1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Moratín, Nicolás Fernandez de

22112281911 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 18 — Moratín, Nicolás Fernandez de

MORATÍN, NICOLAS FERNANDEZ DE (1737–1780), Spanish poet and dramatist, was born at Madrid in 1737. He was educated at the Jesuit College in Calatayud and afterwards studied law at the university of Valladolid. In 1772 he was called to the bar; four years afterwards he was nominated to the chair of poetry at the imperial college. He died on the 11th of May 1780. A partisan of French methods, Moratín published in 1762 his Desengaño al teatro español, a severe criticism of the national drama, particularly of the auto sacramental; and his protests were partly responsible for the prohibition of autos three years afterwards (June 1765). In 1762 he also published a play entitled La Petimetra. Neither the Petimetra nor the Lucrecia (1763), an original tragedy still more strictly in accordance with French conventions, was represented on the stage, and two subsequent tragedies, Hormesinda (1770) and Guzmán el Bueno (1777), were played with no great success. In 1764 Moratín published a collection of pieces, chiefly lyrical, under the title of El Poeta, and in 1765 a short didactic poem on the chase (Diana ó arte de la caza). His “epic canto” on the destruction of his ships by Cortés (Las Naves de Cortés destruidas) failed to win a prize offered by the Academy in 1777, and was published posthumously (1785). But a better idea of Moratín’s talent is afforded by his anacreontic verses and by his Carta histórica sobre el origen y progresos de las fiestas de toros eu España.

His works are included in the Biblioteca de autores españoles, vol. ii.