Authors: Arturo Pérez-Reverte
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical - General, #Action & Adventure, #Suspense, #Historical, #Fiction - General, #War & Military, #Spain
FROM THE SAME
Advice Addressed to Captain Diego Alatriste
SONNET
If what I have I do not fear to lose,
Nor yet desire to have what I do not,
I’m safe from Fortune’s wheel whate’er I choose,
Let plaintiff or defendant be my lot.
For if I joy not in another’s pain
And worldly wealth brings me no hint of pleasure,
Grim death may come and take me without strain;
I’ll not resist or ask for lesser measure.
And you, who even now know not the chains
With which this age imprisons a heart,
Diego—free from pleasures and from pains—
Keep, thus, far hence the prick of passion’s dart;
So to the last, dear Alatriste, keep
Alone, alone, until the final sleep.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Arturo Pérez-Reverte lives near Madrid. Originally a war journalist, he now writes fiction full-time. His novels
The Flanders Panel, The Club Dumas, The Fencing Master, The Seville Communion, The Nautical Chart,
and
The Queen of the South
have been translated into twenty-nine languages and published in more than fifty countries. In 2003, Pérez-Reverte was elected to the Spanish Royal Academy. Visit his website at
www.perez-reverte.com
.