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The project debuted in Francis M.'s 1996 Happy Battle album and featured Marasigan. Dex Aguila on Drums, Raimund Marasigan on samplers and. Francis Magalona - The Oddventures of Mr. PINOY MP3 COLLECTIONS. Miniature Horse and Pony Sales Board. Full text of 'The history and aventures of the renowned Don Quixote, Volume 4' See other formats. My object was to increase a very. Spanish books, always. Europe. In some respects, the time of my visit was favorable. I made it ; in others, it was. Such books as I wanted were then, it is true. Spain than they are now, but it was. Hardly four years had elapsed since. Madrid. and already most of the leading men of letters, whose. Melendez Valdes, the first Spanish poet of the. France. Quintana, in many respects the heir to. Pamplona. Moratin. Paris, while his comedies were. Others of less mark and note shared a fate. Clemencin, Navarrete, and Marina. Among the men of letters whom I earliest knew. Madrid was Don Jose Antonio Conde, a retired. Spanish Arabs. whose history he afterwards illustrated. But, far as. his character and studies removed him from political. We read together the. Castilian poetry, of which he knew more than. He assisted me. too, in collecting the books I needed; . But Don Jose knew the lurking- . I am indebted for the foimdation. Spanish literature, which, without. I should have failed to make. I owe. him, therefore, much ; and, though the grave has long. I have never ceased to feel. Hardly four years had elapsed since. Madrid. and already most of the leading men of letters, whose. Melendez Valdes, the first Spanish poet of the. France. Quintana, in many respects the heir to. Pamplona. Moratin. Paris, while his comedies were. Others of less mark and note shared a fate. Clemencin, Navarrete, and Marina. Hnger in the capital from. The residence in. Madrid of my friend, the late Mr. Alexander Hill. Everett, who ably represented his country for several. Spain ; and the subsequent resi- . Mr. Washington Irving, equally honored on both. Atlantic, but especially cherished by. Spaniards for the enduring monument he has erected. Thv. first of them is Mr. Rich, formerly a Consul of the. United States in Spain; the same bibliographer to. Mr. Prescott have avowed sim- . I owc^. hardly less than I do to his extraordinar. The other is Don Pascual do. Professor of ^Vrabic in the University of. With the former of. I have been in constant communication. Spain, England, and France for my library. With. the latter, to whom I am not less largely indebted, I. I passed in. Europe the period between 1. Continent, but such. Lord Holland in. England, of M. Temaux- Compans in France, and of. Tieck in Germany; ajl. In the interval. between my two residences in Europe I delivered lec- . Harvard College; and, on my return home from the. I endeavoured to arrange these lectures for. But when I had already employed much. I found . Destroying, therefore, what. I had written, I began afresh my never unwelcome. I had previously done as it, per- . Gray, a scholar who should. Mr. Prescott, the historian of both. To these faithful friends. I make my. afl. Fectionate acknowledgments, as I now part from a. George. Nichols, its scholarlike corrector, for the practised skill. I Its earliest Appearance there . V Two Schools .. 5. Jl The National School 6. It appears in troubled Times 6. The Arab Invasion . V. Christian Resistance . Christian Successes . Battle of Navas de Tolosa . Earliest National Poetry . CHAPTER II. 1. 5. Its Character . Book of Apollonius .. N^aint Mary of Egypt . Three Holy Kings . All anonymous . 2. G^nzalo de Berceo . His Versification .. His San Domingo . Letter to Perez de Guzman. CHAPTER III. 3. 5 His Death. His C& ntigas. His Counsels to his Son. Sancho el Bravo. His Conde Lucanor. Don Juan Manuel. His Character . La Danga General. Poetical Chronicle. Fernan Gonzalez. B(*neficiado de Ubeda. Archpriest of Hita. Rimado de Palacio . Castilian Literature thus far . Don Santob . 8. 6. Its Loyal Tone . 1. Una Rcvelacion. CHAPTER VI. Four Classes of it. First Class, Ballads. Tlieir great Number. Theories of Uieir Origin. Preserved by Tmdition. When first prin. U'd . National and Indigenous. First Ballad- Book. Other Ballad- Books . Not to be arranged by Date. Cicneral Diffusion. On Charlemagne 1. Historical Ballads .. On Bernardo del Carpio 1. On Feman Gonzalez . On the Infantes de Lara . On various Historical Subjects 1. Loyalty of the Ballads . Ballads on Moorish Subjects 1. On National Manners . Character of the Old Ballads 1. Their Nationality . Chronicles and their Origin 1. Royal Chronicles . Royal Chronicles cease . Chronicles of Particular Events. El Passo Honroso. El Seguro de Tordesillas. Chronicles of Particular Persons. Alvaro de Luna . 1. Columbus .. 2. 06. Balboa, Hojeda, and Others . Romantic Chronicles . Don Roderic . 2. 00. Character of the Chronicles 2. Appearance in Spain . Family of Amadis. Its Date .. 