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Title: History of Spanish and Portuguese Literature (Vol 2 of 2)

Author: Friedrich Bouterwek

Translator: Thomasina Ross

Release date: January 19, 2018 [eBook #56396]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Anita Hammond, Wayne Hammond and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE LITERATURE (VOL 2 OF 2) ***

i

HISTORY
OF
SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE
LITERATURE.

ii

iii


HISTORY
OF
SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE
LITERATURE.
BY
FREDERICK BOUTERWEK.

IN TWO VOLUMES.

Translated from the Original German,
BY THOMASINA ROSS.
VOL. II.
PORTUGUESE LITERATURE.

LONDON:
BOOSEY AND SONS, BROAD STREET.
1823.

iv

E. Justins, Printer, 41, Brick Lane, Spitalfields.

v


PREFACE.

For much of the valuable information which the following History of Portuguese Literature contains, the author acknowledges himself to be indebted to the communications of a learned Portuguese, with whom he became acquainted after the materials he had previously collected were arranged for publication. M. Bouterwek originally intended to comprise what he had to say, on Portuguese literature, in a brief sketch, which was to form a supplement to the preceding volume; but the assistance of his literary friend enabled him to make the present volume a suitable companion to his history of the sister literature of the Peninsula. In England commercial interests may have induced many persons to make themselves acquainted with the language of Portugal, but the literature of that country has hitherto vi been studied by few. With the exception of Camoens, even the names of the principal Portuguese authors are scarcely known to us. The greater novelty of the subject is therefore an advantage which this second volume possesses over the first. vii


TABLE OF CONTENTS.

VOL. II.

BOOK I.

FROM THE END OF THE THIRTEENTH TO THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
Page
Rise of Portuguese poetry 1
Gonzalo Hermiguez and Egaz Moniz, poets of the twelfth century 5
Early essay in epic poetry 8
King Diniz of Portugal, a poet of the thirteenth century 9
Poets of the royal family in the fourteenth century 10
Oldest specimens of Portuguese prose 14
Intimate connection of the Portuguese and Galician poetry.—The Galician poet Macias 15
The Cancioneiros Geraes 17
Deficiency with regard to historical romances—little influence of the cultivation of Latin verse on Portuguese lyric poetry 20
Early cultivation of historical prose in Portuguese literature 21
Increase of Portuguese power, followed by the rapid developement of the national poetry, at the commencement of the sixteenth century 23
Bernardim Ribeyro 24
His eclogues 25
His cantigas 30
His romance of Menina e Moça 33viii
Christovaõ Falcaõ 39
Other ancient lyric poems 44
BOOK II.

FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY UNTIL TOWARDS THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.
CHAP. I.

GENERAL VIEW OF THE POETIC AND RHETORICAL CULTIVATION
OF THE PORTUGUESE DURING THE ABOVE PERIOD.
Relation of Portuguese to Spanish poetry in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries 47
Causes of the continued cultivation of the Spanish language in Portugal 51
Religious and political character of the Portuguese during this period 54
CHAP. II.

HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE POETRY AND ELOQUENCE FROM THE
EPOCH OF THE INTRODUCTION OF THE ITALIAN STYLE, TILL
TOWARDS THE END OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
Tranquil adoption of the Italian style 59
Saa de Miranda 61
General character of his poems 63
His eclogues 66
His epistles 71
His spiritual poems 74
His popular songs, &c. 76
His two prose comedies 78
Gil Vicente 85
General character of his dramatic prose 87
His autos, or spiritual dramas 90
His comedies, in a peculiar signification of the term 99
His tragi-comedies 101ix
His farces 103
Ferreira 111
General character of his poetry 114
His correct style of sonnet composition 117
His odes 119
His elegies 122
His eclogues 125
His epistles ibid
His epigrams, &c. 130
His tragedy and his two prose comedies 132
Camoens 139
General character of his poetry 148
Character and analysis of the Lusiad 150
The other poetic works of Camoens 184
His sonnets 187
His canções 189
His odes 190
His elegies 192
His estancias 195
His eclogues 196
His poems in redondilhas, &c. 197
His dramas 200
Classical school of Saa de Miranda and Antonio Ferreira 208
Andrade Caminha 209
Bernardes 217
Cortereal 223
Other Portuguese poets of the sixteenth century—Ferreira de Vasconcellos—Rodriguez de Castro—Lobo de Soropita, &c. 225
Rodriguez Lobo 226
His Court in the Country 228
His pastoral romances 235
His miscellaneous poems 245
Imitation of the Spanish romances in Portugal 250
State of Portuguese eloquence in the sixteenth century 252
Romances and novels 253
Sà Sotomayor 254x
Pires de Rebello 256
Progress of the historical art 258
Joaõ de Barros 260
Lopez de Castanheda—Damiaõ de Góes—Affonso d’Alboquerque 266
Bernardo de Brito 268
CHAP. III.

HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE POETRY AND ELOQUENCE, FROM THE LATTER YEARS OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY UNTIL TOWARDS THE CLOSE OF THE SEVENTEENTH.
Decay of the ancient national energy in Portuguese literature 273
Portuguese sonnets of the seventeenth century 276
Faria e Sousa 277
His sonnets 279
His treatises on poetry 283
His eclogues and his theory respecting that species of composition 286
His commentary on the works of Camoens 288
Thomas de Noronha—comic sonnet poetry 290
Barbosa Bacellar 292
Torrezaõ Coelho 295
Freire de Andrada, an opponent of the Gongorists and Marinists 296
Further decline of Portuguese taste—Ribeiro de Macedo—Correa de la Cerda 302
Violante do Ceo 304
Didactic epistles of Alvares da Cunha 307
Jeronymo Bahia 308
Francisco Vasconcellos 311
Telles da Sylva and Nunez da Sylva 312
Other sonneteers—continued intervention of the Spanish language in Portuguese poetry 315
Portuguese eloquence during the seventeenth century 317
Romantic prose—Matheus Ribeyro—Castanheira Turacem 318
Historical prose—Freire Andrada’s biography of Joaõ de Castro 322xi
Portuguese treatises on poetry and rhetoric written during the seventeenth century 327
BOOK III.

FROM THE CLOSE OF THE SEVENTEENTH TO THE END OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
Preliminary observations 328
CHAP. I.

GENERAL HISTORY OF POETICAL AND RHETORICAL CULTIVATION IN PORTUGAL DURING THIS PERIOD.
Total decay of Portuguese literature towards the end of the seventeenth century 329
Establishment of the Portuguese academy in 1714 331
Administration of the Marquis of Pombal 333
Revived spirit of literature—utility of the Portuguese academy of sciences 334
CHAP. II.

HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE POETRY DURING THIS PERIOD.
The Conde da Ericeyra 336
General character of his works 338
His Henriqueida 340
Continuance of corrupt taste in Portuguese poetry—Barros Pereira—Antonio de Lima 347
The Portuguese drama in the first half of the eighteenth century 350
Spurious dramas called operas ibid
RESUMPTION OF AN IMPROVED STYLE IN PORTUGUESE POETRY.
Manoel da Costa 357
His successful imitation of Cantatas in the style of Metastasio 362xii
Progress of Portuguese poetry in the latter part of the eighteenth century 364
Translations of latin classics into the Portuguese language 365
Titles of some of the poems produced in this period 366
Garçaõ—his imitation of Horace’s odes 367
His dramas in the style of Terence 372
The Abbot Paulino 375
Dona Catharina de Sousa—Her tragedy of Osmia 377
Failure of Osmia on the stage—prevalence of dramatic imitations and translations 383
Recent Portuguese poets—in particular Tolentino da Almeida 384
Araujo de Azavedo—his translations of English poems 386
CHAP. III.

HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE ELOQUENCE, CRITICISM AND RHETORIC, DURING THIS PERIOD.
Further decline of Portuguese eloquence 387
New cultivation of eloquence—Classical prose authors still wanting in modern Portuguese literature 390
Romantic prose—translations 391
Portuguese criticism of the eighteenth century ibid
Ericeyra’s introduction to his Henriqueida 392
Garçaõ’s lectures 395
Philological and critical treatises of the Academicians—Joaquim de Foyos—Francisco Dias—Antonio das Naves, &c. 398
Compendium of rhetoric by Antonio Teixeira de Magalhaens 402
CONCLUSION.
Comparison of Portuguese and Spanish literature 403

1


HISTORY
OF
PORTUGUESE LITERATURE.


BOOK I.
FROM THE END OF THE THIRTEENTH TO THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

RISE OF PORTUGUESE POETRY.

That songs in the Portuguese language were sung on the banks of the Tagus, before any kingdom of Portugal existed cannot be doubted. Indeed even Spanish writers, who have considered the question with impartiality, do not deny that Portuguese poetry flourished at an earlier period than the Castilian; and all accounts of the first dawnings of modern civilization in Portugal denote an original poetic tendency in the national genius. That destiny, however, by which Portugal has been from an early period politically severed from the other parts of the Peninsula could alone have prevented the Portuguese poetry from being like the Galician, 2 completely absorbed and lost in the Castilian; for the Galician and Portuguese languages and poetry, were originally, and even after the separation of Portugal from the Castiles, scarcely distinguishable from each other.1

The foreigner, who is not prepossessed by any national partiality, in favour of either the Castilian or the Portuguese modifications of the Hispanic romance, might, perhaps, be induced to conclude that poetry would on the whole have sustained no essential loss, had the language of Portugal been rejected by literature, and reduced like the Galician dialect to the rank of a common popular idiom; for the Castilian poetry was from its origin, so closely allied to the Portuguese, that it is certain the former might easily have incorporated into itself the latter without producing the slightest inconsistency in any of its characteristic features. Still, however, to him who is capable of feeling the more delicate relations of the beautiful in nature and in art, it must be an increased pleasure to hear the same melody performed on two similar, yet differently constructed instruments. The historian of Portuguese literature ought, therefore, to direct his particular attention to those apparently unimportant, and yet in themselves very remarkable properties, whereby Portuguese poetry has in the varied progress of its cultivation more or less deviated from the Castilian, or, as it is now usually styled, the Spanish;2 and also to the manner in which 3 the differences not only of the two sister languages, but of the two nations, whose respective characters are impressed on those languages, have constantly preserved the boundary which divides the polite literature of Portugal and Spain, and which must otherwise have soon been obliterated.

The harmonious softness of the Portuguese language, probably contributed no less to its early cultivation in general than to its applicability to poetry in particular. Even the characteristic nasal sound, which the pronunciation of this language has in common with the French, is in no way detrimental to the rhythm of the Portuguese syllables; for that rhythm, as in the Spanish and Italian languages, depends on a certain accentuation, which is a valuable remnant of the latin syllabic forms, and which is not, as in the French, annihilated by a new rule of orthoepy. That this ancient accentuation, and with it the groundwork of metrical perfectibility, should be preserved in the Portuguese language, is a circumstance rendered the more remarkable by that of a French prince having been the founder of the first dynasty of the kings of Portugal; for from this incidental occurrence, some critics and philologists have endeavoured to explain the similarity between the Portuguese and French pronunciation. The prince to whose influence this effect has been attributed is Henry of Burgundy, who was, in the year 1094, appointed, 4 by his father-in-law, Alphonso VI. of Castile, governor of the country situated at the mouth of the Tagus, and who afterwards held that territory in sovereignty with the title of Count; but however numerous might be the noble families, brought by this prince from France to Portugal, neither he nor they could be able to produce an essential change in the national language among all classes of the people.3 Moreover the same dialect was and still is vernacular in Galicia, where no French prince ever ruled. It is however not a little extraordinary, that under the dominion and influence of French princes and nobles, Portuguese poetry should from its origin have preserved unimpaired those romantic national forms, in which it soon appeared perfectly to coincide with the Castilian poetry; for notwithstanding that most of the French nobles, who settled in Portugal, came from the south of France, whence they brought with them the genuine poetry of the Troubadours, still the introduction of that poetry did not impede the developement of those poetic forms, which constituted a common source of pleasure for the Portuguese, the Galician, and the Castilian.4

The favourable situation of Portugal could not fail to contribute in a considerable degree to the early developement of the Portuguese tongue. While the Castilians descending from their mountains, obtained no increase of wealth until they wrested it sword in 5 hand from the Arabs, the Portuguese, particularly after they recovered possession of Lisbon, enriched themselves by the peaceful pursuits of trade and navigation. Lisbon soon became a flourishing commercial city; and the nation learned to unite civic industry with warlike achievements. The Portuguese, generally speaking, acquired a degree of practical dexterity which even to this day seems to distinguish them from the Spaniards, and which indeed is not sufficiently valued by the enemies of the Portuguese name, amongst whom must be more particularly included their Castilian neighbours. The benefits of civil industry, which were widely diffused from Lisbon, fortified in the Portuguese that feeling of self-esteem, which was necessary for the maintenance of their independence on so small a territory. In the reign of Alphonso I. the son of Henry of Burgundy, the Portuguese dominions acquired nearly their present extent by conquests made from the Moors, as far as the Algarvas. The romance dialect of Portugal now advanced southward into the conquered districts, and thus acquired the dignity of a prevailing national language, the formation of which proceeded from a great capital.

GONZALO HERMIGUEZ AND EGAZ MONIZ.

These circumstances may serve to explain how two Portuguese poets came to be celebrated at so early a period as the reign of Alphonso I. in the twelfth century. One of these poets is Gonzalo Hermiguez, and the other Egaz Moniz; two knights descended from the most distinguished families of the country. The 6 verses of these ancient bards which have been preserved, are not wholly intelligible even to natives of Portugal.5 But though their meaning can only be partially conjectured, they nevertheless merit attention; for no Spanish cancion of that age, by any known author, now exists; and in these oldest records of Portuguese poetry, the germ of the common character and metrical form of the national songs of Spain and Portugal is plainly discernible. Gonzalo Hermiguez and Egaz Moniz wrote no rhymed chronicles or legends. They did not even compose in the Provençal metres. Their lyric effusions, which are popular songs in the proper sense of the term, are composed in short trochaic verses, precisely in the style of the well-known Spanish and Portuguese ballads of the fifteenth centuries. In the verses of Hermiguez scarcely any regular measure is discernible.6 But Egaz Moniz exhibits precisely that 7 metrical form, for which, during some succeeding centuries the Portuguese and the Spaniards manifested a particular predilection.7

These oldest relics of lyric composition in the Portuguese language seem to confirm the opinion, that the prevailing tone of romantic love, which characterised the poetry of the Spaniards and Portuguese, until the imitation of the Italian style was generally adopted, originated in Portugal. To paint romantic despair, and all the storms of passion, combined with the deepest resignation, existing not only in fancy, but in real life, appears to have formed the poetic costume of chivalry in Portugal even earlier than in Spain. Thus, the susceptible Egaz Moniz is said to have survived only a short time the poetic expression of the 8 anguish occasioned by the infidelity of his beloved Violante.

EARLY ESSAY IN EPIC POETRY.

In all literary probability, the Portuguese also preceded the Spaniards in essays in epic, or rather in historical poetry. An old Portuguese narrative in dactylic stanzas (versos de arte mayor), whose unknown author related, as well as he was able, the history of the conquest of Spain by the Moors, may not be so old as it is supposed to be by Manuel de Faria y Sousa, who would refer the origin of these verses to the very period of the Arabic invasion. They are, however, written in such antiquated language, that they may be regarded as of a date anterior to the Cantigas of Hermiguez and Moniz; and that they are the surreptitious fabrication of a later writer can scarcely be supposed, since no one could have hoped to acquire the least fame or reward by producing a counterfeit of so little value. No opinion could be formed of the merits of the whole narrative from the few stanzas, which are now extant, even though the language were more intelligible than it is.8 9

KING DINIZ.

In general all these remains of the most ancient Portuguese poetry must be considered only as first attempts. Throughout the whole of the thirteenth century, the poetic art in Portugal appears to have remained stationary in that degree of advancement to which it had arrived in the twelfth century. The language, however, became gradually more fixed and regular. In the latter half of the thirteenth century, king Diniz (Dionysius) of Portugal, promoted Portuguese literature in the same manner as his contemporary Alphonso the Wise, by his influence and example, improved the poetry of Castile. Diniz, like Alphonso, was himself a poet and a prose writer. His poetic compositions were, according to the fashion of the age, collected in Cancioneiros (song books), which bore the name of the author. But from the testimony of Portuguese writers, it appears that the poems of king Diniz are to be found only in old manuscripts. They cannot, however, be very few in number, for two Cancioneiros are named, one containing the spiritual, and the other the temporal works of the king. The first of 10 these collections bears the singular title of Cancioneiro de Nossa Senhora (Our Lady’s Song book).9 King Diniz, in whose reign trade, and with it the third estate particularly, flourished in Lisbon, founded in the year 1290 the national university. This institution was first established in the capital, but it was soon transferred to Coimbra, where it is still maintained, in a great measure, according to its original forms. It is one of the oldest universities in Europe. No accounts have been preserved of any other Portuguese writers, who, following the example of their king, may have more or less distinguished themselves in the cultivation of the national poetry; though at this period celebrated names might the more naturally be expected, as two poets had flourished in the twelfth century. But the Portuguese bards, who, in the thirteenth century delighted their contemporaries by their poetic compositions, shared no better fate than the writers of the oldest Spanish canciones and romances.

POETS OF THE ROYAL FAMILY IN THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY.

The fourteenth century is not much richer than the thirteenth in names, which shed a lustre on the history of Portuguese poetry. Scarcely any writers of verse are recorded, except those who were members of the royal family, as if they were considered the representatives of all the contemporary poets of their nation. Alphonso IV. who reigned from 1325 to 1357, pursued with regard to poetry the same course as his father, King 11 Diniz. Affonso Sanchez, a natural son of Diniz, appears to have been gifted with a similar poetic talent.10 But the writings of Affonso Sanchez are not now to be found even in manuscript; and those of King Alphonso IV. have never been printed. Pedro I., who was the son of this last mentioned sovereign, and whose unfortunate connection with the beautiful Inez de Castro, has given him a romantic celebrity, seems to have found the Castilian language, which then vied with the Portuguese in cultivation, as well adapted as his native tongue to the poetic expression of his feelings. A Castilian poem by Pedro I., which begins in short verses, like a cancion, and proceeds in the measure of the Italian canzone, has been preserved, in addition to some compositions in Portuguese, which are also attributed to that monarch.11 If Dom12 Pedro’s poem be authentic, it proves that the Italian poetry had an influence on the Portuguese, even at a period when the Castilian had not yet fully developed itself in the old national forms. But this early influence of Italian poetry is also proved 12 by some Portuguese sonnets of the fourteenth or fifteenth century. An old sonnet, in praise of Vasco de Lobeira, the author of Amadis de Gaul,13 is by some writers ascribed to Alphonso IV., King of Portugal, and by others to the Infante Dom Pedro, the son of John I., who was born in the year 1392.14 It is scarcely worth while to enter into minute investigation merely for the purpose of settling this dispute. Admitting the problematic sonnet to be really the production of the Infante Dom Pedro, and therefore written, at the earliest in the commencement of the fifteenth century, it is certain that at that period no imitation of the Italian style was thought of in Castile. In Portugal, however, the metrical form of the sonnet was not only known, as 13 it also was in Castile; but the Italian style was likewise imitated in sonnets. The Infante Dom Pedro translated some of Petrarch’s sonnets into Portuguese.15 It may therefore without hesitation be inferred that Dom Pedro, who has never been mentioned as having struck out a new path on the Portuguese Parnassus, merely followed the example of some of his countrymen who lived before him. It is probable, that the mercantile intercourse between Lisbon and the ports of Italy, made the Portuguese early acquainted with Italian literature. But at the period now under consideration, the imitation of the Italian style appears to have been very limited in Portugal; for the old lyric poetry in the national style, began about this time more particularly to unfold its characteristic beauties. According to the testimony of 14 a Spanish writer,16 the Portuguese Cancioneiro Geral contains some poems of the fourteenth century, with the names of the authors affixed to them.

CHRONICLES IN PROSE.

In the fourteenth century too, Portuguese prose improved in precision, after a certain degree of literary consideration had been given to it, in consequence of chronicles being written in the national language. From this period the Portuguese vied with the Castilians in the patriotic task of recording the memorable events of their national history. The style of the Portuguese chronicles of the fourteenth century is, however, completely in the chronicle manner.17 Indeed the Portuguese 15 literature of the fourteenth century presents no prose work, which in point of style equals those written during that period, in the Castilian language, by the Infante Juan Manuel.

INTIMATE CONNECTION OF THE PORTUGUESE AND GALICIAN POETRY—THE GALICIAN POET MACIAS.

In Portugal as in Spain the fifteenth century was the period during which the old national songs and romances flourished in the greatest luxuriance. Since that time Portuguese and Spanish poetry have in general occupied the same degrees of cultivation, and have lent to each other a mutual support, though neither stood in need of the other’s aid. The correspondence between the Castilian and the Portuguese poetry, was at that time particularly promoted by the Galician poets, who though faithful subjects of the Castilian monarchy, still remained true to their mother tongue. Galicia seems to have been the land of romantic sentiment whence the poetry of love exhibited in the lyric compositions of Spain and Portugal was transplanted. No Portuguese or Spaniard is so celebrated in poetic literature, for the influence of love on his fate, as the Galician poet and knight Macias, who lived in the first half of the fifteenth century, and of whose remarkable history a brief sketch may properly be introduced here. Macias, who obtained the surnames of the enamoured and the great, distinguished himself as a brave warrior against the Moors of Granada, and as an accomplished writer in the literary retinue of the 16 Marquess of Villena.18 But though the marquess appreciated the merits and talents of Macias, he did not approve the romantic passion with which that enthusiast interwove his poetic fancies into the affairs of real life. The marquess strictly prohibited him from continuing a secret intrigue in which he had embarked with a lady, who, through the intervention of the marquess, had become the wife of another knight. But Macias conceived that he could not better prove his chivalrous constancy in love, than by boldly disobeying the commands of his patron. The marquess, however, availing himself of his power as grand master of the order of Calatrava, sent the refractory poet a prisoner to the kingdom of Jaen, on the frontiers of Granada. In his captivity Macias composed his songs of ill-fated love in the Galician language, which at the period of their production were highly esteemed, but which are now lost with the exception of a few trifles.19 He contrived to forward copies of these songs to his mistress. On the discovery of the correspondence, the poetic boldness of Macias roused the husband of the lady to the most furious pitch of jealousy. Armed cap-a-pee, he set out with the intention of slaying the unfortunate poet. He proceeded to the town of Arjonilla, where Macias was confined, and espying the prisoner at a window, he threw a javelin at him, and killed him on the spot. 17 Some idea of the sensation which this affair produced may be formed from the contents of the old Spanish Cancionero, in which it is frequently mentioned. But the story has more properly its place in the history of Portuguese poetry. The Spanish amatory poets, however extravagant might be their extacies in verse, confined themselves, in real life, within certain boundaries, which were consistent with the habits of society. The Portuguese, on the contrary, and as it would appear, the Galicians likewise, when they indulged in the poetic expression of violent and enthusiastic feelings of love, conceived that it was still necessary they should seek to impress the stamp of perfection on their songs, by exhibiting all kinds of sentimental excesses in their own personal conduct. The Spaniards seem always to have felt convinced that they could not attain the romantic tenderness of the Portuguese.20 A certain simplicity and intensity in the expression of tender sentiments, to which the language of Portugal is particularly favourable, has always been one of the characteristic features of Portuguese poetry, from the fifteenth century down to the present times.

THE CANCIONEIROS GERAES.

But in order to pursue the comparison between the romance and lyric poetry of Portugal and of Spain, an intimate acquaintance with the old Portuguese Cancioneiros geraes (general song books), is indispensable. 18 Collections of this kind seem to have appeared as early as the fifteenth century. Writers on literature, however, usually refer to the Cancioneiro, which was printed in the year 1516, by Garcia de Resende, a man of talent, who flourished at the courts of John II. and Emanuel the Great.21 A later collection of the same kind, which was edited by Father Pedro Ribeyro, professor of poetry, in the second half of the sixteenth century, has never yet been printed. The manuscript is dated 1577.22 According to the statements of writers who seem to have been acquainted with Garcia de Resende’s work, it would appear that this old Portuguese Cancioneiro contains many more poetic names than the better known Spanish collection of the same kind, and that among these names are several writers who lived in the fourteenth century.23 Here the author of this history of Portuguese literature, who has vainly endeavoured to render himself acquainted with Garcia de Resende’s interesting collection, must deplore that he is now compelled to leave a chasm which cannot be easily filled up; for this certainly is the place in which it would be most proper to endeavour to discover, in those 19 features, which were doubtless common to all, or at least to most of the Portuguese lyric bards of the fifteenth century, the nature of the original difference of Portuguese and Spanish genius. It may, however, be presumed that the Portuguese poets, who were at this period so much more numerous than the Spanish, had advanced no farther than the latter in poetic refinement, for even Bernardim Ribeyro, called the Portuguese Ennius,24 who lived until the commencement of the sixteenth century, and who is more celebrated than any other poetic writer of the fifteenth century, does not surpass the authors of the old Spanish ballads, in any thing connected with the cultivation of genius and the improvement of poetic language. Thus in all literary probability the Portuguese Cancioneiro geral is merely a companion work to the Spanish collection. But the preponderating number of the poetic writers of Portugal, compared with those of Spain during the fifteenth century, is a circumstance particularly deserving of notice, since it proves that the soil of Portugal was then, as well as at an earlier period, even more fertile than Spain in poetic genius. Still, however, this indicates no peculiarly eminent talent. It is also but fair to observe, lest the superior number of the Portuguese poets, in proportion to the limited extent of their native land, should be too highly estimated, that in the fifteenth century, the Castilian monarchy was not what it now is; for it was bounded on the south by 20 the Moorish kingdom of Granada, and on the east by the Arragonian dominions, where the Limosin language exclusively prevailed.

DEFICIENCY WITH REGARD TO HISTORICAL ROMANCES—LITTLE INFLUENCE OF THE CULTIVATION OF LATIN VERSE ON PORTUGUESE LYRIC POETRY.

Narrative and particularly historical romances seem never to have been so highly esteemed by the Portuguese as by the Spaniards. It is probable that in this class of composition the Portuguese merely imitated the Spaniards, whom they instructed, on the other hand, in bucolic poetry.25

The enthusiasm with which the Portuguese devoted themselves to the cultivation of lyric poetry in their native tongue, was not abated by the passion for latin poetry, which towards the close of the fifteenth century prevailed in Portugal as well as in Italy. This literary coincidence was probably occasioned by the commercial intercourse which then subsisted between Portugal and Italy. The fame of Angelo Poliziano attracted one of his most ardent admirers, the ingenious Henrique Cayado, better known by the name of Ermigius, from Portugal to Italy, where he entered the ranks of the revivers of latin poetry. Cayado was imitated by a considerable number of Portuguese writers who became celebrated for 21 the composition of latin verse.26 But it does not appear that the national poetry, in the vernacular language, was in any way neglected or despised by the Portuguese nobility; and the favour of the great exercised a more powerful influence over the poetic spirit of the nation, than the example of the learned. There is also very little ground for supposing that the Portuguese writers endeavoured to form the romantic poetry of their country on the model of the antique. A correct notion of the essential distinction between romantic and classic composition secured at this period the Portuguese as well as the Italians against the introduction of incongruous and spurious forms in their poetry; and taste was not yet sufficiently cultivated to admit of a judicious union of the classic and the romantic styles.

EARLY CULTIVATION OF HISTORICAL PROSE.

The general improvement of the language, and the renewed intimacy with ancient literature, had even as early as the first half of the fifteenth century an advantageous influence on the Portuguese chronicle writers. At this period a very copious chronicle of the reign of King John I. of Portugal, was written in the Portuguese language, by a knight and statesman, named Fernando Lopes. This writer distinguished himself as early as the reign of King Duarte, or Edward, whose successor, Alphonso V. in the year 1449, conferred on him the 22 dignity of Cronista, or state-historiographer.27 The narrative style of this diligent compiler is, indeed, quite as dull and monotonous as that of the older Portuguese chroniclers; but he obviously made efforts to express himself with a certain degree of dignity. He neglects no opportunity of making his historical characters deliver speeches, after the manner of the ancient writers; and a certain degree of energetic simplicity is to be found in some of those harangues.28 23

INCREASE OF PORTUGUESE POWER, FOLLOWED BY THE RAPID DEVELOPEMENT OF THE NATIONAL POETRY AT THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

Meanwhile the Portuguese monarchy approached the summit of its power and glory. While Spain, under the dominion of Ferdinand and Isabella, began to form itself internally into a single state, the government and people of Portugal directed their attention to discoveries and conquests in Africa and India. A peculiar union of the heroism of chivalry, and the industry of social life which prevailed in Portugal, under the auspices of her enterprising sovereigns, impressed on the nation a consciousness of power, in which the Portuguese were in no respect inferior to the Castilians. The flag of Portugal waved along the western coast of Africa, where Portuguese factories began to be converted into colonies, extending towards the Cape which Vasco de Gama doubled in the year 1498. In 24 less than fifteen years after this memorable event, Portuguese valour, guided by the renowned leaders Francisco de Almeida and Alfonso de Albuquerque, succeeded in founding a kingdom in India, of which Goa was the capital. At this period, during the glorious reign of Emanuel, who in the series of Portuguese sovereigns is distinguished by the surname of the Great, no Spanish poet had attained so much celebrity as was enjoyed by the Portuguese Bernardim, or (according to the more ancient orthography of that name) Bernaldim Ribeyro. A comprehensive idea of the nature of that romantic spirit, which every Portuguese poet conceived himself bound to exhibit in the fulfilment of his poetic destination, may be gathered from an account of the life and writings of this extraordinary man.

BERNARDIM RIBEYRO.

This poet received such a literary education as was in those times required for the study of the law, and a subsequent residence at court. King Emanuel, conferred on him the appointment of moço fidalgo (gentleman of the chamber). Ribeyro found at the court of that sovereign an object capable of fixing his poetic fancy, but not his future happiness; for from that time forward the heart of this sentimental enthusiast appears to have been incessantly agitated by sad emotions. Portuguese writers insinuate that the Infanta Dona Beatrice, the king’s daughter, was the lady of whom the unfortunate Ribeyro was enamoured. It is evident from his writings, that he has studiously 25 thrown a veil over the secret of his heart. We are not informed how he reconciled this passion with his domestic relations, or whether at the period of his marriage he had emancipated himself from those romantic illusions which at other times exercised so powerful a dominion over him. It is related that he frequently retired to the woods where he passed the night alone, singing to the murmuring brooks his songs of passion and despair. But it is also said that he tenderly loved his wife, and after her death showed no inclination to enter, a second time, into the married state. There is no possibility of reconciling these psychological inconsistencies, since it is not known at what period of his life Ribeyro retired from court. Neither is it recorded at what period or at what age he died. But that he cherished romantic fancies in real life, as well as in his poetry, is a fact which is sufficiently confirmed by the accounts which have been preserved of his conduct and by the general character of his writings.29

Among the poetic works of Ribeyro, so far as they are known, his eclogues are particularly distinguished. If not the very oldest, they are certainly among the most ancient compositions of the kind in Portuguese and Spanish literature; and when compared with those of Juan del Enzina, who flourished about the same time in Spain, they may, in every respect, claim the priority. Juan del Enzina ingeniously sported with simple ideas; but Ribeyro sang from his inmost soul. However, even Ribeyro is poor in ideas. His language 26 and composition are very remote from classical correctness, and his prolixity is tedious. But amidst the monotony of Ribeyro’s homely verses, there appears a spirit of truth and poetic feeling, which no art or study could have produced. The eclogues, which are unquestionably the production of Ribeyro’s pen, are four in number; but a fifth in the same style is attributed to him. They are all composed in Redondilhas, arranged in stanzas of nine or ten lines each, called decimas. Like most compositions in the class to which they belong, these eclogues assume the form of tales; but the lyric garb in which the simple materials are clothed, is the most interesting circumstance of the whole. Ribeyro has described in his eclogues only the scenery of his native country. The Tagus, the Mondego, the sea on the coast of Portugal, and even sometimes the city of Coimbra, and other towns, are exhibited in a poetic point of view. The names usually given to the shepherds are, Fauno, Persio, Franco, Jano, Sylvestre; but among the shepherdesses we find, a Catharina and a Joana introduced. Certain peculiarities and mysterious allusions sufficiently betray the object of the poet, which was to represent the romantic situations and events of the fashionable circles in which he moved at the court of Lisbon, under the poetic disguise of situations and events of pastoral life. In conformity with the notions of the age, this kind of disguise was, from its affinity to allegory, highly valued; and it afforded the poet an opportunity of unfolding the sentiments of his heart, to the mistress whom he dared not name, without the fear of compromising either her or himself. Ribeyro’s fancy 27 revelled in this union of truth and fact with truth of poetic feeling. The characters in all his eclogues are nearly the same under different names, and among them an unhappy lover is always the most conspicuous. The fervent expression of tenderness and despair on the part of the lover, forms the soul of these little pastoral pictures.

Ribeyro’s poetic style is in its principal features the old romance style, only here and there somewhat more luxuriant, and occasionally interspersed with antiquated conceits. The unaffected truth of some of the descriptions is heightened by a peculiar kind of rural grace,30 28 and even the uniform repetitions and plays of words in the lyric passages are, in general, not destitute of poetic interest.31 The enthusiast must be forgiven for 29 the application, certainly not very ingenious, of his own name, which he has sometimes allegorically disguised by the word Ribeyra, (a river,) and sometimes introduced as the real name of a shepherd; but the shepherd is in the same way reminded of a beautiful river, which is intended as the allegorical representative of a lady, who under the name of Ribeyra, is the object of Ribeyro’s adoration.32 Some of these antiquated conceits are, however, dignified by warmth of expression.33 But upon the whole, Ribeyro’s eclogues are nothing more than the heartfelt effusions of a poet, who with 30 all his tenderness and depth of sentiment had not sufficient energy to strike out a new course for himself.34

The Cantigas of Bernardim Ribeyro unquestionably bear the characteristic stamp of the fifteenth century. They may be ranked on an equality with the best pieces of the same kind in the old Spanish Cancionero. Like them they paraphrase an idea which is set down at the head of the poem, and thus appear in the form of glosses, without being confined within a certain number of lines. The idea is as in Spanish, called the mote (motto). That which the Spaniards term a glosa, is by the Portuguese denominated a volta (turn); and the title Cantiga, which the Portuguese give to a composition of this kind, seems, like the Spanish term Villancico, to have been borrowed from the ecclesiastical hymns.35 One of Ribeyro’s Cantigas is remarkable for the boldness with which the poet, in his character of a married man, very unequivocally marks the distinction between his wife and the lady who is the object of his regard, and assures this lady that only his hand and not his heart is wedded.36 31 If this Cantiga be really founded on truth, a question with which the critic has, generally speaking, little concern, it not only weakens the authenticity of the 32 accounts respecting Ribeyro’s tender attachment to his wife, but also serves to explain the studied obscurity of the allusions which prevail throughout the whole of his writings; and in this last respect the question is of some interest to the critic. A sextina imitated from the Italian forms, but in trochaic verses, which are besides pure redondilhas, is likewise among the number of Ribeyro’s poems. In addition to these Cantigas, which are, however, but little known,37 there has been preserved a narrative romance of the idyllic kind, which by some favourable accident has even found a place in one of the old Spanish Cancioneros, where it is also attributed to Ribeyro.38 This romance, which is allegorical, contains plays on the name of Ribeyro, and veils the glowing anguish of the poet under a singular obscurity of ideas and images. The romantic mysticism and deep fervour of expression, which distinguish it, sufficiently attest its authenticity.39 33

But a work, by this author, which is of greater extent, and which exhibits the first remarkable attempt towards the improvement of romantic prose in the Portuguese language, remains to be noticed. This work is a kind of romance which Ribeyro appears to have written in his mature years, and which he did not complete. The name given to it Menina e Moça, (meaning “a young and innocent maiden,”) is a repetition of the three first words with which the story begins, and therefore is not susceptible of precise translation in the form of a title.40 In point of intricacy this fragment has no parallel in the whole range of romantic literature. The mysterious Ribeyro has here employed all the powers of his inventive fancy, in giving utterance to his enthusiastic feelings, and in 34 minutely expressing the sentiments of his heart; while at the same time he has confounded and changed characters and events so as to secure every circumstance and allusion against malicious interpretation. Thus a reader in the nineteenth century is at a loss to unravel the entangled composition, and it being merely a fragment, is a circumstance which increases the difficulty. No alchymist ever bestowed more pains on the enigmatical dressing of his doctrine of the philosopher’s stone, than Ribeyro has taken to envelope his romance in a veil of obscurity. It is asserted, nevertheless, that with all this caution he was afraid to lay it openly before the public; and in fact the book did not become known until after his death. It is impossible to form any probable conjecture as to the ultimate object of the author. The commencement of the tale, or if it must be so called, the preface, is put into the mouth of a sentimental female character who has withdrawn from the gay world to a wild solitary spot on the Portuguese coast. This lady, whose name is not mentioned, relates that while she was yet Menina e Moça, she was carried from her father’s house to foreign lands. From that period, doomed to lead a life of wretchedness, alone, among the rugged cliffs, she bewails her never-ending sorrows, beholding only on the one hand the unchangeable mountain tops, and on the other the ever restless waves of the sea.41 In this manner the anonymous female continues 35 her narrative, and describes her inconsolable condition. She states, that by way of amusement, though of a melancholy kind, she has devoted herself to the task of writing “this little book,” (este livrinho), which is intended to unfold her sufferings and her errors. From this introduction the reader impatiently expects the history of the nameless lady, who has now excited his interest. But here the confusion and intricacy commences. The supposed authoress states, that in her solitude she had discovered another lady no less unfortunate than herself. She introduces this lady, who in her turn begins to relate her history. This new character throws the first completely into the back ground. She expatiates on the virtues befitting knights and ladies, and sheds tears of regret for the departed days of chivalry. She states that the wild valleys to which she has retired, were once the scenes of memorable and brilliant events: and here the reader is again disappointed, for instead of relating her own adventures, as is naturally expected, she commences an intricate and romantic story of love and heroism, the period of which is laid in the ages of chivalry. This story is in fact the romance which Ribeyro wished to write. What the author intended 36 by the two-fold frame-work of his romance, and the superfluous history related by the one lady to the other, is an enigma that cannot be solved without a knowledge of the private life of the poet, circumstances of which are supposed to be ingeniously concealed under these forms of art. Ribeyro very dextrously makes his fair narrator observe that, as a woman, she is not qualified to speak minutely, and at length concerning the achievements of knighthood; but that with respect to the affairs of the heart she is enabled to say all that is necessary. Thus he has spared himself the trouble of exercising his descriptive talent on a branch of the history, the details of which he was not inclined to follow.

It would be impossible to furnish an abstract of the tale of love and heroism which forms the subject of this romance. Even on a perusal of the whole, so great is the obscurity, that nothing can be comprehended of the circumstances, without the utmost effort of attention. That Ribeyro has clothed in the disguise of this story, the most interesting events of his own life, is a fact which admits of no doubt; for the contrivance which he adopted with the view of concealing his personal implication, by the intricate arrangement of his romance, is disclosed with the greatest simplicity. The really artless Ribeyro, having so far disguised himself, conceived that by transposing the letters of real names, he did all that was necessary to avoid compromising the individuals of his acquaintance, whom he introduced in his romance, arrayed in the garb of ancient chivalry. Thus Alvaro is converted into Avalor, Joana into 37 Aonia, and Bernardim, the christian name of Ribeyro himself, is changed into Bimnarder and Narbindel. The unconscious simplicity of these transpositions corresponds with the whole tone and style of the romance. The monotony of incessant love complaints renders the prolixity of the narrative still more tedious; but even amidst that monotony and prolixity, it is easy to recognise a spirit truly poetic, more remarkable, however, for susceptibility than for energy. Some of the sentimental passages are distinguished by the charm of a most tender and pathetic sweetness. This characteristic appears even in the introduction, where a story is told of the death of a nightingale, which being perched on the branch of a tree overhanging a brook, dies while singing, and dropping into the brook is carried away by the current, along with the fallen leaves.42 The reader is surprised by these delicate plays of feeling, no less 38 than by many occasional reflexions, which though trivial in the present day, were at the commencement of the sixteenth century by no means common. Thus allusion is made to the absurd notion of women in imagining they can secure the heart of a lover by the same persevering service which pleases themselves in the other sex.43 By traits of this kind, and by the simple truth of description, this old Portuguese romance is sufficiently distinguished from the common class of romances of chivalry, which during the sixteenth century, became in a great measure the fashionable reading of the Spaniards and Portuguese. Spanish literature at that period could not boast of any work written in so cultivated a style, and yet that style soon afterwards became somewhat antiquated. From some passages in which allusion is made to Galician phrases, it is evident that the Portuguese in the age of Ribeyro, carefully distinguished their native tongue as a cultivated language, from the Galician, which had now become a common popular idiom. 39

In the polite literature of Portugal, Bernardim Ribeyro stands on the boundary of the old national and the modern taste, which at the commencement of the sixteenth century, began to be developed in Portugal as well as in Spain, in consequence of the imitation of the Italian style. In spite of all their defects and deformities, Ribeyro’s verses as well as his prose romance, deserve to be honourably remembered, since they present remarkable monuments of the romantic character of the Portuguese at the period when the national greatness of that poetically organized people began suddenly to decline. A remnant of that character must, however, still be preserved, even by the Portuguese of the present day, otherwise a new edition of Ribeyro’s romance would not at the end of the eighteenth century, have been presented to the Portuguese public, as a proof of the excellence of a language in which such a work was written.44

CHRISTOVAÕ FALCAÕ.

Among the contemporaries of Ribeyro the most distinguished was Christovaõ Falcaõ, or Christovam Falcam. He was a knight of the order of Christ, an admiral, governor of Madeira, and a celebrated poet in the age in which he lived. A long eclogue by this writer, which forms an appendix to the works of 40 Ribeyro,45 so completely partakes of the character of the poems which it accompanies, that were it not for the separate title it might be mistaken for the production of Ribeyro himself. It therefore proves that Ribeyro’s poetic fancies, his romantic mysticism, not excepted, were by no means individual. The fashionable form of the poetry of melancholy love in Portugal, was to complain and yet ostensibly affect to conceal itself. Thus, Christovaõ Falcaõ, by a slight change of his own christian name, gives the name of Crisfal to the shepherd who poetically represents himself. The subject of the poem is the love of Crisfal and Maria, the shepherdess who is the heroine of the eclogue. This shepherdess is evidently a real personage, and it is mentioned by writers on literature that the poet’s mistress had the same Christian name; she was a Maria Brandam. The rural scenery described in this eclogue, like that in the poems of Ribeyro, is all national: the Tagus, the Mondego, and the rocks of Cintra, are introduced here as in Ribeyro’s romance. The story is simple. Two lovers are separated by the severity of their parents. The shepherd relates his sorrows, and calls to mind his past days of happiness. This reminiscence gives birth to a kind of tale which is interwoven with the complaints of the shepherd. The verses are redondilhas, and the eclogue consists of upwards of ninety of the ten line stanzas called decimas, exclusive of some cantigas in shorter stanzas, which are interspersed 41 through the work. The language and style, particularly in the lyric complaints, are even more antiquated than Ribeyro’s. The most truly beautiful portion of the poem is the description of a brief interview and renewed farewell between Crisfal and Maria,46 particularly towards the close.47 The poet throws a 42 veil of mystery over the subsequent fate of Crisfal, and does not choose to hint whether the hapless shepherd survives. A nymph who has heard his complaints inscribes them on a poplar, in order, as it is said, that they may grow with the tree to a height beyond the reach of vulgar ideas.48 So delicate a winding up of 43 the story would not have entered into the imagination of every amatory bard.

Portugal may therefore be regarded as the true native land of romantic pastoral poetry, which, however, about the same period flourished in Italy, where it assumed more cultivated forms, particularly after Sanazzaro had written; but in Portugal alone was it properly national. Two Portuguese writers, Saa de Miranda and Montemayor transferred this style of poetry to Spanish literature.49

Among the works of Falcam, there is a kind of poetic epistle, if it may be so called; but he wrote no didactic epistles. This poetic epistle is in fact merely a lyric romance, which the author has addressed to his mistress in the form of a letter, when, as the superscription expressly mentions, he had secretly married her contrary to the will of her parents; an act for which he incurred the penalty of five years imprisonment. From his prison he addressed verses to his lady.50 Thus it also appears that this Portuguese poet, who afterwards discharged, probably with honour to himself, the duties of admiral and governor, wished to make the same romantic principles the basis of his conduct and his writings. 44

OTHER ANCIENT LYRIC POEMS.

It is probable that the lyric pieces which are annexed to the old edition of the works of Ribeyro, and which immediately follow the poems of Falcam, were written by the latter. They belong entirely to the class of Villancicos in the Spanish Cancioneros. They are, for the most part, cantigas or glossed mottos; but some are entitled Esparças, or overflowings of the heart.51 In all these songs the plays of antiquated chivalrous wit are very affectedly blended with genuine effusions of the heart. They are, however, like the old Spanish canciones, throughout enlivened by a glimmering of poetic truth; and even the old fashioned conceits successfully contribute to express intensity of feeling. This is particularly the character of the mottos, which appear to be more remarkable for far-fetched quaintness, than the old Spanish compositions of a similar kind. The following may serve as examples:—“I saw the end at the beginning; I see the beginning at the end; so that I know not whether I am beginning or ending.”52 “Since in beholding you, lady, I have lost the knowledge of myself, do not you do against me, that which for your sake I have done against myself.”53 45 “At variance with myself, great is my danger, for I can neither live with myself nor fly from myself.”54 Some mottos are, however, expressed in a more simple and popular form; but it is remarkable that those which are most inartificial, or destitute of point, are precisely those of which the glosses are more particularly distinguished by nature and grace.55 The Portuguese of this age seem to have been much less disposed than the Spaniards to pourtray in their lyric 46 poetry the continual conflict between passion and reason. Like the Italians the Portuguese gave free utterance to the emotions of the heart, and were only induced to seek after quaint ideas, by an eager desire that the vehemence and depth of their passionate feelings should be energetically and ingeniously expressed.

It would appear that at the commencement of the sixteenth century the romantic pastoral and lyric styles were the only species of poetic composition to the cultivation of which the Portuguese directed their attention. No evidence appears to exist of any remarkable essay in dramatic poetry, before the time of Gil Vicente, who will hereafter be noticed. It is probable that unimportant treatises on poetry and versification, in the style of that which Juan del Enzina wrote in Spanish, existed at the same period in the Portuguese language; and on a comprehensive view of the polite literature of Portugal, previous to the introduction of the Italian style, it will be found that like the true sister of Spanish literature, it was, in an equal degree, susceptible of the reform which presented itself to both. 47


BOOK II.
FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE SIXTEENTH UNTIL TOWARDS THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.


CHAP. I.
GENERAL VIEW OF THE POETIC AND RHETORICAL CULTIVATION OF THE PORTUGUESE DURING THE ABOVE PERIOD.

Relation of Portuguese to Spanish Poetry in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries.

The original relationship between Portuguese and Spanish poetry paved the way for the adoption of the Italian style by the former; for when that style became, during the sixteenth century, naturalized in Spain, a similar change soon followed in the national taste and poetic forms of Portugal. The political conflicts of the two nations did not either then, or at any former period, disturb the harmony of their common poetic feeling. Though the distinctive features in the national character as well as in the language of the Portuguese and Spaniards, might be traced with more precision than heretofore, yet the general customs of both nations remained the same, and the demands of their respective tastes which had been awakened in nearly the same manner, required to be satisfied by similar means. Every species of poetry was not, however, received with equal favour in Spain and Portugal; nor did 48 every style of poetic composition find in each country a poet whose genius was capable of elevating it to particular distinction. In those nations, as elsewhere, fate has, by incomprehensible laws, sometimes summoned the right spirit at the right hour, and has sometimes denied the art to the artist when all external circumstances appeared most favourable, and when the perseverance of emulative competitors was most conspicuous. Thus Portugal cannot boast of a Cervantes, and Spain has given birth to no Camoens.

