CHAPTER V

The Comte de Puymaigre's La Cour littéraire de Don Juan II. (1873) is an excellent general view of the subject. D. Emilio Cotarelo y Mori's Don Enrique de Villena (1896) is a very learned and interesting study. Villena's Arte Cisoria was reprinted so recently as 1879. The Libro de los Gatos and Clemente Sánchez' Exemplos are in Rivadeneyra, vol. li.; the latter were completed by M. Morel-Fatio in Romania, vol. vii. Mr. Thomas Frederick Crane's Exempla of Jacques Vitry (published in 1890 for the Folk-Lore Society) will be found useful by English readers.

Baena's Cancionero (1851) was edited by the late Marqués de Pidal: the large-paper copies contain a few loose pieces, omitted from the ordinary edition which was reprinted by Brockhaus in a cheap form at Leipzig in 1860. D. Antonio Paz y Melia's Obras de Juan Rodríguez de la Cámara (1884) is a good example of this scholar's conscientious work. Amador de los Ríos' edition of the Obras del Marqués de Santillana (1852) is complete and minute in detail.

There is no good edition of Juan de Mena's works; I have found it most convenient to use that published by Francisco Sánchez (1804). The Coplas de la Panadera will be found in Gallardo, vol. i. cols. 613-617.

Juan II.'s Crónica is printed by Rivadeneyra, vol. lviii.; the others—those of Clavijo, Gámez, Lena—are in Llaguno y Amírola's Crónicas Españolas, already named. Llaguno also reprinted Pérez de Guzmán's Generaciones at Valencia in 1790.

No modern editor has had the spirit to reissue Martínez de Toledo's Corbacho, nor did even Ticknor possess a copy. The edition of Logroño (1529) is convenient. The Visión deleitable is in Rivadeneyra, vol. xxxvi. I know no later edition of Lucena's Vita Beata than that of Zamora, 1483.