The most important writer in Portuguese history and
one of the preeminent European poets of the early modern
era, Luís de Camões (1524–80) has
been ranked as a sonneteer on par with Petrarch, Dante,
and Shakespeare. Championed by such influential English
poets as William Blake and Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
and admired in America by Edgar Allan Poe, Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow, and Herman Melville, Camões was renowned
for his intensely personal sonnets and equally intense
adventurous life. He was banished for dueling and brawling
at court, lost an eye fighting the Moors in North Africa,
was shipwrecked off the coast of India, jailed in Goa,
and exiled in Mozambique. Throughout these personal trials,
he advanced poetry beyond the Petrarchin model of love
won and lost to write of personal despair, history, politics,
war, religion, and the natural beauty of Portugal.
The first significant English translation of Camões's
sonnets in more than one hundred years, Selected Sonnets:
A Bilingual Edition collects seventy of Camões's
best—all musically rendered into contemporary, yet
metrical and rhymed, English-language poetry by William
Baer, with the original Portuguese on facing pages—and
reintroduces the genius of a poet whom Cervantes called
"the incomparable treasure of Lusus." A comprehensive
selection of sonnets that demonstrates the full range
of Camões's interests and invention, Selected
Sonnets will prove indispensable for both students
and teachers in comparative and Renaissance literature,
Portuguese and Spanish history, and the art of literary
translation.
"William Baer's brilliant translation of Luis de
Camoes Selected Sonnets is a literary achievement
and one that will bring renewed interest to these classic
texts. Students and all loves of poetry will find it extremely
valuable."
-- Virgil Suarez, Florida State University
"Long overshadowed by the poet's great
epic, Camoes's sonnets emerge here in splendid isolation
to reveal their own greatness. Baer's translations superbly
capture their deepest pride, passion, pathos, and dynamic
energy."
-- William J. Kennedy, Cornell University
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