So far as can be guessed, he drifted back to Madrid, and tried his luck at literature. This is inferred from the fact that within a year or two he was on friendly terms with men of letters in the capital : with Pedro de PadUla, to whose Bomancero (1583) he contributed a lauda- tory sonnet ; with Juan Eufo Gutierrez, for whose poem La Amtriada (1584) he wrote another eulogistic sonnet ^ ; with Luis Galvez de Montalvo, who wrote a similar sonnet which appeared in the Galatea next year.* At about this time, too, he must have begun to write that series of ' twenty or thirty plays ' which ended in 1587, and of which he spoke with some complacency long afterwards ^ : the titles of nine ' See the Informaeion of 1590 (Navarrete, Vida, p. 313 ; Torres Lanzas, op. cit., p. 846) : ' y el miguel de ferbantes fue el que traxo las cartas y auisos del alcayde de Mostagan y fue a oran per orden de V. M. . . .' ^ Moran, Vida, p. 341. 'En veinte y seis de Junio [1581] pague por cedula de su magestad a Miguel de Cervantes vecino de Cartagena, digo estante en Cartagena, bu fecha en Tomar veinte y uno de mayo diez y ocho mil setecientos cinquenta mrs.' This is from the ledger (1581-4) of Lope Giner, pagador de las armadas at Cartagena. ° The sonnets to Padilla and to Rufo Gutierrez are reprinted in Ohras completas de Cervantes {Madrid, 1868-4), vol. VIII, pp. 421-2 and 428. * Montalvo's sonnet is reprinted by Navarrete, )'ida, pp. 278-9. " In the preface to his volume of plays published at Madrid in 1615; see p. 191, n. 1. THE AZOEES CAMPAIGN 65 plays of this period are given in the Adjunta al Parnaso,^ but only two survive.^ ^SSHlh is activity d id not enrich hirg, . ^ Like the rest of his family, he was poop; It is cheering to Ieam~that his brother Rodrigo was promoted for bravery in the Azores during the summer of 1583 ^ : it is depressing to catch a glimpse of Cervantes himself in the following autumn, when we find him pawning, on behalf of his sister Magdalena, five rolls of taffeta which had formed part of Locadelo's gift to Andrea.* Perhaps to this period we should ' The passage (Obms completas de Cervantes, Madrid, 1863-4, vol. VIII, p. 401) shows that the author took a special pride in La Confusa. On March 5, 1585, he undertook to deliver it within a week to Gaspar de Porras for a' fee of twenty ducados : see Cristdbal Perez Pastor, Noticias y documentos relativos d la Mstoria y literatura espanolas in Memorias de la Real Academia Espanola (Madrid, 1910), vol. X, p. 101. ^ The plays that survive are the first two on the list : Los Tratos de Argel and La Numancia. Nothing is known of El Trato de Constanti- nopla y muerte de Selin, a play which Cervantes likewise undertook to deliver to Gaspar de Porras before Easter Sunday, 1585 (Ibid., vol. X, p. 101). ' Cristobal Mosquera de Figueroa, Comentario en hreve compendia de disciplina militar, en que se escriue la Jornada de las islas de los Agores (Madrid, 1596), fol. 58 : ' Echose al agua animosamete eS su vadera, por auer eneallado la barca, Fracisco de la Rua alferez de d5 Fra- cisco de Boauidilla, y tras el el capita Luis de Gueuara, y Rodrigo de Ceruates, a qui§ despues auetajo el Mar£[8 . . .' The action took place on July 26 at Porto das Moas, about two leagues from Angra. According to Navarrete, who gives no authority for his statement (Vida, p. 250), the younger Rodrigo de Cervantes was promoted to the rank of alfirez in 1584. We do not know precisely when Rodrigo became an ensign. He must, however, have held this rank for some time before February 2, 1586, when 71,543 maravedis were due to him as 'alferez de la compania de hombres de armas de D. Josepe de Acuna' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 410 n.). * This appears from a document dated September 10, 1585 (P^rez 66 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES assign the beginning of his intrigue with Ana Franca de Rojas, who became the mother of his natural daughter Isabel de Saavedra.^ By the end of 1583 Cervantes had no doubt finished the pastoral romance which he entitled Primera Parte de la Galatea. The book passed the licenser on February 1, 1584, and on June 14 the author sold his privilegio to his towns- man Bias de Robles for 1,336 reales.^ While the Galatea was printing, Cervantes assumed a new responsibility. He had become acquainted with j Catalina de Salazar y Palacios^i daughter of Fernando de Salazar Vozmediano and Catalina de Palacios.^ Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 89-92) : ' En la villa de Madrid, a diez dias del mes de septiembre de mill y quinientos y ochenta y cinco anos . . . parescieron presentes Rodrigo de Zervantes y doiia Magdalena de Zervantes, hermanos, residentes en esta corte, e dixeron que por quanto habra dos anoe, poco mas o menos tiempo, Miguel de Zerbantes, su hermano, por orden de la dicha dona Magda- lena empeno al senor Napoleon Lomelin cinco panos de tafetan amarillos y colorados para aderezo de una sala, que tienen setenta y quatro varas y tres quartas, por treinta ducados, y que hasta agora ban estado en el empeno . . .' Magdalena de Cervantes finally sold the taffeta to Napoleon Lomelin for 523 reales. It is to be noted that the first item on Locadelo's list of gifts {Ibid., vol. I, p. 9) is : ' Primeramente de siete piefas de tafetanes amarillos y colorados que entre todos hay treynta y seys piernas.' ^ On June 30, 1605, Isabel de Saavedra swore that she was then twenty years of age (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 520) ; on March 30, 1639, she swore she was then forty years of age {Ibid., vol. II, p. 319). The first statement may be approxi- mately correct ; the second is certainly incorrect. " Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 87-9. ' Cervantes's wife was baptized at the church of St. Mary in Esquivias on November 12, 1565. The certificate was printed in the Crdnica de los Cervantistas (Cddiz, 1872), vol. I, pp. 193-6, and is reproduced by Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca (p. 239), as follows : MARRIAGE 67 The girl's father was dead, she had some httle pro- perty, and she was eighteen years younger than Cervantes, who married her at Esquivias, her native place, on December 12, 1584.^ Possibly his friends thought him a fortunate man ; evidently he shared this view. We cannot tell how far it was correct, for we know next to nothing of Cervantes's married life,l3!Kiie aj e_si^LS,;^^lie was not highly esteessed j2^-smnajafimh!ecs,.fiLbisj9d£^'.§ Jfeffl^ this is the comiT)"" lot pf husbands. ' En 12 de Noviembre de 1565 anos, el reverendo Sr. Pedro de Huete, cura teniente de dicho lugar, baptizo una hija del Sr. Fernando de Salazar Vozmediano y de la Sra. Catalina de Palacios su mujer, cuyo nombre fue Catalina ; y el dicho senor cura pregunto a los que V-. la traian a baptizar que a quien senalaban per compadres y que la saquen de pila ; los cuales respondieron que al reverendo Sr. Juan de Palacios, el eual la saco de pila ; y otrosi, el dicho senor cura les encargo el parentesco espiritual, conforme al Santo Concilio tri- dentino ; siendo testigos Pedro de Gamboa y Casimiro Palomeque y Baltasar Jimenez, vecinos de dicho lugar de Esquivias.— Pedro de Huete.' ' Mainez gives (Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 222, n.) the marriage certificate, as copied by Sr. D. Ramon Santa Maria : Miguel de Serbantes v ' En 12. de dioiembre [de 1584] el Reverendo Senor Juan de Palacios tiniente / desposo a los senores [Miguel de zerbantes vezino de Madrid y doiia cathalina de pala- cios vezina desquivias. testigos Rodrigo mexia / diego escrivano y francisco marcos El Doctor escriuano.' This is taken from the Libro de difuntos iy de matrimonios) que comienza en 1578. It differs slightly from the version printed by Rios in the Academy edition of Don Quixote (Madrid, 1780), vol. I, p. clxxxvi. ^ It has been argued (see p. 69, n. 4) that Cervantes's mother-in-law B'2 con D". Cathalina de Palacios 68 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Cervantes cannot have remained long at Esquivias. He had to push his way in the v^^orld. Writing complimentary poems for Pedro de Padilla's lardin Espiritval (1585) was not lucrative,^ and he had already received all the money he was ever to make by the Galatea, which was published in the spring of 1585.2 He -v^ras learning that, as a means of livelihood, the pen is even feebler than the sword : it was a lesson that he learned slowly and unwillingly. It was only possible to earn a living by his pen at Madrid, and there we find him on March 5, 1585, undertaking to supply Caspar de Porras with two plays — La Confusa and M Trato de Constantinopla y muerte de Selin— at twenty ducados each.^ We can- not say whether Cervantes was in Madrid when his father died on June 13, 1585 * ; he was certainly thought well of him in August 1586. If so, she changed her opinion before she made her will on November 17, 1587 ; see pp. 175, n. 1 (paragraph 3) and 178. 1 The Privilegio of Padilla's lardin Espiritval is dated June 5, 1584 ; the Fide Erratas is dated February 12, 1585. Cervantes's redondillas, stanzas, and sonnet were perhaps written between these dates : the poems are reprinted in Obras completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 422-5, 432-3. 2 The Tasa of the Galatea is dated March 13, 1585: there is no foundation for the statement that there is an edition dated 1584. ' Perez Pastor's Noticias y documentos tvlativos d la historia y literatura espanolas in Memoriasde la Real Academia Espanola (iisLAnA., 1910), vol. X, p. 101. Both plays are lost. * The elder Rodrigo made his will on June 8, 1585 (P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 83-6) : his death-certificate was first printed by Navarrete (Vida, p. 565) who, misled by Dona Leonor's statement that she was a widow in 1579 {Ibid., p. 248), assumed that the date of the death-certificate was wrong. Dona Leonor had first passed herself off as a widow in 1576 (see p. 46, n. 2) ; an apologetic HIS WIFE'S DOWRY 69 there on August 1, 1585, when he witnessed a docu- ment drawn up for Ines Osorio,i the illiterate wife of his friend Geronimo Velazquez, a prominent theatrical manager. But it is evident that Cervantes was unsettled, and that he was thinking of taking to some employment less precarious than authorship. He appears at Seville in December 1585 as a man of affairs, trafficking in bills and the hke.^ In August 1586 we discover him again at Esquivias, signing a receipt for his wife's modest dowry, settling a hundred ducados on her,'' and receiving his mother-in-law's power of attorney.* He was drift- ing away from literature. That he did not abandon it altogether is shown by the prefatory poems which he wrote for the works of some of his friends : a explanation of her action is given, with a reprint of her husband's death-certificate, by Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 254. 1 Ibid., vol. I, pp. 87, 88. ^ Ibid., vol. I, pp. 93-5, and vol. II, pp. 93-7. ' The carta dotal of Cervantes's wife, iirst published by Pellicer {Don Quixote, Madrid, 1797-8, vol. I, pp. ccv-ccxii), is reprinted by Mainez {Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 241-4). Including Cervantes's settlement of one hundred ducados, the dowry was estimated at the value of 182,297 maravedis (Navarrete, Vida, p. 393). Among the miscellaneous items were land, an orchard, olives, vines, some house- furniture, afew ornaments, food, a cock, forty-five hens and chickens,&o. * Manuel de Foronda, Cervantes en la Exposicidn Historico-Europea (Madrid, 1894), p. 55 : 'No debio desagradar mucho este matrimonio & la suegra de Cervantes, ni debia tener mal concepto de su talento y honradez, cuando dos anos mas tarde, en 9 de Agosto de 1586, y ante el escribano de S. M. Alonso de Aguilera, otorga Dona Catalina, viuda ya, amplio poder para percibir ciertos maravedises en Toledo a favor de " Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, mi yerno ". Son sus palabras.' But see pp. 174, n. 1 (paragraph B) and 178. 70 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES sonnet and quintillas contributed to Gabriel Lopez Maldonado's Cancionero (1686),i a sonnet to Alonso de Barros's Philosophia cortesana moralimda (1587),2 and a sonnet to the Grandezas y excelencias de la Virgen Sehora nuestra (1587) ^ of Pedro de Padilla, who had become a Carmelite.* There are so many signs of reluctance to take the plunge. It had, how- ever, to be taken. Cervantes had an eye for facts. He saw that the plays — which he described as successful— did not enable him to live : he saw that the writing of pastoral romances meant starvation. ^ Lopez Maldonado assumed the poetic name of Clerino : see his Cancionero (f. 176). His Christian name, omitted from his title-page and not stated by historians of literature (who have assumed it to be Lopez), was conjecturally given as Juan (Perez Pastor, Bibliogmfia madrileSia 6 Descripcidn de las ohras impresas en Madrid [Siglo XVT], Madrid, 1891, p. 124 n.). The real form appears to be Gabriel (Ibid., Parte Tercera (1621 al 1625), Madrid, 1907, pp. 418-20). It is impos- sible to say whether Cervantes wrote his sonnet before Apiil 19, 1584, the date of the licence of Lopez Maldonado's Cancionero : he must clearly have written it before January 29, 1586, the date oi the Fede erratas. ^- The Philosophia cortesana moralizada is usually said to have been first published in 1587, but 1567 is the date given by Pascual de Gayangos and Enrique de Vedia in their translation of Ticknor (Historia de la literatura espanola, Madrid, 1851-6, vol. Ill, p. 556). It is doubtful whether this Philosophia cortesana moralizada is identical with the Proverbios morales of Barros (P^rez Pastor, Bibliografta madrilena, &c. [Siglo XVI], pp. 131-2) : the balance of probabilities is against the theory, but as copies of the Philosophia are unknown, it is impossible to speak with any certainty on the point. ° Cervantes's sonnet was perhaps written soon after December 30, 1586, when Padilla obtained a licence from the Provincial of his Order : the Tasa of the Grandezas is dated June 10, 1587. The poems mentioned in the text are reprinted in Obras completas de Cervantes, Madrid, 1863-4, vol. VIII, pp. 426-7 (to Lopez Maldonado), p. 428 (to Barros), p. 425 (to Padilla). * Padilla joined the Carmelites at Madrid on August 6, 1585. ABANDONS LITEEATURE 71 Behind every book there stands a human being : to write he must have some of the decencies of Hfe. It is useless to disguise the fact : Cervantes could not obtain these decencies by means of his pen. One of the greatest men in literary history, he had so far failed. He abandoned hterature for the simple reason that it did not give him his daily bread, and he took to other honest journeyman's work which, though distasteful and ill-paid, enabled him to keep body and soul together for the next six or seven years. VI Preparations for fitting out the Armada were being made on a large scale. Through the influence apparently of Diego de Valdivia, Alcalde de la Eeal Audiencia in Seville, Cervantes obtained a post as commissary in 1587. During the autumn of that year he was sent to requisition wheat at Ecija, as well as at Castro del Eio, Espejo and La Eambla.^ On January 22, 1588, he was formally appointed com- missary by the proveedor general Antonio de Guevara, who was now upon the spot to direct operations, ' The date of these visits is disclosed in Agustin de Cetina's data (Perez Pastor, Documenios cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 98-112). Moreover, speaking by his deputy Marcos de Bonilla on February 25, 1589, Cervantes refers to his visit to Ecija in ' el ano pasado de quinientos y ochenta e siete' {Ibid., vol. II, p. 149), and in his affidavit of August 27, 1590, he again gives the date as 1587 {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 181-3). From the recepta of Agustin de Cetina, dated November 24, 1592 {Ibid., vol. II, p. 229), it appears that Cervantes received 112 days' salary for commissions executed by order of Valdivia. Hence his service can scarcely have begun later than August 1587. 72 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES and who sent Cervantes to ficija to collect oil, de- scribing him as a diligent, careful man, experienced in such matters.^ To be sure, these words do not mean very much.^ It so happened that Cervantes's previous proceedings at ficija had brought him into trouble; he had incautiously taken possession of bread, wheat, and barley belonging to the Dean and Chapter of Seville, and had been duly excommuni- cated. ^ On February 24, 1588, he empowered a cer- tain Fernando de Silva to take all necessary steps to have his excommunication annulled.* Probably ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos Cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 113-14: 'Per quanto para prouission de los galeones del Rei Nuestro Senor y de las demas naos de armada que por su mandado se van aprestando y juntando este presente ano para cosas de su real servicio, es nefesario se tomen y saquen quatro mill arobas de ajeite en la ciudad de Efija . . . y eonviene nombrar una persona de diligenjia y cuidado que vaya a lo susodicho, y porque la de Miguel de ^ervantes, residente en esta ciudad, es tal qual se requiere para ello por la platica y experienjia que tiene de semexantes cosas y por la satisfacion que tengo de su persona, por la presente le nombro, ordeno y mando que, luego que esta mi comission le sea entregada, con vara alta de justicia se parta a la dicha ciudad de E(ija y saque en ella las dichas quatro mill arrouas de afeite de poder de qualesquier personas que lo tubieren ..." Too much importance has been given to the laudatory words in this document : they are a common form. " Slightly varied, the laudatory phrases reappear in Guevara's order of June 15, 1588 (Ibid., vol. II, pp. 118-19): '. . . es negesario y forfosso . . . que se nombren personas que entiendan en ello con mucho cuidado y diligenfia, y teniendo entendido que la de Miguel de ^ervantes Saavedra es qual eonviene por la entera satisfazion que tengo de su persona que lo hard con el cuidado y presteza quel negofio requiere, y por la pratica y esperien9ia de semejantes cosas, le he querido nombrar . . .' ' This follows from the document mentioned in the next note : see also Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 395-402. * Jos(5 Maria Asensio y Toledo, Nuevos Documentos para ilustrar la vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (Sevilla, 1864), pp. 1-2. COMMISSAEY 73 the matter was comfortably arranged, for on June 15 ^ and July 9 ^ Cervantes was again entrusted with the work of requisitioning at ficija. Save for visits to Marchena ^ for the purpose of collecting oil in September and November, he continued at Ij^cija during the summer and early autumn of 1588.* It was a harassing year for him, and, except the pre- liminary sonnet which he contributed to a treatise on kidney-disease, and two odes (one prophetic and one condolatory) on the Armada,** he made no con- tributions to literature. During the lull which followed the defeat of the Armada, Cervantes made Seville his centre, living probably with Tomas Gutierrez, a retired stroller to whom he was indebted for much kindness.'' The ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cenantinos, vol. II, pp. 118-22. " The document referring to this commission of July 9, 1588, was first published by Sr. D. Ramdn Le<5n Mainez in El Manifiesto (Cadiz, April 25, 1888) : he reprints it in Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 276-7. ^ Guevara's instructions to Cervantes to proceed to Marchena were issued on September 5, 1588 (P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 134-6). Cervantes would seem to have been in Marchena on the following dates : September 17, 18, 19, 20, October 26, and November 4 of the year 1588, and September 18, 1589 {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 220-2). * Ibid., vol. II, pp. 137-47. ° The treatise is the Tratado nvevamente impresso, de todas las enfermedades de las Rinones, Vexiga, y Carnosidades de la verga, y Vrina, diuidido en tres libros (Madrid, 1588), by Francisco Diaz, surgeon to the King. The odes were first printed by Sr. D. Manuel Serrano y Sanz, Homenaje d Menindez y Pelayo (Madrid, 1899), vol. I, pp. 418-27. ° Asensio y Toledo, Nimvos Documentos, pT^. 8-11. This document, dated June 26, 1589, contains the foUovnng statements : ' . . . e yo el dicho Tomas Gutierrez doy por libre e quito agora e para siempre jamas a vos el dicho Miguel de Cervantes de todos maravedis e otras 74 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES record of his life in 1589 makes dull reading. He was busy on professional expeditions ^ ; busy handing in his accounts, 2 reporting through his deputy on the poor quality of the wheat which he had embargoed at Ecija^ (a place to which he still paid an occa- sional visit on business*); acknowledging the receipt of arrears of salary ^ ; standing security for the rent of an illiterate woman who may have been his land- lady " ; settling debts with his friend Gutierrez,'' and authorizing one of his subordinates to collect Heaven knows what strange jumble of debts which he cosas que me aveis sido deudor en todos los tiempos pasados hasta el dia de hoy por cedulas conoscimientos y escrituraa y otros recaudos y de prestamos e cuentas que con vos he tenido y de la posada que os he dado como de otras cualquiera cosas e contrataciones que con vos he tenido por que todo lo que asi me aveis sido deudor en cualquier manera todo me lo aveis dado e pagado y de vos lo he rescebido en leales de contado y es en mi poder de gusto y contento pagado y entregado a mi voluntad. . . .' ' This appears from the items in Miguel de Oviedo's recepia dated Seville, May 30, 1592 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 221-2). ' The account drawn up by Cervantes on Fehruary 6, 1589, is reproduced in facsimile by Jose Miguel Guardia in his translation : Le Voyage au Pamasse (Paris, 1864). ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 148-56. Cer- vantes's deputy, Marcos de Bonilla, caUed (!l6cija, February 25, 1589) five local ■witnesses to prove that the wheat seized in 1587 was ' muy ruin y apaulado y mal acondicionado '. * Ibid., vol. II, pp. 165-7. At £cija, March 14, 1589, Cervantes signed a receipt for 100 ducados on account of his salary. " See the document mentioned in the last note. " P^rez Pastor, Documentos cenantinos, vol. II, pp. 168-70. Gonzalo Ruiz Bermudez sub-let to Geronima de Alarcon a house (or houses) in the Magdalena quarter for the remaining seven months of his lease (from June 1, 1589). Cervantes stood security for the woman, who was unable to write. ' Asensio y Toledo, Ntievos Documentos, pp. 8-11. SEEKS A POST IN AMERICA 75 alleged to be due to him in money and kind — 'jewels, clothes, merchandise, slaves, Avines, hens, and other things.' ^ Cervantes was lucky enough to keep his post after the defeat of the Armada. On February 12, 1590, he was at Carmona, at his wits' end as to how he should carry out his instructions to requisition supphes of oil.2 On March 27 ^ and May 16 * we meet him in Seville, signing receipts for arrears of salary. He had hitherto been paid — not always punctually — at the rate of twelve reales a day ; but the end of that golden age was in sight, and it was tolerably certain that a reduction of wages would take place before long. He had no prospects of advancement where he was ; his work was not interesting, and there was noopening for him in Spain. Accordingly, in May n.^S?)', he drew up a petition to the King, recalling his past services and those of his brother, and begging to be nominated -,to, one of _ four posts t hen vacant in ^Amg^^a : — "" ' Ibid., pp. 3-7. This document is dated June 26, 1589 : the docu- ments mentioned in the two previous notes were signed on the same day. The assistant, Miguel de Santa Maria, received the same official salary as Cervantes himself: namely 12 reales a day (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 171 and 173j. ^ Boletin de la Real Academia de la Historia (Madrid), May 1887, vol. X, p. 330. The document is reprinted by Sr. Mainez (Cer- vantes y su 4poca, p. 264), and by Sr. Cotarelo y Mori {Efem4ridea cervantinas, p. 136). ' Asensio y Toledo, Nuevos Documentos, pp. 12-13. This is a receipt for 400 reales. * Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 173-4. This is a receipt for 180 reales for work done at Carmona and Seville between March 28 and April 9 : in this case payment was unusually prompt. 76 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES (1) the accountantship of the Kingdom of New Granada, (2) the governorship of the province of Soconusco in Guatemala, (3) the paymastership of the galleys of Cartagena (in what is now known as Colombia), and (4) the magistracy of La Paz (in the present republic of Bolivia). The petition reached the Consejo de Indias on May 21, 1590 ; it was rejected on June 6, and on that day Doctor Nunez Morquecho wrote at the foot of the petition the very sensible, commonplace advice that Cervantes had better look about for something nearer home.^ By ^ Though passages from Cervantes's petition have been freely quoted in previous notes, it may perhaps be well to reproduce here the whole document as printed by Sr. D. Pedro Torres Lanzas in the Revista de Archivos, Bibliotecas y Museos (Numero Extraordinario en coumemoraci6n del centenario del Quijote), Madrid, May 1905, pp. 344-5: ' Senor : Miguel de 9erbantes sahauedra dice que ha seruido a V.M. muchos anos en las jornadas de mar y tierra que se han ofrescido de veinte y dos anos a esta parte, particularmente en la Batalla Naual donde le dieron muchas heridas, de las quales perdio vna mano de vn arcabufaco ■ — y al ano siguiente fue a Nauarino y despues a la de Tunez y a la goleta, y viniendo a esta corte con cartas del senor Don Joan y del Duque de 9e9a para que V.M. le hiciese merced ; fue cautiuo en la galera del sol el y vn hermano suyo que tambien ha seruido & V.M. en las mismas jornadas y fueron lleuados a argel donde gastaron el patrimonio que tenian en rescatarse y toda la hazienda de sus padres y los dotes de dos hermanas don9enas que tenia, las quales quedaron pobres per rescatar a sus hermanos, y despues de liuertados fueron a seruir a V.M. en el reyno de Portugal y a las terceras con el marques de Santa cruz, y agora al presents estan siruiendo y siruen a V.M. el vno dellos en flandes de alferez y el miguel de ferbantes fue el que traxo las cartas y auisos del alcayde de Mostagan y fue a oran por orden de V.M. y despues asistido siruiendo en seuilla en negofios de la armada por orden de Antonio de guebara, como consta por HIS PETITION KEJECTED 77 refusing Cervantes's petition the Consejo de Indias saved Don Quixote to the wo rld. For the moment, Cervantes was condemned to continue his tedious routine work — making up his books, having his accounts checked by the Treasury at Madrid. The personal note is seldom audible in the official record of his doings, but there are signs that he was in very low water in this year of 1590, when he thought of leaving Spain. On July 14, he las informaciones que tiene, y en todo este tiempo no se le ha hecho merced ninguna. Pide y suplica humilmente quanto puede a V.M. sea seruido de ha9erle merfed de vn oficio en las yndias de los tres 6 quatro que al presente estan vacos, que es el vno la contaduria del nuebo Keyno de granada, 6 la gouernafion de la probin9ia de soconusco en guatimala, 6 contador de las galeras de Cartagena, 6 corregidor de la ciudad de la Paz, que con qual- quiera de estos oflScios que V.M. le haga merced la resf iuira por que es hombre auil y sufficiente ybenemerito para que V.M. le haga merced, por que su desseo es a continuar siempre en el seruicio de V.M. y acauar su vida como lo han hecho sus antepassados, que en ello resciuira muy gran bien y merced. Su Senoria Senores : gasca busque por aca en que se le , haga merced, en madrid a 6 de / junio 1590. El doctor nunez morquecho.' medina D. Luis dr. gonzalez flores tudanca valtodano agustin aluarez de Toledo On the back of the document is written : ' Miguel de Cerbantes sahauedra. A 21 de Mayo 1590. Al presidente del consejo de Indias.' Sr. Torres Lanzas gives the names of the members who formed the Council in 1590 : President, D. Hernando de la Vega y de Ponseca. Councillors : Licenciado D. Diego Gasca de Salazar, Licenciado Medina de Zarauz, Licenciado D. Luis de Mercado, Doctor Pedro Gutierrez Plorez, Licenciado Pedro Diez de Tudanca, Licenciado Benito Rodriguez Baltodano, Licenciado Agustin Alvarez de Toledo. Relator: Doctor Nunez Morquecho. 78 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES empowered his wife and his sister Magdalena— both resident in Madrid at this time — to collect all manner of debts owing to him.^ He needed all the money he could scrape together. The Administration, though remiss in pajdng its servants, was punctilious in examining their accounts ; though their salaries were in arrears, they were expected to make long journeys, and to pay all incidental expenses without drawing upon the public funds which passed through their hands. ^ The thing could not be done. Cervantes was zealous enough as a commissary, but he had no head for figures, and the unmethodical man had to deal with complex, confused entries which might have puzzled a trained accountant. He was con- stantly occupied in producing his vouchers ^ ; he had before him the prospect of going to Madrid to have his accounts examined ; and when the time for this ordeal came (in December 1590) he empowered a substitute to act for him.* Meanwhile, he was in a state of poverty extreme. One little fact speaks volumes. On November 8, 1590, he needed some common cloth to cover his nakedness, and he obtained it at last from Miguel de Caviedes and Company of Seville : but not till his friend Gutierrez became security for the price (ten ducats), and not till he and Gutierrez had signed a bond in the ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 175-8. ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 399. » Ibid., vol. II, pp. 181-93 (Seville, August 27, 1590) ; pp. 194-9 (Seville, September 26, 1590) ; pp. 200-5 (Seville, October 7, 1590). * Ibid., vol. II, pp. 215-16. On December 3, 1590, Cervantes gave his power of attorney to Juan Serdn, Antonio de Guevaru's secretary. SALARY IN ARREARS 79 presence of four notaries— enough to guarantee the National Debt.^ On March 12, 1591, Cervantes commissioned Juan de Tamayo to collect 110,400 maravedis — arrears of salary overdue since 1588 for work done at i^cija.^ He vanishes till October 15, and then we only see him for a moment engaged on business with the authorities at Estepa.^ Nominally resident at Seville, from about the end of 1591 to the middle of 1592 he was engaged in foraging on a roving commission issued by the new proveedor general, Pedro de Isunza, who had succeeded Guevara in April 1591.* On the strength of a few formal phrases about his subordinates, it has been thought that Isunza had ' Ibid., vol. 11, pp. 212-14. A note in the margin of the document, made by Andres de Lederma, one of the clerks employed by Caviedes and Company, indicates that the cloth was paid for by March 22, 1591. 2 Ibid., vol. 11, pp. 217-18. ' Julian Apraiz y Saenz del Burgo, Cetvantes Vascofilo 6 sea Cervantes vindicado de su supuesto antivizcainismo . . . Nueva edicidn considerablemente aumentada (Vitoria, 1895), p. 140. The writer quotes from a note sent him by Asensio y Toledo : ' En el cabildo celebrado por el concejo de la villa de Estepa el 15 de Octubre de 1591, entraron Diego Ruiz Sanz y Miguel de Cervantes, comisarios de S. M. . . . y los oficiales del cabildo se obligaron a entregar 500 fanegas de trigo y 200 de cebada, en preoio cada una de 14 y 6 reales respectivamente.' This summarizes an original official document. ■• Navarrete, Vida, pp. 76-7. ' La esperanza de mejorarla [su fortuna], contrayendo nuevos meritos y servicios, le obligo acontinuar de comisario del proveedor Pedro de Isunza en los anos de 1591 y 1592, desempeSando eomo tal varios encargos para las provisiones de las galeras de Espafia en las villas de Teba, Ardales, Martos, Linares, Aguilar, Monturque, Arjona, Porcuna, Marmolejo, Estepa, Pedrera, Lopera, Arjonilla, Las Navas, Villanueva del Arzobispo, Begijar, Alcaudete y Alora . . .' 80 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES a high opinion of Cervantes.^ If so, he had an odd way of showing it. Like another commissioner nearer our own time, Cervantes was Highly commended — and docked of his pay. About this period his salary was reduced from twelve to ten reales a day.^ The arrears came in slowly,'* and in some cases remained unpaid,* yet Cervantes was ready to lend moneys and stand security for others." The net was closing round him. But he was undismayed. In the year 1591 ^ Apraiz, Cervantes Vascdfilo, p. 143. The phrases occur in a letter (dated from Puerto de Santa Maria, January 7, 1592) from Isunza to the King : 'Porque los que confinan con el distrito de Andres de Qerio, son Diego de rruy Saenz, Miguel de Ceruantes Saavedra, Bartolome de Arredondo y Gaspar de Salamanca Maldonado, hombres honrrados y de mucha confianga, y annsi tengo por cierto que a ninguno destos hallara embarragado el Corregidor de Cdrdoua en cossa que sea hurto, ni cohecho. . .' Isunza makes no distinction between Cervantes and the rest. He confines himself to saying that they are trustworthy men who are not given to theft or corruption. He could scarcely say less. ''■ There is no written evidence as to when the reduction was first made. But it was in force before October 24, 1592 (Asensio, Nuevos Documentos, pp. 30-1). ' On Jime 27, 1592, Cervantes authorized Diego de Ruy Sayez to receive arrears of salary on his behalf. To judge from his receipt to Ruy Sayez (July 14, 1592), these arrears seem to have been paid by instalments at various places {Ibid., pp. 14-18). * As late as March 12, 1591, Cervantes had not received 110,400 maravedis due to him for work done in 1588-9 (Perez Pastor, Docu- mentos cervantinos, vol. 11, pp. 217-18). ° Asensio y Toledo, Nitevos Documentos, p. 15. In his power of attorney to Ruy Sayez, Cervantes instructs him to recover 340 reales lent to his assistant Nicolas Benito. ' Ibid., pp. 19-23. On August 5, 1592, Cervantes stood security for a Valencian named Juan Portuni, who was suing one Antonio Centeno. PEOCEEDINGS AT TEBA 81 appeared Los Celos, a romance of which he was particularly proud. ^ In 1592 there came to light a circumstance, or series of circumstances, which can scarcely have failed to shake the confidence of the authorities in Cervantes's discretion. A year earlier (in 1591) one of his assistants named Nicolas Benito had visited Teba,^ forced the doors of the state granaries there under the charge of Salvador de Toro, and seized a quantity of barley and wheat which were sent respectively to Malaga and to certain biscuit-makers at Antequera.^ Like all other officials, Toro had to ' Los Celos is said to have been published in Andres de Villalta's Flor de varies y nueuos romances (Valencia, 1591). It is reprinted in Ohras completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 440-2. Cervantes refers to it approvingly in the Viage del Pamaso. " The date of Benito's proceedings is usually given as 1592, and this date is repeated in Sr. Gredilla's summary of documents at Simancas (Apraiz, Cervantes Vascdfilo, pp. 146-7). As will be seen in the next note, Cervantes refers the seizure at Teba to 1591 : his statements were made on August 5 and August 8, 1592, and are likely to be cor- rect, as no great length of time had elapsed between the seizure and his depositions concerning it. But the matter is not free from obscurity, for in a sworn declaration of April 28, 1598 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 246-9), Cervantes seems to refer the seizure to 1592. ^ Asensio y Toledo, Nuevos Documentos, pp. 24-5. ' En la ciudad de Sevilla a cinco dias del mes de Agosto de mil quinientos y noventa y dos anos . . . parescio presente Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra . . . y dijo que se hacia y hizo cargo de mil y ciento y treinta y siete fane- gas y dos quartiUos de trigo y de quinientas y diez fanegas de cebada que Nicolas Benito su ayudante saco por el en la villa de Teba de las Tercias Reales que estaban ^ cargo de Salvador de Toro el ano pasado de noventa y uno el cual dicho trigo y cebada lo hizo conducir con diferentes arrieros el dicho Nicolas Benito a las ciudades de Malaga y Antequera . . .' Apraiz, Cervantes Vascdfilo, pp. 148-9. ' Certifico yo Miguel de 1497 G 82 MIGUEL DE CEEV ANTES give an account of his stewardship, and, as Isunza paid no attention to his applications for payment of the 645,563 maravedis which he claimed,^ Toro rather spitefully obtained an order for execution against Isunza's personal estate.^ Both parties became ex- asperated. During the summer of 1592 Cervantes was twice called upon to give his version of the matter, =* and in the month of December he drew up a report on the subject addressed to the King through the Council of War.* In this report he took the responsibility on his own shoulders, and protested against the precipitate action of the court in granting the order against Isunza. This speaks well for Cervantes's loyalty, and his heat is pardonable, for it seems to have been hinted that the barley and cerbantes saavedra Comisario de Su Mag', que . . . saco por mi orden y del s'. Prouedor en la villa de Teba mil y ciento y treynta y siete fanegas de trigo y mas dos quartilloa el ano Pasado de noventa y uno y ansimesmo quinientas y diez fanegas y media y tres quartillos de cebada el qual dicho trigo y cebada saco nicolas Benito mi ayudante de lo que estaba a cargo de saluador de Toro el qual dicho trigo y cebada lo hizo conduzir el dicho mi ayudante a la Ciudad de Ante- quera a poder de pedro de la siega y de manuel de Ribera 4 quien se hauia de entregar Para hazerse vizcocho . . . y dare cuenta cada y quando que se me pidiere de la entrega del dicho trigo a los dichos vizcocheros que lo convirtieren en vizcocho para servicio de su Mag'. . . .' '■ Application for payment was made, apparently, on July 18, 1592 (Apraiz, Cervantes Vascdjilo, p. 147). ^ P6rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 223-5. ' On August 5 and 8 ; extracts from his testimony on both occasions are given on p. 81, n. 3. * December 1, 1592 (Apraiz, Cervantes Vascdjilo, p. 149). Cervantes had not heard the last of the Teba misadventure at this date ; we find him being called upon for explanations as late as 1598: see p. 102, n. 1. UNBALANCED ACCOUNTS 83 wheat had been put to private uses, instead of being employed in the public service. ^ But the official mind makes little account of personal loyalty and less of individual sensitiveness, and the Teba episode cannot have produced a favourable impression at head-quarters. There Cervantes became known as a man apt to get into hot water. The irregularities at Teba did not stand alone. The official accountants had examined Cervantes's bills and vouchers, and discovered a deficit of 27,046 maravedis. This is not, indeed, a formidable amount, but it was impossible for Cervantes to find such a sum immediately, and naturally enough the Treasury came down for the money on his sureties at £cija ^ — ' Moran, Vida, facsimile facing p. 207. ' Senor : Miguel de cer- bantes Saauedra digo que a mi noticia a veiiido que el fiscal de Vra Mgd y saluador de Toro piden a pedro de isuBza . . . que de su hazienda pague el valor del trigo y oebada que del dicho saluador de Toro se tomo para el seruicio de V. Mgd y que por ello esta executado y quieren dezir que el dicho trigo se uendio Para particulares aproue- chamientos y no se conuertio en seruicio de V. Mgd. y yo como comieario . . . lo deje sacar a mis ayudantes y entregar a los tene- dores de bastimentos y vizcocheros en las ciudades de Malaga y ante- quera de los quales tengo los rescebos para por ello dar cuenta y la cebada se conuertio en pagar los acarretos y portes e yo me e hecho cargo dello y tengo de dar cuenta de todo c6n lo demas que es de mi cargo y no es justo que del dicho prouedorni de mi se diga cosa semejante como la que se opone ni que el dicho prouedor sea in- justam* molestado. . . .' This document is also given by Dr. Apraiz {Cervantes Vascdjilo, p. 149), who adds an additional paragraph : ' Otrosi suplico a V. M. mande que el juez sobresea hasta que se sepa la verdad de este negocio, porque no es justo que por una simple peticidn del delator, sin otra informaci<5n alguna, sea creido y mas contra tan flel criado de S. M. como lo es el dicho Proveedor Pedro de Isunza. — Miguel de cervantes Saavedra.' This is dated December 1, 1592. ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 226-7. g2 84 MIGUEL DE CEKV ANTES one of whom was a widow.^ It is difficult to judge how far Cervantes was the victim of circumstances, or how much he was to blame for keeping his books carelessly. No one supposes for an instant that he was guilty of any dishonourable conduct. It may be that he was able later on to make good the loss suffered by his sureties. But the fact that he placed them in the position of having to suffer is one of the regrettable incidents in his career. As against this, we may perhaps set his good-nature in standing security for Juan Fortuni (August 5, 1592), a Valen- cian whom he can have known but slightly.^ In 1592 there appeared at Burgos in the Flor de romances collected by Sebastian Velez de Guevara an anonymous romance entitled El Desden ^ which is attributed to Cervantes. The ascription is intrinsi- cally likely. When all other trades fail, a man who can write bethinks himself of literature as a port in a storm. It was only in the nature of things, then, that at Seville on September 5, 1692, Cervantes * ' Maria de Aguilar, madre de Hernando de Aguilar Quijada,' as she appears in the document. The men concerned were Fernan Lopez de Torres, Francisco de Orduna, and the licentiate Acuna. ^ Asensio y Toledo, Nuevos Documentos, pp. 19-23. Fortuni sued Antonio Centeno, a knight of St. John residing at Ciudad Rodrigo and formerly a slave at Algiers, for 4,200 reales : part of this was for the balance of Centeno's ransom, and part for money lent to Centeno at Valencia to enable him to buy clothes and other necessaries after his release. Judgement was given in favour of Fortuni, on condition that he found bail. Possibly this is the Fortunyo with whom Cei^ vantes's mother had dealings (see p. 46, n. 2). ' Obras completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-1864), vol. VIII, pp. 442-4. A THEATEICAL CONTEACT 85 should sign a contract with a theatrical manager, Rodrigo Osorio, binding himself to write six plays on terms some of which are worth quoting : — (1) the author to deliver the plays one by one, as they are written — con la claridad que convenga ; (2) each play to be performed within twenty days of delivery of the manuscript, and each to be paid for at the rate of fifty ducados if it should be regarded as one of the best ever put on the Spanish stage ; (3) payment to be made within a week of the first performance of each play; (4) if a play were not given within twenty days of its deUvery, the play to be regarded as accepted, and payment to follow as in the case of a play duly performed ; (5) if two plays were delivered simultaneously, both were to be produced within two successive periods of twenty days ; (6) if, after performance, it should appear that one of the six plays could not rank as one of the best ever put on the Spanish stage, no payment to be made for it.