The Portuguese had raised their country to the same height of political glory as Spain, when their poets began to vie with the Spanish in the ingenious imitation of the Italian forms. After Columbus had discovered America for Spain, as Vasco de Gama had the new way to the East Indies for his own countrymen, the Portuguese lost no time, at least on the eastern coast of the new world, in seizing a share of the rich booty claimed by the Spaniards. The Florentine Amerigo Vespucci in the service of King Emanuel of Portugal, explored a part of the new continent, the whole of which has since borne his name. The papal line of demarcation which divided the newly discovered heathen regions between Spain and Portugal, was equally flattering, though circumstances prevented it from being equally advantageous to both powers. The Portuguese was like the Spaniard, proud of his achievements; and before the mines of Peru had given the highest impulse to Spanish self-esteem, Portugal was already enriched by her Indian treasures. If during the thirty years reign of John III. (from 1521 to 1557) 49 the Portuguese government shewed itself wanting in wisdom, it was not deficient in energy. Even the exertions made to maintain sword in hand, the Portuguese dominion in India, against the constant hostility of the natives, augmented the military strength of the nation, though they proved injurious to its commercial interests. Under these circumstances the bold spirit of commerce was in no danger of degenerating into a petty trading spirit; and the romantic character which Portuguese poetry had from its origin always displayed, could without difficulty develope itself under new features, particularly when the poet himself, like Camoens, was at once a hero and an adventurer.

After the period of the highest greatness of the little kingdom of Portugal had long passed away, its effects still operated powerfully on the spirit and the literature of the nation. To be obliged to become Spanish subjects, on the extinction of their old royal family, deeply mortified the Portuguese; but the shadow of ancient national independence which the cabinet of Madrid found it necessary to concede to Portugal, was sufficient during the whole period in which that country continued under Spanish domination, to maintain in full force the old national hatred between the two countries. This was carried to the highest pitch of exasperation in the hearts of the Portuguese, when they found that in spite of the seeming independence of the kingdom of Portugal, the foreign powers with whom Spain waged incessant war, paid no attention to the distinction between Spanish and Portuguese possessions; and that the Dutch in particular availed themselves of 50 the favourable opportunity to treat the Portuguese as Spaniards, and to deprive them of those valuable possessions in India, for which they were indebted to the enterprising spirit and courage of their ancestors. It required no great political penetration to discover that the most productive source of Portuguese national prosperity had thus become obstructed, and that in all probability such a misfortune would not have occurred had Portugal preserved her independence. Even the nobility and the ecclesiastics, who, contrary to the express wish of the people, had favoured the claims by which Philip II. of Spain was declared Philip I. of Portugal, could not possibly be warm partisans of a government which oppressed the whole country by an absurd and despotic system of administration. During the sixty years therefore in which Portugal felt the weight of Spanish supremacy, every patriotic Portuguese regarded the three Philips, who ruled over his native country, merely as kings of Portugal, unfortunately residing in Madrid. Lisbon continued to be the real Portuguese capital. The ministerial departments of state were still concentrated there; and in conformity with the treaty by which the crown was ceded to Philip, all the public offices in Portugal were filled by native Portuguese. In Lisbon, too, the Portuguese language maintained its ancient consideration in the courts of law, in the polite world, and in literature, though it was not very readily adopted by Spaniards.

The national peculiarities which, even under the Spanish dominion, continued to distinguish the Portuguese 51 from the Spaniards, were attended by consequences remarkably favourable to Portuguese literature, when at last, in the year 1640, the long prepared blow was struck, which rescued Portugal from the yoke of the Spanish sovereigns, and placed John of Braganza on the throne amidst the acclamations of the people. At this period, Spanish poetry had already declined, while on the contrary Portuguese poetry once more revived. The general re-action against every thing Spanish had an inspiring influence on the Portuguese poets, even though they took no part in political affairs. If no second Camoens arose in that age, it nevertheless gave birth to several poets, whose lyric compositions honourably maintained the reputation of their country; and they were eminently successful in gathering the last blossoms of the poetry of romantic love, which had taken the deepest root in Portugal.

CAUSES OF THE CONTINUED CULTIVATION OF THE SPANISH LANGUAGE IN PORTUGAL.

To causes of a totally different nature and in which political interests were but remotely concerned, must be attributed the zeal with which the Portuguese, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, cultivated the language and literature of Spain, along with their mother tongue and the learning of their own country; while the Spaniards of the same period regarded the Portuguese poetry as a mere scion of the Spanish, and besides, generally speaking, looked down with contempt on the language and literature of Portugal. That this unequal conduct of the two nations was not the effect of political 52 causes, is evident from the favour which the Portuguese poets extended to the Castilian language, in the first half of the sixteenth century, when certainly no expectation was entertained of the union of the two kingdoms. Even at that period it was a custom, and indeed a high style of fashion in literature for Portuguese poets to write verses in Castilian as well as in their mother tongue. Saa de Miranda, the poet with whom the most brilliant period of Portuguese literature commences, also holds a place among Spanish poets. Compositions in the Castilian language are indeed interspersed through the works of all the Portuguese poets of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; but nothing could be more extraordinary than to find either verse or prose written in the Portuguese language by a Spaniard.

This phenomenon, which seems to be at variance with Portuguese patriotism, may, however, be explained by the peculiar relations which the Castilian and Portuguese languages bear to each other. The Castilian language has an imposing character which is wanting in the Portuguese; and though the stateliness of the Spanish diction might seem formal and affected to the Portuguese in general, it was likely to make a forcible impression on their poets. The pleasing fluency of the Portuguese tongue, could not, however, operate so favourably on the poets of Spain, for to a Spanish ear the most elegant Portuguese has merely the effect of broken Castilian.56 The Portuguese were indemnified 53 for the Castilian guttural, which so much displeased them, by the sonorous accentuation of the Castilian words; but the Spaniards found much of this accentuation lost in Portuguese by abbreviations of the very words in which it occurs in Spanish. The Castilian too was regarded as the more dignified tongue, because its unabbreviated words, for which it is indebted to the latin, excited more precise recollections of the language of ancient Rome.57 It is probable also, that 54 Castilian pride after the union of the Castilian and Arragonian provinces contributed its share in rendering the Spaniards insensible to the peculiar beauties of the Portuguese language. On the contrary, the flexibility of the Portuguese character more readily accommodated itself to foreign forms. Finally, the dependence of the whole government of Portugal on the court of Madrid, during the space of half a century, rendered the knowledge of the Castilian language indispensable to those Portuguese who were destined to fill the first ministerial departments in their native country; but the Spaniards had no such inducement to learn Portuguese, as they were not permitted to hold any public office in Portugal. Thus did the Spanish language during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, acquire that degree of consideration in Portuguese literature which it afterwards maintained. It should besides be recollected, that during the period in which Portugal continued under the dominion of Spain, a great portion of the bookselling trade had been transferred to Lisbon, the first commercial city in the two united kingdoms; and trifling as this circumstance may at first sight appear, it cannot be doubted that it co-operated to the diffusion of the Spanish language in Portuguese literature.

RELIGIOUS AND POLITICAL CHARACTER OF THE PORTUGUESE DURING THIS PERIOD.

The polite literature of Portugal experienced no disadvantage from certain traits of difference in the Spanish and Portuguese character and manners. The Portuguese who were less addicted to pomp than the 55 Spaniards, were also less inclined to religious fanaticism. The monarchs of Portugal, it is true, exerted their utmost endeavours to inflame the religious prejudices of their subjects, and to teach them to revel in the same delirium of barbarous orthodoxy as the Spaniards. John III. in whose reign Portugal attained the highest pinnacle of her power, did not neglect formally to introduce the Spanish inquisition into his dominions; and the jesuits, who had now begun to excite the alarm of every catholic monarchy, Spain excepted, were in the year 1540, received into Portugal by the same sovereign who proposed to avail himself of the aid of those enterprising defenders and propagators of the old catholic faith, for the conversion of the infidels in both Indies. He consigned to the jesuits the education of his grandson Sebastian, who was his successor on the throne; and the example of the monarch was doubtless imitated by many families of rank. Thus, literary education seems to have been still more jesuitical in Portugal than in Spain; and the dreadful pile, on which heretics were immolated, was lighted up often enough to blunt the moral feelings of the people. But these horrid festivals of superstition accorded less with the Portuguese than the Spanish character. Of the two nations the Portuguese were in disposition the more tolerant, and they continue so to be.58 On this account the spiritual 56 comedies, with which the Spanish public was never satiated, obtained only a transitory success in Portugal. If, then, the fetters imposed on conscience proved only slight restraints to poetic genius in Spain,59 still less could any considerable injury arise from such influence on polite literature in Portugal.

At this period poetry and eloquence were not in Portugal much more than in Spain indebted to support from the throne. The poetic art was nevertheless held in esteem and honour at the court of John III. The time had, indeed, gone by in which the kings of Portugal competed for the laurels of Apollo, and shone conspicuous among the bards of their native land. From the reign of Emanuel the Great, to the period when the dynasty of that monarch became extinct, the kings of Portugal were more disposed to encourage adventurous enterprises in the two Indies than to devote themselves to the cultivation of poetry. John III. however, seems to have possessed a strong taste for dramatic amusements; at least it is related that he himself used to perform parts in the plays of Gil Vicente, which were represented at his court. Sebastian, the ardent disciple of the jesuits, was occupied in the fulfilment of his presumed destiny to extend the glory of his faith and his name by romantic achievements, until in the fatal conflict, by which he hoped to render himself master of Fez and Morocco, he was lost 57 among the lifeless wreck of his defeated army: and Camoens, the no less ardent disciple of the muses, whose enthusiasm in his sovereign’s cause was both patriotic and poetic, was left by Sebastian to languish in bitter poverty. Old Cardinal Henry, though a lover of literature, found, on ascending the throne, sufficient occupation in providing for the political welfare of the country. That the Spanish kings who next governed Portugal bestowed little or no attention on Portuguese poetry and eloquence, is a fact to which it is scarcely necessary to advert. On the accession of John of Braganza, it is probable that the government would have done more for the national drama, which had hitherto been left to work its own way, had not the Portuguese, after the death of the inventive Gil Vicente, fallen further behind the Spaniards in dramatic composition than in any other class of poetry. The royal patronage now arrived too late. Portugal possessed no national drama like that of Spain; and for the non-existence of that branch of literature the people and not the government must be held responsible. The causes which prevented dramatic poetry in Portugal from attaining that degree of excellence to which it arrived in Spain, will be noticed in their proper place, in so far as they can be ascertained or conjectured. The distinguished favour, however, which the Italian opera at length obtained from the court of Lisbon was not only unprofitable to Portuguese national poetry, but contributed to banish it still further from the stage. There was of course now less reason than ever to hope for the establishment of a genuine and well cultivated national drama in Portugal. 58

To the Portuguese nation must be attributed the excellencies and the defects which Portuguese poetry and eloquence presented throughout the whole of this period. In Portugal, no poet, who wished to distinguish himself within the sphere of his art, presumed to dictate legislatorily to the national taste. No one, by striking out a new path, sought to explore the unbeaten regions of his native Parnassus. No sects, like those which occasionally arose in Spain, disturbed the poetic harmony of the Portuguese poets, whose various voices were always attuned in national concord. The influence which the Italian poetry gained over the Portuguese was recognised with equal willingness by the poets and the public. It cannot, however, be denied that this national harmony of the Portuguese poets during the most brilliant period of the polite literature of their nation, gave rise to a certain spirit of self-satisfaction, which though very favourable to subordinate talent, was by no means calculated to awaken genius. The higher beauties of the poetic art were not scrupulously demanded: to secure success it was sufficient that an author should elevate himself in a slight degree above the common makers of verse. Romantic ideas tolerably versified in pleasing language were all that a Portuguese poet found necessary in order to secure the esteem and the eulogy of that public on whose decision his reputation depended. Eminent poetic merit could be appreciated by very few, and it received no particular encouragement or uncommon reward. Thus it happened that the state of poetic public spirit among the Portuguese created no demand beyond an extensive 59 improvement of the national poetry. The great mass of the people adhered to the old romance style; while the nobility, men of education, and finally, all who wished to mingle in fashionable society, preferred the Italian forms, on which, however, the Portuguese national impress was always discernible. But the majority of the poets whose names acquired celebrity, belonged to noble families;—for in Portugal, as in Italy and Spain, every one who wished to gain distinction at court, or in the army, or as a well educated man of the world, composed verses; and even ecclesiastics who were anxious to gain the good graces of the fair sex, found it necessary to lay claim to poetic cultivation. Among the princes of the royal house, the Infante Dom Manoel, who stands in a kind of poetic relationship with Saa de Miranda, seems to be the last who was distinguished for writing passable verse.


CHAP. II.
HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE POETRY AND ELOQUENCE FROM THE EPOCH OF THE INTRODUCTION OF THE ITALIAN STYLE, TILL TOWARDS THE END OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

Tranquil Adoption of the Italian Style.

The introduction of the Italian style into Portuguese poetry was unaccompanied by any remarkable struggle or sensation. No mention is made by writers on general literature, of the existence of a party strenuously opposed to that style in Portugal; and even 60 the works of the Portuguese poets present few or no traces of any literary conflict on the subject. That a change which excited so violent a storm in Spain passed tranquilly in Portugal, was certainly not owing to indifference on the part of the Portuguese in matters of taste. But the Portuguese most distinguished for cultivation, were not attached to the old romance poetry by so decided a predilection as the Castilians. Besides, as has already been stated, that class had become, at an early period, acquainted with Italian poetry. Some of the Italian syllabic metres might already be regarded as vernacular in Portugal, and the spirit of Italian poetry was certainly not unknown to the Portuguese, since they had, from an early period possessed translations of some of Petrarch’s sonnets. Thus the way was already traced out for the thorough reform of the old taste, and the natural flexibility of the Portuguese character was more easily reconciled than Castilian stubbornness to that reform. When, therefore, even Spanish poets had set the judicious example of improving their national poetry, an opposition which would have appeared the mere imitation of an unreasonable party spirit was not to be expected in Portugal. Finally, the poet with whose works the new epoch in Portuguese poetry commences, so successfully seized the delicate tone by which the union of the Italian and the old Portuguese styles was to be accomplished, that the national taste found in him precisely what it required, and the innovation was accommodated to the Portuguese character under the most pleasing forms. 61

SAA DE MIRANDA.

The romantic Theocritus, Saa de Miranda, one of the most distinguished poets of the sixteenth century, has already been noticed in the History of Spanish Poetry.60 He shines indeed more conspicuously among the Spanish than the Portuguese poets; but in his native country he stands at the head of a poetic school. The present is, therefore, the fit place to relate the necessary particulars of his biography.61

Saa de Miranda, the descendant of a noble family, was born at Coimbra, in the year 1495. His parents destined him for the study of the law, and wished, if possible, that he might become professor of jurisprudence in his native city. To occupy the chair of a teacher of law was at that period considered an object worthy of the ambition of persons of rank; and to take an interest in the prosperity of the university of Coimbra was found to be a strong recommendation to the favour of the sovereign. Saa de Miranda had but little taste for jurisprudence, yet, for the sake of pleasing his parents, he pursued his study of legal science until he obtained the degree of doctor. He was afterwards appointed to a professorship, and is said to have distinguished himself by his lectures. But on the death of his father, Saa de Miranda immediately bade farewell to jurisprudence, and resolved to live after his 62 own taste. We are not informed what age he had attained at this period. That his character was, however, truly poetic, is sufficiently obvious, not only from his writings, but from several anecdotes which are related of him. In mixed companies he often sat in a state of silent abstraction, without observing or being aware that he was himself observed. Tears would sometimes flow from his eyes, without any apparent cause, and he himself was so little conscious of their presence, or cared so little to conceal them, that if any one happened to address him, he would, while he suffered himself to be quietly drawn into conversation, frequently forget to dry his moistened cheeks. He cherished a particular desire to travel; and this inclination he gratified when filial duty no longer bound him to the professor’s chair. He declined the offers of King John III. who, in order to detain him would have provided for him in another way, and proceeded to Spain, where he probably acquired a more intimate knowledge of the Castilian language than he had before possessed. He next travelled to Italy, and visited the cities of Venice, Rome, Florence, Naples, and Milan, where he found sufficient opportunities for rendering himself intimately acquainted with the Italian poetry. On his return to his native country he was appointed to a place at court, and enjoyed the favour of the king. He was now accounted one of the most accomplished courtiers in Lisbon, notwithstanding the cast of melancholy which still distinguished him. His pastoral poetry, however, peaceful as its character was, involved him in a dispute with a Portuguese nobleman, who discovered in an eclogue some allusions which he applied to himself. 63 The quarrel having become warm, the poet found it necessary to quit the court. He retired to his estate of Tapada near Ponte de Lima, in the province of Entre Minho e Douro, where he devoted himself wholly to his literary studies, and to the cultivation of rural and domestic happiness. Next to poetry, he took most interest in practical philosophy. His acquaintance with ancient literature was sufficient to enable him to enrich his books with passages from Homer, in the form of marginal notes. He also understood music, and was a performer on the violin. Notwithstanding the gentleness of his temperament, he was fond of chivalrous exercises, and took particular delight in hunting the wolf. He lived happily with his wife, though she was not handsome nor even young at the period when he married her. During his life, his poetic fame was widely spread. Several poets, who reflect honour on their native country, particularly Antonio Ferreira and Andrade Caminha, formed themselves chiefly on the model of Saa de Miranda. His two comedies so highly pleased the Infante Cardinal Henry, that they were performed in the palace of that prince, before a company of prelates, and other persons of rank. After the poet’s decease these comedies were printed by order of the cardinal. Having reached the sixty-third year of his age, he died universally admired and beloved, at Tapada, in the year 1558.

No trace of resemblance to a style produced by imitation, distinguishes the works of Saa de Miranda from the more ancient Portuguese poetry. What he 64 learnt from the Italians was a genuine though not perfect refinement of the old Portuguese style, under more beautiful forms. He was indeed, and ever continued to be, too true a Portuguese to aim at the highest degree of Italian correctness, though it appears, from what he has himself stated, that he was most industrious in the revisal of his works.62 According to his own declaration, it also appears that he did not rely with much more confidence on systematic criticism, than on the fickle approbation of the public. That feeling under the dominion of which he always lived and moved, was, in the dernier resort, his critical rule and guide. The Italian models only directed him to the course which he himself would naturally have adopted. To use his own expression, he culled flowers with the muses, the loves, and the graces.63

Had Saa de Miranda been in a greater degree an imitator than a self-dependent poet, his sonnets would, doubtless, have been more numerous; for he was peculiarly fitted, from his knowledge of the delicacies of the Italian style, to shine in that form of composition. 65 But his Portuguese as well as his Spanish sonnets are few in number; and those of the tender cast, like the sonnets of Boscan, and most of the Spanish writers, entirely harmonize with the old national tone. Besides indulging himself in the use of masculine rhymes, he represented the complaints of love in the old strain of despair, and contributed his share in pourtraying the endless conflict between passion and reason.64 But he particularly excelled in painting the soft enthusiasm of love,65 and his sonnets acquire a peculiar colouring from the mixture of pastoral simplicity, which he could never entirely exclude from his style of poetic representation. The reiterated allusion to 66 the joys and sorrows of human existence, and the transitoriness of all things, is a grecian trait in the compositions of this poet.66

The romantic pastoral world was the native sphere of Saa de Miranda’s muse. The greater number and by far the most beautiful of his eight eclogues are, however, in the Spanish language, for he wrote only two in Portuguese. It can scarcely be doubted, therefore, that Saa de Miranda considered the Spanish language to be more expressive or more elegant than the Portuguese, or that for some other reason he preferred it to his mother tongue; and yet as far as a foreigner may presume to judge between the two languages, his choice ought to have been reversed, for the Portuguese 67 seems expressly formed for romantic pastoral poetry. Perhaps Saa de Miranda thought, without being himself clearly conscious of entertaining such an idea, that it was more poetic to give dignity to the soft pastoral style, by the help of the sonorous Castilian tongue, than to suffer it to be altogether naturally expressed through the medium of the Portuguese idiom. For the character of his pastoral style was to be romantic and wholly national, to resemble the idyllic style of Theocritus only in the simplicity of rural expression, but by no means to be popular, in a prosaic sense. Whether Saa de Miranda’s shepherds and shepherdesses converse in Spanish or in Portuguese, the rural scene is always laid in Portugal. On this account the first of the two Portuguese eclogues of this modern Theocritus, is partly unintelligible to the foreigner, who possesses only a literary knowledge of the peculiarities of the rural idiom of Portugal. The poet himself observes, at the conclusion of his dedicatory stanzas to the Infante Dom Manoel, that he discourses in a new language.67 The new language here alluded to is produced by a delicate blending of the turns most remarkable for graceful simplicity in the Portuguese vernacular dialect, with a set of dignified words and phrases approximating more nearly to the latin. But the effect of the union is very imperfectly appreciated by a foreigner; and the finest charm of the expression is lost in the labour of studying a poetic language of this kind. Besides the simplicity of 68 the composition does not exclude from Saa de Miranda’s eclogues, those mysterious allusions to the romantic manners of the age, which are so common in the writings of the old Portuguese poets. The first eclogue which he wrote in his native language, abounds in such allusions, though it is in other respects one of the least artificial of the poet’s productions in the class to which it belongs. It is a pastoral dialogue in tercets concerning love and indifference, happiness and unhappiness. Three cantigas, the first in octaves, the second in redondillas and in the Spanish language, and the third in the syllabic measure of an Italian canzone, form the poetic essence of this, simple composition. The disposition to prefer the Spanish language for imagery, and the Portuguese for reasoning, which is a striking feature in Saa de Miranda’s poetry, plainly betrays itself in this eclogue. The romantic conversation which forms the frame work to the cantigas in this eclogue, consists chiefly of general observations, which in the simple pastoral language in which they are expressed, have a very piquant character, but which are rendered scarcely intelligible to a foreigner, by the occurrence of broken popular phrases in a half ironical, half serious tone.68 To the 69 philological obscurity of several passages is added the enigmatical expression of suppressed pain, which, however, is natural enough in the mouths of the persons to whom it is assigned. In a word this eclogue is entirely national. None but a Portuguese can justly estimate its poetic merits and demerits. To a foreigner the cantigas are decidedly the best portion.69 70

The second Portuguese eclogue, included in the works of Saa de Miranda, has essentially the same tone and character as the first; with this difference, that it is versified throughout in national stanzas of ten lines (decimas). Descriptions of the general instability and transitory nature of earthly things are particularly conspicuous in this as well as in several of Miranda’s other poems.70 But it would be in vain to look in these Portuguese eclogues for passages of such exquisite beauty as those which occur in the Spanish eclogues of the same author. It was only on the Castilian Parnassus that Saa de Miranda established his fame as one of the most distinguished of bucolic poets. With the exception 71 of elegant language and versification, his Portuguese eclogues are not much superior to the cordial effusions of Ribeyro.

Saa de Miranda seems to have wished to display his native language to advantage in another department of composition, in which, however, he did not shine with equal lustre. A series of poetic epistles which in the collection of his works follow the pastoral poems, are all, except one, written in Portuguese. At the time of their appearance, no similar productions existed in Portuguese literature: but they were speedily surpassed by other writers. Nevertheless it is not merely for the circumstance of their being first attempts that they claim attention. They are distinguished from other poems of this class by the delicate and characteristic union of that peculiar style of pastoral poetry which Miranda formed for his eclogues, with a didactic diction which indicates the disciple of Horace. At the same time Horatian ideas are but thinly scattered through these epistles, and Miranda’s elegance of language is far from reaching the force and precision of the latin model. The poetry in which he endeavoured to approach the style of Horace, is of the romantic didactic class—full of sound morality, conveyed in ingenious reflections and pleasing representations—full of truth and warmth of feeling—but like all romantic poetry, it is somewhat too prolix, and its learning like the most of that which has passed through the scholastic conduits of the cloister, is not drawn from a very profound source. To interest by new views and ideas in didactic poetry, was not a task suited to a catholic poet of the sixteenth 72 century, and least of all to one who so piously adhered to the principles of his faith as Saa de Miranda. The most interesting ideas of this poet, in so far as the value of such ideas is to be considered, must be estimated by their truth and not by their novelty; and their natural application to manners and characters within the scope of the poet’s own observation, constitutes the basis of their poetic merit. The verse chiefly employed consists of light redondilhas, running in stanzas of five lines; and thus, even in metrical form, these epistles depart considerably from the style of Horace. The two last, which, together with those written in the Spanish language, are versified in tercets, must in other respects be ranked in the same class with the rest. Miranda, according to the old custom, styles the whole series of these compositions Cartas (letters), and not Epistolas, the term which at a somewhat later period was properly, though not generally employed by Portuguese writers, to designate poems of a didactic or amusing description under the form of individual correspondence. The first is addressed to the king. After a long series of introductory compliments, full of the accustomed phrases of servile devotion to the throne, the author enters into popular reflections on the art of government, and particularly on the risk of deception, to which sovereigns of the best intentions are constantly exposed. Some of these reflections resolve very happily into practical traits of didactic description.71 Miranda must be forgiven for 73 his useless display of erudition which was quite in the spirit of his age. In recompense, the legitimate character of the poet predominates throughout the whole composition. The succeeding epistles possess more of the light ironical tone of Horace. They are addressed to friends and acquaintances. They relate to the advantages of rural life;—the equivocal nature of city manners and amusements;—the mischievous effects of luxury in Portugal since the introduction of the treasures of India;—the value of literary occupation;—and similar subjects, which an author, who had lived in the gay world, and afterwards retired to solitude, might be expected to discuss in pleasing verse. Thus from the nature of their subjects Miranda’s epistles may also be ranked among the literary pictures of manners in the 74 sixteenth century. The philanthropic and patriotic poet particularly laments the insatiable spirit of trade which prevailed in his native country. He declares his opinion that danger was not to be apprehended from the extended love of the arts and sciences, but from the “perfumes of the Indian spices,” which had the melancholy effect of enervating the old national character.72

Saa de Miranda also contributed to improve the sacred poetry of his native country. His two hymns to the Holy Virgin were the first compositions in Portuguese literature which were executed entirely in the style of the Italian canzone. They cannot, however, be regarded as lyric master pieces any more than the 75 spiritual canzoni of the Italians. Had a catholic poet been able to guard himself against romantic prolixity in such hymns, still must his fancy, on any attempt to elevate it to the poetic spirit of the ode, have again been subdued by the humiliating idea of the guilt and unworthiness of man; and the more truly Christian the song of praise might be, the more would it partake of the litany character. Saa de Miranda cannot be regarded as a model for the composition of hymns. But in his two spiritual Canções he extended the sphere of Portuguese lyric poetry by the noble diction which he introduced into them.73 In the second Cançaõ he has, 76 among other faults, indulged in a play on words, than which no verbal conceit could be more antipoetic; for he finds a wonderful analogy of contradiction between the fall of womankind and the merits of the Holy Virgin, in the name Eve and the word Ave with which the angelical salutation commences.74 But these remains of monkish quibbling are to be expected in spiritual, and particularly in catholic spiritual poems of the sixteenth century.

With Saa de Miranda the literary history of the Portuguese drama likewise commences. Any attempts at dramatic composition which may have been previously made in the Portuguese language, obtained no literary celebrity, and are now forgotten. That in the time of Saa de Miranda, theatres existed in Lisbon, in which dramas, similar to those in the Spanish language were performed, is a fact sufficiently evident 78 from several allusions in Miranda’s two comedies, as well as from the works of Gil Vicente, which will soon claim particular notice. But no national taste for any particular species of drama was then formed in Portugal. The Castilian style could not give the tone to the Portuguese; for at the period in question, which was half a century previous to the birth of Lope de Vega, the Spanish drama was still in its infancy and wavering amidst heterogeneous forms. Thus the Portuguese writers who turned their attention to dramatic poetry, were not, in their choice of styles and forms, restrained by any capricious conditions demanded by the public. These circumstances afforded an opportunity for commencing, without any literary warfare, the improvement of the Portuguese drama by the works of two poets, who like Saa de Miranda and Gil Vicente trod in very different paths. Miranda wrote two comedies in prose. They are dramas of character in the style of Plautus and Terence:—one is entitled Os Estrangeiros (the Foreigners); the other is called Os Vilhalpandos, from two Spanish soldiers, who had both adopted the name Vilhalpando, which, at that period, was probably celebrated in the military world. It has already been mentioned that the Infante Cardinal Henry was particularly pleased with these two dramas, that he permitted them to be performed at his court, and that he gave orders for having them printed. How they happened to obtain these honours is explained partly by their own intrinsic merits and partly by contingent and temporary circumstances. At the papal court, in the beginning of the sixteenth century, a 79 favourable reception had been given to the early Italian comedies in prose, and in particular to Bibiena’s Calandra.76 Miranda’s taste had been formed in Italy, and what pleased a pope might well afford entertainment to a cardinal. Miranda, as a dramatic poet, retraced the footsteps of Bibiena and Ariosto; and Cardinal Henry of Portugal followed the example of Leo X. It is, however, more than probable that the Portuguese public was not induced by such high patronage to manifest particular regard for this class of dramatic entertainments, any more than the Italian public had been, by the marks of distinction bestowed on the plays of Bibiena and Ariosto.

The two comedies of Miranda are, nevertheless, even at the present day, worthy the attention of the critic. They are the first compositions of their kind in Portuguese literature; and in none of the essentials of the dramatic art are they surpassed by the subsequent productions for which they have served as models. Both dramas exhibit highly natural, though not ingenious delineations of character, unaffected diction, and a pleasing and rapid flow of dialogue; and though in their composition they really possess but little dramatic merit, still it is evident that a dramatic spirit has governed their execution.77 These comedies are indeed 80 imbued throughout with the delicate and refined spirit of a poet, whose aversion from pedantry was equal to his feeling of delicacy and love of nature. Miranda, as a dramatist, endeavoured to draw common characters from the life, after the manner of Plautus and Terence, of whom he avowed himself an imitator,78 but he felt the necessity of elevating, by some degree of refinement, the vulgar phraseology which the characters he chose to pourtray actually employed in common life. For this purpose he availed himself of the interesting 81 popular style in which he acquired such extraordinary facility as an idyllic poet. Had the poetic spirit of this popular style shone as conspicuously in his comedies as in his pastoral poems, the former, like the latter, would have been novel and single in their kind. But Saa de Miranda was born a pastoral poet, and only made himself a dramatist by imitation. If he had been penetrated with the spirit of the comic dramatists of Rome, as he was with that of the father of the Greek bucolic, he would have endeavoured to become a Portuguese Plautus or Terence in the same manner as he became a Portuguese Theocritus. He would not then have transplanted foreign manners to the comic stage of his native land. Still less would he have imitated his models in the manner of Bibiena; a manner which even in Italy had been relinquished by Ariosto, who, as a dramatist, struck into the same bypath, and missed the goal. Miranda then did not, strictly speaking, follow Plautus and Terence; but Bibiena and Ariosto, in their character of imitators of those ancient poets, were his guides in the region of dramatic poetry, where the spirit of modern times demanded more than he was capable of supplying. Besides, why did this poet, who was a master in the art of versification, write his dramas in prose? Wishing to adhere throughout to the nature of prose, he makes the principal persons of his dramas explain, chiefly in soliloquies, their own characters, with a garrulity, which though certainly natural, is nevertheless low and tedious; and the popular morality which floats in this prolix stream of vulgar phraseology affords no pleasurable compensation to the 82 auditor or reader.79 Faithful to his models, Miranda has not, in either of his two comedies, laid the scene of action in his native country, where he might have dramatized national customs; the events which he describes are supposed to take place in Italy, and the manners, and in general the characters which he paints, are Italian. In the selection of those characters, he however follows Plautus and Terence, without paying any apparent regard to the distinction between different ages, by which the choice of the dramatic poet ought to be directed. Of the principal characters there is only one perfectly modern in the Estrangeiros, and in like manner only one of the same description appears in the Vilhalpandos. The first is a pedantic doctor named Juris; the second is a lady named Fausta, a hypocrite, surrounded by a group of pretended devotees. The other characters in 83 Miranda’s two dramas, besides valets and waiting maids, are some old men, ostentatious soldiers, and enamoured youths, a grumbling tutor, (ayo,) two or three merchants, a parasite, (truhaõ,) a match-maker, (casamenteiro), and others of a still baser description, which the author seems to have thought could not be dispensed with in any imitation of the ancient drama. In the Vilhalpandos the author has also incidentally introduced the modern characters of a hermit and a French page. No remarkable intricacy of events is produced by these characters being brought in contact with each other; for Saa de Miranda was not formed to be a writer of dramas of intrigue. His scenes are strung together, rather than drawn out of each other. It is not worth while more minutely to analyze the composition of these two dramas. No highly comic scenes occur in either of them. But their general tone is spirited; and, if well performed, they doubtless would, in the age in which they were produced, interest an audience disposed to be pleased with the comic delineation of character; for most of the scenes are of a kind which might enable a player to supply by good acting that comic force in which they are deficient. Thus it happened that though the Portuguese public took no particular interest in dramas of this class, no party was formed, as in Italy, avowedly hostile to them. The bitterest portion of the satire with which Miranda invigorates, not the comic spirit, but the morality of his dramas, is directed against the Italian and particularly the Romish priesthood, to whose scandalous mode of life, the basest characters are made, as the most proper 84 witnesses in such a case, to bear ample testimony. It appears, therefore, that at this time satire might be openly and fearlessly directed against the clergy, and that its application in that way was not displeasing to the heads of the Portuguese church; for had it been otherwise, so pious a writer as Saa de Miranda would scarcely have ventured to indulge in such representations even if he could have made them in secret.

Having taken a general view of the services which this memorable writer rendered to Portuguese poetry, it can scarcely be necessary to state that he was the first classic poet of his nation; but if it be wished to make a more rigid application of this title and to confer it only on writers, whose poetic cultivation, according to the classic models of the ancients, leaves nothing farther to be desired, it were better to abstain altogether from employing it in the history of modern poetry. Miranda presented to his countrymen the first example of the manner in which poetic genius aspiring to the highest pinnacle of art, ought to study the classic poets of antiquity, in order to acquire clearness of poetic perception, solid judgment in invention and precision, elegance and ingenious simplicity in composition and diction, without renouncing his individual character and the genius of his age and nation.80 85

The account of the classic school which Saa de Miranda founded in Portuguese poetry, must be deferred until historical justice be rendered to the genius of a less cultivated poet, who flourished at the same period with Saa de Miranda, but who chose for himself a totally different path on the Portuguese Parnassus.

GIL VICENTE.

Writers on literature have not recorded the date of the birth of Gil Vicente, who is styled the Portuguese Plautus.81 There is reason to suppose that at the latest he was born within twenty years of the close of the fifteenth century. It is known that he belonged to a family of rank, and that he studied the law in compliance with the wish of his family. But it appears that he speedily relinquished his juridical studies and devoted himself wholly to the dramatic art. It is not recorded whether or not he was regularly pensioned as a writer to the court; but he was most indefatigable in furnishing the royal family and the public with dramatic entertainments suited to the taste of the age. He constantly resided at court, where his poetic talents were held in permanent requisition for the celebration of spiritual as well as temporal festivals; and no dramatic writer in Europe was more admired and esteemed than 86 Gil Vicente. His first productions were performed with approbation at court in the reign of Emanuel the Great; but his reputation acquired additional brilliancy in the reign of John III. a monarch who, as has already been mentioned, did not scruple in his younger years to perform characters in the dramas of this favourite author. Vicente seems also to have possessed all the requisite qualifications for a theatrical manager. We are not informed whether he was himself an actor; but he was the tutor of the most distinguished actress of his age, namely, his daughter Paula, maid of honour to the Infanta Maria, a poetess, an amateur performer on several instruments, and, as it appears, celebrated for every thing except beauty. Erasmus is said to have learned Portuguese for the express purpose of reading the comedies of Vicente in the original. There are no notices extant by which farther insight into the personal character of this poet could be obtained. He died in the year 1557 at Evora, and, as there is reason to believe, at an advanced age. Five years after his death, his son Luis Vicente edited a complete collection of his works, or at least of all that had been preserved in manuscript.82 87

Gil Vicente would have been the Portuguese Lope de Vega, if not something even superior, had he been born half a century later, and had he been as much indebted to his age as the Spanish dramatist was to that in which he flourished. But no one was less calculated than Gil Vicente to become an improver of taste; and indeed he was far from being ambitious of earning that honourable title. Had not the favour of the public been continued to him and his dramas even after the middle of the sixteenth century, when the school of Saa de Miranda had risen and acquired the ascendancy in the polite world, he might with propriety be ranked as the last in the series of the Portuguese poets of the fifteenth century. His diction, as well as his whole poetic style, belongs to that age, and to the latest period of his life he continued faithful to the old national manner. In the conflict with the new style introduced by Saa de Miranda’s school, Gil Vicente appeared as the representative of the yet enduring national taste, which even at court, where the adherents of the new party were most honourably distinguished, preserved a co-equal authority with that party. That each party should under such circumstances maintain its credit is not a little remarkable. Perhaps they became accommodated to each other merely because the Portuguese had no relish for literary feuds. It may be 88 presumed that each party therefore felt itself secure, and, content with its own security, took no notice of the other.

Here we again arrive at the point, at which the historian of the cultivation of the Portuguese and Spanish drama finds a stumbling-block in the way of his enquiries; for the materials necessary to the right prosecution of his labour are either entirely wanting or involved in contradiction. In the history of the Spanish theatre it has already been stated how little positive knowledge the Spaniards possessed even in the age of Cervantes and Lope de Vega, respecting the early formation of their national comedy.83 To Torres Naharro, so strangely overlooked by Cervantes, the honour of being the real father of the Spanish comedy, must, on every just principle of historical criticism, be conceded. But Gil Vicente was a contemporary of Torres Naharro; and the dramatic compositions of the Portuguese poet, so far approximate to the ruder forms of the Spanish comedy, as to entitle Portuguese writers to claim for their own country the honour of the invention of that comedy. Spanish Autos either did not exist in the beginning of the sixteenth century, or if they did, they have disappeared from the domain of literature. A whole series of Autos by Gil Vicente are, however, extant; and several were written within the first ten years of the sixteenth century. Some are entirely in the Spanish language; others are half in Portuguese and half in Spanish, but all present, in their radical features, the form and character of the 89 Spanish spiritual comedy. Was Gil Vicente then the first writer who exhibited a kind of poetic design in dramatic entertainments for the celebration of christian festivals, and thus raised to literary consideration a style of composition which had previously been degraded by monks and buffoons? Or are the corresponding works of contemporary Spanish writers lost in oblivion? Was Gil Vicente an imitator of Torres Naharro, or did the latter copy from the former?

The number of dramas which Gil Vicente has bequeathed to posterity is considerable, though compared with the fertility of some of the Spanish poets, by no means extraordinary. They are arranged in classes either by himself, or, as is more probable, by his son, by whom they were published; and in taking a critical view of them this classification is very convenient. At the commencement appear the Autos or spiritual dramas; next follow some anomalous works, which are oddly enough, in preference to all others, styled comedies; these are succeeded by the tragi-comedies; and last of all come the Farsas. Various small poems in the Spanish and Portuguese languages form an appendix to the collection. These works display a true poetic spirit, which, however, accommodated itself entirely to the age of the poet, and which disdained all cultivation. The dramatic genius of Gil Vicente is equally manifest from his power of invention, and from the natural turn and facility of his imitative talent. Even the rudest of these dramas is tinged with a certain degree of poetic feeling. Scenes in stanzas and redondilhas which, though harmonious, are of antiquated construction, 90 succeed each other with wonderful truth and simplicity. But there appears in these compositions no perception of what may be properly called the perfection of dramatic poetry; and no trace of an endeavour to attain classic excellence, calls to mind the spirit of the sixteenth century. Gil Vicente’s language, too, is altogether in the old and uncultivated style.

The Autos, or spiritual dramas, contained in the collected works of this poet, are sixteen in number. They cannot properly be called Corpus Christi pieces, or Autos Sacramentales; for most of them were written to be performed on Christmas night, in celebration of that festival, either before the court at Lisbon, or at royal residences in the country, and they perfectly correspond with the object for which they were intended. Pastoral poetry forms the basis of the whole, even of those which, taking a totally different turn from the rest, become alternately didactic and allegoric. By this characteristic feature they are distinguished from most of the Autos of Spanish or posterior origin. Accident favoured the national poetic genius of the Portuguese in the creation of the spiritual pastoral drama. Gil Vicente while yet a youth and a tyro in the poetic art, surprised King Emanuel and the Queen on the birth of the Infante, afterwards King John III. by the production of a little pastoral drama, which appears better adapted for celebrating the festival of Christmas than the birth of a hereditary prince, but which was, perhaps, on that very account the more flattering to the royal family. This pastoral drama is, in consequence of the distinction it thus obtained, 91 placed before Vicente’s Autos, and a notice by the son of the poet explains the reason why that precedence is assigned to it. The little piece is written in the Spanish language. Vicente’s son observes in his notice, that it was received with particular favour because it was something new in Portugal.84 It is therefore probable that at this period Gil Vicente, as yet unconscious of his own talent, only followed in the footsteps of the venerable Juan del Enzina.85 Having at the request of the royal family altered his piece in such a way as to render it more suitable to representation at Christmas, he was thus accidentally directed into the path which naturally led to the union of dramatic poetry with christian mysteries, and which he afterwards steadily explored. Year after year with increasing taste and fancy he continued to write Christmas pieces, which at last assumed a more enlarged form. Among the personages introduced in these dramas there are always some of the pastoral class, intended to represent directly, and also in a certain degree allegorically, the shepherds at the manger of Bethlehem. But the inventive poet soon advanced a step further. He composed dramas in the same style for the celebration of other religious festivals, without any admixture of pastoral poetry. Among his Autos, however, there is one in celebration of the festival of Corpus Christi, which was one of his earliest productions. The notice annexed to it states that it was performed in the year 1504. It is founded on a 92 simple incident in the life of St. Martin, and possesses scarcely any thing of the character of the later spiritual dramas, or Autos Sacramentales, properly so called. But a far greater display of fancy and theatrical splendour, was the result of Gil Vicente’s subsequent endeavours to dramatize the mysteries of the catholic faith. It would appear that spiritual dramas of this class, in which so much was to be seen and admired, had never before been produced either on the Portuguese or the Spanish stage. It cannot, therefore, be doubted, that Gil Vicente’s Autos had their effect on the Spanish dramatists of the sixteenth century; and that if they were not imitated as models, they served at least as examples for emulation.

The invention and the execution of Gil Vicente’s Autos present an equal degree of rudeness. The least artificial are also those in which the most decided traits of national character appear. The shepherds and shepherdesses who are introduced into these Autos are Portuguese and Spanish both in their names and manners. Their simple phrases and turns of language are similar to those employed by the characters in Saa de Miranda’s eclogues, except that their discourse is more negligent and occasionally more coarse. In combining the appearance of angels, the devil, the holy virgin and allegorical characters, with popular scenes, an effect perfectly consistent with the ideas of the audience was produced; for, according to the catholic doctrine, the miracles with which Christianity commenced are continued without intermission; through the mysteries of faith, the connection between the terrestrial, celestial and infernal worlds is declared; and by allegory that 93 connection is rendered perceptible. The critic would therefore judge very unfairly, were he to regard as proofs of bad taste the consequences which a poet naturally entails on himself in writing according to the spirit of his religion. Making allowance, however, for that spirit, the rudeness of Gil Vicente’s Autos must be acknowledged even by him who measuring them by the rule of critical judgment, is perfectly disposed to view every system of religion only on its poetic side. For instance in one of the simplest of these Autos some shepherds who discourse in Spanish, enter a chapel, which is decorated with all the apparatus necessary for the celebration of the festival of Christmas. The shepherds cannot sufficiently express their rustic admiration of the pomp exhibited in the chapel. Faith (La Fè) enters as an allegorical character. She speaks Portuguese, and after announcing herself to the shepherds as true Faith, she explains to them the nature of faith, and enters into an historical relation of the mysteries of the incarnation.86 This is the whole subject of the piece. 94 Another Auto in which the poet’s fancy has taken a wider range, presents scenes of a more varied nature. Mercury enters as an allegorical character, and as the representative of the planet which bears his name. He explains the theory of the planetary system and the Zodiac, and cites astronomical facts from Regiomontanus, in a long series of stanzas in the old national style. A Seraph then appears who is sent down from heaven by God in compliance with the prayers of Time. The Seraph, in the quality of a herald, proclaims a large yearly fair in honour of the Holy Virgin, and invites customers to it.87 A Devil next makes his appearance with a little 95 stall which he carries before him. He gets into a dispute with Time and the Seraph, and asserts that among men such as they are, he shall be sure to find purchasers for his wares.88 He therefore leaves to every customer his free choice. Mercury then summons eternal Rome as the representative of the church. She appears, and offers for sale peace of mind, as the most precious of her merchandize. The Devil remonstrates; and Rome retires. Two Portuguese peasants now appear in the market. One is very anxious to sell his wife, and observes that if he cannot sell her, he will give her away for nothing, as she is a wicked spendthrift. Amidst this kind of conversation a party of peasant women enter, one of whom, with considerable comic warmth, 96 vents bitter complaints against her husband.89 The man who has already been inveighing against his wife immediately recognizes her, and says:—“that is my slippery helpmate.”90 During this succession of comic scenes the action does not advance. The Devil at last opens his little stall and displays his stock of goods to the female peasants; but one of them who is the most 97 pious of the party seems to suspect that all is not quite right with regard to the merchandize, and she exclaims: “Jesus! Jesus! True God and man!” The Devil immediately takes to flight, and does not re-appear; but the Seraph again comes forward and mingles with the rustic groupes. The throng continues to increase; other countrywomen with baskets on their heads arrive; and the market is stored with vegetables, poultry and other articles of rural produce. The Seraph offers virtues for sale; but they find no purchasers. The peasant girls observe that in their village money is more sought after than virtue, when a young man wants a wife. One of the party, however, says, that she wished to come to the market because it happened to fall on the festival of the mother of God; and because the Virgin does not sell her gifts of grace (as graças); but she distributes them gratis (de graça). This observation crowns the theological morality of the piece, which terminates with a hymn of praise, in the popular style, in honour of the Holy Virgin.

These specimens will afford an adequate idea of the spirit and style of Gil Vicente’s Autos. His largest work of this class may, however, be referred to, in proof of the little attention he bestowed on dramatic plan in the composition of his spiritual comedies. It purports to be “A Summary of the History of God.” After the prologue, which is spoken by an Angel, Sir Lucifer (Senhor Lucifer,) enters, attended by a numerous retinue of devils. Belial is president of his court of justice (meirinho de corte), and Satan gentleman of his privy council, (fidalgo do conselho). After this privy 98 counsellor has performed his part in the temptation of Adam and Eve in Paradise, the whole details of which are represented on the stage, Lucifer confers on him the dignities of duke and captain of the kingdoms of the world.91 Next succeeds a series of scenes which summarily represent the history of the christian redemption. The World accompanied by Time and angels enters as a king. The representation of the fall of man is followed by the history of Abel, by whom a beautiful and simple hymn is sung.92 The next scenes exhibit the histories of Abraham, Job, and David; and thus the Auto proceeds through the incidents of the old and new testaments 99 until the ascension of Christ, which is represented on the stage amidst an accompaniment of drums and trumpets.

On comparing the Autos of Gil Vicente with those of Calderon, the difference appears not much less considerable than that which exists between the works of Hans Sachs and Shakespeare. But the graceful simplicity with which many of the scenes of these spiritual dramas are executed, raises the Portuguese poet infinitely above the poetic shoe-maker of Nuremberg.

