University of Virginia Library

Search this document 


  

expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
collapse section 
 1. 
[section 1]
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
  
  

expand section 

In spite of a growing modern interest in the varied artistic achievements of the noted poet, playwright and composer of the Spanish Renaissance, Juan del Encina (1468-1529?), the lopsided picture of his evolution and creative growth established by Don Emilio Cotarelo y Mori has remained the standard, largely unchallenged one for nearly half a century.[1] Increased interest in Encina's multiple talents over the last two decades has taken numerous forms: re-editings of his influential drama in sound, inexpensive volumes,[2] editions of his poetry,[3] musical criticism and performance of his music live or on long-playing records,[4] and new monographic studies in


258

Page 258
English.[5] Cotarelo's picture of Encina's growth, however, might be summed up by comparing his precocious career to a firework display that had all but guttered out by the poet's twenty-eighth birthday. It will be our modest purpose in this article to question and modify the reasoning by which Cotarelo came to this view of Encina's life and work. In 1496, the year of the first publication of Encina's Cancionero at Salamanca, the vast bulk of the poet's writings, it is true, some sixteen thousand lines of lyric verse, a prose Arte de poesía castellana, an idiosyncratic rendering of Virgil's Bucolics, sundry prologues and the first eight eclogues written for the Duke of Alba's court, had already appeared. Since Cotarelo dated most of the dramas that figured for the first time in subsequent reprints of the Cancionero as works produced by Encina prior to 1497 and published later, it would be possible to come to the conclusion with Don Emilio that the Salamancan's talent had indeed deserted him by the time he passed thirty. Obliged by the evidence of his questionable dating procedures to view Encina's career in two discrete halves, Cotarelo could write in 1928: "Juan del Encina compuso todas sus obras conocidas, menos dos, la Trivagia y la Farsa de Plácida y Victoriano, antes de su primer viaje a Italia y apenas cumplidos los treinta años de edad. Y al considerar que su vida alcanzó la cifra casi normal de sesenta y un años, el hecho nos produce el efecto como de un autor malogrado, tanto más cuanto podemos comprender el número y variedad de sus obras y dada su gran facilidad para componer lo mucho que pudo haber producido en los otros treinta años de su existencia" (Prólogo, p. 28; my emphasis). As recently as 1972, Anthony van Beysterveldt has repeated Cotarelo's perception of the matter as if that critic's informed opinion were actually an objective fact. In a monograph quite masterful in other respects, the Dutch critic unreservedly states: "Todo lo que se ha conservado de su obra literaria fue escrito antes de cumplir el autor los treinta años descontando la Egloga de Plácida y Victoriano y la ya mencionada Trivagia, obra esta última compuesta cuando ya tenía cumplidos los cincuenta años."[6] Neither critic can then repress the impulse to wag an admonishing finger at Encina across time for having wasted his energies in hedonistic revelry instead of sticking to his writing.[7]


259

Page 259

Such a picture is not only inaccurate and unjust, it is misleading with regard to Encina's steady maturation and psychological integrity as an artist and, worse still, palpably distorts the story of Spanish secular drama's experimental but lusty beginnings. Cotarelo's widely accepted chronology is very far from definitive and the steps of reasoning employed to sustain it are on occasion so complicated that Cotarelo's virtuosity may easily baffle the reader into silently consenting to positive distortions. To modify this picture, it will be necessary to recapitulate the interesting evidence suggested by J. Caso González for a revised chronology of the early eclogues I-VIII,[8] and advance original arguments building on Crawford's and Kohler's work to revise the order of eclogues IX-XIV forward in time.[9] We also plan to include the controversial Egloga interlocutoria in this series and round out our revision with some closing remarks on Encina's later poetry. This patient sifting of evidence and minutiae will necessarily be set against the background of Encina's professional and intellectual growth and peripatetic shifts of domicile; consequently, problems of dating, bibliography, and biography will assume a dimension of prime importance. From the synthesis of these results, a very different Juan del Encina emerges both as man and artist.