2. 34. Its Author, Lobeira. Palmerin de Oliva. Portuguese Original lost. Primaleon and Platir. Translated by Montalvo . Palmerin of England . CHAPTER XII. 2. 63. Its Origin in Spain. The Remainder . 2. Mingo Revulgo . 2. CHAPTER XIV. 2. 82. His Representaciones. Writes partly in Spanish . Religious and Secular. Their Character . His Dramatic Theory . Question de Amor. Intriguing Story and Buffoon . His Versification. His Propaladia . 2. No Popular Drama founded. Provencal Poetry under Peter. Second . 3. 08. Under Jayme the Conqueror . Ramon Muntaner . 3. Provengal Poetry decays. War of the Albigenses. CHAPTER XVn. 3. 26. Consistory of Barcelona . Poetry in Catalonia and Valencia 3. Ausias March 3. 31. His Poetry . 3. 33. Decay of Catalonian Poetry. Decay of Valencian. Influence of Castile. Poetical Contest at Valencia. Valencians write in Castilian. Preponderance of Castile. Prevalence of the Castilian. CHAPTER XVin. 3. 46. Similarity in Languages. Religious . 3. 48. Reign of John the Second of. Political and Commercial . His Poetical Court. Troubadours and Minnesingers. His Trabajos de Hercules . Macias el Enamorado . CHAPTER XIX. 3. 66. Connected with Villena. Imitates the Provencals . Relations at Court . Imitates the Italians . His Letter to the Constable of. Poem on the Seven Deadly Sins 3. His Coronation . 3. CHAPTER XX. 3. 89. Francisco Imperial. Gomez de Cibdareal . His Friends the Cartagenas . His Generaciones y Seinblanzas 4. CHAPTER XXI. 4. 03. Family of the Urreas . Pedro Manriquc . 4. Rodrigo Manrique . Gerdnimo de Urrea. Jorge Manrique . 4. His Coplas . 4. 06. Padilla el Cartuxano . Alfonso de la Torre . Diego de Almela . CONTENTS. 4. 20 Diego de San Pedro. His Claros Varones . Question de Amor . Romantic Fiction. CHAPTER XXIII. 4. Cancionero of Baena . Cancioneros of Estu. Riga, etc. 4. 30. First Book printed in Spain 4. Cancionero General . Its different Editions . Its Devotional Poetry . Its Canciones . 4. Its In. Tenciones . Its Motes .. 4. 39. Its Villancicos . Its Preguntas . 4. Its Second Series of Authors . Its Poems at the End . Number of its Authors . Rank of many of them . Character of their Poetry . Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella 4. State of Letters . Its next Victims Moors . Its great Authority. Punishes Opinion . State of the Press. Past Literature of Spain . Promise for the Future. SECOND PERIOD. 4. Period of Glory in Spain . Hopes of Universal Empire . These Hopes checked . Luther and Protestantism. Protestantism in Spain. Assailed by the Inquisition. Protestant Books forbidden . Degradation of Loyalty. Increase of Bigotry. Effect of both on Letters . Moral Contradictions . Effect on the Country . Gutierre de Cetina . Opponents of Boscan and Garci- . Christ. 6val de Castillejo . Antonio de Villegas . Gregorio de Silvestre . Controversy on the Italian School 5. Its final Success . CHAPTER IV. 5. 15. Not favored by Philip the Second 5. He is exiled from Court 5. His Poetry . 5. 10. CHAPTER V. 5. 29. Antonio de Guevara. Luis de Escobar . His D6cada de los C< Ssares. Gonzalez de la Torre . His other Works . Its Probable Author. Juan de Sedeiio . Time of Juan de. Contributions to it . The Language formed . The Pure Castilian. CHAPTER VI. 5. 53. Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo . His Quinquagenas . His Brevisima Relacion . Vaca, Xerez, and Carate. Approach to Regular History. SPANISH LITERATURE. FIRST PERIOD. Sometimes, as in Provence. Sometimes, as in Lombardy and in a few. France, the institutions of antiquity were. And sometimes both these causes were. Favored by a happy climate and soil, by. Roman culture, which had lingered. Spanish peninsula even before they arc to be. Italy. But this earliest literature of modem Spain. Provencal and the rest absolutely. Castilian or Spanish, appeared in troubled times, when. For the masses of the Christian Spaniards. Arab invaders, whicli. Alhambra, and peace had given opi)ortunity. Dante, Petrarca, and Boc- . Lom- . bardy and Tuscany, and Italy had again taken her. A school formed on Italian models. Spanish poetry received less from its influ- . The first will contain the genuinely na- . Charles the Fifth ; while. Provence or of Italy, was, dur- . Both, when taken to- . Spanish literature were. Aug^uet Wilhelm von Schlegel, Ueber Dramatiache Kunst, Heidelberg. Vorle. 8ung XIV. For, in other portions of. Europe, during those disastrous troubles that accom- . Roman power and civili- . But in Spain it was. There, the first utterance of that popidar feel- . Christian Spaniards, for above seven. Moorish invaders; so. Spanish poetry seems but a breathing. Spanish Chris- . tians throughout the Peninsula. Indeed, if we look at the condition of Spain, in the. In 7. 11, Roderic. Gothic and Christian. Arabs, then just forcing their way into the western. Europe from Africa. He failed; and the wild. Mo- . hammedan power achieved almost immediately the con- .
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