The most unimportant of the dramatic works of Gil Vicente are those which the poet and his son have called comedies. One is a dramatized novel, in which a young lady, whom her lover, a priest, has seduced, appears on the stage in child-bed, and after long lamentations and discussions is actually delivered of a daughter. In the second half of the piece the child whose birth is thus announced has attained the age of womanhood, and is in her turn introduced as a lady loving and beloved. The action, however, is not destitute of interest. In the first half of the drama, a Witch, who summons the Devil on the stage, assists the unfortunate lady in child-bed, and afterwards, five laundresses (lavandeiras) make their appearance. Nevertheless, amidst much extravagance and absurdity, the author has represented several scenes of domestic life, in a style equally pleasing and natural. No example of the intrigue of the Spanish theatre is to be found in this piece, but there is introduced a fool (parvo), or more properly a waggish clown, a character which appears to be the rude prototype of the Spanish gracioso. Pleasing songs in the Spanish language are interspersed 100 through the dialogue. The young girl who was born at the commencement of the piece takes leave of the public in the character of a princess. Several of Gil Vicente’s other works, which are styled comedies, are dramatized novels, similar to that just described. One which is entitled, A Floresta de Enganos, (the Forest or Gardens of Deception),93 is merely a dramatized garland of sprightly fancies enriched with allegorical and mythological ornaments. At the head of the dramatis personæ appears the burlesque character of a philosopher, who, because he has reproved some wicked men for their misconduct, is, by way of punishment, tied to a fool (parvo) with whom he is thus compelled to associate. He regards this punishment as the severest torture that could be inflicted on a philosopher. He speaks Spanish, and the replies of the fool are more remarkable for their rudeness than for their wit.94 101

Gil Vicente’s tragi-comedies may be regarded as rough outlines of that kind of drama which subsequently formed a variety of the heroic comedies95 of the Spanish stage. They are not historical dramas, but festival pieces adorned with a certain pomp of allegory, mythology, magic, &c. and occasionally interspersed with pathetic scenes. They were performed before the court on festivals or particular occasions, which are specified. One of these dramas, entitled, Amadis de Gaula, and founded on some of the incidents in the celebrated romance of the same name, was, in spite of its inoffensive character, forbidden to be performed in Spain in the reign of Philip II. The cause of this prohibition probably was, that the disguise of Amadis, as a pilgrim, was deemed a profanation of the sacred habit. This piece which is written in the Spanish language, is destitute of all merit of invention. Others of these dramas exhibit more traces of the poet’s fancy; but in none is 102 there the foundation of a genuine dramatic plot. One entitled, Exhortaçaõ de Guerra, (Exhortation to War), was doubtless a favourite with the court. A pious magician appears who has learned necromancy in a sybil’s cave. By powerful spells he summons to his presence some subject demons, whom he suffers to revile him in the coarsest language.96 He however obliges them to conjure up the spirits of Polyxena, Penthesilea, Achilles, Scipio, and other celebrated characters of antiquity. These spirits appear in succession, and address fine compliments to the royal family. In another tragi-comedy Providence is introduced as a Princess. But the most varied of all is Triumpho do Invierno, (Winter’s Triumph), in two parts. Besides a multitude of characters, among which an allegorical personification of Winter is one of the most conspicuous, Gil Vicente exhibited to his audience a view of the open sea, agitated by a storm during the most inclement season of the year. The noise and confusion among the ships in distress, and the oaths and prayers of the Portuguese sailors expressed in rhymes and redondilhas, would naturally be gratifying to a public who at the period when the piece was written, took particular interest in maritime affairs.97 Another of these tragi-comedies is also a satire. 103

Gil Vicente was destined by nature to be a comic poet. His farças (farces) are by far his best productions; and to them he was indebted for the chief portion of his fame, as well as for the honourable but ill-chosen surname which some critics have applied to him. If the literary relationship between two dramatic writers were to be decided by the comic strength of their works, then indeed Gil Vicente might be truly termed a second Plautus. But neither in respect to their form 104 nor their spirit can Vicente’s farces be ranked in the same class with the regular comedies of Plautus. Nevertheless the name of farces, was not given to those comic dramas, on account of their irregularity or their burlesque style. At the rise of the modern theatre in Spain and Portugal all dramas were denominated farces,98 and that the name has been continued to be applied to Vicente’s comedies, is an accident arising merely from the want of a better term of classification. It is in like manner the result of accident, that in France, England and Germany, the same term is still employed to distinguish precisely that species of drama to which Gil Vicente’s farces belong. These pieces are equally burlesque in their design and execution. They may, in a certain sense, be styled dramas of character; for Vicente attached great importance to the burlesque representation of some characters which he sketched from life. But he never thought of founding his comic interest on plot and intrigue; and in the degree of cultivation to which he had attained, and above which he never rose, he was incapable of designing and executing, on a comprehensive scale, a dramatic picture of character with true delicacy of outline, and still less with interesting truth of colouring. His farces, like his other dramas, have no regular plot for their ground-work. They are dramatic conceptions of scenes of real life, rapidly sketched by a glowing fancy, with genuine comic feeling, with a certain poetic keeping, even when derived from the commonest nature, and 105 worked up by more or less of plastic talent, into some form, but without any regard to correctness, and altogether executed as a mere sportive task. In these farces the language and metrical form are the same as in Gil Vicente’s other dramas. The alternation of the Portuguese and Castilian idioms is seldom governed by any other rule than the caprice of the poet. Upon the whole Gil Vicente’s farces bear much resemblance to the Entremeses which subsequently became favourite entertainments on the Spanish stage; like them they are not divided either into acts or scenes.

Among the eleven dramas, which in the collected works of Gil Vicente are entitled farces, there are two festival pieces, in the popular style, which might with equal propriety have been ranged in one of the preceding classes. The first piece is truly a farce. Two miserable servants, the one a Portuguese, the other a Spaniard, who are almost starving in the service of two coxcombs, meet together in the street at midnight, and each in his respective language complains of his sad fate. The Portuguese describes his master as an enamoured enthusiast, who employs himself day and night in writing silly verses, and in singing them to his own wretched music, but who never appears to think of eating and drinking.99 This romantic gentleman (escudeiro) 106 soon makes his appearance with one of his own song books in his hand. Before he begins to sing a song, he reads aloud its title, and names himself as the author. When he has finished it he commences a new song, first pronouncing very formally the words, “Another by the same,” in the style of the old Cancioneiros. He proceeds to sing under the window of his mistress Isabella, a miller’s coquetish daughter, where his music is accompanied by the barking of dogs and the mewing of cats. The blending of these songs, which though insipid, possess something of the tender and melancholy character of the old cantigas, with the conversation of the lover and his servant,—with the whisperings of the serenaded Isabella from her lattice window,—and with the rage of the gallant at the dogs and cats, which mortify him by the interruption of his singing, was doubtless calculated to operate very powerfully on the risibility of the audience, though much of the ludicrous effect of the scene must now be supplied by the imagination of the reader.100 107 The mother of Isabella at length appears, with a lantern in her hand, endeavouring to learn what is the cause of the uproar. Here a change of scene commences with the lamentations of the old woman in a burlesque caricature style.101 She enters into a dispute 108 first with her coquetish daughter, who has expressed herself pleased with the serenade, and then with the gallant, who at length sings a farewell stanza, and departs. But this collection of songs and dialogues is as far from having any real dramatic object as are the other farces of Vicente, in which he sometimes introduces Witches,—at that period objects of particular interest with the public,—performing incantations in concert with the Devil; sometimes Frenchmen and Italians who speak a kind of broken Portuguese, perhaps often enough heard on the quays of Lisbon. In another of these lively entertaining dramas, an enamoured old man is the principal character.

Of all these farces, however, that entitled Inez Pereira, is distinguished by the most remarkable plot and the greatest stretch of dramatic talent. The history of this piece serves to throw some light on the relation in which Gil Vicente stood with respect to the Portuguese public. Some persons, it appears, had expressed doubts of his title to the authorship of the 109 admired farces attributed to him, and in order to maintain the reputation of his talent, he was desirous that a pointed theme should be prescribed to him as a ground-work for dramatic composition. It was accordingly suggested that he would find a fit subject in the Portuguese proverb: “I prefer an ass that carries me, to a horse that throws me.”102 For the comic representation of this proverb, Vicente chose the prettily conceived story of a young girl, who rejects the matrimonial offer of a wealthy simpleton, because she is resolved to marry none but a man of superior understanding and talents. Inez at length finds a man after her own heart. She gives him her hand, but soon grows very unhappy, because she finds that with such a husband, his will must always be her law. She now sincerely repents the coyness with which she had listened to the proposals of her less gifted lover. Death soon interposes in her favour, and she becomes a widow. Her former suitor offers himself again, and Inez triumphs in the possession of a husband whom she finds it easy to manage. This happily chosen fable is worked up with more care than Vicente seems to have bestowed on his other farces. Had this poet been placed in circumstances similar to those which a hundred and fifty years later operated in favour of Moliere, Inez Pereira would in all probability have been made one of the best comic pieces of character in the dramatic literature of modern times. But in this drama Gil Vicente has contented himself with grouping his characters in a brilliant but confused throng, stringing his scenes together like 110 a wreath of roses, exhibiting events, between which, days, weeks, and months intervene, in immediate succession, like pictures in a rareeshow; and thus upon the whole he has made little approximation towards the point of cultivated taste.103 But this farce supplies 111 illustrations of the manners of the age, which could not easily be obtained from any other source.—We learn from it that the jews in Lisbon were then particularly celebrated as marriage brokers (casamenteiros) and that they carried on this employment as an ordinary branch of traffic. One of the suitors is introduced by some jews of this profession to Inez Pereira.

On reverting from the dramas of Gil Vicente to the poetic works of the classic writers, at whose head Saa de Miranda stands, the reader will find himself transported to a totally different world. But this transition belongs to the chronological order of the subject.

FERREIRA.

Antonio Ferreira, surnamed the Portuguese Horace, was born at Lisbon in the year 1528. His parents, who belonged to the first class of nobility, destined him for a statesman or public functionary. He obtained the degree of Doctor at the University of Coimbra, where he studied the civil law. He took however less interest in his jurisprudential studies than in the lectures of a professor of ancient literature, named Diogo de Tieve, who at that time possessed great celebrity, and for whom after quitting the university he continued to entertain a strong affection and regard. While Ferreira was pursuing his studies at Coimbra, the works 112 of Horace, and other poets of antiquity, produced on him an impression totally different from that which was experienced by the other students, who directed their attention to ancient literature. Among the latter it was a fashion to write verses in latin, and to look with disdain on the Portuguese language; but Ferreira, while yet a youth, proved himself an enthusiastic lover of his mother tongue. He resolved not to write a line in any foreign language, not even in Spanish; and he faithfully kept his determination. In his beautiful introductory or dedicatory stanza, to readers after his own taste (a os bons engenhos) he intimates that his poems shall belong “to those readers to whose pure bosoms he may commit them. For himself he will be content with the glory of having it said that he loved his native land and his countrymen.”104 But the patriotic spirit which thus glowed in the soul of Ferreira was combined, in a manner then altogether uncommon, with a similar enthusiasm for the ancient classics, and particularly for the poetry of Horace. The example of Saa de Miranda had also its influence in forming his taste; and he closely studied the Italian poets from 113 whom he learned to combine classic correctness of ideas and language, on the model of the ancients, with a natural poetic style, suited to the age in which he lived. The beautiful structure of Italian verse so charmed him, that he thought no other metres possessed sufficient dignity to entitle them to be introduced into Portuguese poetry. He accordingly never composed in redondilhas, and, generally speaking, in no verse in the old national style. The whole object of his ambition was to be a classical poet, and in that character to give to Portuguese poetry a new, and according to his taste, a more noble diction. Inspired with the hope of accomplishing this purpose, he laboured with so much assiduity, that before he left the university he had composed the greater portion of the hundred and thirteen sonnets which are contained in the collection of his poems. Whether the “Lady of his Thoughts,” who supplies in these sonnets the place of Petrarch’s Laura, was no imaginary character, is uncertain. It cannot, however, be doubted, that in his fifth elegy the poet alludes to a real and beloved Manila, who had been snatched from him by death. Ferreira was twenty-nine years of age when he published the first collection of his poetic works. He had previously been engaged in delivering academic lectures, probably on jurisprudence, in the university of Coimbra. In his poetic pursuits, he was joined by several young men of similar talent, particularly Andrade Caminha, Jeronymo Cortereal, and Diogo Bernardes, who, together with other poets of that age, formed a circle of disciples and admirers of Saa de 114 Miranda. But he grew tired of his university studies, and visited the court where he soon acquired distinction. He obtained the high office of desembargador de camara de supplicaçaõ (judge of the council of grace), and he was likewise appointed a fidalgo da casa real (gentleman of the royal household). For the young poets of Portugal he now became an oracle of criticism; and a most brilliant prospect had opened itself to him, when in the year 1569, and at the age of forty-one, he died of the plague which was supposed to be brought to Lisbon from the Levant. A monument was erected to his memory in the church where he was buried; but the stone is now much defaced.105

Though not a poet of the first rank, Ferreira has, as a classical poet, been surpassed by no other in Portuguese literature, and has in that respect also had but few equals in the literature of Spain. His fancy was circumscribed, and to originality he seems to have put forth no pretension; but the sound taste which he manifested from the commencement of his poetic cultivation, was a thing totally new in Portugal at that period. Ferreira was by no means a blind or pedantic imitator of the ancients and the Italians. He was, however, animated by an enthusiastic feeling for every thing 115 truly exemplary in the writings of the foreign poets whom he chose for prototypes; his vigorous understanding, cherished with particular predilection the idea of reforming the national Portuguese poetry after such models; and patriotic zeal prompted him to complete what poetic feeling and sound judgment had combined to suggest. Correctness of ideas as well as of language was to him the first requisite of all poetic beauty. He wished to banish from the poetry of his native land those traces of orientalism which it still retained. It was not less his study to avoid the eccentric than the common. He attached more importance to noble than to extraordinary ideas. But to poetic energy, precision and plenitude of picturesque expression, or what may be termed the poetry of language, his attention was chiefly directed. This quality he cultivated with a degree of talent and judgment, which would have imparted to his style Horatian perfection, were it not for the philosophic laconism peculiar to the diction of Horace, and which no modern poet, Klopstock alone excepted, has been able to approach. Ferreira was the first Portuguese writer who manifested a particular interest in the poetic dignity of his native tongue. He was the first who practically proved that the soft toned accentuation and simple popular idiom of that language were not inconsistent either with the energetic expression of didactic poetry, or the sonorous rhythm of the loftier styles. In this respect he essentially departed from the manner of Saa de Miranda; and thus his poetry lost the national colouring by which that of his predecessor is peculiarly distinguished. The 116 works of Ferreira belong indeed to that class of Portuguese poetry which is most easily intelligible to a foreigner possessing a knowledge of latin. Ferreira’s latinity of expression extends even to metrical scanning in which he assumed new freedoms;106 and the title under which he published his poems, and which they still retain, has a sort of latin air.107 Ferreira has therefore never been a favourite poet with the great mass of the Portuguese public. There was indeed a time during the seventeenth century in which he was despised even by the polite world as a learned pedant;108 but a later posterity has rendered justice to his merits. 117 Precisely such a poet as Ferreira was wanting to create among the Portuguese that taste for sound good sense in poetry, which they but too soon lost, and which, in these latter times, they have tardily endeavoured to recover. Ferreira himself takes various opportunities of explaining the principles by which he was guided in the composition of his works. In an epistle to Diogo Bernardes, he says—his first rule is to be as distrustful of himself as he is of superficial censurers; to follow his natural feelings, and to avoid a forced use of art; to respect only the judgment of those who are capable of judging; to follow the counsel of well informed and sincere friends; and to polish the rudeness of genius by industry and judicious imitation.109

Ferreira’s sonnets which amount to a considerable number, are divided into two books. They were all, as has already been remarked, written by the poet at an early period of life. The study of the Petrarchian sonnet is every where manifest in those attempts to emulate the pure Italian style, which, though imitations, are free of all traces of effort and affectation. In general, however, Ferreira’s tender complaints exhibit 118 only feeble glimmerings of the intensity and grace of Petrarch; but on the other hand they are disfigured by fewer extravagancies than the similar effusions of passion by other Portuguese and Spanish poets; and the energy of the expression is usually ennobled by classic grace of diction. Some of these amatory sonnets may be regarded as models.110 In others, however, the poet speaks of “burning snow and freezing fire.”111 Among the best are some which occur in the second book, in which the poet laments the death of his mistress.112 Ferreira seems to have felt no inclination 119 to imitate Petrarch’s didactic sonnets probably, because he had at an early period given to his didactic poetry a different form, and one which bore a more decided resemblance to his favourite Horace.

In the composition of odes Ferreira unquestionably endeavoured to form his style on the model of Horace. But among the thirteen poems, which in the collection of Ferreira’s works are ranged under the title of Odas, and which notwithstanding their scanty number are divided into two books, there is not one which exhibits a truly lyric flight of fancy. In all the language is excellent; the sentiment noble; and the didactic tone and the dignity of the whole manner are in admirable unison with the sonorous melody of the metre; but no new and energetic ideas, no lyric boldness, which, at first sight, might seem irregularity, surprise and charm the reader. Ferreira indeed expressly proposed to himself to soar even as a writer of odes above “the ignorant multitude;”113 but by his frequent repetition of certain 120 pompous and sonorous phrases, he widely departs from the character of the Horatian style.114 Even the moral energy of sentiment which appears in Ferreira’s odes, is not the energy of Horace.115 It would appear that the Italian canzoni with their superfluity of beautiful words and phrases had influenced Ferreira to an extent of which he was unconscious. Some of his odes have precisely the metrical form of the canzone, with the exception of the concluding flourish or apostrophe of the poet to his poem. Others have shorter stanzas like 121 those of the Spanish odes of Luis de Leon.116 Is possible that Ferreira may have been acted upon by the example of Luis de Leon, as they were contemporaries and almost of equal age; or, perhaps, the Spaniard was influenced by the Portuguese poet. This, however, is a subject to which writers of neither country make allusion; but it is certain that the character of Ferreira had nothing in common with the tranquil yet captivating enthusiasm of Luis de Leon. Nevertheless in the composition of the ode he became a model for the poets of his own nation, as Luis de Leon was for those of Spain; and every poem to which the title of ode has subsequently been given in Portuguese literature, exhibits nearly the same character and metrical form of which he set the example. In Ferreira’s odes the descriptive passages are usually the best.117 122

The elegies of Ferreira, at the period at which they were written, had also the advantage of the charm of novelty in the literature of his country; for with the exception of the single elegy of Saa de Miranda no poem of that class existed in the Portuguese language. Ariosto seems to have been the model whom Ferreira particularly copied in elegiac composition. Like Ariosto, he very happily seized the idea of the pleasing voluptuous elegy of the ancients, which was soon after neglected and continued long lost to modern literature. His elegy on May is a classic masterpiece.118 He was less successful 123 in plaintive elegy. Among the elegies of this kind which he composed, several deserve only to be regarded 124 as occasional poems on the death of distinguished persons. Others are properly epistles, abounding in moral reflexions and observations on the uncertainty of human affairs, but wanting in that tone of tender melancholy which is essential to the true plaintive elegy.119 A few free translations from the Greek of 125 Moschus and Anacreon are annexed to this collection of elegies.

Ferreira’s eclogues possess little poetic merit; and, excellent as is the diction, the style is not sufficiently bucolick. Ferreira was no less susceptible than Saa de Miranda of the philosophic enjoyment of a country life and the beauties of rural nature; but an ideal pastoral world was foreign to the scope of his genius, and bucolick simplicity was not at all reconcilable with his taste, which invariably inclined him to masculine reflexion, clothed in a tone of didactic seriousness. He would not, therefore, had he even possessed the natural requisites for pastoral poetry, have been disposed to prefer that style as the poetic form for occasional compositions, however agreeable it might be to the individuals of the royal family to have their festivals poetically illustrated by such contributions to the general gallantry of the court.

Ferreira’s epistles occupy the chief portion of the first volume of his poems; and they are, upon the whole, entitled to the first rank in the poet’s works. It is worthy of remark, that these epistles retain the old title of Cartas instead of that of Epistolas, notwithstanding Ferreira’s predilection for latinity in his choice of words. But they differ in so many various ways from the poetic Cartas of Saa de Miranda, that they may be regarded as the first productions of their kind in Portuguese literature. Their contents evidently 126 shew that they were all written when the poet had attained the age of maturity. At that period he resided at court, and from his practical philosophy, for which he was partly indebted to his literary studies, he deduced the maxims which daily received confirmation from the events of real life. Yet the more he was tied to the great world, the more valuable did retirement appear to him. The natural nobleness of his turn of mind was constantly at variance with the manners and characters of the persons by whom he was surrounded. In this state of feeling he wrote his epistles. They are for the most part addressed to men of the first rank, with whom Ferreira was more or less intimate, and among whose names appear those of the most celebrated poets who laboured in common with him for the classic improvement of the national taste. The didactic poems addressed by Ferreira to these men are nearly all in the same strain. The delicacy of the didactic tone of Horace was not to be attained by a poet who had to open the first path for the restoration of classical style in a country in which the old romantic character in poetry, and the scholastic theological spirit in philosophy, were only beginning to yield to the influence of a more liberal cultivation. Neither was Ferreira, with all his elegance, sufficiently cultivated for that Horatian gaiety, which frequently rises to wanton sportiveness, and jests with the very precepts it inculcates. The characteristics of his philosophy are dignified gravity and sound judgment, unalloyed by any thing like pedantry or pretension. But the philosophic medium through which he viewed the vicissitudes of 127 fortune and the follies of mankind, partook more of religious austerity than of epicurean pleasantry; and notwithstanding his general correctness in epistolary composition, even in that respect, he falls, like almost every other modern poet, far short of the energetic precision of the Horatian style. As an epistolary poet, therefore, Ferreira is no more a Portuguese Horace than the two Argensolas are Horaces in Spanish literature.120 But the sound judgment and noble feeling, which may be said to form the moral soul of these poems, are expressed in that natural, unostentatious, pleasing and varied manner, which belongs to the true spirit of the didactic epistle; and the poet’s fancy has scattered as many flowers on the path of ornate wisdom, as are necessary to distinguish it from the high road of moralizing prose. Patriotism and zeal for the national greatness of Portugal give a peculiar colouring to these epistles. In the spirit of this feeling Ferreira extols the union of Portuguese military glory, with the improvement of manners and the cultivation of the understanding; and with regard to cultivation, according to models, he says—one should seek to “excel others in what is best, and only in other respects to imitate.”121 He zealously exhorts his friend Andrade 128 Caminha not to make the muses in Portugal speak any thing but Portuguese.122 He expresses his dissatisfaction at the little encouragement which in his opinion was extended to genius at that period in Portugal. He also inveighs against the perverted appreciation of good and bad, right and wrong.123 Within the limits 129 of his faith, he himself discourses exquisitely on the beauty of reason.124 But the soft language of feeling more particularly glows in those epistles in which he speaks of the joys of friendship and the pleasures of rural life.125 Occasionally Ferreira’s didactic style takes 130 an ironic jocular turn, and then only does it present true Horatian facility.126 Upon the whole if the poetry of reason and sentiment be not more lightly esteemed than the poetry of luxuriant fancy, Ferreira’s epistles must be numbered among the best in modern literature.

Ferreira endeavoured to introduce epigrams, composed after the manner of the ancients, into the poetry 131 of his native country. But he did not succeed in seizing the spirit of the ancient epigram. Ausonius was his model; and the epigrammas and epitaphios which appear among the works of Ferreira are not distinguished either by the tenderness or the energy of the esteemed Greek poems of the same class. Their chief merit is an elegant precision of language conveyed in the metrical form of the Italian octaves; but it is only in a few instances that this elegant precision is in any degree poignant and pleasing.127 The epitaphs are in general dedicated to the memory of men distinguished in Portuguese history.

Ferreira is the author of a tale written in honour of a female national saint, named Colomba, or, according to the popular pronunciation, Comba. Beauty of language also constitutes the whole poetic merit of this piece; and even the introduction, which is long and tedious, sufficiently proves that when Ferreira undertook to celebrate the virtues of St. Colomba he stepped out of his sphere. The subject of the tale is a legend which might have formed the ground-work of a 132 better production. The fair saint, a Portuguese shepherdess, tending her flocks and singing pious songs, becomes the object of the ardent passion of a Moorish king, who discovers her in one of his hunting excursions. The king pursues her until she has no longer any hope of saving herself by flight. In this extremity she implores a rock to open and receive her. The miracle takes place. The disappointed king strikes his lance against the rock, and a clear fountain gushes forth, the waters of which continue to possess miraculous properties. The narrative is, however, much too cold for such a subject; and the description given of the Moorish king is so extremely grotesque, that it is difficult to conceive how a man of Ferreira’s taste could have brought himself to sketch so rude a picture. He has represented the king as being covered with shag like a bear; and in addition to this ornament has given to one side of his head the ear of an ass, and to the other the ear of a dog.128

Ferreira likewise wished to introduce into the dramatic poetry of Portugal a classical style, approximating to that of the ancients as closely as the difference of times and manners would permit. Among his dramatic works there are a tragedy and two comedies. Ferreira’s patriotic feeling induced him to borrow the subject of his tragedy from the history of Portugal; 133 and he selected the story of Inez de Castro, which has since been so frequently handled by Portuguese poets, though before Ferreira’s time it seems to have been untouched. When it is recollected that at the same period the Dominican Bermudez was engaged in writing a Spanish tragedy on the same story, and according to similar principles,129 the conclusion that one of these tragedies in some measure owes its existence to the other is not easily avoided. Both present a striking similarity in invention and arrangement. But neither poet alludes in any way to his contemporary; and even the critics who notice the one work are silent with respect to the other. The prize of tragic art must, however, be awarded to the Inez de Castro of Bermudez. Ferreira’s Castro (for so the tragedy is briefly called by the Portuguese) contains many beautiful passages; but throughout the whole piece there is a deficiency of true pathos; the imitation of the Greek style in form and manner is painfully elaborate; the dramatic, interest of the composition is extremely feeble, and the dignity of tragic poetry is maintained in the language alone. Inez de Castro with her attendant or nurse (ama), the Infante Don Pedro with his secretary, King Alphonso with his three inhuman counsellors, and finally a messenger, are the acting or rather the speaking characters; and a chorus of Coimbrian women are brought into co-operation with these characters in the same manner as in the tragedy of Bermudez. Ferreira, like Bermudez, deviates from the strict laws of the Greek drama only 134 in the neglect of the unities of time and place; and it is evident that this liberty is by both poets only taken from necessity, because they had not sufficient art otherwise to connect the requisite scenes. Both tragedies contain in appearance five acts; but Ferreira has also rendered his fifth act merely an historical appendage. In the opening of Ferreira’s tragedy Inez enters with her attendant, and after some preliminary complaints circumstantially relates the way in which she became connected with the Prince, and through him with the royal family; though it may be presumed that these particulars must have been sufficiently well known to her confidante long before. The scene changes, and the Infante appears accompanied by the female chorus, which Bermudez has more suitably introduced in connection with Inez. The Infante engages in a long discussion with his secretary on the situation of a Prince who has to maintain a conflict between love, and duty and policy. A hymn to love by the chorus closes the first act. The following acts are constructed in a similar manner. At the close of the fourth act the death of Inez is announced by the chorus; and in the fifth a messenger relates the event to the Prince. The lyric passages are the best in the whole tragedy, and among them the hymn to love is particularly beautiful.130 The lines 135 which Inez delivers on her first entrance indicate at once the lyric character of the piece. The dialogue is elegant throughout, but it frequently exhibits over-strained antitheses. The observations occasionally delivered by the chorus, in a metre formed on the model of the sapphic, are sufficiently moral, though they are in general of the commonest character. The decisive scene, in which Inez appears before the king, approaches nearest to true pathos, but never completely attains that height.131 Upon the whole Ferreira 136 was not a tragic poet. He totally failed in seizing the true idea of modern tragedy.

In spirit and in form Ferreira’s two comedies perfectly resemble those of Saa de Miranda. One which is called “Bristo,” (Comedia do Bristo) takes its name from the principal character in the piece. The other is entitled the “Jealous Man,” (Comedia do Cioso). The comedy of Bristo was the production of Ferreira’s early youth. In his dedication to the king, he says that he wrote it during the holidays, in the course of the few days which he was able to snatch from his more serious studies at the university of Coimbra. To this task he was in all probability incited by the example of Saa de Miranda. It may also be presumed that at a subsequent period, Ferreira gave a finer polish to this comedy, to which Portuguese writers usually refer, when they wish to prove how admirably their native language is adapted to light and elegant prose. But it is not merely in this philological point of 137 view that the merits of this work ought to be estimated. In facility, precision and elegance of dialogue, it surpasses the comedies of Saa de Miranda, and many which in other respects are justly ranked among the best in modern literature. The delineation of character, so far as it goes, is natural and decided: indeed some of the characters, among which is a hectoring profligate knight of Rhodes, who resembles the ostentatious soldiers of Plautus, are particularly well sustained. In the Comedia do Cioso, the principal character, though somewhat overcharged, is strikingly sketched. Both dramas contain some comic scenes; but they are upon the whole as deficient in real comic force as they are overburthened with common place morality; and that morality too, as in the comedies of Saa de Miranda, is conveyed in tedious soliloquies.

But the public favour which the court conferred on the regular dramas of Ferreira, in common with those of Saa de Miranda, and the rude compositions of Gil Vicente, may be regarded as one of the circumstances which operated to prevent the formation of a national drama in Portugal. For the rise, as in Spain, of a national party, which might rouse and incite a poet to advance from the point at which Gil Vicente had stopped, became now much more difficult. Thus the art of dramatic invention and composition long wavered amidst heterogeneous forms, until the Portuguese poets who wished to write for the theatre, had no alternative but to become imitators of the Spanish authors who had preceded them, or entirely to renounce the formation 138 of any thing like a national drama. No Portuguese Lope de Vega arose; and Ferreira’s name was only preserved in the recollection of the learned.


After having perused with critical reflection the history of Portuguese poetry and eloquence, from the introduction of the Italian style to the present point, the reader will be prepared to recognize the rank which Camoens holds among the poets of his country. Respecting this most celebrated of the Portuguese poets, indeed almost the only one among them who has obtained any celebrity beyond the limits of his native country, all the writers of the classic school of Saa de Miranda, Diogo Bernardes excepted, are silent, which is a sufficient proof that they did not include him in their party. But the public voice of Portuguese criticism, combined with the general national approbation, has long since elevated him above those who neglected to mention his name, though they were always ready to bestow praise on each other. Camoens, it is true, was a poor adventurer, wandering in India, at the period when Ferreira, Andrade Caminha, and other contemporary writers were setting the poetic fashion at the brilliant court of Lisbon. But the poems which he produced previously to his departure for India, approximate in a striking degree to the classic works of the school of Saa de Miranda; and hence it is probable that the influence 139 of that school, and of the older Portuguese poetry, may have operated in an equal degree on his genius. This relationship of Camoens with all parties in the polite literature of his native country, will be placed in the clearest point of view by introducing him after Ferreira, and before the other poets, who hand in hand with the latter pursued the newly opened course. Thus the genius of Camoens, as the first of Portuguese poets, may be considered conjointly with his merits as a poet in the spirit of the age in which he lived.

CAMOENS.

The biography of Luis de Camões, or Camoens, again brings to recollection that period in which the poets of Portugal considered their character very imperfectly maintained, if their real life did not prove a faithful mirror of the poetic joys and sorrows embodied in their works. Camoens was born at Lisbon, probably in the year 1524. His parents, as it appears, were not rich; but they belonged to the class of ancient nobility, and they were enabled to give their son an education which facilitated his entrance on the career of military and civic honor. From his father, who was captain of a vessel, and who lost his life in shipwreck on the coast of India, it is probable that Camoens heard many stories, which were calculated to inspire him with a taste for adventure and daring enterprize. Of the history of his early youth no remarkable particulars are 140 recorded. He attended the university of Coimbra, where he acquired a fund of historical and mythological knowledge. Some of his elegies and sonnets which have descended to posterity, seem to have been written at this period, though it does not appear that those productions gained for him the friendship of Ferreira, and other contemporaries of eminent talent, who were about the same time studying at Coimbra. It is probable that these young men, who had joined in a mutual and earnest endeavour to attain classic correctness, anticipated nothing extraordinary from the ardent Camoens, who adopted the new style, but did not disdain the old, and whose fancy was too restless to submit to the didactic controul of the judgment. On quitting the university Camoens returned to Lisbon, but with what design is not mentioned by Portuguese authors, nor has any conjecture been formed respecting the views of success which he might have had in that city. He soon, however, became an object of public notoriety through his imprudent conduct in gallantry, which, next to poetry, at that time engrossed his thoughts. The particulars of a love affair, in which he became involved, are not accurately known; and, therefore, how far with respect to it, he was to blame, cannot now be ascertained. It however appears, that the object of his regard was named Catharina de Attayda, and that she was a dama do paço, (lady of honor) at the court. Either on account of this lady, or of some other circumstance which operated unfavourably for the 141 romantic poet, he was banished from Lisbon; and with this event commences the second part of the life of this extraordinary man.

Thus cut off in the age of aspiring pretension and glowing enthusiasm, from the hope of advancing by the course usually open to youthful ambition, Camoens remained for some time tranquilly at Santarem, the place of his exile, in the neighbourhood of Lisbon. There instead of considering what was now necessary to be done with a view to his future welfare, he occupied himself in writing verses, which have been handed down to posterity, but which only served to fix more deeply a passion the object of which was still near him. With a caprice not uncommon in such a state of feeling, Camoens, who cherished at once romantic ideas of patriotism, and indignant emotions of disgust, suddenly changed the whole system of his life. He became a soldier, and served against the Moors as a volunteer on board the Portuguese fleet in the Mediterranean. To be at once a hero and a poet was now the object of his ambition. Whenever time and opportunity permitted, he composed verses, which often, particularly those of the lyric and elegiac class, had for their subject the recollection of his hopeless passion. Whether he had at this period clearly conceived the plan of his national heroic poem, or whether he was actually engaged in its execution, are questions which, like almost every other fact relative to the history of this poet’s talent, remain enveloped in doubt. It is known, however, that he combated the enemies of his country in a naval battle 142 fought off Ceuta. During this action, in which he eminently distinguished himself, he received a gun-shot wound in consequence of which he lost the sight of his right eye. He now hoped to obtain, in the character of a hero, that reward which he had failed to acquire as a poet. He returned to Lisbon. But no individual at court took any active interest in his welfare. All his efforts to gain an honourable competence were unsuccessful; and he was now verging on the age of maturity. More dissatisfied, and yet more proud than ever, he loudly accused his country of ingratitude, while at the same time his poetic effusions prove that his heart overflowed with the warmest feelings of national attachment. At last, determined to leave for ever a land to which his heart was still bound by the ties of another passion besides patriotism, he embarked in the year 1553, at the age of twenty-nine, for India. That his thankless country should not have even his bones, was the sentiment which, on his departure, his indignant feelings prompted him to exclaim in the words of Scipio:—Ingrata patria, non possidebis ossa mea!

From this period the life of Camoens exhibits a chain of successive adventures and calamities; but fate watched over him with miraculous care, and seemed to rescue him from every danger in order that he might complete his poetic career. The squadron with which he sailed to India consisted of four ships. Three were lost in a storm, but Camoens arrived on board the fourth, in the port of Goa. From this circumstance he augured that fortune was now about to smile on him. 143 He soon found, however, that employment was not to be obtained at Goa, and he entered as a volunteer in a military corps, forming part of an expedition which the Portuguese viceroy was fitting out for the aid of an Indian prince. On the arrival of the troops at the place of their destination, a great portion of the Portuguese fell a sacrifice to the insalubrity of the climate; but Camoens returned in safety to Goa after the object of the expedition had been attained. In the situation in which he then stood, there remained for him no other alternative than to embark in a new expedition which was about to sail for the Red Sea to attack the Arabian corsairs. At the island of Ormus, where he passed the winter, Camoens again found leisure to indulge in the workings of his imagination. His mind gave a poetic colouring to every thing which he saw or heard; and the ardour of his patriotism continued to increase in proportion as he became more intimately acquainted with the theatre of the Portuguese atchievements in India. But many circumstances which came within his observation induced him also to indulge in satirical sports of wit. The government of Goa had hitherto done nothing for him. He did not, however, try to promote his interest by flattery. On the contrary, he ridiculed the disparates na India, (follies in India) as he unceremoniously styled some portion of the proceedings of the government of Goa. The viceroy, who took particular umbrage at this satire, banished Camoens to the Chinese island of Macao. The fate of the unfortunate hero and poet was now more deplorable 144 than ever. He however gained permission to quit Macao and visit the Molucca islands, where he collected fresh materials for pictorial poetry; but he could no longer, as the lines beneath his portrait express, “bear in one hand the sword, in the other the pen.132” He was glad to accept the very unpoetic and unheroic post of provedor mòr dos defuntos, (administrator of the effects of deceased persons) by the emoluments of which he was enabled to subsist. Whenever circumstances permitted he turned his attention to his heroic poem, and thus indemnified himself in the ideal world for the part which he was compelled to perform in real life. At length, on the arrival of a new viceroy at Goa, he obtained permission to return to that island, but in the passage thither was shipwrecked on the coast of Camboya. With difficulty he saved his life, and also his poem, the manuscript of which, soaked with sea-water, he brought to land. This circumstance is noticed in the work itself.133 The story of his swimming ashore with his poem in one hand, while he supported himself 145 by the action of the other, and thus saving his Lusiadas as Cæsar saved his commentaries, has obtained currency through the statement of a German writer, who seems to have misunderstood a very intelligible passage of a Portuguese author.134 On his return to Goa, Camoens was well received; but he had not long enjoyed the smiles of fortune, when another change took place in the viceroyship. The new viceroy lent a ready ear to the enemies of the poet, who was now publicly accused of malversation in the discharge of the office which he had filled at Macao. Camoens was thrown into prison, and there left to work out his justification. It appears he fully cleared himself of the charges which had been brought against him; but he was still detained because he was unable to satisfy the demands of his creditors. A poem, which he addressed to the viceroy, at length procured his liberation. After experiencing many other disagreeable adventures he ardently wished to return to Europe, but it was not in his power to defray the expence of his passage. Even when prepared to embark he was stopped by a demand for the re-payment of a loan, and was nearly reduced to despair, but several liberal individuals stepped forward and provided the 146 sum necessary for his relief. Finally, in the year 1569, Camoens, after an absence of nearly sixteen years, arrived at Lisbon, from the rich shores of India, well in health, but in a state of the most abject poverty.

The third part of the history of this ill-fated poet is the most melancholy. On his return he found Lisbon ravaged by the plague. During this calamity it was not to be expected that much regard should be paid to poetry, and the last hope of Camoens rested on his poem, the only treasure which he had brought with him from India. Considerable changes had likewise taken place at the court. King Sebastian was concerting the plan of his unfortunate expedition to Morocco. In so romantic an enterprise Camoens was predisposed to take an interest, and it served to stimulate his zeal in dedicating his poem to the youthful sovereign. The dedication was graciously received, but the poet obtained no other reward than a wretched pension, just sufficient to mark but not to relieve his misery. The honour was conceded to him of constantly accompanying the court, while he wanted means to procure the necessaries of life. It is said that a faithful slave who had accompanied him to Europe, begged in the streets of Lisbon at night, in order to enable the poet, whose name was now celebrated throughout Portugal and Spain, to appear decently in public during the day. The last blow which the patriotic heart of Camoens received, was the fatal issue of the African expedition. The poet’s hitherto robust constitution now sank under the pressure of sorrow and indigence. His last hope had vanished, and overwhelmed with affliction, he 147 withdrew himself from the world. A few monks were the last individuals with whom he maintained any intercourse. Shortly before his death, he is said to have written a letter, which, if it be genuine, proves that he himself considered his misfortunes unparalleled. He styles it a sort of presumptuousness to attempt to oppose that fate, which had at length compressed all his sorrows within the narrow limits of a sick-bed. It appears that he ended his life in an hospital, in the year 1579, at the age of fifty-five. It was not until sixteen years after his decease that the spot where his ashes repose, was distinguished by a monument erected by one of his admirers. During the same year the learned Rodriguez Lobo Zurupita, who must not be confounded with the poet Rodriguez Lobo, published the first collection of the hitherto scattered poems of Camoens.135 148

The life of Camoens constitutes an essential part of the history of Portuguese poetry. With the exception of Dante no poet of the first rank has in his works so fully represented his own inward feelings combined with every extraordinary circumstance that came within his observation. His poems can only be perfectly intelligible to the reader who never loses sight of the poet; for his character is precisely theirs. But the poetry of Camoens must not on this account be confounded with the self-subjective effusions of certain enthusiasts who express their feelings clearly enough in verse, though not in poetry, except, perhaps, in their own opinion. Among the poets of all ages Camoens is one of the most eminent; and though to a foreigner it may at first sight seem strange that he has permanently obtained in the literature of his country the surname of O Grande (the Great), a title given in history only to a few distinguished sovereigns, yet in the unbounded homage which the Portuguese render to the name of the man, who during his life was suffered to languish in penury, the citizen of the world will readily recognize a general desire to compensate for the injustice with which he was treated by his contemporaries. On this side of the Pyrenees, indeed, however frequently the name of Camoens may be mentioned and written, as a poet he is still scarcely known except by name. But to form a just appreciation of his 149 merit, he must, like Homer, be viewed in the spirit of his nation and his age. It was the ambition of Camoens to be to the Portuguese what Homer was to the Greeks, the first and at the same time the most national of poets; and if he did not entirely attain his end, he nevertheless so far approached it that no other modern poet has been able to combine all the national interests of his country, with the fulness of poetic spirit exhibited in the Lusiad. But it must be recollected that at the period when Camoens wrote, the more correct style, formed on the ancient and Italian models, had just penetrated into Portuguese literature, and that it had not yet taken deep root. Under these circumstances, Camoens, in sketching the plan of his national Epopœia, stood, as it were, severed from the age in which he lived. Modern literature contained no similar work, and, generally speaking, no epic poem worthy of perusal, except the chivalrous compositions of Bojardo and Ariosto. From Trissino Camoens could learn nothing; from Bojardo and Ariosto he might have learned much, but assuredly not the spirit and style of a serious national heroic poem; and Camoens was numbered with the dead before Tasso’s Jerusalem Delivered appeared in print.136 Camoens was the first modern who succeeded in the production of a serious heroic poem. 150 But with all his endeavours to attain classic perfection, he was a Portuguese in the spirit of his age, and too good a patriot to wish to be any thing else. He rose to the height at which he aimed only by flights; having reached it he sank, rose to it again, and again fell from it. He was unable to produce a classically perfect whole of any extent. But the more beautiful passages of his poems, particularly of his Lusiad, will stand the test of the most rigid criticism according to the rules of pure poetry and classic excellence.

Every style of poetic composition of which he had formed a definite idea was attempted by Camoens. But the Lusiad rises so vastly above his other works, and bears such powerful and various traces of the peculiar character of his poetry, that all his lesser compositions must be considered merely as inferior scions sprung from the same root.

The Lusiad of Camoens is a heroic poem; but so essentially different in the unity of the epic plan from all other heroic poems, that to avoid falling into the unwarrantable misconception with which this noble work is every where judged except in Portugal and Spain, it is necessary in considering it, to drop the ordinary rules of comparison, and to proceed upon the general idea of epic poetry unmodified by any prepossession for known models.137 Camoens struck out a totally new path in 151 the region of epopœia. The style of his poem is indeed formed chiefly on the ancient models, and in his diction he has imitated the elegant stanzas of the Italians; but the epic idea of the work is entirely his own; and the kind of composition, which forms its groundwork, was something entirely new in poetic literature. The object of Camoens was to recount in epic strains, with pure poetic feeling, the atchievements of the heroes and great men of Portugal in general, not of any individual in particular, and consequently not of Vasco da Gama, who is commonly considered the hero of the Lusiad. He was not to be satisfied with drawing up a poetically adorned official report, like the Spanish Araucana, written at a later period by Ercilla.138 The title which Camoens gave to his heroic poem sufficiently denotes the nature of its subject. He named it Os Lusiadas, that is to say, the Lusitanians, or Portuguese. This choice of a title was doubtless influenced by the prevailing taste of the Portuguese poets of that age, to whom the common name of their nation appeared unpoetic, and also by the popular notion that the favourite term Lusitania was derived from a 152 certain mythological hero, named Lusus, who visited Portugal in company with Ulysses, and who conjointly with the Greek warrior, built the city of Lisbon (Ulyssipolis). Camoens is not to blame if the editors of his poem, wishing to reconcile its somewhat unusual title with the names of other epic compositions, have converted the Lusiadas into the Lusiada.139 But the poem may be designated by its common title without offence to its spirit or its subject. At the same time it must not be forgotten that the Lusiad is a totally different kind of heroic poem from all those epopees, whether successful or unsuccessful, in which a single hero is the main spring of the whole epic action. According to the plan which Camoens sketched for his national poem, he was enabled to dispense with the choice of a hero whose atchievements should throw those of all others into the shade, and form the sole source of epic interest. To this plan, however, an essential beauty of epic poetry was necessarily sacrificed. The composition lost the advantage of those little groupes of characters which would otherwise have been assembled around the principal character. From its plan, therefore, the Lusiad cannot be accounted such a model of epic perfection as the Iliad, or even as the Æneid, in which that perfection more faintly presented is still to be found. But as a narrative poem, deriving a total effect from the union of its parts, the Lusiad 153 may be considered an epic whole, and consequently, a poem entirely different in kind from the Metamorphoses of Ovid, or even the Divina Comedia of Dante. A poetic and epic grouping of all the great and most interesting events in the annals of his native country, was what Camoens wished to accomplish. He therefore very happily selected the event which constitutes the most brilliant epoch in Portuguese history, as a common keeping point for all the different parts of his epic picture. The discovery of the passage to India by Vasco da Gama was certainly not an heroic atchievement in the usual sense of the term, but in that age, when such adventures bordered on the incredible, it was a truly heroic enterprize. Camoens made this event the groundwork of the epic unity of his poem. But in that unity Vasco da Gama is merely the spindle round which the thread of the narrative is wound. His dignity, as the leader of his intrepid countrymen, renders him in some degree conspicuous; but in other respects he is not distinguished, and the interest of the whole poem depends no more on him than on his companions. The heroes who shine with the greatest lustre in the Lusiad, even the Constable, Nuno Alvarez Pereira, who is the most remarkable among them, are all introduced in what are styled the episodes. But the Lusiad has in reality no episode, except the short story of the giant Adamastor. Another portion of the work, which is commonly called an episode, is a poetic sketch from the ancient history of Portugal, and belongs as essentially to the whole as any of the other principal parts of the great picture. It even occupies nearly one half of the 154 poem. It is precisely on these parts, called episodes, that the epic grandeur of the whole composition rests; and in them the finest passages of the poem occur. Unless the idea of the plan of the Lusiad be rightly seized, the composition will appear in a false light on whatever side it may be viewed.

The Lusiad, designated as a whole, may therefore be termed an epic national picture of Portuguese glory, something greater than a mere gallery of poetic stories, but less than a perfect epopee. The principles of the composition are exceedingly simple; but that they may not be misconceived, it is necessary to understand the epic machinery of the poem, as the poet himself would have it understood, and as it was understood in the spirit of the age by his contemporaries. Camoens was too truly a poet to exclude from his Lusiad the charm of the marvellous and the co-operation of supernatural beings. But he was either accidentally less happy than Tasso in the choice of epic machinery for a modern heroic poem, or he purposely preferred the Greek mythology as the most beautiful. Nothing prevented him from assigning the necessary parts in his machinery to the good and bad agents of popular christian belief; and the subject seems particularly calculated for such an application as the diffusion of christianity by the discoveries and conquests of the Portuguese is in the poem itself made the highest merit of the nation. Camoens, however, appears to have been of opinion that an epic poem, such as he had planned, should be adorned with learning, and particularly mythological learning; and besides, by the introduction of the 155 Greek deities the whole composition seemed to be raised to the true poetic region of the ancient epopœia. Thus there remains the singular incongruity of the Greek mythology and the atchievements of the Portuguese christians, who, on no occasion neglect to act and discourse in the true spirit of their faith. But in the mind of Camoens this incongruity was removed by the opinion, which he shared in common with his contemporaries, that the machinery in epopœia was merely a poetic figure, and that all the heathen deities might be introduced as allegorical characters, in modern narrative poetry, by the same privilege which enables Cupid to retain his place in the lyric compositions of christian poets, without any theological or literary offence. Thus Camoens allegorically introduced Olympus into his poem. The erroneous opinion which misled the poet does not, it is true, redeem this defect in the poem, though it contributes to cast a veil over it. But if the reader admits this opinion, which he must do in order to understand the poet in his own sense, then will even the offence against taste be found to vanish imperceptibly. This compromise once made, the whole poem becomes not only singular, but even wonderful in its singularity, particularly where Vasco da Gama and his companions sport with Thetis and her nymphs allegorically, and yet in good earnest; and the historical material begins, as if suddenly ennobled by magic, to shine in the full light of poetry.

