ENCYCLOPEDIA BEITANNICA.
E N - M E N
MENA, JUAN DE, one of the Italianizing Spanish poets
of the 15th century, was born at Cordova about
1411. We are informed by Romero, to whom we are
indebted for almost all we know about his life, that he had
attained the age of twenty-three before he began to give
himself to "the sweet labour of good learning," pursuing a
regular course of study at Salamanca and afterwards at
Rome. It was at the latter city that he first became
acquainted with the writings of Dante and Petrarch, which
afterwards so powerfully influenced his own style. Having
returned to Spain, he became a " veinticuatro," or magis
trate, of his native town, and was received as a poet with
great favour at the court of John II., being made Latin secre
tary to the king and historiographer of Castile. He died
suddenly, in consequence of a fall from his mule, in-1456,
at Torrelaguna, where the marquis of Santillana, his friend
and patron, erected his monument and wrote his epitaph.
De Mena s principal work, El Laberinto (" The Labyrinth "),
sometimes called Las Trescientas ("The Three Hundred")
from the original number of its stanzas, is a didactic
allegory on the duties and destinies of man, obviously con
structed on the lines of the Divina Commedia of Dante.
The poet, while wandering in a wood and exposed to the
attacks of various beasts of prey, is met by Providence in
the guise of a beautiful woman, who offers to guide him
safely through the dangers which surround him, and at the
same time to explain " as far as they may be grasped by
human understanding " the dark mysteries of life that
weigh upon his spirit. He is then led to the spherical
centre of the five zones, where he sees the three wheels of
destiny, the past, the future, and the present, and the men
belonging to each, arranged in the seven circles of planetary
influence. Opportunity is thus afforded for a vast quan
tity of mythological and historical portraiture ; the best
sketches are those of the poet s own contemporaries, but
the work in general is much disfigured with all sorts of
pedantry, and hardly ever attains to mediocrity as a poem.
The Laberinto was first printed at Seville in 1496 ; Nunez
and Sanchez accompanied it with commentaries in 1499
and 1582 respectively ; and it is still regarded with a good
deal of reverence by the Spaniards as the " magnum opus "
of their " Ennius." De Mena was the author of a number
of minor poems or " vers de socie te," written merely for
court circles, and having neither general interest nor per
manent value ; most of them are to be found in the
Cancionero General. He also wrote a poem entitled La
Coronation, the subject being the " crowning " of the
marquis of Santillana by the Muses and the Virtues on
Mount Parnassus. Finally, his Siete Pecados Mortales
(" Seven Deadly Sins ") is a dull allegory on the antagonism
between reason and the will of man. Complete editions
of the poems of De Mena appeared in 1528, 1804, and
1840.
MANAGE, GILLES (1613-1692), described by Bayle as
" one of the most learned men of his time, and the Varro
of the 17th century," was the son of Guillaume Manage,
king s advocate at Angers, and was born in that city on
August 15, 1613. A tenacious memory and an early
developed enthusiasm for learning carried him speedily
through his literary and professional studies, and we read
of him practising at the bar at Angers as early as 1632.
In the same year he pleaded several causes before the
parlement of Paris, and soon afterwards he attended the
" Grand Tours " at Poitiers, but after having been laid
aside by a severe illness he abandoned the legal profession
and declared his intention of entering the church. He
succeeded in obtaining some sinecure benefices, and lived
for some years in the household of Cardinal De Retz (then
only coadjutor to the archbishop of Paris), where he had
ample leisure for his favourite literary pursuits. Some
time after 1648 he withdrew to a house of his own in the
cloister of Notre Dame, where his remarkable conversational
powers enabled him to gather round him on Wednesday
evenings those much frequented literary assemblies which
he called " Mercuriales." His learning procured for him
admission to the Delia Cruscan Academy of Florence, but
his irrepressible tendency to caustic sarcasm led to his
remorseless exclusion from the French Academy. He died
at Paris on July 23, 1692. Of the voluminous works
of Manage (fully enumerated in the Dictionnaire of
Chauffepie ) the following may be mentioned : Originex
de la Lanr/ue Franqoue (1650 ; greatly enlarged in 1694) ;
Diogenes Laertius Graece et Latine, cum Commentario (1663
and again much improved in 1692); Poemata Latina,
Gallica, Grseca, et Italica (1656; 8th ed., 1687); Origini
della Linftua Italiana (1669); and Anti-Baillet (1690).
Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 16.djvu/11
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