^ ' Asensio y Toledo, Nuevos Documentos, pp. 26-9. ' Sepan quantos csta carta vieren como yo Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra . . . otorgo e conosco que soy convenido y concertado con vos Rodrigo Osorio . . . que estais presente en tal manera que yo tengo de ser obligado e me oblige de componer dende lioy en adelante y entregaros en los tiempos que pudiere seis eomedias de los cases y nombres que a mi me paresciere para que las podais representar y os las dare escritas con la claridad que convenga una a una como las fuere componiendo con declaracion que dentro de veinte dias primeros siguientes que se cuenten dende el dia que OS entregare cada comedia aueis de ser obligado de la representar en publico y paresciendo que es una de las mejores eomedias que se ban representado en Espana seals obligado de me dar e pagar per cada una de las dichas eomedias cincuenta ducados los cuales me aueis de dar e 86 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES These conditions imply that Cervantes felt confident of the verdict of the public. But the agreement came to nothing, apparently : perhaps because Cervantes was sentenced to imprisonment at Castro del Eio on September 19, 1592, within a fortnight of signing his contract with Osorio. He was once more in trouble because of alleged irregularities at Ecija. Francisco Moscoso, corregidor of ficija, held that Cervantes had made an illegal seizure of wheat in that town, ordered him to restore it or pay the price within a fortnight, fined him 6, 000 maravedis, and sentenced him to pay all costs (including four days' salary for the judge and the officers of the court).^ The circumstances are obscure, but it would seem that Moscoso's decision was unduly harsh, for Cervantes was released on bail. He soon found himself in fresh difficulties. The government auditors again overhauled his books, and on Novem- ber 24 they reckoned that the balance against him pagar el dia que la representardes o dentro de ocho dias de como la ovierdes representado y si dentro de los dichos veinte dias no representardes en publico cada una de las dichas comedias se ha de entender que estais contento y satisfecho dellas y me aueis de pagar por cada una dellas los dichos cincuenta ducados de qualquier suerte que sea aunque no las hayais i-epresentado y si os entregare dos comedias juntas para cada una dellas aueis de tener de termino pava representarla los dichos veinte dias y se ban de contar sucesivos unos en pos de otros e yo tengo de ser creido con solo mi juramento y deolaracion en cuanto aueros entregado las dichas comedias ... y si aviendo representado cada comedia paresciere que no es una de las mejores que se han representado en Espana no seals obligado de me pagar por la tal comedia cosa alguna por que asi soy con vos de acuerdo y concierto las cuales dichas comedias me aueis de pagar siendo tales como esta dicho a mi o a quien mi poder oviere en la parte y lugar donde os la entvegare. . . .' ' MorAn, Vida, pp. 336-7. AN INCREASED DEFICIT 87 amounted to 128,281 maravedis.^ In August his accounts had shown a deficit of 27,046 maravedis, and that sum had been recovered from his sureties at Elcija.^ That this deficit should have increased more than fourfold in three months indicated great carelessness on the part of somebody, and it is by no means clear that the carelessness was all on the side of Cervantes. For instance, in January 1593 it occurred to the auditors to ask Cervantes for parti- culars of a commission for which he had received payment as far back as ISQO.'' Some mistakes and oversights will happen under the best of systems : the system under which Cervantes worked was such as to make confusion inevitable. Blunders were, in fact, so frequent that the dis- crepancies in his accounts did not cost him the confidence of his superiors. It is possible that his loyalty to Isunza, a wrong-headed man whose obstinacy in refusing to pay Toro was responsible for the stir raised over the Teba episode, may have influenced the proveedor general in his favour ; stni, it is to be noted that, even after the death of Isunza on June 24, 1593, Cervantes continued to be employed by Isunza's temporary successor, Miguel de Oviedo. On July 7, 1593, Cervantes received instructions to collect wheat in the district extending twelve miles round Seville,* and on the * Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 232. " Ibid., pp. 226-7. » Mordn, rida,y. 338. 'Ibid., p. 337; Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 242. 88 MIGUEL DE CEKVANTES following day was provided with funds for the purpose.! On July 8, also, he received payment for commissions executed in the previous autumn at Ecija, Marchena, El Arahal and Utrera,^ It would almost seem as though he anticipated diffi- culties in the near future : for on July 12, before starting on his expedition, he signed a sweeping power of attorney authorizing Juan de Salinas to act for him in all suits and proceedings, criminal or civil, in which he might be concerned.^ On August 19 his commission was extended, and he was instructed to collect wheat at Llerena, Villa- garcia, and the surrounding districts.* The record of his flittings from one place to another is imperfect, yet we can track him at some points 1 Moran, p. 337. ^ Asensio, Nuevos Documentos, pp. 30-1. The amount of arrears was 600 reales. Cervantes's receipt gives the rate of wages: '. . . .mi salario de sesenta dias a rrazon de diez rreales cada dia. . . .' ' Ibid. 32-4. ' Sepan quantos esta carta vieren como yo Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra . . . otorgo e conosco que doy todo mi poder cumplido ... a Juan de Salinas . . . para en todos e qualesquier mis pleitos causas y negosios seviles y criminales movidos y por mover que yo tengo y tuviere de aqui adelante . . . pueda parescer y paresca ante su majestad y ante los senores Presidentes y oydores de las sus rreales audensias y chancillerias y ante otro qualesquiera alcaldes e jueses e justisias eclesiasticas y seglares de qualquier fuero e juris- dision que scan antellos y qualesquier dellos pedir e sacar e ganar e aver qualesquier cartas e Provisiones rreales que a mi derecho conven- gan e pedir e demandar e rresponder e negar e conoser e defender e pedir e rrequerir e querellar e confrontar e protestar testimonio testimonies e pedir e tomar toda rrazon execusion y difinision por my y en my nomvre poner y desir y alegar y declinar jurisdision de qualesquier justisias,' &c. * Moran, Vida, p. 337 ; Perez Pastor, Documentos cetvantinos, vol. 11, pp. 241-5. DEATH OF HIS MOTHER 89 by the receipts which he signed as he went his way: at Villalba del Alcor on September 12, at La Palma on September 17, at Villarasa on Septem- ber 19, at Ruciana and BoUullos on September 21, at Paterna on October 12, at Almonte on Novem- ber 24, at Niebla on November 26, 1593 ; at Villamanrique on January 26, 1694, and at Jerena on February 16.^ While thus engaged Cervantes lost his mother : she died at some date between September 15 and November 9, 1593.^ Presumably the requisitions were carried out successfully. We have no news of Cervantes till June 30, 1594, when the auditors Pedro Euiz de Otalora and Francisco Vazquez de Obregon passed his accounts for work done at ficija in 1588.^ Some- what earlier than this it is evident that Cervantes was commissioned to collect arrears of taxation — amounting to nearly two million and a half maravedis — in the province of Granada ; for on July 1, 1594, he appeared before the corregidor of Madrid, and named Francisco Suarez Gasco of Tarancon as his security to the amount of a million and a half ^ The dates are derived from a mutilated document given by Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 242-5. ^ This appears from the lease, and the transfer of the lease, printed by Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 102-7. On September 15, 1593, Doiia Leonor, who was living with her daughter Magdalena, obtained the extension of the lease of a house which she had taken in the Calle de Leganitos at a yearly rent of fifty ducados. On November 9, 1593, Magdalena made over the lease to Alonso de Paredes— ' por no tener necesidad, por haber muerto la dicha su madre, de la dicha casa. . . .' {Ibid., vol. I, pp. 105-7). ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 234-40. 90 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES maravedis.^ On August 1 Suarez Gasco signed the necessary deed ^ ; but as his guarantee fell short of the sum due by nearly a million maravedis, and as his reputation did not stand high in other respects, 3 the Treasury officials asked for further securities.* Cervantes was unable to offer them, and, on August 20, he tried to overcome the objec- tions of the accountant Enrique de Araiz by pointing out that he was himself a responsible married man of established credit.^ Araiz allowed himself to be ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 418 : ' Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, veoino de la villa de Bsquivias, residente en esta corte, digo : que para la seguridad e paga de una cobranza que por los senores contadores mayores del consejo de contaduria mayor de S. M. en que estoy nom- brado, de cantidad de 2,459,989 mrs. que a S. M. y a su real hacienda se deben en el reino de Granada de lo procedido de las tercias y alcabalas reales y otras cosas 6, S. M. pertenecientes, tengo ofrescido por mi flador a D. Francisco Suarez, vecino de la villa de Tarancon, hasta en cantidad de 4,000 ducados, que valen 1,500,000 mrs., y tengo necesidad de averiguar con informacion de testigos de abono . . . ' 2 Ihid., pp. 419-21. ' He was suspected of attempting to murder his wife in 1591 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 402 n.) ; see also Navarrete, Vida, p. 422. * This appears from the document quoted in the next note. ^ Navarrete, Vida, p. 421 : ' Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, digo : que V. A. le ha hecho merced de una comision para cobrar 2,000,500 y tantos mil mrs. que se deben a S. M. de fincas en el reino de Granada, para lo cual ha dado fianzas de 4,000 ducados vistas y admitidas por V. A., y con todo esto el contador Enrique de Araiz me pide mas fianzas a cumplimiento de la dicha cobranza. A V. A. suplico, atento que yo no tengo mas fianzas, y que son bastantes 4,000 ducados, y ser yo hombre conocido, de crSdito y casado en este lugar, V. A. le mande se contente y me despache luego, que en ello recibir^ mucha merced. Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra.' According to Navarrete {Vida, p. 421) the whole of this document is in Cervantea's handwriting. On the back it bears the date : ' En Madrid & xx de agosto 1594.' A JOINT DEED 91 persuaded, and consented to accept Cervantes and his wife as additional securities ^ ; on the next day (August 21) the pair executed a joint deed assuming the necessary responsibility. ^ Meanwhile, on August 13, Cervantes was further commissioned to collect arrears at Velez Malaga,^ ' Enrique de Araiz endorsed the petition as follows : ' Que se despache la comision con las fianzas que tiene dadas y con que se obligue el y su muger ' (Navarrete, Vida, p. 422). ' Ibid., pp. 422-5 : ' . . . parescieron presentes Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra y Dona Catalina de Salazar y Palacios, su muger . . . otor- garon que se obligaban y obligaron debajo de la dicha mancomunidad, que el dicbo Miguel de Cervantes dara la dicha cuenta con pago, leal y verdadera, y pagaran el alcanee 6 alcances que se le hicieren . . . y para el cumplimiento dello, y debajo de la dicha mancomunidad segun dicho es, obligaron sus personas y bienes muebles e raices, habidos y por haber ... E la dicha Dona Catalina de Salazar, por ser muger casada, renunci6 las leyes . . . que hablan en favor de las mugeres . . . y como sabidora dellas las renuncid y juro por Dios nuestro Senor e por Santa Maria su bendita Madre, e por las palabras de los santos cuatro evangelios, e por una senal de cruz, tal como esta »Jt en que corporalmente puso su mano derecha en la de mi el presente scribano, de no ir ni venir contra esta scriptura, ni contra parte alguna della, agora ni en tiempo alguno, ni por alguna manera, ni por razon de su docte 6 arras e bienes parrafrenales y hereditarios, ni por otra causa ni razon que & ello le competa, ni dira ni alegara que fue engaiiada ni atemorizada por el dicho su marido, ni que fuerza ni engano did dolo al contrato. . . .' ' The date (August 13, 1594) is derived from an Informe (dated Valladolid, September 10, 1601), printed by Perez Pastor (Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 263-4). The chronology is somewhat obscure, for August 13, 1594, is the date of a general commission issued to Cervantes in tbe following terms (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 425-7) : ' D. Felipe por la gracia de Dios, &c. ; A vos Miguel de Cervantes, sabed : que . . . se me deben en el reino de Granada de lo procedido de mis alcabalas, tercias y otras rentas hasta el tercio primero de este presente ano de 1594 . . . los mrs. siguientes en esta manera . . . y porque a mi servicio y buen recaudo de mi hacienda conviene que se cobren, visto por mis contadores de la dicha mi contaduria mayor de hacienda, confiando de vos que lo hareis con el cuidado y diligencia que 92 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES and on August 23 he received modified instructions as to his duties at Granada.^ He set to work promptly to earn his salary — now raised to some- thing over sixteen reales a day.^ He had dispatched his business at Guadix, and had reached Baza by September 9 =* ; on October 8 he would seem to have drawn up a report of the difficulties he had en- countered at Almunecar, Motril, Salobrena, and Granada * ; on November 17 he reported from Malaga that he had collected arrears at Baza, Guadix, Agiiela de Granada and Loja, and asked for an se requiere, fue acordado de vos lo cometer, y yo lo he tenido por bien : y OS mando que luego vais con vara alta de mi justicia a laa dichas ciudades y villas [Granada, Ronda, Loja y Alhatna, Guadix y su partido, Baza, Almunecar, Motril y Salobrena], y a las demas partes y lugares donde fuere necesario, y requerais a los dichos mis tesoreros y receptores, y a otras cualesquier personas que los debieren pagar, que OS los den y paguen luego, sin poner en ello inconveniente ni dificultad alguna, cada uno la parte que le toca y fuere obligado & pagar. . . .' This document of August 13, 1594, would seem, however, to have been held back till August 23, when Cervantes's instructions were modified as regards Granada, the modification being appended as a postscript to his general commission. ' These instructions are given by Navarrete, Vida, p. 427. ^ Documents dated from Baza on September 10, 1594, show that Cervantes was paid at the rate of 550 maravedis a day, and that the authorities at Baza paid him 2,750 maravedis,hemg the amount of his salary for five days — two days spent in travelling to Baza, two days spent in going to Guadix and back, and one day spent in making up his accounts at Baza {Ibid., p. 480). " Ibid., -p. 4:29. * The document has not been discovered, but the fact is established by the Eeal provision of November 29, 1594 (Ibid., pp. 481-3) : 'A voa Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, que por comision mia estais en la ciudad de Granada entendiendo en cosas de mi servicio, vuestra carta de 8 de octubre deste ano de 594 se vi6 por mis contadores de mi contaduria mayor de hacienda, y por ella avisais que ..." A LAST MISSION 93 extension of twenty days to enable him to fulfil his mission at Konda.^ This request was granted on November 29,^ and on December 9 his wanderings ended with the collection at Eonda of 429,849 maravedis (as against the Treasury claim for 454,824 maravedis).^ Cervantes may have thought the busi- ness was over and done with when, on December 15, he signed at Seville a receipt for 4,000 reales for- warded on November 21 by Francisco Perez de Victoria, the local administrator at Velez Malaga.* If so, he was to learn his mistake before long. ' This holograph is reproduced by Navarrete (Vida, p. 431), who gives it in facsimile immediately after the list of erratas in his volume (p. 644, but unpaged). The communication is printed by Sr. Mainez (Cei-vantes y su ipoca, p. 296 n.), and also by Sr. Cotarelo {Efemirides cervantinas, p. 158),vrho follows Sr. Mainez in modernizing the spelling. The last sentence shows where the letter was written : ' Y Puedeseme enbiar el despacho a Malaga donde qued[o] esperandole.' " In the Seal provision quoted by Navarrete {Vida, p. 432) : ' . . . para todo lo susodicho os doy el mismo poder que teneis por la dicha vuestra comision ; el termino de la cual se os proroga por veinte dias mas, 6 los que menos fueren menester, que se cuenten desde el dia que se cumplio el que teneis, y si fuere pasado corran desde el dia que recibieredes este despacho, de que ha de constar por testimonio signado de escribano. ..." » Ibid., pp. 438-4. * Ibid., pp. 484-5. This receipt contains a good example of the puz- zling statements which are found in legal documents to which Cervantes put his name. Cervantes begins by acknowledging that he received from Juan Leclerque 4,000 reales ' librados en el banco de Gonzalo de Salazar e Juan deCarmona, de que me doy por pagado a mi voluntad '- Immediately after this comes the following contradictory statement : ' E despues de lo susodicho en la dicha ciudad de Sevilla en este dicho dia mes e ano suso dicho [15 dias del mes de diciembre de 1594 anos], ante mi el dicho escribano publico [Juan de Velasco] parecio el dicho Miguel de Cervantes, y dijo, que no embargante que en esta carta de pago se declara haber recibido del dicho Juan Leclerque los dichos 94 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES VII On May 7, 1595, Cervantes appears as a prize- winner in a poetical joust organized by the Domini- cans of Saragossa to commemorate the canonization of St. Hyacinth ^ ; he was awarded three silver spoons for a gloss ^ on a given redondilla, but there is no reason to suppose that he went to Saragossa to receive them.^ He had more serious preoccupa- tions, and must already have begun to feel uneasy as to the turn his affairs were taking at Seville and Madrid. He was on the brink of disaster. When the arrears of 4,000 reales from Velez Malaga were paid over to him in Seville, to save expense he lodged this sum (together with an additional 3,400 reales) in the hands of Simon Freire de Lima, a Seville banker, who gave him a bill for the amount payable at Madrid. In due course Cervantes pre- 4,000 IB. librados en el dicho banco de Gonzalo de Salazar e Juan de Carmona ; la verdad es, que no se le libraron en el dicho banco de Gonzalo de Salazar, y que agora los recibe del dicho Juan Leclerque realmente y con efecto en reales de plata de contado, de que se did por pagado a su voluntad. ..." It is not easy to understand the object of these devices. ' Navarrete, Vida, pp. 85, 443-5. • There were seven competitions open to the whole of Spain ; the last day on which compositions were received was April 29. ^ Cervantes took part in the second competition ; his verses and those of his rivals were read on May 2, and the first prize was awarded to him on May 7. The poem is reprinted in Obms completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 443-4. * Clemente Cortejdn believed, however, that Cervantes attended in person at Saragossa (La coartada, Barcelona, 1903, p. 9). A BANKRUPT BANKER 95 sented the bill to Gabriel Rodriguez, Freire de Lima's agent at Madrid ; but Rodriguez had not received the necessary funds from Freire de Lima, and the bill was dishonoured. Meanwhile, Freire de Lima had gone bankrupt for 60,000 ducados. After one or two fruitless journeys between Seville and Madrid, Cervantes petitioned that the 7,400 reales should be collected from the wreck of Freire de Lima's fortune, and that (as a debt to the Treasury) they should constitute a first claim on the bankrupt's estate.^ All this depositing of money, presenting and rejecting of bills, coming and going between Seville and Madrid, must have taken time. On August 7, 1595, Cervantes addressed his petition to the Treasury, 2 and the matter must have been * The circumstances are set forth in the Real provision of August 7, 1595, addressed to Bernardo de Olmedilla (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 435-6) ; ' . . . per parte de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra me ha side hecha relacion que por mi mandado habia ido a cobrar el finca que se me debia de las alcabalas y tercias del reino de Granada, de lo cual obo de cobrar cierta cantidad de mrs. de las del partido de Velez- Malaga, y las personas que lo obieron de pagar se lo libraron en Sevilla, lo cual cobr6, y por no hacer costas de traerlo a esta corte a la mia, dio 7,400 rs. a Simon Freire de Lima, mercader de esa dicha ciudad, el cual le did cedula sobre si mismo, a pagar en esta villa de Madrid, y por no haber venido el susodicho a ella, escribio a Gabriel Rodriguez, portugues, para que se los pagase, y no lo hizo, y en el interin que paso esto habia quebrado y faltado el dicho Simon Freire de Lima, y alzadose con LXUBdc"., y por ver si los podia cobrar habia vuelto a esa dicha ciudad, y no habia sido posible por estar embargada su hacienda por otros acreedores, y me suplico que atento lo susodicho, y que los dichos maravedises son de mi hacienda real, le mandase dar mi carta para que se le pagasen de la dicha hacienda, no obstante los embargos fechos en ella, 6 que sobre ello proveyese como la mi merced fuese. . . .' ' This date is derived from an Informe signed by Juan de Gamboa 96 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES regarded as urgent, for on the same day a Bed provision was dispatched to Bernardo de Olmedilla, judge of the Seville Court, instructing him to recover the money from what remained of Freire de Lima's property in Seville, ^ Cervantes still had in hand and Bartolome de Sardeneta at Valladolid on September 13, 1601 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 264-6) : ' . . . es que en siete de Agosto del ano pasado de 595 se acudio por parte del dicho Cerbantes a la Contaduria Mayor de Hacienda, y se hizo relacion que el hubo de cobrar por su comission cantidad de maravedis en el dicho partido de Velez Malaga, y las personas que lo hubieron de pagar se lo habian librado en la dicha ciudad de Sevilla, y en ella lo habian cobrado ; y por no hacer costas de traerlo a la corte, en partida de 7,400 reales los entrego a Simon Freyre de Lima, mercader, y dio cedula sobre si mismo a pagar en la dicha villa de Madrid, y al tiempo que se acudio a que lo pagase habia quebrado y no se habia podido cobrar, y pidio se diesse recaudo para que se hiciesse. . . .' ' The reference (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 435-6) to this Heal provision has already been given on p. 95, n. 1. The dispositions of the Seal provision did not correspond exactly to Cervantes's suggestions. In case there v^as no previous claim on Freira de Lima's estate, Olmedilla was instructed to collect the 7,400 reales and send the amount to Pedro Mesia de Tovar, the Accountant-General ; if, how- ever, there were antecedent claims on the bankrupt's estate, Olmedilla was to collect the 7,400 reales and deposit them with Diego Paulo de Banuelos, the Receiver-General, who was to pay the money to those who made out their legal claim to it, power being reserved to proceed against Cervantes and his securities. The relevant passages of the Real provision are as follows: 'y os mando que luego que con ella seals requerido por parte del dicho Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, y constandoos ser asi todo lo suso contenido, con la diligencia posible averigueis que bienes y hacienda hay del susodicho, y en cuyo poder estan ; y averiguado, y no habiendo embargos sobre ellos por deudas que sean mas antiguas que la que de suso se hace mencion, hagais que se cobren los dichos 7,400 rs., y que se invien en letras de personas seguras, a la menos costa que sea posible, & las mis areas de tres Haves a poder de D. Pedro Mesia de Tovar . . . y si pareciere que sobre los dichos bienes y hacienda hay otros embargos por deudas mas antiguas que la del dicho Miguel de Cervantes, cobrareis los dichos 7,400 rs. y los inviareis 4 esta mi corte a poder de Diego Paulo de Banuelos . , . para ADEIFT AT SEVILLE 97 149,600 maravedis collected by him in the province of Granada, and this amount he paid into the Exchequer on September 20, 1595, through his sister Magdalena.^ He was now adrift at Seville as one of the unemployed, and in 1596 he had time and to spare for his sonnets on the glorious Santa Cruz and the inglorious Duke of Medina Sidonia.^ But he was not to be left at peace by his former masters. The 7,400 reales due from Freire de Lima were recovered by the Treasury on January 21, 1597,^ and the auditors now proposed to check the accounts of Cervantes's commission in Andalusia during the latter half of 1694. For some inexplicable reason que los tenga en deposito, y cle alii se paguen a quien los obiere de haber . . . y se entienda que lo contenido en esta nuestia carta en lo que en virtud della se hiciere ha de ser sin perjuicio del dereoho que yo tengo contra el dicho Miguel de Cervantes y sus fiadores, porque aiempre ban de quedar y quedan obligados a oumplir y dar cuenta de la dicha comision, y la dicha cobranza de los dichos 7,400 rs. es por su cuenta y riesgo, y no por la mia. . . .' ' Navarrete, Vida, p. 249. ^ Obras compUtas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 432, 435. The Santa Cruz sonnet appeared first in Cristobal Mosquera de Figueroa's Comentario en hreve compendia de discipUna militar (Madrid, 1596), S. 177 verso— 178 recto ; the sonnet on the Duke of Medina was first published by Juan Antonio Pellicer, Ensayo de una hibUotheca de traduetores espanoles, &c. (Madrid, 1778), Part I, pp. 160-1. ' The date is given in the Informe signed by Juan de Gramboa and Bartolome de Sardeneta on September 13, 1601 (Perez Pastor, Docm- mentos eervantinos, vol. II, pp. 264-6) : ' y visto en la dicha contaduria, se dio carta el dicho dia [siete de Agosto del aiio pasado de 595] para que el doctor Bernardo de Olmedilla, que en aquel tiempo era Juez de loB Grades de la dicha ciudad, cobrase los dichos 7,400 reales y los ymbiase a las areas de tres Haves, el qual los cobrd y los entregaron a don Pedro Mesia de Tobar, tesorero general de Su Magestad, de que dio carta de pago en 21 de Henero de 597.' urn H 98 MIGUEL DE CEEV ANTES Cervantes was not in the mood to go to Madrid and submit his accounts for examination. He had all the vouchers in his possession, and his presence was therefore essential. His surety Suarez Gasco was duly notified, and was evidently afraid that the Exchequer authorities might proceed without waiting for Cervantes. Accordingly, to protect himself, he applied for a mandamus compelling Cervantes's attendance. On September 6, 1597, Gaspar de Vallejo, judge of the High Court at Seville, was instructed by a Beal Provision to obtain sureties guaranteeing the appearance of Cervantes before the Exchequer Court at Madrid within twenty days, the sureties to be responsible for the presen- tation of Cervantes's accounts, and for the payment of whatever sum might be due by him to the Treasury ; if these sureties were not obtainable, Cervantes was to be arrested, sent up to Madrid jail, and handed over to the alcaide of Madrid, who was to keep him in custody tiU further instructions were issued.^ ' Navarrete, Vida, pp. 437-8. ' D. Felipe &c. Licenciado Gaspar de Vallejo, mi juez de la real audiencia de los grades de la ciudad de Sevilla, sabed : que en 13 dias del mes de agosto del ano pasado de 594 di comision d Miguel de Cervantes para que fuese k la ciudad de Granada y otros partidos del Andalueia, y cobrase de ciertos tesoreros y reneptores y otras personas 2,557,029 mrs. que los debian de finca de ciertos anos, y cobrado que los hubiese los trujese & mis areas de tres llavea : & agora por parte de D. Francisco Suarez Gasco, uno de los fiadores que el dicho Miguel de Cervantes dio para siguridad y paga de la dioha cobranza, me ha sido fecba relacion que a 61 y los demas fiadores se les ha notificado den cuenta de los maravedis que el suso- dicho cobr6 en virtud de la dicha comision, y que no la pueden dar si no estii presento el dicho Miguel de Cervantes, el cual estd en esa dioha IMPRISONED AT SEVILLE 99 The wording of the Beal Provision was clumsy, and even a little misleading. Bail was required only for a balance of 79,804 maravedis. Vallejo, however, took his instructions to mean that bail must be provided for the entire total of 2,557,029 maravedis which Cervantes had been commissioned to collect. As nobody was able (or, at least, willing) to give a guarantee for over two millions and a half, VaUejo committed Cervantes to SevUle jail. In prison Cervantes apparently wrote a statement of his case, pointing out the impossibility of his obtaining sureties while away from home — fuera de su casa, — drawing attention to the fact that the total for which oiudad, y tiene en su poder los papeles en virtud de que se tiene de dar, y me supliod le mandase ^ar mi carta para que eompeliesedes al dicho Miguel de Cervantes 4 que venga a esta corte a dar la dicha cuenta, 6 que sobre ello proveyese como la mi merced fuese : lo cual visto por el presidente y contadores de mi oontaduria mayor de hacienda fue acordado que se hiciese ansi, y que para ello debia mandar dar esta mi carta para vos : e yo tiivelo por bien, y os mando que luego que con ella fudredes requerido por parte del dicho D. Francisco Suarez Gasco hagais que el dicho Miguel de Cervantes OS de fianzas de que dentro de veinte dias se presentara en esta corte a dar la dicha cuenta, y pagara el alcance que se le hiciere ; y no dandoos las dichas fianzas le prendereis y enviareis preso y a buen recaudo a la carcel real desta mi corte a su costa, adonde se entre- gara al alcaide della, al cual se notificar^ le tenga preso y a buen recaudo hasta que por los dichos presidente y contadores de la dicha mi contaduria mayor de hacienda se provea y mande otra cosa : lo cual ansi haced y cumplid, sin poner en ello inconveniente ni difi- cultad alguna ; que yo lo tengo asi por bien. . . .' As is stated in the text, this Beal Provision is dated September 6, 1597. ' Los demas fladores ' seems to be merely an official cUcM. The only other securities were Cervantes and his wife (see p. 91) ; from hetlittle, and from him nothing, could be obtained, but Suarez Gasco, a man of some substance, was in a different position. h2 100 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES he had to account was not 2,557,029 nmravedis but 79,804 maravedis, and asking that, as the amount was so small, he might be released on his under- taking to attend duly at Madrid. These representa- tions had their effect. On December 1, 1597, another Beal Provision instructed Vallejo to release the prisoner, provided Cervantes found sureties to guarantee that he would appear at Madrid within thirty days, produce his accounts, and pay the balance (79,804 maravedis) due from him — the sure- ties to be responsible for this sum.^ After about ' Navarrete, Vida, pp. 438-9. 'D. Felipe, &c. A vos el licenciado Gasparde Vallejo, mi juez de la real audiencia de los grades de Sevilla, sabed : que por parte de Miguel de Cervantes me ha sido fecha relacion que por mi carta y comision de 13 de agosto de 594 le habia mandado cobrar 2,557,029 mrs. que habia de finca en las alcabalas y rentas de ciertos partidos del reino . . . y que respecto de no haber venido i dar cuenta de la dicha comision, en vi de setiembre deste ano de Dxcvii habia dado otra mi carta, por la cual os habia mandado compeli^sedes al dicho Miguel de Cervantes os diese fianzas de que dentro de xx dias se presentaria en esta corte a dar cuenta de la dicha comision y pagar el alcance que se le hiciese, y no dandoos las dichas fianzas le preudiesedes y enviasedes a buen recaudo a la carcel real desta mi corte, para que estuviese preso en ella hasta tanto que diese la dicha cuenta, y que en virtud de la dicha mi carta le habiades preso y teni'a- des en la carcel real de esa dicha ciudad hasta tanto que diese fianzas de todos los dichos 2,557,029 ; las cuales estaba imposibilitado de poder dar, respecto de estar fuera de su casa ; y me suplico que pues la can- tidad que 61 debia era muy poca, mandase dar mi carta para que dando la dicha fianza en cantidad de lo que esto fuese, le soltasedes de la c4rcel y prision donde estaba, para que pudiese venir a esta mi cort6 y fenescer la dicha cuenta, 6 que sobre ello proveyese como la mi merced fuese ; lo cual visto por el presidente y conta- dores de mi contaduria mayor de hacienda, y la razon que dello hay en mis libros de relaciones, y que por ellos parece que de la dicha comision tan solamente tiene por satisfacer y dar cuenta de 79,804 mrs., y que lo demas, a cumplimiento de lo que por ella se le RELEASED FROM JAIL 101 twelve weeks' imprisonment Cervantes was set free, but there is no sign that he took any steps to fulfil the conditions on which he obtained his release. It is difficult to explain his inaction, his indifference to summonses, threats and punish- ment, and his failure to keep his promise. It can scarcely be pleaded that he was immersed in litera- ture ; for — unless we choose to believe the story that he began Don Quixote in Seville jail — none of his compositions is assigned to 1597, except the sonnet on Herrera, a poem of disputable authen- ticity.i Throughout 1598 Cervantes appears to have re- mained in Seville. He had a reminder of a dis- agreeable incident in his past when, on April 28, he was required to give particulars of the seizures effected by his assistant Nicolas Benito at Teba six mando cobrar, lo esta, fue acordado que debiamos mandar dar esta nuestra carta para vos ; j os mandamos que dando el dicho Miguel de Cervantes fianzas legas, lianas y abonadas a vuestra satisfaccion, de que dentro de xxx dias vendra a esta mi corte y dara la dicha cuenta, y satisfara el alcance que por alias se le hiciere ; y no lo haciendo, los dichos sua fiadores pagaran de contado los dichos 79,804 mrs. que parece debe, le solteis de la dicha carcel y prision donde esta, para que pueda hacer lo susodicho : lo cual hareis ansi, no estando preso por otra cosa mas que lo susodicho, que yo lo tengo ansi por bien. . . .' As is noted in the text, this Real Provision is dated (from Madrid) December 1, 1597. ' Obras completasde Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 4.31-2. The sonnet was first printed by Navarrete ( Vida, p. 447). The heading, which represents Cervantes as calling himself 'author of Don Quixote ', cannot be earlier than 1605. Herrera died in 1597. Yet Navarrete suggests that the sonnet was written just after Herrera's death. It is not specially characteristic of Cervantes, and the manuscript in which it first occurs is dated 1631, fifteen years after Cervantes's death. 102 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES or seven years earlier.^ But that past, though not without its troubles, must have seemed to him happy when compared with his present circumstances. He had now no means of support, and hved as he could. We have occasional glimpses of the shifts to which he was driven. On September 15 he found a surety for some yards of common cloth, which he undertook to pay for by the end of December ^ ; on November 4 he found a surety for two quintaks of biscuit, which he undertook to pay for by the end of January 1599.' It was manifestly a wretched time with him, but he was not uninterested in what was happening about him. Philip II died on September 13, 1598, and Cervantes did not fail to commemorate in song this event, and some grotesque aspects of pubhc cere- monies connected with it.* Poor as he had always been, he had not been so poor but that he could lend a trifle at times to others, and some of those repaid what they had borrowed. Thus, on February 10, 1599, he signed a receipt for ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 246-9. In this relacion jurada Cervantes refers Benito's proceedings at Teba to the year 1592 (d ano pasado de XCll) : see p. 81, nn. 2 and 3. ^ Ibid., vol. II, pp. 250-1. The surety was the Licentiate Francisco del Aguila (or Avila). " Ibid., vol. II, pp. 252-3. The surety in this case was Geronimo de Vanegas, 'procurador en la real audienfia de la casa de la contratawon de Indias desta ciudad de Seuilla.' • Obras completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 434-5 ; Francisco Geronimo Collado, Descripcion del tAtnulo y relacion de las exequias que hizo la ciudad de Sevilla en la mueiie del rey Don Felipe Segundo (Sevilla, 1869), pp. 217-20. See also Francisco Rodriguez Marin (El Br. Francisco de Osuna), Chilindrinas ; cuentos, aiiiculos y otras bagatelas (SeVilla, 1906), pp. 213-24. HIS DAUGHTER 103 ninety ducados due to him from Juan de Cervantes, possibly his cousin, son of his uncle, Andres de Cervantes. 1 In this same month the Treasury re- membered his existence, and once more summoned him to Madrid to render his accounts within thirty days. The authorities appear not to have known his exact whereabouts at the moment ; he had sunk out of sight, and perhaps never received the official summons : if he did receive it, he disregarded it as before.^ A little later in 1599 he may have been tempted to go to Madrid, not indeed to satisfy his patient, persistent creditors, but to arrange a domestic matter : the future of his natural daughter, Isabel de Saavedra, who had hitherto lived with her mother, Ana Franca de Eojas.' After her rupture with Cervantes, Ana Franca de Eojas had married one Alonso Rodriguez, to whom she bore a daughter (likewise named Ana Franca). Both the mother and Rodriguez died at some date previous to August 9, 1599, when Bartolom^ de Torres was appointed curador ad litem to the two ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. 11, p. 254. ' So it appears from a passage in Navarrete, Vida, p. 440 : ' . . . asi como se deduce que ya no estaba preso alii [en Sevilla] en febrero de 1599, y que aun ignoraba su paradero el tribunal de contaduria mayor, pues en este mes, segun los apuntes 6 anotaciones de un libro manual de cargos y resultas que corria desde 1597, y existe en su archivo, se proveyd contra Cervantes auto de llamamiento con termino de treinta dias ; pudiendo inferirse que por no haber Uegado a notificarsele no verified su comparencia. . . . ' ' The documents quoted in the following notes give the name as Ana Franca de Rojas. Sr. Cotarelo y Mori holds {EfemMdes cervanti- nas, p. 178) that Franca is an abbreviation of Francisca. 104 MIGUEL DE CEKVANTES girls, ^ Hitherto Isabel de Saavedra had necessarily passed as the daughter of Alonso Rodriguez. It was impossible for her to drop that character at once, but measures were contrived to bring her nearer her real father. On August 1 1 she was taken into the service of Magdalena de Cervantes, who agreed to lodge and feed her, to teach her housework and sewing, and to pay her twenty ducados for the two years of her engagement. ^ Naturally nothing in the ' Perez Pastor, Documentos ceivaniinos, vol. I, pp. 131-4. 'En la villa [de] Madrid, a nueve dias del mes de Agosto de mill e quinientos e noventa e nueve anos, ante el senor lioenciado Don Francisco Ariai Maldonado, del consejo de su magestad, alcalde de su casa y corte, e por ante mi, Martin de Urraca, escribano . . . pareci6 Isabel de Saavedra por si y Ana Franca, su iiermana, hijas que quedaron de Alonso Rodriguez e Ana Franca, su muger, difuntos, e dixo que por quanto ella y la dicha su hermana son mayores de doce anos e menores de veynte y cinco, y tienen nezesidad de que se les cobren sus bienes y hazienda de las personas en quien quedaron por muerte de los diclios sus padres, e ponerse a soldada, e seguir sus pleitos, e poner algunas demandas, e por ser ellas menores no lo pueden hazer por sus pe^ sonas, por tanto que nombraba y nombrd por su curador ad litem a Bartolome de Torres, procurador del niimero de esta corte, que presente estaba, pidio al dicho senor alcalde lo mande lo acete e jurar. E por el dicho senor alcalde visto mando lo acete e haga el juramento e de la flanza que en tal caso es obligado. E yo el dicho escribano rescebi juramento en forma de derecho del dicho Bartolome de Torres. . . .' ' E visto por el dicho senor alcalde el juramento, acetacion e flanza dada por el dicho Bartolome de Torres, dixo que le discernia e dis- cerni6 la dicha curaduria ad litem de las personas de las dichas menoreS. . . .' '^ Ibid., vol. 1, pp. 135-7. ' En la villa do Madrid, a onze dias de) mes de Agosto de mill e quinientos e noventa e nueve anos . . . parescid presente Bartolome de Torres, procurador del niimero de esta corte, en nombre e como curador ad litem quo es de Isabel de Saabedra, hija de Alonso Rodriguez e Ana Franca, eu muger, difuntos, e por virt[u]d de la curaduria que de la dicha menor le fue discernida ISABEL DE SAAVEDRA 105 deed of contract indicates that the new maid was the niece of her employer.^ There was no reason for — there were obvious reasons against — drawing attention to the left-handed relationship between them. The document is, in fact, an adroit legal form drawn up in the interest of Cervantes, who was thus enabled to place his daughter under trustworthy supervision without awakening undue curiosity as to her antecedents. Ostensibly engaged as a servant, Isabel de Saavedra took up her resi- dence with her aunt Magdalena in Madrid, where her other aunt Andrea was also living at this time.'^ . . . dixo que ponia e puso a servicio a la dicha Isabel de Saabedra, su inenor, con dona Magdalena de Sotomayor, hija del licenciado Cer- vantes de Saavedra, su padre, difunto, que esta presente, por tiempo de dos anos cumplidos primeros siguientes, . . . e por veynte ducados que se le ban de dar en todo el dicho tiempo, durante el qual la dicha menor servira a la dicha dona Magdalena de todo lo que le mandare dentro de su casa e la aconipanara e servira bien e fielmente, y la dicha dona Magdalena le ha de ensenar a hazer labor y a coser, e darla de comer e beber, e cama e camisa labada, e hazella buen tratamiento. . . .' As to the future of Isabel de Saavedra's half-sister, Ana Franca — who was evidently born before August 9, 1587 — we only know at present that she married Alejandro Gasi de Castro, that she was alive on June 4, 1631 {Ibid., vol. I, p. 210), and that she appears to have died before September 19, 1652. * Unless, perhaps, Magdalena hints at some obscure relationship by adding— contrary to her usual practice — Saavedra to her father's name. " This follows from two documents, both dated Madrid, September 28, 1599 (Perez Pastor, Doctimentos cenantinos, vol. II, pp. 255-62). These documents show that Andrea had recently been living in a house looking on to the Calle de la Comadre de Granada ; they also show that she had another lawsuit on hand — this time against her dead landlady's mother. It may be convenient at this point to refer to other documents 106 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Possibly Cervantes left his sisters to make these discreet arrangements. At any rate there is no which go to prove that Andrea was certainly living in Madrid as far back as December 8, 1596, and perhaps was there sixteen months earlier. These documents also go to prove that Costanza de Figueroa, Andrea's daughter, had inherited something of her mother's pugnacity. They likewise testify to the fact that there had been a love-affair between Costanza and the future Conde de Plasencia — Pedro de Lanuza y Perellds, brother of the well-known Juan de Lanuza who had been executed in 1591 for his share in the Aragonese rising that year. Concerning this love-affair there are three documents (Perez Pastor, vol. I, pp. 108-22), the first of which is dated Madrid, December 3, 1596, while the two others are dated Madrid, December 8, 1596. The disclosures are curious. The first document refers to a previous deed executed at Madrid on July 25, 1595, in which Lanuza had undertaken to pay Costanza 1,400 ducados, and stated the nature of his obligations to her {Ibid., vol. I, p. 110). At the time this deed was drawn up in 1595 Lanuza was a comparatively poor man, as his estates had been con- fiscated after the Aragonese rising. Soon afterwards the cloud lifted, and on February 14, 1596, Philip II bestowed on him the encomienda de Mora, to which was attached an income of 324,517 maravedis [Tbid., vol. I, p. 277). Lanuza was evidently making his way, and hoped (very reasonably, as it proved) to secure the restoration of his estate. In the position to which he aspired any connexion with a member of tlie Cervantes family could only prove embarrassing. He accordingly took steps to shake off Costanza. In the first document (Decembers, 1597) Lanuza guarantees Costanza 200 ducados y&zxlj for seven years, the amount to be secured on his encomienda, and to be payable in two instalments (at Midsummer and Christmas), the first instalment to fall due at Christmas 1596. As to what his obligations to Costanza were, he avoids going into details by referring to the deed of July 25, 1595 (not known to us). In case his estate is restored to him, he undertakes, on entering into possession of it, to pay Costanza the 1,400 ducados, or such portion of that sum as may still be owing to her. Five days later (December 8) Lanuza signed a deed providing that, in case of his death, Costanza should be entitled to recover the 1,400 ducados from his estate in a single lump sum, instead of receiving it in half-yearly instalments spread over seven years. This appears to have satisfied Costanza, On the same day (December 8) she signed a deed accepting Lanuza's terms, and renouncing every sort of claim against his estate and person, specifically including the claim that he should marry her : ' . . . y ansi mismo la dicha dona Constanza de DEATH OF RODRIGO 107 evidence that he went to Madrid for the purpose. There is no trace of him till May 2, 1600, when he appeared as a witness at Seville to support a petition presented by Agustin de Cetina, a paymaster of the forces, with whom he had had official dealings when a commissary. 