The Lusiad assumes a mythological character immediately after the introductory stanzas. Vasco da Gama with his squadron has already doubled the Cape 156 of Good Hope; and steering along the eastern coast of Africa, he approaches the Indian seas. The gods are then assembled on Olympus, to deliberate on the fate of India. Venus and Bacchus form two parties, the former in favour of the Portuguese, and the latter against them. In this application of the allegory, the poet, doubtless, gratified his patriotic pride; for Portugal was, even by the Spaniards, styled the native land of love; and temperance in the use of wine, was a national virtue of the Portuguese. In order to give a still higher import to this allegory, Venus is made to consider the Portuguese as modern Romans, and to entertain for them the same regard which she formerly extended to the people of ancient Rome: but Bacchus recollects his expedition in India, and is indignant at the Portuguese, whose enterprize threatens to eclipse his glory. Among the gods who declare themselves friendly to the Portuguese, Mars is particularly conspicuous. Meanwhile Vasco da Gama’s fleet touches at several places on the coast of eastern Africa. Vasco endeavours to enter into amicable relations with the King of Mombaza; but Bacchus transforms himself into a Mahometan priest, and by treacherous tokens of friendship plans the destruction of the Portuguese in Mombaza. Venus, however, discovers the treachery in time to prevent it. She appeals to Jupiter. Her prayers for the Portuguese fleet are heard. Mercury warns Vasco da Gama in a dream, and Vasco escapes the danger that is prepared for him. He sails onward to the African kingdom of Melinda. The King of Melinda, though also a Mahometan, gives a hospitable reception to the Portuguese, whose courage and national glory 157 excite his warmest admiration. Here the poet connects the thread of those narratives which have been erroneously regarded as the episodes of the Lusiad. At the request of the King of Melinda, Vasco da Gama relates the most interesting incidents of Portuguese history, and closes his patriotic narrative with a description of his own voyage up to the period of his arrival at Melinda. The King of Melinda now becomes the enthusiastic friend of the Portuguese; and here the second half of the poem commences. Vasco da Gama proceeds on his voyage with the pilots, who are to shew him the nearest course to India. Bacchus, however, descends to the bottom of the sea, and implores the gods and goddesses of Neptune’s kingdom, to assist him in destroying the Portuguese fleet before it shall reach India. A dreadful storm arises, and seems to promise the accomplishment of Bacchus’s wish: but at the critical moment Venus again rescues her favourites, and the Portuguese arrive in safety at the kingdom of Calicut, on the coast of Malabar. Vasco da Gama is at first very favourably received by the Zamorim, or Prince of Calicut. This opportunity is seized by Camoens to supply a sort of supplement to the poetic narrative of the events of Portuguese history; for he makes Paulo da Gama, the brother of the admiral, explain to the Catual, or Indian governor of Calicut, the historical tapestries and pictures on board the Portuguese ships. At length, Bacchus, who is not yet weary of playing the part of a Mussulman, for the annoyance of the Portuguese, stirs up such a misunderstanding between Vasco da Gama and the Zamorim of Calicut, that the 158 projected commercial treaty between Calicut and Portugal is set aside, and the Portuguese fleet is once more exposed to the risk of destruction. But the grand object of the voyage is now attained, and Vasco da Gama weighs anchor, and directs his course back to Europe. During the homeward voyage Venus prepares for the enterprizing navigators a brilliant festival on an enchanted island in the great ocean, where goddesses and sea nymphs, wounded by Cupid’s darts, become enamoured of the Portuguese who land on the island. The voluptuous magic festival, at which the goddess Thetis, or Tethys, (for both names denote the same deity), becomes the bride of Vasco da Gama, affords the poet the last opportunity of completing his picture of Portuguese national glory; for a prophetic nymph relates the most conspicuous atchievements of the Portuguese commanders in India, and Thetis taking Vasco to the top of a high mountain, explains to him on a magic globe the geographical positions of the different countries.

All the objections which may be urged against an epic composition of this kind, are so very obvious, that from a mere sketch of the contents of the Lusiad, it is impossible to conceive how a poet, even of the most uncommon talents, could form a grand and beautiful whole on a plan at once so trivial and so irregular. But the plan of the composition of this poem resembles a scaffolding, which is surrounded and concealed by the beauty and grandeur of the building; and which serves to connect the parts in a singular kind of union, yet has no share in producing the unity of the effect. The 159 unity of effect, and consequently of the poem, rests wholly and solely on the execution of the plan, out of which only a poet like Camoens could have created a Lusiad. But the historian of Portuguese poetry, who is not inclined to concede the just claims which this poem possesses on the admiration of all ages, must present to his readers another and a totally different analysis of the work from that which has just been given. A suitable opportunity will thus be afforded for more particularly noticing the beauties with which the Lusiad abounds, and the faults in which it is not deficient.

The introductory stanzas mark with sufficient precision the tone which the poem maintains to its close. “Arms and the renowned men, who from the western shore of Lusitania, penetrated beyond Taprobana by seas never before navigated; who amidst frightful dangers and warfare accomplished more than could be expected from human powers, and in a remote region of the world founded and raised a new kingdom: also the glorious atchievements of those kings, who extended their faith and their dominion, and spread terror through the wicked regions of Africa and Asia; and others whose glorious deeds have raised them above the laws of mortality;” are announced as the objects of the poet’s strains.140 160 Then follows an effusion which has more of a patriotic than a poetic character, combined with a panegyrical dedication to King Sebastian, containing no less than sixteen stanzas. The narrative which commences with the nineteenth stanza opens amidst the course of the events, and in a truly epic strain.141 The reader may 161 now readily perceive that he must not expect to find in the Lusiad a work written in the spirit and the style of classic antiquity. It betrays indeed a certain degree of loquacity which seems to run counter to the effect of the lofty epic. But there is something captivating in the enthusiasm of the poet’s manner; his patriotism rouses sympathetic feelings; we expect to find his poem the offspring of an overflowing heart; we are charmed with the natural, elegant and noble language of the work; and as soon as the narrative begins, the poetic point of view seems likewise to be fixed. The mythological machinery which Camoens conceived to be indispensably necessary to epic dignity, forms a peculiar kind of ornament, for which indeed the reader is prepared from the commencement of the poem. The description of the council of the gods on Olympus, with which the narrative opens, though somewhat at variance with the ancient costume, is nevertheless pleasing and not devoid of dignity. Here the poetic spirit of Camoens is evinced in some picturesque comparisons in which he vies even with Homer. All these similies bear the impress of the poet’s powers of active perception and representation. They are neither far fetched nor common, and they abound in poetic truth and energy.142 In the forty-fourth stanza, Vasco da 162 Gama is for the first time mentioned, and in few words characterized as a man of “proud and lofty spirit, on whom fortune ever smiled.”143 But there soon occur passages in which the poetic light of the representation is totally extinguished.144 Passages of this kind are afterwards frequently repeated, and their prosaic dryness is the more displeasing when contrasted with the deep poetic spirit which pervades the more beautiful parts of the composition. The description of the first engagement between the Portuguese of Gama’s fleet and the treacherous Moors of Mosambique, affords the poet another opportunity of displaying his talent in picturesque comparison. But it becomes obvious that 163 this talent must have been formed on the model of Ariosto rather than on that of Homer. There occur indeed in his representations of the tumult of the battle, some imitations of Ariostic exuberance, which do not strictly harmonize with the prevailing style of the Lusiad.145

In the second canto the singularity of the mythological machinery becomes still more remarkable, when at Mombassa, on the coast of Africa, Bacchus assumes the disguise of a Christian priest, and on an enchanted altar goes through the ceremony of the christian worship for the purpose of deceiving the Portuguese.146 164 But the grotesque application of the machinery in this passage, prepares the mind for scenes of a similar character, and thus the comic effect of subsequent parts of the poem is in anticipation softened. The reader who enters into the spirit of the poet becomes unconsciously accustomed to this view of the ancient mythology; and he is even soon reconciled to the incongruity of Vasco da Gama offering up prayers as a christian to Providence, and those prayers being heard by Venus. The description of Venus, who once more intercedes with Jupiter in favour of the Portuguese, resembles Ariosto’s description of Alcina. Here the poet for the first time evinces his predilection for voluptuous pictures of beauty. This charming description may be said to possess a nationally classic character.147 The speech by which Vasco 165 da Gama’s ambassador gains the King of Melinda to the interests of the Portuguese is excellent, and the pompous meeting of the king with Vasco, on board the Portuguese admiral ship, is elegantly and picturesquely described.

At the commencement of the third canto, a new life is infused into the poem. But to try this poetic survey of Portuguese history, as it stands in connection with the whole, by any rule of prosaic verisimilitude, would be to depart from the poetic spirit of the Lusiad. In order to understand the narrative which Vasco da Gama relates to the King of Melinda, it is necessary to possess that knowledge of the events alluded to, which Camoens presumed every Portuguese to possess, but which in all probability could not have been possessed by a sovereign of Melinda. The reader who peruses this narrative without the necessary knowledge of the history of Portugal, will be incapable of appreciating many of the most essential beauties of the Lusiad. In so far as Camoens may be denominated 166 the Portuguese Homer, he is indebted for that title to the poetic epitome he has given of the history of his country; and this epitome is a rapid succession of pictures, which flit away like shadows, before those who are unacquainted with their historical ground work, for the poet evidently expected readers who would be gratified to observe how art was capable of elevating the events of real life to the region of epic invention. This portion of the poem, which extends from the third to the end of the fifth canto, contains passages, which in point of classic elegance leave nothing more to be desired; but even here Camoens has in some instances made an unpoetic display of his erudition. Previously to the narrative of Vasco da Gama, the poet speaks in his own character, and patriotically elevates the Portuguese nation above every other. Vasco’s narrative commences with a cold geographical enumeration of the different countries of Europe, in which the Swedes, Danes, Prussians, Russians, and Livonians are styled estranha gente, (strange people) just as a modern traveller might speak of the Ostiaks and the Samoides. Spain is denominated the head of Europe, and Portugal the crown of that head.148 Viewed in the light of probability, the invectives in which Vasco da Gama at every opportunity indulges 167 against the Mahometans, must be supposed offensive to the King of Melinda; but Camoens, in his patriotic zeal, lost sight of many circumstances which would have claimed the consideration of any other poet. Among the most beautiful passages in these three cantos of the Lusiad, may be numbered the tribute to the memory of Egaz Moniz, the Portuguese Regulus, who, however, ended his career more happily than the Roman consul;149 the description of the battle of Ourique which laid the foundation of the kingdom of Portugal;150 168 the description of the visit of Queen Maria of Spain to her father the King of Portugal, to implore assistance for her husband in his contest with the Moors;151 the 169 relation of the tragical fate of Inez de Castro, which is the most celebrated of all the exquisitely beautiful passages in the Lusiad;152 the description of the 170 sanguinary battle of Aljuabarrota, the greatest victory 171 the Portuguese ever gained over the Castilians:153 and some others, of the like character, which might still be enumerated. The picture of the battle of Aljuabarrota excels all the similar descriptions which occur even in the Lusiad, remarkable as that poem is for such passages. The valiant Nuno Alvares, who by his eloquence and his personal authority, no less than by his courage, saved the political existence of Portugal, shines with such conspicuous lustre at the head of the Portuguese warriors, that he with far more propriety than Vasco da Grama might be denominated the hero of the Lusiad, were it a work which ought to be judged according 172 to the rules usually applied to epic poetry.154 Even in this great battle picture, the finest touches are unquestionably copied from nature, for the poet was no less in his place amidst the tumult of war than in the more tranquil region of the Muses.155 In the continuation 173 of the narrative of the first discoveries of the Portuguese in the east, the particular interest which the poet took in allegoric description is again displayed in a novel manner. The two principal rivers of India, the Indus and the Ganges, are made to appear to King Emmanuel in a dream under the personification of two old men. The representation is truly excellent.156 174

In Vasco da Gama’s narrative of his own voyage, the following passages must always be particularly distinguished: first, the description of the farewell to the Portuguese shore:157 secondly, a sort of didactic episode, consisting of reflexions made by an old man on the vanity of human ambition, quite in the spirit of that true poetry which embraces the whole range of human existence;158 and thirdly, another kind of episode which introduces the giant Adamastor, whom Camoens conjured up from the old world of fable to render him the spirit of the Cape of Good Hope.159 In the description of this part 175 of the voyage, Camoens for the first time uses the freedom of relieving the solemn seriousness of his narrative by some comic touches. Fernaõ Velloso is the humourist among the enterprising followers of Vasco da Gama.160 Camoens also occasionally breaks the poetic 176 tone of the whole description by a display of his mythological and historical pedantry, and by his endeavours to express in a poetic manner things which are totally unpoetic; as for example, in alluding to the day of the departure of the fleet, he says:—“When the eternal orb of light had entered the sign of the Nemæan monster, and when the decaying world in its sixth age, moved feebly and slowly after having observed the sun’s circuitous course repeated fourteen hundred and ninety-seven times.”161 These deformities sometimes injure the beauty of the finest parts of the poem.

The chief portion of the second half of the poem, from the sixth to the tenth canto, is thrown into shade by the first half; and the essential want of a rising interest, weakens the epic character of the whole. But these last five cantos of the Lusiad abound in classically beautiful passages; and that kind of unity at which the poet aimed is on no occasion forgotten. The description of the palace of Neptune and the sea deities in the depths of the ocean is equally charming and novel; though it must be allowed that the portrait of Triton degenerates into the grotesque. In order to 177 omit no opportunity of interweaving into the composition of the Lusiad whatever might shed a poetic lustre on the Portuguese name, Camoens makes Velloso, for the amusement of the ship’s crew, relate the history of the Lusitanian knights, who according to Portuguese tradition, are called Os doze de Inglaterra (the twelve of England.) In the description of the storm which follows, the powerful painting of the dreadful picture once more reveals the poet who had himself passed through like scenes of danger. The same stamp of truth is apparent in the succeeding descriptions of Indian objects, which no great poet, except Camoens, has sketched from nature. The poem is not injured by the long and energetic apostrophe to the European powers, with which the seventh canto commences. According to the view to be taken by a catholic christian, Camoens was justified in extolling the national glory of Portugal above that of other christian nations, on the ground that while the Portuguese by their valour, were extending the dominion of the catholic faith, and had not, for a considerable period waged war against any of the European states, those states were contending against each other, and even in a certain measure against the church of Rome. To strengthen in some degree the poetic probability by a matter of fact, Camoens has introduced, at the period when the intercourse between the Portuguese and the Indian Prince of Calecut commences, a Moor named Monzayde, whose destiny had actually conducted him over land to India. Through this mediator, who speaks Spanish, and who finally becomes a christian, the 178 Indians are made acquainted with the power of the Portuguese and Spanish arms. This Moor is also the interpreter, who, in the eighth canto assists Paulo da Gama in explaining the historical pictures and embroideries to the Indian ambassador. In point of poetic merit, this supplement to the abstract of the history of Portugal is far inferior to the narrative in the third and fifth cantos:—but Camoens could find no other means of accomplishing his purpose; for he was equally reluctant to omit anything which he conceived to belong to his pictures of Portuguese national glory, or to crowd too many of the events of former times into one part of his poem. None of these historical descriptions, which occupy a large portion of the eighth canto, form finished pictures; they are mere sketches, and are, in general, deficient in poetic warmth; but the ninth canto makes ample amends for this fault. The magic festival, which Venus prepares to recreate her beloved navigators after the fatigues they have encountered, is boldly conceived and charmingly executed; and in this part of the composition the poet’s fancy has revelled with evident delight. Camoens, like all the Portuguese poets of his age, next to the indulgence of heroic feeling and all powerful patriotism, was fond of luxuriantly pourtraying the passion of love. Except the fate of Inez de Castro, and the atchievements of Nuno Alvarez Pereira at the battle of Aljubarota, the poet has executed no portion of his poem with such decided predilection as the visit of the navigators to the enchanted island; and to no other part of the poem is so much space allotted in proportion to the whole. The long 179 description of the preparations for the luxuriant festival, and of the festival itself, which commences at the eighteenth stanza of the ninth, and extends into the tenth canto, is full of picturesque beauty. Its great prolixity however, must, even according to the incorrect plan which Camoens followed, be accounted a defect in the composition. But the reader, like the poet himself, soon forgets every thing except the seductive painting, which sometimes, it must be confessed, only just respects the boundaries of decorum, which yet upon the whole offends no elevated feeling, and which has not been surpassed by any later poet in the same style. The first idea of the island of love, on which Camoens makes Venus entertain the Portuguese navigators, seems borrowed from Ariosto, but Ariosto’s description of the magic gardens of Alcina scarcely affords a groundwork for the scenes and situations in the Lusiad. There is, however, little room to doubt that Tasso, when he trod in Ariosto’s footsteps in order to describe the abode of Armida, availed himself of the description of Camoens. In the tone of frank simplicity with which the festival is announced, the character of the poet is again manifested. It is described as merely “a refreshment for restoring the exhausted strength of the navigators; some interest for those fatigues which render short life still shorter.”162 Venus, in her car drawn by doves, descends 180 from Mount Ida in quest of Cupid. She finds him with a throng of loves employed in forging arrows. The fuel used in the process of forging is allegorically and whimsically described to be human hearts, and the red-hot arrows are cooled in tears. Cupid and his little deputies are directed to wound a number of goddesses and sea nymphs, so that every individual on board Vasco da Gama’s fleet, shall on landing on the magic island, find himself in the situation of a happy lover. Meanwhile Venus adorns the island with the loveliest charms of nature.163 On first landing, the navigators 181 know not where they are, but they are soon satisfied with the pleasing reality without concerning themselves about the nature of the miracle which has transported them to a terrestrial heaven.164 When the festival is 182 drawing to a close, the poet for the first time explains the object of the fiction, by stating it to be an allegorical representation of the happiness which is the reward of courage and virtue. After this cold manner of dissolving the enchantment, the unprejudiced reader feels little interest in the conclusion of the poem. The stanzas in which the prophetic nymph celebrates the future atchievements of the Portuguese are historical fragments, the connection of which must be studied in order to form a just estimate of their poetic merits and demerits. The geographic supplement which is put into the mouth of Thetis is still colder, notwithstanding the singular idea of the globe which hovers in the air, and which exalts the miracle of the geographic lecture. But thus is the sympathy of the reader the more powerfully excited by the passage towards the end of the Lusiad, where Camoens speaks of himself; which he had refrained from doing in the preceding part of the work. As he approached the close of his labour he was impressed with the conviction that no earthly happiness awaited him; and now saw “his years descending, and the transition from summer to autumn near at hand; his genius frozen by the coldness of fate, and he himself borne down by sorrow into the stream of black oblivion and eternal sleep.”165 His heart then pours fourth the epiphonema of the poem, consisting of 183 a didactic apostrophe to his sovereign, full of loyalty, but not less abounding in honest zeal for truth, justice and virtue.

An epic poem so powerfully imbued with intensity of feeling and character as the Lusiad, naturally calls to mind Dante’s Divina Comedia, and Klopstock’s Messiah. But the Lusiad bears in other respects no more resemblance to the Messiah, than to every other great poem in which the beauties make amends for the exercise of indulgence towards numerous faults. The Lusiad presents a greater similarity to the work of Dante. Both poems are epic, though neither are epopees in the strict sense of the term. Both are singular, but truly poetic in invention; and in both the full stream of purest poetry is incessantly broken by false learning and various unpoetic excrescences. But with respect to invention the Divina Comedia is, in its original plan, trivial, and only becomes grand by the poetic filling up of the vast divisions of hell, purgatory and heaven: the Lusiad is more poetic in its outline, but not so rich in its internal parts. Finally, the two poems are distinguished by the kind of feeling which prevails in each and by a total difference of style. Dante introduced all the variety of the terrestrial world, of which he had perfect command, into the mystic region of a celestial and subterraneous existence, in which he, as a Christian, placed faith; and the whole plan of his extraordinary poem has for its object the pious apotheosis of his beloved Beatrice. Camoens glowed with patriotism and heroism; and to avoid weakening the patriotic and nationally heroic character 184 of his poem, by the force of religious interest, he preferred introducing into his terrestrial fiction the heaven of mythology, because he felt that it afforded him the finest imagery. Dante’s style is throughout energetic, frequently rude, and always characteristic of the spirit of the extraordinary writer, who stood alone, and who in a great measure himself created the language in which he expressed his feelings. Camoens, like Ariosto, was wholly the man of his age and his country; a fact which is sufficiently evident from the delicate and luxuriant style, which he partly borrowed from Ariosto, and which he only cultivated as far as was necessary for the expression of the serious epopæia.166


The other poetic works of Camoens, appeared even in the eyes of the poet himself, when compared with the Lusiad, merely secondary effusions of his feelings and his imagination. It appears, as far as the point can be ascertained, that he never collected them himself, and many may therefore be lost. Among those productions which were collected and published after 185 the death of Camoens, by his admirer Lobo de Soropita, under the affected title of Rhythmas, there are several which were not printed from the best and latest copies. Some other poems which escaped the notice of the first collectors, and which have only been included by modern writers among the miscellaneous productions of Camoens, may be found in a somewhat different form among the poems of the pious Diogo Bernardes. This writer, who was a contemporary and admirer of Camoens, and who was the first among the celebrated Portuguese poets of that age, to render justice to the preponderating genius of the author of the Lusiad, is now, in spite of all his piety, accused of gross plagiarism on that author. The writer of a general history of modern poetry and eloquence has, however, no occasion to take part in the controversy respecting these problematic works; for none of the disputed poems are of a kind which was new in Portuguese literature; and among the miscellaneous remains of Camoens are many pieces of similar species, the authenticity of which is undisputed.167 186

But the miscellaneous poems of Camoens, are calculated to involve the literary historian in another kind of embarrassment. They are, if not extremely numerous, at least sufficiently various; and among the number are many so poetically conceived, and admirably executed, that to give merely to one of each class of these minor poems that kind of detailed consideration which it has been thought necessary to bestow on the Lusiad, would be to incur the risk of converting the history of Portuguese poetry into a compendium of the history of the poetic works of Camoens. In every species of poetic composition then practised in Portugal, Camoens has left specimens of no common merit; and in some of those species his example has formed and fixed the favourite style for his native country. Indeed a careful perusal of the various productions of the author of the Lusiad, is alone sufficient to afford a summary notion of the whole range of Portuguese poetry in the sixteenth century. This will account for the preponderating authority still conceded to the works of this poet in the polite literature of his country. To that authority Portuguese critics and writers are always disposed to defer in discussing the merits of any poem; and when they wish to select a model in any particular kind of poetic composition, they invariably turn first to the works of Camoens. The predilection of the Portuguese for the greatest of their poets, has rendered them unjust towards the merits of others who have not chosen to compose in his manner. But in the poetry of Camoens the national style is combined with correctness and elegance, precisely in the manner which suited the taste 187 of his country: and Portuguese taste has never risen above the degree of cultivation to which Camoens attained.

In sonnets the fancy of Camoens was particularly prolific. Like Tasso, he seems throughout the whole of his life to have made it a rule to compose sonnets as long as he could compose verse. The number of his sonnets which have been preserved is three hundred and one. Some appear to be occasional sonnets; and of these several are written in fictitious names. It is known that, in India, Camoens was frequently applied to for poetic aid in affairs of the heart; for according to the spirit of the age a lover could not more elegantly recommend himself to the good graces of a fair lady than by the composition of a tender sonnet; and a poet, like Camoens, who was himself so often poetically occupied with his amatory feelings, would find but little difficulty in celebrating another lady besides his own mistress. Most of his sonnets have love for their theme, and they are of very unequal merit: some are full of Petrarchic tenderness and grace, and moulded with classic correctness; others are impetuous and romantic, or disfigured by false learning, or full of tedious pictures of the conflicts of passion with reason. Upon the whole, however, no Portuguese poet has so correctly seized the character of the sonnet as Camoens. Without apparent effort, merely by the ingenious contrast of the first eight with the six last fines, he knew how to make these little effusions convey a poetic unity of ideas and impressions, after the model of the best Italian sonnets, in so natural a manner, that the first lines or quartets 188 of the sonnet excite a soft expectation, which is harmoniously fulfilled by the tercets or six last lines.168 In this way he has occasionally imparted a romantically beautiful effect to well known stories in the sonnet form, by the introduction of a single tender idea at the close.169 Among these sonnets there are likewise some of a moral and religious character. 189

In the series of the minor poems of Camoens, the sonnets are succeeded by seventeen Canções (songs) written on the model of Petrarch’s canzoni. These compositions more particularly prove how deeply Camoens was penetrated with the spirit of the Petrarchic poetry. They also display the utmost elegance of language, combined with the soft harmony of the Italian verse.170 In these canções, as well as in the other poems of Camoens, the painting of natural scenery, wherever the lyric picture embraces it, presents a character of 190 lively perception, which never could be imitated in the closet by any laboured exercise of the imagination.171

The canções are followed by twelve compositions styled odes. In their essential characteristics, these pieces are but little distinguished from the canções, though the 191 object of the poet seems to have been that they should approximate more nearly to the ancient style. The structure of the verse corresponds with that which Ferreira and the Spanish poets, since the time of Luis de Leon, selected for this class of lyric composition. The bold fancy of Pindar, or the energy of Horace, is not to be expected in these any more than other Portuguese and Spanish odes. But Camoens never limited his poetry merely to sonorous language. The first ode is particularly distinguished for its beauty. It is addressed to the moon. The idea is mythological, like all the lofty ideas of Camoens. But in none of his other odes has the poet so well succeeded in combining the grace of antiquity with a romantic tenderness of feeling free from every trace of affectation. The commencement is in the pure ode style. The poet invokes his muse to stem “the current of lovers’ tears, and attired in a rich and gay robe to do homage to the goddess who converts night into day.” He then addresses the goddess of the moon herself, she “whose silver beam penetrates the thick clouds, and prevents night from obscuring the image which love traces and re-traces in his heart; she whose pure forehead is crowned and encircled with stars; she who strews the plains with roses and with flowers, created by spring through her heavenly influence.”172 But a still finer 192 passage occurs at the conclusion of the ode, where the poet bids farewell to night, “the silent friend whom he obeys; and, that she may listen to his complaints, presents to her roses and fresh amaranth still wet with the tears of the fair bride of the jealous Titan.”173

The odes are followed by some Sextinas, the artificial beauty of which Camoens has not failed to render pleasing. His one-and-twenty elegies are, however, more worthy of particular attention. Next to the Lusiad these compositions may in general be numbered among the longer poems of the author, and also among 193 those in which the poet is most frequently represented in his real character as a man. Camoens had, however, no correct notion of the elegiac style. Like Ferreira, he blended it with the epistolary. But such a junction is no less detrimental to the tenderness than to the unity of the elegiac character, and in general deprives elegy of half its poetic interest. Were the language less copious and facund, this method of confounding the boundaries of the elegiac and the epistolary styles, would be still more striking. But the harmonious softness and rich flow of the expression, even where it approaches to prolixity, establish, at least, in a certain degree, a unity of character among the heterogeneous ingredients of which the elegy of Camoens is composed.174 The feeble and 194 tedious passages are readily overlooked, as they are amply counterbalanced by others possessing real elegiac beauty:175 and the occasional deficiencies of these elegies in the poetry appropriate to their class, are compensated by the inappropriate, in which the poetic character of Camoens is every where prominent. The romantic soul of the unfortunate poet is completely unveiled in his elegiac compositions. His earliest productions in this class were written in his youth, when he was exiled to Belem; the others are expressive of the feelings which he experienced in his oriental voyages and adventures. 195 There he fondly cherished recollections of the tranquil happiness which he persuaded himself he had enjoyed in his native country, though he had indignantly abandoned it as a place to existence in which he could not be reconciled. The common fate of humanity, which, independently of his personal circumstances, he always viewed profoundly and poetically, was in India more than ever present to his imagination; and in his elegies he has poured forth, without restraint, all the feelings of his heart. Thus is sympathy more powerfully excited by these compositions than by many of the same class, the beauties of which are of a less prosaic character. No other works of the poet so irresistibly command the reader’s regret for his misfortunes, and love for him as a man.

A few poems, widely differing from each other in character, are printed under the common title of estancias, (stanzas) because they are all composed in Italian octaves. Camoens seems to have felt that in Portuguese, as in Italian, this measure was, in universality of application, nearly equivalent to the Greek hexameter, because it was capable of being united and blended with most of the romantic poetic forms, in the same manner as that hexameter with the different styles of ancient poetry. The three first poems which occur under the title of estancias, are truly poetic epistles, and at the same time faithful mirrors of the character and principles of the poet. Through them Camoens, in a spirit of fervent loyalty, but with a no less honest zeal for truth and justice, addresses useful advice to his sovereign. The estancias which immediately succeed 196 these epistles, are glosses in the Spanish manner on two of the author’s own sonnets. A tender epistle addressed to a lady, is the subject of the next: and the last estancias form an epic legend, which, with some alterations, also appears among the works of Bernardes. It is founded on the history of St. Ursula. Whether this epic legend be really the production of Camoens, or of his admirer Bernardes, it far excels Ferreira’s similar talc of St. Colomba, though the materials are less poetic.

Among the miscellaneous poems of Camoens, the eclogues occupy a considerable space, particularly if we include those of which Bernardes claimed to be the author. Much care appears to have been taken to give them an elegant polish. By the Portuguese they are regarded as models; and according to the received idea of the modern eclogue, particularly in Spain and Portugal, they certainly deserve that distinction. But with all their unquestionable merits, they do not reach the pure eclogue style of Saa de Miranda. The rural character which they ought to possess, is besides much impaired, in consequence of Camoens having, like Ferreira, employed the bucolic form merely to give a poetic interest to events borrowed from real life. This indeed was a custom which had been more or less followed in Portuguese poetry since the time of Ribeyro, and of which even Saa de Miranda did not disdain to avail himself. But those Portuguese poets who endeavoured to form their eclogue style after Saa de Miranda, were in general content with pastoral names and pastoral scenes, when they wished to throw a bucolic disguise 197 over known characters and events; and thus the spirit of pastoral poetry often entirely vanished in those compositions in which its form was most ostentatiously displayed. The eclogues of Camoens partake of this essential fault. Still, however, they are sufficiently pleasing even without the aid of the historical key, with which the reader would doubtless willingly dispense. The descriptive passages are in general the best. In the expression of sentiment these eclogues perfectly resemble the sonnets, canções, and similar poems with which in reality they constitute one species. Passages in the Spanish language are occasionally interspersed.

In the collected works of Camoens, a separation is made of his poems in the Italian style and the Italian syllabic measure, from those which are composed in redondilhas, and which afford examples of an improved national style. In this style also he has enriched every species of poetic composition practised in Portugal and Spain. Much and justly celebrated are the redondilhas in which he poured forth the inmost feelings of his soul, on his return from Macao to Goa, after he had narrowly escaped death by shipwreck.176 The number of his smaller poems, in 198 all the possible forms of the old lyric style, proves how much, as a poet, he was attached to his native country. 199 Romantic, gallant and comic plays of fancy and wit, glossed mottos in the Spanish style, voltas177 in the genuine Portuguese manner, and other poetic trifles in the Portuguese and Spanish languages, appear to have been dealt out at every opportunity with a profuse hand by Camoens. In these compositions he paid no rigid attention to the correctness and elegance of the ideas, and indeed no mental sport of this kind seems to have been too homely for him. He even composed in honour of a lady, a romantic mythological a b c in redondilhas, in which, in correspondence with the initial letters, the names Artemisia, Cleopatra, Dido, Eurydice, Phædra, (spelt Fedra, according to the Italianized orthography of Camoens) Galatæa, &c. are played on in succession. But in some of these compositions, the simplicity and amenity of the old lyric style are combined with a peculiar grace, which alternately defies178 and disarms179 the severity of criticism. 200

The same national spirit which prevented the patriotic Camoens from rejecting the old lyric forms 201 of the Portuguese poetry, induced him to write several dramas, and thus to leave no kind of poetic composition unattempted. It is not known at what period of his life these dramatic works were produced; but it is probable that they were written previously to his departure for India. They belong more completely to the age of Camoens than to the poet himself. They are, however, highly deserving of attention, though they should be merely considered as the last proofs of the poetic versatility and plastic genius of an author who comprised his whole age within himself, as far as a Portuguese national poet could accommodate himself to his age. Camoens was too much a poet to wish to supplant the national drama of his native country, however rude it then might be, by a prosaically modelled imitation of the ancient drama. He adhered to the party formed by the Spanish dramatist Naharro, and his ingenious countryman Gil Vicente. But his determination to dramatic poetry was not sufficiently decided to enable him to fix, by his productions, the taste of the Portuguese nation. Had the genius which animates the Lusiad, taken a dramatic direction, Camoens 202 would have been the Calderon of Portugal, before a Lope de Vega had arisen in Spain. But Camoens in the composition of his dramas contented himself with slightly overstepping the bounds of Gil Vicente’s manner, and with refining, also, only in a slight degree, the construction of the plot and the language. The rudest of the three dramas, which are now attached as a supplement to the other works of the author, is, El Rey Seleuco, (King Seleucus) a singular production, founded on the well known anecdote of the history of that monarch, who resigned his wife Stratonice to his son Antiochus, lest the youth should fall a sacrifice to the passion of love. Camoens seems to have had no idea of treating this delicate subject in a sentimental way. The burlesque prelude or prologue, as it is called, in prose, is calculated to raise the expectation of a farce rather then of a serious drama. The theatrical manager, a lad who acts as his servant, a man of condition, who presents himself as a spectator, and his escudeiro, (attendant) are the characters in this prologue. The manager’s servant is the gracioso of the piece, and his jokes are at least so far useful that they afford an idea of the kind of wit which was at that time relished by the fashionable world in Lisbon. The drama itself, to which this prologue is the introduction, is entitled a comedy in the Spanish acceptation of the term, and is likewise denominated an auto, probably because royal personages are brought upon the scene, a circumstance which according to the Portuguese notions of poetry in that age elevated the piece above a mere comedy. The historical material is moulded according to the romantic 203 forms; the composition is not only inartificial but trivial; and in the execution the ludicrous is quite as prevalent as the comic. The king and queen first enter, to converse on the melancholy state of the prince, and the king takes the opportunity of lamenting that he is no longer young enough for so fair a consort. The prince next appears attended by his pages, to whom he complains of his passion, but without naming the beloved object. The king and queen in vain endeavour to ascertain the cause of the prince’s grief, and orders are given to prepare a bed for him. A bed is introduced on the stage, and a chamber-maid who is engaged in making it, is surprised by her lover in disguise, who is a porteiro (usher) of the castle. This scene is altogether an interlude in the romantic style. The prince again enters, and after many tender complaints betakes himself to bed. A band of music arrives to sooth him while he reposes. One of the musicians named Alexander de Fonseca, enters into conversation with the usher and a page, concerning the melancholy of the prince. With the consent of the prince the usher sings a romance, and the queen again enters with an attendant. Various scenes thus succeed each other, until the physician by feeling the prince’s pulse, discovers the secret. The catastrophe is merely a representation of the dose of the anecdote, without any reference to the queen, who is resigned by the father to the son, like an article of household furniture. The physician in this comedy is a Spaniard. He is made a native of Castile in order that one of the characters might speak Spanish, and thus introduce a variety into the dialogue 204 which it appears was agreeable to a Lisbon audience. The dialogue is in other respects natural, and the versification in redondilhas is pleasing and not devoid of elegance. But there is not a single excellent scene to compensate for the grotesque frivolity of the composition. It is impossible to consider this work as any thing else than a mere juvenile essay of such a poet as Camoens.

The second comedy of Camoens, Os Amphitryões, (the Amphitryons), was, however, a valuable contribution to the dramatic literature of Portugal. The merit of the invention of this purely comic piece, belongs indeed to Plautus, whose Amphitryon Camoens has freely imitated. But even the imitation must have marked an epoch in the history of the dramatic literature of Portugal, had the public been inclined to favour so happy a combination of the national and ancient forms. Any one unacquainted with the Amphitryon of Plautus would regard the Portuguese comedy as an original. The whole story of the piece is modernized without weakening the comic force of the situations. Jupiter indeed remains unchanged; but Mercury who attends him in his disguise, performs the servant in the true Portuguese style. Amphitryon is a sea captain, according to the Portuguese idea of that character. The servant of Amphitryon is converted into a perfect gracioso, who speaks Spanish, but still retains the name of Sosia. The humour of the burlesque scenes in which Sosia appears, is heightened by making Mercury, who converses with Jupiter in Portuguese, always speak Spanish, when he plays his part as the pseudo Sosia. 205 It would be worth while to ascertain whether this pleasant comedy is ever performed in Lisbon.

Filodemo, the third comedy of Camoens, is one of those dramatized novels, of which the Spanish theatre afterwards afforded many examples. It is not a drama of intrigue, but a variegated collection of grave and half comic scenes, which are combined together as a whole by their common reference to the result of a singular event. That event is the saving of two twins, a boy and a girl, whose mother is a princess of Denmark. A shepherd finds the twins and brings them up. Shepherds and shepherdesses, gentlemen and ladies, a waiting woman, a hunter, and other characters of a similar kind, form the romantic groupe. The scene is sometimes in town in the open streets, or within a house; sometimes in the country, and among barren mountains. The denouement is the most trivial part of the whole composition. It is brought about by a shepherd initiated in the art of magic, who, by his necromantic skill, discovers the parentage of the twins, and by this discovery removes the obstacles which impede the happy issue of two parallel love stories. In this drama Camoens has interspersed, and evidently not without design, scenes in prose among scenes in verse. In conformity with his inclination to unite all manners, he was desirous of approximating to the party, which on the pretext of adhering strictly to nature endeavoured to banish verse from Portuguese comedy. He accordingly gives the dialogue in prose where the conversation is entirely of a popular character; and whenever the style becomes somewhat elevated, redondilhas are again 206 introduced. Some of the shepherds speak Spanish, and among them a lad who is the bobo (buffoon) of the piece. Thus it would appear that Camoens in all his dramas, sought to exercise the right of retaliation upon the Spanish poets, who were fond of making their gracioso, or buffoon, express himself in Galician or Portuguese. The jokes in the Spanish language which Camoens has in this instance put into the mouth of his gracioso, would be sufficiently unpolished even if they were less broad and spiritless.180 207

MONTEMAYOR.

From Camoens, whose name now becomes a waymark for the whole domain of Portuguese poetry, the historian of that poetry cannot properly revert to the classic school of Ferreira, without previously reviving the recollection of Jorge de Montemayor, who was a contemporary of Camoens and Ferreira. The history of the life and writings of this excellent poet, belongs indeed rather to the literature of Spain than to that of Portugal.181 But the spirit of the pastoral romance of Diana, by which Montemayor gained immortal fame, is in fact the spirit of Portuguese poetry transfused into the Spanish language. Without being an imitator of Ribeyro,182 Montemayor followed in the same path with the same kind of susceptibility to impressions. But the cultivated delicacy of his feeling, and the romantic 208 enthusiasm of his imagination, rendered him the first poet who enlarged and dignified the plain antiquated form of the Portuguese pastoral romance. He renewed and riveted the old link of connection between the Spanish and the Portuguese poetry. Had he confined himself to writing in his native tongue, he would probably have been succeeded by a Portuguese Gil Polo;183 and the romantic pastoral poetry of the Portuguese would then have remained single in its kind. But Montemayor composed verses in the Portuguese language only for the sake of variety, and not with the view of extending the sphere of Portuguese poetry.184

CLASSICAL SCHOOL OF SAA DE MIRANDA AND ANTONIO FERREIRA.

The comparatively correct style of poetry introduced into Portuguese literature by Saa de Miranda, and the still more coldly correct style of Antonio de Ferreira, though favoured by that portion of the polite world which valued a reputation for learning, were but little esteemed by the great bulk of the public. The poets of this sect may fairly be said to constitute a classical school, without thereby admitting them to an equal rank with the incorrect men of genius whose irregular effusions could scarcely fail to possess more 209 poetic character, than other works which are now to be noticed; such, for example, as the poems of Andrade Caminha, who formed himself entirely on the model of Ferreira. The efforts made by the poets of this classic school to attain the correctness of the ancients seem to have checked their powers of fancy, and it may be presumed that imaginations which were so easily repressed, could not be very creative and energetic. Those who, like some modern German writers would, in defiance of every rule of language, render genius the measure of classic excellence, must find a new term to designate that poetry, the greatest merit of which is the elegant perfection and pure rounding of poetic forms after the example of the ancients. This, which is in other respects an inferior style of poetry, is nevertheless held in consideration by all cultivated nations. To reject it as altogether worthless would indeed be very unjust, since it serves to shew how judgment, talent, and taste, can by the study of ancient models, produce, even without the aid of genius, a certain kind of poetic beauty, which is not unmeritorious, though it frequently presents scarcely a shadow of that pure and sublime beauty which is the offspring of real genius. Poetry of this kind is therefore styled classical, merely in reference to a certain degree of affinity which its forms bear to the classical forms of Greek and Roman art.

ANDRADE CAMINHA.

One of the warmest friends, admirers and imitators of Ferreira, was Pedro de Andrade Caminha, Camareiro 210 (gentleman of the chamber) at the court of the Infante Dom Duarte, brother to King John III. He survived his friend Ferreira six-and-twenty years. During his life his poems seem rather to have been esteemed by a small circle of connoisseurs and dilettanti, than to have been favourites with the public. Thus it happened that at that period they were only circulated in manuscript, and that afterwards, with the exception of a few which had been admitted into spiritual collections, they totally disappeared; they have, however, been recently discovered, and have been printed at the expense of the Portuguese Royal Society.185 Andrade Caminha seems to have had no notion of any thing more perfect in poetic composition than the works of his friend Ferreira, who, however, barely avoided the dangerous boundary where poetry ends and versified prose begins. Caminha’s compositions in elegant verse are, however, still more deficient in genuine poetry, than the works of Ferreira, and indeed they can scarcely be termed poems. His eclogues are cold, and their coldness is the more striking, as they are intended to express forcibly the language of romantic love. His epistles are better deserving of attention. They possess just about as much poetic warmth as is necessary to maintain the character of didactic poems. In these epistles Caminha, as a painter of manners and a moralist, alternately describes and 211 reasons energetically and without pedantry in the style of Ferreira, and his unassuming manner gives more effect to the agreeable colouring of that style.186 But Andrade Caminha is by no means so rich in ideas as Ferreira. He limits the circle of his free reflections, by constant reference to the relations in which he lived. In the epistles to his brother, and in those to Ferreira, he, however, indulges in a more unconstrained expression of feeling.187 Of all these epistles, 212 the seventeenth, in which he inveighs against impertinent critics, possesses most didactic merit.188 Andrade Caminha seems to have supposed that he possessed a particular talent for elegiac poetry. Twenty of the elegies he composed are still preserved, exclusive of many songs of complaining love in redondilhas, to which the title of elegies is likewise given. But the sorrow for the death of the royal personages and ingenious friends, which is lavished in the first half of Caminha’s elegies, and the tender anguish occasioned by the inexorableness 213 of his beloved Phyllis, which appears in the second half, seldom rouses any poetic sympathy in the reader, notwithstanding the beauty of language with which the sorrow and anguish are expressed. In some of the elegies to Phyllis, the descriptions of natural scenery possess considerable merit.189

But the most remarkable of all Caminha’s works are his epitaphs and epigrams, of which no Portuguese poet has bequeathed so many to posterity. His Epitafios which amount to eighty-one, and his Epigrammas 214 which exceed two hundred and fifty in number, are almost all written in octave verse. In these little pictures of reflection and sentiment, which derive so much of their value from correctness and elegance, a limited fancy aided by solid taste is capable of rising above the level of prose. The labour which Andrade Caminha bestowed on the composition of his epitaphs and epigrams, sufficiently proves that he felt what was his proper vocation at the foot of Parnassus. But even there he could not travel without a guide, and the spirit of his age induced him to choose Ausonius for his conductor. He had, like Ausonius, sufficient talent for the proper keeping of the tenderness, precision and energy which distinguish the serious epigram of the Greeks; but in his imitation of the style of the Greek epigram, he missed the refined correctness of Ausonius by confounding poetic with prosaic simplicity. Of the eighty-one epitaphs which Caminha composed in honour of celebrated and exalted individuals, not one can claim an equal rank with the best ancient productions of the same kind. In most of them the reader finds only dry encomiums accompanied by trivial reflections.190 In others the ideas rise but very little 215 above the level of the commonest observation.191 In Caminha’s epitaphs the result of the epigrammatic compound of the ideas, where he wishes to be uncommon, has sometimes a singularly frigid effect; as, for example, when speaking of the hero Affonso d’Albuquerque, he pompously says: “He sprang from kings, he honoured kings, and he subdued kings.”192 Even the language of powerful feeling sinks, as in the epitaph on Ferreira, beneath the common place of the reflections.193 216 The serious epigrams are more ingenious, though even they are, for the most part, merely agreeable plays of fancy.194 In some the formality of the diction produces a very happy effect; in others the epigrammatic expression of feeling displays an astonishing degree of romantic intensity;195 a few are truly excellent.196 To 217 this last class, however, the comic epigrams of Caminha do not belong. A truly comic turn of thought is scarcely ever to be found in them, and it is only occasionally that they betray a poignant conceit.197 But it must be acknowledged that a poet of more fertile fancy would find it difficult to write nineteen strictly comic epigrams on an ugly face, (a uma feissima.)

BERNARDES.

Diogo Bernardes was the friend of Andrade Caminha, and like him an admirer and disciple of Ferreira. He was capable of receiving more lively impressions than Caminha, and he passed less tranquilly through life. At first he only endeavoured to distinguish himself as a poet, and he succeeded in gaining a degree of celebrity in his native town Ponte de Lima, whence he is called the poet of Lima. He then wished to become the historian of his native country, but in this undertaking he did not experience the support on which he had calculated. It is probable that he became intimately acquainted with Ferreira at the court of Lisbon. Desirous of entering upon a life of active occupation, he visited the court of Philip II. at Madrid, where he resided for some time in quality of secretary to the Portuguese embassy. Fate at length involved him in 218 the unfortunate expedition of King Sebastian. After fighting valiantly in the battle of Alcacer Seguer in Africa, he was made prisoner by the victorious Moors. During his captivity he composed several elegies and spiritual songs. On recovering his freedom he returned to his native country where he lived until the year 1596. Since his death he has been the object of severe animadversion, owing particularly to the supposition, which has already been noticed, of his having appropriated to himself some poems of Camoens. But were there no reason to doubt the fact of this plagiarism, Bernardes has sufficiently suffered for it in the esteem of posterity, by the unjust depreciation of his poetic talent in the critical writings of some Portuguese authors of the seventeenth century, more particularly in those of Manoel de Faria e Sousa, with whom this tone of criticism originated. In the eighteenth century, however, justice was rendered both to him and to Ferreira.198 Without striking out a new course in poetry, and indeed without paying any rigid regard to the distinction between poetry and prose, Bernardes evinces a far greater share of poetic feeling than Ferreira; and, as a poet, if not as an elegant versifier, he is far 219 superior to Andrade Caminha. His spiritual poems are among the very best in the class to which they belong. The title which he gave them, namely:—“Miscellaneous poems to the good Jesus, and the glorious Virgin his mother, &c.”199 is quite in the spirit of the poetry of the catholic religion. But Bernardes was not capable of viewing catholic Christianity on its only true poetic side, that is to say, the bold character of a miraculous working faith. He confined himself to the representation of the inconceivable grace of the Saviour, of the anguish of heart which the sinner should feel in the deep consciousness of his unworthiness, and of similar dogmata, which certainly may be expressed in poetic phrases, but which unavoidably fetter the imagination, and convert even hymns into litanies.200 It is 220 only through a pious childishness of feeling, to which catholic Christianity gives birth, that some portion of poetic life has been imparted to the spiritual songs, sonnets, and estancias of Bernardes. That feeling led him to introduce into his sonnets to the holy virgin, a mixture of romantic love; for example, when the poet complains to the virgin that he loves something beside herself;201 or, when he admires her beauty in a picture, 221 and reflects how beautiful she herself must be. The spiritual songs in the popular style, which are included among the works of Bernardes, are written in Spanish. The temporal songs, elegies, and sonnets of this poet, have the same soft and infantine character, and are therefore not inappropriately presented to the public as an appendix to his pictures of spiritual feeling.202 A few elegies which he composed during his captivity among the Moors,203 and some endechas in the old 222 national style,204 belong to this class. Bernardes has also left behind him eclogues, epistles, and numerous sonnets. His epistles shew the veneration he entertained for the critical judgment of Ferreira, whose cold style, however, certainly could not please him.205 Many of his 223 sonnets are expressive of the homage with which he submitted his poetry to the judgment of Ferreira, as he did his faith to the doctrines of the church. The elegy in which he laments the death of Ferreira may, therefore, be numbered among his sincerest effusions of the heart.206

CORTEREAL.

