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The Oxford book of Portuguese verse

Chapter 152: FRANCISCO DE MORAES
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About This Book

This anthology gathers Portuguese verse from the twelfth through the twentieth century, presenting medieval Galician-Portuguese lyric—dance and pilgrimage songs—alongside troubadour-influenced courtly love poems, satirical pieces, and later lyric developments. An extended introduction situates the poems in early national formation, foreign contacts, and manuscript songbooks, and highlights forms such as cantigas de amigo, cantigas de amor, serranilhas, barcarolas, and other folk and court genres. Selections stress the music and dance origins of many texts and trace a continuity between popular village songs and cultivated court poetry, offering a historical and formal panorama of Portuguese poetic tradition.

FRANCISCO DE MORAES

c. 1500-1572

111. Cantiga

Desengano, quem vos quer,
esse vos nam pode achar,
e quem vos nam ha mister
buscai-lo para o matar.
Com meus enganos contente
passei a vida té agora,
viestes vos em tal hora
que ao dobro sou descontente.
Is fugir a quem se quer
convosco desenganar:
eu que vos nam hei mister
quisestes-me vir buscar.
Nam tinha eu a vida em mais
que em quanto vivi de enganos,
desenganos são sinais
de morte ou mores danos.
Quando vos ouve mister
folgastes de me enganar,
quando enganado quis ser
vindes-me desenganar.