1 Just two months later Cervantes's brother Eodrigo was killed at the battle of Nieu- port,^ when Philip II's nephew, the Archduke Figueroa dio por libre al dicho senor don Pedro de Lanuza de todo y qualquier derecho que contra el tenga aunque fuese y ser pueda pretension de casamiento y derecho contra su hacienda por cualquier causa, derecho y pretension que contra el dicho don Pedro de Lanuza y BUS bienes le compete y puede competer, que de todo se apartd y excluyo para que no le quede derecho alguno en ninguna forma, excepto la cobranza de log dichos mill y quatrocientos ducados como de suso va hecha mincion, y si otra cosa pidiere sobre ello no ha de ser oida en juicio ni fuera del ... ' {Ibid., vol. I, p. 117). Sr. Cotarelo presumes (Efemeridea cervantinas, p. 168) that reasons of decorum, or of respect for the lady, caused Lanuza to omit defining his obligations to Costanza when the deed of December 3, 1596, was drawn up : such reasons would have been equally valid on July 25, 1595. So far as can be gathered, Lanuza would seem to have promised marriage to Costanza when he was poor. When he was better off, and his prospects im- proved, he determined to bi-eak with her. He now had some money : she had none, and consented to be bought off. Andrea de Cervantes signed the deed of i-enunoiation on December 8, 1596 (Ibid., vol. I, p. 119). Costanza lived with her mother, and hence it is highly probable that Andrea was in Madrid when the missing document of July 25, 1595, was drawn up. ' Cetina's instancia was presented to the Seville court on March 18, 1600. Cervantes gave his evidence immediately after Luis de Castro on May 2 : see (under the heading of Curiosidades) El Ateneo (Sevilla, Martes, 1.° de Diciembre de 1874), p. 11. Cetina's name occurs fre- quently in connexion with Cervantes's accounts between 1587 and 1594 (Perez Pastor, Doeumentos cervantinas, vol. II, passim). ' In two separate documents (Ibid., vol. 11, pp. 290-1, and p. 287), both dated Madrid, October 11, 1610, Cervantes and his sister Magdalena give the date of Rodrigo's death as 1601. Cervantes, however, throws light on the matter by specifying the occasion : 108 MIGUEL DE CEEV ANTES Albert, was routed by Maurice of Nassau ; but it was not till long afterwards that the news of Rodrigo's death reached his family.^ His surviving relatives tried to recover his arrears of pay, but with only moderate success.^ However, if the Spanish Exchequer was slow in discharging its debts, it was zealous in following up its debtors. On September 14, 1601, the Treasury auditors once more endeavoured to extract from Cervantes the 79,804 maravedis which they claimed from him.^ ' . . . toda la parte que me toca de la herencia de los bienes y sueldo del alferez Rodrigo de ^erbantes, mi hermano, que le mataron en ser- vicio de Su Magestad en la Jornada de las Dunas en el aiio pasado de seyscientos y uno en los Estados de Flandes . . . .' Las Dunas is Nieuport: the battle there took place on July 2, 1600. The correct date is given by Perez Pastor (Ibid., vol. II, p. 409) ; elsewhere in the same volume, by a slip of the pen or owing to a mere misprint, the date is given as ' 2 de Junio de 1600 ' (p. 431). For an account of the battle, in which the English under Sir Francis Vere took part, see John Lothrop Motley, History of the United Netherlands (London, 1904), vol. IV, pp. 28-50, and L. Klingenstein, The Great Infanta Isabel, Sovereign of the Netherlands (London, 1910), pp. 107-9. It will be observed that, after some thirty years of service, Rodrigo was still an ensign. At the time of his death he was serving in Sebastian de Otaula's company of infantry, which formed part of Luis del Villar's terdo. ' It is possible that his family did not hear of Rodrigo's death much before August 6, 1605 ; see the document dated November 7, 1605, when his sisters took the first step towards recovering his arrears of pay (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 267-9). Both were apt to act promptly in such matters. " Instalments were paid at long intervals to Rodrigo's heirs : some of these instalments were paid on December 13,1613, on September 27, 1640, on August 27, 1649, on September 4, 1651, and on November 26, 1654 {Ibid., vol. II, p. 410 n.). ° Ibid., vol. II, pp. 264-5 : ' ... La qual dicha quenta no esta tomada hasta agora, y conforme a la que se tiene con el en los dichos libros parece restale deuiendo 79,804 [maravedis].' TEEASURY DOCUMENTS 109 They might as well have asked him for the moon. As we have seen, he had not the means to buy himself food and clothes. He was, of course, unable to meet the Treasury's demand, and it seems likely that he was imprisoned again in 1602,^ to which ' It is not absolutely established that, after his imprisonment in Seville in 1597, Cervantes was imprisoned there again at some time previous to January 24, 1603 ; but it is diflncult to avoid drawing this conclusion from the following documents, copies of which were supplied by Toraas Gonzalez to Navarrete, who quotes (Vida, p. 439) a brief passage. The full text is given by Sr. MAinez {Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 513-14) in a modernized form : 'A Miguel de Cervantes se did comisidn de S. M.*, fecha en 13 de Agosto de 594, para que cobrase las fincas de ciertos partidos del Eeino . . . y para podersele recibir su cuenta, es necesario que los contadores de relaciones den razon si el dicho Cervantes ha dado cuenta de la dicha comisidn, y si en ella se hizo cargo de los dichos maravedis y tiene satisfecho y pagado el cargo de ella, 6 lo que en ello hay. [Valladolid a 14 de Enero de 1603.] ' Upon this the following detailed information was supplied ten days later: ' For los libros de relaciones de S. M.* parece que dicho Miguel de Cervantes tuvo oomision para cobrar dos cuentos quinientos cincuenta y siete mil veintinueve maravedis de ciertos partidos y rentas del Reino, en que entran los treinta y cuatro mil maravedis que habia de finca en las alcabalas y tereias de Baza, en el tereio primero de 594, de los cuales cobro tan solamente 27,904 maravedis, por tantos que parecid haber de iinca en el dicho tereio primero. Y por cuenta de los dichos dos cuentos quinientos cincuenta y siete mil veintinueve maravedis entrego en las areas dos cuentos cuati'ocientos treinta y seis mil ciento cincuenta y cuatro maravedis, y no dice por cuenta de qu6 partidas son, y mds se le hicieron buenos, por no cobrados del dicho receptor de Baza y de otro, treinta y un mil setenta y un mara- vedis, que todo monta dos cuentos cuatrocientos setenta y siete mil doscientos veinticinco maravedis, de los cuales no ha dado cuenta en los dichos libros ; y para que la viniese a dar se han dado cartas para que el Sr. Bemabe dePedroso le soltase de la carcel donde estaba en Sevilla, dando fianzas de venir a darlas dentro de cierto termino, y hasta ahora no ha venido, ni hay razdn de las diligencias que se han hecbo. Fecho en Valladolid a 24 de Enero de 1603.— Domingo Ipenarrieta.' 110 MIGUEL DE CEKV ANTES year is assigned the publication of his sonnet in Lope de Vega's maledictory poem, La Bragontea} VIII Though it seems probable that Cervantes was im- prisoned at Seville in 1602, the fact is not absolutely established. If he really was in Seville jail at tliis time, we cannot tell whether he did, or did not, find the securities required of him before he was released, nor do we know why the instructions con« cerning his release were addressed to Bernabe de Pedroso.^ What is certain is that Cervantes did Sr. Mainez argues {Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 514) that Cervantes had already paid into the Treasury part of the sum which the accountants claimed. In support of his view Sr. Mainez refers to the Diligencias de ejecucion en Baza (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 427-31). Undoubtedly the accounts are confused, and no doubt the auditors made mistakes now and then. If their figures were wrong, it is all the more strange that Cervantes did not go to Madrid (or Valladolid) and expose the eiToi'. But this is precisely what he refused to do. The broad facts of the case are simple. The money entrusted to Freire de Lima was re- covered by Januaiy 21, 1597 (see p. 97). But after this, as maybe gathered from the Eeal Provision of December 1, 1597, there was still a balance against Cervantes (see p. 100, n. 1). He admitted the debt, though he pleaded that the amount was very small ('la cantidad que ^1 debia era muy poca '). He never alleged that he was beingasked for the money twice over, and we need not be more papal than the Pope. ' The sonnet prefatory to La Dragontea is reprinted in Obras com- pletas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, p. 429. It is often said to have appeared first in an edition of La Dragontea, published at Madrid in 1598. No copy of this Madrid edition is known to exist. An edition of La Dragontea published at Valencia in 1598 does not contain Cervantes's sonnet, which, however, appears in an edition dated 1602. See Hugo Albert Rennert, The Life of Lope de Vega (Glasgow, 1904), p. 140. ' The normal routine would have been to instruct one of the judges at Seville to release Cervantes conditionally : this course was followed when Cervantes was imprisoned at Seville in 1597 (see p. 100, n. 1), AT VALLADOLID 111 not pay the sum claimed by the Treasury, and that the Treasury officials at Valladolid, the new capital,^ were ignorant of his whereabouts in January 1603.^ The truth is that after the summer of 1600 Cer- vantes disappears from sight for a long while. We hear nothing positive of him, or of any member of his family, till February 8, 1603, when his sister Andrea signed — apparently at Valladolid — a receipt for 788 reales, the price of underclothing which she had made for the fifth Marques de ViUafranca and his wife.^ If, as has been thought, the invoice ac- companying Andrea's receipt is in Cervantes's hand- writing, this might be taken as evidence that he was at Valladolid in February 1603 ; but those who have seen these documents differ in opinion,* and, at the and it is not easy to guess why it should not be adopted again in 1602. As Sr. Cotarelo y Mori points out {Efemirides cervantinas, p. 187), the information gathered by Navarrete (Vida, p. 443) concerning Pedroso does not indicate that he held any judicial office. Yet Ipenarrieta'a statement (p. 109, n. 1) is explicit. Moreover, Pedroso seems to have been at Seville in 1602-3, and possibly he had special powers. ^ Philip III removed the court from Madrid to Valladolid in 1601 ; see Luis Cabrera de Cordoba, Belaciones de las cosas sucedidas en la Cdrte de^Espana, desde 1599 hasta 1614 (Madrid, 1857), pp. 93, 95. " This seems to follow from Ipenarrieta's letter of January 24, 1608 : see p. 109, n. 1. ' There are three documents referring to stuffs bought, and to things made, by Andrea for ViUafranca. They are indicated by JJavarrete (Vida, pp. 98-4, 252, and 455), and are printed by Sr. Mdinez (Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 388-9). The word 'Valladolid' does not appear in any of them ; but Vazquez, who sent them to Navarrete, pointed out that ViUafranca arrived at Valladolid from Algiers in January 1603 (Ibid., p. 389 n.). Hence there is scarcely any doubt aa to the place. * Vazquez, in his letter to Navarrete, gives it as his opinion that the receipt and invoice are both in Cervantes's handwriting, and that 112 MIGUEL DE OEKV ANTES best, the opinions of experts on handwriting do not inspire complete confidence. We know that Car- vantes's mother-in-law died shortly before July 21, 1604, for on this date his wife was at Esquivias, carrying out the provisions of her mother's will,' an instrument drawn markedly in Dona Catalina's favour, and with a distinct bias against Dona Cata- lina's husband. We cannot tell whether Cervantes went to Esquivias with his wife or not ; we cannot tell whether he (or she) started for Esquivias from Valladolid ; but it seems tolerably certain that Cervantes was living at Valladolid in the summer of 1604.2 No doubt he was then arranging to obtain a Privilegio for a work which, though still unpub- lished, was already the subject of gossip in literary even Andrea's signature attached to the receipt was written by Cervantes {Ibid., p. 389 n.). Navarrete {Vida, p. 94) seems to have agreed with this view ; on the other hand, Sr. Mainez {Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 388-9 n.) holds that only the invoice was written by Cervantes. * The fact is established by a phrase which occurs in a deed of gift executed by Dona Catalina on January 31, 1612 (Perez Pastor, Doeu- mentoa cervantinos, vol. I, p. 170) : — ' . . . ante la justicia del dicho lugar [de Esquivias] e por ante Juan Hidalgo, escribano de su magestad e del numero del ayuntamiento del, en veynte e un dias del mes de Jullio del auo pasado de mill y seiscientos e quatro, se hizo particion e division de los bienes e hazienda que quedaron por fin y muerte de la dicha Catalina de Palacios, mi madre. . . .' ' This is inferred from a statement made by Cervantes's niece Costanza at Valladolid on June 30, 1605 {Ibid., vol. II, p. 515) : ' . . . dixo que de un ano que ha que esta esta confesante en esta corte . . .' As Costanza lived with her uncle, this would seem to imply that he came to Valladolid in June 1604 ; but Costanza also lived with her mother, and, assuming that both arrived in Valladolid together, her statement (if correct) seems to throw some doubt on the authenticity of the Villafranca receipt and invoice. BON QUIXOTE 113 circles. This book was Don Quixote. It and its author are mentioned slightingly by Lope de Vega in a private letter written at Toledo on August 14, 1604.1 The official Privilegio was granted at Valla- dohd on September 26. It extended only to Castile, and perhaps this implies that the publisher, Francisco de Eobles, did not think highly of its prospects. If so, he was mistaken. The book was a commercial success.^ When Don Quixote was issued in January ' Cayetano Alberto de la Barrera, Nueva Biografia \Obras de Lope de Vega, vol. I], Madrid, 1890, p. 122 : ' De poetas, no digo : buen siglo es este ; muchos estan en cieme para el ano que viene, pero ninguno hay tan male como Cervantes, ni tan necio que alabe & Don Quijote. . . .' ' Sr. Cotarelo y Mori {Efemerides cervantinas, p. 198) repeats the old story of Philip Ill's seeing a student laughing so heartily over a book that the king observed : ' Aquel estudiante 6 esta fuera de si, d lee la historia de Don Quijote.' Sr. Cotarelo y Mori refers to Baltasar Porreno as his authority. Pellicer gives the tale in the biography which precedes his edition of Don Quixote (Madrid, 1797-8), vol. I, p. xcix. Pellicer writes : ' dice el licenciado Baltasar Porreno en los Dichos y HecJios de aquel Rey [Felipe III], segun D. Gregorio Mayans,' and he refers to paragraph 56 of Gregorio Mayans's Vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedm in the Vida y hechos del ingenioso hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha (Londres, 1738), vol. I, p. 27. The passage in Mayans reads as follows : ' Aun viviendo Cervantes, consiguio la gloria de que su Obra tuviesse la aoetacion Real. Estava el Rei Don Felipe, Tercero deste nombre, en un balcon de su Palaoio de Madrid, i espaci- ando la vista observo, que un Estudiante junto al Rio Manzanares leia un Libro, i de quando en quando interrumpia la leccion, i se dava en la frente grandes palmadas, acompanadas de extraordinarios movi- mientos de placer, i alegida ; i dijo el Rei. Aquel Estudiante, o estd, fuera de si, o lee la Historia de Don Quijote. I luego se supo que la leia ; porque los Palaciegos suelen interessarse mucho en ganar las albricias de los aciertos de sus Amos en lo que poco importa.' It will be observed that Mayans does not profess to quote from Porreno, nor is the anecdote to b"e found in Baltasar Porreno's Dichos y hechos del Senor Bey D. Phelipe III. el Bueno (Madrid, [1628 ?]). 114 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES 1606, a Lisbon bookseller named Jorge_Rodriguez Jtook the opening afforded by .Eobles's-jae^igence, and set about preparing a reprint -fbrJJie-Ecaiuguese market^ Evidently some rumour of this move reached Eobles, v?ho met it by procuring in Cer- vantes's name a supplementary Privilegio for Aragon and Portugal on February 9, 1605. This did not check Rodriguez, who replied, on February 26, by obtain- ing for his pirated edition an Aprobacion from Frey Antonio Freyre, an Augustinian acting on behalf of the Inquisition. Another reprint of Bon Quixote for circulation in Portugal was undertaken by a rival Lisbon publisher, Pedro Crasbeeck, who secured a replica of Frey Antonio Freyre's Aprobacion on March 27. It is possible that Crasbeeck's enterprise was suggested to him by Robles,^ who had a second edition of Bon Quixote in hand at Madrid, and who endeavoured to strengthen his position stiU further by enlisting the sympathies of the author. At Valladolid, on April 12, 1605, Cervantes signed a document in which, after stating that he had sold his Privilegio to Robles, he authorized Robles and his representatives at Lisbon to take action against infringers of the copyright in Portugal, or to come to terms with them.^ The alternative is significant. ^ This view is advanced by Sr. Cotarelo (EfemMdes cervantinas, p. 195). ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cetvantinos, vol. I, pp. 141-4 : ' Sepan quantos esta carta de poder vieren, como yo, Miguel de ^ervantes Saauedra, residents en esta corte, digo : que per quanto yo compuse un libro yntitulado El yngenioBO hidalgo don quijote de la mancha, PIRATED EDITIONS 115 It would seem that Eobles wished to secure his share of profits on the pirated editions. As Cerr vantes had parted with his rights, he had nothing to y por el rey ... me esta dado y concedido su previlegio y faoultad, despachado en toda forma, para que yo o quien mi poder hobier? le pueda ympremir y vender en estos Reynos de Castilla y en el de la Corona de Portugal por tiempo de diez anos con proybicion y penas que ninguna persona sin mi poder y licencia le pueda ympremir ni vender segun del dicho previlegio eonsta y paresze, a que me refiero. = Y a mi noticia ha venido que algunas personas en el dicbo Reyno de Portugal ban ympresso o quieren ympremir el dicho libro sin tener, como no tienen, para ello poder ni licencia mia contraviniendo el dicho previlegio y facultadReal. Por tanto, en la via e forma que mexor de derecbo lugar haya otorgo y conozco por esta presente carta que doy y otorgo todo mi poder cumplido, libre, Uenero y bastante, segun le tengo y de derecho en tal caso se requiere y mas puede y debe valer ... a Francisco de Robles, librero del Rey nuestro senor, y al licenciado Diego de Alfaya, capellan de su magestad, y a Francisco de Mar, residentes en la 9ibdad de Lisboa, y a cada uno y qualquier dellos por si e in soMdMm,especialmente para quepor mi y en mi nombre y como yo, representando mi persona se puedan querellar y aousar criminalmente o en la mejor via e forma que de derecho lugar haya de las persona o personas que sin el dicho mi poder ban ympresso ymprimieren el dicho libro en qualesquier partes destos Reynos de Castilla y en el de la Corona de Portugal, pidiendo sean condemnados y pugnidos en las penas en que ban incurrido e incurrieren conforme al dicho real privilegio y a las leyes de los Reynos y senorios de su magestad para donde me esta concedida la impresion y venta del dicho libro, y en razon dello hagan en el dicho mi nombre qualesquier pedimentos, querellas, requerimientos, citaziones, protestaziones, y presentazionea de testigos, scripturas y probanzas, y pidan embargos, entregas, prisiones, ventas y reventas de bienes, y tomen posesiones dellos y hagan juramentos y todos los demas autos y diligencias que judicial y extrajudicialmente convengan y sean necesarias y las que yo, en virtud del dicho privilegio y facultad Real, podria hazer presente siendo, y asimismo hagan qualesquier conciertos en razon de la dicha impression y venta del dicho libro, dando a las persona o personas con quien se conzertaren los poderes y licencias que les paresciere y bien visto fuere para que las referidas personas 6 quien su poder hobiere puedan imprimir e vender el dicho libro en los dichos Reynos de la Corona de Castilla y Portugal por el tiempo que yo lo puedo hazer I 2 116 MIGUEL BE OEEVANTES gain or to lose personally, and he had no power to intervene effectively ; but it was to his interest to stand well with his publisher, and his statement of April 12, 1605, placed on public record his approval of Kobles's proceedings. IX We now come to an awkward incident in Cer- vantes's career, an incident which has attained undue importance owing to the action of biographers who, under the behef that they were protecting Cervantes's reputation, entered into a conspiracy of silence with regard to it. This might make it necessary to en- large upon the subject, were it not that the matter is, in truth, a very simple one. Briefly, the facts are these. ^ conforme al dicho previlegio o por el que se conzertaren, rescibiendo y cobrando e resciban y cobren en el dicho mi nombre la cantidad de maravedis y cosas, que por razon de la licencia y poder para la dicha impression y venta del dicbo libro se conzertare se me hayan de dftr, y asimismo hagan qualesquier conciertos con los que le ban impresso hasta ahora y impremieren de aqui adelante otorgando sobre todo las scripturas, conciertos y poderes que bien visto les fuere y haziendo lo que yo come senor del dicbo previlegio y en virtud del puedo hazer, y con lo que de todo prozedieve se haga la orden y voluntad del dicho Francisco de Eobles, a quien pertenesce el dicho privilegio y cuyo verdadero mercader es, conforme a una sci'iptura de confierto entre el y mi fecha, de la exsibicion y demostracion de la qual le relievo. . . .' * The facts may be gathered from the Averiguaciones hechas por mandado del seHor Alcalde Cristoval de Villarroel sdbn las heridas que se dieron d don Gaspar de Ezpeleta, cdballero del habito de Santiago. This document was first printed in its entirety by Sr. Mainez in 1886. It is reproduced by him in Cervantes y su dpoca, pp. 390-408, and by Perez Pastor, Documentos cereantinos, vol. II, pp. 455-537. In subsequent notes dealing ■with the case, references will be given to both worksi CALLE DEL RASTRO 117 In the summer of 1606 Cervantes and his family occupied an apartment on the first floor of a new house in the CaUe del Rastro at Valladolid.^ At about eleven o'clock on the night of Monday, June 27, when Cervantes was in bed, the inmates of the house were roused by cries for help. Luis and Esteban de Garibay,^ fellow-lodgers of Cervantes's, hurried down to see what the matter was, and found that the cries came from a certain Gaspar de Ezpeleta, who was at the door with his rapier drawn, and bleeding from wounds.3 Luis de Garibay called Cervantes, who but the passages quoted will be from the text as printed by Perez Pastor. ^ The houses in the Calle del Rastro were still building on August 4, 1604 : see Narciso Alonso A. Cortes, Noticias de una corte literaria (Madrid-Valladolid, 1906), pp. 81-5. ' They were the sons of the chronicler Esteban de Garibay Zamalloa and his second wife Luisa de Montoya. Luis de Graribay was born on December 8, 1581 ; he died on March 21, 1617. Esteban de Garibay was bom on September 11, 1590; he died on October 25, 1611 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 480 n. and 486 n.). ' See the evidence of Esteban de Garibay (P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervanthws, vol. II, p. 468, and Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 393 a) : ' . . . dixo que estando este testigo en su casa esta noche [27 de jurdo] a liora de las diez o las once, poco mas o menos, oyo vozes diciendo : i cuchilladas, cuchilladas !, e no sabe quien lo dixo, y este testigo se asomd a la ventana y vio un hombre que estaba a la puerta y venia diciendo a vozes que le socorriesen, que venia herido, y este testigo baxo abaxo con una vela e vio al dicho hombre herido, el qual con la luz que tenia subio por laa escaleras arriba, y traya su espada desen- vainada. . . >' On June 29 Esteban de Garibay deposed that his brother Luis went downstairs with him :' ... a las vozes, como tiene declarado, bax6 este testigo y su hermano don Luis ; el qual don Gaspar estaba herido y con mucha sangre . . .' (Perez Pastor, Docu- mentos cervantinos, vol, II, p. 492 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 897 6). 118 MIGUEL DE CEEVANTES helped to carry the wounded man upstairs,^ where Luisa de Montoya, mother of the Garibays, had a bed made for him on the floor of her room.^ A priest,'' a barber-surgeon,* and an algtmcil^ were ' Cervantes testifies as follows (Perez Pastor, Documentos ce)-vantims, vol. II, p. 462 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su 6poca, p. 391 6) : ' . , , estando este testigo acoftado en la cama esta noche a hora de las once, poco mas o menos, oyo ruido e grandes vozes en la calle, que le llamaba don Luis de Garibay, y este testigo se levanto y el dicho don Luis dixo a este testigo que le ayudase a, subir un hombre, el qual este testigo vio y era el que tiene declarado. . . .' " Luisa de Montoya deposes (Perez Pastor, Documentos cermntinos, vol. II, p. 462 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su dpoca, p. 391 6) : ' esta testigo le mando hacer una cama donde le echai'on.' The escribano, Fer- nando de Velasco, in his preliminary statement, describing the arrival of the Alcalde, says (Perez Pastor, Documentos cermntinos, vol. II, pp. 455-6; Mainez, Cervantes y sti 4poca, pp. 390i-lo): ' Bubio a unos aposentos altos della [la dicha casa nueva del Eastro] en el quarto donde vive dona Luisa de Montoya, viuda, y en la sala hallo a un hombre echado en una cama fecha en el suelo de la dicha sala. . . .' ' The priest's name Vfas Gonzalo Bravo de Sotomayor : just before he was sent for, his nephew had seen Ezpeleta and his opponent fighting in the distance (P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 467-8 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 392 6-3 a). * The barber-surgeon was Sebastian Macias, ' ciruxano y barbero de las guardas viejas e de a caballo de Su Magestad ' : for his deposition see Perez Pastor, Documentos ceivnntinos, vol. II, p. 456, and Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 391 a. Cervantes speaks of two barbers being present : ' y luego un barbero y desde a poco otro ' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 462 ; MS,inez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 391 6). But this statement does not appear to be confirmed by other witnesses. ^ The alguacil was Francisco Vicente. According to Cervantes's daughter, he was called in by her cousin Costanza (P&-ez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 521 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 404 6) : ' . . . e dona Costanza, prima de esta confesante, dixo a dos hombres que pasaban por alii : 4 no llamaran a la justieia, que han muerto aqui un cavallero ? ; el qual subio y era el alguacil Francisco Vicente, y despues vino el senor Alcalde, oomo tiene dicho;' GASPAR DE EZPELETA 119 summoned. The priest heard Ezpeleta's confession ; the barber-surgeon attended to the patient's wounds — a deep stab in the right thigh, and another low down in the left part of the abdominal wall, damaging the peritoneum, through which part of the omentum pro- truded. A Navarrese by birth, a Knight of the Order of Santiago by station, Ezpeleta was known in Valladolid as a rather needy rake, who lived on intimate terms with the Marques de Falces, Captain of the Royal Archers.^ Informed of what had ' Gaspar de Ezpeleta was the son of Matias de Ezpeleta and Catalina del Rio, both natives of Pamplona. He was born about 1568, and was admitted to the Order of Santiago in 1598. A mis- adventure which befell him in a recent joust at Valladolid was commemorated by Gongora in two uncomplimentary d4cimas : Cantemos a la gineta Y lloremos a la brida La vergonzosa caida De don Gaspar de Ezpeleta. i Oh, si yo fuera poeta Que gastara de papel Y que nota hiciera de el ! Dijera a lo menos yo Que el majadero cayo Porque cayesen en el. Dijera del caballero, Visto su caudal y traza, Que ha entrado poco en la plaza Y menos su despensero ; Que si cayera en Enero Quedara con santo honrado, Aunque el Apdstol sagrado, Cuando Dios le hizo fiel, Cayo de alumbrado, y el Cayo de desalumbrado. The allusion in the closing lines is to the conversion of St. Paul, a feast celebrated on January 25. The verses are quoted by Juan Antonio Pellioer on p. cxvii of the biography prefixed to the first 120 MIGUEL DE OEEV ANTES occurred, Cristobal de Villarroel, one of the four Alcaldes of Valladolid, arrived to take Ezpeleta's deposition. Ezpeleta's story was that, after supping with the Marques de Falces,^ he was strolling near the Calle del Rastro when he was accosted by a man unknown to him : words passed, followed by a fight in which Ezpeleta received his wounds. The de- ponent was so weak that the Alcalde did not press him further at the moment. ^ His page gave a likely clue by stating that his master had been carrying on a notorious intrigue with a married woman in Valladolid, and by hinting pointedly that Ezpeleta's wounds had been inflicted by her husband or some one else related to her.'' Though in possession volume of his edition of Don Quixote (Madrid, 1797-8). They will not be found in M. Foulche-Delbosc's edition of Gdngora, which reproduces the Chacon manuscript : from this manuscript all verses of a personal or offensive character are omitted. ' The Marques de Falces came with the Alcalde : see the statement with which the escribano, Fernando de Velasco, opens the record of the inquiry (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 455-6 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su dpoca, pp. 390 &-1 a). " Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 457-61 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su if oca, p. 391 b. ' The page's name was Francisco Camporredondo. The crucial passages of his evidence are as follows (Perez Pastor, Documentos cewantinos, vo\.ll, pp. 466-7 ; M.a.mez,Ceri>anies y sm ^poc«, p. 392 o, b) : ' . . . dixo que el dicho don Gaspar ha tratado y trata amores con una muger casada, que los nombres y casa ha declarado al dicho senor Alcalde, e que habiendo venido a noticia del dicho su marido, tiene entendido que han habido y tenido dares y tomares e pesadumbres, porque el dicho don Gaspar entraba y salia de ordinario en su casa, e muchas noches se quedaba en la dicha casa, e que lo que harian no lo sabe, mas de que los amores de ambos eran muy conocidos y sabi- dos en todos los criados . . . dixo que este testigo cree que el dicho don Gaspar se rezelaba y andaba rezeloso de cierta persona que p ea DEATH OF EZPELETA 121 of the woman's name and address, Villarroel did not follow up this scent. On the evening of June 28 he again visited Ezpeleta, who merely expanded his former statement, adding nothing of importance except that his opponent had fought fairly .^ Though Ezpeleta was' sinking fast, those about him urged him to disclose the name of his antagonist ; he per- sisted in saying that he did not know the man, begged his tormentors to leave him in peace, ^ and died at six o'clock next morning (June 29). ^ Mean- en casa de la dicha muger casada, y el nombre de la dicha persona declard al dicho senor Alcalde, y aunque se trataban como amigos, habia entre ellos algunos zelos ... no sabe ni entiende que este dano le pueda venir de otra parte sino es de la casa de la dicha muger, que tiene declarado al senor Alcalde, de los deudos de ella. . . .' Andres Ramon, another servant of Ezpeleta's, was less communicative, but he spoke to his master's constantly visiting a house near the Puerta de Santisteban, and to his receiving and sending messages through one of the men employed there (Perez Pastor, Documenios cemantinos, vol. II, pp. 469-70 ; Mdinez, Cervantes y su dpoca, 393 6). ' Villarroel's second examination of Ezpeleta took place at seven in the evening (Perez Pastor, Docunientos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 475-7 ; Mdinez, Ceixantes y su ipoca, pp. 894 6-5 «):'... dixo que no ha renido con nadie ni tiene sospecha sobre ninguna persona mas de lo que tiene declarado, e que la dicha persona que rin<5 con i\ se acuchill6 como hombre honrado, y que el fue el primero que metio mano a la espada contra el. . . .' ^ This is spoken to by Luisa de Montoya and by Magdalena de Cervantes. The first-named says : ' en el articulo mortis le dixeron que descargase su concieijcia y mirase que se moria; el qual dixo que no le cansasen, que no tenia mas que declarar ni decir de lo que tenia dicho, y con esto el susodicho espir6.' Magdalena confirms this : ' le preguntaron cerca de su herida y quien le habia herido, y que descar- gase su conciencia ; el qual dixo que ni lo sabia, ni queria saber, y que le dexasen, y con esto murio ' (Perez Pastor, Doeumentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 481 ; Mdinez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 896 a). • The barber-surgeon Macias states that he was present at the death of Ezpeleta, ' el cual murio de las heridas que tenia hoy dia [29 de 122 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES while, Villarroel had received unfavourable reports concerning the conduct of certain women living in the house where Ezpeleta lay, and he seems to have suspected that they knew more than they chose to admit of the mysterious stranger who, after wounding Ezpeleta, had vanished into the night.^ On June 29, therefore, he proceeded to question some of the in- mates of the house. Several of them knew Ezpeleta by sight ; some knew him personally ; none could throw light on the circumstances in which he met his death. In the course of examination by the Alcalde, Esteban de Garibay spoke to Ezpeleta's having visited a lodger named Juana Gaitan (widow of the poet Pedro Lainez, and a friend of Cervantes's); he said that visits paid her by the Duque de Pastrana Junio] por la manana a hora de las seis, poco mas o menos, el qual esta pasado de esta presente vida ' (Perez Pastor, Documentos eer- vantinos, vol. II, p. 482 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 396 a). ' See the note appended by Fernando de Velasco immediately after Ezpeleta's second deposition (P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 477-8 ; Mainez, Ceiviantes y su epoca, p. 395 a, 6) : ' . . . siendo informado su merced del dicho senor Alcalde que en las casas nuevas que estan enfrente del Rastro de esta ciudad, e particularmente en la casa donde entr6 herido el dicho don Gaspar de Ezpeleta, viven algunas mugeres que en sus oasas admiten visitas de cavalleros y de otras personas de dia e de noche, adonde asimisnio entraba el dicho don Gaspar de Ezpeleta, de que en la vecindad hay grande murmura- cion y escandalo ; y para averiguar lo susodicho y saber si de la dicha casa salio la persona que hirio al dicho don Gaspar de Ezpeleta. o fue por causa de alguna de las mugeres que viven en ella, y averiguar la libertad con que viven las mugeres que estan en ella y que en esta corte no tienen entretenimiento ninguno, y que por su causa fue las heridas del dicho don Gaspar, su merced del dicho seiior Alcalde, por su per- sona, en presencia de mi el presente escribano, hizo las informaoiones y- av^riguaciones siguientes.' . . - THE EZPELETA CASE 123 and the Conde de Ooncentaina had given rise to gossip ; and he mentioned the names of two men who called upon the Cervantes family — Agustin Kagio, a Genoese contractor, and Simon Mendez, a Portuguese who apparently had some connexion with the Admiralty.^ Magdalena de Cervantes spoke to her brother's receiving visits from Mendez, and stated that Hernando de Toledo, Senor de Higares, had also called on him once or twice.'^ Another ' The essential passages of Esteban de Garibay's evidence are as follows (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 487-8 ; Mainez, Cewantes y su ipoca, p. 397 oi, 6) : ' dixo que ... en el quarto alto , . . posa dona Juana Gaitan e dona Luisa de Argomedo e dona Maria de Argomedo, y que este testigo vio algunas veces entrar en este quarto al dicho don Gaspar de Ezpeleta de dia entrar a visitarles. ' Prcguntado que otras algunas personas sabe este testigo que entren en el quarto de la dicha dona Juana Gaitan e doiia Maria de Argomedo, dixo que ban entrado algunas personas que no se acuerda de sus nombres, excepto del duque de Pastrana y conde de Ooncentaina, e que no sabe los nombres de los demas, mas de que de ello hay nota e murmuracion. 'Preguntado en el quarto de las Cervantas que visitas de cavalleros hay, dixo que en el dicho quarto entraban Agustin Raxio y Simon Jfendez, portugues, e no ha mirado en otras personas.' In documents dated 1604 Simon Mendez is entitled 'tesorero general de las rentasde los diezmosde la mar de Castillay de Galicia' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cenantinos, vol. II, p. 488 n.). ' ' Preguntada que otras personas ban entrado en la dicha casa y aposento a visitar a los que tiene declarado, dixo que don Hernando de Toledo, seiior de Higares, ha entrado una o dos veces a visitar a el dicho Miguel de Cervantes, su hermano, e tambien ha entrado Simon Mendez ' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 499 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su epoca, p. 399 a). The witness called imme- diately before Magdalena de Cervantes, one Isabel de Islallana, a servant of Maria de Argomedo's, testified that she had been pinched and solicited by Ezpeleta just before his fatal fight ; that she had seen the Duque de Pastrana and the Conde de Concentaina visiting her employer ; that she had noticed that the Senor de Higares visited the 124 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES lodger named Isabel de Ayala, a pious widow of a censorious turn, gave evidence reflecting unfavour- ably on Juana Gaitan, on Mariana Ramirez, and more especijilly on Cervantes's daughter, Isabel de Saavedra. She alleged, that the visits - of «eft--b^ day and night to the Cervantes family were ar^ourceu of scandal, and that Cervantes's daughter was^otori^ ously known as the mistress of Simon Mendez, wh o had given her a costly presentT she further alleged that she had repeatedly rebuked Mendez for his mis- conduct, though he denied the charge, declaring that his visits were nothing more than friendly calls. 1 Isabel de Ayala's evidence was little better Cervantes family, and that, on the previous evening, she had observed him speaking to one of the women of the family, who was at the window looking on to the street (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 495-8). In the version printed by Mainez (Cervantes y sii, ipoca, p. 398 a-b) Cervantes is represented as being at the window. ' Isabel de Ayala, widow of Dr. Espinosa, spoke favourably of the Garibay family : ' que es gente honrada e recogida.' For the rest her evidence is as follows (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 504-7 ; Mdinez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 400 a-1 a) : ' . . . en este quarto donde el dicho Miguel de Cervantes y su hija, hermanas y sobrina viven, hay algunas conversaciones de gentes, que entran en ella de noche y de dia algunos cavalleros que esta testigo no eonoce, mas de que en ello hay escandalo e murmuracion ; y especialmente entra un Simon Mendez, portugues, que es publico e notorio que esta amancebado con la dicha dona Isabel, hija del dicho Miguel de Cervantes ; y esta testigo se lo ha reprendido muchas veces al dicho Simon Mendez, aunque 61 decia que no entraba sino por buena amistad que tenia en la dicha casa ; y sabe esta testigo, por lo haber oido decir publicamente, que dicho Simon Mendez la habia dado un faldellin que le habia costado mas de ducientos ducados; y que en el quarto alto, arriba de la taberna, vive dona Mariana Ramirez, la qual es publico e notorio que esta amancebada con don Diego de Miranda, e dicen que se quiere casar con ella, y que sobre esto ban estado presos, THE EVIDENCE 125 than second-hand gossip, but it would appear to have carried weight with the Alcalde Villarroel, who clung to his preconceived notion that Ezpeleta had been done to death by somebody related to one of the women living at the house in the Calle del Eastro. Unluckily Ezpeleta, before dying, had bequeathed a silk gown to Magdalena de Cervantes, who had nursed him assiduously ^ ; and, as Magdalena was y despues aca todavia se tratan ; y que en otro quarto alto . . . vive dona Juana Gaytan e dona Maria de Argomedo y dona Catalina, muger soltera, sobrina de la dicha dona Juana Gaytan, e dona Luisa, tambien moza soltera, hermana. de la dicha dona Juana Gaytan ; y estas dichas mugeres admiten mucbas visitas, de dia e de noche, de cavalleros, como son el duque de Pastrana e Maqueda, y ha oido decir que el conde de Concentaina y el senor de Higares, que ha oido decir se llama don Fernando de Toledo, y otros muchos cavalleros, que no conoce, pero que el de Higares entraba mas veces y mas a menudo en el aposento del dicho Miguel de Cervantes e su muger, hermanas y sobrina e hija. . . . ' Preguntada si esta testigo . . . sabe o ha oido decir por qual de las dichas mugeres fue la dicha pendencia, dixo que esta testigo no lo sabe, mas de haber oido decir que la dicha pendencia fue por lo que se le pregunta, pero no conoce ni sabe por quien fuese, ui tampoco ha oido decir quien fuese el hombre con quien el dicho don Gaspar rinese, ni lo sospecha, porque esta testigo no trata con ninguna de ellas, porque, como dicho tiene, siempre le ha parecido mal y causado escandalo las demasiadas conversaciones y libertades con que viven. . . .' ' See Magdalena's evidence (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 498 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su epoca, p. 399 a): ' . . . dixo que no conoce al dicho don Gaspar de Ezpeleta mas de desde la noche que entro en casa de dona Luisa de Montoya herido, y entonoes le oyo Uamar don Gaspar de Ezpeleta, y desde entonces esta testigo estuvo a su cabecera regalaudole hasta el punto que murio. ' Preguntada como dice no le conocer, pues el dicho don Gaspar en su testamento hace una manda a esta testigo de que le den un vestido de seda de la que ella quisiere por el amor que la tiene, dixo que esta testigo no sabe por que razon lo dixo, mas de que si por haber acudido con caridad a regalarle en la cama, le hizo alguna manda.' 