In the same school of correct poetry with Andrade Caminha and Bernardes, arose the ingenious Jeronymo Cortereal, another of those chivalrous spirits of the sixteenth century, for whom every ordinary sphere of life was too limited. Ambitious of doing honour to his country and his distinguished family, he served in the Portuguese army against the infidels in Asia and Africa. He afterwards settled on his estate near Evora. In his residence, which was situated on a hill, and surrounded by rude precipices, and which commanded an extensive view of the surrounding country, he devoted himself to poetic composition; and sometimes, for the sake of variety, turned his attention to music and painting. This romantic abode of the muses charmed even the cold-hearted Philip II. of Spain, when he visited his 224 kingdom of Portugal. Cortereal, who on that occasion, rendered homage to the new sovereign in verse, had previously often been unfaithful to his native tongue. He is included in the number of those Spanish poets, who indefatigably but vainly vied with each other to convert historical art into epic art, and to produce a Spanish national epopee.207—He related in Spanish verse and in a poem of fifteen cantos, the history of the battle of Lepanto, which has given occasion to so much Spanish poetry of every description. In the Portuguese language, he wrote two poems of a similar kind, which, at the time of their production were very much esteemed. The subject of one is the siege of the Portuguese garrison of Diu in India, which was valiantly defended by the Governor, Mascarenhas. In the other of these works Cortereal relates in the same style, the hapless story of Manoel de Souza and his wife, who on their return from India were shipwrecked on the coast of Africa, and who after wandering about for a considerable time, perished among the savages. To impart poetic decoration to prosaic events of this kind, borrowed from the history of the period, was the prevailing fashion of the day in Spain and Portugal; and to banish such narrations from the region of poetry, was an idea that never suggested itself to any poet, still less to the public.208 225

OTHER PORTUGUESE POETS OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY—FERREIRA DE VASCONCELLOS; RODRIGUEZ DE CASTRO; LOBO DE SOROPITA; &c.

Unconnected with this classical school, which became extinct about the close of the sixteenth century, several Portuguese poets pursued their own course, nearly in the same manner as Camoens, though not with the same success. Jorge Ferreira de Vasconcellos, for example, a man of considerable acquirements, who held a distinguished post in Lisbon, rendered himself celebrated as the writer of several comedies which were much esteemed. He was also the author of a new romance of the Round Table.209

At a somewhat later period lived Estevam Rodriguez de Castro, a poet, and at the same time a learned physician, who was invited to Italy by the grand duke of Tuscany. He is the author of various sonnets, odes and eclogues.

Fernando Rodriguez Lobo de Soropita, the publisher of the miscellaneous poems of Camoens, likewise belongs to this age. Besides his juridical works, he was the author of various pieces of humour in verse.

The present opportunity may be taken to mention the latin verses, which were at this period still current in Portugal, and by the composition of which, men of education, and even men in office of the first rank, 226 endeavoured to obtain a place near the ancient classics, without interfering with the poets who adhered to their vernacular tongue. The learned statesman Miguel de Cabedo de Vasconcellos, who resided for several years in France, was particularly distinguished as a writer of latin verse. Ancient literature seems, at this time, to have had a powerful influence on the education of the Portuguese nobility; and as, at this period, all the most celebrated Portuguese poets belonged to noble families, it cannot be doubted that, the invisible link between the Portuguese and latin poetry, was then much stronger than the visible one, which never can be mistaken in the works of these poets.

To enumerate the remaining names of the Portuguese poets of the age of Camoens, is a task which must be resigned to the writer, whose object it may be to pursue more minutely the details of this particular department of literature. Another Portuguese classic of the sixteenth century, must, however, be included among the number of those poets, who, in a general history of modern poetry and eloquence, are the more worthy to be placed in a conspicuous light, in proportion as they are little celebrated beyond the confines of their native land.

RODRIGUEZ LOBO.

That Portuguese writers, who, in other instances have shewn themselves so careful in the collection of 227 biographic details, should be almost silent respecting the life of such a poet as Francisco Rodriguez Lobo, is a circumstance only to be explained by one of those sports of fortune, through which in literature, as in life, honour is often withheld from the most deserving, and lavished on the worthless. Rodriguez Lobo was also a poet of noble extraction; but nothing is known respecting the history of his life, except that he was born in the town of Leiria, in Portuguese Estremadura, about the middle of the sixteenth century; that by talent and industry he distinguished himself at the university, and afterwards spent the chief portion of his life in the country; and finally, that, in the passage of the Tagus, he perished in that river which in his poetry he had often celebrated in terms of romantic admiration. His remains were interred in the chapel of a convent not far distant from the spot, where the current of the stream cast his body on shore.210

To no other poet, after Saa de Miranda, Ferreira and Camoens, are the language and literature of Portugal so much indebted as to Rodriguez Lobo, with whom, indeed, the history of Portuguese eloquence may 228 be said to commence. He so highly improved romantic prose in the Portuguese language, and laid so excellent a foundation for a pure prose style, that in endeavouring to attain classic perfection in that department of composition, later writers have merely followed in the same course. His verse is no way inferior to his prose; and with all his classical refinement he was not, like Ferreira, a poet of limited imagination. Of all the Portuguese poets, Rodriguez Lobo is, in every respect, entitled to the place next in rank to Saa de Miranda and Camoens. His great erudition did not prevent him from being completely imbued with poetic natural feeling, and in pictures drawn from the romantic arcadian world his fancy was inexhaustible. It is indeed only where his descriptions have a pastoral colouring that he is perfectly in his poetic sphere. But within that sphere he occasionally draws resources from practical good sense with a degree of adroitness which is displayed by no previous Portuguese poet.

The writings of Rodriguez Lobo are susceptible of three divisions which approximate to each other. To the first belongs his prose work:—“the Court in the Country,” in which no verses are introduced. Three connected pastoral romances form the second and most considerable portion; here the prose is merely a beautiful combining link by which the work is made a whole. The third comprises the author’s miscellaneous poems.

The Corte na Aldea, e Noites de Inverno, (the Court in the Country, and Winter Nights,) is the title of a book, by which Rodriguez Lobo endeavoured 229 to introduce a kind of Ciceronean style into Portuguese prose, and at the same time to furnish a useful guide to the formation of character for public life. The antiquated style of the title is in a certain degree at variance with the classic elegance of the book itself. It is probable that no more in this, than in his other works, would Rodriguez Lobo have avoided the gothic ornaments of which the romantic prose of the Spaniards and Portuguese was never entirely divested, had he not, as a prose writer, been here guided by his favourite Cicero, in whose footsteps he trod. Perhaps he was also acquainted with some Italian works of a similar kind; for at this period the Italian prose writers imitated Cicero; and Il Cortegiano of Castiglione, bears in its subject at least a resemblance to Lobo’s “Court in the Country.” But the direct imitation of Cicero’s style is unquestionably an essential feature in this work. Precisely with the same forms of friendly courtesy, as those which characterize Cicero’s Tusculan and Academic discourses, but with some romantic modifications, Rodriguez Lobo collects around him a party of friends in the country. These friends discourse together concerning the proper education of an elegant man of the world. As conversation occupies the chief portion of the work, the whole is not inappropriately divided into dialogues. Each dialogue has, however, an historical frame work. But even though copying after Cicero’s models, it appears, that Rodriguez Lobo could not, without difficulty, find the path of pure prose composition. The first dialogue opens precisely in the style of an 230 old romance.211 Nevertheless the long sentence with which it commences, bespeaks, by its facility and rhetorical harmony a cultivation of style, which is not discoverable in the works of any earlier Portuguese prose writer. At the same time the reader is still farther charmed by the delicate and sharp outline which is given of the characteristic features of the assembled interlocutors.212 The conversation 231 does not take the turn which might be expected; but the natural colouring of the representation is thus augmented. The degree of cultivation by which these gentlemen are distinguished from the ordinary portion of society, leads them, in the first place, to discourse of literature. One of the party very properly observes, that, the country library of a man of their class, should consist chiefly of works on history, poetry, and practical philosophy. This gives rise to an encomium on the Portuguese language, which at that period had to contend with enemies in its native land, and which was still more vehemently attacked by the Spaniards. Cultivation of language again becomes the subject of discussion in these dialogues; and the epistolary style being considered more important than any other to a gentleman who is to figure in the world, Rodriguez Lobo, through the medium of one of the party, gives a full, and for the age in which it was written, a new treatise of the art of correct letter-writing. Even the external elegance of the letter comes under consideration. The interlocutors then discuss appointments, messages and visits; ornamental hyperboles (encarecimentos); the difference between love and desire; selfishness; social decorum in manners and discourse; social eloquence generally; the art of social anecdote in particular; witty conversation in society; true gallantry (cortesia); education at court, in the army and in the schools. The reader who forms his judgment of this ingenious work, apart from the age in which, and for which, it was written, will probably depreciate its intrinsic merits. 232 Now that the first principles of modern cultivation have become common, the precepts of Rodriguez Lobo will be scorned as trivial by the merest noviciates in politeness; and our students of psychology will feel more inclined to receive instructions from a French observer of mankind of the eighteenth century, than from this Portuguese writer. But in the sixteenth century such a work as the Corte na Aldea could only have been written by a man initiated in the refined manners of his age, and combining a delicate spirit of observation with an extraordinary store of literary knowledge. In Portuguese eloquence it had no prototype. In the descriptive passages only is the style somewhat overcharged with antiquated and pompous phrases. The turns of the dialogue are, like the similar passages in the writings of Cicero, natural and pleasing, though they do not possess the poignant spirit of more recent productions of this kind.213 Where the exposition 233 of the ideas assumes a totally didactic character, the expression is clear, decided and unostentatiously harmonious.214 Upon the whole the prose of Rodriguez Lobo has more of an oratorical character than the modern style of conversation admits; but the romantic tone of chivalrous gallantry in the sixteenth century, produced, even in the conversational style, a certain formality and rounding of long periods, by an influence similar to that which the oratorical prose of the forum exercised at Rome in Cicero’s time, over every species of prosaic composition.

But Rodriguez Lobo’s Corte na Aldea is entitled to honourable distinction, for even something more than its general merits, as the first book in classical prose produced in Portugal. By the anecdotes and tales which are interwoven with the dialogue and didactic passages, it furnished 234 the Portuguese with the first model of light narrative style in their native tongue.215 The letters from the Ciceronean collections, and other ancient and modern works, which Rodriguez Lobo has translated, and introduced as illustrations of his theory of the epistolary style, are likewise very judiciously chosen. Finally, this copious theory of epistolary composition is the first successful attempt at any thing beyond a mere scholastic guide to eloquence in Portuguese literature. Previously to the production of this work, no rhetorical models were known in Portugal, save those of Aristotle, which were transmitted through the second and third hand in so barbarous a form, that a writer found it necessary to forget them in order to learn to express himself without pedantry.

Thus a Portuguese poet was the first who made his countrymen acquainted with the spirit of genuine and elegantly cultivated prose in their native tongue; and, therefore, of all the writings of that poet, the work by which he extended the boundary of the polite literature 235 of his nation, deserves, in the history of that literature, to hold the most conspicuous place. But Rodriguez Lobo ranks still higher among poets than among prose writers, though he neither introduced a new style nor a new form of poetry into Portuguese literature. His three connected pastoral romances, are the most luxuriant blossoms of this old branch of Portuguese poetry. Such a treasure of romantic bucolics as the united works present, is no where else to be found. The prose with which Rodriguez Lobo has incorporated the pastoral poems, can only be regarded as a poetic groundwork. In the present age these romances would not easily find, except in Portugal, and perhaps not even there, a reader possessing sufficient patience to peruse them throughout with attention. Were they even two thirds shorter than they are, their monotony would still be intolerably tiresome except to persons accustomed,—like the polite world of Portugal and Spain, in the time of Rodriguez Lobo,—to pastoralize their joys and sorrows, and to be satisfied with the constant sameness of pastoral composition, if it in some degree flatter the heart and the senses. In describing the subject of this romance, nothing further can be said, than that this or that shepherd and shepherdess occasionally meet, and occasionally separate. The general story unfolds no action which excites particular interest; and as little do the individual descriptions exhibit any character properly fitted for originating action. It may with tolerable certainty be inferred, that the story is a disguised picture of the romantic events of real life, in which the author was engaged. But though the disguises be less 236 mysterious and singular than those of Ribeyro’s old pastoral romance,216 still they present not the slightest attraction for posterity. If Lobo’s pastoral romance be compared with Montemayor’s Diana, the monotony of its subject will be found to be still more striking. However, notwithstanding that monotony, and also some ornamental excrescences of the old romantic kind, this romance well merits literary distinction, on account of the narrative and descriptive parts, which combine the most pleasing polish of language with a poetic tenderness of style, in which Lobo is not surpassed by Montemayor himself. The descriptions of scenery which frequently occur, are in particular remarkable for exquisite touches of romantic simplicity. They are, doubtless, sketched from nature: the scene is invariably laid in Portugal, and the country is sometimes accurately traced out by the rivers.217 But the 237 parts in verse are by far the most beautiful of the whole; and the best of the cantigas and canções which occur in this delicate representation of romantic pastoral life, may be regarded as classic models in their kind.

Primavera (Spring) is the title of the first of Lobo’s pastoral romances. Pastoral images of spring are here exhibited in contrast with the complaints of unhappy love. The inexhaustible fertility which Rodriguez Lobo has evinced in the execution of this contrast, seems totally incredible in this prosaic age; for the same impressions and situations are continually recurring in an ever varied form. A descriptive song of spring, full of cheerfulness, opens the beautiful gallery.218 The spirit of a shepherd, 238 who has been transformed into a fountain, sings the history of his tender passion. Sonnets, canções, tercets, octaves, and redondilhas, are by turns gracefully introduced in the succeeding cantos. Sometimes at the close of these lyric effusions the reader is surprised by ideas, which, however, were in some degree to be expected.219 In general the enthusiasm of love is represented with somewhat less quaintness by Rodriguez Lobo than by Montemayor. When plays of sentiment running through several stanzas turn on a prevailing idea occurring in the last line of each stanza, Lobo, like Montemayor, usually expresses this idea merely by a simple exclamation. These plays of sentiment are also very pleasingly combined with the usual reflections on 239 the perishableness of all earthly things.220 The poetic salutations to nature, which to the poet appeared as though she sympathized with him, present, in this pastoral romance, all the charm of the tenderest simplicity.221 Then 240 again the same melancholy reflections recur in another form.222 In many of these songs, however, the romantic complaints are carried to an excessive prolixity. That which might be sufficiently well expressed in five or six stanzas, sometimes occupies from thirty to forty. Scope is, however, advantageously given to romantic wit in the style of the age, by the poetic questions and answers with which Rodriguez Lobo’s shepherds and shepherdesses occasionally maintain conversation. In this way antiquated quaintness is successfully avoided, while the poetic character of these sportive exercises is carefully preserved. The plays of wit acquire indeed an augmented interest by being combined with a kind of poetic competition. Thus, for example, the question:—Whether love with or without hope be the truest love? is answered in two different songs.223 The question in what degree love and 241 jealousy are allied? receives three answers in three 242 songs.224 Rodriguez Lobo has not been surpassed by any 243 ancient or modern poet in the ingenious simplicity and elegance of these fanciful compositions. But had he 244 been less successful in productions of this class, still the poetic truth, intensity, delicacy and graceful ease of his pastoral cantigas and canções would have entitled him to one of the highest places among the lyric poets of all nations. The reader readily pardons the tedious length of the Primavera, as it could not otherwise include so many lyric poems. Even the antiquated division into Florestas (flower-beds), will not displease, if the exquisite lyric effusions which are scattered through the work, be allowed to represent the flowers. That this romance is arranged in geographical divisions according to the rivers of the district in which the scene is laid, must also be excused, though such a plan may 245 not, perhaps, appear quite congenial with the spirit of romantic poetry.

The other two pastoral romances of Lobo are merely continuations of his Spring, which according to the plan on which it is written, might be protracted to infinity. The first continuation is entitled, O Pastor Peregrino, (the Wandering Shepherd). It is arranged in divisions, which, like the acts of the Spanish comedies, bear the name of jornadas. The second continuation, or the conclusion of the whole romance, is entitled, O Desenganado,225 (the Disenchanted), and its divisions are called discursos (discourses). Here also a rich harvest of lyric flowers charm the reader, though the romance itself becomes even less interesting. Rodriguez Lobo has endeavoured to render this last portion of his romance in a peculiar way instructive. Towards the close, as the events become more romantic, he introduces a portion of his geographical, historical, and physical knowledge. Still sound judgment and a delicate spirit of observation are here manifest.

But Rodriguez Lobo who found only within the boundary or in the vicinity of pastoral poetry the objects and impressions for the poetic representation of which he was destined by nature, was induced to take part with the Portuguese and Spanish poets of his age in the absurd competition for the prize of 246 epopœia. He wrote a work entitled, O Condestabre de Portugal, (the Generalissimo of Portugal), which he intended should be a national epic poem. It is, however, merely a versified biography of the renowned Nuno Alvarez Pereira, whom the Portuguese of that age eulogized with an enthusiasm equal to that with which the Spaniards celebrated their favourite Cid. Rodriguez Lobo has collected with all requisite patience the most remarkable events in the life of his hero. He has arranged them chronologically, dividing the whole into twenty cantos, and the long narrative is written in neat octaves. But all the advantage which a story can impart to a poem is wanting in this tedious work. It is difficult to conceive how a man of Rodriguez Lobo’s poetic taste, could have written verses in this style without being conscious that he was only rhyming historical prose. The imagination has had but little or no share either in the cultivation of the style or the painting of the situations; and the whole work exhibits no trace of poetic invention. But it is soon evident that from beginning to end the author is resolved never to be at variance with historical truth. Thus Rodriguez Lobo purposely repressed his natural poetic feeling in order to conform with the false notions of epic composition, which were at that time firmly established in Spain and Portugal. So much, indeed, was he under the dominion of those notions that he has not had the courage to mingle even as much poetry with his narrative, as the Spaniard Ercilla introduced in his Araucana.226 The few stanzas which Camoens in his 247 Lusiad consecrates to Nuno Alvarez,227 are worth more than the twenty cantos of Lobo’s versified biography. In a philological point of view, however, the composition deserves praise, for the simplicity, correctness and elegance of its language. A gleam of poetic beauty here and there distinguishes some of the descriptive and pathetic passages, and repays the labour of a perusal.

The predilection which Rodriguez Lobo unconsciously and almost exclusively entertained for pastoral poetry, is more than sufficiently proved by the ten eclogues which are included among the works of this poet, independently of the three pastoral romances already noticed. He wished to combine didactic with bucolic poetry. On this idea he has explained himself in a preface to his didactic eclogues. Man, he says, has abandoned the state for which nature destined him, since he has exchanged the quietude of his rural occupations and wishes, for a restless and dissatisfied life by sea and by land. Abel was a shepherd, and all the succeeding patriarchs, on whom God bestowed his favour, devoted themselves to the care of flocks and herds. Amidst rustic occupations the virtues of the ancient Romans were fostered; and there have arisen in the pastoral state many great men who have been called to fill thrones. Country life must therefore be regarded as the only natural state of existence, and consequently it is that state to which all the precepts of morality have reference. Thus poetry cannot be more suitably combined with morality than through the medium of pastoral composition. It is therefore nothing surprising 248 that the discourse of shepherds should be the vehicle of practical philosophy. The shepherd in his smock-frock has not less correct notions of virtue and vice than the courtier and man of the world. But poetry is, generally speaking, merely the clothing of truth.228 According to these principles which may be regarded as a portion of the Portuguese art of poetry in the sixteenth century, Rodriguez Lobo chose for his didactic eclogues, a particular moral point of view. The first is directed against rudeness and ignorance; the second against hatred and envy; the third against avarice. In like manner each of the remaining eclogues censures some particular vice, and the censure is conveyed in a style of rural gentleness, while the opposite virtue is recommended by pleasing images. The simple morality which Rodriguez Lobo puts into the mouths of his shepherds is certainly not unnatural in their situation. Far removed also as the critic may be from the scholastic prejudices which formed the basis of the poetic art of the sixteenth century, and which would render poetry a mere robe for morality, still it is impossible entirely to reject the idea of this species of didactic eclogue. But such a homely morality, in union with pastoral poetry, could possess poetic interest, only at a time when the commonest remarks on moral 249 relations, if divested of theological and monastic forms of expression, had all the charm of novelty. In the present age, however, when philosophy has long nourished poetry with more invigorating aliment, the didactic eclogues of Rodriguez Lobo cannot claim any particular favour among readers, who justly require that morality should not directly mix in the business of poetry, when it has nothing new to tell.

The works of Rodriguez Lobo, also include about a hundred romances, which, with the exception of a few, are written in Spanish. The first half contributed nothing to the advancement of Portuguese literature. It consists of fifty-six occasional poems in redondilhas, which are all pompous salutations of Philip III. who in the year 1619 visited his Portuguese dominions. Such occasional poems were at the period denominated romances. But the works of Rodriguez Lobo conclude with some real romances in the old spirit and style, which cast a new light on that part of Portuguese literature. They prove, that which more ancient data leave doubtful, namely, that the epic or heroic romance, which in Castile is as old as the Castilian language, was never completely naturalized in Portugal.229 The narrative romances in particular, the subjects of which are borrowed from the history of Moorish knights and ladies, and in which Spanish poetry is so profusely rich, seem only to have found their way into Portugal from Spain, and never to have been perfectly congenial with the national taste of the 250 Portuguese. This kind of romance seems indeed to be essentially attached to the Castilian language. It appears that in the age of Rodriguez Lobo, the Spaniards made it a reproach to the Portuguese that they wanted the talent necessary for inventing these romances. Rodriguez Lobo, who was a zealous patriot, wrote a whole series, but only with the view of ridiculing this species of composition which appeared to him too vain-glorious. In an introductory romance he apostrophizes the romancistas (romance writers) of his native country. He conjures them, instead of continuing to plunder the Spanish language, to soar to distinction by means of originality, since where there were so many pens, wings could not be wanting. He begs them to observe, that the laurel tree on Parnassus had been completely stripped, since to every Spanish romancist a whole branch had been assigned as a garland.230 He adds, that they might roam to the Alhambra and the Alpuxarra in quest of the fair ladies 251 Daraja and Celinda, Adalifa and Celidaxa.231 Lobo follows up this satirical address with a considerable number of Spanish romances of his own composition, apparently with the view of proving how easy it is to write such pieces. Indeed to a poet of Rodriguez Lobo’s talent it certainly could not be difficult to produce an exaggerated imitation of the style of the Spanish national romance. But such extravagant imitation will not deprive the best of those romances of the merit which they really possess. Lobo seems purposely to have introduced among these compositions, some pastoral romances in the Portuguese language; as if it were not as easy and even easier to ridicule pastoral poetry; or as if an exuberance of pastoral poetry were to be a proof that Portuguese literature could well dispense with the beautiful epic romance.

Rodriguez Lobo laid the foundation of that excessive accumulation of pastoral poetry, existing in the Portuguese language. He exerted his utmost endeavours to fix the taste of the nation in that direction. Before he appeared, the poetic genius of the Portuguese earnestly and zealously sought distinction in different ways. But after the period in which Rodriguez Lobo flourished, the Portuguese poets evinced an exclusive predilection for the pastoral style, even in other classes of poetic composition. 252

STATE OF PORTUGUESE ELOQUENCE IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

Though Portuguese poetry had now attained a degree of consideration which in the following century it was unable to surpass, eloquence, or the elegant literature of prose remained far behind. That no writer of talent should have produced a work in Portuguese prose, which in a rhetorical point of view is worthy to mark an epoch, may in some respects be accounted for by peculiar circumstances, and must in others be attributed merely to the caprice of chance. The same restrictions on intellectual freedom, which in Portugal so effectually opposed the full developement of pure eloquence, had likewise held captive the thinking faculty in Spain. In Spain, however, a few, but still some men of talent, who pretended to no distinction in poetry, learned to move, even in their fetters, with rhetorical freedom and dignity, and there was nothing to prevent the occurrence of similar instances at an equally early period in Portugal. But it appears, that the Portuguese authors who had no ambition to be poets, were not endowed with the true talent for cultivating the art of rhetorical representation, and that the poets were too much engaged with their own art, to take any particular interest in the improvement of any other branch of polite literature. With the single exception of Rodriguez Lobo, whose Corte na Aldea afforded in Portugal the first example how a poet could elevate the language of common life, without confounding the boundaries of poetry and 253 elegant prose, no Portuguese poet of the sixteenth century in any way contributed to the cultivation of eloquence; and the period when Rodriguez Lobo enjoyed his utmost celebrity was not earlier than the commencement of the seventeenth century. Now the Portuguese language was then, as the loud complaint of Lobo sufficiently proves, frequently denied, even in Portugal, any claim to the possession of that accuracy and elegance, without which poetry, deficient merely in cultivation, might indeed exist, but which is indispensably necessary to prose composition, when it is to be elevated above the formal style of ceremony, and the negligent expression of common life. Thus it seems to have happened that some Portuguese historians and moralists, who, even in the first half of the sixteenth century, had actually formed their style to a certain extent on the ancient models, still unconsciously fell into the rude manner of the chronicle and monastic prose. In Spain elegant prose was afforded the opportunity of an earlier developement, for the national pride of the Castilians had at all times powerfully protected the Castilian language; and men of learning who entertained a different opinion had not the deciding voice.232

ROMANCES AND NOVELS.

The novel style was at this period not more prejudicial to true eloquence in Portugal than in Spain. 254 Every reader, however, unconscious of any theoretical reasoning on such subjects, regarded the romances and novels which were now profusely circulated as scions from the old stock of the national poetry. They were judged according to poetic laws; while fictitious events in forms wholly prosaic, would have been justly declared counterfeit. But the Portuguese attributed to themselves the peculiar merit of ingenious invention, and of an excellent, if not a perfect, style in the relation of romantic events. Palmerin de Oliva, which next to Amadis de Gaul, Cervantes spares in his judgment on romances of chivalry, was written by Francisco de Moràes, a Portuguese courtier and man of the world; and it has already been mentioned, that even Amadis, in its original form, is considered to have been the production of a Portuguese.233 Francisco de Moràes lived in the reign of John III. and he visited the French court in the suite of the Portuguese ambassador. This visit may have contributed to nurture his taste for romances of chivalry, which were then greatly in favour with people of rank in France.

SA SOTOMAYOR.

Many other Portuguese romances of different kinds were produced in the sixteenth century. The prize awarded to Rodriguez Lobo, as author of the most celebrated pastoral romance, had already been an object of ambition with Eloy de Sà Sotomayor, whose Ribeiras 255 do Mondego, (Banks of the Mondego),234 was not, however, so early known as Lobo’s work. From the preface to the Ribeiras, it is quite evident that Rodriguez Lobo had, according to the fashion of the age, introduced into his pastoral romances a disguised picture of affairs of love which personally interested himself. Sà Sotomayor, who was also a bachelor of canon law, was considered one of the most successful rivals of Rodriguez Lobo, in romantic composition. But as a poet, he was in every respect far inferior. His narrative and descriptive styles are not destitute of grace.235 His verses, however, cannot bear comparison with those of Lobo: and even his most natural pictures 256 of sentiment are deficient in novelty of idea and ingenious simplicity.236

PIRES DE REBELLO.

Among the Portuguese chivalric romances, which were so assiduously read in the sixteenth century, may be numbered A Constante Florinda, (the Constant Florinda) of Gaspar Pires de Rebello, who was likewise the author of some short didactic novels, (novelas exemplares) which were published about the period at which Cervantes enriched Spanish literature with tales 257 of a totally different standard, though bearing the same title.237 Rebello entertained a very high opinion of the usefulness of his novels;238 but his inventions are common place; and his unceasing display of mythological learning is as affected as are many of his similies and images.239 258

PROGRESS OF THE HISTORICAL ART.

But the historical works which were written in the Portuguese language in the sixteenth century, are more important to the lover of literature, as well as the politician, than the other compositions in prose which have just been noticed. In Portugal, as well as in Spain, relations of real events had long been completely distinguished from romantic prose. But before the old chronicle style could become entirely obsolete, it was necessary that the old chronicle spirit should yield to the nobler spirit of historic art; and to this in that age, with all its great events, there was little inducement in Portugal. The ancient classic historians were, it is true, read and studied; but when Portuguese writers attempted to imitate them, they at most only succeeded in producing some resemblance to their force of description, and in a certain degree to their elegance of expression, but failed altogether in the arrangement of events according to the just idea of historical utility, and in the delicacy of the shades of an historical picture. Indeed the rude spirit of the chronicles seemed then to belong no less essentially to the narration of modern events, than the rhyme and the metres of romantic verse to modern poetry. He who felt himself called to be the historian of his native country, necessarily endeavoured to render himself no less intimate with the old chronicles than with classic authors; and, if, fully imbued with his subject, he took up the thread of the narrative where an earlier chronicler had dropped it, he unconsciously fell into the style of that chronicler. Had fate transplanted for 259 several years to Italy, and placed in a sphere of political and literary activity, a Portuguese possessing the talent and energy of Diego de Mendoza, he would probably, like that distinguished Spaniard, have there learned to compose an historical work according to justly conceived ideas of historical art, independently of the influence of the chronicles.240 But in India, to which at that time all Portuguese subjects who wished to rise in the service of their country eagerly hastened, it was not to be expected that a historian could be formed. Still, however, the historical literature of the Portuguese of the sixteenth century, when considered with reference to its rhetorical character, possesses a degree of interest which the elegant compilations of later historians cannot excite. The men who at that memorable epoch, either from their own inclination, or as Cronistas in the service of the government, related the history of their native country, and more particularly of the Portuguese discoveries and conquests, were inspired with ardent national feeling, and that feeling they communicated to their works. Their narratives have character. The manner in which that character displays itself, is doubtless too prominent in cases in which the national interests come into conflict with claims of foreign powers. But an endeavour to preserve historical fidelity, is in general observable in the works of these writers. To confound them with the common chroniclers would be doing them great injustice. They earnestly endeavoured to introduce into their narratives 260 as much of the style of the ancient classics as could be united with the style of the chronicle; and the remote traces of that historical art in which they were deficient are to be recognized in their works. It was not so much their object to string facts together, as to combine remarkable events as far as they were able, under one practical point of view.

JOAÕ DE BARROS.

The events of India formed the favourite theme of many of the Portuguese Cronistas of the sixteenth century. At the head of these industrious writers stands Joaõ de Barros, whose name is not altogether unknown in literature, beyond the boundaries of his native land. In the early part of the sixteenth century he was distinguished by his talents and acquirements among the young men of rank, who were educated at the court of Emanuel the Great. At this period he seems to have applied himself with particular delight to the study of the Roman historians, and in particular of Livy. In his twenty-first year he produced a romance of chivalry. King Emanuel, who on reading this romance thought that he perceived in the youthful author a talent for historical composition, commissioned him to draw up an account of the oriental discoveries and conquests of the Portuguese. Barros immediately prepared for the commencement of his arduous task; the execution of which was, however, delayed for some time in consequence of the death of King Emanuel. But he was speedily solicited by King John III. not to relinquish his design, 261 and, as an encouragement, was invested with the lucrative but troublesome post of Treasurer to the Indian department (Caza da India). Without neglecting the duties of this office, Barros indefatigably collected materials for his great historical work, which he commenced and continued with unremitting activity until a short time previous to his decease. He died in the year 1570, at the age of seventy-four. The Portuguese have surnamed him their Livy. His historical labours sufficiently prove that he did not study Livy in vain, and though he cannot justly claim a place near that historian, yet are his labours well deserving of an ample notice in the history of Portuguese literature.

The celebrated work of Joaõ de Barros is entitled “Asia, or the Atchievements which the Portuguese performed in the Discovery and Conquest of the Seas and Lands of the Orient.241” The books are, like those of Livy’s works, distributed into decades. These decades are four in number, and each makes a moderately sized folio volume. In this work Barros, though he embraces only the most brilliant portion of Portuguese history, has pursued an idea similar to that which governed Livy, for he constantly endeavours to illustrate and render self-evident the greatness of the Portuguese name, as Livy does the majesty of the Roman people. Whether national pride may not sometimes have seduced 262 him into violations of historical truth, is a question which the historian of eloquence cannot be required to investigate.242 This Portuguese Livy has to a certain degree approached the excellence of his model in the art of historical description. His language is sometimes not merely elegant; but the pictures he draws exhibit an unaffected charm of intuitive representation. These descriptions are neither disfigured by pompous phrases nor poetic excrescences; and they still possess a lively internal spirit as well when rural or urbane scenery is depicted,243 as when military events are represented.244 263 But passages thus distinguished for rhetorical beauty are only occasionally to be found in the works of Barros. His narrative style is, upon the whole, merely the old chronicle style, with the diction somewhat more elevated; and even his diction abounds in expressions which were beginning to grow antiquated 264 at the period when he wrote. The practice of commencing several sentences in succession by the conjunction and, in the manner of the old chronicles, is not uncommon in the writings of Barros. But he seldom attains the real flexibility of the long, yet harmoniously articulated sentences of Livy. Barros sometimes very happily inculcates his practical views by speeches in the manner of the ancients, which under certain circumstances he introduces as delivered by the Public, in order to express in the most natural way all that can be said for and against certain enterprises; such, for example, as the continual fitting out, under the auspices of Prince Henry, so celebrated in the history of discoveries of vessels, for the further exploring of the new passage to India.245 Speeches by individuals, though seldom, are for the most part not inappropriately introduced; but the insipid style of the chronicles is then very unseasonably 265 retained.246 Least of all did Barros understand the drawing of character; and in this respect the difference between the Roman and the Portuguese Livy is most striking. The monkish point of view in which this author, like every other of his age in Portugal and Spain, regarded the faults and excellencies of human character, rendered any thing like natural portraiture impossible. An ancient Roman observer of human nature would not, for instance, have deduced the courtesy and gentleness of Prince Henry, the encourager of navigation, from the purity of that prince’s soul, with an intimation that such a conclusion was to be drawn because he was held to be truly virginal.247 In the spirit 266 of his age, Barros seizes every opportunity for putting forward his catholic opinions, though the result is by no means to the advantage of his historical work.

LOPEZ DE CASTANHEDA—DAMIAÕ DE GÓES—AFFONSO D’ALBOQUERQUE.

In order to form a correct estimate of the rhetorical merit of Barros, with reference to the age in which he lived, it is necessary to compare his historical works with others which were written in Portugal at the same period and on the same subjects. In this comparison Barros will be found to shine forth as a light of superior lustre. With equal patriotism and industry, and with a greater sacrifice of his own interest, Fernaõ Lopez de Castanheda composed his history of the discovery and conquest of India by the Portuguese: a narrative of events, which, though compendious in form, exhibits the most laborious accuracy in the investigation of facts.248 But whatever may be the historical merit of this work, it is, as to rhetorical character, merely a common chronicle. The diffuse chronicle of King Emanuel, which was about this 267 period edited by Damiaõ de Góes, is also interesting only to the historian.

The life of the great Affonso d’Alboquerque, composed by his son, Affonso d’Alboquerque, the younger, is a biographical chronicle, which may be placed on a parallel with the works entitled, Histories, which have just been noticed.249 No historical work enjoys greater esteem in Portuguese literature: and that a father so celebrated, should have found so worthy a narrator of his atchievements in his son, certainly was not a thing easily to be anticipated. But in the scale of rhetorical merit, these Commentaries, as the work is usually denominated, weigh but lightly. The language may be said to be pure, but the style is monotonous; and upon the whole it is merely a repetition of the old chronicle style.250 268

BERNARDO DE BRITO.

Bernardo de Brito, a Portuguese historian, who lived in the latter end of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth centuries, possessed a far higher degree of historical cultivation. He was educated at Rome, and was master of several modern languages. He devoted himself to the ecclesiastical profession, but in the cloister he followed his predilection for Portuguese history; and as authorized Cronista of his convent, he undertook the arduous task of writing a complete history of the Portuguese monarchy. He died in the year 1617, in the forty-seventh year of his age, without having attained the object to which he honourably aspired. But, notwithstanding his early death, he might have succeeded in completing the history of his native country, had not the plan on which he proceeded placed that object beyond his reach. The idea of a history of the Portuguese monarchy, would have been properly fulfilled by commencing with the foundation of that monarchy, and in an introduction only, referring back somewhat beyond the eleventh century. But Bernardo de Brito contemplated the execution of a work of much greater magnitude. His Monarchia Lusitana was intended to be a complete history of the country, now called Portugal, from the most remote antiquity down to the latest period.251 The ancient 269 history of Portugal was with him a favourite part of his subject. It is probable that he wished his history to rank as a companion to the Spanish work of Florian de Ocampo, who in the reign of Charles V. commenced on a similar plan, a history of the Spanish monarchy from the time of the flood.252 Brito, however, did not think that period sufficiently remote, but chose to start from the creation of the world. Whatever particulars are furnished by ancient authors, concerning Lusitania and the Lusitanians of the earliest ages, he has collected, examined, and arranged in historical connection. But a thick folio volume, which includes the four first books, brings the history no further than the birth of Christ; and towards the end of the second volume, where the history of modern Portugal commences, the work breaks off. Had it been completed, still it would not have been an easy matter to have brought the numerous notices respecting Portuguese antiquities, which Brito has introduced, under a point of view whereby they might have formed an appropriate union with the heterogeneous events of modern history. But the work is eminently distinguished for style and descriptive talent. The ingenious author seems like many other eminent persons of his age to have derived particular advantage from his residence in Italy. Without deteriorating by laborious polish, the vigorous style which is indispensable to historical composition, he gives even dry narratives of facts in a manner totally different from the compilers of the old chronicles; 270 and where the internal interest of the subject animates the description, Brito’s historical pictures possess an impressive effect, which marks the pupil of the ancient classic writers.253

Brito’s preface, in which he gives an account of the spirit and plan of his history of the Portuguese monarchy, merits attention. He observes that even his own countrymen advised him to write his work, if not 271 in Latin or Italian, at least in Spanish, in order to afford it an opportunity of being read beyond the confines of Portugal, and also for the sake of avoiding the vulgarity into which his native tongue might betray him.254 Thus, even in Portugal, during the sixteenth century, notwithstanding the progress made by Portuguese literature, the detractors of the Portuguese language must have been exceedingly numerous, since their conduct is so frequently a subject of complaint with patriotic writers. Brito was one of the patriots who most loudly expressed his indignation against that anti-national party. The Portuguese language, he says, has fallen into disrepute only because Portugal cherishes “ungrateful sons, like poisonous vipers.”255 He expresses his regret, that though possessing a little better knowledge of his native language, he could not write in the most brilliant style, which is only to be done when the author bestows greater attention on elegance of expression than on the veracity of facts, which is unworthy of a true historian.256

A smaller historical work by Bernardo de Brito, from its title of Elogios dos reys de Portugal, (Eulogies 272 on the Kings of Portugal) seems to promise to the historian of eloquence a kind of rhetorical memoires, from which not a little might be expected. But these eulogies are brief and dull notices, and scarcely afford groundwork for biographical sketches. They are merely intended to illustrate the copper-plate portraits of the kings of Portugal, which are included in the work.257

The travels of Fernaõ Mendez Pinto,258 may also be numbered among the works written in cultivated Portuguese prose, which appeared during the sixteenth century. It seems to have been the first book of travels, the author of which bestowed labour on narrative and descriptive style.

The cultivation of the other departments of prosaic composition appears to have been at this period very much neglected in Portugal. Some moral treatises, written by the historian Barros, in the dialogue form, perhaps merit to be again brought into notice.259 A Panegyrico by the same author on an Infanta Maria, has also the reputation of being eloquently written.

An art of poetry and rhetoric composed on practical principles, and calculated to convey useful instruction, 273 was not to be expected while writers had still sufficient difficulty in the preliminary study of the grammatical rules and purity of diction. To facilitate the acquisition of both, Nunez de Liaõ wrote his book on the origin of the Portuguese language, and his introduction to Portuguese orthography.260


CHAP. III.
HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE POETRY AND ELOQUENCE, FROM THE LATTER YEARS OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY UNTIL TOWARDS THE CLOSE OF THE SEVENTEENTH.

Decay of the ancient national energy in Portuguese Literature.

At the end of the sixteenth century the most brilliant period of Portuguese poetry had passed away. A new epoch did not, it is true, commence; for the style of invention and composition which during that century was introduced, continued essentially unaltered. The influence which the fantastic school of the Gongorists produced, in the first half of the seventeenth century, on most of the Portuguese writers, did not entirely repress the cultivation of the better style.261 But the proper place to form a resting point in the account of 274 the second period of the polite literature of Portugal is the present, for here genius ceased to advance, and dextrous talent merely traded on the stock which the sixteenth century had bequeathed. According to the plan of a history, in which it is intended to describe circumstantially, only the progress of poetic and rhetorical genius and taste, the account of Portuguese poetry and eloquence in the seventeenth century must therefore form merely a summary appendix to the preceding chapters.

At the commencement of the present book it was remarked, that the loss of independence experienced by the kingdom of Portugal, was attended with no immediate injury to Portuguese literature. The Spanish language could obtain no higher consideration in Portugal than it already enjoyed. The humbled national pride took pleasure in the courageous defence of the national language, and the Castilian tongue only served to remind the patriotic Portuguese of the ignominious occupation of his country. But several circumstances concurred to limit poetic genius in Portugal to a somewhat monotonous continuation of the old style in a few branches of poetic composition, while in Spain dramatic poetry, full of national boldness, rapidly advanced in the career of well merited fame. That fate had denied a Lope de Vega to the Portuguese language is not sufficient to account for this contrast, the Spanish would still have been banished from the stage in Portugal, had a Portuguese national theatre vied with that of Spain. In that case the competition of numerous poets would, perhaps, have ensured the cultivation of dramatic composition in the language of the country, which, since the death of Gil Vicente, had been neglected. But even Gil 275 Vicente, as has been already observed, wrote his first drama in Spanish; and in his subsequent works he interspersed the Spanish with the Portuguese language, as if he felt that the latter was not of itself fitted to supply dialogue throughout the whole of a dramatic performance. The genuine Portuguese comedies of Saa de Miranda and Antonio Ferreira were by no means sufficiently national to excite the imitation of a poet who might wish to produce an effect upon the great body of the Portuguese public. Meanwhile the comedies of Lope de Vega found their way into Portugal, and since that period this class of comedy seemed to require the Spanish language to render it perfect. In the seventeenth century, many Spanish comedies were written by Portuguese authors; and the Portuguese poets who adhered to their mother tongue, sought another sphere. During the sixty years in which there was no court in Lisbon, Portuguese poetry withdrew entirely within the circle of private relations. The lyric forms of romantic love, with a supplemental supply of the favourite amatory pastoral poetry, and of versified jests of various kinds, seemed fully to satisfy the public. That the spirit of vigorous emulation should so suddenly have vanished among the Portuguese poets, would, however, be inconceivable, were it not that in Spain about the same period, every species of poetic composition, except dramatic poetry, which flowed like an impetuous torrent, remained stationary at the point at which it stood in the beginning of the seventeenth century. Both the Spaniards and the Portuguese felt the paralyzing influence of the political relations of their deeply humiliated countries; and in both nations 276 despotism, spiritual and temporal, finally overthrew the power which had long kept it in equipoise. Even in Portugal, therefore, the restoration of the independence of the kingdom in the year 1640, though it excited new ebullitions of patriotism, could produce no new freedoms in poetry.

PORTUGUESE SONNETS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.

In the history of Portuguese poetry, the seventeenth century may be called the Age of Sonnets. Lyric art in the old national syllabic metres was entirely abandoned in serious poetry. The composition of sonnets formed the particular recommendation of the man of the world in the circle of polite society; and both in spiritual and temporal affairs, sonnets were resorted to as the means of extricating their authors from difficulty. It would almost appear that at this period poetic merit in Portugal was estimated solely by the inexhaustible facility which an author displayed in the composition of these trifles. To acquire the title of a poet certainly nothing more was necessary than to write a few sonnets not absolutely contemptible. Thus, in the year 1631, when the number of printed Portuguese sonnets was increasing by thousands, Jacinto Cordeiro,262 a minute calculator of the poetic fame of his nation, added a supplement of thirty-eight names of Portuguese bards 277 to the list of Spanish and Portuguese poets, which Lope de Vega had furnished in his celebrated Laurel de Apolo.263 Doubtless this erroneous estimate of the poetic glory of the nation contributed to check the growth of talent which might have taken a loftier flight, had not a few neatly turned sonnets been sufficient in public opinion, to confer on any individual all the fame of a poet. The limits of a general history of modern poetry are too narrow to afford room for a detailed notice of these sonneteers; a particular account can, therefore, only be given of a few of the most celebrated among them, who were also the authors of other poetical works, or who in any way assisted in improving or deteriorating the literary taste of their country.264

FARIA E SOUSA.

Manoel de Faria e Sousa who has been so repeatedly mentioned in the course of the present volume, and who 278 has not been passed by unnoticed in the history of Spanish poetry,265 exercised an important influence on the poetry of the Portuguese sonneteers, particularly in the first half of the seventeenth century. Possessing uncommon faculties, which were early disclosed, and early perverted, he distinguished himself while yet a youth by his extraordinary talents and powers of memory. In the year 1605, he participated, in quality of secretary, in the official duties of one of his relations, under whom he received the education fitting for a statesman. But neither his talents and acquirements, nor his connection with the most distinguished families of his native country, having conducted him to an object commensurate with his diligence and ambition, he quitted Portugal and visited Madrid. Though he did not realize all his expectations in the Spanish capital, he was not entirely neglected. He obtained a post in an embassy to Rome; and on his return to Madrid he found at least a tolerable source of subsistence. Still, however, he continued dissatisfied with his income, and on that account his pen was in constant activity. He himself states that he daily wrote twelve sheets, each page containing thirty lines. He possessed so great a facility in rhetorical turns and flourishes, that in the space of a single day he could compose a hundred addresses of congratulation and condolence, all sufficiently different from each other. As an author both in verse and in prose, he continued to labour with unabated assiduity to the period of his death, which happened 279 in the year 1649.266 A considerable portion of his numerous works will preserve his name in honourable recollection; but the value of that portion greatly depends on the subjects it embraces. They belong to the department of history and statistics, but they are all written in Spanish, and therefore cannot with propriety be farther noticed in the history of Portuguese literature. Faria e Sousa’s poems are also chiefly in Spanish; he wrote only sonnets and eclogues in Portuguese versez.267 Of the six hundred, or to use his own phrase, “the six centuries” of sonnets, which, as it appears he selected for posterity out of a still greater number, precisely two hundred are Portuguese. Some of these compositions merit the praise which Faria e Sousa’s admirers have lavished on them all;268 and the whole 280 collection is animated by a buoyant spirit, which soars above ordinary and moderate elegance. But this spirit could not long accommodate itself to sound poetic judgment, nor to the old simplicity and natural flow of ideas and images. Without intentionally becoming an imitator of the Italian Marinists, the Spanish Gongorists, or the school of Lope de Vega, Faria e Sousa revelled in bold flights of fancy, like Lope de Vega, and indulged in eccentric extravagancies like the Marinists and Gongorists. The poetic flowers in his sonnets are overgrown by luxuriant parasitical weeds. In the first Century of the sonnets in the Portuguese language love is the only theme. The introductory sonnet announces that they are intended to celebrate the “penetrating shafts of love, which were shot from a pair of heavenly eyes, and which after inflicting immortal wounds, issued triumphant from the poet’s breast.”269 This style pervades the whole collection. In one place a tender swain, named Menalio, forbids the satyres of the wood to steep their feet in the brook 281 which has served as a bath to the fair Albania, that “morning-star, who in the depth of the water is the first of suns, where the sun himself is dazzled.”270 On another occasion the poet complains of the “bitter taste he experiences in his mouth,” when he describes his pain to his mistress.271 Sometimes it is scarcely possible to guess the meaning of these romantic conceits. But this style of poetic composition was by the admirers of Faria e Sousa denominated the ingenious and the tender style. The principal sonnets in the second Century pursue the same theme of romantic love, but they are sometimes so charming that the beauty of the successful passages, nearly throws into shade the distortions by which even that beauty is more or less 282 alloyed.272 Among the moral sonnets in this Century there are several which, though not abounding in ingenious ideas, are nevertheless expressive pictures of sentiment.273 The sonetos sacros (spiritual sonnets), with 283 which the collection closes, are, however, destitute of all trace of poetic merit. Whatever deserves to be pointed out as remarkable in the twelve Portuguese eclogues of Faria e Sousa, may with propriety be included in the notice respecting the degree of merit which this industrious writer possessed as a poetic theorist.

