Letter #5748
Alfonso de VALDÉS to Ioannes DANTISCUSPalencia, [1527]-10-01
English register:
Valdés had dispatched his last letter to Dantiscus through a certain Aragonese before Dantiscus’s Breton arrived with his letter. He quotes the contents of the letter sent earlier (IDL 5747) and sends again the list of towns through which the chancellor [Mercurino Gattinara] is likely to travel. He cannot leave today because he is delayed by the slow pace at which Germans deal with matters at hand. If it weren’t for this, he would be with Dantiscus by evening. He will set off the next morning. He hopes that if he fails to meet with Dantiscus on the way, they will surely meet on Saturday. He sends his regards to him and his wells (most likely a pun on the similarity between the Latin puteum – well and puta – prostitute. It could be a reference to the women accompanying Dantiscus and the place where he was staying, as “Dueñas” means “Ladies” in Spanish).
received Dueñas, [1527]-10-01 Manuscript sources:
Auxiliary sources:
Prints:
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Text & apparatus & commentaryPlain textText & commentaryText & apparatus
Clarissimo viro, domino Ioanni Dantisco, serenissimi regis Poloniae etc.
Salutem plurimam.
Dederam ad te litteras uni Aragonensi, cum Britonus tuus tuas ad me attulit. Vidisti, arbitror, ex meis cancellarium cras venturum Arandam atque die Sabbati ad nos. Quo itinere, certe ignoro, ait metator hospitiorum sive (ut isti vocant) furrerius, qui cancellarii litteras attulit, venturum recto itinere. Si per Germanorum tarditatem licuisset, eram hac nocte apud te futurus, tamen haud fieri potuit, ut me hodie ab his negotiis absolverem. Cras summo mane spero me discessurum arripiamque iter per oppida, quorum catalogum iam secundo ad te mitto. Quodsi te non convenero in itinere, conveniam saltim die Sabbati. Interea vale felicissime cum tuis puteis.
Palantiae, primo Octobris.
Nosti tuum Valdesium.