126 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES (like Isabel de Ayala) a devout elderly woman who had renounced such vanities as silk, Villarroel seems to have imagined that the gown was really meant for one of the younger women in the house ^ — prob- ably for Magdalena's niece, Isabel de Saavedra, concerning whom Isabel de Ayala had deposed so unfavourably. Though Ezpeleta's landlady gave some suggestive evidence as to his character ^ and ' His questions to Magdalena, following immediately on the parar graphs just quoted, indicate his suspicions : ' Preguntada, pues esta testigo profesa habito de beata, y no le quadra el vestido de seda que el dicho don Caspar le manda, diga y declare si se lo manda para darle a otra persona, puniendolo en cabeza de esta testigo, dixo que esta testigo no sabe ni entiende per que el dicho don Graspar le hiciese k dicha manda, porque nunca le trato ni conocio en su casa, ni en otra ninguna, mas de tan solamente quando le vio herido, como tiene dicho.' Villarroel further examined Luisa de Montoya on this point (Perez Pastor, Doeumentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 503 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su epoca, p. 400 o) : ' Preguntada por que causa o razon el dicho don Gaspar mando un vestido de seda a dona Magdalena de Sotomayor, diciendo que se le manda por el amor que la tiene, pues la dicha manda presupone conoscimiento en casa de la dicha dona Magdalena, y siendo, como es, beata, y que se viste de xerga, presupone tambien que mandarle un vestido de seda era para otra persona e no para ella, dixo que no se hallo al testamento, ni sabe la causa, mas de que entiende que por ser pobre se lo mandaria de caridad, porque la tiene por una gran sierva de Dios por la buena vida que hace. . . .' ^ Ezpeleta's landlady, Juana Ruiz, lived in the Calle de los Manteros ; being ill in bed, she volunteered to give evidence, which was taken by commission (Perez Pastor, Doeumentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 508-10 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 401 a, h). She deposed that during the three months Ezpeleta had lodged with her he seldom slept at home (' no durmio en ella quince dias, porque se quedaba a dormir fuera '), and she told a curious story of a visit to her house paid by a veiled woman who went up to Ezpeleta's room during his absence, vowing to be revenged on him. The veiled woman complained of Ezpeleta having taken from her two gold rings (one studded with diamonds, and the other studded with emeralds), and said that her husband had threatened to kill her, because she was unable to produce ARRESTED 127. conduct, and though Ezpeleta's mistress was found in his lodgings after his death/ Villarroel held to his theory. Immediately after hearing Isabel de Ayala's evidence he ordered the arrest of Cervantes, his daughter, his sister Andrea, his niece Costanza, and seven other persons — five of whom lodged in the same house as the Cervantes family ^ : Cervantes's them. She was persuaded to reveal her husband's name — ' dixo que au marido se llamaba Galvan y era escribano y vivia junto a San Salvador.' Juana Ruiz went on to say that two monks were subse- quently sent by the veiled woman to Ezpeleta to ask him for these rings, and that Ezpeleta handed them over. It would seem, however, that they came into his possession again, for, after he was wounded, the alguacil Diego Garcia took charge of two rings which were found on him, and which corresponded to the veiled woman's description of thoge belonging to her : ' Dos sortixas pequenas de oro, la una con diamantes pequenos, que es unas memorias que se parten en tres partes, e la otra de tres esmeraldas ' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervan- tinos, vol. II, p. 460 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su 4poca, p. 391 a). ' The two alguaciles, Francisco Vicente and Diego Garcia, found her there veiled, and accompanied by two maids likewise veiled. She struck the alguaciles as being a person of quality. She behaved like one. When the oflScers asked her her name, and what she was doing there, she told them this was no business of theirs. They reported the matter to Villarroel, who ordered her to be brought before him. She was taken to the Alcalde's private residence, was closeted with him for some time, and, after revealing to him privately her name, she made a public deposition stating that she had gone into the house in the Calle de los Manteros to visit a sick woman there — manifestly Juana Buiz, to whom the last sacraments had been administered on June 29 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cenantinos, vol. II, p. 511 ; Mainez, Ceroantes y su Spoca, 401 6-2 a). There can be no reasonable doubt that the veiled visitor was Ezpeleta's mistress, wife of Galvan : she may have gone to the house again to try and recover her lost rings. ' The prisoners were Miguel de Cervantes, Isabel de Saavedra, Dona Andrea and her daughter Costanza de Ovando, Juana Gaitan, Maria de Argomedo Ayala (widow of Alonso Enriquez), her sister Luisa de Argomedo Ayala, her niece Catalina de Aguilera, and 128 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES wife was absent from Valladolid at the moment, ^nd thus escaped being sent to Valladolid jail with her husband and other members of his family.^ The prisoners suffered because of the com- pany which their poverty compelled them to keep, The evidence against them was vague and feeble. But, apart from his duty to inquire into the mystery of Ezpeleta's death, Villarroel was responsible for the maintenance of order in Valladolid, and it would be unfair to assume that he had nothing to go upon but Isabel de Ayala's statement. The CaUe del Rastro lay in a poor quarter of the city. Dukes and counts were unlikely to visit the neighbourhood for any laudable purpose : the visits of the Duque de Pastrana and the Duque de Maqueda were not denied, and the reputation of these two noblemen was not good.'^ It was possible to test one passage in Isabel Mariana Ramirez. Besides these, two men were arrested, Simon Mendez and Diego de Miranda ; neither of them lived at the house in the Calle del Rastro. It will be observed that the name of Magdalena de Cervantes does not appear on the list of prisoners. ' Cervantes's wife is not mentioned by Andrea de Cervantes, Magdalena de Cervantes, and Isabel de Saavedra (Perez Pastor, Docii- mentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 517-19, 498-501, and 520-2 ; Mainez, Cercantes y su ipoca, pp. 403 a-4 h, 398 a-9 6, and 404 a, 6) ; but that she resided at the house in the Calle del Rastro is established by the evidence of Esteban de Garibay, of Maria de Zeballos (a maid in the service of the Cervantes family), of Luisa de Montoya and her maid Catalina de Rebenga, of Isabel de Ayala, and of Cervantes's niece Costanza (Perez Pastor, Documentos cenantinos, vol. II, pp. 487, 492, 502, 493, 507, and 514 ; Mdinez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 397 o, 897 6, 399 6, 398 a, 400 h, and 402 6). " Isabel de Ayala deposed that the Duque de Maqueda, as well as the Duque de Pastrana, visited Juana Gaitan (Perez Pastor, Bocu- THE OFFICIAL THEOKY 129 de Ayala's evidence, and this proved to be correct : one of the lodgers at the house in the Calle del Rastro was a widow named Mariana Eamirez, and it was true that, little more than a month before the Ezpeleta incident, she had been accused of miscon- duct with Diego de Miranda, and that both she and her paramour had been punished.^ No doubt this created a prejudice against the other inmates of the house. The Eamirez-Miranda case did not, indeed, come before Villarroel personally, but he must have heard of it from his colleague, and probably allowed it to influence him unduly. His action in arresting eleven persons on suspicion of being indirectly con- cerned in Ezpeleta's death was the rash proceeding of an amateur magistrate ; it was high-handed and perhaps illegal, though the discretion given to Al- caldes was extremely wide ; it is not, however, incomprehensible, and it might have been effective had his theory as to Ezpeleta's death been correct. As it happened, his theory was wrong. Eight of the female prisoners,^ as well as Diego de Miranda,^ were mentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 506 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 400 6). Four years later (July 23, 1609) Maqueda was concerned in a brutal midnight attack on the Duque de Sessa at Madrid. Pastrana is mentioned as intervening in this street-brawl: see Luis Cabrera de Cordoba, Belaciones de las cosas sucedidas en la C6rte de Espatia, desde 1599 hasta 1614 (Madrid, 1857), p. 378. ' They were reported to the Alcalde, Alonso Munoz de Otalora, on May 10, 1605. For details see Mainez, Cervantes ysu Spoca, pp. 409-11. '^ These were Cervantes'snieceCostanza, his sister Andrea, his daughter Isabel de Saavedra, Catalina de Aguilera, Luisa de Argomedo Ayala, Maria de Argomedo Ayala, Juana Gaitan, and Mariana Bamirez. ' Diego de Miranda y Gutierrez de Ayala seems to have been a Knight 1497 K 130 MIGUEL DE CEEVANTES examined by Villarroel on June 30 and July 1 in the courthouse attached to Valladolid jail. He failed to extract from them any damaging admissions. On the contrary, Isabel de Ayala's charges were contradicted, or explained away. It was averred that Pastrana had only visited Juana Gaitan twice or thrice, and that his calls had reference to the publication of two works by her deceased husband, with whom he had been acquainted. ^ Evidence was put in to show that Hernando de Toledo, Senor de Higares, had known Cervantes in Seville, that he had paid but two visits to the house during the year previous to Ezpeleta's death, and that one of these visits took place after Ezpeleta was wounded.^ Simon Mendez, of the Order of Santiago. He was born about 1558, and was a married man (Perez Pastor, Documentos cerrantinos, vol. II, pp. 506 n. and 530 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 407 a and 409-10). He gave his age as thirty-four when questioned by Villarroel. He and Mariana Ramirez were examined solely with respect to their conduct since their conviction in the previous month : they had then been forbidden to hold any further communication with one another, and now denied having infringed this order (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantims, vol. II, pp. 529-30 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 406 &-407 a). ' This statement, made by Juana Gaitan, is corroborated by her niece Catalina de Aguilera, by Cervantes's sister Andrea, by his niece Costanza, and by both Luisa and Maria de Argomedo Ayala (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 529, 523-4, 519, 516, 525, and 527 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 406 h, 405 a, 404 a, 408 a, 405 S, and 406 a). Juana Gaitan seems to have intended to dedicate two posthumous works of her husband's to the Duque de Pastrana. These works do not appear, however, to have been published. " This was sworn to by Costanza de Ovando, by her mother Andrea, and by Isabel de Saavedra (P6rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 515, 519, and 521 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 403 a, 404 a, and 404 6). REBUTTING EVIDENCE IBl it was testified, called merely on business.' The accusations concerning him and Isabel de Saavedra were denied on oath by the latter, and her denials '• '■ were borne out by both her aunts and by her cousin s s Costanza.2 Neither Cervantes nor Mendez was 1 I ' Costanza de Ovando deposed ' que el dicho Simon Mendez alguna vez ha ido a visitar a Miguel de Cervantes, tic de esta confesante, per tratar de negocios ' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 515 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 402 6). The evidence of Costanza's mother on this point is given in the last paragraph of n. 2 below. '^ Isabel de Saavedra replied as follows to questions concerning her relations with Mendez : ' Preguntada si esta confesante conoce a Simon Mendez, portugues, y de que le conoce, dixo que le conoce porque es amigo del dicho su padre e porque iba a tratar y comunicar sus negocios con el. ' Preguntada si esta confesante ha tenido particular trato y amistad con el dicho Simon Mendez, y le ha regalado y servido, dixo que lo niega, porque nunca con tal respeto entr6 en casa del dicho su padre, ni tal ha sabido ni entendido.' Eespecting this declaration (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 520-2 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 404 o, &), it may be observed that, after transcribing it, the notary mechanically added the usual formula — ' and she signed her name to it ' {y lo firmd de su nomhre). He assumed, not unnaturally, that Cervantes's daughter would be able to write. However, as we know, she had been reared in a humble station, and apparently had not learnt to write. Accord- ingly, the notary corrected his previous statement with the supple- mentary words— 'and then she said that she did not know how to sign, and she did not sign ' {y luego dixo que no sabiafirmar e no firmS). Isabel's cousin, Costanza, testified as follows: 'Preguntada si el dicho Simon Mendez es verdad que entra de visita en el quarto donde esta confesante vive, por particular amistad que tiene con dona Isabel de Saavedra, su prima, dixo que no sabe que entre mas de a ver al dicho su tio, ni con otra manera da visita.' Dona Andrea said much the same in further detail : ' Preguntada si en el quarto de est?, con- fesante es continue de visita ordinaria Simon Mendez, portugues, por trato que tiene con dona Isabel de Saavedra, su sobrina, dixo quo Simon Mendez, de quien se le pregunta, algunas veces ha visitado a Miguel de Cervantes, su hermano, sobre ciertas fianzas, dijo que le ha pedido que vaya a hacer al Reyno de Toledo para las rentas que k2 132 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES called by the Alcalde.' It became obvious that there was no legal case against the prisoners, but Villarroel was not sufficiently convinced of their innocence to undertake the sole responsibility of discharging them. He called in his colleagues, and, on July 1, the four Alcaldes of Valladolid sitting in banco decided to release those in custody ; but that further proceedings were contemplated appears from the fact that the Alcaldes at the same time appointed a legal adviser to act for three of the female prisoners who were under age.^ The prisoners were let out of jail, but under humiliating conditions, varying in individual cases. Cervantes came off best : he was released on his own recognizance. So were Miranda and Mariana Eamirez, but they were condemned to pay six ducados for expenses, besides being again for- bidden to communicate with one another ; and to en- sure compliance Miranda was ordered to wind up his ha tornado e que por otro titulo ninguno no ha entrado ' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 515 and 518; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, pp. 402 6 and 403 6). ' Mendez was not called during the whole course of the inquiry. Cervantes was examined before Ezpeleta's death, and spoke to helping him upstairs. There was nothing to prevent his being called again, as were other witnesses in the case. As he was not recalled, we may presume that Villarroel did not think he could throw any light on the matter. ^ The names of the four Alcaldes appear in the following order on the official record : Melchor de Tebes, Cristobal de Villarroel, Alonso de Otalora, and Pedro Manso. The minors were Isabel de Saavedra, Catalina de Aguilera, and Luisa de Argomedo Ayala : Geronimo de la Cueva was appointed to protect their interests (P^rez Pastor, Dow mentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 531 ; M4inez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 407 6). EELEASED ON BAIL 133 affairs and leave Valladolid within a fortnight. The women were let out on bail, but were placed under arrest in their house. Simon Mendez was likewise released on bail, but the Court forbade him to enter the house in the Calle del Eastro, and further forbade him to have any communication whatever with Isabel de Saavedra.^ Mendez was not informed of this decision till July 8,^ but it is possible that the rest were released before this date, for on July 6 the women concerned petitioned through their attorney that the order forbidding them to leave their houses should be rescinded. ^ The official record of the case, which has an air of incompleteness, as though it had been carelessly drawn up or tampered with, ends with a petition from Andrea de Cervantes ' The decision of the Court (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. 11, pp. 531-2 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 407 a, V) reads thus: ' Simon Mendez no entre en esta casa, ni hable en publico ni en secreto con esta muger [Isabel de Saavedra], y don Diego de Miranda dentro de quince dias se despache y saiga de esta corte y no se junte en publico ni en secreto el ni dona Mariana Eamirez, pena de ser castigados por amancebados, y dexen los dichos don Diego y dona Mariana seis ducados para pobres y gastos; y dona Andrea y doiSa Juana y las demas sueltenlas en fiado, su casa por carcel, y Miguel de Cervantes en fiado.' " The sentence was communicated to him by Juan Lopez de Carranza (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 532 ; Mainez, Cetrantes y su dpoea, p. 407 6). ' Geronimo de la Cueva appears for Maria de Argomedo Ayala, Luisa de Argomedo Ayala, Andrea de Cervantes, Costanza de Figueroa (or Ovando), Juana Gaitan, Catalina de Aguilera, Isabel de Saavedra, and Mariana Ramirez (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 532-3 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 407 6). It will be observed that the name of Magdalena de Cervantes (or Sotomayor) does not appear. She, like Cervantes, was not called at the last stage of the inquiry, and presumably nothing could be alleged against her. 134 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES begging that she and the other female prisoners be no longer kept indoors/ and this petition is followed by a request from Cervantes that some one be sent to take away certain clothes of Ezpeleta's which had been left in his charge.^ On July 9 Cervantes obtained a receipt for these things from an agent ^ acting on behalf of the Marques de Palces,* and, w^ith their removal, the incident closed — so far as Cervantes was concerned. It was an unhappy experience for him. Cervantes was, of course, perfectly innocent of any share in Ez- peleta's death ; on that point there can be no doubt. But the unanimous decision of the four Alcaldes left his daughter, Isabel de Saavedra, under a cloud. No- thing that is known of her — of her subsequent conduct ^ ' Dona Andrea de Cervantes eon las demas presas en la casa por carcel en razon de la muerte de don Caspar de Ezpeleta, suplica a V. S. las mande dar libres, pues se sabe que no tienen culpa ; y hasta agora ban estado sin tenella ; y para ello, &.' (Perez Pastor, Boeu- mentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 533 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su (poca, p. 407 6). " ' Miguel de Cervantes suplica a V. S. mande que vayan por unas calzas y un jubon y una ropilla, que tiene en su poder, de don Gaspar de Ezpeleta, porque se pudre con la sangre que tiene, y que para ello, &.' (P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 533 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su epoca, p. 407 6). It is to be noted that Cervantes's request is signed by his sister Andrea. ' The clothes were handed over to Juan de Sotomayor (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 537 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 408 6). * On July 7, Falces empowered Juan de Sotomayor to act for him in the inquiry into Ezpeleta's death, and in matters relating to the ad- ministration of Ezpeleta's estate. We hear no more of the case after July 17, 1605, when Sotomayor signed a receipt for two rings, two purses, a rosary, three keys, a pair of gloves, and a pair of cuffs which had been left in the charge of the alguacil Diego Garcia. THE MENDEZ INCIDENT 135 and of her relations with her father — serves to excite sympathy for her. Unfortunately the Court, in re- flecting unfavourably on Isabel de Saavedra, reflected discredit on Cervantes himself, for it implied that he had not been mindful of his daughter's honour. This view does not compel assent. Beyond Isabel de Ayala's uncorroborated testimony, given with all the bias of self-righteousness, there was nothing against Isabel de Saavedra at this time ; there is nothing against Simon Mendez, then or later, except that he ran into debt.^ It may be that Cervantes was too confiding ; it may be that he would have been better advised had he prevented his daughter from seeing even as much as she did of a married man like Mendez.^ But how could he ? Consider his position. He lodged, as a poor man must lodge in a big city, cooped up in a hugger-mugger fashion. Literatiu-e did not enable him to live in decent in- dependence, and he was forced to eke out his income by doing odds and ends of work for business men into whose characters he could not afford to pry too curiously. He did the best he could in the circum- stances by claiming his natural daughter, and by placing her under the same roof as his wife and sisters. It was probably well known in Valladolid that Ezpeleta had seduced the wife of a notary called ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 488, n. 4. 2 Ibid., vol. II, p. 488, n. 4. A joint undertaking, dated at Valladolid on October 20, 1605, shoves that Simon Mendez was married to Isabel Nunez de Fonseca. 136 MIGUEL DE CEEVANTES Galvan, that he had died of wounds inflicted by her husband or one of her relatives,^ and that Villarroel, obstinately refusing to follow up the true scent, had persisted in harrying a group of poor people who were perfectly innocent. As Cervantes and his family were released on bail we may assume that they continued to reside in Valladolid. While in that city he received the anonymous sonnet abusing Bon Quixote, for which his niece Costanza was simple enough to pay the postage fee.^ His sisters, Andrea and Magdalena, were there on November 7, 1605, on which date they signed a power of attorney authorizing Antonio de Avila, a member of the Council of War in Flanders, to take steps to collect on their behalf such arrears of pay as might be due to their brother Eodrigo, who had been kUled at Nieuport in 1600.^ But of Cervantes personally ^ See the evidence of Ezpeleta's servant, Francisco Camporredondo, given at Valladolid on June 27, 1605 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 465-7 ; Mainez, Cervantes y su ipoca, p. 392 a, h) . ' The reference occurs in the Adjunta to the Viage del Pamaso. ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 267-9 : ' Sepan quantos esta carta de poder vieren como nos dona Andrea de Zer- bantes y dona Madalena de Sotomayor, hermanas de el alferez Rodrigo de (j!erbantes, y como sus herederas, ambas a dos juntamente otorgamos y conocemos por esta presente carta que damos y otorgamos todo nuestro poder cumplido quan bastante de derecho se requiere y es necesario al senor gouernador Antonio de Auila, del Consejo de Guerra de Su Magestad, ressidente en los estados de Flandes, con poder de sostituir en la persona o personas que le pareciere y por bien tuviere, especialmente para que por nosotras y en nuestro nombre y como nosotras mismas pueda presentar y presente ante Su Alteza del Serenissimo Archiduque Alberto y ante los juezes y ministros de su Consejo de guerra, y ante quien y con derecho pueda y deba una cedula de Su Magestad dirigida al dicho senor Archiduque para que se A BLANK PERIOD 137 there is no trace during the latter part of 1606 and during I6O6.1 In 1606 the Court returned to Madrid : averigue y sepa que cantidad de maravedis se le quedaron debiendo al dicho alferez Rodrigo de Zerbantes, nuestro hermano, de su sueldo de el tiempo que sirvid a Su Magestad en los dichos estados de Flandes, y en razon desto se fenezcan las quentas con el dicho alferez, y de lo que alcanzare se de certificacion y testimonio segun parece de la dicha cedula, su fecha en la ciudad de Burgos a seis del mes de Agosto passado deste presente ano, refrendada de Andres de Prada, secretario de Su Magestad, y firmada de su real mano, y en razon de lo susodicho pueda hazer y haga qualesquier pedimientos y presentaciones que convengan y sean necessarios, y en nuestro nombre, siendo necessario, pueda nombrar contador y persona que haga la dicha quenta, a la qual desde luego habemos por nombrado, y pida se le haga y fenezca la dicha quenta, y hecha y fenecida pida se le den las certifica- ciones y testimonios que convengan para que con ellos se pueda pedir y cobrar la cantidad de maravedis que pareciere debersenos como tales herederas del dicho alferez Rodrigo de ^erbantes. . . .' ^ There is no solid ground for attributing to Cervantes the descrip- tion of the festivities held to celebrate the birth of the future Philip IV [Belacion de lo sucedido en la ciudad de Valladolid, desde el punto delfelicisimo nadmiento del Principe don Felipe Dominico Victor, nuestro Senor, hasta que se acaharon las demostraciones de alegria que por el se hizieron, Valladolid, 1605). The author of this record seems to have been the historian Antonio de Herrem (P6rez Pastor, Docu- mentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 413-18). Gayangos identiiied {Remsta de JEspana, Madrid, 1884, vol. XCVll, p. 498) Cervantes with a gambling namesake at Valladolid who is mentioned by Tome Pinheiro de Vega in 1605 {Memorias de Valladolid, British Museum, Add. MS. 20,812). The passage, as I read it, is as follows : ' Lope Garcia de La Torre conoceis vos, y deixa sua molher muy dama e fermosa 200 o 300 ate de manha e elle vai se deitar, e quando a dama responde, calla y dexadme, no quereis Lope Garcya? Ceruantes, da me aquella palmatoria, veremos si le hago callar, como jugava de lo vuestro, renid, mientras juego lo mio, callad.' Cervantes was not an uncommon name at this period, and Gayangos's identification has not been accepted. For particulars concerning Lope Garcia de la Torre and his wife Juana de Urramendi, see Perez Pastor, Noticias y Documentos relatives d la historia if literatura espanolas published in Memorias de la Heal Aeademia Espanola (Madrid, 1910), vol. X, pp. 103-9). 138 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES whether Cervantes went there at the same time we have no means of knowing. He had not the means to move his family when and where he chose. After, as before, the publication of Don Quixote, he was in low water. It is on record that, at some date between January 1605 and November 23, 1607, he borrowed 450 redes from his publisher Kobles.^ It does not follow that Cervantes was residing in Madrid at the time he obtained this loan (whenever that was). The fact is that we hear nothing of him from the summer of 1605 tUl the summer of 1608. Then he comes into view again at Madrid, where we also find his natural daughter, Isabel de Saavedra, whose con- duct had been discussed during the Ezpeleta inquiry at Valladolid in 1605. X She had had a larger experience of the world during the intervening three years. When we meet her again she is independent, no longer living with her father. It would appear that on June 24, 1608, she began her tenancy of a house in the Calle de la Montera, situated in the Eed de San Luis ; for this house she paid in advance an annual rent of fifty- ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 145. When Fran- cisco de Robles married his second wife, an inventory of his belongings was drawn up (Madrid, November 23, 1607). Perez Pastor gives the following items innMemoria delo que me deben d mi Francisco de Eobles : ' Miguel de Cerbantes, por cedula de dineros prestados, quatrocientos y cinquenta reales IB 450 Juan de la Cuesta, impresor de libros, como principal, y Maria Rodriguez de Rivalde, como su fiadora, de resto de obligacion de mayor suma 3 IB 661' A MARRIAGE CONTRACT 139 three ducados, or rather, on August 11, 1608, she obtained a receipt ^ for that amount from an elderly man of affairs called Juan de Urbina, who professed to be acting on behalf of a certain Captain Sebastian Granero, an elusive personage.^ Whether Cervantes's daughter really paid any rent to Urbina may be doubted. A doubt is suggested by the terms of an agreement signed on August 28, 1608 : the contract- ing parties were, on the one side, Urbina and Cer- vantes ; on the other, one Luis de Molina y Castilla, a native of Cuenca. The main provisions of the deed, which was signed by these three, and by Isabel de Saavedra,^ may be summarized as follows*: (1) Isabel de Saavedra (described as widow of ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 276-7. ' En la villa de Madrid a onze dias del mes de Agosto de mill e seiscientos y echo afios, ante mi el escribano de Su Magestad e testigos, el senor Juan de Urbina, . . . residente en esta corte, y en nombre del capitan Sebastian Granero, por virtud del poder que del tiene para cobrar y otras eosas ante mi el escribano, y otorgo que rescibe de Dona Isabel de Saavedra, residente en esta corte, cinquenta y tres ducados en reales que le paga del arrendamiento de la casa que tiene el dicho capitan a la Bed de San Luis, que le tiene arrendada por un ano, que comenz(5 el dia de San Juan de Junio pasado deste presente ano de mil y seiscientos y ocho y se cumplira el dia de San Juan de Junio que verna de mil y seiscientos y nueve anos, los quales dichos cinquenta y tres ducados le ha pagado. . . .' ' Granero seems to have been a man of straw : he and Juan de Acedo Velazquez were employed by Urbina as figureheads — ' auxiliares de su devocion'— in various enterprises (Ibid., vol. II, pp. 437-8). ^ It will be noted that in a receipt of 1608 (p. 144 n.) Cervantes's daughter appears as Isabel de Saavedra : in the marriage contract she appears as Isabel de Cerbantes y Saavedra, as Isabel de Cer- vantes, and as Isabel Sanz. The signature appended to the latter document reads ' Dona Isabel de Cerbantes Saavedra '- * This contract seems to have been known as far back as 1853. 140 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Diego Sanz and ' legitimate daughter ' of Cervantes) was to receive two thousand ducados as her dowry on her marriage with Luis de Mohna. Thanks to Sr. Travadillo (who found it), to Sr. Crespo, and to Jose Maria Sbarbi, it was published as follows in the Revista de Archivos, Bihliotecas y Museos (Madrid, June 15, 1874), pp. 162-5. ' En la villa de Madrid a veinte y ocho dias del mes de Agosto de mil seiseientos e ocho anos, ante mi el escrivano publico y testigos de yuso escriptos parecieron presentes loa seiiores Juan de Urbina secre- tario de los serenisimos Sres. Principes de Saboya y Miguel de Cerbantes Saavedra residente en esta corte de la una parte y de la otra Luis de Molina vecino de la ciudad de Cuenca, residente asi mismo en esta corte, y ambas las dichas partes dijeron : que por cuanto mediante la gracia y bendicion de Dios nuestro Senor esta tratado e contratado que el dicho Luis de Molina se haya de casar y velar en faz eclesise como lo manda el santo concilio de Trento con la Sra. D^. Isabel de Cerbantes y Saavedra, viuda, muger que fue de D. Diego Sanz, hija legitima de dicho Sr. Miguel de Cervantes y que para ayuda a sustentar las cargas del' matrimonio se le hayan de dar dos mil ducados que valen setecientos y cincuenta mil marav. pagados a los plazos que iran dichos y declarados y sobre ellos, entre ellos hacen y otorgan el asiento y capitulacion siguiente en esta manera : — Primeramente el dho. Luis de Molina se obliga que dentro de un mes primero siguiente que corre y se cuenta desde hoy dia de la fecha desta carta en adelante se casard y velara con la dicha senora D*. Isabel de Cervantes por palabra de presente tales que hagan verdadero matrimo- nio, donde no, que le puedan compelery apremiar a ello por todo rigor de derecho y demds de lo pagar ha de pena mil ducados aplicados para la dote de la dicha D". Isabel, la cual pena pagada, 6 no, 6 graciosa- mente remitida siempre ha de ser obligado yse obliga a casarsey velarse dentro del dicho tiempo con la dicha senora D*. Isabel. — Item los dichos Sres. Juan de Urbina y Miguel de Cerbantes prometen en dote y casamiento al dicho Luisde Molina con la dicha Sra. D." Isabel los dichos dos mil ducados los cuales se obligan con sus personas y bienes e raices habidos 6 por haber ambos a dos juntamente de mancomun a voz de uno, 4 cada uno de ellos por si e insolidum por el todo renun- ciando como renunciaron la ley de duobus res devendi y el autentica presente hoc ita de fidejusoribus, y la epistola del divo Adriano, y las leyes de la escusion y division como en ella se contiene de los dar y pagar y que los daran y pagaran al dicho Luis de Molina 6 a quien su poder oviere dentro de tres aiios primeros siguientes que corren y se LUIS DE MOLINA 141 (2) Molina undertook to marry Isabel de Saavedra within a month of August 28, 1608 ; faiUng this, he was to pay a thousand ducados towards her dowry, cuentan desde hoy dia de la fecha de esta carta en adelante y so acabardn en veinte y nueve de Agosto del ano que viene de mil seiscientos y once Uanamente en reales de plata, y no en otra moneda, puestos en esta corte en su poder a costa y mision de los dichos senores Juan de Urbina y Miguel de Cervantes, y para la seguridad de los otros mil [g de los dos mil ?] ducados el dicho Juan de Urbina obliga e hipoteca por especial y espresa hipoteca no derogando a la general, unas casas que tiene suyas propias en la calle del Prado de esta villa que tienen por linderos de la una parte con casas de D. Juan Alonso comprador de la Reina nuestra seiiora y de la otra con casas de Juan del Castillo, sastre, y ansi mismo obliga e hipoteca una heredad que comprd de Alonso Nunez de Larabras en el arroyo de Brenigal, en la cual esta labrando una casa y huerta, y tiene labrado un estanque, para no los poder vender ni traspasar a persona alguna hasta tanto quel dicho Luis de Molina este pagado enteramente de los dichos dos mil ducados y la venta que de otra mauera hiciere sea ninguna de ningun valor ni efecto, e ansi mismo oblig6 e hipotecd dos molinos que tiene en la villa de Tembleque para que esten obligados a la seguridad de los dichos dos mil ducados, las cuales dichas casas, heredades 6 molinos estan libres de censo alguno escepto la dicha heredad que tiene trescientos ducados de principal de que se paga censo al dicho Alonso Nunez de Larabras y las dichas casas que tienen cuatro reales de censo perpetuo. Item el dicho Luis de Molina se oblig6 que cada y cuando que recibiese el dicho dote, a todo lo demas que se diere demas de los dichos dos mil ducados dara carta de page de ellos y hara escritura de dote en forma con los requisites necesarios ; y porque la dicha seiiora D.* Isabel Sanz del primer matrimonio tiene una nina que se llama Isabel Sanz de edad de ocho meses poco mas 6 menos, la cual tiene una casa en esta dicha villa en la Red de San Luis que tiene por linderos casas de Juan Garcia : es condicion que la dicha casa la haya de vivir la dicha senora D^ Isabel su madre y el dicho Luis de Molina todo el tiempo que la dicha nina no tubiere estado sin que por ello pague cosa alguna, y si la nina faltare antes de tomar estado lo hayan de gozar todo el tiempo que la dicha D*. Isabel su madre viviese, y si la dicha senora D». Isabel faltase aunque deje hijos deste matrimonio ha de gozar las dichas casas el dicho Miguel de Cerbantes su abuelo, padre de la dicha D». Isabel y despues de sus dias han 142 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES and was to be held to his engagement, notwith- standing the payment of the said thousand ducados. de quedar las dichas casas para quien el dicho Miguel de Cerbantes quisiere, y porque la dicha casa tiene de censo quinientos ducados al quitar por las cuales se pagan de censo en cada ano treinta y cinco ducados ; los dichos senores Juan de Urbina y Miguel de Cerbantes juntos de mancomun debajo de la dicha mancomunidad e escursion se obligan de pagar el dicho censo y el perpetuo que tienen d quien lo hubiere de haber, todo el tiempo que el dicho Luis de Molina viviere en las dichas casas porque la dicha vivienda se la ban de dejar libre sin que por ella pague cosa alguna. Y porque este dote que se da a la dicha senora D*. Isabel con el dicho Luis de Molina el dicho Sr. Juan de Urbina le da por algunas causas que a ello le mueven. Es condicion que si el dicho Luis de Molina hubiese hijos deste matrimonio no haya de entrar ni entre la dicha Isabel menor con particion 6 division, con los herederos del dicho Luis de Molina y no teniendo hijos ha de ser heredera la dicha D*. Isabel menor. Y la dicha Sra. D*. Isabel que estuvo presente al otorgamiento desta escritura se oblig6 de casarse y velarse con el dicho Luis de Molina dentro del dicho tiempo del dicho un mes, donde no, que si se saliere fuera pagard el dicho Luis de Molina los dichos mil ducados, demas de que lo puedan compeler e apremiar a ello por todo rigor de derecho. Todo lo cual contenido en esta dicha escritura todos los susodichos se obligaron en forma de lo guardar y cumplir e por esta carta dieron poder cumplido a todas e cualesquier justicias 6 juez de S. M. de cualesquiera parte ylugares que scan a cuya jurisdiccion se sometieron y renunciaron su propio fuero, y privilegio y la ley si convenerit, para que ansi se lo hagan cumplir como si fuese sentencia definitiva de juez competente, pasado en cosa juzgada e por ellos consentida : renunciaron cualesquier leyes que sean en su favor que non les valan en juicio ni fuera del, y la ley de derecho que dice que general renunciacion de leyes fecha non vala. Y la dicha senora D*. Isabel renuncio las leyes y privilegios de los Emperadores Senatus consultus Justiniano y el auxilio del Veleyano y leyes de Toro y nueva constitucion, que hablan en favor de las mujeres de cuyas fuerzas fu6 avisada por mi el presente Escribanoy lo otorgaron ansi ante mi el dicho Escribano y lo firmaron de sus nombres en el registro, a los cuales doy fe que conozco siendo testigos el doctor Baltasar Carrillo e Juan de Acevedo Velazquez y Cristobal del Castillo de Inojosa estantes en esta c6rte. Dona Isabel de Cer- bantes Saavedra. — Juan de Urbina. — Miguel de Cerbantes Saavedra. — Luis de Molina.— Pas6 ante mi Luis de Velasco— va testado, aunque PERPLEXING CLAUSES 148 (3) Juan de Urbina and Cervantes made them- selves responsible for the payment, within the next three years (ending August 29, 1611), of the two thousand ducados constituting Isabel de Saavedra's dowry, Urbina mortgaging specific properties for this purpose. (4) With respect to the house occupied by Isabel de Saavedra in the Eed de San Luis — and now described as belonging to her daughter Isabel Sanz, a child about eight months old — it was provided that (a) Isabel de Saavedra and Molina should live in it rent free for so long as Isabel Sanz might remain unmarried, Urbina and Cervantes undertaking to pay rates and ground-rent; (&) if Isabel Sanz died unmarried before her mother, Isabel de Saavedra and Molina were to have the use of the house during Isabel de Saavedra^s hfetime, Urbina and Cervantes undertaking to pay rates and ground-rent ; (c) if Isabel Sanz and Isabel de Saavedra both predeceased Cervantes, the house went to him, even though his daughter should leave issue by her marriage with Molina; and (d) in this case Cervantes was to be free to bequeath the house to whom he chose. (5) After stating that Juan de Urbina pays the dowry for 'certain reasons that move him there- unto ', the contract provided that (a) should Molina have issue by his marriage with Isabel de Saavedra, deje hijos.— E yo Luis de Velasco escribano publico del rey N. S. vecino de Madrid fui presente con los dichos testigos y puse mi signo en testi- monio de verdad.— Luis de Velasco.' lU MIGUEL DE CERVANTES her daughter Isabel Sanz should have no share or part in the property falling to Molina's heirs ; but (b) should Molina's marriage with Isabel de Saavedra be with- out issue, Isabel Sanz should inherit. (6) Isabel de Saavedra undertook to marry Molina within a month of August 28, 1608 ; failing this, she was to pay Molina a thousand ducados, and was to be held to her engagement, notwithstanding the payment of the said thousand ducados. This document is full of puzzles, and perhaps of something worse. It is to be noted that Isabel de Saavedra, who in 1605 was described by her aunt Magdalena at Valladolid as Cervantes's natural daughter, comes forward in 1608 as his legitimate daughter ; it is to be noted that, though unable to write at Valladolid in 1605 she can (apparently) sign a, marriage settlement at Madrid in 1608 1; it will further be noted that she is no longer a spinster, but a widow with a daughter about eight months old. So far, no record of her marriage has been found, and no details are available concerning her ^ When publishing the document on June 15, 1874, D. Vicente Vignau, the editor of the Revista de Archivos, Bibliotecas y Museos, added a note (p. 162) in which he says : ' Este precioso documento fue encon- trado por el relator Sr. Travadillo en la titulacion de unas fincas de esta corte con motivo de un pleito que se vi6 el ano 1853 en esta Audiencia ; en cuyo archive debe existir el original a que se refiere.' In the absence of the original, it might be contended that Cervantes himself added his daughter's name to the marriage deed. As against this, it may be pointed out that Isabel de Saavedra's signature is attached to a povsrer of attorney dated November 17, 1608 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 278-9), and to many documents of later date. ISABEL SANZ 145 first husband, Diego Sanz del Aguila.