Faria e Sousa is the author of three treatises; the first, “On the sonnet;” the second, “On the erroneous notions of the moderns concerning poetry;” and the third, “On pastoral poetry.” These works must not be overlooked in the history of the literary taste of Portugal, since theoretical prolusions of this kind by poetic writers, supplied the place of a detailed art of poetry in Portuguese literature. All these treatises are written in the Spanish language.274 The first, which is entitled Discurso de los Sonetos, is in itself insignificant. It merely contains a few scanty notices on the history of sonnet poetry, and some trifling observations hastily thrown together on the appropriateness of the sonnet metre in Spanish and Portuguese poetry. But towards the close of the treatise Faria e Sousa advances a very wide principle, which is exceedingly convenient for him in its application to his peculiar style of composition. One certainly must not, he says, grant absolution for excrescences and licences in poetry, from the notion that elegant language is of less importance than bold and beautiful ideas; but it is not to be forgotten “that a great man may sometimes do what he pleases, and that 284 it is a great crime to call him to account for so doing, more particularly when those by whom he is called to account are pigmies in knowledge and judgment.”275 That Faria e Sousa ranked himself in the class of great men is a circumstance which admits of no doubt. In his second treatise (Contra la opinion moderna acerca lo que es poesia) he has more clearly explained the nature of the ideas which in his opinion are more to be esteemed in poetry than elegant words. In the first place he applies the just principle that language does not make a poet in so loose and perverted a manner as to imply that correct versification is but of little importance. He then reasons again on a just principle most inconsistently, concerning the essence of poetry. He first observes that the essence of poetry as little consists in fine phrases and even in grand ideas, as in deep knowledge or in polished verse, (versos muy peinados). He next makes this assertion,—“the only things required in poetry are invention, imagery, pathos, and a display of every kind of knowledge.”276 Considered in this point of view, he admits Marino to be far inferior to Homer, Virgil, Ovid, Dante, Ariosto, and similar poets. But then Torquato Tasso is 285 scarcely a poet worth naming; for in Tasso’s poetry there is but little learning, little invention, and a common style of composition. Tasso is in his opinion a second Lucan, and nothing more; a historian indeed, but no poet. Finally, he complains that allegory, which he regards as particularly necessary to the beauty of a great poem, is totally wanting in Tasso’s Jerusalem Delivered. Faria e Sousa seems to have picked up in Italy the opinions which form the groundwork of his vituperation of Tasso and his Jerusalem. Having ceased to rail against Tasso, he proceeds to declaim concerning poetry in a series of paragraphs, which plainly shew that he was totally deficient in clearness of ideas on the subject. Six of these paragraphs, in immediate succession, commence with such phrases as the following:—“He understands nothing of the matter;” or more briefly, “he is a fool,” (es necio); or “he is an absolute fool (es totalmente necio) who supposes,” &c. or “it is a proof of perfect ignorance,” (purissima ignorancia); or “it is a proof of a total want of knowledge of poetry to assert,” &c. And yet after all these rude sallies against a party which perhaps did no more than earnestly resist his attacks on correctness of ideas and language, he comes at last merely to this conclusion, that a writer of great genius must not be restrained by trifles, and that in his poetry he need only avoid singularity, coarseness and unintelligibility.

In a general history of literature any particular notice of these half true, but mainly trivial declamations, would be quite unnecessary, had not this author been for a considerable period revered as a critical 286 oracle in Portugal.277 The absurd conversion of the pastoral style into a mere poetic figure was among other faults of Portuguese poetry, methodically favoured and confirmed by the fallacious theories of Faria e Sousa. The earlier Portuguese poets who availed themselves of this inappropriate freedom merely followed a custom which had accidentally arisen. After transforming all sorts of occasional poems into eclogues, they at least endeavoured to give these factitious eclogues a pastoral character. But Faria e Sousa having formed a perverted judgment on pastoral poetry, proceeded in conformity with that judgment to exhibit various kinds of completely disfigured eclogues. In his treatise on his own pastoral poems, he theoretically praises himself for never having attempted any species of poetic composition on which he did not confer some novelty. He was accordingly less scrupulous than the eclogue writers who had preceded him, in introducing into such poems characters from the great and polite world. It seems with him to be sufficient that the scene shall always be in the country. He composed, however, a few eclogues in the true spirit and style of pastoral life. He likewise endeavoured to introduce into pastoral poetry more of action and interesting incident than is usually exhibited in that species of composition, so that in this respect some of his eclogues are brought into comparison with serious comedies. According to these and similar principles, Faria e Sousa distinguished his love eclogues (eglogas amorosas,) from 287 hunting eclogues (venatorias), sea-faring eclogues (maritimas), properly pastoral or rather rustic eclogues (rusticas), funeral eclogues (funebres), and other modifications of similar description. In pursuance of his theory he recognized even arbitrator eclogues (arbitrarias), monastic eclogues (monasticos), critical eclogues (criticas), genealogical eclogues (genealogicas), hermit eclogues (eremiticas), and finally, as a particular species, fantastical eclogues (fantasticas), the theme of which is a prophetic vision. Of all these styles he has given specimens according to his own fancy. The same confusion of ideas on which his art of poetry is founded, and the same search after the uncommon at the expense of sound judgment, pervades the whole of this collection of eclogues. The beautiful idea which pastoral poetry presents was completely lost in the way in which Faria e Sousa viewed it. He attached but little importance to the representation of a poetic rural life, and still less to ideal simplicity, his wish being to sport, after his own manner, in bucolic forms, with crude conceits, affected pathos, and extravagant images. His rustic eclogues are, it is true, sufficiently rural, but not in the style of Saa de Miranda, who with the most delicate art gave a poetic dignity to rustic manners. Faria e Sousa’s shepherds are absolute clowns; and he accordingly makes them discourse in a kind of low Portuguese, one half of which is unintelligible to foreigners unacquainted with the rudest dialect of the peasantry of Portugal.278 288

Faria e Sousa crowned his efforts towards the literary cultivation of his age by a diffuse commentary on the works of Camoens,—a production more calculated to obscure than to illustrate the original. This commentary is written in Spanish.279 The value of the historical portion would be greatly enhanced, were it separated from the critical, so that the latter might be rejected and only the former retained. But the historical data which Faria e Sousa has collected for the elucidation of Camoens’s poems, and particularly the Lusiad, are everywhere interwoven with the critical paraphrase of the text, and that paraphrase is so overloaded with a mass of erudition not merely superfluous, but totally unconnected with the subject, that in the present age, a reader of the works of Camoens, might be enabled to estimate the extent of his admiration of 289 the poet by the degree of patience with which he peruses the labours of this commentator. Faria e Sousa has furnished a new example of the little profit to be derived from critical investigation, by a man who does not commence with a mind rightly cultivated for such a study. His admiration of Camoens contributes nothing to the improvement of his own poetic talent, for he always forces his own perverted views into Camoens’s poetry.

The esteem which Faria e Sousa obtained in Portuguese literature, must have contributed not a little to promote the endless rhyming of sonnets, and to impede the developement of the loftier style of poetry in Portugal. The false liberality of his critical code proved very convenient for the sonneteers, who experienced but little difficulty in exhibiting the qualities which that critic required in their compositions; and the unreasonable severity with which he treated Tasso was calculated to seduce every eccentric sonneteer into the conceit that he was himself something more than a Tasso. The pretensions of Faria e Sousa were not, however, universally recognized on the Portuguese Parnassus. Even in the composition of sonnets, some of the principal Portuguese poets of the seventeenth century followed the more pure and elevated style of Camoens. But no one thought of avoiding the faults into which Camoens had fallen. That prince of Portuguese poets was always regarded as faultless. 290

THOMAS DE NORONHA.

Comic sonnet poetry, in which Camoens did not distinguish himself as a master, obtained a favourable reception from the Portuguese public on Thomas de Noronha, a contemporary of Faria e Sousa becoming celebrated for that kind of composition.280 But Thomas de Noronha, though an agreeable man of the world, was but a pretender in wit. His writings probably acquired a particular interest from the convivial temper, for which he was distinguished in society, and of which the reader is reminded by his poetry. But such versified jests as this merry companion has left behind him, could only have obtained temporary popularity from personal and local circumstances. They want the sprightly extravagance of the burlesque poetry of the Italians, as well as the moral keeping and caustic delicacy of the more lofty style of satire. Burlesque, however, they certainly are. Some approach, at least in a coarse way, to the Italian jests of a similar kind;281 and in others jesting 291 and serious feeling are blended together in a very absurd manner. Thomas de Noronha thought fit to write a burlesque sonnet in honour of Rodriguez Lobo, when that poet was drowned in the Tagus. After a comic apostrophe to heaven and earth, Noronha declares that if he can catch Æolus he will give him a flogging.282 In nearly the same manner he jests in comic canções and romances, and in redondilha stanzas, (decimas,) which may also be termed epigrams. In these verses the 292 conceits frequently turn on a play of words. Many must be altogether unintelligible to the foreign reader, particularly in the nineteenth century.

BARBOSA BACELLAR.

As a writer of serious sonnets, and particularly of romantic love sonnets in the style of Camoens, no Portuguese poet of the seventeenth century was more successful than the elegant and ingenious Antonio Barbosa Bacellar, who was also celebrated as one of the most skilful disputants of the university of Coimbra. After filling various public offices, he died in the year 1663.283 Barbosa Bacellar’s inclination to form his taste on the model of Camoens, is proved by several excellent glosses, which he composed on some of that great poet’s sonnets. He may indeed be ranked among the most distinguished writers of poetic glosses. In all his poems, many of which are written in the Spanish language, he has disdained those excrescences which Faria e Sousa commends as a proof of unconstrained genius. Barbosa Bacellar was one of the supporters of the correct style of sonnet composition, in whom the spirit of the sixteenth century survived; but so little was he disposed to approve the jejune correctness of Ferreira and Caminha, that he preferred deviating into the opposite extreme, rather than repress the spirit of his poetry by a rigid adherence to forms. He excelled 293 in the art of ingeniously amplifying a romantic idea without allowing the sentimental to degenerate into the fantastic. Besides some very charming sonnets,284 the most remarkable productions of this poet are the extended pictures of romantic aspiration which since his time have been distinguished in Portuguese poetry by the untranslatable name of Saudades.285 The complaints of a lovelorn heart vented in solitude, are the only materials which enter into the composition of these poems; and the peculiar character of their class, which had rapidly grown into favour, was fixed by Barbosa Bacellar. A certain degree of prolixity is essential to these 294 compositions. They do not well afford opportunity for the display of a brilliant store of novel ideas; and to employ an inexhaustible flow of words in painting the tender longing of love was deemed a proof of the ardour of the passion. They might very properly be classed with elegies, were it not that they have usually a narrative form. There are also among the Spanish and Portuguese eclogues, many poems which present the same character as these pictures of amatory aspiration. Barbosa Bacellar seems to have conferred on these pictures the highest degree of improvement which they were capable of receiving, consistently with fidelity to the style, which was then exclusively appropriated to the poetry of love in Spain and Portugal. But the modern forms of cultivation have given, at least on this side of the Pyrenees, a direction so totally different to poetic susceptibility, that the endless complaining of lovers must soon become tedious even to the readers most disposed to indulge in such romantic sentiments. It is, however, a remarkable circumstance in the history of the human mind, that the Portuguese taste in the seventeenth century fondly dwelt on every little feature of such never-ending repetitions in the expression of the same feeling. Barbosa Bacellar devoted no small portion of labour to every line in his Saudades. He is particularly successful in imparting a graceful colouring to the romantic conversations in which the solitary lover engages with natural objects.286 295

TORREZAÕ COELHO.

A doctor of canon law, and a member of the Inquisitorial college of Lisbon, named Simaõ Torrezaõ Coelho, vied with Barbosa Bacellar in this new modification 296 of romantic poetry. His pictures of passion are, however, totally different from those of Bacellar. He imitated the perverted style of the Marinists and Gongorists, and followed the precepts of Faria e Sousa. He talks of “the just sensation of unjust love;”287—of the living feeling of a dead soul;288 of “the memory that lives in the brass of the soul;”289 and such like Marinisms and Gongorisms. His verses appear, however, to have been very popular.290

FREIRE DE ANDRADA.

Jacinto Freire de Andrade or Andrada, an ecclesiastic, who performed a part in the political history of his native country, and nearly fell a sacrifice to the patriotism with which he defended the claims of the house of Braganza against the Spanish occupation of the Portuguese throne, also endeavoured to enlarge the boundaries of comic poetry. Wit so highly cultivated had never before shewn itself in Portuguese verse. In the union of bold sportiveness, sustained humour and poignant satire, with perfect correctness and elegance of language, Andrada’s burlesque narratives of the fable of 297 Narcissus, and the fable of Polyphemus and Galathæa,291 excel all the earlier specimens of comic wit which the works of former Portuguese poets, including even the comedies, afford. The burlesque manner of Andrada is owing solely to a caricature style which he took no pains to avoid. From the introductory stanzas to his Polyphemus, it appears that he merely tried to divert himself by these plays of fancy, in the hope of forgetting the adversities of his life. He wished, he says, “to visit the region of folly, that he might thereby approach happiness.” He also observes, that “with three ounces of judgment he is more loaded than an elegy, and more solemnly sententious than a sonnet.”292 In order to cheat his sorrow, he makes “joy play 298 with false dice.”293 Had Andrada thrown these dice more steadily, he would, without doubt, have been one of the first comic writers in narrative poetry. But his satire was chiefly directed against the affected poetry of the Gongorists. He attacked other follies merely incidentally as they happened to strike him, and while he was in the humour rather to jest than to castigate.

In his Narcissus, he begins with parodying the wild conceits and romantic imagery of the fantastic sonneteers. To explain whence the beauty of Narcissus originates, a minute detail is given of the charms of his mother, the nymph Liriope, to whom the river god Cephissus makes tender propositions. After describing how the nymph paints herself in the morning, it is said of her eyes “that for boldness and honour there are no fairer lights in heaven; that they are pirates rebelliously fallen from the sun, which now, like the Dutch, wage war against the stars.”294 Of the lips of the beauteous nymph he says, that they make “the roses wither for envy.”295 The declaration of love, put into the mouth of Cephissus in this parodying style, is still more whimsical. If, says he, the eyes of the nymph should summon him to 299 battle, he must be immediately subdued, because he should “see the sun divided in two eyes.”296 He conjures her not to destroy the paper on which he has written his declaration of love, as in that case she will destroy “the house in which she dwells; and the altar on which she is worshipped.”297 He now begins to weep bitterly, upon which Liriope observes, that if he be a true lover, the fountain of his tears must never dry up; but that it would be better to begin by giving her a little present, and to let “the sin go first and the tears follow afterwards.”298 Andrada’s conceits, though they sometimes consist of mere plays of words, are still not of a common kind; as when he makes the covetous nymph say, that, “the demon of the flesh, flies frightened from the cross, but clings to the crossed;”299 and that of “all beautiful streams none murmur so sweetly as the Silver River (the Rio de la Plata in South America).” At length the nymph resigns herself to the river god, and he becomes the reputed father of Narcissus. The reader is next entertained with a comic 300 biography of Narcissus, which is a satirical representation of the history of a fashionable beau. Before he quits the cradle he is destined to become a military officer, as it is discovered that he was born “in the sign of the lion, though it was really the sign of the bull.”300 The officer when grown up is characterized as one who though choleric, is never sanguine (sanguinary); who has “sinned against the fifth commandment in word but not in deed;301 and who has always displayed great gallantry in engagements with the wine flasks.302” Tired of the army, he applies himself to poetry, and writes a new Jerusalem Delivered, and some sonnets in 301 which the sun is so frequently introduced, that the absurdity of the conceits or disparates is, as it is said, rendered quite transparent. Narcissus also becomes fond of tracing genealogies, but he considers it beneath his dignity to study law, or to endeavour to acquire any other kind of practical knowledge. Being convinced by the heralds of his distinguished extraction, he withdraws himself from the public eye; but at the same time takes a lively interest in all that occurs at court, and soon becomes a minister of state. The love of wealth being now his governing passion, he rapidly enriches himself at the expense of the nation, and at last dies of vanity.

What this satire occasionally wants in refinement, is compensated by its extraordinary features, in which Andrada’s wit shines with peculiar lustre: and though the comic effusions of the ingenious author can only rank as poetic trifles, they are nevertheless entitled to some attention in consequence of their being chiefly directed against the absurd style which then distinguished and disfigured Spanish and Portuguese literature.

Andrada’s Polyphemus is a direct ridicule of the monstrous production of Gongora which bears the same title. As an example of the kind of ridicule employed it may just be mentioned, that in this parody the Cyclops styles the conquering eyes of Galathæa, “Turks by land and Dutch by sea.” The poetic works of Andrada include some comic sonnets and romances. He is also the author of a still more remarkable prose work which will be hereafter noticed. 302

FURTHER DECLINE OF PORTUGUESE TASTE—RIBEIRO DE MACEDO—CORREA DE LA CERDA.

During the second half of the seventeenth century, until the period of the first imitation of the French style in Portuguese literature, the defenders and partizans of classic correctness in Portugal seem to have been constantly diminishing. After the kingdom was emancipated from Spanish dominion, the old patriotic spirit of the Portuguese again found its way into their poetry; but that poetry gained little thereby in interior cultivation; and its boundaries were not farther extended. A species of mythological tales in the romantic form, but very dull and frigid, obtained some favour. In this style did Duarte Ribeiro de Macedo, who was also a prose author, and who died in the year 1682, after filling several distinguished posts, relate the fable of Adonis in serious redondilhas. Undismayed by the ridicule with which Freire Andrada had overwhelmed poems formed of such materials, he says in his verses that “Adonis has obtained privileges from Cupid, and licences from Diana, for punishing wild beasts and enchanting the fair; that lightnings flash from his eyes, and arrows are shot from his hands; that the hills and valleys at once represent lamentation and horror, because in the former the beasts groan, and in the latter the goddesses sigh.”303 303

Fernaõ Correa de la Cerda, an ecclesiastic, who was Bishop of Oporto, may also be numbered among the versifiers of this class. In a sonnet on a lady who died a few days after an eclipse of the sun, he thought it pathetic to say, that “at the death of Phillis, the whole celestial sphere must be afflicted with deep sorrow, bitter anguish.” And then he asks “if an eclipsed sun excites so much regret, what is to be expected from a dead sun?”304 304

VIOLANTE DO CEO.

A poetess whose name and rank probably contributed to raise her reputation at this period, shone conspicuously among the writers whom Freire de Andrada ridiculed. She was called Violante do Ceo, that is, if a name may be translated, “Violante of Heaven.” As a nun of the order of Dominicans, she obtained the character of a pattern of piety. Portuguese writers, moreover mention, that she was an excellent performer on the harp, and a singer. Among her writings there are some spiritual meditations in prose. She was born in 1601, and died in 1693, having consequently attained the age of ninety-two. Her miscellaneous poems were for the first time collected after her death.305 Violante do Ceo was certainly a woman of genius; but her genius had received a totally false cultivation. She delighted as much as any of the partizans of Faria e Sousa, in all the absurdities of Portuguese Gongorism and Marinism. With her no antithesis was too far-fetched, no play of words too trivial, if the idea she thereby expressed was, according to her opinion, extraordinary. When wanting a poetic image, she immediately has recourse to the sun, which constantly shines in her pages as in these of the other Portuguese Gongorists and Marinists, whose verses, on that account, were by the witty Andrada, pronounced transparent. The tenderness or 305 warmth of feeling which in female poetry often gets the better of the judgment, is in the writings of Violante do Ceo unnaturally represented by a false overstrained wit, which, however, assumes the disguise of judgment. In a sonnet on a lady, named Marianna de Luna, Violante do Ceo apostrophizes the muses, as “the divinities, who, in the garden of the king of day, unloosing their sweet voices, arrest Zephyr;—who, admiring the thoughts, multiply the flowers which Apollo creates.” She implores the muses “to abandon the society of the sun, since a moon (that is to say, Marianna de Luna,) which is at once a sun and a prodigy, prepares for them a garden of harmony.” Whether Marianna de Luna was a musician, or whether she had really laid out a fine garden, is not clearly explained. After some unintelligible phrases, it is in conclusion declared, that “through the grace of the deity, this tuneful garden is secured by the immortal wall of eternity.”306 In this 306 spirit and style Violante do Ceo composed both sacred and profane poetry. One of her Spanish sonnets on the death of a lady, closes with the idea, that, “if for such a sun the world is the region of setting, heaven on the other hand is for such a sun (the words are expressly repeated) the region of rising.”307 She addressed a similar sonnet to a physician, named Arraes, a word which in the Portuguese language signifies the master of a vessel; and she says, in allusion to his name, that he deserves to be captain of the ship of life, which navigates the ocean of tyrannic disease; that is to say, as the succeeding lines denote, that he ought to be the king’s physician.308 By her writings, after the revolution in the year 1640, Violante do Ceo distinguished herself as a patriot, but never as a judicious poetess.309 307

DIDACTIC EPISTLES OF ALVARES DA CUNHA.

Of the extent to which the perverted taste, which in the seventeenth century disfigured Portuguese, even more than Spanish poetry influenced the didactic epistolary style, a judgment may be formed by reference to the writings of Antonio Alvares da Cunha. This author, one of the most distinguished statesmen and literary characters of the reigns of John IV. and Alphonso VI. addressed epistles to Joaõ Nunez da Cunha, who was appointed viceroy of the Portuguese dominions in India. To express the trivial idea of Nunez da Cunha being about to sail from Lisbon for India, Alvares da Cunha pompously says, that the new viceroy will cut through “the crystal waves from the mouth of the Tagus, to those new regions which the world descried by the waving of the Quinas.”310 The time of the sailing of the ship is described as the time during which the viceroy’s “winged beachen trees spread their pinions, carrying with them the wind, while they pursue their silvery path.” He next regrets that the instrument with which he writes does not perfectly express 308 his ideas, observing “that though the pen touch softly the guitar of the paper, rude thunder resounds from that guitar.”311 This epistle is one of the longest in Portuguese literature; and though totally deficient in the true epistolary character, it nevertheless contains many good ideas and sound precepts, while at the same time it exhibits a vain display of historical erudition.312

JERONYMO BAHIA.

The taste of the public was, in like manner, corrupted by Jeronymo Bahia, of whose existence in other respects no account is preserved.313 The old fable of Polyphemus and Galathæa had already been so completely 309 exhausted, that a recurrence to it might have been expected rather to disgust than to please; and yet, as if a new relation of that wearisomely repeated story had been all that was necessary to establish a writer on a level with Gongora, Jeronymo Bahia collected a store of affected phrases, and with pompous gravity remodelled the often celebrated theme of the Cyclops and his disdainful mistress.314 Thus powerless had been all the pointed satire of the more judicious party. Divested of its original heaviness, and united with the fanciful Marinism, Gongorism now seemed to its defenders to be raised above the reach of ridicule. Bahia, too, thought it, perhaps, the less necessary to guard against the wit of the adverse party, since he was himself a master in subtle witticism. He wrote numerous comic romances, that is to say, comic tales and descriptions of travels in redondilhas. His playful loquacity flows in an inexhaustible current in these romances, which are not destitute of comic interest; but their extreme length would still have rendered them tedious, even though the author had better succeeded in catching the gay style 310 suited to such trivial compositions.315 His great facility in rhyming is recorded in a notice affixed to one of his odes. This ode was written on a victory gained by the Portuguese during their war with Spain, and Bahia composed it in a single day, so that it was presented to the king on the evening of the day on which the account of the battle was circulated. Surely no other manufacturer of rhyme would, like him, have spun out an Idyllio panegyrico, on a chandelier, which the Duchess of Savoy presented to the Queen of Portugal, to fifty octavo pages of versified prattle. From the works of this author may also be incidentally learned the direction which the prevailing spirit of religion took in Portugal, when the old national energy expired, and when the still more remarkable decline of the Spanish 311 monarchy enabled the Portuguese to maintain an eight-and-twenty years war against Spain, in defence of their recovered independence. It was at this period that the court of Lisbon resorted to the far-famed expedient of enlisting by prayers and entreaties Saint Anthony among the Portuguese troops, and formally investing him with the military rank of generalissimo, in order to render the army invincible. The inhabitant of heaven was declared to have accepted the command, and Jeronymo Bahia wrote a song of praise in honour of King Alphonso VI. who effected this extraordinary arrangement.316

FRANCISCO VASCONCELLOS.

The dominion of bad taste and worthless subtilty was not, however, during the second half of the seventeenth century extended over the whole of the Portuguese Parnassus. The writings of some poets still evinced sound judgment and some portion of the old and nobler style of art. Francisco de Vasconcellos of the island of Madeira, inclined somewhat more to the 312 side of reason than most of his contemporaries.317 Some of his sonnets are so free from unnatural and overstrained thoughts,318 that one might be induced to consider his other productions as parodied imitations in the style of Andrada, were it not that these outbalance the number of his correct poems, and that his works include a new dressing of the long before overdone story of Polyphemus and Galatæa.

TELLES DA SYLVA AND NUNES DA SYLVA.

Antonio Telles da Sylva was likewise distinguished among the multitude of sonneteers by a better cultivated 313 taste.319 He also composed latin verses, though he was gentil-homem da camara (a gentleman of the chamber).

But a greater share of attention is due to the poems of Andre Nunes da Sylva, an equally unassuming and ingenious writer, who received his first education in Brazil, and who died a Theatin monk in Portugal.320 His spiritual sonnets, canções, and romances, are at least free from absurd conceits and Marinistical subtilties. It was, however, scarcely possible at any time, but more especially at the period of the most violent re-action against protestantism, not to deviate from reason, in representing 314 poetically, and with religious fervour, the mysteries of the catholic faith, according to the opinions alone considered orthodox in Portugal and Spain. Nevertheless among the spiritual poems of Nunes da Sylva there are some, which though certainly as romantic as pious, are by no means fantastic, and which may be ranked among the best of their kind.321 Even where the pious writer appears to have fallen into the most extravagant metaphors of the Marinists, as when he styles the tomb of St. Isabella “a flower of the firmament, a star of the field;” or, shortly after, “a nightingale, an animated jewel, an Orpheus to the ear, and a flower to the eye,”322 his eccentric plays of ideas have still a poetic keeping. 315 Among the patriotic poems, to which the war with Spain gave birth, there are several by Nunes da Sylva, which are distinguished for correct and picturesque representation, at least in single passages;323 and his sonnets and songs of love possess, with all their faults, a considerable portion of poetic tenderness.

OTHER SONNETEERS—CONTINUED INTERVENTION OF THE SPANISH LANGUAGE IN PORTUGUESE POETRY.

It is not necessary to enter into particular details respecting other Portuguese sonneteers. Some who enjoyed celebrity lived until the commencement of the eighteenth century, among whom the names of Diogo de Monroy e Vasconcellos, Thomas de Sousa, and Luis Simoes de Azavedo, deserve to be mentioned. About 316 the same period lived Diogo Camacho, who was the author of a lively poem, entitled a Journey to Parnassus; the idea of which was doubtless taken from the work of Cervantes of the same name, but which when compared with that master-piece, possesses no great merit. On comparing the Portuguese sonnets, the authors of which lived till the eighteenth century, with those of a somewhat older date, an obvious, though certainly not a striking tendency of Portuguese taste, to a more correct direction of the imagination, is, upon the whole, perceptible. But how far this change in Portuguese literature was effected by the increasing influence of French taste, which about this time commenced its universal sway; or whether it is at all attributable to the introduction of that taste, are questions not easy to be decided. This, however, is certain, that the incorrect, silly, and fantastic style of writing and judging poetry, still maintained its ground in the Portuguese literature of the eighteenth century long after the Count de Ericeira, who will soon be further noticed, had drawn from the school of Boileau those principles by which he wished to improve the literary taste of his countrymen.

Of the Portuguese sonneteers, who more or less contributed to transfuse the style of the seventeenth into the eighteenth century, there was none who did not, according to the custom of the age, pride himself in his facility of composing verses in the Spanish language. The recent separation of Portugal from the Spanish monarchy, had not, in the least, diminished this old custom of the Portuguese poets. They addressed complimentary verses in Spanish to the Queen of Portugal. 317 Spanish comedies were still represented in Lisbon; and even the loas, or prologues, were recited in the same language. It was not until the esteem for Spanish literature had declined throughout Europe, that the literature of Portugal became entirely Portuguese.324

It is proper to observe here, that the collections of Portuguese poems of the seventeenth century, likewise contain sonnets by a Prince Don Pedro, and by several anonymous ladies.

PORTUGUESE ELOQUENCE DURING THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.

All that need be said respecting the Portuguese eloquence of the seventeenth century, may be related within the compass of a few pages. The obstacles which had hitherto impeded the free cultivation of energetic and reasoning prose in Portuguese literature, operated still more fatally, when the restraints on conscience became more oppressive, and when there was no longer any feeling of political greatness to give excitement to the thinking mind. 318

ROMANTIC PROSE—MATHEUS RIBEYRO—CASTANHEIRA TURACEM.

Viewed in relation to the whole of Portuguese literature, romantic prose continued nearly on the same footing on which it long had stood. It maintained its ground; but it was long after the death of Rodriguez Lobo before any more distinguished writer in this class of composition arose. With regard to invention, however, some of the Portuguese romances of the seventeenth century are not without merit. This praise is due to a work written by Matheus Ribeyro, a priest, who did not scruple to publish his name on the title-page, together with an enumeration of all his ecclesiastical dignities. This romance, which is entitled, “Retirement from Care, or the Life of Carlos and Rosaura,”325 is not wanting in adventures both by sea and land. The style, however, is that of the old romance, with all its excrescences, and is particularly fantastical in the descriptive passages.

But a more elegant and far more valuable production of fancy now demands some notice. That this work was written with the view of opposing fantastic ornament in polite literature, and of assisting to restore a more natural and dignified spirit and style, would never be suspected from its affected title, which, stripped of its antiquated form, means, as far as it can be rendered 319 intelligible, “The elegant Evening Party, or the Improvement of Bad Manners.”326 On the title-page, and at the close of the dedicatory address, the author styles himself Felix da Castanheira Turacem. No information respecting him, beyond what his work affords, seems to have been preserved; but from that it may be concluded that he was a man who moved in the more elevated and polished ranks of society. The bad custom which he particularly condemned was an improper extension of the liberty taken at the season of the carnival in Lisbon. To present a picture of a more elegant and noble style of social entertainment, he contrasts the sprightly conversation of the company, whose manners he describes, with the licentious tricks of the carnival (entrudo.) The plan of Castanheira’s work is similar to that of Rodriguez Lobo’s “Court in the Country;” but the composition possesses a higher degree of romantic interest. In the party which Castanheira assembles, beautiful women play prominent parts; and between them and the young gentlemen who most contribute to the entertainment, attachments are formed which cross and oppose each other. The characters by turns sing, play, tell stories, and converse. 320 The composition is, upon the whole, equally graceful and natural; but the execution is in many passages less successful. Castanheira, particularly where he begins to describe, is often drawn unconsciously into the stream of Gongorism and Marinism, though it appears that he was really anxious to separate himself completely from the partisans of these styles. That this was his most serious determination, is obvious from his spirited preface, in which he acknowledges that he does not calculate on a very favourable reception in the polite world. He declares that he is not ambitious of the honour of writing verses extempore. He sought to steer clear of dulness and bombast, the Scylla and Charybdis of the wide ocean of eloquence; and in all his digressions never to lose sight of the haven of clearness, as its entrance is difficult. “But deliver us from metaphor,” he adds in latin, and in the words of the Lord’s Prayer.327 A man who, at this period, could so express himself in Portugal, deserves, were it on that account only, to be distinguished in the history of polite literature. Castanheira’s language, too, is, upon the whole, as natural according to the manner of its cultivation, as is his lively descriptive art. It is singular, however, that occasionally in the course of his work, and sometimes in those very passages, the superiority of which would otherwise be unquestionable, he falls into the very faults which he 321 himself ridicules.328 On the novel style, which is discussed in the first evening party, Cervantes appears, by that time, to have exercised a favourable influence. The severe criticism on the Poesia Incuravel (Incurable Poetry), in the second evening’s conversation, is certainly the best theoretical disquisition on Gongorism and Marinism, to be found in the Portuguese literature of the seventeenth century. It ought, also, to be stated, that the sonnets and other poems which are scattered through the work, exhibit some very successful passages. Occasion is taken to introduce a Discurso Academico, which towards the conclusion refers to the Italian academic system, which had long been imitated in Portugal, but which proved of as little advantage to Portuguese as to Italian literature.329 322 Among the poems comprised in this book, there are many in the Spanish language.

HISTORICAL PROSE—FREIRE DE ANDRADA.

Of the cultivation of prose style in Portuguese literature during the seventeenth century, nothing could be said, had not a man in whom the spirit of the sixteenth century survived, successfully pursued the path which Barros and Brito traced out. This writer, who must be regarded as single in his age, was Jacinto Freire de Andrada, the same who in his comic tales already noticed, ridiculed the Gongorism and Marinism of poetry. The reader is almost inclined to doubt the evidence of his own eyes, when, among the Portuguese writings of the seventeenth century, he discovers such a prose work as “the Life of Dom Joaõ de Castro, fourth Viceroy of India, by Freire de Andrada.”330 No 323 biographical work, deserving to be ranked on a level with this, had hitherto appeared either in Portuguese or any other modern language. Andrada is reproached with a certain degree of far-fetched elegance and refined subtlety; and certainly his historical style might often, with advantage, be more simple. But that this ingenious writer upon the whole entertained the most correct notion of the rhetorical cultivation of historical prose, and that his intention was to write an energetic style appropriate to his subject, but by no means to make an ostentatious display of elegant phrases, would be sufficiently evident from the character of the whole work, even though the author had not, in his brief preface, explained himself with sufficient clearness on this point. He observes, that he has written his book in the language of truth, and according to credible authorities. He neither followed the advice of some who recommended the extension of his work, nor adopted the opinion of others who wished him to 324 sacrifice the truth of nature to the fashionable ornaments of affected cultivation. His object was not to flatter a corrupt taste; on the contrary he wished to merit, by the unadorned language of truth, the approbation of sensible readers, rather than to gain a name among the great mass of a mis-judging public.331 To a man of Andrada’s cultivated mind, it never could appear that the duty of a faithful historian required him to write in the chronicle style, as a means of thereby ensuring historical truth. When he took up the pen he felt that a demand was made upon him for the exercise of intellectual powers. His biography of Joaõ de Castro was to be a monument in honour of that distinguished man. Andrada, therefore, devoted no less attention to the representation than to the distribution of the materials of his narrative. To all appearance he did not form his style on that of any particular author of antiquity, but he makes nearer approaches to Sallust than to any other; and the influence which the study of the classics must have had on the literary education of Andrada, is sufficiently obvious. His turn for wit occasionally led him to express himself in antitheses of too poignant a character; but in every other respect his narrative style possesses the clearness, precision, lightness, 325 and moreover the deep interest of the classic prose of antiquity. It is only necessary to read the commencement of this biography, to enter immediately into the spirit of the whole work.332 Andrada’s appropriate diction never resolves into merely elegant prolixity; and whatever be the degree of polish it receives, its character is generally unassuming. In the biographical arrangement of the events, little historical art is observable, but a clear practical understanding is displayed throughout the whole work. The character of Joaõ de Castro is exhibited even in the first accounts given of his childhood and education. The reader afterwards finds it developed with farther precision, but without any appearance of being again obtruded by the historian. The dark side, which, however, should never be wanting in an historical picture, is left by Andrada to the imagination of his readers. But the intuitive power displayed in the representation of the events, which is naturally and nowhere poetically adorned, leaves nothing to be wished for in this biographical work.333 Andrada 326 also proved himself a disciple of the classic school by his predilection for the ancient custom of enlivening the narrative, and augmenting the interest of the subject, by speeches attributed to the principal personages who figure in the work. These are sometimes delivered by Joaõ de Castro himself, and more frequently by his most dangerous but interesting enemy, Coge Cofar, the general in chief of the Mussulmans in India. Some of these speeches are decidedly excellent, but others are rather artificial.334 Towards the close of the biography where documents are interpolated, the story loses some portion of its deep interest. It was by no means a happy idea to add to this work an appendix, which is 327 intended as a summary recapitulation of the whole; and at the same time as a supplemental picture of the character of Joaõ de Castro, whose character is sufficiently portrayed in the narrative of his achievements.


Treatises in the Portuguese language, intended for the developement of the principles of poetry and rhetoric in systematic order, or for the extended application of some of these principles, seem either not to have been written, or at least not to have been much known in the seventeenth century. Practically cultivated taste and critical tact, without which the art of poetry and rhetoric degenerates into useless scholastic theory, must, to men like Freire Andrada, in a great measure have supplied the place of systematic rules. 328


BOOK III.
FROM THE CLOSE OF THE SEVENTEENTH TO THE END OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.

PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS.

The third period of Portuguese poetry and eloquence arises so imperceptibly out of the second, that no particular date, or remarkable event in Portuguese literature can be said to form a dividing point between them. The influence of the French taste on the Portuguese is the characteristic mark of the commencement of this last period. But even that influence never produced any thing like a revolution in the state of polite learning in Portugal. French taste worked its way into the language and the literature of the Portuguese, as tranquilly as into their manners. It therefore neither forcibly supplanted the old taste, nor caused any conflict of literary factions at all resembling that warfare, which arose between the Gallicists and the adherents of the old style in Spain. Thus the literature of Portugal, for the second time, asserted its peaceful character. As in the sixteenth century no Portuguese Boscan had to contend with an old romantic party, so in the eighteenth century there arose 329 no Portuguese Luzan to uphold the French taste by methodical rules of art. There occurred, therefore, no violent reaction of old patriotism against Gallicism, like that experienced in Spanish literature. Under these circumstances an opportunity was at last afforded for the English taste also to operate quietly and imperceptibly on that of the Portuguese. The historian, however, who finds it necessary to fix on some particular point for the commencement of this last principal division of the history of Portuguese poetry and eloquence, is constrained to take his departure from the change of political relations, which has been the main cause of Portuguese cultivation and literature becoming, in the struggle between French and English tendencies, what they now are. Towards the close of the seventeenth century, those conflicting tendencies which have threatened the very existence of the kingdom of Portugal, first began to manifest themselves.


CHAP. I.
GENERAL HISTORY OF POETICAL AND RHETORICAL CULTIVATION IN PORTUGAL DURING THIS PERIOD.

Total decay of Portuguese Literature towards the end of the Seventeenth Century.

In the year 1668, when the Spanish government again recognized the independence of the Portuguese 330 monarchy, the difference between what that monarchy had been, and what it then was, became palpable. It appeared that even its new existence was not altogether assured by the peace with Spain. The flame of patriotism no longer glowed with its wonted ardour in Portuguese breasts; and the hope of re-conquering those territories in India of which the Dutch had obtained possession was extinguished. The gold and diamond mines, discovered in Brazil, offered, it is true, a compensation for the lost sources of oriental wealth. But the old spirit of national enterprise was no more, and the people, as well as the government, wanted energy and talent for the useful employment of treasures, from which the commercial policy of England well knew how to derive advantage. A general lethargy seemed to overspread the nation; and towards the close of the seventeenth century the effects of that lethargy became no less manifest in the depression of literature than in the decay of military and maritime power, of the finances, and of all the branches of national industry. On the breaking out of the war of the Spanish succession, the court of Lisbon inclined sometimes to the French, and sometimes to the English party; but while the government thus wavered, and was at a loss what to do, the nation seemed perfectly disposed to adopt the manners introduced from France, and French literature soon gained the same ascendancy in Portugal as in the rest of Europe. But the Portuguese were not, at that period, prepared to estimate the merits of French literature. Those who moved in the polite world learned to speak and read French, and to mutilate 331 their mother tongue.335 But only a few individuals of uncommon acquirements took pleasure in cultivating their literary taste after French models. The majority of the poets, or versifiers of Portugal were, properly speaking, entirely destitute of taste.

In taking a comprehensive view of the state of poetry and eloquence in Portugal, during the eighteenth century, it will be proper to follow the thread of the national annals; for the general history of this portion of Portuguese literature resolves into about as many sections as the number of the reigns into which the political history of the country is divided. The period was indeed now gone by in which the nation formed itself, rather than suffered itself to be formed by the government.

ESTABLISHMENT OF THE PORTUGUESE ACADEMY IN 1714.

During the forty-four years reign of John V. namely, from 1705 to 1750, there was no want of institutions, calculated to raise the nation to the point of elevation whence it had fallen. For the polite literature of Portugal a new era seemed to have commenced, when, in the year 1714, an Academia Portugueza, 332 on the model of the French academy, was established under the presidency of so accomplished a man as the Count de Ericeyra. But we nowhere find an account of any advantage which the language and literature of Portugal derived from the labours of this academy; and the establishment was soon so completely neglected, that it is difficult to conjecture how and when it sank into decay.336 Other academies on the Italian plan had their rise and decline without producing any beneficial results; while several Portuguese poets were satisfied with the honour of admission into the Italian academy of the Arcadians. The academy of history, founded at Lisbon in 1720, also promised to be useful to Portuguese eloquence, as well as to historical science; but in the end little or nothing was effected even by this institution. Besides, though the general character of the Portuguese, which had always been less fanatical than that of the Spaniards, appeared about this period to become somewhat more liberal in religious and ecclesiastical matters, that favourable symptom was merely a consequence of the friendly relations which Portugal was under the necessity of maintaining with England; and these relations seemed to place Portugal too much in a state of dependence, to be flattering to the national feeling, or to reanimate it by the diffusion of knowledge. The inquisition, too, continued to adopt the old precautions against all 333 attempts at free-thinking, after the manner of Voltaire. It was, therefore, neither the spirit of the old nor of the new age, which, in the reign of John V. sometimes maintained the ancient forms in Portuguese poetry and eloquence, and sometimes endeavoured to introduce new ones. This fluctuation was merely the result of a feeble wavering between the old Portuguese, the French, and the Italian taste. The better poetry was, however, still to be found in the works of the authors, who remained faithful to the ancient manner.

ADMINISTRATION OF THE MARQUIS OF POMBAL.

The twenty-six years reign of Joseph Emanuel, from 1750 to 1777, proved more salutary for the Portuguese nation. The rigid despotism of the powerful Marquis de Pombal, who in the name of the king ruled with unlimited sway, left unpleasant recollections in the minds of a portion of the nation. Nevertheless the spirit of the higher nobility and of the ecclesiastics was not wholly subdued by his measures. In the dungeons which were filled with state prisoners, it is possible that some men of talent languished. But Pombal’s iron arm roused the slumbering nation. The despotic system of government adopted by this state reformer, who was, perhaps, only cruel from necessity, was an enlightening system, and his object was to restore the ancient glory of the Portuguese name. To literature he attached but little immediate importance. But he crippled the spiritual despotism, which held captive the last remnant of Portuguese energy. Europe is mainly indebted to him for the suppression of the order of the 334 jesuits; and the Portuguese, in particular, have to thank him for that revived feeling of independence which soon penetrated into their literature. A taste for the fine arts, for philosophy, and literary cultivation, became fashionable in Portugal. The connexion with England proved, in some respects, advantageous to the new progress of Portuguese genius, and promoted literary improvement; for the Gallicists lost a considerable portion of their political ascendancy, when English literature began to be properly estimated in Portugal.

REVIVED SPIRIT OF LITERATURE—UTILITY OF THE PORTUGUESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES.

It was not until after the death of King Joseph Emanuel, that the change which had taken place in Portugal became fully manifest. Pombal’s institutions seemed indeed destined to be annihilated, when his enemies triumphed. But even the new degree of favour which the clergy enjoyed in the reign of the pious Queen Maria, had not the effect of stifling the revived spirit of improvement in Portugal. Young Portuguese travelled to several parts of Europe and carried back to their native country the fruits of modern cultivation. The Prince Regent loved and favoured literature. In the course of a few years the Royal Academy of Sciences at Lisbon did much to rouse the nation to new activity, and in particular to reconcile philosophic study with enlightened views of national interest. Had that excellent institution, especially as it existed under the judicious guidance of the Duke of Lofoens, been left undisturbed in the pursuit of its glorious and successful 335 labours, the benefits produced to Portugal would have been more extensive and direct than those which most of the European academies have conferred on the countries to which they belong. The cosmopolite observer will, doubtless, be less interested in what the academy accomplished for polite literature, than in its zealous exertions for the encouragement of science, the diffusion of just and liberal ideas, and the consequent improvement of national industry and public prosperity. This institution was, however, of important service to polite literature. Prizes were offered for the best comedy and the best tragedy, to be written in the Portuguese language. It was endeavoured, through the influence of some of the academicians, to restore to due consideration the Portuguese classic writers of the sixteenth century, and also to re-introduce the language of that better period into literature, and the business of common life. Some volumes of academic transactions, which have in furtherance of this object been published since the year 1792, contain, in imitation of the French manner, essays purely literary, interspersed with articles on national history. This was, however, only a harmless blending of heterogeneous subjects; and the recollections of ancient times to which it gave birth, contributed to recall to Portuguese poetry and eloquence some portion of the old national spirit, from the revival of which the general interests of the country had every thing to expect337. 336


CHAP. II.
HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE POETRY DURING THIS PERIOD.

THE CONDE DA ERICEYRA.

