Albornoz founded a college in the university of Bologna, expressly for the Spaniards, his countrymen.
3
A gesture of contempt or playfulness, as the case may be, and which consists in a certain twist of the fingers and
1
There are but twelve of them. Possibly when Cervantes wrote this dedication he intended to include "El Curioso Impertinente," which occurs in chapters xxxiii. – xxxv. of the first part of "Don Quixote."
2
Cardinal Albornoz founded a college in the university of Bologna, expressly for the Spaniards, his countrymen.
3
A gesture of contempt or playfulness, as the case may be, and which consists in a certain twist of the fingers and thumb.
4
The original is
5
6
The
7
8
The Monument is a sort of temporary theatre, erected in the churches during Passion Week, and on which the passion of the Saviour is represented.
9
Peter of the Corner;
10
The Spanish authorities, under the pretext of being at perpetual war with Infidels, still cause "Bulls of the Crusade," to the possession of which certain indulgences are attached, to be publicly sold in obscure villages. The product of these sales was originally expended on the wars with the Moors, but from the time when Granada fell into the hands of the Spaniards, it has been divided between the church and state. The bulls are carried about by hawkers, who are called "Buleros." —
11
An
12
"Clean from dust and straw" —
13
This is a formula used in Spain by those who do a thing for the first time. —
14
The Quarto contains four Maravedis.
15
16
(This footnote is missing from the printed edition.)
17
18
In the slang dialect of Spain,
19
20
The
21
The Braves of the Hampa were a horde of ruffians principally Andalusians; they formed a society ready to commit every species of wrong and violence.
22
The
23
24
Our readers will perceive that this relates to the atrocity committed by the Infant Don Juan of Castille, who, while in revolt against his brother, Sancho IV., appeared before the city of Tarifa with an army, chiefly composed of Mahometans; finding the infant son of the governor, Don Alonzo Perez de Guzman, at nurse in a neighbouring village, he took the child, and bearing him to the foot of the walls, called on Guzman to surrender the place on pain of seeing his infant slaughtered before his eyes in case of refusal. The only reply vouchsafed by Don Alonzo was the horrible one alluded to in the text. He detached his own dagger from its belt, and threw it to Don Juan, when the sanguinary monster, far from respecting the fidelity of his opponent, seized the weapon, and pierced the babe to the heart as he had threatened to do This anecdote is related, with certain variations, in Conde, "La Dominacion de los Arabes en Espana." – See English Translation, vol. iii.
25
The winner.
26
A large purse made of cat-skin.
27
The
28
The
29
A favourite wine, grown on the shore of the Manzanares.
30
The Virgin Martyr, Santa Lucia, had her eyes burnt out of her head, and is regarded, in the Catholic Church, as particularly powerful in the cure of all diseases of the eyes. She is usually represented as bearing her eyes on a salver, which she holds in her hand.
31
The quill-driver.
32
Fat-face, puff-cheeks, or any other term describing fulness of face, in the least complimentary manner.
33
The clamberer.
34
Protector, or more exactly "bully," – to defend and uphold in acts of fraud and violence.
35
Dandy.
36
37
"Ocaña" is a city at no great distance from Madrid; and if the lady has placed her tiger there, instead of in Hyrcania, as she doubtless intended, it is of course because her emotions had troubled her memory. The "Tarpeian mariner" is a fine phrase surely, but its meaning is not very clear.
38
"At that time," remarks Viardot, "while wounds were still sewed up by the surgeons, the importance or extent of the cut made was estimated by the number of the stitches."
39
40
The goldfinch.
41
The lop-eared, or mutilated; alluding, generally, to losses suffered at the hands of justice.
42
43
Most of our readers will remember that the "sanbenito" is the long coat or robe, painted over with flames, which is worn by heretics whom the Inquisition has condemned and given over to the civil power.
44
45
The flat-nose.
46
The
47
Tricks of cheatery at cards.
48
Cutpurse.
49
The wolf-cub.
50
For Peruvians, which the American merchants were then called.
51
Don Augustin de Arrieta, a Spanish commentator of