XXVIII LOPE DE VEGA WE think of Philip III's reign as the epoch of Don Quixote, but Spaniards speak of it as the epoch of Lope de Vega. I suppose that Lope was the most prolific writer who ever lived. He wrote verse and prose of all sorts: sonnets, odes, lays, madrigals, ballads, epics, pas- torals, hymns, stories, a novel, and what not, beside eighteen hundred plays and four hundred and fifty autos. It is said that he put on the stage seventeen thousand characters or more. A Spanish critic says that the reason why Lope, with intellectual genius equal to Shakespeare's, is inferior, is that Shakespeare always aimed before he shot, but that Lope fired before taking aim. Lope de Vega ( 1562-1635) was born in Madrid, of parents in humble circumstances. He was as pre- cocious as he was prolific; at the age of ten he trans- lated Claudian's verses into Spanish, and at twelve wrote his first comedy. In 1583 he served in a naval expedition against the Azores, under the Marquis of Santa Cruz, and a few years later he enlisted in the Invincible Armada. But prior to this enlistment, while he was composing comedies for the director of a company of players, he fell in love with the director's daughter. For four years she was his mistress and -215- |