received 
his bachelor's degree. The next five years of his life are shrouded in 
considerable obscurity. It was formerly believed, as related by 
Montalvan, that he returned from the University of Alcalá to Madrid 
about 1582, was married and, after a duel with a nobleman, was obliged 
to flee to Valencia, where he remained until he enlisted in the 
Invincible Armada in 1588, but recent research[1] has proved the case 
to be quite otherwise. It would seem that, on leaving the University 
about 1582, he became Secretary to the Marqués de las Navas and that 
for four or five years he led in Madrid a dissolute life, writing verses 
and frequenting the society of actors and of other young degenerates 
like himself and enjoying the favor of a young woman, Elena Osorio, 
whom he addressed in numberless poems as "Filis" and whom he calls 
"Dorotea" in his dramatic romance of the same name. In the latter work 
he relates shamelessly and with evident respect for truth of detail many 
of his adventures of the period, which, as Ticknor says, "do him little 
credit as a young man of honor and a cavalier." 
[Note 1: Professor Hugo Albert Rennert, in his excellent and 
exhaustive work entitled The Life of Lope de Vega, from which many 
of the details of this Introduction are taken, quotes at length from 
Tomillo and Pérez Pastor's Datos Desconocidos the Spanish criminal
records of the Proceso de Lope de Vega por Libelos contra unos 
Cómicos. In the course of the procedure much light is thrown upon this 
period of Lope's life.] 
In the light of the recent information cited above, we know also that 
Lope's career immediately after 1587 was quite different from what his 
contemporary Montalvan had led the world long to believe. In the 
Proceso de Lope de Vega por libelos contra unos Cómicos, it is shown 
that the poet, having broken with "Filis," circulated slanderous verses 
written against her father, Jerónimo Velázquez, and his family. The 
author was tried and sentenced to two years' banishment from Castile 
and eight more from within five leagues of the city of Madrid. He 
began his exile in Valencia, but soon disobeyed the decree of 
banishment, which carried with it the penalty of death if broken, and 
entered Castile secretly to marry, early in 1588, Doña Isabel de Urbina, 
a young woman of good family in the capital. Accompanied by his 
young wife, he doubtless went on directly to Lisbon, where he left her 
and enlisted in the Invincible Armada, which sailed from that port, May 
29, 1588. During the expedition, according to his own account, Lope 
fought bravely against the English and the Dutch, using, as he says, his 
poems written to "Filis" for gun-wads, and yet found time to write a 
work of eleven thousand verses entitled la Hermosura de Angélica. The 
disastrous expedition returned to Cadiz in December, and Lope made 
his way back to the city of his exile, Valencia, where he was joined by 
his wife. There they lived happily for some time, the poet gaining their 
livelihood by writing and selling plays, which up to that time he had 
written for his own amusement and given to the theatrical managers. 
Of the early literary efforts of Lope de Vega, such as have come down 
to us are evidently but a small part, but from them we know something 
of the breadth of his genius. In childhood even he wrote voluminously, 
and one of his plays, El Verdadero Amante, which we have of this early 
period, was written at the age of twelve, but was probably rewritten 
later in the author's life. He wrote also many ballads, not a few of 
which have been preserved, and we know that, at the time of his 
banishment, he was perhaps the most popular poet of the day.
The two years following the return of the Armada, Lope continued to 
live in Valencia, busied with his literary pursuits, but in 1590, after his 
two years of banishment from Castile had expired, he moved to Toledo 
and later to Alba de Tormes and entered the service of the Duke of 
Alba, grandson of the great soldier, in the capacity of secretary. For his 
employer he composed about this time the pastoral romance Arcadia, 
which was not published until 1598. The remaining years of his 
banishment, which was evidently remitted in 1595, were uneventful 
enough, but this last year brought to him a great sorrow in the death of 
his faithful wife. However, he seems to have consoled himself easily, 
for on his return to Madrid the following year we know of his entering 
upon a career of gallant adventures which were to last many years and 
which were scarcely interrupted by his second marriage in 1598 to 
Doña Juana    
    
		
	
	
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