^ Obviously he cannot well have died before the summer of 1607, if his daughter's age is correctly stated in the deed of settlement ; he may have died later : in either case Isabel de Saavedra's widowhood was short. It is, however, unsafe to base deductions on a document drawn up with the object of concealing inconvenient facts, and this marriage deed is precisely such a document. An examination of its contents provokes embarrassing questions. If, as alleged in the agree- ment, the house in the Eed de San Luis belonged to Isabel Sanz on August 28, 1608, why should her mother pay fifty-three ducados rent for it to Granero (through Urbina) on August 11 ? On the face of it, we might assume that, between August 11 and August 28, Granero had transferred the house to Isabel Sanz. That assumption, however, would be mistaken ; for we happen to know that, despite his pretence to the contrary, Juan de Urbina was the real owner of the house on August 11,^ and the ' The name is given in full — ' Don Diego Sanz del Aguila, mi pri- mero marido ' — in Isabel de Saavedra's last will, dated September 19, 1652 (Perez Pastor, Docwmentos eervantinos, vol. II, p. 338). Perez Pastor searched without result for the marriage certificate of Sanz and Isabel de Saavedra in the archives of the parishes of San Sebastian, San Martin, San Luis, and San Gines ; he searched for the baptismal certificate of their daughter Isabel Sanz in the archives of the two last-named parishes, but without success ; and in these two archives he also failed to find the death certificate of Sanz {Ihid., vol. I, p. 836). It is possible that the marriage took place at Valladolid : the non-appearance of the child's baptismal certificate is less easily explained. ' On January 29, 1608, Granero declared before a notary that the house standing in his name in the Red de San Luis had been bought 1497 II 146 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES transfer— if any transfer ever took place— must have been made by him. Not less perplexing is the appearance of Cervantes as joint security for the payment of a sum of two thousand ducados, not to speak of yearly rates and ground-rent. The two thousand ducados were four times the amount of his ransom, and many times the amount of sums for which he had defaulted and gone to prison. He was as poor as ever : we have seen him, after the publication of Bon Quixote, forced to borrow a few hundred reales from Eobles. How came he to assume obligations which it was impossible for him to meet ? The only answer is that he was sure of their being met by some one else — by Urbina, in fact. This brings us to the most disquieting item in the con- tract : the intervention of a stranger like Urbina in Cervantes's family affairs. Urbina was not a youthful visionary philanthropist. As secretary of the Duke of Savoy, he had experience of affairs ; he was a married man of mature age, a shrewd and enter- prising speculator, not over scrupulous in his methods.^ How are we to explain the action of with Urbina's money, and was Urbina's property : see Perez Pastor, Documentos cenantinos, vol. II, p. 421 n. [item/]. ^ Ibid., vol. II, pp. 430-47. Urbina married Margarita Merula in Italy before he went to Spain towards the end of the sixteenth century. At Madrid he joined the household of the Duke of Savoy in 1604, and two years later his wife and his grandchildren were ordered by the Duke to return to Italy. His wife died in 1616, the same year as Cervantes (Ibid., vol. II, p. 444 n.) ; Urbina himself survived till the end of 1632 or the beginning of 1638 (Ibid., vol. II, p. 427). AN UNSOLVED PUZZLE 147 such a man in giving, for no apparent reason, a very sufficient dowry to Isabel de Saavedra on her hasty marriage with Molina ? No satisfactory explanation has hitherto occurred to any of Cervantes's innumer- able admirers.^ Perhaps some unedifying story is hidden from us. Be that as it may, the bargain was struck, and no time was lost in carrying it out. On September 8, 1608, Isabel de Saavedra and MoHna were solemnly desposados in the presence of Cervantes at the parish church of San Luis in Madrid.^ This desposorio was in fact a marriage,^ but cohabitation was postponed ' Piiez Pastor {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 440-3) assumes that Cervantes and Urbina formed a friendship at Valladolid, and that this was intimate enough to lead Urbina to provide a dowry for his friend's daughter : ' Suponemos que el secretario Juan de Urbina conoceria en Valladolid a Cervantes y a su familia, fundandonos en que no se establece de repente una amistad, especialmente si lleva consigo dispendios y sacrificios, como fueron los que Urbina hizo en 1608, siendo fiador de 2,000 ducados para la dote de Dona Isabel de Saavedra, dejandola en usufructo la casa de la Red de San Luis y relevando al matrimonio del pago del censo de la dicha casa, para lo cual se ofrecid como flador Juan de Acedo Velazquez, intimo amigo de Urbina.' The con- jecture may be correct. Still, documents referring to Urbina {Ibid., vol. II, p. 432 n.) prove that he resided at Madrid in 1605-8, and hence his visits to Valladolid would probably have been too few and brief to allow of his forming an intimate friendship with Cervantes at this time. " Ibid., vol. I, p. 146: 'En ocho de Septiembre del dicho ano (1608) yo, el licenciado Francisco Ramos, despose in facie eclesise a Luis de Molina con dona Isabel de Saavedra por mandamiento. Testigo el doctor Carrillo, medico, y Pedro Diaz de Paredes y Miguel de ^erbantes.— El licenciado Ramos.' ' In a document of November 17, 1608, Isabel de Saavedra refers to Molina as ' su marido ' (Ibid., vol. II, p. 278) ; in a document of December 5, 1608 (Ibid., vol. I, p. 147), Luis de Molina says : ' . . . yo soy desposado por palabras de presente que hazen legitimo y verdadero L 2 148 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES till the more formal ceremony took place,^ and till Urbina had another opportunity of displaying his benevolence. Meanwhile, the bride showed that her confidence in Molina was not excessive. He was no novice in affairs ; for, after his release from slavery at Algiers in 1698,2 ^e had found employ- ment with the firm of Carlos and Antonio Maria Trata (or Strata), two Genoese money-changers and bankers established in Madrid.^ Soon after her betrothal, Cervantes's daughter resolved to sue * her mother's executor for sums which, aS she alleged, he was withholding from her. The most natural course would have been for her to profit by MoHna's ex- perience, and place her case in his hands. It may be that she knew him too well and mistrusted his business capacity. At any rate she passed him by,' matrimonio con mi esposa dona Isabel de Qerbantes y Saabedra, muger que primero fue de Diego Sanz, hija legitima de Miguel de 9erbantes. . . .' It -will be observed that, for the sake of appearances, Molina represents his wife as being of legitimate birth. ^ This appears from a statement of Molina's in the document of December 5 last mentioned (P^rez Pastor, Documentos ceroantinos, vol. I, p. 147) : ' . . . y porque yo me entiendo de velar con la dicha mi esposa en haz de la sancta madre yglesia, y consumarle su matrimonio. . . .' " Concerning Molina's ransom, see the dbligaciones (April 2 and 3, 1598) of the Mercenarians printed by Perez Pastor, with comments {Ibid., vol. I, pp. 123-30, 278-80). " Ibid., vol. II, pp. 272-5, 418-20. * Her cousin Costanza was likewise engaged in litigation at about this date. She obtained a writ of execution for 1,100 reales against a certain Francisco Leal : Leal paid her this sum on December 18, 1608 {Ibid., vol. II, pp. 280-1). ^ It is right to add that, as appears from the document quoted in the next note, she had obtained Molina's permission to nominate her aunt on October 29. JUAN DE URBINA 149 and on November 17 empowered her aunt Magdalena to act for her in this suit (as well as in other suits not specified).^ Urbina now came forward again as a benefactor, and gallantly provided a trousseau. We can still trace the course of his beneficence. On September 3, 1608, he undertook to pay before Christmas 1,800 reales which he owed to a Madrid tradesman from whom he had bought a quantity of materials suitable for women's dresses/ Most, if ^ Ibid., vol. II, pp. 278-9 : ' En la villa de Madrid a diez y siete dias del mes de Noviembre de mil y seiscientos y ocho anos, ante mi el escribano publico e testigos deyuso escriptos, pareci6 presente Dona Isabel de Saavedra, mujer de Luis de Molina, residente en esta corte, y en virtud del poder que tiene del dicbo su marido, que pass6 y se otorgo en esta villa de Madrid ante Luis de Velasco, escribano de Su Magestad, en vente y nueve dias del mes de Otubre passado deste ano, general para cobrar, de que yo el presente escribano doy fee, e usando del dicbo poder dixo y otorgd que daba y did su poder cumplido bastante, el que se requiere y es necesario, a Dona Madalena de Sotomayor, beata de la tercera orden de Senor San Francisco, residente en esta corte, para que per ella y en su nombre pueda haber, rescibir y cobrar todos e qualesquier maravedis que le scan debidos por escripturas, cedulas y en otra qualquier manera, y en especial pueda haber y cobrar de Miguel Hernandez, criado de Su Magestad, para que pueda cobrar de el los maravedis que paresciere deberyteneren su poder comoalbacea de Ana Franca, difunta, madre de la dicha Dona Isabel de Saavedra, y sobre la dicba cobranza pueda parecer en juicio y dar cartas de pago. . . .' " Ibid., vol. II, pp. 434-5 [item 9] : ' Obligaci6n de Juan de Urbina, secretario de los Principes de Saboya, residente en la corte, morador en la calle de las Tres Cruces, de pagar a Juan Trujillo, mercader, 1,800 reales, precio de " 18 varas de gurbion rosa seca, verde y bianco, a 26 reales la vara. 15 varas de tafetdn verde. mar, a 9 reales vara. 9| varas de raso negro alto de Valencia, a 27 reales la vara. 7 varas de raso negro de Valencia, entrealto, a 18 reales la vara. 9 varas de terciopelo negro, dos pelos, fondo en raso, a 42 reales la vara. 15 varas de tafetan negro, doblete de Granada, a 8 reales la vara. 150 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES not all, of these materials passed at once into Isabel de Saavedra's possession, and appear transformed in a long inventory of articles which were her con- tribution towards setting up house. ^ Molina was living at Valladolid in 1606 ^ before the Ezpeleta incident had been forgotten. There, or later at Madrid, he must have learned the circumstances of the bride's family. He must have known that Cer- vantes could not provide her with the handsome outfit which she brought with her, and there is no indication that Isabel de Saavedra's first husband, Diego Sanz del Aguila, was a man of means. But Molina did not inquire too curiously : heati possidentes. He had no foolish pride, and on December 5 he signed a receipt ^ for the entire outfit furnished by Urbina and valued at 14,753 reales, being careful to 6 varag de angeo, a 2 reales la vara. 3 varas de bocaci negro, a 4 reales la vara. 13 onzas y 6 adarmes de molinillos negros, a 7 reales onza. 20| onzas de pasamanos de seda fina de colores, a 7 reales onza. 2| varas de tafetan labrado, de color, a 14| reales la vara. 1^ vara de Nantes bianco, & S\ reales la vara." El pago serd para Navidad del presente ano. Testigos : El Dr. Baltasar Carrillo, medico, Francisco Molardo y Felipe Rizoo, criados del otorgante. Madrid, 3 Septiembre, 1608.' 1 Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 147-54. The '18 varas de gurbion rosa seca' bought from Trujillo reappear as ' Item un vestido de gorbion rosa seca, guarnecido, en mil reales ', and so forth (see Cotarelo y Mori, Efemirides cereantinas, p. 229). An examination of the list shows that Urbina did things handsomely. Among the articles are two diamond rings, a ruby ring, gold bracelets, and a silver ewer. These can scarcely have been given by Cervantes, who is more likely to be the donor of the thirty-eighth item on the list : ' Item seis libros de diferentes historias, en cien reales.' ' Ibid., vol. II, p. 418 n. (items 1 and 2). ' Ibid., vol. I, pp. 147-54. ISABEL'S MAREIAGE 151 have it recorded that this was over and above the two thousand ducados already guaranteed^ The path was now smooth. On March 1, 1609, Isabel de Saavedra and Molina were finally married at the parish church of San Luis in Madrid, Cervantes and his wife acting as sponsors.^ It is hard to say what share Cervantes had in these prenuptial manoeuvres, and it would be grotesque for commonplace Pharisees like the rest of us to sit in judgement on him. Yet it is impos- sible to avoid drawing some provisional conclusion from the fragmentary evidence before us. It may be that, though a hero at the post of danger and a master in the field of literature, Cervantes was less intrepid and less masterful in his home. He had lived out of it too long. His experience as a sub- ordinate in the public service had accustomed him to compromises, and to being overruled. The fact ' Ibid., vol. I, p. 153 : ' . . . y es declaracion que los bienea que agora resoibo son demas y aliende de los dos mill ducados que Juan de Urbina e Miguel de Qerbantes me estan obligados a pagar por quenta de la dote de la dicha mi esposa a ciertos plafos por esoritura otorgada ante Luis de Velasco, escribano de su magestad ... la qual ha de quedar y queda en su fuerja y vigor. . . .' "^ Ibid., vol. I, p. 155 : ' En el dicho dia (primero de Marzo de 1609) por decreto de Senoria lUustrisima el Senor Cardenal de Toledo, velle a Luis de Molina con dona Isabel de Saavedra ; padrinos Miguel de Qerbantes y dona Catalina de Salajar. Testigos Pedro Diaz de Paredes y Mateo Aparicio y Juan de Afedo Belazquez y otros, y lo firme. — El Licenciado Ramos.' Juan de Acedo Velazquez was, like Captain Sebastian Granero, one of the agents employed by Urbina in his business transactions. We cannot tell whether Urbina was, or was not, one of the ' otros ' mentioned in the certificate. 152 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES that he was poorer than his wife, and poorer than his daughter, did not tend to strengthen his authority. We are fain to make excuses for him. But, if he be rightly quoted in certain documents (which are available only in the form of an imperfect tran- scription), it must be admitted that Cervantes did more than yield a weak and mute acquiescence to Urbina's plans. Within little more than a year of his daughter's marriage, we shall find Cervantes declaring that the house in the Eed de San Luis had been bought with his money, and that it would revert to him under the conditions set out in the marriage contract. 1 As Cervantes had no money, his state- ment must be interpreted in a non-natural sense. It is all the more inexplicable that he should have made it since he had privately signed a document (produced in court later) in which he acknowledged that the house belonged to Urbina.^ The incident ' See the third document printed by Julio de Sigflenza, under the heading of La Hija de Cervdntes, in La Ilustracidn Espanola y Ameri- cana (8 de Mayo de 1882), ano xxvi, niim. xvil, p. 287 : ' assi mysmo en 27. m."" 610 el Miguel de Cerb.*i=» otorgo scrip.* declarando q.« las dichas cassaa son del — y q.® a de suceder en ellas en pp.* y usufructo despues de la vida de la S — d — ysabel muriendo la manor antes de tomar estado por ser suya y conprada con su din.° y asi lo contiene y tiene por bien.' " See the fifth document printed by Julio de Siguenza (Ibid., 8 de Mayo de 1882), ano xxvi, num. xvii, p. 287. The words in [ ] are con- jectural, being attempts to supply what is obviously missing. Illegible passages are indicated by the suspensive points ... as in Siguenza's transcription. ' Ju." de Urbina = con luis de molina y su mug."^ d." Ysavel de saavedra y Cerbantes. R.<"^ El 1.*° Florez = Manuel m.' en nombre de Joan de urbina secretario del serenisimo Principe gran prior de s.° Joan. Pongo demanda 6. dona ysabel de saabedra y cerbantes y a luis CONTEADICTIONS 153 is regrettable, Cervantes was lost in the atmosphere of deceit and trickery which involved his daughter, de tnolina su marido. Vecinos de esta villa, y haciendo Relacion del caso digo que tiniendo mi parte unas casas suyas propias en la calle de la Red de san Luis que tienen por linderos casas de Joan Garces al tiempo y cuando se capitulo el casamiento entre los dichos luis de luolina y su muger fu6 pacto y condicion que las dichas casas las biviesen los suso dichos mi^ntras no tomase estado Dona ysabel sanz hija de la dha. dona ysabel de saabedra y en tomandole avia de ser para la dha. nina y en caso que faltase antes de tomar estado fue condicion que ubiese de gozar las dhas. casas por su bida la dha. dona ysabel de Saavedra y que falleciendo ella aunque dejase hijos del dho. matrimonio uviese de gozar las dichas [casas Miguel] de cerbantes padre de la dha. dona [ysabel de sajabedra y despues de sus dias queda[rian dichas] casas a quien el dho. miguel de cer[bantes] . . . y aunque el lo literal de la es[criptura] esto ansi el intento y trato fue que . . . dha. dona ysabel sanz muriese sin ... la propriedad de las dhas. casas uviese . . . de mi p.*« de tal manera que la dha. [dona ysa]bel de saabedra tuviese la abita[cion por sus] dias faltando ella aunque dejase . . . diese la dicha casa a. mi parte . . . aunque por algunos Respectos no se hizo mencion en la escritura de capitulacion el dho. Miguel de Cerbantes otorgo escriptura de declaracion en favor de mi p.*» en la conformidad Referida que es esta que presento con el Juramento necesario juntamente con la capitulacion otorgada en Racon del dho. casamiento y por aver muerto la dha. dona ysabel sanz sin tomar estado a llegado el caso por donde pertenece a mi p.*« la dha. casa en propiedad y atento a que la dha. dona ysabel de saavedra se jacta de que la dha. casa es suya en propiedad y de que no tiene obligacion a restituirla a mi p.° = Pido y supp."" a Vmd. declare pertenecer en propiedad la dha. casa al dho. secretario Joan de urbina mi parte y la dha. dona ysabel solo tener derecho pava abitarla por su bida y estar obligada a restituirsela por su muerte sus herederos al dho. Juan de urbina y los suyos sobre que pido Just.* y costas y para ello etc. y juro esta demanda en forma. . . .' The passage concerning Cervantes's acknowledgement that the house really belonged to Urbina is, it will be observed, categorical : ' aunque por algunos Respectos no se hizo mencion en la escritura de capitulacion el dho. Miguel de Cerbantes otorgo escriptura de declara- cion en favor de mi p.*« en la conformidad Referida que es esta que presento con el Juramento necesario.' The approximate date of Urbina's petition can be fixed by the auto 154 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES her husband, and their benefactor. Nor were his troubles only of the domestic kind. Shortly before his daughter's marriage he had a disagreeable reminder that the Treasury had not forgotten him. On November 6, 1608, he and his surety Suarez Gasco were summoned to appear before the Ex- chequer authorities within ten days. There was evidently some delay, for Cervantes did not acknow- ledge service of the writ till November 24.^ What happened subsequently is unknown. For thirteen years the Treasury had continued to press its claim against Cervantes : we hear no more of it after 1608, which follows : 'Que se de traslado a la otra p.*" y el contenido en esta pre.* jure y declare como se pide y nombre procurador conocido con quien sigan los autos con senalamiento de estrados El alcalde don Sebastian de carabaxal lo mA° en m.* d treinta y uno de hen." de seisc.°8 y v.*' e dos anos = Hordonez.' Urbina's petition, then, was presented on or before January 31, 1622, by Manuel Martinez, who produced Cervantes's written declara- tion as part of his case. ' Mdinez, Cervantes y su e'poca, p. 515 ; Navarrete, Vida, p. 440 : ' En Madrid, a seis de Noviembre de 1608 se dio auto contra el dicho Miguel de Cervantes y D. Francisco Suarez Gasco, residente en esta corte, y veoino de Tarancon, como su fiador, con termino de 10 dias [y pena de 10 ducados y 50 ducados a buena cuenta]. ' En 24 del dicho mes y ano se notified al dicho Miguel de Cervantes, y respondio que le oia ; y el dicho auto y un pliego respondido [por los libros de relaciones, por donde consta que el dicho D. Francisco Suarez, es su fiador en cantidad de 4 mil ducados,] estan en el libro de autos de particulares de esta Contaduria.' Navarrete (who omits the words given in [ ] above) conjectures {Ibid., p. 440) that Cervantes either gave a satisfactory explanation, or paid the balance (if there was any balance) against him. His reason for thinking so is that we hear no more of the matter. He notes, however, that we have not all the documents before us. This is so : the Lihro de autos de particulares and the Manual de los libros de cargos y otras resuUas are both missing. JOINS A CONFEATERNITY 155 the year that Urbina came into his life. Whether there is any connexion between the two things is a matter of curious conjecture. In 1609 Cervantes was lodging in the Oalle de la Magdalena with his wife, his sisters, and his niecp ISS^za. As already stated, his wife was present at the final marriage of Isabel de Saavedra and Molina, though not at their desposorio. A childless woman, she had no easy part to play by her husband's natural daughter, but she seems to have done her duty, and rather more than her duty, by that unsympathetic person. For many years, while Cer- vantes was engaged as commissary in Andalusia, he and Dona Catalina had necessarily seen little of one another. Now, towards the end of their married life, religion seems to have drawn them somewhat closer together. On April 17, 1609, Cervantes joined the newly-founded Confraternity of Slaves of the Most Blessed Sacrament. ^ On June 8, following the example set them the year before by Magdalena de Cervantes,^ ' There appear (Navarrete, Vida, pp. 476-80) to have been two confraternities of ' indignos esclavos del Santisimo Sacramento ' : one which met in the Oratorio del Caballero de Gracia, and another which met in the Calle del Olivar. The latter, to which Cervantes belonged, was founded on November 28, 1608, by the Barefooted Trinitarian Fray Alonso de la Purificacion and Antonio Robles y Guzman, a devout layman attached to Philip Ill's court. Navarrete gives (p. 479) the following contemporary record of Cervantes's admission to the con- fraternity : 'Recibiose en esta santa hermandad por esclavo del Santisimo Sacramento a Miguel de Cervantes, y dijo que guardaria sus santas constituciones, y lo firm6 en Madrid a 17 de abril de 1609. = Esclavo del Santisimo Sacramento : Miguel de Cervantes.' " That Magdalena had already received the habit is shown by 156 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Cervantes's wife and his sister Andrea received the habit of the Third Order of Saint Francis.^ In the record of her admission as a Tertiary, Andrea is described as ' widow of General Alvaro Mendano ', and this description would imply that she had married again since June 30, 1605, when she declared on oath before Villarroel at Valladolid that she was the widow of a Florentine named Sante Ambrosio.^ a phrase in Isabel de Saavedra's power of attorney (November 17, 1608) : 'Doiia Madalena de Sotomayor, beata de la tercera orden de Senor San Francisco.' See Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 278. ' See Juan Antonio Pellicer, Vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra in El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha (Madrid, 1797-8), vol. I, p. ccxiii : ' D. Pedro Lopez Adan, presbitero, Voto perpetuo, y Archivero de la Venerable Orden Tercera de Penitencia de la regular observancia de N. S. P. S. Francisco de esta villa de Madrid : certifico que en uno de los libros, en los que se escriben las personas de uno y otro sex3 que reciben el habito y profesan en la V. Orden de esta Corte, que die principio en 1. de junio de 1608. anos, y finaliz6 en 27. de diciembre de 1616. en el folio 4. vuelto, y entre las que recibieron el habito en 8. de junio de 1609. por mano del R. P. Fr. Diego Ordonez, provincial, se hallan las dos partidas siguientes, senaladas con los numeros 72. y 73. ' Num. 72 : D*. Andrea de Cervantes, viuda del General Alvaro Mendano : vive en la calle de la Magdalena, a las espaldas de la duquesa de Pastrana. ' Num. 73 : D*. Catalina de Salazar Vozmediano, muger de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra : vive en la mesma casa de la de arriba : ya vive a las espaldas de Elorito.' ' P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 517 : ' En el dicho dia e mes e ano [treinta dias del mes de Junio de mil e seiscientos e cinco anos] el dicho senor Alcalde mando parecer ante si a dona Andrea de Cervantes, presa, y de ella recibio juramento en forma de derecho, y se le pregunt6 lo siguiente : 'Preguntada o6mo se llama y que edad y estado tiene, dixo que se llama dona Andrea de Cervantes, viuda, muger que fue de Sante Ambrosio, florentin, y que antes fue desposada y concertada con Niculas de Ovando, y es de edad de cinquenta anos.' DEATH OF ANDEEA 157 Eesearch has revealed no trace of any Spanish general called Alvaro Mendaiio.^ If Andrea was responsible for the entry, it may perhaps be regarded as the last of her mystifications. Her course was run : on October 9, 1609, she died of fever at Cer- vantes's house in Madrid, and was buried at his expense in the church of Saint Sebastian. ^ The other members of Cervantes's household made ready for the last journey. Magdalena was fully professed in the Third Order of Saint Francis on February 2, 1610.3 Qn June 16 Cervantes's wife ' The nearest approach is Alvaro de Mendana, whose name appears now and then as Mendano ; he cannot, however, have married Andrea after 1605, for he died on October 18, 1595: see Navarrete, Viia, p. 251. * Juan Antonio Pellicer, Vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra in El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la MancJia (Madrid, 1797-8), vol. I, p. ccxv : ' En el Libro de Difuntos [de la parroquia de S. Sebastian de esta Corte], que empieza el ano de 1609. y acaba en elde 1620. fol. 31. se dice: ' En Madrid en nueve diaa del mes de otubre de mil y seiscientos y nueve anos murio de calenturas D*. Andrea de Cerbantes, viuda de Sante Ambrosi, florentin, de hedad de 65. anos. Dexd una hija, y no testo. Recibio los santos sacramentos de mano del licenciado Francisco Lopez, Tiniente de Cura de la dicha iglesia. Enterrola Miguel de Cerbantes, su hermano, que ambos vivian en la calle de la Madalena, frontero de Francisco Daza, maestro de hacer coches. Enterrose en S. Sebastian en orden de dos ducados.' Andrea's age is correctly given here. At Valladolid in 1605 she was nearly sixty-one instead of fifty, as she supposed : see p. 60, n. 3. ' On January 4, 1610, an ofBcial of the Third Order was directed to make inquiries as to 'la vida y costumbres y aprovechamiento que han hecho en el ano de noviciado las personas que han de profesar a dos de Febrero de este ano de mil y seiscientos y diez '. Under the date of January 10, the record continues : ' . . . y propuso el padre ministro a los padres y hermanos como cumplian el ano de noviciado los hermanos y hermanas siguientes : Carlos de Timan, Pedro de Vera, Dona Felipa del Castillo, Dona Isabel Fajardo, doncella, Doiia 158 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES made her will, before makings her ^prefession. By this" will, "apparently made without the knowledge of her husband. Dona Catalina bequeathed ahnost all her property to her brother Francisco de Palacios Salazar, and left Cervantes a life-interest in a-rrne- yard and apiece of land ; both of these were to pass, after Cervantes's death, to his niece Costanza for two years, when they were to go with the rest to Francisco de Palacios Salazar. In addition to this. Dona Catalina bequeathed to Cervantes the bed she died in, with the bedclothes, and such pieces of furniture as were not left to her brother Francisco. The bequest was made ' por el mucho amor y buena compania que ambos hemos tenido'. It may perhaps seem that the wife's reference to her husband is couched in language not much warmer than she uses in speaking of her maid Maria de Ugena, to whom she left certain clothes — ' por el mucho amor que la tengo por el tiempo que me sirvi6 siendo nina'. But we cannot feel sure whether these words are her own or the stock phrases of the notary Baltasar Madalena de Sotomayor, doncella, Doua Francisca Gomez, viuda, Dona Estefania de Idrobo, casada, y que se habia hecho la informacion por el califlcador y se habia hallado ser gente virtuosa y dignos de que se les diese la profesion, y oida y entendida la dicba informacion, votaron y declararon se les diese la profesion el dia de nuestra Senora de la Purificacion venidera.— Luego incontinenti fueron Uamados por el hermano portero y se presentaron ante el perlado, incados de rodillas pidieron la profesion y se les fue concedida declarandoles lo que debian hacer para ella, lo qual fue fecho en diez de Enero de mil seiscientos y diez anos, de que yo el presente iufrascripto notario, que presente estuve a lo arriba referido, doy fe. — JuandelaPena, Secretario.' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 282-4.) HIS WIFE'S WILL 159 de Ugena, possibly a kinsman of the maid's. Perhaps, too, the bequests to Cervantes may be regarded as more or less formal, for it must have occurred to Dona Catalina's advisers, if not to herself, that her husband, who was nineteen years her senior, was unlikely to survive her (as indeed he did not). A bequest of fifty reales yearly to her brother. Pray Antonio de Salazar, for books may be construed as a sign of interest in literature ; it may also be taken as an indication of her attachment to her family — an attachment which she further manifested by leaving directions that she was to be buried in her father's grave at Esquivias.^ We need not pause to discuss ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 156-63. For this long document it may be enough to quote the more important clauses : ' Item mando que quando Dios sea servido de me llevar desta pre- sente vida, mi cuerpo sea Uevado al lugar de Esquivias, jurisdicion de la cibdad de Toledo, y me entierren en la sepoltura de Fernando de Salagar Bosmediano, mi padre, que esta en el coro de la yglesia del dicho lugar junto a la grada del altar mayor de la dicha yglesia, que esta con su losa. . . . ' Item mando a Francisco de Palacios Salagar, mi hermano, vecino del dicho lugar de Esquibias, cinco aranzadas y media de majuelo, que es el majuelo que Uaman de Pedro H[e]rnandes. . . . ' T asimismo mando al susodicho el majuelo del espino que es a Val de la Fuente, su caber quatro aranzadas, jaen, los quales diohos dos majuelos tienen olivos y estos dichos dos majuelos fueron de el dicho Juan de Palacios, mi tio, y se los mando por cumplir su voluntad que tuvo por su testamento, debajo de cuya dispusicion murid, con la propia cargay obligacion que me los mando a mi, que son echo misas rezadas perpetuamente en cada un ano para siempre jamas mientras los tuviere cada posehedor. * Item mando al dicho Francisco de Palacios, mi hermano, el tercio y remanente de quinto que mi madre, Catalina de Palacios, me mando por su testamento, debajo de cuya dispusicion murid, con la carga que me lo mand6 que es una misa voluntavia a Senor San Francisco, 160 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES the provisions of this will, which appears to have been irregular, and was revoked later. Having signed it, y el dicho tercio y quinto es la parte de casa que esta inclusa en la casa del dicho mi hermano en que de presente vive, y mas aranzada y media de majuelo jaen en el majuelo de la Cueva que esta ineluso con el del dicho mi hermano, y mas otra aranzada y media en el Villar que esta inclusa con otra aranzada y media del dicho mi hermano, y mas otro majuelo que llaman el albillo junto a la fuente que dizen de Umbidales y mas una tierra tras cabeja, que ha sido majuelo, su caber quatro aranzadas, . . . y mas un huerto, que esta ahora hecho cerca, que llamaban de los perales, junto a la yglesia del dicho lugar, y no tiene toda la dicha hazienda mas carga de la dicha misa, libre de todos censos perpetuo ni al quitar ni otra ninguna hipoteca. . . . ' Item mando al dicho Miguel de Zerbantes Saabedra, mi marido, el majuelo de camino de Sesena su vedueno jaen, que cabe quatro aran- zadas poco mas o menos ... el qual haya y tenga y goze de usufructo durante sus dias y vida con cargo de que diga quatro misas rezadas cada ano por mi alma y despues de sus dias le goze por dos anos, los primeros, dona Costanza de Obando, sobrina del dicho mi marido, con el mismo cargo de las dichas quatro misas, y pasados los dichos dos anos le mando el dicho majuelo al dicho mi hermano Francisco de Palacios con cargo de que haga dezir 6 diga ocho misas rezadas cada ano por las almas de mis padres y mia y del dicho mi marido, con mas que haya de dar cinquenta reales cada ano a mi hermano Fray Antonio de Salazar para libros u para lo que el quisiere, y despues de los dias e vida de los contenidos en esta clausula mando el dicho majuelo a la dicha yglesia del dicho lugar, que es su advocacion Santa Maria, con cargo que se digan cada ano por las almas mias y demas contenidos en esta dicha clausula y mis padres treinta misas rezadas de difuntos perpetuamente para siempre jamas y mas me hagan una fiesta de Senor San Pedro cada ano con su misa cantada y otra a Senor San Francisco en sus dias o en sus octavas, y en case quel dicho Fray Antonio de Salazar, mi hermano, alcanzara de dias a todos los con- tenidos en esta clausula, es mi voluntad que la dicha yglesia de cien reales al dicho mi hermano para libros u lo que el quisiere, y despues de los dias del dicho mi hermano la dicha yglesia haya e goze el dicho majuelo con sola la dicha carga de las dichas treinta misas rezadas y las dos fiestas para siempre jamas, y esta clausula se ponga en las tablas e memorias de la dicha yglesia conio se acostumbm a hazer. ' Item mando al dicho Miguel de Zerbantes, mi marido, la cama en que yo muriere con la ropa que tuviere con mas todos los demas bienes MAGDALENA DE CERVANTES 161 Dona Catalina returned to her devout practices, and on June 27, 1610, was fully professed in the Third Order of Saint Francis.^ Her sister-in-law's health was failing fast. On October 11, Magdalena de Cervantes, being then ill in bed, signed her will, in which she told a strange story respecting a sum of three hundred ducados due to her, as she alleged, by muebles que yo tuviere excepto lo que mando al dicho mi hermano, esto sin que se le pida quanta al dicho mi marido por el mucho amor y buena compania que ambos hemos tenido. ' Item mando a Maria de Ugena, mi criada, hija de Juan de Ugena y Ana Rodriguez, vecinos de Esquibias, todos los vestidos de seda- y otros qualesquiera y el manto que tuviere y camisas el dia que yo muera, y esto la mando por el mucho amor que la tengo por el tiempo que me sirvio siendo nina, y ruegue a Dios por mi alma. . . . ' Item mando al dicho mi marido una tierra de una aranzada, que llaman el Herrador, por sus dias y despues venga al dicho mi hermano Francisco de Palacios, y despues de sus dias la goze la dicha yglesia con la propia carga de la demas hazieuda dicha en una clausula de este dicho mi testamento. Y en caso que la dicha yglesia no quiera acebtar lo susodicho, que es majuelo o tierra, es mi voluntad de man- darselo al hospital de pobres del dicho lugar con la dicha carga, y se ponga en la dicha tabla con la otra clausula.' The executors named by the testatrix were Cervantes, Francisco de Palacios Salazar, and Doctor Pena, the priest at Esquivias (or whoever might be his successor at the time of Dona Catalina's death). The vrill was drawn up by Baltasar de Ugena, who is said (Mainez, Cervantes y su ijpoca, p. 518, n. 2) to have been the uncle of Dona Catalina's maid. According to Sr. Mainez, Dona Catalina had known him at Esquivias, and employed him to draw up her will ' en la seguridad de que asi se guardaria el secreto perfectamente '. ' See Juan Antonio Pellicer, Vida de Miguel de Cenantes Saavedra in El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha (Madrid, 1797-8), vol. I, pp. ccxiii-ccxiv : ' En el espresado libro, en el que se escriben las personas que profesan en dicha V. 0. T. en el fol. 6. hay una partida, senalada con el num. 68. en 27. de junio de 1610. que dice : ' D.* Catalina de Salazar Bozmediano : vive en la calle de Leon, frontero de Castillo, panadero de Corte. = D.* Catalina de Salazar Bosmediano.' [For 'el espresado libro ', see p. 156, n. 1.] 1497 M 162 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Fernando de Ludena, a connexion of Lope de Vega's. Her tale was that she had lent the money to Ludeila when he was a bachelor ; that she called at his house, after his marriage, to ask for payment ; that Ludena, fearing his wife's anger, denied the debt; that, when she made a second attempt to obtain payment, Ludeiia (in the presence of his wife and nephew) terrorized her into signing an admission that he owed her nothing, while he privately assured her that he would keep her supplied with food and, in case he died before her, would leave her enough to live on. On her death-bed Magdalena averred that her signature had been extorted from her, and instructed her executors to collect the three hundred ducados from Ludeiia, or at least to bring the debt before him as a matter of conscience. If, as some believe, the defaulter was the Fernando de Ludena who wrote the sonnet prefatory to the Novelas Exem- plares, and who is praised in the Viage del Parnaso, Cervantes clearly declined to make his sister's quarrels his own. Dona Catalina, in her will, had made a small bequest to Cervantes's niece Costanza, but made no mention of his daughter, Isabel de Saavedra. Magdalena likewise made over to Costanza an allow- ance which she received from Enrique de Palafox, a knight of the Order of Oalatrava; to Costanza she also left her share of what might come to her from the estate of her brother Rodrigo. She ap- pointed her brother and Costanza as executors, but MAGDALENA'S WILL 163 passed by her niece Isabel in silence. ^ The coinci- ^ The more important) clauses of Magdalena's will (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 285-9) may be quoted here : ' In Dey nomine amen. Sepan quantos esta carta de testamento vieren como yo Dona Madalena de Sotomayor, . . . estando enferma en la cama de la dolencia y enfermedad que Nuestro Senor ha sido servido de me dar, en mi sano juyzio y entendimiento natural . . . Otorgo y conosco por esta carta que hago y ordeno este mi testamento en la forma y de la manera siguiente : . . . 'Item mando que mi cuerpo sea sepultado en la yglesia o monesterio que pareciere a mi hermano Miguel de ^erbantes, y alii me mande enterrar, y por ello se pague lo acostumbrado. . . . ' Item declare que don Fernando de Ludena me debe trecientos ducados prestados siendo mozo soltero, y despues de casado con Dona Ana Maria de Hurbina, su muger, yo los fuy a pedir delante de la dicha Dona Ana, y por entonces, por no henojar a la dicha su muger diciendo los debia, no me los confeso deber, y despues habiendo ydo alia a su casa otra vez en razon del dicho debito en presencia de la dicha Doiia Ana Maria y de un sobrino suyo, diziendo que si no queria yo hazer una zedula, que me ijedia, en que yo confesase que no me debia nada, el dicho Don Fernando de Ludena me ameo [(.amenazo ?j muchas veces diciendo que no me daria nada en su vida si nohaziala dicha zedula, y a solas me dixo que me prometia mientras el viviese de darme todos mis alimentos, y que si yo le alcanzaba de vida, me dexaria con que viviese, y debaxo de la dicha promesa le hice zedula en que declare no deberme nada, la qual hice contra mi voluntad, y asi declare debajo de mi conciencia quedarme a deber los dichos trecientos ducados. Mando que mis testamentaiios los cobren, a lo menos se lo digan y le encarguen la conciencia, pues sabe ser verdad, y asi lo mando. ' Item mando a Dona Costan^a de Figueroa, mi sobrina, hija de Dona Andrea de ^erbantes, mi hermana difunta, la parte de hacienda de tres herederos que somos a la hacienda de Rodrigo de Qerbantes, mi hermano, que le mataron en Flandes en la Jornada de dos de JuUio del ano de seyscientos y uno, porque ruegue a Dios por mi. ' Item mando asimismo a la dicha Doiia Costan^a sesenta y quatro ducados de dos panyaguas que me dio Don Enrique de Palafoj, caba- llero del habito de Calatrava, que los ha de haber en virtud de la merced de Su Magestad del pan y agua que se da a los dichos caballeros, para que en mi lugar la dicha Doiia Costanfa los haya, de que me tiene dado poder el dicho Don Enrique.' Perez Pastor identifies [Ihid., vol. II, p. 431) this Fernando de 164 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES dence is curious, and can scarcely be accidental. It would seem that Isabel de Saavedra was no longer on friendly terms with her relatives, and this impression is strengthened by the fact that, on the day Magdalena made her will, Cervantes by a separate deed conveyed to his niece Costanza his prospective share in Eodrigo's estate.^ He had nothing else to leave, and his daughter would seem Ludena with the writer of the sonnet at the beginning of the Novelas Exemplares ; Sr. Cotarelo y Mori dissents from this opinion {Efeme- rides cervantinas, p. 239). * Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. U, pp. 290-1 : ' Sepan quantos esta carta de poder vieren como el alferez Miguel de ^er- bantes, hijo de Rodrigo de Qerbantes e de Dona Leonor de Cortinas, su muger, residente en esta corte, otorgo y conosco per esta carta que doy mi poder cumplido, qual de derecho se i-equiere, a Dona Costanya de Figueroa, mi sobrina, hija de Dona Maria de ^erbantes, mi hennana, para que para ella misma, como en su fecho y causa propia pueda reoibir, haber e cobrar toda la parte que me toca de la herencia de los bienes y sueldo del alferez Rodrigo de ^erbantes, mi hermano, que le mataron en servicio de Su Magestad en la Jornada de las Dunas en el ano pasado de seyscientos y uno en los Estados de Flandes, el qual sueldo, que se le debia y debe, esta mandado pagar por gedula real de Su Magestad, y para ello le cedo mis derechos y aciones y la hago procuradora, autora, para que ella haga de ello su voluntad como cosa Buya propia por el mucho amor y voluntad que la tengo, y digo y declai'o de no revocar este poder y manda agora ni en ningun tiempo, y si paresoiere haberlo revocado, desde luego lo doy por nenguno. . . . Y lo otorgue ansi ante el presente escribano y testigos. Que fue fecha e otorgada en la villa de Madrid a honze dias del mes de Otubre de mil y seyscientos y diez anos, siendo testigos Lorenzo Cruzado y Juan de Berjes e Juan Mendez, estantes en corte, y el otorgante, que doy fee conozco, lo firmd. — Miguel deCerbantes. — Ante mi Geronimo Lopez.— Lleve un real y no mas.— Lopez.' This deed, hastily drawn up, confirms the impression that Cervantes was in the habit of signing documents without reading them very carefully. It will be observed that he is described as an ' alferez ', and that his sister's name is given as ' Maria ' instead of Andrea. RELATIONS WITH UEBINA 165 to have had the first claim on him. Yet he de- liberately passed her over, as his wife and his sister had done before him. What had happened ? Did Cervantes mean to show his displeasure, or did he think that his daughter was sufficiently provided for under her marriage settlement ? The latter alterna- tive does not recommend itself in view of the antecedent circumstances. Some seven months before he signed the deed in favour of Costanza, Cervantes had reason to feel misgivings as to his daughter's marriage settlement. Even at that early date questions had arisen con- cerning the ownership of the house in the Red de San Luis, and, if we may trust the fragmentary documents brought forward, Cervantes had com- mitted himself to statements which, though perhaps not absolutely untrue, were calculated to leave a wrong impression. On March 27, 1610, he appears to have alleged that the house in the Red de San Luis belonged to him, and had been bought with his money.^ If he went through the form of buying it, he can only have bought it with money lent to him for the purpose by Urbina, to whom he re- conveyed the house by a secret deed.^ Whatever passed between him and Urbina, it is practically certain that his proprietorship of the house was ' See the third document printed by Julio de Sigiienza in La Ilustra- eidn Espanola y Americana (8 de Mayo de 1882), aBo xxvi, num. xvii, p. 287 ; it is reproduced on p. 152, n. 1. ' See the fifth document printed by Julio de Sigiienza (Joe. cit), and reproduced on p. 152, n. 2. 