Abstract
This article consists of a preliminary study, the paleographic
transcription and a version in prose of a “triumphal arch” dedicated to don
Fernando Deza y Ulloa, a high official of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. As
the verses on the arch themselves make clear, this was not an example of
ephemeral architecture; its existence was confined to paper, it was merely
literary. It was written by the Mercedarian fray Antonio de Segura and was
included in a little book of poems entitled “Poemas varios que a diversos
asuntos compuso el padre maestro…”; although the poem is
undated, the final compilation can be assigned to the year 1716. The
interest of the triumphal arch is dual: as an example of the verses of fray
Antonio de Segura, an important personality in the literary world of New
Spain, who was highly active in the first decades of the eighteenth century
but until now unknown to us as a poet; and as an example of the repetition
into which by that time this sort of Baroque game had fallen.
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