The first Portuguese poet remarkable for paying homage to the French taste, was the ingenious and meritorious Francisco Xavier de Menezes, Conde da Ericeyra, born in 1673. The family rank of this writer doubtless added to the celebrity of the talents by which he distinguished himself at an early period of life. This will account for the extraordinary circumstance, that while yet in the twentieth year of his age he was elected president of one of the academies which were founded in Lisbon, on the model of those of Italy. He is said to have spoken the Latin, Spanish, Italian and French languages with facility. He made, however, no progress in Greek. At an early age he translated 337 Boileau’s Art of Poetry into Portuguese octaves; and from that period he maintained a friendly intercourse with the French critic. Literary and more particularly poetical studies continued to occupy him even during the Spanish war of succession, in which he made several campaigns. He rose in the Portuguese army to the rank of mestre do campo (major general.) The consideration and influence which the Count da Ericeyra enjoyed in Portuguese literature, were rapidly augmented by the authority attached to the offices which he filled; for in the year 1714, he was appointed rector and secretary of the Portuguese academy which was then founded; and in the year 1721, co-director of the new academy of history. His literary reputation soon extended beyond the narrow limits of Portugal; and during the latter half of his life, he held a conspicuous place among the men of his age, whose talents had given them a general celebrity. He maintained a correspondence with learned foreigners both in the south and north of Europe. The Pope and the King of France bestowed on him particular marks of their esteem; and the transactions of the Russian Imperial Academy of Sciences were formally transmitted to him by that learned body. In his old age this diligent writer bestowed the greatest share of his attention on an epic poem, entitled, the Henriqueida, in which he endeavoured, as far as possible, to fulfil all the conditions of poetic art, according to the principles of the most celebrated critics. It would appear that he completed his task in the year 1738, and at the age of sixty-nine he enjoyed the satisfaction of seeing his work printed. He died two years afterwards. 338 The number of his works, both in verse and prose, is considerable; and it seems that many of them still remain unprinted.338

The poetical works of the Count da Ericeyra, among which are several in the Spanish language, are distinguished by a degree of polish in which it is impossible not to recognise the disciple and admirer of Boileau. But this nobleman was not destined to mark an epoch in Portuguese poetry. To regard him as a mere Gallicist would be extremely unjust, and to rank him among poets in the highest and strictest sense of the term, would be to form an equally erroneous judgment of poetic art. Ericeyra certainly was not a slavish imitator of the French style. He endeavoured to form his talent by the study of all the works which he conceived fitted to serve as models whatever might be the language in which they were written; and this spirit of liberality in literary cultivation was a peculiarly estimable trait in his character. In the metrical structure, as well as in the style of his poems, he remained faithful to the forms and spirit of the old Portuguese national poetry, and to the school of the sixteenth century. But with all his plastic capabilities, he was wanting in creative fancy; and with all his endeavours to attain classic correctness, 339 he did not avoid faults, which are readily pardoned in the works of the older Portuguese poets, in consideration of the poetic energy which is manifest in those very faults. In that poetic energy all the writings of the Count da Ericeyra are deficient. His imagination, which never of itself took a lofty flight, was much more inclined to enlarge artificially upon any pleasing subject, than to seize with inspiration and freely fashion a subject of its own; and the rules of French criticism doubtless contributed to allure him to the cultivated occasional style, as that style may justly be denominated, which, whenever the opportunity for an occasional poem offers, is always at the command of a writer possessing no common share of descriptive talent. Accordingly not a few occasional poems are to be found in the works of the Count da Ericeyra. In compliance with the old Portuguese custom, he sometimes made choice of the eclogue form, to record in a pleasing strain of verse, certain events which occurred in the Royal family. In this form, for example, he deplores, through the medium of shepherds and shepherdesses, the death of the Infante Dom Miguel, which took place in the year 1724. After what has already been said respecting other works of this kind, to dwell longer on the eclogues of the Count da Ericeyra would be a superfluous labour; but in the history of Portuguese poetry, the Henriqueida claims a more particular notice.339 340

The Henriqueida may unquestionably be called an epic poem with far more propriety than the Condestabre de Portugal of Rodriguez Lobo.340 It is the work of an industrious talent, which occasionally seizes, with happy effect, a poetic situation, and by poetic handling elevates a series of historical events, somewhat above the sphere of prosaic nature. But this tedious and laboured poem possesses no other merit. Neither in the invention, highly as it has been esteemed, nor in the execution, which is not wanting in incidental beauties, is there displayed any thing like the captivating energy of the epic poetry of Camoens; and even in correctness of ideas and images, Ericeyra’s Henriqueida is very deficient. The subject is patriotically chosen. Henry of Burgundy, the founder of the Portuguese monarchy, is the hero of the poem. The action is not destitute of intrinsic interest, and the epic unity belonging to it has been happily caught by Ericeyra. The poem is divided into twelve cantos. Henry of Burgundy, the son-in-law of Alphonso VI. King of Castile, receives the county of Portugal as a fief, but on condition of first conquering that dowry, and afterwards securing it by further conquests. At the commencement of the poem the prince is waging war against the Moorish King Muley; but there appears little probability of the conquest of Lisbon, which is still in the hands of the Moors. Henry is informed that a Portuguese sybil lives somewhere in the vicinity of the camp in a concealed cavern, which he determines 341 to explore, and for that purpose withdraws unnoticed from his army. The rashness with which this purpose is executed, is more characteristic of a fool-hardy adventurer than of a hero destined to be the founder of a kingdom. After taking a desperate leap, he succeeds in discovering the cavern and its inhabitant, who proves to be a christian sybil. She reveals to him the secret of his destination, together with some facts relative to the future greatness of the nation. While he is engaged in collecting this prophetic information, his troops suppose him to be lost. The Moors attack; the Christians are giving way; but at the critical moment Henry arrives, and turns the tide of victory. This first event, by which the interest of the epic action becomes immediately attached to the hero of the poem, is succeeded by a series of single combats, sieges, and victories, interspersed with love adventures, and carried on until the taking of Lisbon, with which exploit the poem concludes. The distribution of the parts is managed with much art, so that the characters in which it is wished the reader should take an interest, appear one after the other in their proper lights. The situations, too, are for the most part well chosen. Prophetic dreams, and a certain portion of fairyism still impart to the tale the charm of the miraculous, even after the christian sybil has divulged the general influence of the celestial powers. But the Henriqueida is from the first to the last canto destitute of that poetic warmth and spirit, the absence of which cannot be supplied by the ablest descriptive talent, and without which poetic art degenerates into mere exercises of style; for the 342 industriously ingenious author was deficient in energy and depth of natural feeling, as well as in purity of ideal feeling. In his advertencias preliminares, or theoretical introduction, Ericeyra declares that he has in a certain measure endeavoured to imitate all epic poets, and to imbibe a portion of the manner of each; but had he withheld this acknowledgment no reader acquainted with other epic poems, could have failed to recognise in the Henriqueida the styles of Homer, Virgil, Ariosto, Tasso, and progressively of Lucan, Silius Italicus, and Statius, but without ever discerning the animating spirit of genuine poetry. The tedious coldness which pervades the whole poem destroys the effect of those incidental beauties of style which it must be allowed to possess. The very first stanzas give birth to an unfavourable presage;341 and to invoke the inspiration of 343 the deity rather than the muses is but a frigid conceit.342 Even the descriptive passages, in which Ericeyra displays most talent, are deteriorated by artificial traits which launch into the region of Portuguese Marinism, and betray all the coldness of study.343 Sometimes these traits stand as abruptly forward as if they had been interpolated by a sonnetist of the seventeenth century; thus, in allusion to Henry of Burgundy’s descent into the sybil’s cave amidst the fury of the conflicting elements, it is said, that “the vivid flames of his heart dried up the waves, and set fire to the winds.”344 When 344 the assembled princes sit down to hear Henry relate what he has seen in the cave, it is said of the plumes of the military heroes, that “they wafted glorious deeds to heaven, and inscribed victories without the aid of letters.”345 On another occasion, the author describes the effect of a violent shout of the storming troops, by saying, that “even the stones of the walls seemed touched by the cry, and had nearly disclosed the medals which their celebrated founders had buried beneath them.”346 Among the poetic ornaments of Ericeyra’s narrative style, the picturesque comparisons are for the most part well conceived; but with all their truth they are deficient 345 in poetic energy;347 and sometimes, contrary to all expectation, they terminate quite in the Marinistic style.348 The Henriqueida is tolerably free of mythological decoration. Still, however, Ericeyra could not altogether refrain from availing himself of an ornament which he considered so essential. He has, therefore, contrary to all prosaic probability, for the violation of which there is no adequate poetic motive, introduced a Moorish princess in the character of a secret adherent of the Greek mythology, and he has thus taken occasion to describe a whole gallery of gods and goddesses. At the conclusion of the poem, Ericeyra again summons 346 all his powers of description, not entirely without success, but still without avoiding those faults into which his factitious enthusiasm had previously involved him.349

That such a poet as the Count da Ericeyra could, with all his praiseworthy endeavours, succeed in restoring the ancient glory of Portuguese poetry, or in giving a new 347 direction to the poetic spirit of his nation, certainly was not to be expected. But in consequence of his labours it ceased to be taken for granted in Portugal, that the mines of the higher poetry were exhausted, and he contributed to encourage the idea of improvement in poetic cultivation. His name, therefore, deserves to be held in honourable recollection. What benefits he, as a theorist, sought to impart to the poetic art, shall be noticed in the next chapter.

CONTINUANCE OF CORRUPT TASTE IN PORTUGUESE POETRY.

BARROS PEREIRA—ALEXANDRE ANTONIO DE LIMA.

The age of the Count da Ericeyra presents, at its close, a resting point in the history of Portuguese poetry, which, if the numerical division of the years be not too rigidly insisted on, may form a boundary between the first and the second halves of the eighteenth century. It was solely during the latter half that a favourable change became obvious in the poetic cultivation of the Portuguese. In the former half only a few Portuguese poets of celebrity laboured to maintain a suitable connection between the new and the old eras.

Among those poets it is not meant to include Father Antonio de Lima Barros Pereira, who in the year 1720 published his spiritual and temporal works, under the title of Floresta Apollinea, (Apollinian Flower-garden). But this collection of miscellaneous poems ought to be 348 mentioned, as it serves to prove that in the beginning of the eighteenth century the Spanish was the favourite dramatic language in Lisbon. Among the works of Barros Pereira, his loas, or allegorical preludes, are the most numerous, and are all written in Spanish. Barros Pereira also sought to distinguish himself by those poetic rhapsodies without plan or object, which were, both in Spain and Portugal, called Sylvas (Forests.)

The Rasgos Metricos (Metrical Fragments) of a writer, named Alexandre Antonio de Lima, which were printed in 1740, are likewise about equally divided between the Portuguese and Spanish languages. The title-page bears a dedication to St. Ann; and in the same spirit which dictated that kind of address, the author, who seems to have been of a sprightly humour, has mingled spiritual and temporal productions together; and he has sometimes made even pieces of the most sacred character vehicles for jokes, which, however, are meant to be pious after their own way.350 This singular 349 incongruity was still considered inoffensive by the Portuguese of that age. The miscellaneous poems of Antonio de Lima are chiefly of a comic character. But a foreigner who has never lived in Portugal will be unable to understand most of this writer’s epigrammatic conceits, as they all refer to particular customs and local relations.351 Some of Antonio de Lima’s serious sonnets are by no means contemptible productions.352 In satirical prose he attempted an imitation of Quevedo’s visions. 350

THE PORTUGUESE DRAMA IN THE FIRST HALF OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.

SPURIOUS DRAMAS CALLED OPERAS.

In the first half of the eighteenth century, a new, though not a happy turn, became perceptible in the dramatic poetry of the Portuguese. While the Spanish drama still supplied the place of a Portuguese national drama, the favour of the court of Lisbon was bestowed on the Italian opera. The general approbation which was soon extended to operatic performances of every description, led to the introduction on the Portuguese stage of a singular species of hybridous comedy. There was a wish to naturalize the Italian opera; but it is probable that few Portuguese singers were then capable of executing recitative; and it may also be presumed, that the Portuguese had heard of the little French operas, in which the characters speak and sing alternately. This, however, is certain, that the public of Lisbon had always a strong predilection for comic entertainments; and, it appears, that with the view of fully satisfying the popular taste, it was thought advisable to introduce the pomp of the serious Italian opera into the comic drama of Portugal. By what 351 practical head this idea was suggested no Portuguese writer has thought fit to record. It seems not improbable that it had its origin in the speculation of a theatrical manager, who wished to venture on the experiment of amusing the public in a new way; and who, for that purpose, availed himself of the services of some obscure writer, who happened to have a talent for dramatic poetry. The first essays of this theatrical novelty were all anonymous. It is, however, likely, that the result greatly exceeded the expectation of the speculator. The scenic decorations, in which the new species of drama rivalled the Italian, the burlesque humour of the pieces themselves, the effects of music, both vocal and instrumental, captivated the great mass of the Lisbon public. The higher ranks of society too, and even the court, took an interest in these performances. New dramas in this spirit and style followed each other in rapid succession, more particularly during the ten years which elapsed between 1730 and 1740. But no poet, who had previously acquired reputation, appears to have devoted himself to this kind of composition; and the prolific dramatist, whose anonymous productions were so fortunate as to obtain the chief favour of the public, had probably at the time private reasons for wishing to remain unknown. He was a Jew, whose name, even after it was disclosed, was seldom mentioned, as the public, content with the antonomasia, still continued to call him O Judeo, (the Jew).353 352

The popularity of the new dramas soon became so great, that manuscript copies were eagerly procured for the purpose of private performance or reading. From these copies collections were printed, the increase of which fell still short of the public demand.354 To none of the dramas contained in these collections is the name of an author affixed. In spirit and style they so closely resemble each other, that they may all be considered as the production of one individual. If at this period French taste had acquired any decided influence on Portuguese literature, such dramas, though they might, for the sake of incident, music, and decoration, have been tolerated on the stage, would never have been sought for in print. It is impossible to imagine a more rude combination of low jests, with romantic and miraculous events, partly taken from real history, and partly from the Greek and Roman mythology. Had this strange compound been the workmanship of cultivated as well as of inventive talent, then, indeed, might the grotesque medley have been rendered, by the ingenuity of composition, entertaining even to readers of cultivated taste. But in these confused jumbles, called comic operas, the composition is, in general, as inartificial as the wit intended to enliven 353 them is dull. The lowest buffoonery is blended with singular adventures, tournaments, or ceremonies; and trivial airs and songs are successively introduced. Some can lay no claim to any merit of invention, either in arrangement of story or incidents, as is exemplified in a spectacle of this class called Don Quixote, which was represented in 1733. No fewer than thirty-six characters figure in this compilation from the master work of Cervantes, whose spirit is, however, banished from the composition. The Esopaida ou Vida de Esopo, (Æsopeid, or Life of Æsop) is one of these pieces which seems intended to be particularly comic. The first scene represents a fair at Athens with all its appropriate accompaniments. The philosopher Zeno appears with Æsop and two other slaves, all of whom he wishes to sell. Æsop soon distinguishes himself by coarse jests and endless quibbling.355 Another philosopher, named 354 Xanthus enters, accompanied by his disciples Periander and Ennius. He puts Æsop’s wit to the test, and purchases him.356 The scene now changes. Filena, the daughter of Xanthus, confides the secrets of her heart to an old and ugly female slave, named Gerigonza. They are joined by Euripedes, the wife of the philosopher, who reprimands her daughter, and sings a silly scolding duet 355 with her.357 Æsop enters and again makes a display of his wit. Then follows a tender scene between Filena and her lover; Gerigonza becomes enamoured of Æsop; and the philosopher and his wife quarrel together, singing a duet of the most vulgar character. By a succession of scenes of this sort, the action is carried on through the first act. In the second act King Crœsus of Lydia arrives with an army to besiege Athens: and Themistocles appears on horse-back in the suite of Crœsus. The scene is now alternately in Athens and 356 in the camp of Crœsus. Drums and fifes are kept in constant employment. Splendid pleasure gardens adorned with statues add to the pomp of the spectacle. But Æsop, whose puns and quibbles are inexhaustible, is always the hero of the piece. At last, after bringing about a peace between Crœsus, and the people of Athens, he is appointed governor of the city. Thus ends the Æsopeid, which might with more propriety be entitled the Buffooniad. Amidst this grotesque jumble, however, sparks of no common fancy are occasionally elicited; but the anonymous author seems to have been totally destitute of literary cultivation, and to have had no higher aim than to give a humorous colouring to the rudeness of his combinations. The rest of the Portuguese comic operas are, upon the whole, still more rude than the Æsopeid, though some are richer in the musical part of the composition, and possess grave or even pathetic airs and duets in the style of the serious Italian opera.

It might, at first sight, be supposed, that a nation which could be pleased by dramas of this kind, must be for ever excluded from the path of higher cultivation. In Lisbon, the Italian opera-house continued to be the real court theatre. But the Portuguese opera which stood like a spurious child beside the Italian, maintained its ground in spite of its parent. Had not the taste for this kind of dramatic entertainment prevailed down to the second half of the eighteenth century, a new edition of the Æsopeid, and other theatrical caricatures, would not have been published in 1787. The restoration of a truly noble style in Portuguese poetry, could not therefore be expected to derive its origin from the drama. 357

RESUMPTION OF AN IMPROVED STYLE IN PORTUGUESE POETRY.

MANOEL DA COSTA.

To obtain this object, it was, however, only necessary that a poet should arise, who, charmed by the renewed union of Portuguese and Italian poetry, might be induced to place himself under the tutelage of the early Italian poets. Thus would the Italian opera have rendered compensation for the evils to which it had given birth. A Brazilian, named Claudio Manoel da Costa, was one of the first writers who in this way contributed to reintroduce an elevated style into Portuguese poetry.358 Born in the province of Minas Geraes, that part of Brazil where the chief object is the working of mines, he seems not to have been destined for the service of the muses. He indeed passed through a course of academic studies in Europe; but he himself states that during the five years which he spent at the university of Coimbra, no kind of poetry was there held in esteem, save that which was composed in the corrupt but fashionable style of the Portuguese Marinists. That young Da Costa, while at the university of Coimbra, should have applied himself to the study and imitation of the older Italian poets, and of Metastasio, was a circumstance peculiarly favourable to his improvement, while at the same time it afforded the first proof of his 358 being destined to arrive at a point of purer cultivation than his contemporaries. He even ventured on the composition of Petrarchic sonnets in the Italian language, and in this attempt he was not unsuccessful. On his return to Brazil his poetic studies were continued in the region of gold and diamond treasures, to which he seems to have attached but little value; for he complains that amidst these mountains, no Arcadian stream awakes by its sweet murmur harmonious verse: and that the turbid waters of the brooks only serve to call to recollection the rapacious perseverance of the miners by whose labour they are discoloured. On his own poems he pronounces a remarkable judgment. He observes that he was too late in learning the rules of good taste from the Greeks, Italians and French; and that influenced by bad example, he sinned against principles, the justice of which he recognized. The perverted manner of the sonnetists of the seventeenth century is certainly here and there perceptible in the writings of Da Costa. But upon the whole, it may be said, that for nearly the space of a century, no Portuguese writer had so well succeeded in that kind of sonnet poetry, which most charmingly approximates to the style of Petrarch; and that in the other compositions of this Brazilian poet, the faults are counterbalanced by merits of the most pleasing kind. The sonnets included in the collection of his poetic works, amount to nearly a hundred; and among them are some in Italian, but none in the Spanish language. The style of these sonnets, nearly all of which have love for their subject, is, however, not altogether that of Petrarch. They possess a certain 359 tone of poignancy, which betrays the spirit of modern times. Nevertheless, Da Costa’s style, alike free from exaggeration and fantastic ornaments, exhibits the truth of nature and of poetry so happily united with Petrarchic intensity of feeling, and expressed in language so elegant and unostentatious, that his sonnets may justly be numbered among the very best in Portuguese literature.359 While perusing them, the reader cannot fail sometimes to fancy that he recognizes the simple tone of the old Portuguese lyric poetry, reflected by an Italian echo.360 Though the influence of French taste was 360 far less powerful than the Italian with Da Costa, it still had some effect on his poetry. It appears to have guided him in the choice of a metre for his epicedios, or elegies. These poems, however, are not composed in Alexandrines, but in iambics of five feet, without any complexity in the rhymes. This is a kind of verse which is frequently used by English writers; and yet Da Costa seems never to have turned his attention to English poetry. But though such verse was quite uncommon, similar measures had long before been known in Portugal, and perhaps Da Costa was not the first Portuguese poet who in this way attempted to approximate to the French style, as far as the diversity of the languages would, with propriety, permit the experiment to be carried. This dull style of rhyming, appears, however, always somewhat foreign and inharmonious in Portuguese poetry. In other respects, these epicedios possess the merit of noble, inartificial, and pleasing expression; but they want the high charm of the author’s sonnets, and some of his other poetic compositions.361 He himself appears to have attached 361 most value to his twenty eclogues. They are indeed written with peculiar care, and are not destitute of beauty in some of their parts; but, like most Portuguese eclogues, they are either occasional poems in a bucolic dress, or partly lyric compositions, which, with the exception of pastoral names, exhibit no trace of bucolic character. The extraordinary predilection of the more ancient Portuguese for this species of pastoral poetry, had therefore descended from one generation to another, down to these latter times. One of Da Costa’s eclogues is dedicated to the prime minister, the Marquis of Pombal, or as he was then still called, the Count of Oeyras, with a warmth of feeling which seems to have been the genuine effusion of the poet’s heart. From an emphatic eulogy pronounced on that minister, it may be concluded that the Portuguese poets immediately and sensibly felt the beneficial effects of his administration, for the general encouragement of mental freedom was a part of Pombal’s system. The poet says of the statesman, that he reconciled innocence with genius, and recalled 362 justice to the world.362 Among Da Costa’s other poems, the most remarkable are his masterly imitations of canzonettas, cantatas, and other modern Italian poems for music, to which the opera has given birth. Nothing finer in this style of poetry is to be found even in the similar minor works of Metastasio. His A’ Lyra Desprezo (Farewell to Poetry), and the Palinodia, which accompanies it, are alone sufficient to prove the perfect accordance of the Italian and Portuguese language with respect to the laws of musical poetry.363 But still finer is 363 another Farewell, entitled, Fileno ä Nize, despedida, which was probably composed by Da Costa on his return to America. Here the old romantic inexhaustibility in the poetic amplification of a favourite idea, sustained by a constantly recurring burthen, is united with all the magic of Metastasio’s versification.364 In some poems of the same class which Da Costa composed in the Italian language, a certain degree of constraint is observable. But his Portuguese cantatas, spiritual as well as temporal, are not only free from that fault, but often bear the stamp of excellence. 364

PROGRESS OF PORTUGUESE POETRY IN THE LATTER PART OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.365

To make a detailed report of Portuguese poetry during the last thirty years of the eighteenth century, is a task 365 which must be consigned to other writers. In this general history it is sufficient briefly to describe how the new spirit of Portuguese literature acquired, even on its poetic side, a marked influence, though it did not unfold itself with that energy which was necessary to reproduce the poetry of the sixteenth century under somewhat varied features. This period must not yet be extolled as the commencement of a second golden age of Portuguese poetry; but the poetic talent of the Portuguese has opened for itself a wider field; and fantastic rhyming no longer finds admirers among the educated class of readers. The Portuguese zealously endeavour to rival, in polite literature, as well as in science, those nations who have, or who seem to have outstripped them. But this rivalry is happily combined with a revived veneration for the poetry of the sixteenth century. Thus have the old national forms of Portuguese poetry been preserved for modern times; and the Portuguese drama alone seems doomed to be governed by French laws.

TRANSLATIONS.

In the first half of the last thirty years of the eighteenth century, the desire to cultivate a correct 366 style in Portuguese poetry was fostered by new translations of some of the latin classics. The Odes of Horace were translated into Portuguese by Joaquim José da Costa e Sa;366 the Satyres of Sulpitia by Antonio Luis de Azavedo;367 Ovid’s Heroides by Miguel de Couto Guerreiro;368 and the comedies of Terence by Leonel da Costa.369 But it would appear that the Portuguese did not in their wish to become more intimately acquainted with genuine poetry, so happily commence the translation of the Greek poets. On the other hand, several French and English works obtained a suitable Portuguese dress. Telemachus appeared in the year 1770; and Young’s tragedies in 1788. A circumstance which cannot fail to excite surprize, at least in Germany, is that in the year 1791 there appeared a Portuguese translation of the Herman of Baron Shönaich, the most indifferent of all German epic compositions;370 but Gessner’s Death of Abel also appeared in the Portuguese language in the year 1785.

TITLES OF SOME OF THE POEMS PRODUCED IN THIS PERIOD.

Among the best poems which appeared about this time in Portugal, may be classed, The Rebuilding of 367 Lisbon, an epic composition, by Miguel Mauricio Ramalho;371 Satires and Elegies, by Miguel do Couto Guerreiro;372 the Dream, a heroic poem, by Luis Rafael Soyé;373 the Triumph of Innocence, by José Anastasio da Costa e Sà;374 Lusitania transformed by Alvares do Oriente;375 Gaticanea, or the War between the Dogs and Cats, by Joaõ Jorge de Carvalho;376 and some others.

GARÇAÕ.

More particular attention is due to the poetic works of Pedro Antonio Correa Garçaõ, which were written at an earlier period, but which were only first collected and published in the year 1778.377 Since Ferreira flourished, no other Portuguese poet had so decidedly formed his taste by the imitation of Horace. Garçaõ, who for this reason is called the second Portuguese Horace, did not content himself as Ferreira had two hundred years before, with imitating in Portuguese verse, the intellectual elegance and sprightly philosophy of 368 Horace’s odes, sermons and epistles; in the composition of his odes he endeavoured to introduce into Portuguese poetry verse constructed on the Horatian model. But, however distinctly the Portuguese language may without prejudice to its abrupt pronunciation be accentuated, and however readily it may, at first sight, seem to accommodate itself to the ancient metres, it is in reality as little subject to their laws as the Spanish and Italian; the reason plainly is, that the Portuguese, like all modern languages, is totally destitute of fixed syllabic quantity in monosyllabic words; and, that like the Spanish and Italian languages, it is not sufficiently rich in dactylic words to afford, in some degree, the means of concealing this deficiency. In most of his imitations of ancient verse Garçaõ has therefore merely strung together, in an unusual way, lines of long and short iambics. In his sapphic odes, as he calls them, the sapphic verse is not more obviously perceptible than in many older compositions of the same kind, into which rhyme is admitted.378 Garçaõ 369 endeavoured to make an approximation to alcaic verse by the employment of dactylic words.379 But whatever objections may be urged against the metrical form of Garçaõ’s odes, they must be allowed to exhibit in their spirit and style proofs of a bold endeavour to soar above the eternal sameness of the sonnet and the eclogue. Of the spirit of Horatian philosophy, they present no deeper traces than the odes of Ferreira;380 but they were well calculated to recall the Portuguese to the exercise of a sound and vigorous judgment in poetry. Garçaõ’s diction is worthy of a poet of the sixteenth century. Among the lyric works of this poet are a Pindaric ode with strophes, antistrophes and epodes;381 and a dythirambic, 370 the character of which is certainly somewhat frigid.382 Had Garçaõ been a pedant, he would not have 371 devoted so much labour on sonnets, and on canções and glosses in the old national forms. He was, however, by his turn of mind and cultivation better fitted to succeed in didactic satire and epistles in the manner of Horace; and in this respect he again resembles Ferreira. But his satires and epistles, which are among the best in modern literature, possess more of Horatian gaiety and airyness than the kindred works of Ferreira;383 there is 372 in their moral tendency occasionally something more social.384

Garçaõ also endeavoured to give a new direction to the dramatic poetry of Portugal. He did not possess sufficient dramatic invention to satisfy a public accustomed to all the extravagance of operatic and theatric pomp. But he exerted his utmost efforts to counteract the influence of that pomp, and of the general bad taste which seemed to have obtained a complete dominion over the national theatre. His theory, which will be further noticed in the next chapter, could only be promulgated within a narrow circle. As a dramatic poet, he first declared war against the rude opera taste, by writing a little comedy in the style of Terence, the title of which is:—Theatro Novo, drama, (The New Theatre, a drama). It is a mere dramatic trifle, with a very simple plot. An adventurer of fallen fortune 373 conceives the idea of establishing a new theatre, in which speculation he is to be assisted by his two fair daughters and a rich Englishman, Arthur Bigodes, (a name formed from the English oath, “by God.”) He engages several other individuals in his scheme. Two love affairs, the one sincere and the other compulsory, impart comic interest and dramatic unity to the piece. The principal scene, to which the others merely serve as auxiliaries, is that in which each member of the dramatis personæ delivers a critical opinion respecting the kind of pieces which ought to be represented at the new theatre. But judicious and patriotic as the result of the deliberation might be, it was nevertheless very liable to be interpreted by the public of Lisbon to the prejudice of a reformer, who consigned the execution of his plan to a ruined adventurer. This was, however, the first step towards raising the dignity of Portuguese comedy, and restoring it to its former rank as a national drama. The Portuguese public was susceptible of patriotic sentiments, and Garçaõ understood how to touch the national feeling without having recourse to pedantry. Accordingly, he makes the manager of the new theatre, in a comic situation, say, that his beloved native country is not a little indebted to him for the trouble he has taken to rescue her from the abyss of ignorance in which she lay, miserable and infatuated, amidst wretched dramas.385 He observes, that 374 genuine comedy must again become the school of manners, as it had been to the ancients. In conclusion, he solemnly invokes the shades of Gil Vicente, Ferreira, and Saa de Miranda.386 This little comedy is written in light and agreeable iambic verse, and is not destitute of dramatic spirit.

Another comedy by Garçaõ appears to have been intended as an example of the kind of character drama which the author wished to introduce on the Portuguese stage. It is called Assemblea ou Partida, (the Assembly or the Party).387 This modern Gallo-Portuguese 375 title denotes that the author intended it to be an elegant conversational piece, affording a picture of fashionable manners. It is called merely a drama, and is attributed to no particular species, because it consists of only one act, which indeed is a tolerably long one. Thus it is not entirely faithful to the plan of a regular comedy in the style of Terence. The satire of the piece is directed against that sort of ostentatious boasting, to realize which the finances of the fashionable braggadocio are not always adequate. The characters are well drawn. To accommodate the national taste in every way, Garçaõ has introduced into the piece some well written sonnets, and a half-comic cantata, which is set to music and performed at the party of a lady. This comedy exhibits no trace of any particular imitation of the French style. Garçaõ wished to reform the Portuguese drama on classic principles, but, as he himself on another occasion observes, he wished to effect the reformation with a due regard to modern times and manners, and consequently without any rigorous adoption of the ancient dramatic laws in their full extent.

THE ABBOT PAULINO.

The ingenious prelate, Paulino Cabral de Vasconcellos, Abbot of Jazente, who is commonly called merely the Abbot Paulino, deserves to be honourably distinguished among those Portuguese poets, who at the latter end of the eighteenth century reclaimed the national taste, and brought it under the rules of classic 376 cultivation.388 The collection of his poems, printed in the year 1786, consists of sonnets only; but without having read them, it is scarcely possible to conceive that this species of poetic composition should have acquired so many new charms towards the close of the eighteenth century. In this collection of two hundred and forty-five sonnets, which are probably selected from a still greater number of compositions of the same kind by the Abbot Paulino, there is scarcely one that can be pronounced dull or heavy; most of them display a peculiar union of clearness, lightness and elegance, with a tone of Horatian philosophy and irony. The study of French literature seems to have contributed to the singular cultivation of the Abbot Paulino. But the spirit of his poetry is by no means French. In one poetic glance he comprehended the various situations of real life, viewing them sometimes on the romantic, sometimes on the rural, and sometimes on the comic side; and the pictures of sentiment and reflection which he thus calls up, are compressed into the sonnet form in the most pleasing and natural manner. The best of Paulino’s sonnets are those which are conceived in a tone of elegant satire;389 and some which, 377 though apparently frivolous, occasionally remind the reader of Propertius.390 The satire of this Portuguese poet, however, very seldom degenerates into grossness.

DONA CATHARINA DE SOUSA—HER TRAGEDY OF OSMIA.

But dramatic poetry in Portugal required some particular excitement to make it keep pace with the 378 new cultivation of the nation; and an impulse of this kind was given when the Lisbon academy of sciences, which, during the last twenty years of the eighteenth century, was constantly embracing new objects, turned its attention to polite literature. The academy offered a prize for the best tragedy in the Portuguese language. Competitors came eagerly forward. But none of the tragedies which have been crowned by the academy, obtained so much popularity as the Osmîa of Dona Catharina de Sousa.391 It is probable that no other female writer who has acquired celebrity in the eighteenth century, could have produced such a work, though, perhaps, in other respects she might rank higher as a poetess than Catharina de Sousa. The fable of the tragedy, according to the conditions required by the academy, in the year 1785, is selected from the Portuguese national history. Three tragedies were produced within the space of three years. In the year 1788 the academy awarded the prize to Osmîa; and on opening the sealed note, in which the author’s name was supposed to be inscribed, it was found to contain only a reference to a prize question respecting improvements in the cultivation of the olive in Portugal, with a request that the academy would apply to that object the prize which was renounced for the tragedy of Osmia. But the equally generous and ingenious authoress soon became known. The tragedy 379 was first printed without her name; but a second edition was published in the year 1795. It owes its celebrity not merely from the circumstance of its being the production of a female pen. In several scenes of this drama, tragic pathos is, in the happiest way, combined with an elegance which from the sex of the writer was more to be expected than the former quality. The subject is chosen from the history of the ancient inhabitants of Portugal, rather than of the Portuguese. A story from the age of romance would have better fulfilled the idea of a national tragedy; but Dona Catharina de Sousa, in the spirit of modern cosmopolite education, in a great measure formed by French reading, followed the Gallic taste even in a predilection for the Roman age in tragic drama. Osmia, the heroine of the tragedy, is a Lusitanian Princess of the race of the Turdetani, who in the second century of the Christian era, sought to emancipate themselves from the Roman yoke. She is, contrary to her inclination, united to Prince Rindacus, who heads the Turdetani in their insurrection against the Romans. Osmia combats like a heroine. The Turdetani are, however, defeated; Rindacus disappears, and Osmia is made prisoner by the Romans. The Roman Prætor Lælius becomes deeply enamoured of the fair captive, and she in her turn is not indifferent to his passion. With the principal persons thus situated the developement of the dramatic action commences. The composition would doubtless have been much more rich and brilliant if the authoress had not so rigorously confined herself within the rules of French tragedy. The Roman characters 380 appear modernized in the French style. In this very absurd way the Prætor Lælius is drawn. On several occasions he complains of his “poor heart” in as doleful a strain as a hapless lover of modern times. But in the delicate representation of the relationship of Osmia with the Prætor, and with her rude barbarian husband, the sentiments of a noble-minded woman are painted in such a manner as none but a woman could paint them. The tragic grandeur of the composition rests on the character of Osmia, who will not on any consideration render herself unworthy of her noble descent. The loftiest pride of patriotism contends in her bosom with love for the Roman Prætor, whom she wishes to hate, but whose tender generosity she feels less and less power to resist.392 The feminine heroism of her 381 character thus acquires a pensive gentleness, which renders her, as a woman, more and more interesting in every scene. The character of Osmia is forcibly relieved by contrast. A Turdetanian prophetess, who is also among the number of the captives, burns with national pride and hatred of the Romans; and her energetic but unfeminine patriotism is the means of constantly producing tragic concussions in the train of the events, until the husband of Osmia unexpectedly re-appears. The authoress has been eminently successful in the gradual heightening of the tragic interest.393 She did not venture to shed blood on the 382 stage. The death of Osmia is related; but at the end her husband enters wounded and dying. Notwithstanding the simplicity of the composition, the tragedy 383 comprises a considerable share of action. The rapid flow of the dialogue in some of the scenes, approximates more nearly to the tragic style of Voltaire, than to that of Corneille and Racine. The language is dignified throughout; though in some scenes it is deficient in poetic keeping. But according to the rule which the authoress herself was accustomed to consider as the only correct one in the estimation of dramatic perfection, she could not avoid faults which she theoretically regarded as beauties. The present is not the proper place for analysing the individual fine passages of this tragedy. The feminine character of the whole composition, however, well merits a minute analysis in a theory of poetry.

FAILURE OF OSMIA ON THE STAGE—PREVALENCE OF DRAMATIC IMITATIONS AND TRANSLATIONS.

The great difference between such a tragedy as Osmia and the dramatic entertainments to which the Portuguese public were accustomed, must have impeded the good effect which under other circumstances might have been produced by the prizes which the academy of Lisbon continued to offer. Osmia was performed; but it did not obtain a favourable reception from the public, and some similar tragedies by which it was succeeded experienced nearly the same fate. The Italian opera maintained its consideration in Lisbon; and the dramas which have since been produced on the Portuguese stage, are for the most part, either imitations of foreign pieces or translations. No modern 384 Portuguese poet seems to have attempted to pursue the path of dramatic composition in the style of the Spanish comedy, and to carry it forward from the point at which Gil Vicente had stopped. Of the modern Portuguese comedies in the French style those from the pen of Guita have the highest reputation. But the Portuguese appear still to cherish as a favourite dramatic entertainment, the burlesque and truly national entremeses (interludes) which have either risen out of the Spanish compositions of the same class, or have with them one common origin.394

RECENT PORTUGUESE POETS:—IN PARTICULAR TOLENTINO DA ALMEIDA.

Among the latest Portuguese poets of eminence, may be numbered Manoel de Barbosa du Boccage, Francisco Bias Gomez, Francisco Cardoso, Alvarez de Nobrega, Xavier de Matos, Valladares, and Nicolao Tolentino de Almeida. The last mentioned writer seems to be greatly admired for his poignant satires, which have for their subject various local relations in Lisbon.395 The wit of this poet, whose writings betray much dissatisfaction with his lot in life, is not always intelligible to a foreigner; but he evinces a decidedly national spirit, which when combined with the representation of modern manners, 385 becomes peculiarly interesting.396 In the works of Tolentino are revived most of the ancient national metres of the Portuguese in redondilhas.397 386

ARAUJO DE AZAVEDO—HIS TRANSLATIONS OF ENGLISH POEMS.

It would be unjust to close this History of Portuguese Poetry, without recording the name of Araujo de Azavedo, minister for foreign affairs in Lisbon, a writer of talent and learning, and a statesman to whom his country and its government is much indebted. His excellent translations of Dryden’s Alexander’s Feast, some of Gray’s Odes, and the Elegy in a Country Church-yard, are truly valuable acquisitions to the national literature of Portugal. His object in making these translations was to direct the attention of his poetical contemporaries to the hitherto unexplored side of the Portuguese Parnassus; and it may be expected that genius will readily follow the tract of such a guide.398 387


CHAP. III.
HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE ELOQUENCE, CRITICISM, AND RHETORIC, DURING THIS PERIOD.

Further Decline of Portuguese Eloquence.

Before it was possible for any thing like true eloquence to find a place in Portuguese literature, public spirit had to revive from that state of feebleness and apathy into which it had been plunged by the rapid decline of Portugal from the pinnacle of national glory. It was indispensable that a time should return in which the human mind might move with somewhat more freedom in the trammels of ecclesiastical tyranny. The nation had to become once more capable of contemplating great objects. The national taste was to be reclaimed from the affectation of pompous phraseology, and it was necessary that the spirit of philosophy should be allowed to make suitable approaches towards the 388 spirit of poetry. But these, and all the other conditions requisite for the revival of polite prose in Portugal, were never more decidedly wanting than precisely at the period when the introduction of French manners seemed likely to infuse a French taste into the national literature. But reckoning from the latter end of the seventeenth century, the imitation of French taste had operated for a considerable time, and yet had influenced only the forms of social life. Its presence in Portuguese literature, was scarcely perceptible. It has already been shewn that during the first half of the eighteenth century, Portuguese poetry, even in the hands of the few poets who were not unwilling to learn elegance from the French, continued subject to the style of the Gongorists and Marinists. Of course still less was it to be expected that Portuguese writers should be capable of imitating the polite prose of the French, since such an imitation would pre-suppose a cultivation of the understanding which at that time was not practicable in Portugal. The French taste in so far as it really found admission into Portugal, doubtless contributed at first, as about the same time its adoption did in Germany, to repress the loftier style of eloquence, for the language became so corrupted by foreign words and phrases, that it was difficult for the prose writer to know what tract it was proper to follow. The poet might, if he pleased, still adhere to the style of the sixteenth century; for his language was not like that of prose composition, subject to the laws of fashion. But no author could attempt classic prose, in the language of the sixteenth 389 century, without encountering the risk of being regarded as a pedant by his contemporaries; and if he wished to follow the fashion, he was obliged to disfigure the language in which he wrote.

A few works of research which were written during the first half of the eighteenth century, are, with the exception of books of devotion, almost the only compositions which still preserved a kind of national prose style in Portuguese literature. Barbosa Machado’s great national Dictionary of Learned Men, is not written without rhetorical care. The author wished to express himself with correctness and elegance, particularly where he uses the language of panegyric, but even then he could not avoid frigid and pompous phraseology; and some phrases, which he seems to have admired, are constantly recurring in the work; as for example when he calls a poet “one of the most melodious swans of the Portuguese Parnassus,” without considering that Parnassus is neither a river nor a pond. A few affected metaphors were the only recognized beauties of prose composition at this period in Portugal. Didactic prose could no longer exist when the philosophic and scientific cultivation of the Portuguese became daily more abridged, and was almost limited to the small remnant which was taught in the cloisters and the colleges of the Jesuits. The lectures which under these circumstances were delivered in the academies, were considered to have sufficiently fulfilled their objects if they did not lull the auditors to sleep. The art of historical composition was now completely extinguished in Portugal. 390

NEW CULTIVATION OF ELOQUENCE—CLASSICAL PROSE AUTHORS STILL WANTING IN MODERN PORTUGUESE LITERATURE.

In the second half, and more especially during the last thirty years of the eighteenth century, the spirit of improvement was awakened, and began to diffuse itself into every department of Portuguese eloquence. The admirable clearness, precision and facility of the French prose, has at length exercised an advantageous influence on the Portuguese. Without enforcing with pedantic rigour the restoration of all the old forms of the sixteenth century, the best Portuguese authors now endeavour to write their mother tongue with purity, and at the same time to satisfy the new wants created by the progress of time and the spirit of the age. The praiseworthy diligence which the Portuguese now manifest in collecting scientific knowledge of every kind, and in republishing the works of their early authors, appears, however, to have operated indirectly to the prejudice of eloquence, for among the men of talent, to whom Portugal is indebted for her regeneration, none have yet distinguished themselves in prose composition. But the Portuguese have had so many things to retrieve, that they have scarcely had time to devote particular attention to the rhetorical form of didactic works. An effort to avoid the bad taste of the preceding age, and upon the whole to cultivate a clear and dignified form of expression, is perceptible in most of the modern treatises of the Portuguese. Empty bombast has given place to the language of reason. The Portuguese nation have 391 now to wish for a modern historian qualified to tread in the footsteps of Barros, Brito and Andrada. Such a writer might succeed in still more firmly rivetting the connecting link between the promising present and glorious past in the hearts of Portuguese patriots.

ROMANTIC PROSE—TRANSLATIONS.

A new era of romantic prose might also have been commenced in Portugal, had the poetic spirit of the old Portuguese pastoral romances been modified, instead of being enfeebled by the introduction of the cultivated forms of modern prose. Translations of foreign novels seem to have too readily satisfied that portion of the Portuguese public, whose cultivation was, through this species of reading, gradually approximating to the taste of the other nations of Europe. A translation from the French of Le Sage’s popular Gil Blas was supplied by the poet Barbosa Du Boccage, who is probably descended from a French family. This was soon followed by translations of the Moral Tales of D’Arnaud, and of various works of a similar description.

PORTUGUESE CRITICISM OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.

The progress of genuine prose in Portuguese literature during the eighteenth century, may, upon the whole, be estimated by the style of Portuguese criticism in the same period. It may be presumed that the authors of critical treatises on literary subjects, endeavoured by their own prose to shew the relationship, 392 which, according to their opinion, ought to exist between poetry and eloquence; and it is certain that the principles on which they wrote precisely corresponded with the rhetorical cultivation of the age, within the boundaries of Portuguese taste. These theoretical labours, in their relation to Portuguese poetry and eloquence, deserve to be particularly noticed.

ERICEYRA’S INTRODUCTION TO HIS HENRIQUEIDA.

A new epoch in Portuguese criticism seems to commence with the critical treatises of the Count da Ericeyra; for this writer studiously availed himself of the principles of French criticism, and his authority gave full effect to the example he set. But there was more of semblance than reality in Ericeyra’s appropriation of French criticism. He had too little feeling for the essence of poetry to be able to modify the idea of beauty according to French principles of correctness, without losing sight of the true foundation of that idea. With all his critical rules, therefore, he never rose above what may be termed the external apparatus of poetry. Within that apparatus his taste was altogether circumscribed. His general opinions on poetry are developed with sufficient clearness in the copious introduction to his Henriqueida,399 and in the explanatory notes which he has attached to that epic composition. The introductory dissertation is written in good prose; but the observations which the author makes on the 393 subject of epic poetry, partake more of prosaic than of poetic views. The subject with which the Count da Ericeyra’s critical essay commences is imitation; but, composing in the spirit of his own system, he first speaks of the celebrated poets whose works he had imitated, and afterwards of the imitation of nature. He speaks of Homer with emphasis; and yet at the same time acknowledges that he was acquainted with that poet only through Madame Dacier’s prose translation. Under these circumstances he reasonably enough speaks with still greater emphasis of Virgil, whose works he could read in the original. Of all human works, Virgil’s Æneid, in the opinion of Ericeyra, approaches nearest to perfection.400 On the other hand, he says, that Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso, belongs more properly to the class of romantic tales of chivalry, than to epic poetry; but that it is nevertheless worthy of imitation on account of its pleasing narrative style and the “fertility of poetic genius,” which the Count acknowledges Ariosto to possess. Voltaire’s Henriade, however, which was then the newest epic production, is pronounced to be particularly distinguished for its “elevated and natural poetry.” Ericeyra takes this opportunity of more accurately defining his theory of perfection in epic poetry. It belongs, in his opinion, to a perfect epic action, that the hero of the poem should as much as possible be kept present in the scene of action. On epic machinery Ericeyra pronounces nearly the same 394 judgment as Boileau, namely, that when a modern introduces into his poetry the Christian system of the ancient mythology, the pleasure to be derived from epic composition is destroyed. Even the Jerusalem Delivered, would be a tedious work, had not Tasso enlivened the “pious melancholy of the subject” by the introduction of magic and by other means. The example set by Camoens, who introduced into modern poetry all the mythological deities as allegorical characters, is recommended as highly worthy of imitation; but nevertheless Tasso’s plan is not to be altogether condemned. Ericeyra makes some very judicious observations on the epic treatment of real history. Lucan, he says, was the first who disfigured epic poetry by writing merely as a poetic historian; and he attributes the ill success of the Spaniards in epic poetry to their having always preferred Lucan to every other model. His remarks on the epic character are no less correct; and his opinions on language and style are such as might be expected from a man of sound and cultivated understanding. He praises the dramatic style of Corneille, Racine and Moliere. From these authors, he observes, a writer may learn how to express naturally the heroic and tender passions in their full force, and without the false glare which disfigures the works of many modern and also some ancient poets. Thus the Count da Ericeyra endeavoured to vindicate his own poem before the tribunal of the public. The most remarkable circumstance with respect to the whole treatise is the little value which the author attaches to poetic allegory. When it is recollected in what esteem allegory was 395 held by the early Portuguese critics, Ericeyra’s treatise, though in other respects unimportant, and only interesting in its connection with the whole of Portuguese literature, will be recognised as at least a step gained in literary criticism.

GARÇAÕ’S LECTURES.

Among the treatises of criticism by which it was hoped, about the middle of the eighteenth century to reform the taste of the Portuguese, some consideration is due to those written by Garçaõ, the imitator of Horace.401 They are in the form of lectures, and were delivered in an assembly called the academy of the Portuguese Arcadians. On this account they are also entitled to rank among works of oratory. In two of these lectures, Garçaõ zealously defends the Aristotelian theory of tragedy in its application to the modern drama. He insists on obedience to the rule of not shedding blood on the stage. Accordingly he commends the French drama; and notices Addison’s Cato with approbation. His opinion, on this point, he conceives is sufficiently supported by these two remarks—1st. That to fulfil the object of tragic art it is not necessary to shed blood on the stage—and 2dly. That it is improper, because at an intellectual entertainment disgusting objects should not be presented to the eye. Garçaõ appears also to have understood in the usual way the condition of Aristotle, that tragedy should refine the passions of the spectator. 396 He expatiates much on the moral utility of a perfect tragedy, through which the theatre might, in his opinion, be easily converted into an excellent school of morals. To this effect the opinions of the French critics Le Bossu and Dacier, are industriously cited in concert with those of Aristotle. Both lectures were given in the year 1757. The main object of a third lecture which Garçaõ delivered to the same society in the same year, is to demonstrate that the imitation of the classic poets of antiquity is one of the most essential requisites of modern poetry. He observes that the judicious and the servile imitator must not be confounded together, for that the latter is in fact merely a plagiarist. Garçaõ himself seems, however, to have been somewhat puzzled to make out this distinction; for he asserts that Camoens has in his pastoral poems imitated Virgil in the same manner as Virgil has Theocritus. A skilful imitator, he says, may excel the poet whom he imitates, as Horace has in many passages excelled Pindar. At the same time it must be allowed, that these and the following lectures of Garçaõ possess the merit of pure, natural, and dignified language; and that in several passages they display true eloquence.402 Garçaõ, who 397 felt a patriotic interest in the improvement of the polite literature of his country, expected that the academy of the Portuguese Arcadians would by its exertions revive the good taste of the sixteenth century. Only such a society, zealously competing for the welfare and honour of the country, can, he says, become “the Alexander who will cut this gordian knot of bad taste, the Achilles who will conquer this Troy.”403 But it appears that he appealed to his Arcadians in vain. Their literary patriotism was of a very passive character; 398 and the advantages which Garçaõ hoped this society would procure, were destined to be obtained through another.

PHILOLOGICAL AND CRITICAL TREATISES OF THE ACADEMICIANS JOAQUIM DE FOYOS—FRANCISCO DIAS—ANTONIO DAS NAVES, &C.

Among the literary treatises (Memorias de Litteratura) published by the Royal Academy of Sciences in Lisbon,404 are to be found the latest contributions to Portuguese criticism and eloquence; and that society may justly boast of the well directed efforts of its members to promote the literary cultivation of the nation. At the head of these literary treatises, there appeared in the year 1792 a remarkable essay on Portuguese pastoral poetry by Joaquim de Foyos.405 This treatise served at once to record the unconquerable predilection with which the Portuguese adhered to their pastoral poetry, and the new freedom of opinion which ventured to shew itself in opposition to the oracles of French criticism. Joaquim de Foyos asserts, that pastoral poetry must be the oldest, and consequently the most natural and original style of poetry. In the history of human nature, he observes, the shepherd’s life is in the natural course of the transition from barbarism to social cultivation. It is, he adds, precisely in this 399 stage of the developement of human wants and energies, that the mind is particularly awakened to poetic activity: and as in pastoral life man is surrounded by the sweetest tranquillity of nature, so must pastoral poetry be the true poetry of nature. Joaquim de Foyos has indeed related consistently with his own notions, the history of mankind and poetry in a way which is well calculated to set forth the particular merits of bucolic composition: otherwise history might soon have convinced him that pastoral life has scarcely ever been the passage from the savage state to civilization: that the kind of pastoral state which favours the ground work of bucolic poetry, has only arisen under particular circumstances in a few places; and has, even there been of little advantage to poetry: that Greek poetry no more originated in Arcadia, than German in Switzerland: that the oldest Greek poetry exhibits no trace of the pastoral character: that Theocritus first devoted himself to this style of composition at the voluptuous court of the Ptolemies in Alexandria: and that its revival in the romantic age, like its birth in Alexandria, presupposes a degree of social cultivation, whence the human mind longingly reverts to a more natural existence, on which it at last bestows ideal beauties. Joaquim de Foyos judges of the French critics by more just principles. He observes, that these critics, of whom Le Bossu may be placed at the head, deduce numerous chimerical rules from what they term the morality of a poem. Dacier, he says, has also misunderstood Aristotle in wishing to render the story of a poem a sort of 400 Æsopic fable. The ingenious and elegant Marmontel has fallen into the same error.