166 MIGUEL DE CEEV ANTES purely nominal— a legal fiction adopted por algmos respetos. Such was his position on March 27, 1610, by which date some misunderstanding as to the ownership had arisen between Urbina on the one side, and Molina and his wife on the other. Urbina was apparently willing that they should occupy his house rent free ; he was not willing to make it over to them as a gift. The misunderstanding was Hkely to become worse ; if so, Cervantes's difficulties would also become worse. Irritated by the cupidity of Molina and his wife, Urbina might well dechne to pay the two thousand ducados on account of Isabel de Saavedra's dowry, which fell due in the following year. By this time Cervantes knew enough of his daughter and his son-in-law to feel sure that they would press to the uttermost their legal claim. It was impossible for Cervantes to raise so large a sum as two thousand ducados, and yet he had made himself jointly responsible for its punctual payment on or before August 28 of the following year. What was to be done ? In his perplexity, Cervantes seems to have thought of leaving Spain, if he could contrive it. In 1610 there appeared his sonnet on Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, a famous patron of literature in the previous century.^ A patron at this moment would be the saving of Cervantes, and, as it happened, he had been presented to Pedro Fernandez Euiz de ' Gbras compUias de Cerrantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, p. 431. The sonnet, ■with poems by Antonio Hurtado de Mendoza, Mira'^de Amescua, and others, appeared in Ohras del insigne cavalhro Don Diego de Mendoza, &c. (Madrid, 1610). IN SEARCH OF A PATRON 167 Castro y Osorio, the seventh Conde de Lemos, nephew and son-in-law of the Duque de Lerma, the favourite minister of Philip III, Lemos, who had once em- ployed Lope de Vega as his private secretary/ had a foible for literature, and often lent a helping hand to authors in distress. In the early summer of 1610 his father-in-law's influence secured his appointment to the viceroyalty of Naples, and it became known that he intended to take with him several literary men as members of his suite. It would appear that Cervantes hoped to be one of the chosen few. He was no doubt too reasonable to beheve that he could make a fresh start in Italy at the age of sixty-two ; but his re- moval from Madrid would extricate him from his em- barrassing position. His high hopes, however, were disappointed. Lemos did not invite him to join his household ; fair words appear to have been spoken ; but Cervantes needed something more substantial than promises, and his. failure mortified him deeply.^ ' Cayetano Alberto de la Barrera, Niiera Biografi'a in Obras de Lope de Vega (Madrid, 1890-1902), vol. I, pp. 70-1. Lope de Vega became secretary to Lemos in 1598. Barrera, dryly remarkingthat the famous dramatist's duties were of a varied kind, and perhaps a little humbler than those commonly associated with the post of secretary, quotes a phrase from a letter of Lope's to Lemos : ' Ya sabeis cuanto os amo y reverencio, y que he dormido a vuestros pies como un perro.' Lemos himself wrote a play which has disappeared. A few of his poetical compositions have, however, survived. Sr. D. Antonio Paz y Melia has published {Bulletin Mspanique, Bordeaux, 1903, vol. V, pp. 249-58 and 349-58) a glosa by Lemos included in the Correspondencut del Conde de Lemos con Don Francisco de Castro, sii hermano, y con el Principe de Esquilache (1613 20). ^ See the Viage del Parnaso, cap. iii, 163-204. Gdngora was also one of the disappointed aspirants ; he good- 168 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES He was doomed to stay on at Madrid in discouraging circumstances. To meet his engagements he re- quired money more than ever ; his capacity for earning money by doing non-literary work diminished as he grew older ; his books brought him fame, but nothing more solid. The patron in whom he rashly put his trust had failed him at a critical moment. He knew that his daughter was a grasping woman married without affectimx^to a needy and indelicate man. His wife — and this he did not know, though he may have guessed it — had furtively made a will leav- ing most of her small property away from him. He had lost one sister, and was now about to lose another. On October 14, 1610, Magdalena de Cervantes, avail- ing herself of her right as a Tertiary, added a codicil to her win, directing that she was to be buried in the neighbouring Franciscan convent in a spot chosen humouredly records his check in a burlesque sonnet {Bihlioteca de Autores Espanoles, Madrid, 1872, vol. XXXII, p. 437) : El Conde mi senor se va & Napoles, Y el Duque mi senor se va i. Francia ; Principes, buen viaje, que este dia Pesadumbre dare & unos caracoles. Como sobran tan doctos espanoles, A ninguno ofreci la musa mia; A un pobre albergue si de Andalucia, Que ha resistido d grandes, digo a soles. Con pocos libros libres, libres digo De expurgaciones, paso, y me paseo, Ya que el tiempo me pasa como higo. No espero en mi verdad lo que no creo ; Espero en mi concieneia lo que digo. Mi salvacion, que es lo que mas deseo. DEATH OF MAGDALENA 169 by Cervantes. 1 This would, at least, save him expense. She died three months later (January 28, 1611), the cost of her modest funeral, twelve reales, being paid by her Franciscan brethren. ^ Magdalena de Cervantes died precisely seven months before her niece's dowry became payable. So far nothing had been done in the way of preparing to meet the obligation. Shortly after Magdalena's death it occurred to Urbina to employ Isabel de Saavedra's husband on business at a distance from Madrid, and on February 26 he empowered MoHna to make arrangements respecting one of his recent enterprises, some iron-works situated in the neigh- bourhood of Carlizares.^ He can scarcely have ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 292-3 : ' En la villa de Madrid a catorce dias del nxes de Otubre de mil y seiscientos e diez anos, ante mi el escribano e testigos, parescio Dona Madalena de Sotomayor, estando en su bucn entendimiento natural, dixo que por quanto ella otorgo su testamento y ultima voluntad ante mi el pre- sente escribano, y entre otras cosas que en el mando fue mandar que su cuerpo fuese sepultado en la yglesia o monesterio que paresciere a su hennano Miguel de ^erbantes, agora es su voluntad de mandar, come manda, que su cuerpo sea sepultado en el monesterio de Senor Sant Francisco desta villa en la parte que paresciere al dicho Miguel de ^erbantes, y en todo ]o demas de la dicha manda lo revoca. ' Y todo lo demas del dicho su testamento lo dexa en su fuerfa y vigor, y ansi lo dijo y otorgo, siendo testigos,' &c. ^ Ibid., vol. II, p. 430, n. 1 : ' En 28 de hen." de 1611 as" murio D.a Magdalena de Jesus, hermana de zeruates. Rbio los s.^°^ saeram.to= de mano del lic.'i'' fran"" Lopez no testo era natural de aqui y era pobre, y tanto q.« la hizieron enterrar los lierm'"'^ terceros de S. Fran."" en 12 r? ' This document, discovered by Francisco Asenjo Barbieri, was first printed (with some slight variants) in the Suplemento d la Crdnica de los Cervantistas (CAdiz, 23 de Abril de 1872), vol. I, p. 105. ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, pp. 294-6 : ' Sepan 170 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES imagined that this errand would occupy Molina for over seven months, and keep him out of the way when the time for paying the dowry came. If Urbina hoped to contrive this, or if he thought to cajole the married couple by putting business in the husband's way, he was disappointed. The pair with whom he had to deal were not simpletons in money matters. Molina dispatched his business at Cani- zares, and returned to Madrid, August 28 came, but he received no money. We may take it that quantos esta carta de poder vieren como yo Jhoan de Urbina . . . otorgo y conozco por esta presente carta, que doy mi poder cumplido, quan bastante de derecho se requiere y es necesario, a Luis de Molina . . . con facultad de enjuiziar, jurar y sustituir en un procu- rador dos o mas y los revocar e poner otros para que por quanto tengo tratado de tomar en arrendamiento una herreria del Sr. Don Juan Garoes Muiioz, . . . que esta situada junto a la villa de Canizares, sierra de Cuenca . . . e para lo tratar y efetuar tengo dado poder al Licenciado Pedro Camerero, cura propio de la villa de Canizares, y a Francisco Castillo . . . y sin los revocar el dicho poder se lo doy al dicho Luis de Molina para que juntamente con los dichos Licenciado Pedro Camerero y Francisco Castillo por si in solidum pueda convenirse con el dicho Don Juan Garoes o quien su poder hobiere en tomarle en arrendamiento la dicha herreria para mi por el tiempo, precio y a pagar a los tiempos e plazas y en la parte y lugary con las condiciones, clau- sulas, penas e posturas y con el salario que bien visto le fuere. . . . ' Y otrosi le doy este poder al dicho Luis de Molina para que pueda poner e nombrar mayordomo e persona que en mi nombre administre y tenga quenta e razon de la dicha herreria, e darle poder para ello y senalarle salario y obligarme a la paga y tomarle quenta quando y como convenga en forma bastante. ' Otrosi para que con qualquier persona o personas pueda concertar y concierte la mena y carbon necesario para beneficio de la dicha fabrica de hierro y obligarme a la paga al dia, tiempo e plazo que le pares- , ciere con las condiciones y posturas que le pareciere. En razon de lo qual y de cada cosa e parte pueda en mi nombre ante escribano escribanos hacer y otorgar la escritura o escrituras de contrataoion y obligacion y las demas necesarias y que convengan y le pareciere. . . .' MOLINA DISTRAINS 171 Cervantes would have paid but could not, and that Urbina could have paid but would not. Urbina had mistaken his man ; his creditor was not to be trifled with. Molina applied for an execution-warrant against both defaulters,^ astutely lending an air of respectability to the marriage-contract by represent- ing Cervantes as the principal debtor and Urbina as his surety. Molina's legal claim was incontestable ; his application was granted as a matter of course, and, since Cervantes had no assets, a distraint was levied on Urbina's belongings. Within twenty-four hours Urbina yielded, paid nineteen thousand of the twenty-two thousand reales due, and on November 29, 1611, bound himself to pay the balance within three months.^ It is doubtful if he was ever called upon * The exact dates of Molina's application and of the order of the Court are not known ; but, from the document quoted in the next note, both must be iixed before November 29. Perez Pastor {Ibid., vol. I, p. 337) states that Molina filed his petition before the Alcalde Don Fernando Ramirez Farinas (and Juan del Campillo, escrihano de provincia) on September 17, 1611. ' Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 164-8. Molina begins by putting in his receipt for what he had already received — ' catorze mill setecientos y cinquenta y tres reales en joy as de oro y plata, vestidos, ropa blanca y otros bienes muebles '— and continues as follows : ^JJILansi mesmo por bienes de la dicha dona Isabel de Saabedra, mi esposa, deinas y aliende de lo contenido en la dicha escriptura me fueron prometidos por el dicho Miguel de Zerbantes, su padre, dos mill ducados pakados en fin de tres anos, y dello el dicho Miguel de Zerbantes, como jprincipal, y Joan de Urbina, como su fiador y princi- pal cumplidor y Ipagador, e cada uno in soUdtim y dello como bienes dotales de la dioha mi esposa hizieron y otorgaron en mi favor escrip- tura de obligacion para me los pagar en fin de los dichos tres anos, que paso en/ esta villa de Madrid a veynte y ocho dias del mes de Agosto del/ dicho ano de mill y seiscientos y ocho por ante Luis de 172 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES for the remaining three thousand reales : Isabel de Saavedra, perhaps content with so substantial an Velasco, escvibano de su magestad, a que me refiero, y por haberse cumplido el plazo de la dicha escriptura y no haberme pagado, yo presents la dicha escriptura ante cl senor alcalde don Fernando Ramirez Farinas y Joan del Campillo, escribano de provincia, y en virtud della pedi execucion contra las personas y bienes de los dichos Miguel de Zerbantes, prenoipal, y secretario Joan de Urbina, su fiador, y cada uno y qualquier dellos por los dichos dos mill ducados, y Be me mando dar y di6 mandamiento de execucion, y en virtud del fu6 fecha y trabada execucion por ellos en la persona y bienes del dieho secretario Joan de Urbina, el qual a quenta dellos, dentro de las veynte e quatro horas de como le fue fecha la dicha execucion, me dio e pago diez y nueve mill reales, de los quales le di y otorgu6 carta de pago al dicho secretario Joan de Urbina, y por los tres mill reales restantes yo suspend! la dicha execucion, por lo qual es a mi quenta y cargo cobrarlos, y agora la dicha dona Isabel de Saabedra, mi muger, me pide le de y otorgue carta de pago y recibo de dote de los dichos dos mill ducados juntamente con los catorze mill setecientos y cinquenta y tres reales que antes de agora habia recebido. . . . Eyoviendo ser justo y que de derecho a ello estoy obligado = Otorgo y conozco por esta presente carta yo el dicho Luis de Molina que he recebido por bienes dotales de la dicha dona Isabel de Saabedra, mi muger, los dichos treinta y seis mil setecientos y cinquenta y tres reales en esta manera: los catorze mill setecientos cinquenta y tres reales dellos en vestidos, joyas de oro y plata, ropa blanca y ajuar de casa ... y los veinte y dos mill reales restantes de la dicha escriptura de obligacion que por la dicha razon otorgaron en mi favor los dichos Miguel de Cerbantes, principal, y secretario Juan de Urbina, su fiador, los diez e nueve mill reales dellos que- cobre del dicho secretario Juan de Urbina, de que le di carta de pago dentro de las veinte y quatro horas de como fue executado, y los tres mill reales restantes de que le di espera y aguardo por tres meses, y por habevla dado queda por mi quenta y cargo en cobrarlos ... e me obligo de tener y que tenJre los dichos treinta y seis mill setecientos y cinquenta y tres reales de la dicha dote en pie y seguros e que la hazienda que en ellos montare no la vendere, trocare ni cambiare ni obligar^ tacita ni expresamente a ninguna deuda ni accion cevil ni creminal, y si lo hiziere que no vaya ni le pare perjuicio, y cada y quando que el matrimonio eutve mi y la dicha mi muger fuere disuelto y separado, ora por muerte o divorzio o en otra qualquier manera que sea, luego que lo tal succeda le dare, FURTHER LITIGATION 173 instalment in ready money, seems to have intervened as a peacemaker. But no lasting peace was possible between the parties. Another difficulty soon arose. Cervantes and Urbina had further promised to pay all charges — rates and ground-rent — on the house in the Red de San Luis. It would seem that these charges were not paid, that legal proceedings followed, that the Court ruled in Molina's favour, and that on October 30, 1612, Urbina capitulated once more.^ Molina and his wife thus obtained their legal due. StiU they were not satisfied, and in course of time went so far as to claim the house in the Red de San Luis as their absolute property. This was more than Urbina could endure, and there followed an interminable series of lawsuits which lasted longer than the lives of most of those concerned in them. But we need not anticipate the course of events. pagare, volvere y restituire a ella o a quien su poder tuviere los dichos treinta y seis mill setecientos y cinquenta y tres reales desta dicha dote y por ellos sin aguardar que pass t^rmino alguno, porque aunque le tenga lo renuncio. . . .' ^ See the third document printed by Julio de Sigiienza in La Iliistra- cion Espanola y Americana (8 de Mayo de 1882), vol. XXVI, num. xvii, p. 287 : ' Sobre cumplir las diohas Capp."*= se trato pleito entre los S. S. con el A. — y por sent.* de alld. y del Con.° fue conden.^" a otorgar scrip.* conf.^ a la dicha capitu.""' inserta la dicha clau." y paso el pleito ante Campillos de prov.* ano 612. ' en 30 otu.« el Sr. Ju.* de urbina otorgo la dicha scrip.* p.* insertar la dicha clau.* y sen.*^ ' The Campillos mentioned here is apparently identical with the Juan del Campillo named on p. 171, n. 1. He appears to have been an escribano de nAmero at Madrid from 1581 to 1595, and later an escribano de provincia (Perez Pastor, Ibid., vol. I, p. 337). 174 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES XI Nobody likes to be threatened with a distraint, and it seems probable that henceforward Cervantes saw little of his daughter and his son-in-law. After Cervantes's death, his widow appears to have been on good terms with Molina and his wife ^ ; but it is noticeable that Cervantes's name is never linked with theirs after the proceedings of IGll.^ A glimpse of Cervantes's relations with his wife, and with the members of his wife's family, is afforded by a deed dated January 31, 1612.^ Hereby ^ This is inferred from the fact that Dona Catalina finally appointed Luis de Molina as her executor. ''■ It must be remembered, however, that there was prolonged litigation between Urbina and Molina from 1612 to 1615, and it is quite possible that Cervantes appears in the documents relating to these suits. Perez Pastor {Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 338) suggests that these documents may yet be discovered in the archives of the extinct Consejo de Castilla. ' Perez Pastor, Ibid., vol. I, pp. 169-77. The most important parts of this long deed ai-e as follows : ' Sepan quantos esta publica escri- tura de dejacion y traspaso, vieren, como yo, dona Catalina de Palacios y Salazar, muger que soy de Miguel de Zeruantes, vocinos del lugav de Esquibias, jurisdicion de la ciudad de Toledo, estantes de presente en esta corte, en presencia del dicho Miguel de Zeruantes, mi marido, y con su licencia y consentimiento. . . . Digo que por quanto Catalina de Palacios, mi senora e madre, difunta, que haya gloria, viuda, muger que fue de Hernando de Salazar Vozmediano, por su testamento e ultima voluntad con que fallecio, que pas6 e se otorgd ante Alonso de Aguilera . . . su fecha en el diez e siete de Noviembre del ano pasado de mil y quinientos y ochenta y siete, me nombro e dejo por su hija y heredera, juntamente con Francisco de Palacios y Fernando de Salayar, mis hermanos, para que suoediesemos y heredasemos sus bienes, haziendome dellos mejora en el tercio e remanente del quinto segun constadel dicho testamento, y por mueiie de la dicha mi madre, entre mi y cl dicho Francisco de Palacios, mi hermano, ante la justicia del dicho lugar ... en veynte c un dias del mes de JuUio del ano HIS WIFE'S WILL REVISED 175 Dona Catalina annulled the clauses in her will (June 10, 1610) which gave her husband a life- pasado de mill y seiscientos e quatro, se hizo particion e division de los bienes e hazienda que quedaron por fin y muerte de la dicha Catalina de Palaoios, mi madre, e por ella se me adjudicaron los bienes que adelante se dira por quenta de la dicha mejora . . . Todos los quales dichos bienes me fueron adjudicados por la dicha particion segun consta de la hijuela della, que montan setenta y ocho mil ocho- cientos setenta y nueve maravedis. Y es ansi que la dicha mi madre al tiempo que fallescio quedo debiendo ansi por si como por el dicho mi padre cinco mil y novecientos y setenta y cinco reales, que valen ducientos y dos mil y ochocientos e diez maravedis. . . . ' Para las dichas deudas se sacaron del cuerpo de la hazienda las dichas casas de Toledo y una tierra de la hazienda de las dichas casas de Toledo y una tierra con unas olivas en el termino del dicho lugar de Esquibias al paso que dicen el Apartado, que el dicho Francisco de Palacios lo vendio en, dos mil y quarenta e un reales, a saber : las dichas casas en mil y cien reales y la dicha tierra en treinta y dos mil maravedis, que valen los dichos dos mil y quarenta y un reales sesenta e nueve mil trescientos noventa y quatro maravedis, que sacados de los dichos cinco mil y novecientos sesenta y cinco reales de deudas, quedaron las dichas deudas en ser en tres mil y novecientos y veinte y quatro reales, de los quales me tocan de pagar por el dicho tercio e quinto mil y ochocientos y treinta y un reales, que valen sesenta y dos mil ducientos y cinquenta y quatro maravedis, que sacados de los dichos setenta y ocho mil ochocientos setenta y nueve maravedis, que montan los bienes de dicha mejora, me quedan diez y seis mil seiscientos veinte y cinco maravedis, los quales sacados de los seis mil y quarenta y seis reales y medio que me tocan de la mitad de deudas de las de arriba referidas, como uno de dos herederos, debo finalmente al dicho Francisco de Palacios, mi hermano, que estapagado y satisfecho, diez y ocho mil novecientos e cinquenta e seis maravedis en dineros de contado, y quedando por suyos y como suyos los dichos bienes de suso referidos que me fueron adjudicados por quenta del dicho tercio e quinto. ' Y aunque estos, conforme a la clausula del testamento de la dicha mi madre por donde me hace la dicha mejora, prohibe la enagenacion y venta dellos, pero esto fue por dos respetos, el uno para que no se pudiese valer de ellos el dicho mi marido, y el otro, en caso que no tuviese yo hijos, atendiendo a que los bienes de la dicha mejora viniesen en el dicho Francisco de Palacios, mi hermano, pero teniendo 176 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES interest in two small pieces of land at Esquivias : she mortgaged these to her brother, Francisco de hijos pudiese disponer de ellos y hazer a mi voluntad, como lo dice por palabras expresas la dicha clausula = Y porque yo no tengo hijos hasta ahora que hayan de suceder y heredar mis bienes, y que de los diehos bienes de suso referidos a mi no me pertenece mas del usu- fruto y utre dominio de ellos por los dias de mi vida, y que el dicho Francisco de Palacios, mi hermano, ha pagado y desembolsado de su propia hazienda los diehos cinco mil y novecientos y sesenta e cinco reales de las dichas deudas, que conforme a la quenta arriba dicha, sacado el valor en que los diehos bienes fueron tasados e se me adjudi- caron, el resto se qued6 y le soy deudora de ellos realmente y con efeto, y que habiendo deudas son preferidas a las mejoras y herencia, y han de ser primeramente pagadas. ' Atento lo qual y que yo le era deudora de las dichas cantidades arriba dichas, que me tocan de las dichas deudas que forzosamente habia de ser apremiada a la paga de ellos u dejar los diehos bienes, y el dicho mi hermano ha cumplido con las dichas deudas por no ver enagenados los diehos bienes ni pasados en otro poseedor, y porque lo que ansi ha pagado por mi quenta y a mi perteneciente vale mucho mas que lo que a mi me habian de valer el usufructo y aprovecha- miento de los diehos bienes durante mis dias, no teniendo como no tengo hijos, como dicho es, en consideracion de todo lo susodicho y teniendolo por bueno, cierto y verdadero, en la mejor forma que puedo y ha lugar de derecho de mi buena y libre voluntad mediante la dicha licencia del dicho mi marido, otorgo y conozeo que hago dexacion, renunciacion e traspaso en el dicho Francisco de Palacioa, mi hermano, que estd; presente y acetante, de todos los diehos bienes de la dicha mejora, que son la dicha parte de casa, majuelos, tierras y huertos de suso declarado e deslindado, para que sea propio del dicho Francisco de Palacios en usufructo y en propiedad para ahora e para siempre jamas. . . . ' Y para en cumplimiento de lo en ella contenido y de la paga de los dichoa diez y ocho mil novecientos e cinquenta y seis maravedis que ansi soy alcanzada y debo al dicho mi hermano sobre el valor de los diehos bienes, obligo mi persona y bienes, habidos y por haber, y esto no derogando, obligo y hipoteco por especial y expresa obliga- cion e hipotecas un majuelo que yo tengo al camino de Sasena de quatro aranzadas, linde el dicho camino y tierra de Santaren, para que este obligado e hipotecado a la paga y cumplimiento de lo que dicho es para no lo poder vender ni enagenar si no es con la HIS MOTHEE-IN-LAW 177 Palaeios Salazar, to whom she also transferred the additional share of property inherited under her mother's will. This was done in consideration of Francisco's paying off certain long outstanding debts on the family estate. The new arrangement, to which Cervantes assented, was unobjectionable ; for, as Doiia Catalina put it, debts take precedence of legacies, and she herself was unable to pay her parents' debts, which exceeded in amount the value of the property now made over to her brother. The practical effect of the change was to deprive Cervantes of whatever advantage he might have received under his wife's will; but the advantage was small, and the possibility of his living long enough to profit by it was smaller. In this case renunciation was both right and easy. An inte- resting item in the deed is one which acquaints us with the purport of a clause in the wiU of Dona CataUna's mother, Catalina de Palaeios. The clause in question forbade the alienation of the property bequeathed to Cervantes's wife as her preferential share. Under it, therefore, Dona Catahna's bequests to her husband in the first place, and to her brother in the second, were both illegal. But the illegality was circumvented by Dona Catalina's tactful state- ment that the clause was expressly inserted with a view (1) to keeping the Esquivias property out of Cervantes's hands, and (2) to securing its re- carga desta dicha hipoteca, y lo que de otra manera se hiziere no valga. . . .' ItOT N 178 MIGUEL DE CEEV ANTES version to Francisco de Palacios Salazar in the event of Dona Catalina's having no children. We may take it, then, that when Catalina de Palacios made her will on November 17, 1587, she had no great esteem for her son-in-law Cervantes; and we may further take it that, as she did not alter her wiU, her opinion had not changed during the subsequent sixteen or seventeen years of her life. The case which she foresaw had now arisen. Dona Catalina was childless, and, with Cervantes's con- sent, the property passed intact to Dona Catalina's brother. The evidence goes to show that Cervantes had married into a most united family. This has its advantages, but the members of the famUy do not seem to have taken very kindly to him. It is thought that he and his wife had been staying at Esquivias shortly before the deed of January 31, 1612, was signed at Madrid.^ This may, or may not, be so ; they seem to have moved about a good deal ; but their home, such as it was, was in Madrid. We learn at first-hand that Cer- vantes was present at a disorderly meeting of the newly-founded Academia HpI vajp. on Mflrch g, 1 fi12,_^ ' This view, held by Sr. Cotarelo y Mori {Efemirides cenantinas, p. 246), is based on the description of Cervantes and his wife in the deed of January 30, 1612, as ' vecinos del lugar de Esquibias ' and as 'estantea de presente en esta covte' (Perez Pastor, Documentos cei'- vantinos, vol. I, p. 169). Perez Pastor, assuming that there was some relationship between Dona Catalina and some of the mayordomos de la cofradia del Santtsimo (Juan Quixada Salazar and Gabriel Quixada Salazar) at Esquivias, suggests (Ihid., vol. I, p. 316) that some plays or entremeses by Cervantes may have been given there. THE ACADEMIA SELVAJE 179 when (as so often happens) two learned persons came to blows, and when Cervantes lent his cheap spectacles to Lope de Vega, who compared them to badly poached eggs.^ Common as they were, these glasses served their purpose by helping Cervantes to write some of his Novelas exemplares, a collection which was submitted to Gutierre Cetina not later than July 2, 1612. Precisely a year later (July 2, 1613) Cervantes seems to have received the habit of the Franciscan Tertiaries at AleaM de Henares.^ In 1513 also there appeared his sonnet to Diego Eosel y Fuenllana,^ as well as the verses to Gabriel Perez del Barrio Angulo,* and to this same year is * Cayetano Alberto de la Barrera, Nueva Biografia in Ohras de Lope de Vega (Madrid, 1890-1902), vol. I, p. 183. Barrera quotes from a letter of Lope de Vega's, dated March 2, 1612: 'Las academias estan furiosas ; en la pasada se tiraron los bonetes dos Lieenciados ; yo lei unos versos con unos antojos de Cervantes, que parecian huevos estrellados mal hecbos.' The Academia Selvaje, known first of all as El Pamaso, changed its name in honour of Francisco de Silva y Mendoza, at whose house in the Calle de Atocha the association held its meetings. Silva vras a brother of the Duque de Pastrana (see pp. 122 and 128, n. 2). ^ Navarrete, Vida, pp. 191, 480, and 579. The information was derived from a document existing in the Madrid archives of the Tertiaries before Navarrete's time; it was impossible for him to verify the fact by research at Alcala de Henares, as the local records of the Tertiaries for the years previous to 1670 had disappeared. ' A soldier who wrote Paiie Primera De varias apUcafiones, y Trans- formaciones, las guales tractan, Terminos Cortesanos, Practica Militar, Casos de Estado, en prosa y verso con nueuos Hieroglificos, y algunos puntos morales (Naples, 1613). The volume is somewhat rare : the sonnet is reprinted in Obras completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 447-8. * The verses to Perez del Barrio Angulo appeared in the latter's Direccion de Secretarios de Senores, y las materias, cuydados, y obligaciones que hs tocan, con las vittudes de que se han de preciar, estilo, y orden del n2 180 MIGUEL DE CEKV ANTES conjecturally assigned the ode to the Conde de Saldaua, a composition of doubtful authenticity. ^ The official Aprobacion for the Novelas exemplwres had been signed by Gutierre Cetina on July 9, 1612 ; a supplementary -4j9ro&aciow had been secured on August 8 ; the Privilegio for Castile had been granted on November 22. But there was a long delay in obtaining the Privilegio for Aragon, and this was not issued finally till August 9, 1613.^ Meanwhile Cervantes would seem to have heard that the term of waiting was drawing to an end, and on July 14, 1613, he penned his dedication to the Conde de Lemos, whom he salutes as his benefactor. Henceforward we may consider him as a pensioner of Lemos's. On September 9, 1613, he disposed of his rights in the Novelas exemplares to his publisher Robles, for 1,600 reales and twenty- four copies of the volume.^ No timely legacies came his way.' His niece Costanza was luckier, despacho y expedients, manejo de papeles de ministros, formulariosde car- tas, proxtisiones deoficios, y vn compendio en razon de acrecentar estado, y hazienda, oficio de Contador, y otras curiosidades que se declaran en la primera hoja (Madrid, 1613). The lines are reprinted in Obras com- pletas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1864), vol. VIII, pp. 429-30. ' Obras completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 444-7. ^ For bibliographical and other points relating to the Novelas exemplares, see the present writer's Introduction to The Complete Worhs of Miguel de Cervantes Saaredra (Glasgow, 1902), vol. VII. ^ Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 178-82. On September 28, 1613, Robles signed a power of attorney authorizing his representatives, Melchor Gonzalez and Francisco Geraldo, to prosecute all infringers of his copyright in the province of Aragdn : see P^rez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 183-5. * If Cervantes's relations with his daughter had been good at this riAGE DEL PABNASO 181 for on January 14, 1614, she signed a receipt for a thousand reales sent to her from Trujillo in Peru by a certain Juan de Avendano ' ; of Avendafio and his reason for sending this money, we know nothing. Cervantes depended on what he could earn by his pen, and what he received from Lemos. He was compelled to write continuously. It Avould appear from his own statement that he had finished the Viage del Parnaso before he wrote the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares.^ No doubt this assertion is correct, but it can refer solely to the verses, for Apollo's supplementary prose letter was dis- patched from Parnassus, so we learn, on July 22, 1614, as the god was buckling on his spurs and making ready to mount the Dog-star. The Viage time he might have been drawn into some responsibility for Geronima de Rojas y Prado and Maria de Rojas y Prado, aged nineteen and eighteen respectively. They were the daughters of Luisa de Rojas, and therefore nieces of Cervantes's former mistress Ana Franca de Rojas, and cousins of Isabel de Saavedra. Their father, a barber named Francisco Sanchez de Prado, had died at Guatemala some time before November 22, 1613, when his daughters were placed under the tutelage of Luis de Molina, for whom Isabel de Saavedra stood as surety. The documents referring to the wardship are printed by Perez Pastor (Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 186-93), who remarks (Ihid., vol. I, p. 310) that the arrangement resembled that made in Isabel's own case when she was placed under the charge of her aunt Magdalcna. 1 lUd., vol. I, pp. 194-5. ^ In the Prologo to the Novelas exemplares (1613) Cervantes speaks of the Viage del Parnaso as belonging to the past, like the Galatea and the First Part of Don Quixote : ' este digo que es el rostro del Autor de la Galatea, y de don Quixote de la Mancha, y del que hizo el viage del Parnaso. . . .' 182 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES del Parnaso passed the censor on September 16, and was issued towards the end of November or the beginning of December. The fact that the book was dedicated to Eodrigo de Tapia— a lad of fifteen, but the son of a Minister of State — might suggest the idea that the author was in search of a patron nearer to hand than Naples. The prob- ability, however, is that the dedication of the Viage del Parnaso to young Tapia had been offered and accepted before the Novelas exemplares were finished, or before Lemos had come to Cervantes's aid, and had received in return the dedication of the Novelas exemplares. It was then too late for Cervantes to cancel his promise to the Tapias. The most he could do was to keep them waiting while he brought out his more important work and dedicated it to Lemos. This done, he kept his pledge to the Tapias. He gained little by his complaisance. Eodrigo de Tapia may have taken some interest in literature, for some six years later Lope de Vega thought it worth while to dedicate a play to him ; but Eodrigo was a minor, and both he and his father, Pedro de Tapia, were reputed to be as niggardly as they were wealthy. The father may have helped to pay Francisca de Medina, widow of Alonso Martin, for setting up the book in type ; but if the Tapias paid, the printer's bill, they did no more, and henceforward Cervantes was faithful to his patron Lemos AN INTERLOPER 183 XII While the Viage del Parnaso was lying by him Cervantes was working at the Second Part of Bon Quiocote, He would seem to have reached the thirty- sixth chapter two days before he wrote Apollo's letter, for Sancho Panza's letter to his wife is dated July 20, 1614.1 He kept to his task, interrupting its course to compose the song in honour of the Blessed Theresa (not yet canonized) on the occasion of her feast-day (September 26).^ But such inter- ruptions were infrequent, and Cervantes had reached the fifty-ninth chapter of his sequel before he came across a spurious Second Part of Don Quixote which had been licensed at Tarragona on July 4, 1614, and purported to be the work of one Alonso Fernandez de Avellaneda. We cannot tell when Cervantes first saw the apocryphal continuation : probably not till after he had sent the Viage del Parnaso to the printers. Had the manuscript still been in his hands, he could scarcely have resisted the tempta- ' Don Quixote, Part II, chapter xxxvi. ' The stanzas to Blessed Theresa appeared in the Compendio de las solenes fiestas qve en toda Espana se hicieron en la Beatificacion de N. B. M. Teresa de lestts fmdadora de la Reformacion de Descalzos y Descalzas de N. S. del Carmen en prosa y verso (Madrid, 1615). This volume, edited by Fray Diego de San loseph, contains contributions by Lope de Vega, Espinel, Valdivielso, and other poets of repute. Cervantes's cancion will be found in Obras coinpletas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 437-40. 184 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES tion to add a few words on an intrusion which he deeply resented. Cervantes could see no merit in the Tarragona Bon Quixote, which he branded as silly and obscene.' This is the view of a man with a real grievance. Avellaneda's book, though sometimes dull and sometimes brutal, is by no means unreadable. But it has one fatal defect : at its best it is imitative, and it would never have existed had not Cervantes pointed the way with the First Part of Don Quixote. Avellaneda might have been worse employed than in writing it, and one could have made something like a case for him had he issued his sequel two years earlier. As things were, there was no excuse for its publication, for a passage in the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares had made it clear that Cervantes himself had the genuine Second Part in hand.^ This announcement, made publicly in 1613, did not induce Avellaneda to suppress his work. On the contrary, he pressed on with it, and made his offence more rank by writing an insolent preface in which, gleefully dwelling on the prospect of his spoiling Cervantes's market, he bespattered the man whom he had determined to rob. It is not surprising that Cervantes took offence at Avellaneda's scurrilities. No one, how- ever urbane, likes being fleeced and flouted. No ' Don Quixote, Part II, chapter lix. ' ' . . . y primero veras, y con breuedad dilatadas las hazanas de don Quixote, y donayres de Sancho Panja. . . .' A SCURRILOUS ATTACK 185 author, however meek and lowly in heart, enjoys being told that he cackles ; that his attitude to his readers is aggressive and bumptious ; that his tongue wags more freely than the one hand that fate has left him ^ ; that, though a soldier old in years, he is but a fop in airs and graces; that he is a cantankerous creature who quarrels with every one ; that his soured and envious nature (scandalous in an elderly person who has taken to devotion as a last resource) has left him without a friend in the world, so that he is driven to concoct his own eulogistic sonnets ; that his best book was written in a dungeon ^ ; and that it bears the convict brand upon it, inasmuch as it has the growhng, snarling, fretful, and splenetic tone characteristic of jailbirds.^ ' From Avellaneda's words it may be gathered that he had never seen Cervantes, and that his allusion to Cervantes's mutilation is an inference from a passage in the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares. ' This touch is likewise derived, not from personal knowledge, but from an obscure passage in the Prologue to the First Part of Don Quixote. ' The relevant parts of Avellaneda's Prologo are as follows : ' Como casi es comedia toda la historia de don Quixote dela Mancha, no puede ni deue yr sin prologo : y assi sale al principio desta segunda parte de sus hazanas este menos cacareado, y agressor de sus letores, que el que a su primera parte puso Miguel de Ceruantes Saauedra, y mas humilde que el que segundo en sus Nouelas mas satiricas que exemplares, si bien no poco ingeniosas, no le pareceran a el lo son las razones desta historia que se prosigue, con la autoridad que el la comenfo, y con la copia de fieles relaciones que a su mano llegaron (y digo mano, pues conflessa de si que tiene sola vna, y hablando tanto de todos, emos de dezir del, que como soldado tan viejo en anos, quanto mofo en brios, tiene mas lengua que manos) pero quexesse de mi trabajo por la ganancia que le quito de su segunda parte pues no podra por lo menos dexar de confessar tenemos ambos vn fin, que es desterrar la perniciosa licion de los vanos libros de cauallerias, tan 186 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES These personalities might have annoyed a milder man than Cervantes. In the thickets and swamps which form the ordinavia en gente rustica y ociosa, si bien en los medios diferenciamos, pues el tomo por tales el ofender a mi, y particularmente a quien tan justamente celebran las naciones mas estrangeras, y la nuestra deue tanto por auer entretenido honestissima, y fecundamente tantos anos los teatros de Espana con estupendas, e inumerables comedias, con el rigor del arte que pide el mundo, y con la seguridad y limpieza que de vn ministro del santo Oficio se deue esperar. ' No solo he tomado por medio entremessar la presente Comedia con las simplicidades de Sancho Panja, huyendo de ofender a nadie, ni de hazer ostentacion de sinonomos voluntaries, si bien supiera hazer lo segundo, y mal lo primero : solo digo, que nadie se espante de que saiga de diferente autor, esta segunda parte ; pues no es nueuo el prosseguir vna historia diferentes sujetos ; quantos ban hablado de los amores de Angelica, y de sus sucessos : las Arcadias, diferentes las ban escrito : la Diana no es toda de vna mano. Y pues Miguel de Ceruantes es ya de viejo como el Castillo de san Ceruantes, y por los anos tan mal contentadizo, que todo y todos le enfadan, y por ello esta tan falto de amigos, que quando quisiera adornar sus libros con sonetos campanudos, aula de ahijarlos (como el dize) al Preste luan de las Indias, o al Emperador de Trapisonda por no ballar titulo quijas en Espana, que no se ofendiera de que tomara su nombre en la boca, con permitir tantos, baxan los suyos en los principles de los libros del autor, de quien murmura ; y plegue a Dios aun dexe aora que se ha acogido a la Iglesia, y sagrado. Contentese con su Galatea, y comedias en prosa, que esso son las mas de sus Nouelas ; no nos cause. Santo Thomas en la 2. 2. q. 36 ensena que la embidia es tristeza del bien y aumento ageno, dotrina que la tomo de S. luan Damascene : a este vicio da por hijos S. Gregorio ... el odio, susurracion, detraccion del proximo, gozo de sus pesares, y pesar de sus buenas dichas . . . pero disculpan los hierros de su primera parte en esta materia el auerse escrito entre los de vna carcel, y assi no pudo dexar de salir tiznada dellos, ni salir menos que qucxosa, niormuradora, impaciente, y colerica, qual lo estan los encarcelados, en algo diferencia esta parte dela primera suya, porque tengo opuesto humor tambien al suyo, y en mater'ia de opiniones, en cosas de historia, y tan autentica como esta : cada qual puede echar por donde le pareciere, y mas dando para ello tan dilatado campo la cafiUa de los papeles que para componerla he leydo, que son tantos como los que he dexado de leer.' AVELLANEDA 187 underworld of literature there always lurk rep- tiles — Scorpion, and asp, and amphisbaena dire, Cerastes horned, hydras and ellops drear, And dipsas — that never crawl into daylight save to attack some writer whose little measure of success is his sole crime. Avellaneda was of this species. Cervantes hints that 'Avellaneda' was a pseudonym i; and the world has followed his lead, but without much result. We know nothing of Cervantes's assailant.