Collections of traditional Spanish ballads were made in the early seventeenth century; some recorded directly from singers, others reworked by educated poets. So popular were these that Court poets composed ballads of their own. Most Spanish poetry of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries circulated in manuscript among a small coterie of wits and fellow poets, and it often contains references to contemporary events and people, sideswipes at institutions and individuals, and allusions to other writings of the time. The modern reader has to know about the people and events criticized and lampooned, and everything from municipal by-laws to contemporary painting can prove helpful. The traditional popular associations of the ballad also led to many poets combining in their poems the language of the street alongside that of polite society and the schoolroom. |
| 1 |
"El lastimado Belardo" (1588-95) with a note on Góngora's "En los pinares de Júcar" (1603) Ronald Truman 2 | |
"Noble desengaño" (1584) | Eric Southworth 3 | |
"Arrojóse el mancebito" (1589) | Eric Southworth 4 | |
"En un pastroral albergue" (1602) | Colin Thompson 5 | |
"Testamento de Don Quijote" (1606-14?) | John Rutherford 6 | |
"Son las torres de Joray" (1621?) | Clive Griffin 7 | |
"A la Corte vas, Perico" (date unknown) | Colin Thompson 8 | |
"Los borrachos" (1627-28?) | Nigel Griffin 9 | |
"A Vulcano, Venus y Marte" (c. 1630) | Oliver Noble Wood |
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