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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: THE-TOO |
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TIRSO DE MOLINA , the pseudonym of Gabriel Tellez (15711648), Spanish dramatist. Born at Madrid in October 1571, he studied at the Alcala de Henares, joined the Order of Mercy on the 4th of November 1600, and made his religious profession in the Monastery of San Antolin at Guadalajara on the 21st of January 16o1. He was a dramatist of ten years' standing
interest
Trujillo in 1626, was elected later to the posts of reader in theology and definidor general, and in May 1632 was appointed chronicler of the Order of Mercy. His Deleitar aprovechado (1635) is a devout counterpart of the Cigarrales de Toledo, much inferior to its predecessor in interest
great
work
appearance of a supposititious nephew's name on the title-pages of the last four volumes indicates the equally natural desire of a prominent monk to avoid conflict with the authorities. A sixth
tribute to the count de Sastago, who had accepted the dedication of the fourth part of the plays, and who had probably helped to defray the publishing expenses, Tirso de Molina is said to have compiled the Genealogia de la casa de triage (164o), but the ascription of this genealogical work
It is only within the last few years that it has become possible to give an outline of his life; it will always be impossible for posterity to do justice to his genius, for but a fraction of his plays have been preserved. The earliest of his extant pieces is dated 1605 and bears no sign of immaturity; in 1624 he had written three hundred plays, and in 1634 he stated that he had composed four hundred within the previous twenty years; of this immense production not more than eighty plays are in existence. Tirso de Molina is universally known as the author of El Burlador de Sevilla y convidado de piedra, the piece in which Don Juan is first presented on the stage; but El Burlador de Sevilla represents only one aspect of his genius. No less remarkable than his representation of perverse depravity in El Burlador de Sevilla is his dramatic treatment of a philosophical enigma in El Condenado por desconfiado. Though manifestly attracted by exceptional cases, by every kind of moral aberration, by the infamous and the terrible, his range is virtually unlimited. He reveals him-self as a master of historical interpretation in La Prudencia de la mujer and of tragical pathos in La Venganza de Tamar; his sympathetic, malicious wit finds dramatic expression in El Vergonzoso en palacio and Don Gil de las calzas verdes, and the fine divination of feminine character in Averiguelo Vargas and La Villana de Vallecas is incomparable. Tirso de Molina has neither Lope de Vega's inventive resource, nor his infinite seduction; he has neither Calder6n's idealistic visions, nor his golden music; but he exceeds Lope in massive intellectual power and in artistic self-restraint, and he exceeds Calder6n in humour, in creative faculty, and in dramatic intuition. That his reputation extended beyond the Pyrenees in his own lifetime may be gathered from the fact that J. Shirley's Opportunity is derived from El Castigo del penseque; but he was neglected in Spain itself during the long period of Calderbn's supremacy, and his name was almost forgotten till the end of the 18th century, when some of his pieces were timidly recast by Dionisio Solis
dates
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