For his more solid education, we are told, he went to Salamanca. But why

Rodrigo de Cervantes, who was very poor, should have sent his son to a

university a hundred and fifty miles away when he had one at his own

door, would be a puzzle, if we had any reason for supposing that he did

so. The only evidence is a vague statement by Professor Tomas Gonzalez,

that he once saw an old entry of the matriculation of a Miguel de

Cervantes. This does not appear to have been ever seen again; but even if

it had, and if the date corresponded, it would prove nothing, as there

were at least two other Miguels born about the middle of the century; one

of them, moreover, a Cervantes Saavedra, a cousin, no doubt, who was a

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source of great embarrassment to the biographers.

That he was a student neither at Salamanca nor at Alcala is best proved

by his own works. No man drew more largely upon experience than he did,

and he has nowhere left a single reminiscence of student life-for the

"Tia Fingida," if it be his, is not one--nothing, not even "a college

joke," to show that he remembered days that most men remember best. All

that we know positively about his education is that Juan Lopez de Hoyos,

a professor of humanities and belles-lettres of some eminence, calls him

his "dear and beloved pupil." This was in a little collection of verses

by different hands on the death of Isabel de Valois, second queen of

Philip II, published by the professor in 1569, to which Cervantes

contributed four pieces, including an elegy, and an epitaph in the form

of a sonnet. It is only by a rare chance that a "Lycidas" finds its way

into a volume of this sort, and Cervantes was no Milton. His verses are

no worse than such things usually are; so much, at least, may be said for

them.

By the time the book appeared he had left Spain, and, as fate ordered it,

for twelve years, the most eventful ones of his life. Giulio, afterwards

Cardinal, Acquaviva had been sent at the end of 1568 to Philip II by the

Pope on a mission, partly of condolence, partly political, and on his

return to Rome, which was somewhat brusquely expedited by the King, he

took Cervantes with him as his camarero (chamberlain), the office he

himself held in the Pope's household. The post would no doubt have led to

advancement at the Papal Court had Cervantes retained it, but in the

summer of 1570 he resigned it and enlisted as a private soldier in

Captain Diego Urbina's company, belonging to Don Miguel de Moncada's

regiment, but at that time forming a part of the command of Marc Antony

Colonna. What impelled him to this step we know not, whether it was

distaste for the career before him, or purely military enthusiasm. It may

well have been the latter, for it was a stirring time; the events,

however, which led to the alliance between Spain, Venice, and the Pope,

against the common enemy, the Porte, and to the victory of the combined

fleets at Lepanto, belong rather to the history of Europe than to the

life of Cervantes. He was one of those that sailed from Messina, in

September 1571, under the command of Don John of Austria; but on the

morning of the 7th of October, when the Turkish fleet was sighted, he was

lying below ill with fever. At the news that the enemy was in sight he

rose, and, in spite of the remonstrances of his comrades and superiors,

insisted on taking his post, saying he preferred death in the service of

God and the King to health. His galley, the Marquesa, was in the thick of

the fight, and before it was over he had received three gunshot wounds,

two in the breast and one in the left hand or arm. On the morning after

the battle, according to Navarrete, he had an interview with the

commander-in-chief, Don John, who was making a personal inspection of the

wounded, one result of which was an addition of three crowns to his pay,

and another, apparently, the friendship of his general.




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