^ He may have been an unscrupulous rival like that Matheo Luxan de Sayavedra who, in 1602, had published a spurious continuation of Mateo Aleman's Primera Parte de Guzman de Alfarache. Or he may have been merely a bilious pedant like that Pedro de Torres Eamila who, in 1617, flung his Spongia at Lope de Vega. 3 Or he may have been a mediocre playwright who, in his self-complacency, took the strictures on the comedia nueva in the forty-eighth chapter of Bon Quixote for an attack on his unappreciated master- pieces, assumed a pseudonym, and dragged in a ' Cervantes's phrase in the Prologue to the Second Part of Don Quixote is ' autor del segundo don Quixote, digo de aquel que dizen, que se engendrd en Tordesillas, y nacio en Tarragona '. * Some of the attempts at identification are noted in the Complete Works of Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (Glasgow, 1901), vol. Ill, pp. xxvii- xxix. A more recent and more ingenious, though not more convincing, contribution to a discussion which has hitherto proved fruitless will be found in M. Paul Groussac's volume entitled Vne inigme Uttiraire, Le Don Quichotte d' Avellaneda (Paris, 1903). ' See Cayetano Alberto de la Barrera, Nueva Biografia in Obras de Lope de Vega (Madrid, 1890-1902), vol. I, pp. 300-12. 188 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES covert allusion to Lope de Vega in order to give himself an air of mystery and importance. It is also possible that Avellaneda was the writer's real name, and that he came from Tordesillas, as he states on his title-page.^ The one thing certain is that Avellaneda hoped to make a little money by bringing out an unauthorized continuation of another man's work. When he learned from the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares that the author of the First Part of Don Quixote would shortly publish a sequel, he saw his chance of gain vanish. His pre- face is an expression of spite and baulked cupidity. It would have been better had Cervantes ignored the ribaldry which no one can read now without contempt for the boor who wrote it. He had not learned that no man is ever written down but by himself. He was so far disturbed as to change the plan of his continuation, and he deigned to notice Avellaneda's impertinences. This condescension was a mistake. Cervantes replied with dignified moderation in the Prologue to the Second Part of Don Quixote, but the references to his enemy in the text were less happy. It cannot be denied that the last fifteen chapters show signs of haste and of natural anger: still, it is not impossible that, but ' This title-^page reads as follows : Segundo Tomo del Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha, que contiene su tercera salida ; y es la quinta parte de sus auenturas. Compuesto por el Licenciado Alonso Fernandez de Auellaneda, natural de la Villa de Tordesillas. Al Alcalde, Regidores, y hidalgos, de la noble villa del Argamesilla, patria feliz del hidalgo Cauallero Don Quixote de la Mancha. ConLicencia, En Tarragona en casa de Felipe Roberto, Ano 1614. HIS EEPUTATION ABEOAD 189 for Avellaneda's intrusion, Cervantes might have left his great book unfinished, and, if this be so, posterity is indebted to the abusive interloper. However that may be, Cervantes had written his Vak by February 26, 1616. We know that on that day the authentic continuation was already in the hands of the oflBcial licenser, Francisco Marquez Torres, who relates a story ^ of his accompanying one of Cervantes's benefactors, the Cardinal Arch- bishop of Toledo, to return a visit from the French special envoy, Noel Brtnandaddi San Juan Evangelista d la Porta-Latina y de los Impresores de Madrid if. 137 and 139 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, p. 197) : 'En seis de Setiembre [1615]traxo Domingo de Vera por los dos meses de Julio y Agosto pasados veinte y siete reales menos seis maravedis, en que entr6 la capilla de las Rimas Sacras, son de casa de Alonso Martin . 26-2! ' Mas hoy dicho dia primero de Noviembre (1615) traxo Vera de casa de Alonso Martin treinta y dos reales y quatro maravedis de la limosna de Setiembre y Oetubre, y de la capilla de dos Comedias de Cervantes y un libro de Sermones 32-4 There was apparently some delay in delivering Lope de Vega'i Rimas Sacras, the Tassa of which is dated September 24, 1614. Th( other volume no doubt contained the sermons preached in honour o: the beatification of our Seraphic Mother Teresa : the Tassa is datec September 24, 1615. DON QUIXOTE 195 the Second Part of Bon Quixote was not signed till November 5. Hence this sequel can scarcely have been published before December 1616. To prevent the possibility of any confusion with Avellaneda's volume, the writer of the true continuation added ' autor de su primera parte ' after his name on the title-page. The precaution was superfluous. Nobody was likely to mistake the apocryphal sequel for the authentic one. Moreover, Avellaneda's licence did not permit him to sell his work outside the limits of the Tarragona diocese.^ And, finally, his con- tinuation dropped still-born from the press.^ XIII The Segunda Parte del Ingenioso Cavallero Don Quixote de la Mancha was the last of his books that Cervantes saw in print. He had a sonnet ready for Juan Yaglle de Salas,^ and another dedicated to ^ On July 4, 1615, Francisco de Torme y de Liori, acting for Juan de Moncada, Archbishop of Tarragona, wrote : ' damos y otorgamoa licencia que se pueda imprimir y vender en este Arjobispado.' ^ Avellaneda's sequel was forgotten in Spain till 1730, when it was issued with ' Tomo III ' on the title-page, and was got up to match the 1723 and 1780 editions of Cervantes's Don Quixote. An expurgated edition of Avellaneda's book appeared at Madrid in 1805-6 ; it was not heard of again till 1851, when it was included in the Bihlioteca de Autores Espanoles, vol. XVIII, pp. 1-115. Of later editions the most notable is one published (Barcelona, 1905) with a learned introduction by Marcelino Men^ndez y Pelayo. ' Obras completas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 430-1. The sonnet appeared first in Juan Yague de Salas's tragic epic, Los Amantes de Teruel (Valencia, 1616). Alonso Remon gave his Aprobacion to the book on January 22, 1615 ; the King's licencia was granted on January 26. Possibly the sonnet was not written till o2 196 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Alfonso Gonzalez de Salazar^; and he was full oi projects. He seems to have counted on more time than was to be given him. He was in his sixty- ninth year when the Second Part of Don Quixote was published, and was beginning to feel that age was telling on him. In the Prologue to the Novelat exemplares he has left us his portrait at the age oi sixty-six. There we see him, as he saw himself; a man of aquiline visage, with chestnut hair, smootb and unruffled brow, sparkling eyes ; a nose arched but well-proportioned ; a beard that was golden twenty years earlier, but had now turned to silver ; a long moustache that shaded a small mouth con- after these preliminaries were over. Another Aprobacion was giver at Valencia on July 16, 1616, and a local Ucencia was signed oii July 18, 1616, by Vicente Perez, acting for Doctor Martinez. It is plain that the volume was not issued till three or four months aftei Cervantes's death. ^ Obras compleias de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, p. 438. In the notes to their translation (Madrid, 1851-6) ol George Ticknor's History of Spanish Literature, Pascual de Gayangos and Enrique de Vedia suggest (vol. Ill, pp. 506-7) that Cervantes was in som.e degree related to the nun Alfonsa Gonzalez de Salazar throngl his wife. The sonnet first appeared in Miguel Toledano's Minerva Sacra (Madrid, 1616). As this volume was not delivered to the Hermandad de los Impresores de Madrid till August 7, 1616 (Perez Pastor, Biblio grafCa Madrilefia, Parte Segunda, Madrid, 1906, p. 396), we maj perhaps assume that it appeared after Cervantes's death (April' 23, 1616). An ode by Cervantes, addressed to the Conde de Saldana, was firsi printed in 1846, and will be found in Ohras completas de Cervanta (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. VIII, pp. 444r-7. The date of compositior is uncertain. Leopoldo Rius vaguely conjectures that the ode wai written between 1600 and 1616 {Bibliografia critica de las dbroi de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Madrid, 1895-9-1905, vol. I p. 183). APPEAEANCE 197 taining few teeth, six in all, in bad condition and worse placed, since they did not correspond to one another ; height about the average, neither tall nor short; complexion bright, more fair than dark; somewhat bent, and not very quick on his feet.^ This is not the portrait of a man young for his years, and Cervantes would seem to have aged consider- ably between 1613 and 1615. Doubtless his stoop became more marked, his step slower. Marquez Torres, writing in February 1615, bluntly describes him as ' old ' ; he himself, writing to the Conde de Lemos in the following summer, speaks of the work which he had planned out, but adds doubtfully : ' if my old shoulders can bear such a load.' Clearly, Cervantes had his misgivings when he dedicated his * Confirmation of some traits of the portrait is to be gathered else- where. In acknowledging (July 31, 1579) the receipt of the two hundred and fifty ducados contributed by Cervantes's family towards his ransom, Pray Juan Gil and Fray Anton de la Bella, who no doubt derived their information from Dona Leonor de Cortinas, describe Cervantes as larhi ruhio (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. II, p. 56) ; in the ransom certificate (Algiers, September 19, 1580) Fraj Juan Gil describes Cervantes on the day of his release as ' mediano de cuerpo, bien barbado, estropeado del brazo y mano izquierda ' (see p. 50, n. 3). That Cervantes wore spectacles before he published the Novelas exemplares we know on the authority of Lope de Vega (see p. 179, n. 1). If the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares be taken literally, Cervantes was a stammerer. Various alleged portraits of Cervantes have been produced from time to time, and have been finally rejected as spurious (see Francisco Rodriguez Marin, Chilindrinas, Sevilla, 1906, p. 253). The most recent appeared in 1911 (seeSr.Sentenach,£eyo'^»'»»*<'e Cervantesin the Eevue /w'sjponjgMe (Paris, 1911), vol. XXV,pp.l3-18,andM.R.Foulche-Delbosc, Cervantiea. Le ' laurigui ' de VAcadimie espagnole in the Revue hispa- nique (Paris, 1911), vol. XXV, pp. 476-9. 198 MIGUEL DE CEKVANTES plays to Lemos, before the Second Part of Bon Quixote appeared ; and they were justified. He had undertaken too much. In addition to Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda, Historia Setentrional (which appeared after his death), he was engaged on four other works which never appeared at all : the long- promised continuation of the Galatea, a book to be called Las Semanas del Jardin, a play entitled El Engano a los ojos, and El famoso Bernardo, perhaps his last great conception. ^ His spirit was indomit- able, but his strength was waning, and by the spring of 1616 he knew that he was doomed. On March 26, ' For Cervantes's promises to bring out a continuation of the Galatea see the Introduction to the Complete Works of Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (Glasgow, 1903), vol. II, pp. xxxvi-xxxix. Las Semanas del Jardin was promised in the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares (1613), in the dedication of the Ocho eomedias y ocho entremeses nuevos (1615), and in the dedication of Persiles y Sigismunda, which was published posthumously. Professor Gottfried Baist is of opinion that we have a fragment oiLas Semanas del Jardin in La Tia fingida (Grundriss der romanischen Philologie, II. Band, 2. Abteilung, Strassburg, 1897, p. 462, n. 1). Respecting La Tiafingida. which was not printed till 1814, see M. R. PoulchS-Delbosc's Etudi sur 'La Tia fingida' in the Jfesjwe Jiispanigue {^sxis, 1899), vol. VI, pp. 256-306 ; the introduction to the Complete Works of Miguel di Cervantes Saavedra (Glasgow, 1902), vol. VII, pp. xii-xix ; and more especially the ingenious study contributed by Sr. D. Adolfo Bonilla j San Martin to the Archive de investigaciones histdricas (Madrid, 1911) vol. II, pp. 5-92. As for the play, it is promised in a punning passage of the Prologuf to the Ocho eomedias y ocho entremeses nuevos (1615): 'y que pan enmienda de todo esto le ofrezco vna comedia que estoy componiendo y la intitulo el engano a los ojos, que (si no me engano) le ha de dai contento. Y con esto Dios te dk salud, y a mi paciencia.' El famoso Bernardo is promised in the dedication of Persiles j Sigismunda (1617), and would appear to have been the last considerabh work begun by Cervantes. BERNARDO DE SANDOVAL 199 1616, he wrote 1 to acknowledge the kindness of Lemos's kinsman, Bernardo de Sandoval y Rojas, the Cardinal-Archbishop of Toledo, whom Marquez Torres had accompanied to the French Embassy a year before, a prelate whose ' exceeding charity ' is praised in the Prologue to the Second Part of Don Quixote. In thanking the Cardinal for his recent letter and bounty, Cervantes mentions his illness as having grown ' so much worse lately that I believe it will make an end of me, though not of my gratitude '. He had no illusions as to his con- dition. If we are to take literally the statenaents made in the Prologue to Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda, Cervantes would seem to have paid a final visit to his wife's native place about this time. In this Prologue he gracefully describes ^ his meeting on ' Obras comphtas de Cervantes (Madrid, 1863-4), vol. I, p. Ixxi. ' This Prologue is so characteristic that it may be well to reproduce it entire from the first edition : ' Svcedio pues, Lector amantissimo, que viniendo otros dos amigos, y yo del famoso lugar de Esquiuias, por mil causas famoso, vna por sua illustres linages, y otra por sus illustris- simos vinos, senti, que a mis espaldas venia picando con gran priessa vno, que al parecer, traia desseo de alcan9arnos, y aun lo mostro, dandonos vozes, que no picassemos tauto. Esperamosle, y Uego sobre vna borrica vn estudiante pardal, porque todo venia vestido de pardo, antiparas, zapato redondo, y espada con contera, valona brunida, y con tren^as yguales : verdad es, no traia mas de dos, porque se le venia a vn lado la valona por mementos, y el traia sumo trabajo, y cueta de enderejarla : Uegando a nosotros dixo : Vuessas mercedes van a alcan9ar algu oficio, 6 prebeda a la Corte, pues alia esta su lUustrissima de Toledo, y su Magestad ni mas ni menos, segun la priessa con que camina, que en verdad que a mi burra se le ha cantado el victor de caminante mas de vna vez ? A lo qual respondio vno de mis cSpaneros : El rozin del senor Miguel de Ceruantes tiene la culpa 200 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES the high road from Esquivias to Madrid with a grey- clad, beruffled and bespectacled student, who, on hearing the great man's name, saluted him hyper- bolically as *el manco sano, el famoso todo, el desto, porque es algo que pasilargo. Apenas huuo oido el estudiante el nobre de Ceruantes, quado apeadose de su caualgadura, cayendosele aqui el coxin, y alii el portamanteo, que con toda esta autoridad camiuaua, arremetio a mi, y acudiendo assirme de la mano yzquierda, dixo : Si, si, este es el manco sano, el famoso todo, el escritor alegre, y finalmente el rcgozijo de las Musas ? Yo que en tan pocoespacio vi el grande encomio de mis alabanjas, pareciome ser descortesia, no corresponder a ellas, y assi abrazandole por el cuello, donde le eche a perder de todo punto la valona, le dixe : Esse es vn error, donde ban caido mucbos aficionados ignorantes, yo, senor, soy Ceruantes, pero no el regozijo de las Musas, ni ninguno de las demas baratijas, que ba dicbo vuessa merced : vuelua a cobrar su burra, y suba, y caminemos en buena conuersacion, lo poco que nos falta del camino : hizolo assi el comedido estudiante, tuuimos algun tanto mas las riendas, y con paso asseutado seguimos nuestro camino, en el qual se trato de mi enfermedad, y el buen estudiante me deshaucio al momento, diziendo: Esta enfermedad es de ydropesia, que no la sanara toda el agua del mar Oceano que dulcemente se beuiesse : vuessa merced, senor Ceruantes, ponga tassa al beuer, no oluidaudose de comer, que con esto sanara sin otra medicina alguna. Esso me ban dicho muchos, respSdi yo, pero assi puedo dexar de beuer a todo mi beneplacito, como si para solo esso huuiem uacido, mi vida se va acabando, y al paso de las efemeridas de mis pulsos, que a mas tardar, acabaran su caiTera este Domingo, acabare yo la de mi vida. En fuerte punto ha Uegado vuessa merced, a conocerme, pues no me queda espacio, paramostrarme agradecido a la voluntad, que vuessa merced mc ha mosti-ado : en esto llegamos a la puente de Toledo, y yo entre por ella, y el se aparto a entrar por la de Segouia. Lo que se dira de mi sucesso, tendra la fama cuydado, mis amigos gana de dezilla, y yo mayor gana de escuchalla. Tornele a abrajar, voluioseme ofrecer, pico a su burra, y dex6me tan maldispuesto, como el yua cauallero en su burra, a quien auia dado gran ocasion a mi pluma, para escriuir donayres, pero no son todos los tiempos vnos : tiempo vendra quija, donde anudando este roto hilo, diga, lo que aqui me falta, y lo que sfe, conuenia. A Dios gracias, a Dios donayres, a Dios regozijados amigos, que yo me voy muriendo, y desseando veros presto contentos en la otra vida.' LAST ILLNESS 201 escritor alegre, y finalmente el regocijo de las musas '. As the young enthusiast ambled on his ass beside his hero's long-striding nag, the conversation turned (so we are told) on Cervantes's illness, which the student diagnosed as dropsy, counselling the sick man to drink next to nothing — advice not easily followed by one who was evidently consumed with thirst. Dropsy is no longer regarded as a specific malady, but as a symptom which occurs in various diseases.^ With such insufficient data as we have, it is impossible to say precisely what Cervantes suffered from: whatever it was, he knew that he was beyond cure when he wrote the Prologue to Los Trabajos de Persiks y Sigismunda. The ride from Esquivias (if it ever took place) was his last. When, as he says, he parted from the admiring student at the Toledo Bridge leading into Madrid, he felt life ebbing from him, and imagined that all would be over by the following Sunday. He was not to be released so soon. On April 2, being then, too ill to leave his lodgings in the Calle del Leon, he was professed at home as ' Some modern Spanish doctors are of opinion that Cervantes suffered from arterio-scleroais. This is not impossible, for dropsy is present in many forms of heart disease; but it is also present in disease of the liver, kidneys, and lungs, as well as in cases of ascites and diabetes. I gather from the experts whom I have consulted that the thirst from which Cervantes suffered is specially characteristic of diabetes ; that no proper study of this complaint was even begun till 1679, when Thomas Willis's observations served as a starting-point ; and that the physicians of Cervantes's time would therefore have failed to diagnose it. 202 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES a Tertiary of Saint Francis.^ There was no hope for him on April 18, when he received the sacra- ment of Extreme Unction from Francisco Lopez, the priest who had ministered to Andrea and Magdalena on their death-beds." On April 19 Cer- vantes made a supreme effort, wrote his moving valedictory dedication of Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda, and laid down his pen. His work was done. He would have wished, he says, to live long enough to see Lemos again. But it was not to be : he felt this when — a man of letters even in his agony — he adapted the opening of certain coj^las antiguas to his purpose : Puesto ya el pie en el estriuo, con las ansias de la muerte, Gran Senor, esta te escriuo.'' ' See Juan Antonio Pellicer, Vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra in El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha (Madrid, 1797-8), vol. I, p. ccxiv : 'En dos de abril de mil seiscientos y diez y seis profesd, en su casa por estar enfermo, el hermano Miguel de Zerbantes : en la calle del Leon, en casa de D. Francisco Martinez, clerigo, hermano de la Orden.' This is copied from fol. 1306 of the record mentioned on p. 156, n. 1. The facts respecting Cervantes's receiving the habit of the Tertiaries are stated on p. 179, n. 2. ^ The date is given by Cervantes in the dedication of Persiles y Sigismunda dated April 19, 1616 : ' ayer me dieron la Estrema vncion, y oy escriuo esta.' ' These coplas antiguas have been identified and published (with two glosas) by M. R. Foulch^-Delbosc in the Revue hispanique, Paris, 1899, vol. VI, pp. 319-21. The first stanza reads as follows : Puesto ya el pie en el estriuo con las ansias de la muerte senora, aquesta te escriuo, pues partir no puedo vivo, quanto mas toraar a verte. DEATH 203 'With one foot in the stirrup,' he made ready for his journey from sunshine to the sunless land. Cervantes died on Saturday, April 23, 1616.^ Next day, clothed in his Franciscan habit and with his face uncovered,^ he was borne by his brother Tertiaries from the Calle del Leon to the convent of the Barefooted Trinitarian nuns in the Calle de Cantarranas.^ There he was buried and there he still rests. No stone marks his grave, which is now beyond identification. His will has not The lines were evidently often in Cervantes's mind : he had already quoted them incidentally in La Ilustre fregona. ' See the last page (D 2 verso, but unnumbered) of the editor's preface to Comedias, y entremeses de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, el autor del Don Quixote, divididas en dos tomos, con una Dissertacion, o Prologo sdbre las Comedias de EspaHa (Madrid, 1749). ' En 23. de Abril de 1616- anos murio Miguel Cervantes Saavedra, casado con Dona Cathalina de Salazar, Calle del Leon. Becibio los Santos Sacramentos de mano del Licenciado Francisco Lopez. Manddse enterrar en las Monjas Trinitarias. Mando dos Missas del alma, y lo demas a voluntad de su muger, que es Testamentaria, y al Licenciado Francisco Nunez [Martinez], que vive alii. Fol. 270 [de loa Libros de la Parroquia de San Sebastian de Madrid].' The editor of this issue. Bias Antonio Nasarre y Ferruz, makes one or two slips in his transcription. The most important of these is the substitution of Nuiiez for Martinez : this is corrected by Sr. D. Ramon Le6n Mainez in Cervantes y su epoca, p. 570 n. " This fact is stated in the epitaph at the beginning of Persiles y Sigismunda : ' De Don Francisco de Vrbina a Miguel de Ceruantes insigne, y Christiano ingenio de nuestros tiempos, a quien lleuaron los Terceros de san Francisco, a enterrar con la cara descubierta, como a Tercero que era.' The writer of the epitaph was brother of Lope de Vega's first wife, Isabel de Urbina. ' Navarrete s'tates (Vida, pp. 532-6) that Cervantes was buried in the Calle del Humilladero. The improbability of this has often been pointed out : the impossibility of it is now established (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 345-82, and vol. II, pp. 539- 47). 204 MIGUEL DE CEKVANTES been found; but he is known to have directed that two masses should be offered for the repose of his soul, and that others should be said at the discretion of his executors/ Dona Catalina and Francisco Martinez,^ the priest in whose house he died.^ ' See Cervantes's death-certificate (quoted on p. 203, n. 1). We cannot doubt that Dona Catalina arranged for many more masses to be said for Cervantes. When she came to die some ten years later she left instructions that three hundred masses were to be offered for the repose of her soul: see p. 208, n. 1. '^ Martinez became chaplain to the Trinitarian nuns in whose convent Cervantes was buried : Luis de Molina appointed him executor of his will dated December 25, 1631 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervantinos, vol. I, pp. 211-19). " Cervantes changed his lodgings frequently during the last seven years of his residence at Madrid. The records of the Franciscan Tertiaries show that on June 8, 1609, when his wife and his sister Andrea received the habit, he was living in the ' calle de la Magdalena, a las espaldas de la duquesa de Pastrana '. The entry concerning his wife is supplemented with the words — 'ya vive a las espaldas de Elorito '. This move to the back of the College of our Lady of Loretto is presumed to have taken place before October 9, 1609. At this date Cervantes and his family were living ' en la calle de la Madalena, frontero de Francisco Daza, maestro de hacer coches'. The record of his wife's profession as a Franciscan Tertiary (see p. 1 61 , n. 1) shows that Cervantes was living 'en la calle del Leon, frontero de Castillo, panadero de Corte ' on June 27, 1610. A passage in the Adjunta al Pamaso seems to indicate that on July 22, 1614 — or a little earlier— Cervantes lodged 'en la calle de las huertas, frontero de laa casas dSde solia viuir el Principe de Marruecos '. Navarrete mentions {Vida, p. 476) another move to the Calle del Duque de Alba : ' Que mor6 en la calle del duque de Alba, cerca de la del Estudio de San Isidro, se sabe por el proceso de desahucio que existia en la escribania de D. Juan Zamacola.' The house in the Calle del Leon in which Cervantes died stood ' en la esquina de la calle de Francos '. In El Antiguo Madrid Ramon de Mesonero Romanes writes as follows {Ohras, Madrid, 1881, vol. VI, pp. 45-6) : ' El insigne Cer- vantes, que habitd, come dijimos, un tiempo, en la calle de las Huertas, hacia el niimero 16 nuevo, frontero de las casas donde solia PEBSILE8 Y SIGISMUNDA 205 Cervantes's papers passed into the keeping of his widow. Of the four works which he mentioned as in progress only one was printed : Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda. The others were probably unfinished: apparently no care was taken to pre- serve these three manuscripts.^ Five months after Cervantes's death his widow obtained a Privilegio for Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda,^ and sold it to Villarroel.^ The book was printed before Christmas, vivir el Principe de Marruecos, moro otra vez en la plazuela de Matute, detms del colegio del Loreto ; otra en la calle del Leon (rf Mentidero), mimero 9 antiguo y 8 modemo ; y en fin, vino a fallecer en la misma calle, en la casa numero 20 antiguo de la manzana 228, que hace esquina a la de Francos, y que fue demolida per ruinosa en 1833.' ^4^0, the same writer's article, La Casa de Cervdntes, contributed under tKe^wejidonym of ' El Curioso Parlante ' to the Revista Espanola (23 de Abril de 1833), and included in the First Series of Escenas Matntenses (Obras, Madrid, 1881, vol. I, pp. 305-18). ' Most of Cervantes's autographs are reports, petitions, signatures to receipts, and the like. Three of a literary character are alleged to exist : the first two redondillas on the death of Isabel de Valois, the ode on the Conde de Saldana, and the letter to Cardinal Bernardo de Sandoval y Rojas (pp. 14, 196 n. 1, and 199 of the present volume). The redondillas are juvenile compositions ; the ascription to Cervantes of the ode on Saldana is contestable ; the third is a private letter and it is by no means certain that any of these, except the letter, is in Cervantes's handwriting. But, assuming all of them to be authentic holographs, the number would be astonishingly few. ' Jose de Valdivielso's Aprobacion was given on September 9, 1616 ; on September 24 a Privilegio for ten years was granted to ' Catalina de Salazar biuda de Miguel de Ceruantes Saauedra '. ' Villarroel and the printer Juan de la Cuesta are judged to have taken unusual pains in producing the book. Leopoldo Rius writes {Bihliografia crttica de las obras de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Madrid, 1895-1905, vol. I, p. 161) : ' El papel es bueno y la impresion muy esmerada. Puede afirmarse que de todas las ediciones pHncipes de las Obras de Cervantes, excepcidn hecha del Viaje del Pamaso, es la mejor impresa.' As already stated (p. 182) it is possible that in the case of the Viage del Pamaso the printing bill was paid by the elder Tapia. 206 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES 1616,1 and appeared early in 1617.^ Cervantes had been engaged on it for at least three years, ^ and evidently felt confident of its success.* At the outset his expectations seemed likely to be fulfilled. Some six or seven ^ editions were issued in the Peninsula'' during 1617; in 1618 two French translations of the work appeared, and an English ' The Fe de erratas is dated December 15, 1616 ; the Tassa was signed on December 23 by Geronimo Nunez de Leon, who, apparently forgetting for the moment that the author was dead, ends with the words : ' de pedimiento de la parte del dicho Miguel de Ceruantes doy esta fee.' ^ This follows from the Libro Primero de la Hermandad de San Juan Evangelista d la Porta-Latina y de los Impresores de Madrid, f. 156 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cervaniinos, vol. I, p. 198) ! ' A dos de Abril de 1617 de la capilla de casa de Juan de la Cuesta se traxo : 2 Libros de Josepho, que tuvieron 100 pliegos. 2 Persiles, 116 pliegos. Epistolas de San Gerdnimo, 76. 2 Devocionarios de Lucio, 52. 2 Monarchias, octava parte, de Zamora, 320 pliegos, que suman todos 664 pliegos, que a dos maravedis, valen treinta y nueve reales y dos maravedis . . . 39-2.' ' Persiles y Sigismunda is promised in the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares (1613). In the dedication of the Oeho comedias y ocho entremeses nuews Cervantes speaks between jest and earnest of ' el gran Persiles ', In the dedication of the Second Part of Don Quixote he writes more seriously : ' con esto me despido, ofreciendo a V. Ex. los trabajos de Persilis, y Sigismunda, libro a quie dare fin dentro de quatro meses, Deo volente, el qual ha de ser, o el mas malo, o el mejor que en nuestra lengua se haya compuesto, quiero dezir de los de entreteni- miento, y digo, E[ me arrepiento de auer dicho el mas malo, porque segun la opinion de mis amigos ha de llegar al estremo de bondad possible. . . .' ^ The number is doubtful, for an edition dated 1617 and bearing Juan de Villarroel's name is believed to be an unauthorized reprint (Bins, Bibliografia, vol. I, pp. 161-2). " One of these, with a Tassa dated July 4, 1617, was issued at Lisbon by lorge Rodriguez. HIS RELATIVES 207 version was published in 1619. But this popularity was not lasting. Public interest in PersiJes y Sigis' mmda rapidly diminished, flickered out in Spain soon after 1630, and showed no sign of revival for nearly a century. ^ XIV Long before then Cervantes's family had become extinct. Of his sister Loisa we hear nothing after 1620. His granddaughter, Isabel Sanz del Aguila, was no longer living on January 31, 1622.^ His niece Costanza died unmarried on September 22, 1624,^ leaving to her cousin Isabel de Saavedra the balance still due from their uncle Eodrigo's estate.* Cervantes's widow, who resided in Madrid with * No edition of the text, and no translation of it, appears to have been published between J629 and 1719, and the existence of a 1629 edition may be thought doubtful. ' ' For aver muerto la dha. dona ysabel sanz ' : these words occur in the document printed on p. 152, n. 2. This cannot be later than January 31, 1622, and may be earlier. ' See Juan Antonio Pellicer, Vida de Miguel de Cet-vantes Saavedra in El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha, Madrid, 1797-8), vol. I, p. ccxv : ' D.» Constanza de Obando, soltera, murio en la calle del Amor de Dios en 22. de septiembre de 1624. anos. Recibio los santos sacra- mentos de mano del licenciado Corbalan. No testo. Enterrola Luis de Molina, secretario de Carlos Strata : de fabrica [6 sepultura] 12. ducadoB.' Pellicer refers to ' el Libro de Difuntos [de la parroquia de S. Sebastian de esta Corte] que empieza aiio de 1624, y acaba en el de 1628. fol. 41. b '. * That Isabel de Saavedra inherited the money due from the Crown to her uncle Rodrigo is proved by the following clause in her last will, dated September 19, 1652 (Perez Pastor, Documentog cervdntinos, 208 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES her brother Francisco de Palacios, spent her last years in pious exercises, and died on October 31, 1626, naming Luis de Molina as one of her execu- tors. ^ As might have been expected, Molina's marriage with Cervantes's daughter was not happy. Though Isabel de Saavedra throws out the humorous vol. IIj p. 336) : ' Declare que Su Magestad me debe quinientos escudos, lo que pareciere conforme a las cartas de pago, de un sueldo del alferez Eodrigo de Cervantes Saabedra, mi tio, el qual se paga por el oflcio de descargos ; mando se haga la diligencia y se cobre.' The sums received at intervals are stated on p. 108, n. 2. As Isabel de Saavedra was illegitimate, the money would not presumably have been paid to her as a matter of course. Some form of bequest must, one would think, have been made. Yet, as appears from the document quoted in the last note, Costanza died intestate. Perhaps proof was given of a verbal bequest. Another possibility will suggest itself to any one who has had occasion to study Isabel de Saavedra's character at close quarters. During Cervantes's lifetime she had passed herself off as Cervantes's legitimate daughter in a case where money was at stake. She was not incapable of doing the same thing again for the same reason. ' See Juan Antonio Pellicer, Vida de Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra in El Ingenioso Hidalgo Don Quixote de la Mancha (Madrid, 1797-8), vol. I, pp. ccxv-ccxvi : ' D.* Catalina de Salazar, viuda, murio en la calle de los Desampa- rados en 81. de otubre de 1626. anos. Reoibio los santos sacramentos de mano de Carlos Manrique : test6 ante Alonso de Valencia, secre- tario : su fecha en 20. de este presente mes y ano. Enterrose en el convento de las Trinitarias, y mando le dixesen trescientas misas del alma : y fundo una Memoria. Albaoeas Luis de Molina, secretario, y Francisco de Palacios, que vive en la misma casa.' Pellicer refers to ,' el Libro de Difuntos [de la parroquia de S. Sebas- tian de esta Corte] que empieza ano de 1624. y acaba en el de 1628. fol. 213 b '- The above-mentioned will, made on October 20, 1626, has not been found. It may be assumed that in it Cervantes's widow cancelled the directions as to her burial-place given in her will of June 16, 1610 (see p. 159, n. 1). She was not buried, as she had previously wished, near her father at Esquivias, but in the convent of the Trinitarian nuns at Madrid, where her husband had been buried some ten years before. THE MOLINA HOUSEHOLD 209 suggestion that her marriage was made in heaven,^ it had been a casamiento enganoso. Husband and wife were never at one except in theii' law-suits with Urbina^ and others.^ Though unscrupulous ' The phrase occurs in Isabel de Saavedva's surreptitious will, dated June 4, 1631 (Perez Pastor, Docnmentos cenantinos, vol. I, p. 202) : ' considerando que Dios nuestro senor fue servido de darmele en compania. ..." ° Urbina kept his claim alive by intermittent sworn statements that the house in the Red de San Luis belonged to him, and by acting as the actual proprietor. Thus he mortgaged the house on December 7, 1616 {Tbid., vol. II, pp. 298-300), and confirmed this arrangement more fully on November 18, 1617 {Ibid., vol. II, p. 425, n. 1). On June 3, 1619, he authorized Pedro de la Plaza and Baltasar de Montoya to act for him in ' el pleito y causa que quiero que se ponga y que se ha puesto a Luis de Molina, como marido y conjunta persona de dona Isabel de Saavedra, vecinos desta dicha villa, sobre la propiedad de la casa en que los susodichos viven arriba de la iglesia parroquial de San Luis desta villa de Madrid, que como propia habida y adquirida para mi con mis propios dineros, de que tengo bastantes escripturas e instrumentos en mi poder de que daran razon los dichos mis procura- dores e las presentaran con la peticion e demanda que sobre la propiedad de la dicha casa se ha de presentar en mi nombre con las demas peticiones y escripturas e probanzas que en el dicho pleito fueren necesarias hasta le fenecer y acabar en todas instancias e sacar carta executoria del para tenerla en guarda de mi derecho y de mis herederos e suoesores ' [Ibid., vol. II, pp. 303-4). Another document relating to a suit begun by Urbina against the Molinas in January 1622 has been already quoted (p. 152, n. 2). In other ways the Molinas behaved as if they were the real owners of the house. They made structural alterations which were paid for in June 1620 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cenantinos, vol. II, pp. 309-10). On July 21, 1630, in a carta de dbligacion Molina impudently declared ' vivo en mis casas a la Red de San Luis ' {Ibid., vol. II, p. 315). In view of the dispute as to the ownership of the house, the clergy to whom certain charges on the house were payable pressed for immediate settlement. On June 22, 1621, Molina and his wife undertook to be responsible. In the body of the document {Ibid., vol. II, p. 312) they originally described themselves ' como duenos y posehedores que somos de las dichas casas ' : the word ' duenos ' is conveniently blotted. ' In her will of June 4, 1631 (Perez Pastor, Documentos cetvantinos, 1497 p 210 MIGUEL DE CEEVANTES where his interests were concerned, and though n^ lacking in the astute arts of a small attorne) Molina proved incompetent in the conduct of h affairs, and lived from hand to mouth, pawnir rings or jewels, and borrowing money from his ow servant.^ As he admitted in his will,^ he wj equally unsuccessful in his attempts to manage h wife's business. He died on January 23, 1632 vol. I, p. 203), Isabel de Saavedia mentions ' un pleito que tuvim con un tie del dicho Luis de Molina.' ' Molina became escribano real in 1616, the year of Cervantei death (Ibid., vol. I, p. 304). « See Molina's vyill dated December 25, 1631 {Ibid., vol. I, pp. 21 19) : ' Item deolaro que debo a Pedro Martinez, mi criado, ducient realea que me prest6, de que le hize cedula, y por quenta dell le tengo dados quarenta reales, mando se le pague lo dema A quantity of valuables was pawned to one Miguel de Castro. ' Ibid., vol. I, p. 218 : ' Item declare para descargo de mi concienc que la poca o mucha hacienda es de la dicha dona Isabel Saabedra, i muger, y que antes la he consumido y gastado mucha parte de su dol por lo qual la dexo y nombro por mi universal heredera. . . .' ' The following death-certificate is printed by Julio de Siguenza La Ilustracidn EspaHola y Americana (15 de Abril de 1883), ano xxv: num. XIV, p. 235 : ' Parroquia de San Luis (Madrid). — Libro de Difuntos de S.' Luis. — Empecosse en 25 de Octubre de 1629 asta 1634. (En el fol. I'i vuelto hay la partida siguiente) : — ' Luis de Molina marido de D." Isabel de Saavedra murid oybiern 23 de Henero de 1632, en la calle de SanLuis en frente de la de 1 Jardines en sus cassas : recibid los Santos Sacramentos que se 1 administrd el Lie.'*" Gonzalez (?) teniente de San Luis tesante (sic text6 ante) Thomds Bamirez escribano rreal que tiene su ofic enfrente de la estampa de los naipes. Nombrd por su albacea a dicha su mujer y al p.* presentado Fr. Juan de Villafranca de 6rden de la Merced, y al Lic-i^" Francisco Martinez Capellan en 1 monjas Trinitarias descalfas. Mandd por su alma cinco missas alma y las demds que su muger dispusiere. Mandose enterrar i S. basilic' DEATH OF MOLINA 211 dishonest and untruthful to the end, persisting in his assertion that the house in the Eed de San Luis belonged to his wife. Yet it speaks well for his forbearance that he bore his wife no ill-will.^ Shrewd and shrewish as she was, Isabel de Saavedra not unnaturally mistrusted her shifty husband, re- corded his fecklessness in a surreptitious will, did not name him one of her executors, and left strict instructions that a female slave of hers should on no account pass into his possession.^ As it hap- pened, Isabel de Saavedra long survived Molina. An adept in driving a hard bargain, she appears to have lived in comfortable circumstances.^ A ' Besides leaving his wife all he had, Molina appointed her his executrix, and praised her as ' tan gran Christiana ' (P^rez Pastor, Documentos eervantinos, vol. I, p. 212). The phrase does not appear to be used ironically. ' Her first will, dated June 4, 1631, contains the following passages (Ibid., vol. I, pp. 199-207) : ' Item declare que al tiempo y quando vine al matrimonio con el dicho Luis de Molina, mi marido, truxe a su poder como bienes dotales mios treynta y seys mill sete- cientos y quarenta y tres reales, los dos mill ducados en moneda de plata y lo demas en bienes muebles, y de la dicha dote hoy en dia esta menoscabada la mi tad y mis, por donde me hallaba desobligada de hacer al dicho Luis de Molina, mi marido, participe de mis bienes muebles. . . .' ' Item mando que Gracia, mi esclava, no quede en poder del dicho Luis de Molina, mi marido, ni se le pueda dar en preeio de los ducientos ducados que por clausula deste mi testamento mando se le den, y si se hiciere lo contrario, la dicha esclava quede libre, porque ansi conviene, por quanto la dicha esclava ha dicho que si sigue en poder del dicho Luis de Molina tiene de hacer algun mal recaudo, y por evitar esto es mi voluntad se cumpla lo arriba dicho.' ' She let Urbina's house in July 1648 at an annual rent of 1,150 reales; the tenant, after paying half a year's rent in advance, found that the house did not suit him ; Isabel de Saavedra thereon consented 1«7 p 2 212 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Tertiary of Saint Francis, she grew more and mori devout as she became older, and played an ignobl part as informer to the Inquisition.^ She died oi September 20, 1652. ^ Her first will shows tha< to cancel the agreement on condition that the tenant should pa 220 reales for the six days that he had lived in the house, and that sh should not refund the balance of 355 reales till she succeeded i reletting it {lUd., vol. II, pp. 332-3). Isabel de Saavedra's circumstances are indicated by the fact tha she provided for a thousand masses to be offered for her intentio and the repose of her soul {Ibid., vol. II, p. 335). In 1643 she we able, without any inconvenience to herself, to lend 2,200 realt to Fernando Ortiz and his wife (Ibid., vol. II, pp. 326-8), and remai out of pocket for nine years {Ibid., vol. II, p. 337). ' That she had joined the Tertiaries before June 4, 1631, appeal from a phrase in her will of that date : ' Y quando la volunta de Dios nuestro senor fuere de me llevar desta presente vida, la mi es [que] mi cuerpo sea amortaxado con el habito de mi padre serafic San Francisco ' {Ibid., vol. I, p. 200). On March 30 and September 21, 1639, she gave evidence before tl Inquisitor Juan Adam de la Parra against a crazy woman name Maria Bautista (IW(Z., vol. II, pp. 319-25) : on both occasions shegai her age as about forty, forgetting that she was at least fifty-four. '^ Ibid., vol. II, p. 343 : ' En 20 del dicho mes y ano {Septiembre i 1653), murio Dona Isabel de Sahabedra, viuda de Luis de Molina, cal de la Sarten, casas de Don Francisco Montalbo. Reciuio los sant( sacramentos. Test6 ante Pedro de Castro ; testamentarios a el mu reberendo Padre Frai Angelino de la Questa, abad de San Martin, y Dona Antonia de Gomara, que bibe en dicha casa de la difunts mandd mill misas de alma y docientas de testamento ; enterr6i en San Martin.' P&ez Pastor refers to ' Arch, de S. Martin. Difunto libro 5°., f». 345 v".' On October 7, 1652, Pedro de Castro declared (Ibid., vol. II, p. 34 that he had seen Isabel de Saavedra lying dead on September 19 that year : ' doy fee que en el dia diez y nueve de Setiembre pasa( deste presente ano de mil y seiscientos y cinquenta y dos vi muer naturalmente a Dona Isabel de Saabedra, viuda de Luis de Molina, quien doy fee conoci. ..." It seems clear, however, that Castn memory was at fault, for the certificate of Isabel de Saavedra's dea in the parish record is preceded by other death-certificates dat A DEATH-BED KEPENTANCE 213 during a severe illness in 1631, she had doubts as to the validity of her claim to the house in the Eed de San Luis.