Antonio Mira de Amescua

Mira de Amescua's plays are dispersed in various printed collections, and the absence of a satisfactory edition has prevented, his due recognition. He has an evenness of execution which indicates an artistic conscience uncommon in Spanish playwrights; he resisted the temptation to write too much, and he unites a virile dignity of expression to impressive conception of character.
Two of his plays''La adversa fortuna de Don Bernardo de Cabrera'' and ''El ejemplo mayor de la desdicha''are respectively the sources of Rotrou's ''Don Bernardo de la Cabrère'' and ''Belisaire''; Moreto's ''Caer para levantar'' is simply a recast of Mira's ''El Esclavo del demonio'', a celebrated drama which clearly influenced Calderón when composing ''La Devoción de la cruz''; and there is manifestly a close relation between Mira's ''La Rueda de la fortuna'' on the one hand and Corneille's ''Héraclius'' and Calderón's ''En esta vida todo es verdad y todo es mentira''. A few of Mira de Amescua's plays are reprinted in the ''Biblioteca de autores españoles'', vol. xlv. Provided by Wikipedia