221
See pp. 45-46.
222
Op. cit. 156.
223
e. g. op. cit. 166, 244.
224
Further, the individual passages which are Petrarchan in tone without actually being borrowings are reminiscent of De Remediis i; see pp. 81-83.
225
Paris c. 1560. Penney records eight editions of this work; I quote from that of Paris, N. Bonfons, 1578.
226
Gilman, 168.
227
There has been no attempt to note such cases here; the sources of Petrarch are of interest in this context only when the ideas concerned play a significant part in La Celestina (as with the quotation from Heraclitus in the Prólogo).
228
This point is made by Gilman, 177.
229
It occurs in ii. 59; 189. See p. 58, n. 1.
230
168-9; 87. This cause of her murder is accepted by Gilman, 177, but on p. 103 it is only partially accepted ('There is certainly some truth...') and then discarded on the ground that 'Rojas is never content with such elemental motivations'. See Russell, art. cit. 164.