^ On her recovery her scruples evi- dently vanished, for she let the house, and took the rent for it ; but they returned when she was struck down twenty-one years later. Her last will, signed the day before her death, contains a rambling and verbose clause which amounts to an admission that she and her husband had successfully conspired, in defiance of Cervantes's wishes, to cheat Urbina.^ September 20, 1652 ; he would appear to have been thinking of the day on whieh he drew up her will (September 19), which, by a slip of the pen, he dated September 9 (Ibid., vol. II, p. 449, nn. 1 and 2). * This is deducible from the concluding words of the following clause : ' . . . y asimismo le doy, cedo, renuncio y traspaso [al dicho Luis de Molina, mi marido,] qualquier derecho justo que yo tengo y me pertenesce a las cassas en que al presents vivo, ansi a la habitacion della como a las mexoras que en ellas se ban hecho, y en caso que a eUo no hay justicia es mi voluntad no lo intente ' {Ibid., vol. I, p. 202). ' Ibid., vol. II, pp. 338-9 : ' Item declaro que he poseido una casa a la Red de San Luis, en que al presente vive un criado de Su Magestad, en la qual dicha casa he gastado desde que la he tenido mas de seiscientos ducados en cosas precisas para poder vivir, como son : una cueva que me costd cien ducados, y empedrar y poner de ladrillo el pozo que se hundia, y aunque es de medianeria, gaste en ello cien ducados, y en levantar unas tapias que se caian y hice a mi costa cinco tapias en alto en que se me puso pleito, procurandolo impedir, y gaste en el dicho levantamiento cien ducados, y tambien levante un aposento que estaba caido en el patio, en que gaste otros cinquenta, muy poco mas a menos, y en puertas nuevas, oerraduras y ventanas y en cerrar un corredor y reparar los desvanes y division de tabiques gaste lo demas, que uno y otro monto muy bien los dichos seiscientos ducados, antes mas que menos.— Y estos reparos fueron tan necesarioa, que sin ellos me decian los maestros estaba a peligro de hundirse. Y aunque yo he tenido y tengo la dicha casa por mia propia en propiedad como cosa heredada de Dona Isabel Sanz del p3 2U MIGUEL DE CERVANTES Even so, her confession was grudging and incom- Aguila y Saabedra, mi hixa, y de Don Diego Sanz del Agnila, mi primero marido, con todo eso porque el senor Miguel de Cerbantes Saavedra, mi padre, hizo una escritura en favor del secretario Juan de Urbina y sus herederos para que quedase aplicada a cierta capellania y lo demas contenido en dicha escritura o escrituras, y aunque estoy informada que tengo derecho para poder disponer de la dicha casa libremente, con todo eso no he querido ni quiero oponerme a lo que hizo el dicho mi padre, y ansi estoy convenidacon Mateo de Carranza, como testamentario del dicho secretario Juan de Urbina, en que pagandoseme los dichos seiscientos ducados que se me deben por los reparos y mexoras que he hecho en la dicha casa, y mas catorce mil reales en que el dicho Luis de Molina, mi marido, alcanzo al dicho Juan de Urbina en la compania que tuvieron del arrendamiento de Unas herrerias, como el dicho mi marido, de quien soy heredera, lo declar6 en el testamento que hizo, debaxo de cuya dispusicion muri6, sobre que ha habido pleito y esta pendiente en el oficio que fue de Fulano Romero, escribano de provincia, se queda la dicha casa para la dispusicion que della tomaron los dichos Miguel de Cerbantes, mi padre, y secretario Juan de Urbina, y ansi lo quiero y mando, y haciendoseme el dicho pagamento me desisto de qualquier derecho y accion que tengo y me pertenece a dicha casa, y no de otra manera.' Romero's Christian name, which the testatrix was unable to recall, was Martin. He is mentioned in Molina's will {Tbid., vol. I, p. 213) as possessing certain receipts which would prove that Urbina owed Molina over eighteen thousand 7-eales in connexion with the ironworks at Canizares (see p. 169, n. 3). ' Item declaro que yo tuve compania quatro u cinco anos con el secretario Juan de Urbina en rafon de una herreria que esta en Cani9ares, tierra de Cuenca, y nunca se ajustaron las quentas por estar ausente siempre el dicho Juan de Urbina, y a mi parecer sere acreedor a sus bienes en mas de diez y ocho mill reales conforme a las cartas de pago y demas papeles y recaudos que estdn presentados en el oficio de Martin Romero, escribano de provincia, por mandado de los senores del Consejo, mando se siga el pleito y se cobre lo que se debiere de los bienes y hazienda del dicho secretario Urbina.' In the next clause of his will Molina makes a similar allegation respecting his uncle, the Licentiate Luis de Molina, priest of the church of San Miguel at Cuenca. He accuses his uncle of appropriat- ing money, of refusing to settle accounts, and of hiding the ledgers, so as to avoid paying a sura of over twenty thousand reales due to his UEBINA'S HOUSE 215 plete, and the evil which she did lived after her.^ nephew. It is impossible to say what amount of truth there is in these statements. It is, however, noticeable that while Molina claimed ' over eighteen thousand reales ' from Urbina's estate on December 25, 1631, his wife did not put the amount higher than ' over fourteen thousand reales ' in 1652. ' On October 9, 1652, Urbina's executor, Mateo de Carranza, took steps to obtain possession of the house in the Red de San Luis (Ibid., vol. II, p. 347). On October 11, the dlguaciles were instructed to hand it over to him. On October 14, 1652, Carranza made the application to the court : ' Madrid, 14 Ootubre, 1652. ' Mateo de Carranza, secretario de S.M. y de la Eeyna Nuestra Senora, digo que Juan de Urbina, difunto, secretario que fue de S.M., tenia una casa suya propia en la Red de S. Luis, de que tenia hecha donacion a Dona Isabel de Saavedra Cervantes, para que gozase el usufructo de ella por los dias de su vida y que despues volviese a sus herederos. Y porque la susodicha fallecio a diez y nueve de Setiembre pasado de este presente ano (como consta del testimonio de escribano de que hago presentacion), y yo tengo poder de los dichos herederos para administrar, vender o enagenar todos los bienes, asi muebles como raices, que quedaron por fin y muerte del dicho secretario Juan de Urbina, y siendo la dicha casa uno de ellos, y tocandole a los dichos herederos por muerte de la dicha Dona Isabel de Saavedra. — Pido y suplico a v.m. mande que se me de posesion de la dicha casa en virtud del dicho poder, de que asi mismo hago presentacion, para administrarla, venderla o disponer de ella en nombre de los dichos herederos, que para que conste que lo son presento la clausula del testamento del dicho Juan de Urbina, en que los instituy6. Pido justicia, etc. '=Otrosi digo que por pagar la dicha casa, de incomodaparticion y de censo perpetuo que tiene, diez y nueve ducados cado ano, luego que fallecio el dicho secretario Juan de Urbina, puso pleito a sus testamentarios la dicha Dona Isabel de Saavedra, para que le fundasen censo de la dicha cantidad, como se le fundaron por haber side condenados a ello y declarado que debia gozar el dicho usufructo sin obligacion de pagar las dichas cargas ; el qual dicho censo le fundaron Urban de Ortega y Manuela Perez, su muger, de trescientos y ochenta ducados de principal, que hacen de renta en cada un ano los dichos diez y nueve ducados, como todo consta del testimonio que presento. — Y por que el dicho censo toca y pertenece a los dichos herederos, pido y suplico a v.m. mande se notifique a los dichos Urban de Ortega, 216 MIGUEL DE CERVANTES a los que hubieren sucedido en la obligacion de la paga de el, reconozcan a los dichos herederos y a mi en su nombre por duenos del dicho censo y renta de ^1 para acudirles con ella desde el dia de la muerte de la dicha Dona Isabel de Saavedra en adelante, mientras no le redimieren. Pido justicia, etc. — Matheo de Carranza.' {Ibid., vol. 11, pp. 345-7.) On the same date as this document was drawn up (October 14, 1652) the dlguacil Juan de Legarda made over the house— 'sin perjuicio de tercero ' — to Carranza on behalf of Urbina's heirs, and at the same time the occupant of the house was directed to make his future payments to Carranza. The circumstances are not very clear, but what seems to have happened was this. Isabel de Saavedra withdrew her claim to the house in the Red de San Luis on condition that she was repaid the money she had spent— six hundred ducados — on improving and keeping up the house, in addition to fourteen thousand reales alleged to be due to her late husband by Urbina on account of the ironworks at Canizares. Perez Pastor is of opinion (Ibid., vol. II, p. 428) that she came to this agreement with Carranza before 1648 : the grounds for this opinion are not stated. But the point is unimportant, for the arrangement was admittedly not put into effect till October 14, 1652, after Isabel de Saavedra's death. It did not prove to be a satisfactory solution. Urbina's heirs, who lived in Italy, did not comply with the conditions ; the six hundred ducados and the fourteen thousand reales were not paid ; the house was accordingly adjudged to Isabel de Saavedra's niece, Angela Benita Gasi, and was sold in 1666. INDEX Acedo Velazquez (Juan de), 139 n. 2, n. 4, 147 n. 1, 151 n. 2. Acquaviva (Giulio), 17 n. 4, n. 5, 18 n. 4. Aguila (Francisco del), 102 n. 2. Aguilar (Francisco de), 31 n. 2, 88 n. 3, 56 n. 2. Aguilar (Gaspar de), 191 n. 1. Aguilar (Maria de), 84 n. 1. Aguilar Quijada (Hernando de), 84n.l. Aguilera (Alonso de), 174 n. 3. Aguilera (Catalina de), 124 n. 1, 127 n. 2,129 n. 2,130 n. 1,132 n.2, 13Bn.3. Alarcon (Geronima de), 74 n. 6. Albert, Archduke, 108, 136 n. 3. Aleman (Mateo), 187. Alonso (Juan), 139 n. 4. Alonso de la Puriflcacion (Fray), 155 n.l. Alvarez de Toledo (Agustin), , 76 n. 1. Alvarez Guerra (Juan), 8 n. 2. Alvear (Isabel de), 60 n. 1. Ambrosio(Sante), 156 n.2, 157 n.2. Antonio (Nicolas), 8 n. 2. Aparicio (Mateo), 151 n. 2. Apraiz (Julian), 29 n. 4, 79 n. 3, 80 n. 1, 81 n. 2, n. 3, 82 n. 1, n. 4, 83 n.l. Aragones (Alonso), 39 n. 1, 42 n. 2, 44n.l,n.4, 50n.2, 54n. 1. Araiz (Enrique de), 90 n. 5, 91 n. 1. Arellano (Angela de), 57 n. 2. Argomeda Ayala (Luisa de), 123 n. 1,124 n.l, 127 n.2, 129 n.2, 130 n. 1, 132 n. 2, 133 n. 3. Argomeda Ayala (Maria de), 123 n.l, n.2, 124 n.l, 127 n.2, 129n.2, 130n.l, 133n.3. Arias Maldonado (Francisco), 104 n.l. Arnaute Mami, 29 n. 6, 32 n. 1 . Asenjo Barbieri (Francisco), 169 n.2. Asensio y Toledo (Jose Maria), 72 n. 4, 73 n. 6, 74 n. 7, 75 n.l, n.3, 79 n. 3, 80 n.2, n,5, n.6, 81 n. 3, 84 n. 2, 85 n. 1, 88 n. 2, n.3. Avendano (Juan de), 181. Avila (Antonio de), 136 n. 3. Avila (Francisco del). See Aguila. Ayala (Isabel de), 124 n. 1, 126, 127, 128 n. 1, n. 2, 129, 130, 135. Azana (Esteban), 6 n. 1. Baeza (Graspar de), 61 n. 1. Baist (Gottfried), 198 n. 1. Banuelos (Diego Paulo de), 96 n.l . Barcenas (Hernando de las), 61 n.l. Barrera (Cayetano Alberto de la), 118 n.l, 167 n.l, 179 n.l, 187 n.8. BarroB (Alonso de), 70 n. 2, n. 3. Bautista (Maria), 212 n. 1. Bayo (Francisco del), 15 n. 1. Becerra (Domingo), 32 u. 1 , 44 n . 3. Bella (Anton de la), 45, 46 n. 2, 59n.2, 197n.l. Benavides (Diego de), 46, 49, 54 n. 1, n. 3, 55 n. 3, 56 n. 2. Benito (Nicolas), 80 n. 5, 81 n.2, n. 3, 101, 102 n. 1. Berjes (Juan de), 164 n. 1. Blanco de Paz (Juan), 42, 44 n. 1, n.3, n.4, 52 n.2, n. 3, 53 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 55 n. 1. Bonilla (Marcos de), 71 n. 1, 74 n.3. Bonilla y San Martin (Adolfo), 198 n. 1. Boqui (Pirro), 12 n. 3, 18 n. 1. Bravo de Sotomayor (Gonzalo), 118 n.3. 218 INDEX Brulart de Sillery (Noel), 189, 190. Cabrera de Cordoba (Luis), 111 n. 1, 128 n. 2. Campillo (Juan del), 171 n. 1, n. 2, 173 n. 1. Camporredondo (Francisco), 120 n. 3, 136 n. 1. Cano (Alonso), 8 n. 2. Caramanohel (Francisco), 47, 48 n. 1, 50 n. 3. Cardenas (Juan de), 3. Cardenas Zapata (Inigo de), 48 n.l, 50 n. 3. Carmona (Juan de), 93 n. 4. Carnerero (Pedro), 169 n. 3. Carranza (Mateo de), 213 n. 2, 215 n.l. Carrillo (Baltasar), 139 n. 4, 147 n. 2, 149 n. 2. Castaneda (Gabriel de), 21 n. 2, n. 3, 28 n. 1, 31 n. 1. Castellano (Diego), 30 n. 3, 43 n. 2, n. 3, 52 n. 3, 53 n. 2, 54 n. 1. Castellanos (Antonio), 8 n. 2. Castillo (Felipa del), 157 n. 3. Castillo (Francisco), 169 n. 3. Castillo (Juan del), 139 n.4. Castillo de Inojosa (Cristobal del), 139 n.4. Castro (Luis de), 107 n. 1. Castro (Miguel de), 210 n. 2. Caatro (Pedro de), 212 n. 2. Castro y Bellvis (Guillen de), 191 n. 1. Caviedes (Miguel de), 78, 79 n. 1. Cayban, 42. Centeno (Antonio), 80 n. 6, 84 n. 2. Cerdant (Michele), 24 n. 5. Cervantes (Andrea de), 5 n. 6, 12, 13, 16, 46 n. 2, 59 n.2, 60 n.l, n.2, n.3, 61 n.l, 65 n.4, 105 n. 2, 111 n. 3, n. 4, 127 n. 2, 128 n.l, 129 n.2, 130 n.l, n.2, 131 n.2, 133 n.l, n.3, 134 n. 1, n. 2, 136 n. 3, 156 n. 1, n. 2, 157 n.l, n.2, 163 n. 1, 164 n. 1, 202, 204 n. 3. Cervantes (Andres de), uncle of Cervantes, 4 n. 1, 103. Cervantes (Andres de), brother of Cervantes, 5 n. 5. Cervantes (Juan de), grandfather of Cervantes, 2-4, 10 n. 2, n. 3. Cervantes (Juan de), brother of Cervantes, 6, 7 n. 4. Cervantes (Juan de), cousin of Cervantes, 4 n. 1, 11 n. 3, 103. Cervantes (Loisa de), 6 n.l, 11 12, 207. Cervantes (Magdalena de), 5 n. 2, 6, 7 n.3, 8n.l, 26 n.3, 46 n.2, 57 n.2, 65 n.4, 78, 89 n.2, 97, 104 n.2, 105, 107 n.2, 121 n.2, 123 n.2, 125 n.l, 126 n. 1, 127 n.2, 128 n.l, 133 n.3, 136 n.3, 144, 149 n.l, 155 n.2, 157 n.3, 161, 162, 163 n. 1, 164, 168, 169 n. 1, n. 2, 180 n. 4, 202. Cervantes (Maria de), 4 n. 2. Cervantes (Pedro de), 3 n. 3. Cervantes (Rodrigo de) the elder, 4, 5, 6 n. 1,8 n.l, 11, 15, 18 n.l, n. 2, 57 n. 1, 61 n. 1, 68 n. 4, 164 n. 1. Cervantes (Rodrigo de) the younger, 6, 7 n.2, 10 n.2, 12, 19 n. 1, 22 n. 1, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30, 34 n.l, n.2, n.3, 40, 46 n.2, 57, 62, 63 n. 1, 65 n. 3, n. 4, 107n.2, 108n. 1, n.2, 136 n.3, 162, 163 n. 1, 164 n. 1, 207 n.4. Cervantes Saavedra (Bias de), 8 n. 2. CeiTantes Saavedra (Miguel de), his ancestry, 2-4 ; his parents, 4-5 ; his brothers and sistere, 5-7 ; baptismal certificate, 8 n. 1 ; his birthplace Alcala de Henares, not Seville, not Toledo, not Esquivias, not Madrid, not Lucena, not Consuegra, not Alcazar de San Juan, 8 n. 1 ; his boyhood, 10 ; writes verses commemorating Isabel de Valois, 14 ; alleged to' have studied at Salamanca, 14 n. 1 ; his connexion with Juan Lope de Hoyos, 14-15; goes to Italy, 16; serves in Car- dinal Acquaviva's household, 17-18 ; enlists in the Spanish army, l9; in Urbina's company, 20 n. 1 ; fought at the battle of Lepanto, 21 ; mutilation of INDEX 219 his left hand, 22 n. 1 ; con- valescence in Calabria, 23 n. 1 ; joins Lope de Figueroa's regi- ment, 24; is stationed at Naples, 24; shares in expedi- tion to Corfu, 25 ; is quartered at Naples, 25 n. 2 ; assists at the capture of Tunis, 25 n. 3 ; is at Naples in 1574, 26 n. 2 ; in garrison at Palermo, 27 n. 1 ; obtains letters of recommenda- tion from Don John of Austria and the Duke of Sessa, 28 n. 1, 31 n. 1 ; leaves Naples on board the Sol, 29 n. 1 ; is captured and becomes the slave of Dali- Mami, 30 n. 4; is in captivity in Algiers, 31 n. 2 ; writes verses, 31 n. 3 ; makes his first attempt to escape, 32 n. 1 ; writes complimentary sonnets for Bartolomeo Ruffino, 83 ; makes a second attempt to escape, 35-7 ; is betrayed and refuses to reveal the details of the plot, 37 n. 2 ; imprisoned by Hassan, 38 n. 1 ; his life spared, 39 n. 1 ; writes appeal in verse to Mateo Vazquez, 40 n. 1 ; makes a third attempt to escape, 40 n. 2 ; signs a peti- tion in favour of Fray Jorge de Olivar, 41 n. 2 ; makes a fourth attempt to escape, 41 n. 3, 42 n. 1, n. 2; is betrayed by Juan Blanco de Paz, 42 n. 3 ; is cross-examined by Hassan, 43-4 ; is kept in irons, 44 ; is ransomed by Fray Juan Gil, 49 n. 2, 50 n. 2 ; his certificate of ransom, 50 n. 3 ; demands a public inquiry into his con- duct, 53-4 ; witnesses ransom certificate of Juan Gutierrez, 55 n. 2 ; embarks for Spain, 66 n. 1 ; is at Thomar, 63 n. 1, n. 2 ; goes to Oran, 63, 64 n. 1 ; is in Madrid writing sonnets for Pedro de Fadilla and Juan Rufo Gutierrez, 64 n. 3 ; writes for the stage, 64, 65 n. 1, n. 2 ; pawns goods on behalf of his sister, 65 n. 4 ; finishes La Galatea, 66 ; sells his privilegio to Bias de Robles, 66 n. 2 ; marries Catalina de Salazar y Palacios at Bsquivias, 67 n. 1 ; writes complimentary poems for Pedro de Padilla's lardin Espiritval, 68 n. 1 ; his Galatea is published, 68 n. 2 ; is in Madrid writing plays for Gaspar de Porras, 68 n. 3 ; witnesses a document in Madrid for Ines Osorio, 69 n. 1 ; appears at Seville, 69 n. 2 ; signs a receipt at Esquivias for his wife's dowry, 69 n. 3 ; writes sonnets, 70 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3 ; obtains post as commissary, 71 n. 1, 72 n. 1, n. 2 ; is excommunicated, 72 n. 3, n.4; is again at ^cija, 73 n. 2 ; goes to Marchena, 73 n. 8; isat Ecija, 73n.4; writes sonnet and two odes, 73 n. 5 ; resides at Seville, 73 n. 6 ; hands in his accounts, 74 n. 2 ; reports on quality of wheat at Ecija, 74 n. 8 ; receives arrears of salary, 74 n.4, n. 5 ; settles debts, 74 n. 7, 75 n. 1 ; is at Carmona, 75 n. 2 ; signs re- ceipts in Seville for arrears of salary, 75 n. 3, n. 4 ; petitions for a post in America, 75, 76 n. 1 ; is in difficulties for money, 78 ; commissions Juan de Ta- mayo to collect arrears of salary, 79 n. 2 ; is on business at Estepa, 79 n. 3 ; is engaged on a roving commission, 79 n. 4 ; his salary is reduced, 80 n. 2 ; writes a romance, Los Celos, 81 n. 1 ; reports on the irregular proceedings at Teba, 81 n.2, n. 3, 82 n. 4 ; his accounts are examined, 83 ; finds sureties who pay the deficit, 83 n. 2, 84 n. 1 ; stands security for Juan Fortuni, 84 n. 2 ; is con- sidered to be the author of an anonymous romance, El Desden, 84 n. 3 ; signs a contract with Rodrigo Osorio to write six plays, 85 n. 1 ; is sentenced to im- prisonment, 86 n. 1 ; is released 220 INDEX on bail, 86 ; is again in diffi- culties, 87 ; receives instnictions to collect wheat in the Seville district, 87 n. 4 ; receives pay- ment for previous commissions, 88 n. 2 ; gives power of attorney to Juan de Salinas, 88 n. 3 ; is commissioned to collect wheat, 88 n. 4 ; at Villalba del Alcor, La Palma, Villarasa, Ruciana and Bollulos, Fatema, Almonte, Niebla, Villamanrique and Je- rena, 89 n. 1 ; loses his mother, 89 n. 2 ; is commissioned to collect arrears of taxation in Granada, 89, 90 n. 1, n. 5 ; also at Velez Malaga, 91 n. 3 ; re- ceives increased salary, 92 n. 2 ; reports on his difficulties, 92 n. 4, 93 n. 1 ; signs a receipt at Seville, 93 n. 4 ; awarded a prize at a poetical joust at Saragossa, 94 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3 ; deposits money with Simon Freire de Lima who goes bank- rupt, 94, 95 n. 1 ; petitions the Treasury, 95 n. 1, n. 2 ; pays 149,600 maravedis into the Ex- chequer, 97 ; is at Seville un- employed, 97 ; writes sonnets on Santa Cruz and the Duke of Medina Sidonia, 97 n. 2 ; dis- regards summons to Madrid, 98 n. 1 ; is committed to jail in Seville, 99 ; writes a statement of his case, 99-100; is released by another Real Provision, 100 n. 1 ; is in straitened circum- stances, 102 n. 2, n. 3 ; com- memorates the death of Philip II, 102 n. 4 ; again disregards summons to Madrid, 103 n. 2 ; appears as a witness at Seville, 107 n. 1 ; loses his brother Rodrigo, 107 n. 2 ; is unable to meet the demands of the Trea- sury, 108 n. 3, 109 ; is again imprisoned, 109 n. 1 ; writes sonnet for Lope de Vega's Dragontea, 110 n. 1 ; removes to Valladolid, 112 n. 2 ; obtains a Privilegio for Don Quixote, 112, 113; is mentioned slight- ingly by Lope de Vega, 113 n. 1 ; signs a document concerning the Privilegio of Don Quixote, 114 n. 2; is concerned in the incident of Gaspar de Bzpeleta's death, 116-38; is arrested, 127 n. 2 ; is released, 182 ; obtains a receipt for Bzpeleta's clothes, 134 n. 3; receives an anonymous sonnet abusing Don Quixote, 136 n. 2; borrows money from Robles, 138 n. 1 ; resident in Madrid, 138 ; is involved in his daughter Isabel de Saavedra's schemes, 188- 53 ; is connected with Juan de Urbina in his daughter's marriage contract, 139 n. 4, 143; guarantees 2,000 ducadoB, 146, 151 ; acts as witness at the marriage, 151 n.2; declares the house in the Red de San Luis to be his, 152 n. 1, 165 ; acknowledges that it belongs to Urbina, 152 n. 2 ; is sum- moned before the Exchequer, 154 n. 1 ; joins the Confrater- nity of Slaves of the Most Blessed Sacrament, 155 n. 1 ; loses his sister Andrea, 157 n. 2 ; his wife's will, 159 n. 1 ; signs a deed conveying to his niece Costanza his share in his brother Rodrigo's estate, 164n. 1 ; thinks of leaving Spain, 166 ; writes a sonnet on Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, 166 n. 1 ; seeks a patron, 166, 167; hopes to go with the Conde de Lemos to Naples, 167 ; is mortified at his failure, 167 n. 2 ; loses his sister Magdalena, 169 n. 1, n. 2 ; is threatened with distraint by Luis de Molina, 171 n. 1 ; is present at a meeting of the Academia Selvaje, 178, 179 n. 1 ; writes his Novdas exemplares, 179 ; receives the habit of the Franciscan Tertiaiies, 179 n. 2 ; writes a sonnet to Diego Rosel y Fuenllana, 179; vrrites verses to Gabriel Perez del Bamo Angulo, 179 n. 4 ; obtains Apro- INDEX 221 bacion for the Novelas exem- plares, 180 n. 2 ; writes a dedi- cation to Lemos, 180 ; disposes of his rights in the Novelas exemplares to Robles, 180 n. 3 ; writes the Viage del Pamaso, 181, 182 ; works at the second part oiDon Quixote, 183 ; writes stanzas in honour of the Blessed Theresa, 183 n. 2 ; sees the spurious Second Part of Don Quixote, 183; is insulted in Avellaneda's Prologo, 185 n. 3 ; is roused to finish his Second Part of Don Quixote, 188, 189 ; becomes famous abroad, 189- 90 ; obtains the Aprohacion for Don Quixote, 190, 191 ; obtains the Privilegio, 191 ; sends to the press his Ocho comedias y ocho entremeses nuevos, nunca repre- sentados, 191 n. 1, 192, 193; obtains an Aprohacion for the Ocho comedias y ocho entremeses nuevos, 194; obtains a Privile- gio, 194; writes a sonnet for Juan Tague de Salas, 195 n. 3 ; dedicates a sonnet to Alfonso Gonzalez de Salazar, 196 n. 1 ; describes his personal appear- ance in the Prologue to the Novelas exemplares, 196-7 n. 1 ; is engaged on Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda, 198 ; pro- mises a continuation of La Galatea, 198 n. 1 ; engaged on Las Semanas del Jardin, El Engano & los ojos, and Elfamoso Bernardo, 198 n. 1 ; his health fails, 198 ; writes to thank the Cardinal Archbishop of Toledo for his kindness, 199 ; writes his Prologue to Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda, 199 n. 2 ; is professed as a Ter- tiary of Saint Francis, 202 n. 1 ; receives the sacrament of Extreme Unction, 202 n. 2 ; writes his valedictory- dedication of Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigismunda, 202 ; dies, 203 n. 1 ; is buried, 208 ; his Los Trabajos de Persiles y Sigis- munda is printed, 205 ; his autographs, 205 n. 1. Cervantes Saavedra y Lopez (Mi- guel de), 8 n. 2. Cespedes (Mariana de), 57 n. 2. Cetina (Agustin de), 71 n. 1, 107 n. 1. Cetina (Gutierre), 179, 180, 194. Chacon (Antonio), 119 n. 1. Chaves (Rodrigo de), 38 n. 3, 44 n. 3, 54 n. 1, 55 n. 1, 56 n. 2, n. 4. Cirot (Georges), 8 n. 2. Claramonte (Andres de), 8 n. 2. CoUado (Francisco Geronimo), 102 n. 4. Colonna (Ascanio), 17 n. 1. Colonna (Marcantonio), 20 n. 3. Concentaina (Conde de), 123 n. 1, n. 2, 124 n. 1. Conforti (Luigi), 24 n. 5. Cordoba (Martin de), 40. Cordova (Alonso de), 57 n. 2. Cortej6n (Clemente), 94 n. 3. Cortinas (Elvira de), 5 n. 4, 12, 16. Cortinas (Leonor de), 5 n. 3, n. 4, 6n.l, 7n.4, lln.3, 12, 18n.2, 19n. 1, 22n. 1, 33 n. 2, 46 n. 2, 61n. 1, 68n.4,89n. 2,164n. 1, 197 n. 1. Cotarelo y Mori (Emilio), 3 n. 3, 8 n. 2, 12 n. 3, 20 n. 1, n. 3, 24 n. 5, 29 n. 1, n. 3, 30 n. 3, 57 n.2, 60 n.3, 75 n. 2, 93 n. 1, 103 n. 8, 105 n.2, 110 n.2, 113 n.2, 114 n. 1,150 n. 1,163 n.l, 178 n. 1, 190 n. 1. Crasbeeck (Pedro), 114. Crespo, 139 n. 4. Croce (Benedetto), 24 n. 5. Cruzado (Lorenzo), 164 n. 1. Cuesta (Juan de la), 138 n. 1, 205 n. 3, 206 n. 2. Cueva (Geronimo de la), 132 n.2, 133 n. 3. Dali-Mami, 30 n. 2, n. 4. Daza (Francisco), 157 n.2, 204 n. 3. Diaz (Francisco), 73 n. 5. Diaz de Paredes (Pedro), 147 n. 2, 151 n. 2. Diez de Tudanca (Pedro), 76 n. 1. ' Doctor Pdstumo,' 8 n. 2. ' Dorador (El),' 85, 37, 51. 222 INDEX Doria (Marcello), 25, 26 n. 1. Enriquez (Alonso), 127 n. 2. Enriquez (Feliciano), 53 n. 3, 54 n. 1, n. 3. Espinosa (Diego de), 17 n. 5. Estefano (Juan de), 56 n. 5. Exarque (Onofre), 42 n. 2, 43 n. 1. Ezpeleta (Gaspar de), 116-38. Ezpeleta (Matias de), 119 n. 1. Fajardo (Isabel), 157 n. 3. Falcea (Marques de), 119, 120 n. 1, 134 n. 4. Fernandez deAvellaneda (Alonso), 22 n. 1, 183, 184, 185 n. 1, n. 3, 187, 188 n. 1, 189, 194, 195 n. 2. Fernandez de Navarrete (Martin), 1 n. 1, 5n.2, n. 3, n. 6, 8 n. 1, n. 2, 17 n. 3, 19 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, 20n.l, 21n.l, n.2, n.3, 22n.l, 23 n. 2, 24 n. 3, n. 4, 25 n. 2, 26 n. 1, n.2, 27 n.3, 28 n.l, 29 n.5, n. 6, 30 n. 3, n. 4, 31 n. 2, n. 3, 32 n.l, 34 n.l, n.3, 35 n.3, n.4, n.5, 36 n.3, n.4, 37 n.2, 39 n. 1, 40 n. 2, 41 n. 1, n. 3, 42 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 43 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 44 n.l, n.2, n.3, n.4, 48 n. 1, 50 n.2, n.3, 52 n. 1, n.3, 53 n.2, n. 3, n. 4, 54 n. 1, n. 2, 55 n. 1, n. 3, 60 n. 3, 62 n. 2, 64 n. 1, 68 n.4, 69 n.3, 79 n.4, 90 n.l, n.2, n. 3, n. 5, 91 n. 1, n.2, n. 3, 92 n. 1, n.2,n.3,n.4, 93n.l,n.2, n.3,n. 4,94n.l, n.2,95n.l, 96n.l,97 n.l, 98 n.l, 100 n. 1, 101 n.l, 103 n. 1, 109 n. 1, 110 n. 2, 111 n. 3, n. 4, 154 n. 1, 155 n. 1, 157 n. 1, 179 n. 2, 203 n. 3, 204 n. 3. Figueroa (Costanza de), 60 n. 3, 105 n.2, 112 n.2, 118 n.5, 127 n.2, 128 n.l, 129 n.2, 130 n. 1, n.2, 131n. 1, n.2, 133 n.3, 136, 148 n.4, 155, 159 n.l, 162, 163 n. 1, 164 n. 1, 165, 180, 207 n. 3, n.4. Figueroa (Lope de), 24 n. 1, 25. Figueroa (Maria de), 8 n. 2. Flores (Josef Miguel de), 8 n. 2, 50 n. 3. Foronda (Manuel de), 8 n. 2, 69 n.4. Fortuni (Juan), 80 n. 6, 84 n. 2. Fortunyo (Juan), 46 n. 2, 84 n. 2. Foulche-DelboBc (Raymond), 14, 119 n.l, 197 n.l, 198 n. 1, 202 n.3. Francfe (Anton), 56. Freire de Lima (Simon), 94, 95 n. 1, n. 2, 96 n. 1, 97, 109 n. 1. Freyre (Antonio), 114. Gaitan (Juana), 122, 123 n. 1, 124 n.l, 127n.2, 128n.2, 129n.2, 130 n. 1, 133 n. 1, n. 3. Galvez de Montalvo (Luis), 64. Gamboa (Juan de), 95 n. 2, 97 n. B. Garces Munoz (Juan), 169 n. 3. Garcia (Diego), 126 n.2, 127 n.l, 134 n. 4. Garcia de la Torre (Lope), 137 n. 1. Garibay (Esteban de), 117 n.2, n. 3, 122, 128 n. 1, 128 n. 1. Gkiribay (Luis de), 117 n.2, n.3, 118 n.l. Garibay Zamalloa (Esteban de), 117 n.2. Gasca de Salazar (Diego), 76 n. 1. Gasi (Angela Benita), 215 n. 1. Gasi de Castro(Alejandro), 104 n. 2. Gayangos (Pascual de), 70 n. 2, 137 n.l, 196 n.l. Geraldo (Francisco), 180 n. 3. Getino de Guzman (Alonso), 11 n.4, 12 n.3, 18 n. 1,46 n.2. Gil (Juan), 32 n. 1, 45 n. 1, 46 n.2, 48, 49 n.l, n.2, 50 n.2, n.3, 52 n.3, 53, 54 n.2, 55 n.3, 56n.3, 59n.2, 197n. 1. Giner (Lope), 63 n. 2, 64 n. 2. Giron (Licenciado), 41, 42 n. 1, 44 n.2. Godinez de Monsalve (Antonio), 25 n.3. Gomara (Antonia de), 212 n. 2. Gomez (Francisca), 157 n. 3. Gongora (Luis de), 5 n. 3, 119 n. 1, 167 n. 2. Gonzalez (Melchor), 180 n. 3. Gonzalez (Tomas), 109 n. 1. Gonzalez de Salazar (Alfonsa), 196. Gonzalez Flores (Pedro), 76 n. 1. Granero (Sebastian), 139 n. 1, n.2, 145 n. 2, 151 n. 2. INDEX 223 Groussao (Paul), 18 n. 4, 187 n. 2. Guardia (Jose Miguel), 74 n. 2. Guevara (Antonio de), 71, 72 n. 2, 73 n. 3, 78 n. 4, 79. Gutierrez (Juan), 55. Gutierrez (Tomas), 73 n. 6, 74, 78. Gutierrez de Cumbres (Alonso), 61n.l. Gutierrez Florez (Pedro). See Gonzalez Flores. Haedo (Diego de), 35 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, n. 5, 36 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, n.4, 37n. 1, 38n. 1, n.2. Hamet, 25 n. 1. Hassan, 32n. 1, 35, 37, 38n. 1, 39, 40, 41 n. 1, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 48, 50. Hernandez (Miguel), 149 n. 1. Herrera (Antonio de), 137 n. 1. Herrera (Fernando as), 101 n. 1. Higares (Hernando de Toledo, senorde), 123 n. 2, 124 n. 1, 130. Hinojosa (Ricardo de), 17 n. 2. Huete (Pedro de), 66 n. 3. Hurbina (Ana Maria de), 163 n. 1. Hurtado de Mendoza (Antonio), 166 n. 1. Hurtado de Mendoza (Diego), 166. Idrobo (Estefania de), 157 n. 3. Ipenameta (Domingo), 109 n. 1, 110 n. 2, 111 n. 2. Isabel de Valois, 14, 16, 205 n. 1. Islallana (Isabel de), 123 n. 2. Isunza (Pedro de), 79 n. 4, 80 n. 1, 82, 83 n. 1, 87. Jimenez (Baltasar), 66 n. 3. John of Austria (Don), 22, 25, 26 n. 1, n. 2, 27, 28, 31,62. Jurien de la Graviere (Jean Pierre Edmond), 24n.5. Klingenstein (Miss L.), 107 n. 2. Laguiar (Francisco de), 46 n. 2. Lainez (Pedro), 122. Lanuza (Juan de), 105 n. 2. Lanuza y PerelWs (Pedro de), 105 n.2. Leal (Francisco), 148 n. 4. Leclerque (Juan), 93 n. 4. Lederma (Andres de), 79 n. 1. Legarda (Juan de), 215 n. 1. Leiva (Sandro de), 29, 30. Lemos (Conde de), 167 n.l, 180, 181, 182, 191, 194, 197, 198, 199, 202. Leon (Dimete), 46 n. 2. Lerma (Duque de), 167. Lizcano y Alaminos (Francisco), 8 n.2. Locadelo (Juan Francisco), 13, 16, 60n.3, 61n. 1, 65n.4. Lomelin (Napoleon), 65 n. 4. Lopez (Catalina), 8 n. 2. Lopez (Felipe), 57 n. 2. Lopez (Francisco), 157 n. 2, 169 n.2, 202, 203 n.l. Lopez (Geronimo), 164 n. 1. Lopez Adan (Pedro), 156 n. 1. Lopez de Carranza (Juan), 133 n. 2. Lopez de Cervantes (Miguel), 8 n.2. Lopez de Hoyos (Juan), 14, 15, 16 n. 1, 17 n. 5. Lopez de Torres (Fernan), 84 n.l. Lopez Maldonado (Gabriel), 70 n.l, n. 3. Lopino (Domingo), 53 n. 2, n. 3, 54 n. 1, 55 n. 1. Ludena (Fernando de), 162, 163 n. 1. Luxan de Say avedra (Matheo) ,187. Macias (Sebastian), 118 n. 4, 121 n.3. Mainez (Ram6n Le6n), 7 n. 2, 8 n. 1 , 29n. 1, 46n.2, 50n. 3, 66n. 3, 67n. 1,69 n.3, 75 n.2, 93 n. 1, 109n.l, llln.3, n.4, 116n. 1, 117 n. 3,118 n.l, n.2, n.3, n.4, n.5, 120 n.l, n.2, n.3, 121 n.l, n.2, 122 n.l, 123 n. 1, n.2, 124 n. 1, 125 n. 1, 126 n. 1, n. 2, 127 n.l,128n.l, n.2, 129n.l,n;3, 130 n.l, n.2, 131 n.l, n.2, 132 n.2,133n.l, n.2,n.3, 134n.l, n. 2, n. 3, 136 n. 1, 154 n. 1, 159 n. 1, 203 n. 1. Maurique (Carlos), 208 n. 1. Manso (Pedro), 132 n. 2. Maqueda (Duque de), 124 n. 1, 128 n. 2. Marco (Antonio), 22 n. 1, 32 n. 1. 224 INDEX Mariana (Juan de), 8 n. 2. Marquez Torres (Francisco), 189 n. 1, 190, 197, 199. Martin (Alonso), 182, 193 n. 1, 194 n. 1. Martinez (Francisco), 202 n. 1, 203n.l, 204n.2, 210n.4. Martinez (Manuel), 152 n. 2. Martinez (Pedro), 210 n. 2. Maurice of Nassau, 108. Mayans y Siscar (Gregono), 8 n. 2, 113 n. 2. Medina (Francisca de), 182, 193 n. 1. Medina de Zarauz (Licenciado), 76 n. 1. Medina Sidonia (Duke of), 97 n. 2. Mendana (Alvaro de), 157 n. 1. Mendano (Alvaro), 156 n. 1, 157 Mendez (Juan), 164 n. 1. Mendez (Simon), 123 n. 1, n. 2, 124 n. 1, 127 n. 2, 130, 131 n. 1, n.2, 132n. 1, 138n.l,n.2, 135 n.2. Mendez Silva (Rodrigo), 1 n. 2. Menendez y Pelayo (Marcelino), 195 n.2. Meneses (Francisco), 32 n. 1. Mercado (Luis de), 76 n. 1. Morula (Margarita), 146 n. 1. Mesia de Tovar (Pedro), 96 n. 1, 97 n. 3. Mesonero Romanos (Ramon de), 204 n. 3. Mira de Amescua (Antonio), 166 n. 1, 191 n. 1. Miranda y Gutierrez de Ayala (Diego de), 124 n. 1, 127 n. 2, 129 n. 3, 132, 133 n.l. Mirannes (Paul), 7 n. 2. Molardo (Francisco), 149 n. 2. Molina (Luis de), 213 n. 2. Molina y Castilla (Luis de), 139 n.4, 140,141, 143, 144, 147 n.2, n. 3, 148 n. 1, n. 2, n. 5, 149 n. 1, 150, 151 n.2, 152 n.2, 155, 166, 169n.3,170, 171n.l,n.2, 173, 174n.l, n.2, 180n.4,204n.2, 207 n.3, 208 n.l, 209 n.2, 210 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, n. 4, 21 1 n. 1, n. 2, 212n.2, 213n. 1, n.2, Moncada (Juan de), 195 n. 1. Moncada (Miguel de), 20 n. 1. Montalbo (Francisco), 212 n. 2. Montiano y Luyando (Agustin de), 8 n. 1. Montoya (Baltasar de), 209 n. 2. Montoya (Luisa de), 117 n. 2, 118 n. 2, 121 n. 2, 125 n. 1, 126 n. 1, 128 n. 1. Mordn (Geronimo), 16 n. 2, 63 n. 2, 64n.2, 83 n.l, 86 n.l, 87 n.3, 88 n. 1, n. 4. Morel-Fatio (Alfred), 18 n. 3, n.4, 20n.l. MoscoBO (Francisco), 86. Mosquera de Figueroa (Cristobal), 65 n.3, 97 n.2. Motley (John Lothrop), 107 n. 2. Mugaqui (Francisco), 18 n. 1. Munoz de Otalora (Alonso), 129 n.l, 132 n.2. Murielliz (Telle), 1 n. 1. Murillo Velarde (Pedro), 8 n. 2. Naharro (Pedro), 191 n. 1. Najera (Duque de), 46 n. 2. Nasarre y Ferruz (Bias Antonio), 8 n. 2, 203 n. 1. Nunez de Fonseca (Isabel), 135 n. 2. Nunez de Larabras (Alonso), 139 n. 4. Nunez de Leon (Geronimo), 206 n.l. Nunez Morquecho (Doctor),76 n.l. Olivar (Jorge de), 38 n. 1, 41. Olmedilla (Bernardo de), 95 n. 1, 96 n.l, 97 n.3. Ordonez (Diego), 156 n. 1. Orduna (Francisco de), 84 n. 1. Ortega (Urban de), 215 n. 1. Ortiz (Fernando), 211 n. 3. Ortiz de Zuniga (Diego), 8 n.2. Osorio (In6s), 69. Osorio (Rodrigo), 85 n. 1, 86. Otaula (Sebastian de), 107 n. 2. Ovando (Costanza de). See Figue- roa. Ovando (Nicolas de), 60 n. 3, 156 n.2. Oviedo (Miguel de), 74 n. 1, 87. Ozaeta (Andr6s de), 12 n. 2. Pacheco Portocarrero (Alonso), 26 n.3, 57 n.2, 59 n.2. INDEX 226 Padilla (Pedro de), 64, 68 n. 1, 70 n. 3, n. 4. Palacios (Catalina de), 66 n. 3, 67 n. 2, 69 n. 4, 112 n. 1, 159 n.l, 174n.8, 177, 178. Palacios (Juan de), 159 n. 1. Palacios Salazar (Francisco de), 158, 159 n.l, 174 n. 3, 177,178, 208 n. 1. Palafox (Enrique de), 162, 163 n. 1. Palafox (Geronimo), 49 n. 1, n. 2. Palomeque (Casimiro), 66 n. 3. Paredes (Alonso de), 89 n. 2. Parra(Juan Adam de la), 212 u. 1. Pasqual (Mateo), 31 n. 2, 56 n. 5. Pastrana (Duque de), 122, 123 n. 1, n.2, 124 n.l, 128 n. 2, 130 n. 1, 179 n. 1. Paz y Melia (Antonio), 167 n. 1. Pedro (Gaspar), 29. Pedrosa (Luis de), 2 n. 4, 42 n. 1, 54n.l, n.3. Pedroso (Bernabe de), 109 n. 1, 110 n. 2. Pellicer y Saforcada (Juan An- tonio), 5 n.3, 50 n.3, 69 n.3, 97 n.2, 113 n.2, 119 n.l, 156 n. 1,157 n.2, 190 n. 1, 202 n. 1, 207 n. 3, 208 n. 1. Pena (Juan de la), 157 n. 3. Perez (Manuela), 215 n. 1. Perez (Vicente), 195 n. 3. Perez de Alcega (Juan), 59 n. 1. Perez del Barrio Angulo (Gabriel), 179 n. 4. Pere^ de Moya (Juan), 193 u. 1. Perez de Victoria (Francisco), 93. Perez Gredilla (Claudio), 27 n. 1. Perez Pastor (Crist<5bal), 2 n. 1, n. 4, 4 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, 5 n. 2, n. 4, n.5, 7 n.3, n.4, 8 n.l, 11 n. 4, 12 n.2, n.3, 13 n.l, n.2, 15 n.l,16n. 1, 17n.3,n.5,18n.l, n. 2, 19 n. 1, 22 n. 1, 27 n. 1, 31 n. 2, 32 n. 1, 33 n. 2, 34 n. 2, 38 n.3, 45 n.l, n.2, n.3, n.4, 46 n. 1, n. 2, 48 n. 1, 49 n. 1, n. 2, 55 n.2, 56n. 1, n.2, n.3, n.5, n. 6, 57 n. 1, n. 2, 59 n. 2, 60 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 61 n.l, 62 n. 1, 6Bn. l,65n.l,n.3,n.4,66n.l, n. 2, 68 n. 3, n. 4, 69 n. 1, n. 2, 70n.l, n.2, 71n.l,72n.l,n.2, n.3, 73 n.l, n.3, n.4, 74 n.l, n. 3, n. 4, n. 5, n. 6, 75 n. 1, n. 4, 78 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, n. 4, 79 n. 1, n.2, 80 n.4, 81 n.2, 82 n.2, 83 n.2, 87 n.l, n.2, n.4, 88 n.4, 89 n.l, n.2, n.3, 90 n. 3, 91 n. 3, 95 n. 2, 97 n. 3, 102 n.l, n.2, n.3, 103 n.l, 104 n.l, n.2, 105 n.2, 107 n. 1, n. 2, 108 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, 112 n. 1, n. 2, 114 n.2, 116 n. 1,117 n.2, n.3, 118 n.l, n.2, n.3, n.4, n.5, 120 n. 1, n.2, n. 3, 121 n. 1, n. 2, n.3, 122 n. 1,123 n.l, n.2, 124 n. 1, 125 n. 1, 126n. l,n.2, 127 n. 1, 128 n. 1, n. 2, 129 n. 3, 130n. 1, n.2, 131n. 1, n.2, 132 n.2, 133 n.l, n. 2, n. 3, 134 n.l, n. 2, n. 3, 135 n. 1, n. 2, 136 n. 1, 11.3,137 n.l,138n. 1,139 n.l,n. 2, 144n.l, 145n. 1, n.2, 146n. 1, 147n.l, n.2, n.3, 148n.l,n.2, n.3, n.4, 149 n. 1, n.2, 150 n.l, n.2, n.3, 151 n.l, n.2, 155 n.2, 156 n. 2, 157 n. 3, 159 n. 1, 163 n.l, 164n. 1, 169n. 1, n. 2,n. 3, 171 n.l, n.2, 174 n.2, n.3, 178 n.l, 180n.3, n.4, 181n.l, 193 n. 1, 194 n. 1, 197 n. 1, 202 n. 3, 203 n.3, 204 n.2, 206 n.2, 207 n.4, 209 n. 1, n. 2,n. 3, 210 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, 211 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, 212 n. 1, n. 2, 213 n. 1, n. 2. Philip II, 27 n. 2, 102, 105 n. 2, 107, Philip III, 111 n. 1, 113 n. 2, 167. Philip IV, 137 n. 1. Pinheiro de Vega (Tome), 137 n. 1. Pius V, 17. Plaza (Pedro de la), 209 n. 2. Ponce de Leon (Manuel), 24 n. 4, 25 n.2, 26 n.2. Pon-as (Gaspar de), 65 n. 1, n.2, 68. Porreno (Baltasar), 113 n. 2. Portocarrero (Pedro) the elder, 26 n. 3, 57 n. 2. Portocarrero (Pedro) the younger, 59 n. 2. Prada (Andrfe de), 136 n. 3. Questa (Angelino de la), 212 n. 2. Quixada Salazar (Gabriel), 178 n. 1. Quixada Salazar (Juan), 178 n. 1 226 INDEX Raez Maltrapillo (Morato), 43 n. 3. Ragio (Agustin), 123 n. 1. Ramirez (Geronimo), 15 n. 1. Ramirez (Mariana), 124 n. 1, 127 n. 2, 129, 132, 133 n. 1, n. 3. Ramirez (Tomas), 210 n. 4. Ramirez Farinas (Fernando), 171 n.l, n.2. Ramon (Andres), 120 n. 3. Ramos (Francisco), 147 n.2, 151 n.2. Rebenga (Catalina de), 128 n. 1. Remon (Alonso), 195 n. 3. Rendero (Andres), 12 n. 2. Rennert (Hugo Albert), 110 n. 1. Riguera Montoro (Joae Maria), 8 n.2. Rio (Catalina del), 119 n. 1. Rios (Vicente de los), 50 n. 3, 67 n. 1. Rios de Lamperez (Blanca de los), 16 n. 2. Rius (Leopoldo), 196 n.l, 205 n.3, 206 n. 5. Rivera (Pedro de), 49 n.l, n.2, 50 n. 3, 53. Rizco (Felipe), 149 n. 2. Robles (Bias de), 66. Robles (Francisco de), 113, 114, 115, 138n.l, 146, 180 n.3. Robles y Guzman (Antonio), 155 n. 1. Rodriguez (Alonso), 103, 104 n. 1, n.2. Rodriguez (Ana), 159 n. 1. Rodriguez (Gabriel), 95 n.l. Rodriguez (Jorge), 114, 206 n. 6. Rodriguez Baltodano (Benito), 76 n. 1. Rodriguez de Rivalde (Maria), 138 n. 1. Rodriguez Marin (Francisco), 2 n.3, 3 n.l, n.2, 4 n. 4, 5n.6, 10 n.2, lln. 1, n.2, n.3, 12 n.l, 102 n. 4, 197 n.l. Rojas (Ana Franca de), 66, 103, 104 n. 1, n. 2, 149 n. 1, 180 n. 4. Rojas (Luisa de), 180 n. 4. Rojas y Prado (Geronima de), 180 n. 4. Rojas y Prado (Maria de), 180 n. 4. Romero (Martin), 213 n.2. Rosel y Fuenllana (Diego), 179. Rueda (Lope de), 191 n. 1, 192. RufEno (Bartolomeo), 33. Rufo Gutierrez (Juan), 64. Ruiz (Juana), 126 n. 2, 127 n. 1. Ruiz Bermudez (Gonzalo), 74 n. 6. Ruiz de Otalora (Pedro), 89. Ruiz de Vergara Alava y Esquivel (luan Bautista), 29 n. 4. Ruiz de Vergara y Alava (Fran- cisco), 29 n. 4, n. 5. Ruiz Sanz (Diego), 79 n. 3, 80 n. 1, n. 3, n. 5. Saavedra (Isabel de), 66 n. 1, 103, 104 n. 2, 105, 124 n. 1, 126, 127 n.2, 128 n.l, 129 n.2, 130 n.2, 131n.2, 132n.2, 133n.l,n.3, 134,135, 138, 139n.l,n.3, n.4, 141, 143, 144 n. 1, 145, 147 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 149 n. 1, 150, 151 n.2, 152n.2, 155, 162,163,164,166, 169, 171 n.2, 172, 180 n.4, 207 n. 4, 208, 209 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, 210 n.3, 11.4, 211 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 212n. 1, n.2, 213n.l, n.2,215 n.l. Salazar (Antonio de), 159. Salazar (Fernando de), 174 n. 3. Salazar (Gonzalo de), 93 u.4. Salazar Vozmediano (Fernando de), 66 n. 3, 159 n. 1, 174 n. 3. Salazar y Palacios (Catalina de), 66n.3, 67n.l, 91n.2,112n.l, 151 n.2, 155, 156 n. 1,158, 159 n. 1, 161 n. 1, 162, 174 n. 1, n. 3, 175, 177, 178, 203 n. 1, 204 n. 1, n.3,205n.2, 208n.l. Saldana (Conde de), 180, 196 n. 1, 205 n. 1. Salinas (Juan de), 88 n. 3. Salto y de Castilla (Beltran del), 22n.l, 25n.3,28n.l, 31n.l. Sanchez (Miguel), 191 n. 1. Sanchez de Cordova (Pedro), 61 n.l. Sanchez de Prado (Francisco), 180 n.4. Sandoval y Rojas (Bernardo de), Cardinal Archbishop of Toledo, 189n.l, 199, 205n.l. San loseph (Diego de), 183 n.2. Santa Cruz (Marques de), 63 n. 1. 97 n. 2. INDEX 227 Santa Maria (Miguel de), 75 n. 1. Santa Maria (Ram6n), 8 n. 1. Santisteban (Mateo de), 19 n. 3, 20 n. 1, 21 n. 1, n. 2, n. 8, 27 U.S. Sanz del Aguila (Isabel), 139 n. 4, 148, 144, 145, 152 n. 2,207 n. 2, 218 n. 2. Sanz del Aguila (Diego), 139 n. 4, 140, 145 n. 1, 147 n. 3, 150, 213 n.2. Sardeneta (Bartolome de), 97 n. 3. Savoy (Duke of), 146 n. 1, 149 n. 2. Sbarbi (Jose Maria), 139 n. 4. Sentenach (Narciso), 197 n. 1. Serdn (Juan), 78 n. 4. Serrano y Sanz (Manuel), 73 n. 5. Sessa y Terranova (Duque de), 22 n. 1,27, 28, 30 n. 1,31, 46 n.2, 62, 128 n. 2. Sigiienza (Julio de), 3 n. 3, 152 n.l,n.2, 165n. 1, n.2, 173n. 1, 210 n. 4. Sigura (Antonio de), 16 n. 2. Silva (Fernando de), 72. Silva y Mendoza (Francisco de), 179 n.l. Sorbellone (Gabriel), 25, 26. Sosa (Antonio de), 31 n. 3, 36 n. 4, 39n.l,50n.2,52n.l,n.2,n.3, 53 n. 1, 54 n. 1, 55 n. 1. Sotomayor (Juan de), 184 n. 3, n. 4. Sotomayor (Magdalena de). See Cervantes. Strata (Carlos), 207 n.3. Suarez Gaaco (Francisco), 89, 90 n. 1, n. 3, 98 n. 1, 154 n. 1. Tamayo (Juan de), 79. Tamayo de Vargas (Tomas), 8 n. 2. Tapia (Pedro de), 182, 205 n. 8. Tapia (Rodrigo de), 182. Tarrega (Francisco), 191 n. 1. Tebes (Melchor de), 132 n. 2. Theresa (Blessed), 183 n.2, 194 n. 1. Ticknor (George), 70 n. 2, 196 n.l. Timan (Carlos de), 157 n. 3. Toledano (Miguel), 196 n. 1. Torme y de Liori (Francisco de), 195 n. 1. Toro (Salvador de), 81, 82, 83 n. 1, 87. Torres (Baltasar de), 42 n. 2. Torres (Bartolome de), 103, 104 n.l, n.2. Torres (Hernando de), 46 n. 2. Torres (Jos(§ Maria), 20 n. 1, 23 n. 1. Torres Lanzas (Pedro), 19 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 21 n.l, n.2, n.3, 22 n.l, 27 n.3, 28 n. 1, 30 n.3, n.4, 81 n.2, n.3, 32 n. 1, 34 n. 1, n. 8, 35 n. 8, n. 4, n. 5, 36 n.8, n.4, 37 n. 2, 39 n. 1, 40 n.2, 41 n.l, n.8, 42 n. 1, n.2, n.3, 48 n.l, n.2, n.3, 44 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, n. 4, 50 n. 2, 52 n. 1, n. 8, 53 n. 2, n. 8, n. 4, 54 n. 1, n. 2, n. 3, 55 n. 1, n. 8, 62 n. 2, 64 n. 1, 76 n. 1. Torres Ramila (Pedro de), 187. Trata (Antonio Maria), 148. Travadillo, 139 n. 4. Trujillo (Juan), 149 n.2, 150 n.l. Ugena (Baltasar de), 159 n. 1. Ugena (Juan de), 159 n. 1. Ugena (Maria de), 158, 159 n. 1. Drbina (Diego de), 18 n. 3, 19 n. 8, 20n.l, 23n.l. Urbina (Francisco de), 208 n. 2. Urbina (Isabel de), 208 n. 2. Urbina (Juan de), 139 n. 1, n. 2, n.4, 143, 145 n.2, 146 n. 1, 147 n. 1,149 n.2, 150 n.l, 151 n.2, 152 n.2, 155, 165, 166, 169 n.3, 170, 171 n.2, 178n. 1,174 n.2, 209 n.2, 211 n.8, 218 n.2, 215 n.l. Urena (Conde de), 2. Urraca (Martin de), 104 n. 1. Urramcndi (Juana de), 187 n. 1. Uruena (Juan Mateo de), 11 n.2. Valcazar (Juan de), 30 n.4, 82 n. 1, 44 n. 2, 54 n. 1, n. 8. Valdivia (Diego de), 71. Valdivielso (Jose de), 190, 194, 205 n.2. Valencia (Alonso de), 208 n. 1. Vallejo (Gaspar de), 98 n.l, 99, 100 n.l. 228 INDEX Vanegas (Geronimo de), 102 n. 3. Vazquez, 111 n. 3, n. 4. Vazquez (Mateo), 40. Vazquez de Obregon (Francisco), 89 Vedia (Enrique de), 70 n. 2, 196 n. 1. Vega (Fernando de), 54 n. 1. Vega (Hernando de), 30 n. 2, n. 3, 31n.2, 54n. 1. Vega Carpio (Lope Felix de), 8 n.2, 110, 113 n. 1, 162, 167 n. 1, 179 n. 1,182, 183 n.2, 187 n. 3, 188, 191 n. 1, 193, 194 n. 1, 197 n. 1. Vega y de Fonseca (Hernando de la), 76 n. 1. Velasco (Fernando de), 118 n.2, 120n.l, 122n.l. Velasco (Juan de), 93 n. 4. Velasco (Luis de), 139 n. 4, 149 n. 1, 151 n.l, 171 n.2. Velazquez (Geronimo), 69. Velez de Guevara (Luis), 191 n. 1. Velez de Guevara (Sebastian), 84. Vera (Domingo de), 194 n. 1. Vera (Pedro de), 157 n. 3. Vera (Rodrigo de), 56 n. 5. Vere (Sir Francis), 107 n. 2. Viana, 36 n. 1. Vicente (Francisco), 118 n. 5, 127 n. 1. Vignau (Vicente), 144 n. 1. Villafranca (Juan de), 210 n. 4. Villafranca (Marques dej. 111 n. 3. Villalobos (Geronimo de), 46 n. 2. Villalon (Cristobal de), 36 n. 3, 54 n. 1. Villalta (Andres de), 81 n. 1. Villanueva (Juan Bautista), 30 •n.3. Villar (Luis del), 107 n.2. Villarroel (Cristobal de), 120, 121 n.l, 122, 125, 126 n.l, 127 n.l, 128, 129, 130, 132 n.l, n.2, 136, 156. Villarroel (Juan de), 193, 194, 205 n. 3, 206 n. 5. Willis (Thomas), 201 n. 1. Yagiie de Salas (Juan), 195 n. 3. Zamacola (Juan), 204 n. 3. Zeballos (Maria de), 128 n. 1. Oxford : Horace Hart M.A. Printer to the University GENEALOGICAL TABLE. Juan de Corvantes (,born about 1490 ; alive Oct. 9, 1555) I Mnria (oltM Uny IS, 1683) Andrea {alivt Oct. 80, 1664) I Rodrigo de Cervantes i^Leonor de Cortinas (ditd June 13, 1585) Juan {alht Feb. 10, 1699) {died between Sept. 15 atid Nov. 9, 1693) Andri^s {breSept.l9,1652) Angela Benita (aliM in 1666) Isabel Sanz del Aguila Mm Doc. 1607 or Jan. 1608 ; diedb^ore Jan. 31, 1622) * Illegitimati^