A philological treatise in the form of a dictionary, by Antonio Pereita do Figueiredo, on the genius of the Portuguese language, according to the Decades of Barros,406 though not immediately connected with poetry and rhetoric, is nevertheless worthy of honourable notice, since it is calculated to direct Portuguese writers to the study of Barros, and the spirit of their mother tongue. Another treatise by the same writer, has for its object to recommend Barros as a model for Portuguese eloquence.407

The analysis of the poetic language and style of Saa de Miranda, Ferreira, Bernardes, Caminha and Camoens, by Francisco Dias, is more useful than most of the treatises of the same kind previously written in Portuguese.408 The investigations of this intelligent writer are philological rather than critical; but the critical observations which he introduces are dictated by a clear judgment and just feeling. The improvements which Saa de Miranda effected in the poetic language 401 of the Portuguese are here exhibited in their true light. Even the latinisms of Ferreira are placed in an advantageous point of view by the author. He speaks of Camoens in terms of enthusiasm; but in the encomiums which have lately been bestowed on Caminha, Dias does not concur.409 The treatise is, upon the whole, very well written.410

An Essay by Antonio das Naves Pereira on the proper use of the language of the Portuguese writers 402 of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, abounds in judicious critical remarks.411 It is written expressly to condemn the gallicizing (a Francezia) of modern Portuguese. This learned philologist and critic is likewise the author of a comparative view of the language and manner of the principal Portuguese poets with particular reference to the peculiarities of each style of poetry.412

The want of a work which might in the strict sense of the term be called a complete theory of criticism, does not appear to have yet been felt by the Portuguese. A compendium of rhetorick by Antonio Teixeira de Magalhaens was published in the year 1782;413 and a few years after a French art of rhetorick by Gisbert, as translated into Portuguese.414 403


CONCLUSION.

COMPARISON OF PORTUGUESE AND SPANISH LITERATURE.

On a general comparison of the treasures of the polite learning of Spain with the poetry and eloquence of Portugal, there will appear on the Spanish side a balance of literary riches, but not of genius and cultivation. The heroic romances, the satire of Cervantes, and the dramatic poetry of the Spaniards, still preponderate, though the epic poem of Camoens, and all the beautiful and singular productions of Portuguese pastoral poetry be weighed in the opposite scale. The greater number of the old Portuguese lyric poets, does not, as to intrinsic value, raise the Portuguese lyric poetry above the Spanish. The dramatic works of Gil Vicente, which are completely thrown into shade by those of Lope de Vega and Calderon, would still be eclipsed, did they even possess the riper cultivation of the few dramas of Saa da Miranda, Ferreira, and Vasconcellos; which, however, is again more than counterbalanced by the dramatic energy and lofty poetry of the works of Moreto, Antonio de Solis, and other Spanish authors. But in a general view of the poetic genius of both nations, it would be wrong to overlook the different extent of the territories to which the two languages belong, or to forget that in the style of romantic pastoral poetry, which shines so brilliantly in Spanish literature, the Portuguese instructed the Spaniards, and 404 never were excelled by them. Generally speaking it may be said, that in no earnest literary competition between the Portuguese and the Spaniards, have the former ever suffered themselves to be outdone by the latter. Accidental circumstances, not want of energy, prevented the Portuguese from keeping pace with the Spaniards in dramatic poetry; and under these circumstances no serious competition could arise. In the cultivation of modern eloquence both nations have at last advanced to nearly the same degree of improvement.

Portuguese poetry is no less national than the Spanish. The tendency to orientalism, with which the Spaniards have been so frequently reproached, was, in like manner, a characteristic of the poetic genius of the Portuguese, until the general influence of French taste produced a remarkable change in manners and in literature. To form a just estimate of the works of Saa de Miranda, Camoens, Rodriguez Lobo, and the other principal Portuguese poets, it is not the Greek or Latin, and by no means the French rule of criticism, which ought to be made the measure of poetic excellence. From a right understanding of what really constitutes natural and ideal poetry, is derived the only true principle whereby the judgment ought here to be guided in forming its decision. Keeping this principle in view, attention must be paid to local circumstances, which, whenever ancient or modern poetry has arisen out of the poetic perception of nature and human life, rather than out of reading, or philosophic and critical abstractions, give to the poetic creations of 405 the mind the true impress of reality;—and, amidst realities, the poets of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries lived. These poets sufficiently satisfied their contemporaries and their age, but they had no wish to recommend themselves to posterity by a theoretically cultivated and universal style of poetry. Their poetic world is, accordingly, something more than a mere imaginary world; and what they only wrote to please themselves and their contemporaries, must increase in value with every succeeding century; because the circumstances under which such a style of poetry could arise, are gradually becoming more and more rare.

END OF VOL. II.

AND OF THE HISTORY OF PORTUGUESE LITERATURE.

E. Justins, Printer, 41, Brick Lane, Whitechapel. 406


ERRATA VOLUME II.

Page 103, l. 2 from the top, for farcas read farças.
110, l.  3 from the top, for rareshow read rareeshow.
115, l.  3 from the top, for prediliction read predilection.
120, l.  1 first note, for a ode read an ode.
134, l.  7 from the top, for opening Ferreira’s tragedy Ferreira’s tragedy.
164, l.  2 of the note,for hrone read throne.
165, l.  7 from the top,for the poetic survey read this poetic survey.
199, l. 11 from the top, for redondillas read redondilhas.
211, l.  7 from the top, espistles read epistles.
233, l. 10 from the top, for exercisesd read exercised.
252, l.  6 from the top, for remaind read remained.
302, l. 14 from the top, for stile read style.
313, l.  2 from the bottom of the second note, for he read the.
318, l.  6 from the bottom, for a more natural dignified read a more natural and dignified.
324, l. 10 from the bottom, for antithesis read antitheses.

407


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FOOTNOTES:

1 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 12 and 17.

2 The Portuguese of former times never resigned the common denomination of Spaniards to the inhabitants of the Castilian monarchy. They invariably styled the Spaniards Castelhanos. Even in the late edition of the poems of Camões, that writer, who composed only a few trifles in Castilian verse, is distinguished by the title of Principe dos Poetas de Hespanha, (Prince of Spanish poets).

3 Detailed information concerning the settling of French knights in Portugal, under Henry of Burgundy, may be found in Manuel Faria y Sousa’s well known work:—Europa Portuguesa, v. i. p. 448.

4 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 17.

5 Further information on this subject is contained in Manuel de Faria y Sousa’s Europa Portuguesa, vol. iii. p. 378, whence all these particulars are derived.

6 It is difficult to collect any sense from the words. Those who understand Portuguese may try their skill on the following specimen:—

Tinhe rabos nom tinhe rabos
Tal a tal ca monta?
Tinheradesme, nom tinheradesme,
De là vinherasdes, de cà filharedes,
Ca amabia tudo em soma.
Per mil goyvos trebalhando
Oy oy vos lombrego
Algorem se cada folgança
Asmey cu: porque do terrenho
Nom ha hi tal perchego.

The above fragment is contained in the Europa Portuguesa, vol. iii. p. 379.—Dieze has also printed it in his Remarks on Velasquez.

7 Two complete songs by Egaz Moniz are given in the work of Manuel de Faria y Sousa already mentioned, vol. iii. p. 380. One commences as follows:—

Bem satisfeita ficades
Corpo doyro
Alegrade a quem amardes,
Que ei jà moyro.
Ei bos rogo bos lembredes
Ca bos quije
A que dolos nom abedes
Que bos fije.
Cambastes a Pertigal
Por Castilla
A amade o mei mal
Que dor me filha.

8 There is no poetry in the specimens quoted by Faria y Sousa. For example the following:—

A Juliam et Horpas a saa grei daminhos,
Que em sembra cò os netos de Agar fornezinhos
Huna atimarom prasmada fazanha,
Ca Muza, et Zariph com basta campanha
De juso da sina do Miramolino
Com falsa infançom et Prestes maligno
De Cepta aduxerom ao Solar Espanha.
Et porque era força, adarve, et foçado
Da Betica Almina, et o seu Casteval
O Conde por Encha, et pro comunal
Em tarra os encreos poyarom a Saagrado,
El Gibaraltar, maguer que adordado,
Et co compridouro per saa defensaõ,
Pello susodeto sem algo de afaõ
Presto foy delles entrado et filhado.

9 See Barbosa Machado, article Dionis.

10 The changes which the name Alphonso undergoes in Spanish and Portuguese may mislead persons who are not intimate with those languages. In Spanish it is indiscriminately either Alfonso or Alonzo; the latter form, however, is chiefly used in common life. In Portuguese, from the natural tendency of that language to omit the letter l, the name is invariably pronounced and written Affonso.

11 This poem is given by Barbosa Machado, under the head D. Pedro I.—As it is written in the Castilian language, it would be out of place in a collection of specimens of Portuguese poetry. The Portuguese songs of Pedro I. are included in Garcia de Resende’s Cancioneiro.

12 The Spanish Don becomes Dom in Portuguese.

13 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 49.

14 Manuel de Faria y Sousa has printed it in his Discurso de los Sonetos, prefixed to his Fuente Aganippe, that is to say, his poems, vol. i. The language and style of this sonnet are sufficiently ancient.

Bom Vasco de Lobeyra, e de gram sem,
de pram que vos av des hem contado,
o feito de Armadis, o namorado,
sem quedar ende por contarhi rem.
E tanto vos aprougue, e a tambem,
que vos seredes sempre ende loado,
eu entre os homes hos por bo mentado,
que vos eram adeante, e que hora hem.
Maes porque vos fizestes a fremosa
Breoranja amarendoudo hu nom amarom
esto, combade, e contra sà vontade.
Ca eu hey gram dò de a ver queixosa,
por sa gram fremosura, e sa bondade,
e ber porque o sim amor nom lho pagarom.

15 One of these sonnets is printed, as a specimen, in the before-mentioned Discurso de los Sonetos. There is in the antiquated diction a degree of precision which approximates to the style of the original:—

Vinha Amor por o campo trebelhando
com sà fremosa Madre, e sàs donzellas;
el rindo, e cheo de lédice entre ellas,
ja de arco, e de sas setas nom curando.
Brioranja hi a sazom sia pensando
na gram coita que ella ha, e vendo aquellas
setas de Amor, filha em sa mano huna dellas,
e metea no arco, e vayse andando.
Des hi volveo o rosto hu Amor sia.
Her, disse: ay traidor que me has falido;
en prenderey de ti crua vendita.
Largou a mano, quedou Amor ferido:
e catando a sa sestra endoa do grita,
hay merce, a Brioranja que fogia.

16 See Sarmiento’s Obras Posthumas, p. 323.

17 The Cronica do Condestabre de Portugal Nun Alvarez Pereyra, printed in gothic letters at Lisbon 1526, in folio, may serve for an example. That this chronicle was composed about the end of the fourteenth century is a fact which admits of no doubt. Though written quite in the dry style of the chronicles, yet the author seems to have had a vague idea of historical arrangement; and he sometimes aims at a certain degree of skill and eloquence in antithesis. Thus in the preface, which commences in the following manner:—

Antigamente foy costume fazerem memoria das cousas que se faziam, assi erradas, como dos valentes e nobres feitos; dos erros, porque dellos soubessem guardar, e dos valentes e nobres feitos, aos boõs fizessem cobiça a ver peras cousas semelhantes fazerem.

With this artificial commencement, the simplicity of the following passage forms a remarkable contrast:—

E por nom fazer longo prollego (prologo), farei aqui começo em este virtuoso Senhor, do qual veo o valente y muy virtuoso conde estabre Dom Nunalvaréz Pereyra. E assi dehi em diante siguiremos nossa historia.

18 See the preceding vol. p. 74.

19 Dieze, in his Remarks on Velasquez p. 105, has printed a commencing stanza of one of these songs, which presents no great merit, together with a translated passage from Argote de Molina’s Nobleza de Andalusìa.

20 Even Cervantes in his Journey to Parnassus, makes Mercury assign to Lusitania the supplying of Amores, in order to collect together the ingredients of romantic poetry.

21 What is stated by Barbosa Machado shews how highly Garcia de Resende was esteemed by his contemporaries.

22 Barbosa Machado likewise gives an account of this collection under the head D. Pedro I. p. 540, a place in which such a notice would scarcely be looked for.

23 This is expressly mentioned by the Spanish writer Sarmiento, who says:—El cancionero Portuguez contiene muchissimos mas poetas que el Castellano. Este contiene solos los del siglo xv. pero aquel contiene algunos del Siglo xiv.—Obras posth. p. 323.

24 It will soon be necessary to make this author the subject of a particular notice.

25 I have met with no notice of a Romanceiro distinguished from the Portuguese Cancioneiro by any remarkable number of narrative romances.

26 Dieze, in his Remarks on Velasquez, p. 76, has collected notices of the lives of those Portuguese who in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries distinguished themselves by the composition of latin verse.

27 According to the testimony of Barbosa Machado, Lopes wrote several chronicles; only one was however printed, a damaged copy of which I have now before me. It is entitled: Chronica d’El Rey D. Joaõ I. de boa memoria &c. composta por Fernam Lopes. Lisboa 1644. With Zurrara’s continuation it forms one thick folio volume. It is singular enough that in these old Portuguese chronicles, the word Rey (King) is always preceded by the Castilian article El, instead of the Portuguese O. Thus El Rey, united as if forming one word, has become in the official stile of Portugal the substitute for O Rey.

28 The following speech, which is short, and is not badly conceived, may be transcribed here entire as an interesting specimen of Portuguese prose of the fifteenth century. Nuno Alvarez, who commands the Portuguese army against the Castilians, whom his brothers have joined, thus addresses his companions in arms:—

Amigos, eu nam sey mais que diga do que vos jà tenho dito, però ainda vos quero responder a ìsso, que me dissestes. Quanto he o que dizeis: que os Castellanos sam muytos, et vem grandes Capitanes, et senhores com elles, tanto vos serà mayor honra, et louvor de serem por vós vencidos, ca jà muytas vezes aconteceo os poucos vencerem muytos, porque todo o vencimento he em Deos, et nam nos homens. Na outra cousa, em que duvidaes, segundo parece, que he a vinda de meus Irmaõs em sua companhia, a ìsso nam temais por nenhuma guisa, nem Deos quizesse tal, que nenhum por mim fosse enganado. Ca eu naõ os hey por meus Irmanos nesta parte, pois que vem por desviar a terra, que os gérou. E nam digo contra meus Irmaõs, mas em verdade vos juro, que ainda que ahi viesse meu Padre, eu seria contra elle, por serviço do Mestre meu senhor. E pera vós verdes que he assim, se a voz praz de em esta obra sermos todos companheiros; eu vos juro, et prometo, que eu seja o dianteiro ante a minha bandeira, et o primeiro que comece a pelejar, et assi podeis ver a vontade, que eu tenho contra meus Irmaõs neste feito. Mas, naõ embargo da vossa tençaõ ser todavia qual me dissestes, aquelles, que se quizerem hir pera suas casas, et lugares, vaõse com Deos, ea eis, et esses poucos de boõs Portugueses, que comigo vem, lhe entendo poer a praça.

29 Barbosa Machado’s article under the head “Bernardim Ribeyro,” is too short and unsatisfactory for a name so celebrated.

30 For example in the following stanzas:—

O dia que ally chegou
Com seu gado et com seu fato,
Com tudo se agasalhou
Em huma bicada de hum mato,
E levandoo a pascer,
O outro dia à ribeira
Joana acertou de hi ver,
Que andava pela ribeira
Do Tejo a flores colher.
Vestido branco trazia,
Hum pouco a frontada andava,
Fermosa bem parecia
Aos olhos de quem na olhava.
Jano em vendoa foy pasmado,
Mas por ver que ella fazia
Escondeose entre hum prado.
Joana flores colhia,
Jano colhia cuidado.
Despois que ella tene as flores
Jà colhidas, et escolhidas
As desvariadas cores
Com rosas entremetidas,
Fez dellas huma capella.
E soltou os seus cabellos
Que eram tam longos como ella,
E de cada hum a Jano em vellos
Lhe nacia huma querella.—
Eglogo II.

31 For example:—

Triste de mi, que serà?
O coitado que farei,
Que nam sei onde me và,
Com quem me consolarei?
Ou quem me consolarà?
Ao longo das ribeiras,
Ao som das suas agoas,
Chorarei muitas canceitas,
Minhas magoas derradeiras,
Minhas derradeiras magoas.
Todos fogem jà de mim,
Todos me desemporaram,
Meus males sòs me ficaram
Pera me darem a fim
Com que nunca se acabaram.
De todo bem desespero
Pois me desespera quem
Me quer mal que lhe nam quero,
Nam lhe quero senam bem,
Bem que nunca della espero.
O meus desditosos dias,
O meus dias desditosos,
Como vos his saudosos,
Saudosos de alegrias,
D’alegrias desejosos:
Deixaime jà descançar,
Pois que eu vos faço tristes,
Tristes porque meu pesar
Me deu os males que vistes,
E muitos mais por pasar.—
Egl. III.

32 The Spaniards cannot easily enter into the spirit of these verbal allusions in the Portuguese language; for the word which in Portuguese signifies a river, is in Spanish by the usual change in the penult syllable Ribera, and signifies a bank. The Portuguese Ribeira, or Ribeiro, is probably derived from Rivus; and the Spanish Ribera from Ripa.

33 For example:—

Ribeira de meu cuidado,
O cuidado da ribeira,
Ribeira do bem passado.
Pois de ti vivo apartado
Comigo vive canseira:
Audo com a fantesia,
Trago huma tristeza tal,
Que mouro con alegria,
Tam contente sou com o mal,
Que sempre mal ter queria.—
Egl. V.

This fifth eclogue is, however, attributed to Ribeyro only by conjecture.

34 These eclogues form an appendix to the old as well as the new edition of the prose romance of Menina e Moça, which will soon be further noticed.

35 See the preceding vol. p. 113.

36 This very plain dealing effusion is as follows. It is without punctuation:—

Nam sam casado senhora
que ainda que dei a maõ
nam casei ho coraçaõ
Antes que vos conheçese
sem errar contra vos nada
huma soo maõ fiz casada
sem que mais nisso metesse
doulhe que ella se perdesse
solteiros e vossos sam
hos olhos e ho coraçam
Dizem que ho bom casamento
se a de fazer de vontade
eu a vos a liberdade
vos dei e o pensamento
nisto soo me achei contento
que se a outrem dei a maõ
dei a vos ho coraçaõ
Como senhora vos vi
sem palauras de presente
na alma vos reçebi
onde estareis para sempre
nam de palaura somente
nem fiz mais que dar a maõ
guardandovos o coraçaõ
Caseime com meu cuidado
e com vosso dessejar
senhora nam sam casado
nam mo queiras acuitar
que servirvos e amar
me nasçeo do coraçaõ
que tendes em vossa maõ
Ho casar nam fez mudança
em meu antiguo cuidado
nem me negou esperança
do galardam esperado
nam me engeiteis por casado
que se a outro dei a maõ
a vos dei ho coraçaõ.

37 They may be found in the appendix to the old and scarce edition of the tale Menina e Moça, (Lisboa, 1559, in 8.)

38 In the Cancionero de Romances, Amberes 1555, in 8vo. It is also to be found in the new as well as in the old edition of the Menina e Moça.

39 It commences thus:—

Ao longo de huma Ribeira,
Que vai pello pe da serra,
Onde me a mi fez a guerra
Muito tempo o grande amor,
Me levou a minha dor.
Jà era tarde do dia
E a agua della corria
Por antre hum alto arvoredo,
Onde ás vezes hia quedo
O Rio, e ás vezes nam.
Entrada era do veram,
Quando começam as aves
Com seus cantares suaves
Facer tudo graciozo.
Ao rogido saudozo
Das aguas cantavam ellas;
Toda las minhas querellas
Se me pozeram diante; &c.

40 The new edition of the Menina e Moça, ou Saudades de Bernardim Ribeyro, published by one of the descendants of the poet, Lisboa 1785, in 8vo. is easier to read than the old edition, on account of the more regular punctuation. But the old and scarce edition, which, however, bears on the title page, the words de novo estampada, Lisboa 1559, in 8vo. contains, in an appendix, Ribeyro’s eclogues, and also a collection of old Portuguese poems by other authors.

41 She says:—

Escolhi para meu contentamento (se entre tristezas et saudades ha algum) virme viver a este monte, onde o lugar et mingoa da conversação da gente te fosse, como para meu cuidado cumpria: porque grande erro fora depois de tantos nojos, quantos eu com estes meus olhos, vi aventurarme ainda esperar do mundo o descanço, que elle nunca dè a ninguem. Estando eu aqui ló, taõ longe dè toda a outra gente, et de mim ainda mais longe; donde nam vejo senaõ serras de hum cabo, que se naõ mudaõ nunca, et do outro aguas do mar, que nunca estam quedas, onde cuidava eu jà que esquecia a desaventura, porque ella, et depois eu a todo poder que ambas pudemos naõ leixamos em mi nada em que pudesse nova magoa ter lugar; &c.

42 The following is the passage:—

Nam tardou muito que estando eu assi cuidando, sobre hum verde ramo que por sima da agua se estendia, se veyo pousar hum Rousinol, começou a cantar tam docemente que de todo me levou a pos si o meu sentido d’ouvir; et elle cada vez crecia mais em seus queixumes, que parecia que como cansada queria acabar, senaõ quando tornava como que começava. Entam (triste da avezinha) que estandose assi queixando nam sey como se cahio morte sobre aquella agua, cahindo por entre as ramas, muitas folhas cahiram tambem com ella; pareceo aquello sinal de pezar naquelle arvoredo de caso tam desestrado. Levava a pos si a agua, et as folhas a pos ella, et quizeraa eu hir tomar: mas polla corrente que alli fazia, et pelo mato que dali para baxo acerca do rio logo estava, prestasmente se alongou da vista; o coraçaõ me doco tanto entaõ em ver taõ asinha morto quem dantes taõ pouco havia que vira estar cantando, que naõ pude ter as lagrimas.

43 This passage may be regarded as a specimen of romantic didactic prose:—

Coitadas das mulheres que porque vem que as namoram os homens com obras cuidam que assi se devem elles tambem de namorar: et he muito pelo contrario, que aos homens namoramnos desdeis et presunçoens, apos huma brandura de olhos, asperesa muita de obras. Isto de seu natural lhes deve vir, porque sam rijos, que parece nam terem em muito senam o que trabalham muito. Nos outras boandas de nosso nacimento fazemos outra cousa: porem se elles com nosco entrassem a juizo, que razam mostrariam per si? Ca o amor que he senam vontade? Ella nam se dà, nem se toma por força, mas como quer que seja, ou pela desventura das mulheres, ou pela ventura dos homens.

44 The publisher of the new edition of the Menina e Moça (see note p. 33.) expressly states in his preface, that by recalling public attention to that work, he proposes to refute the censures which have been pronounced on the Portuguese language.

45 Egloga de Christovam Falcam, chamado Crisfal, annexed to the old edition of the Menina e Moça. See note page 33.

46

Depois de me visto ter
e ja que me conheçia,
lagrimas lhe vi correr
dos olhos que nam movia:
de mim sem nada dizer.
Eu lhe disse: meu dessejo,
vendoa tal com asaz dor,
dessejo do meu amor
crerei eu ao que vejo,
ou crerei ao meu temor,
A ysto bem sem prazer
me tornou entam assi
com voz de pouco poder:
Crisfal que vez tu em mim
que nam seja pera crer?
Eu lhe respondi: perdervos
de vos ver por tanto anno
fazme assim temer meu dano
que vejo meus olhos vervos,
e temo que me engano.

47

E dizendo: O mezquinha,
como pude ser tam crua
Bem abraçado me tinha
a minha boca na sua
e a sua façe na minha.
Lagrimas tinha choradas
que com a boca gostey,
mas com quanto certo sey
que as lagrimas sam salgadas,
aquellas doçes achey.
Soltei as minhas entam
com muitas palauras tristes,
e tomey por concruzam,
alma por que nam partistes
que bem tinheis de rezam.
Entam ella assi chorosa
de tam choroso me ver,
ja pera me socorrer
com huma voz piadosa
comezoume assi dizer:
Amor de minha vontade
ora non mais! Crisfal manço
bem sey tua lealdade.
Ay que grande descanço
he falar coma verdade.
Eu sey bem que nam me mentes,
que o menter he diferente,
nam fala dalma quem mente.
Crisfal nam te descontentes
se me quereo veer contente.

48

Isto que Crisfal dezia,
Assi, como o contava,
Huma Nymfa, o escrivia
N’ hum alamo que alli estava,
Que ainda entam crescia.
Dizem, que foi seu intento
De escrevelo en tal lugar,
Pera por tempo se alçar
Onde baixo pensamento
Lhe nam pudesse chegar.

49 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 210.

50 These verses bear the following superscription:—Carta do mesmo, estando preso, que mandoa a huma Senhora con que era casado a furto contra vontade de seus parentes &c.—This letter is also attached to the old edition of the Menina e Moça.

51 From the verb Esparecer, which is almost synonymous with the French Extravaguer, the term Esparça is probably derived.

52

Vi o cabo no começo,
Vejo o começo no cabo,
De feiçaõ que nam conheço,
Se começo, nem se acabo.

53

Senhora, pois, por vos ver,
Assi me desconheci,
Nam me quereis vos fazer
O que por vos fiz amim.

54

Comigo me desavim;
Vejo me em grande perigo,
Nam posso vivir comigo,
Nem posso fugir de mim.

55 The following for example:—

Nam posso dormir as noites,
amor, nam as posso dormir.
Desque meus olhos olharom
em vos seu mal e seu bem,
se algum tempo repousarem
ja nenhum repouso tem.
Dias vam e noutes vem
sem vos ver nem vos ouvir.
Como as poderei dormir?
Meu pensamento ocupado
na causa de seu pensar
acorda sempre ho cuidado
para nunca descuidar.
As noites do repousar,
dias sam ao meu sentir,
noutes de meu nam dormir.
Todo ho bem he ja passado
e passado em mal presente;
o sentido desvelado,
ho coraçam descontente:
ho juizo que ysto sente
como se deve sentir,
pouco leixara dormir.
Como nam vi ho que vejo
cos olhos do coraçam,
nam me deito sem dessejo
nem me erguo sem paixam;
hos dias sem vos ver vam,
as noites sera vos ouvir,
eu as nam posso dormir.

56 In illustration of this remark, the words cor, paço, povo, pay, may, por, ter, may be compared with the Spanish words color, palacio, pueblo, padre, madre, poner, tener, and similar comparisons may be made of a multitude of others. Let the reader also take into consideration the clipping pronunciation of o and a when these vowels terminate words in the Portuguese language. The Portuguese articles o and a, abbreviated from lo and la, together with the compounds formed from them, as no and na, instead of en lo and en la, must necessarily be offensive to the Spanish ear. It is singular, however, that the Portuguese language has a tendency to lengthen those particular words in which the Spanish cannot tolerate any further extension; for the Spanish Universidad, Magestad, &c. become in Portuguese Universidade, Magestade, and so forth.

57 It deserves, however, to be noticed, that of all the sister languages of Roman descent, the Portuguese alone has preserved, in its grammatical structure, a remarkable fragment of the ancient latin conjugation, namely, the pluperfect of the indicative, viz. fora, foras, fora, from fueram, fueras, fuerat. But this pluperfect has also the signification of a preterite of the subjunctive; and through the ambiguity, which thus arises, the value of this grammatical relic in the Portuguese language is in a great measure lost, notwithstanding that the connection may easily mark the proper sense. But how happens it that of all the languages claiming a Roman origin, the Portuguese, though in other respects remarkable for a certain simplicity of character, is, upon the whole, distinguished by the most numerous and subtle tenses in the conjugations of its verbs?

58 This trait of distinction between the Portuguese and Spanish national character is still noticed by travellers. The Portuguese is a bigot, like the Spaniard, but he is far less fanatical. The intercourse of trade in Lisbon, requires an external appearance of tolerance. If the English sailors refuse to take off their hats during the catholic processions in Portugal, the populace content themselves with exclaiming, “they are English heretics!” or uttering some other words of reproach.

59 See preceding vol. page 151.

60 See the preceding vol. p. 210.

61 All the notices extant respecting the life of this poet, are collected in the biographical memoir prefixed to the new edition of his Obras Lisb. 1784, 2 vols. 8vo. Dieze in his Remarks on Velasquez, has merely selected the article “Saa de Miranda,” from the works of Nicolas Antonio and Barbosa Machado.

62 He says in his third sonnet:—

Ando cos meus papeis em differenças.
Sam preceitos de Horacio, me diram!
Em al nam posso, sigoo em apparenças.
Quem muito peleijou, como irá sam?
Tantos ledores, tantas as sentenças.
Cum vento vellas vem, et vellas vam.

63 In one of the introductory stanzas of his first Portuguese eclogue, he says, addressing the prince Dom Manoel:—

Parecia que andava a colher flores
Co as Musas, co as Graças, cos Amores.

64 One of his sonnets commences at once with the description of this conflict:—

Desarrezoado Amor dentro em meu peito
Tem guerra co a razon. Amor, que jaz
Hi ja de muito tempo, manda e faz
Tudo o que quer a torto ou a direito.

65 For example in the following charming sonnet, which even derives a peculiar air of simplicity from the recurrence of masculine rhymes:—

Nam sey que em vós mais vejo, naõ sey que
Mais ouço, et sinto ao vir vosso, et fallar,
Naõ sey que entendo mais té no callar,
Nem quando vos nam vejo alma que vee.
Que lhe aparece em qual parte que esté,
Olhe o Ceo, olhe a terra, ou olhe o mar,
E triste aquelle vosso sossurar,
Em que tanto mais vay, que direy que he?
Em verdade naõ sey que he isto que anda
Entre nós, ou se he ár como parece,
Ou fogo d’outra sorte, et d’outra ley,
Em que ando, de que vivo: et nunca abranda,
Por ventura que á vista resplandece.
Ora o que eu sey taõ mal como direy?

66 What a beautiful elegiac didactic picture is presented by the following sonnet on the setting sun:—

O sol he grande, caem com a calma as aves
Do tempo, em tal sazaõ que soe ser fria:
Esta agoa que d’alto cae acordarmehia,
Do sono naõ, mas de cuidados graves.
Ó cousas todas vãs, todas mudaveis,
Qual he o coraçaõ que em vós confia?
Passando hum dia vay, passa outra dia,
Incertos todos mais que ao vento as naves.
En vi ja por aqui sombras et flores,
Vi agoas, et vi fontes, vi verdura,
As aves vi cantar todas d’amores.
Mudo, et seco he já tudo, et de mistura,
Tambem fazendome eu fuy d’outras cores.
E tudo o mais renova, isto he sem cura.

67

Ora provemos ja a nova lingoagem,
E ao dar a vela ao vento boa viagem.

68 The following passage with which this eclogue commences, affords a fair specimen of Miranda’s style, while at the same time it presents nothing very obscure to the foreign reader:—

Gonç. Quantas cousas Ines, madrinha, et tia,
Se me vaõ descobrindo de ora em ora,
Inda que eu faça corpo, gesto, et ria?
Polla alma de quem mais naõ pode, a fora
Outros respeitos, cumpre ter paciencia,
Té que seja da vida, ou da dór fora.
Aos erros he devida a penetencia
Por conta, por medida, por balança,
Seja juiz a propria consciencia.
Porem quando ao contrario de esperança
Em vez de galardaõ acode pena,
Quem terá sofrimento em abastança?
Amor que por antolhos tudo ordena
Bem pouco se lhe dá de que a fé sancta
Se quebre com graõ culpa on com piquena.

69 The following elegant and simple stanzas form the commencement of the first cantiga which is sung by the complaining shepherd Gonçalo:—

Onde me acolherey? tudo he tomado,
Nam parece esperança aqui nenhuma.
Sombras feas, et negras, mal peccado,
Estas si que apparecem, cousa alguma
Naõ ficou por fazer, como o passado,
Será o que he por vir, ouçame a Luma,
Delgada, que traspoem polo alto monte,
Seus trabalhos cos meus coteje, et conte.
Que se os velhos Solaos fallam verdade,
Bem sabe ella por prova, como Amor
Mata, et averá de mi piedade:
Endimiaõ tam fermoso, et tal pastor,
Entre as flores dormia em fresca idade,
Olhando ella do Ceo perdia a cór,
Té das flores ciosa, et d’agoa clara,
Que o seu fermoso Amor lhe adormentára.

70 For example:—

Ves tu cousa, que esté queda?
Ora he noite, ora amanhece,
Ora corre huma moeda,
Ora outra, tudo envelhece,
Tudo tem no cabo a queda.
Nas Villas hum baylo dançam
Em que todos ao som andam,
Huns cá, outros lá se lançam,
Como o tanger naõ alcançam,
Mais pés, nem braços naõ mandam.
Do sangue, et leite empollado
O Bezerrinho viçoso
Corre, et salta pollo prado,
Depois lavra preguiçoso,
Tira o seu carro cansado,
Cos dias, et co trabalho
O brincar d’antes lhe esquece,
Nam he já, o que era ao malho,
Cortese, levese ao talho,
O boy velho, que enfraquece.

71 For example:—

E por muito que os Reys olhem
Vaõ por fora mil inchaços,
Que ante vós Senhor se encolhem
D’uns Gigantes de cem braços
Com que daõ, e com que tolhem.
Quem graça ante el Rey alcança,
E hi falla o que naõ deve,
Mal grande da má privança,
Peçonha na fonte lança,
De que toda a terra beve.
Quem joga onde engano vay,
Em vaõ corre, e torna atrás,
Em vaõ sobre a face cay,
Mal ajaõ as manhas mas
Donde tanto dano say.
Homem de hum só parecer,
D’hum só rostro, huma só fé,
D’antes quebrar, que torcer,
Elle tudo pode ser,
Mas de corte homem naõ he.

72 He says in his fifth epistle:—

Dizem dos nos sos passados
Que os mais naõ sabiam ler,
Eram bons, eram ousados.
Eu nam gabo o nam saber
Como alguns ás graças dados.
Gabo muito os seus custumes
Doeme se oje nam sam tais.
Mas das letras, ou perfumes
De quais veo o dano mais?
Destes mimos Indianos
Ey gram medo a Portugal,
Que venhaõ a fazerlhe os danos.
Que Capua fez a Anibal
Vencedor de tantos annos.
A tempestade espantosa
De Trebia de Trasimeno,
De Canas, Capua viçosa
Venceo em tempo piqueno.

73 The following are the two first stanzas of the Cançaõ à Nossa Senhora.

Virgem fermosa, que achastes a graça
Perdida antes por Eva, onde nam chega
O fraco entendimento chegue a Fé.
Coytada desta nossa vista cega
Que anda apalpando polla nevoa baça,
E busea o que, ante si tendo, nam vé.
Sem saber atinar, como, ou porque,
Entrey pollos perigos
Rodeado de imigos.
Por piedade a vós venho, et por mercé,
Vós que nos destes claro a tanto escuro,
Remedio a tanto mingoa
Me dareis lingua, et coraçaõ seguro.
Virgem toda sem magoa, inteira, et pura,
Sem sombra, nem d’aquella culpa herdada,
Por todos nos, té o fim desdo começo:
Claridade do Sol, nunca turbada,
Sanctissima, et perfeita criatura,
Ante quem de mi fujo, et me aborreço,
Ey medo a quanto fiz, sey que mereço,
Dos meus erros me espanto,
Que me aprouveram tanto
Agora à só lembrança desfalleço.
Mas lembrame porem, que vòs fizestes
Paz entre Deos, et nós,
E a quem por vós chamou sempre a maõ destes.

74

O Ceo, que Eva perdera,
Ouem no lo abria, ficou fora de briga;
Foy he oje entregue a chave,
Foy o nome mudado d’Eva em Ave.

75 The following passage will afford a specimen of the style of this elegy:—

Cordeiro ante o throno alto de Cordeiro,
Lavado irás no teu sangue sem magoa,
O quem como era pay, fora parceiro!
Diz Paulo (da Fé nosso ardente fragoa)
Que para o filho o pay faça thesouro,
Parece natural hum correr d’agoa.
Nam assi aqui perto abaixa o Douro
Ao contrario, no mar se lança escuro,
Mondego, et Tejo das areas d’ouro,
Quanto mais certo contra o imigo duro
Podes, que outrem dizer, vim, vi, venci,
Cerrando, et abrindo a maõ, posto em seguro.
Nam se vejam mais lagrimas aqui
Salvo se por nós forem, que em taes trevas
Em tam cega prisam deixaste assi.
Vayte embora, que ja nam tens que devas
Temer, lá tudo he paz, tudo assossego,
A quem leva o seguro, que tu levas.

76 See the History of Italian Literature, vol. ii. p. 171.

77 Only a short specimen can conveniently be quoted here. In the fifth act of the Estrangeiros a servant who has met with a misfortune in the street calls aloud for justice, and an old man, named Reynaldo, interposes his remarks. Callidio. Regedores, Cidadães, homens de bem, os grandes, et os pequenos todos me acodi, todos me valei que a todos releva, se aqui ha alguma lembrança de liberdade, et justiça.

Reynaldo. Tamanhas duas cousas cuydavas tu d’achar assipollas ruas?

Callidio. No meyo do dia, no meyo de Palermo naõ me ouve ninguem, naõ me acode ninguem.

Reynaldo. Callate ora com teu mal.

Callidio. Que fazem aqui tantas varas de justiça?

Reynaldo. Que riso!

Callidio. Todo o mundo dorme?

Reynaldo. Dormes? tu sonhas? tu tresvalias?

Callidio. Ah cidadães que todos somos escravos.

Reynaldo. Ja vay entrando em seu acordo.-

Callidio. Assi ha isto de passar? Esfoloume, açoutoume, matoume, se me a justiça, naõ acode acaberey de entender que faz cada hum nesta terra o que lhe vem à vontade, e farey tambem o que me a minha mais der que faça.

78 In his dedication of the Estrangeiros to Cardinal Henry, he says:—

A comedia qual he, tal vay, aldeaã e mal ataviada. Esta sò lembranza lhe fiz à partida, que se naõ desculpasse de querer as vezes arremedar Plauto e Terencio, &c.

79 Thus in the Vilhalpandos a young lover discourses with himself in the following way:—

Este meu coraçaõ enlheeyro em que praticas começa entrar comigo, naõ me queria elle pouco ha saltar do peito fóra que a naõ podia eu soffrer? Deixoume elle mais dormir, nem assossegar? Agora que aconteceo de novo, mandouselhe por ventura desculpar alguem, ou chora, et sospira alguem de todos nós senaõ eu como? et tamanha injuria, et tam rezente, podelhe lembra outra nenhuma cousa? Ainda naõ quer, ainda naõ cansa. Em quanto ouve que dar durou o amor, voou a fazenda, voou elle juntamente. Ah, isto he o que pintaõ ao amor com asas, voou, fugio, desappareceo, sem nenhuma lembrança de mim se som vivo se morto. Como? et taõ pouco duro o amor? cuytado de mim, que fazia fundamentos delle pera toda minha vida, assi se põe tudo atras abrindo as maõs et çarrando? &c.

This is not a third part of the soliloquy.

80 From the new edition of the works of Saa de Miranda, which has already been mentioned, it appears that the Portuguese still appreciate the merits of this poet, or rather that his writings have again been restored to favour. But in this new edition the punctuation is as faulty as in Portuguese books of older date; and thus the foreigner experiences additional difficulty in studying a poet whose works, even if correctly printed, would not be very easily understood.

81 Nicolas Antonio and Barbosa Machado are the authorities for the particulars here collected. Dieze has likewise quoted from the above-mentioned writers, the account given in his appendix to Velasquez, p. 86, respecting Gil Vicente, and Paula Vicente, the daughter of the poet.

82 The library of the University of Göttingen contains a copy of this old edition, entitled:—

Compliaçam de todalas obras de Gil Vicente &c.—Empremiose em a muy nobre e sempre leal cidade de Lisboa, anno 1562, in folio.

The complete title may be found in Dieze’s edition of Velasquez, p. 87. The text of the dramas is printed in gothic characters, but the introduction which precedes each piece is printed in the modern roman type. In the dramas themselves the Portuguese and Spanish languages are indiscriminately employed, and though the introductions are chiefly written in Portuguese, some of them are also in Spanish. I know of no later edition of Gil Vicente’s works. Barbosa Machado mentions none of subsequent date. How can the Portuguese public so completely forget an old favourite? Only a few of Gil Vicente’s Autos were printed singly in the seventeenth century.

83 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 282.

84 He does not merely use the words—“por ser cousa nova;” but he expressly says—“por ser cousa nova em Portugal.”

85 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 130.

86 The Santa Fè speaks and the peasant Bras (Blas) replies as follows. The old orthography is, with the exception of filling up some contractions, preserved in this and the following passages, quoted from the Autos of Gil Vicente.

Fè. A diuinal claridade
Seja em vosso entendimento
et vos dee conhecimento
de sua natauidade.
Bras. Mas quiem sos vos o quiem seres?
Fè. Pastores eu sam a fee.
Bras. Ablenhuncio satanhe,
Sa nhi fee nho see que ses.
Fè. Fee ha crer o que nam vemos
pella gloria que esperamos,
amar o que nam comprendemos
nem vimos nem conhecemos
pera que saluos sejamos.
Bras. Aora lo entiendo menos.
Rellata esso mas claro,
que perjuro a santo Amaro
que nhi punto os entendemos, &c.

87 The Seraph’s proclamation is in old versos de arte mayor, with the middle and ending lines short:—

Aa feyra, aa feyra y grejas mostreyros,
pastores das almas, papas adormidos
compray aqui panos, muday os vestidos,
buscay as çamarras dos outros primeyros:
os antecesseros,
feiray o caram que trazeis dourado,
oo presidentes do crucificado
lembrayuos da vida dos sanctos pastores
do tempo passado.
Oo principes altos, imperio facundo
guardayuos da yra do Senhor dos ceos,
compray grande soma do temor de Deos
na feyra da Virgem Senhora do mundo,
exemplo da paz.
Pastora dos anjos, luz das estrelas,
aa feyra da Virgem donas et donzelas,
porque este mercados sabey que aqui traz
as cousas mais belas. &c.

88 The Devil speaks as follows:—

Diabo. Hi ha de homens roins
mais mil vezes que nam bõos,
como vos muy bem sentis.
E estes ham de comprar
disto que trago a vender,
que sam artes denganar
et cousas pera esquecer
o que deuiam lembrar:
que o sagaz mercador
ha de leuar ao mercado
o que lhe compram milhor,
porque a roim comprador
leuarlhe roim borcado.

89 She tells, with a humorous simplicity, that her ungrateful husband has robbed her garden of its fruits before they were ripe; that he never does any thing, but leads a sottish life, eating and drinking all day, &c.

Vayseme aas ameyxieyras
antes que sejam maduras,
elle quebra as cereygeyras,
elle vendima as parreyras,
et nam sey que faz das vuas.
Elle nam vay aa laurada,
elle todo dia come,
elle toda noyte dorme,
elle nam faz nunca nada
et sempre me diz que ha fome.
Jesu Jesu, posso te dizer
et jurar, et tresjurar,
et prouar, et reprouar,
et andar, et reuoluer,
que he milhor pera beber
que nam pera maridar.
O demo que o fez marido!
que assi seco como he
beberaa a torre da see,
entam arma hum arroydo
assi debayxo do pee.

90 The words Aquella he a minha froxa have a very comic effect in the original Portuguese from the way in which they are introduced.

91

Faço te Duque e meu capitaõ
Dos reynos de mundo até sua fim;

Says Lucifer to Satan.

92 It is a Vilancete resembling the Spanish Villancicos.

Adoray montanhas
o Deos das alturas;
tambem as verduras
Adoray, desertos
et serras floridas,
o Deos dos secretos
o Senhor das vidas.
Ribeyras crecidas,
louuay nas alturas
Deos das criaturas.
Louuay aruoredos
de fruto prezado;
digam os penedos
Deos seja louuado.
E louue meu gado
nestas verduras
o Deos das alturas.

93 The word Floresta has a two-fold meaning. In Portuguese it usually signifies a flower garden or a park. In Spanish it also bears the meaning of the Italian Foresta. Gil Vicente so frequently confounds Spanish and Portuguese together, that in the present instance it is necessary to guess the meaning he wishes to attach to the word Floresta, which seems to be that of a flower garden.

94 Both converse in Spanish in the following extract.

Filosofo. Y porque la reprehension
a todos es enojosa,
me vi en grande passion
y me hecharon en prision
eu carcel muy tenebrosa.
No basto, mas en depua
de questo que oydo aueis,
solo por esto que digo
ataron ansi comigo
esto bono que aqui veis.
Que lo trayga desta suerte
al comer y al cenar
al dormir y platicar
esto sopena de muerte
que no lo pueda dexar
hasta el morir.
Parvo. Has te dir.
Filo. Nome dexaraas dezir
la causa que me ha traido.
Par. Hasta la mañana.
Filo. Dexame oraser oydo
desta gente cortesana. &c.

95 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 368.

96 The usual titles with which the demons address the pious necromancer, are “Thief” and “Blackguard.”

97 The following is a specimen selected from a long nautical scene of this kind. It is not necessary to quote the names of the characters at length.

Pilo. Aa verdade este vento
entra muy indiabrado.
Mari. Vos piloto sois aazado
pera perder logo o tento.
E mais noyte tam escura.
Pilo. Que quereis vos Fernam Vaz
no mal que o inuerno faz
tenho en culpa per ventura.
Mari. Quee, et vos chorais antora.
Pilo. Oo virgem da luz senhora
sam Jorge, sam Nicolao.
Mari. Acudi eramaa aa nao
et leyxay os sanctos agora:
Si quer manday amaynar
ameyomasto essa vella
et aa mezena colhella
et huma vez segurar.
Apit. Py py py.
Gru. Adees?
Pilo. Amayna amayna a mezena.
Gri. Praz.
Af. haam.
Gri. mezena.
Pilo. Amaynay essa mezena.
Gri. Que amaynemos a mezena?
Pilo. Acudi ali todos tres.
Gri. E eu tambem yrey la?
Affò. E eu yrey la tambem.
Pilo. Oo pesar de Santarem
o demo vos trouxeca. &c.

98 Hence in both languages the word farsante or farçante is a general term, signifying a comedian.

99

Apariço. He o demo que me tome,
mortemos ambos de fome
et de lazeyra todo anno.
Ordonho. Con quien biue?
Apa. que sey eu?
viue assi per hi pelado
como podengo escaldado.
Ordo. De que sirue?
Apa. De sanden,
Pentear et jejuar
todo dia sem comer,
cantar et sempre tanger
sospirar et bocijar.
Sempre anda falando soo,
faz humas trouas tam frias
tam sem graça, tam vazias
que he cousa pera auer doo. &c.

100 In this extract the reader will perceive the manner in which the old Portuguese orthography represented first, the barking, and secondly, the howling of dogs. Each forms a rhyme in the place in which it occurs:—

Escu. Senhora, isso do cabo
medizey ante que esqueça.
Mais resguardado estaa qui
o meu grande amor feruente.
Que tendes? hum pee dormente,
oo que gram bem pera mi.
Hi hi hi, de que me rio?
riome de mil cousinhas
nam ja vossas senam minhas,
Apa. Olhay aquelle desuario.
Cães. Ham ham ham ham.
Escu. Nam ouço com a cainçada.
rapaz dalhe huma pedrada
ou fartos eramaa de pam.
Apariço.
Co os pedras os ajude Deos.
Cães. Ham ham ham ham.
Escu. Pesar nam de Deos cos cães.
rapazes nam lhes daes vos?
Senhora nam ouço nada,
doume oo demo que me leue.
Apa. Toda esta pedra he tam leue.
tomay la esta seyxada.
Cães. Hãy hãy hãy hãy.
Apa. Perdoay me vos Senhor.
Escu. Ora o fizeste peor
aa pesar de minha mãy. &c.

101 The old woman begins thus:—

Velha.
Rogo aa Virgem Maria
que quem me fazer guer da cama
que maa cama et maa dama
et maa lama negra et fria.
Maa mazela et maa courela
mao regato et mao ribeyro
mao siluado et mao outeyro
maa carreyra et maa portela.
Mao cortiço et mao somiço
maos lobos et maos lagartos
nunca de pam sejam fartos
mao criado, mao seruiço.

These burlesque antitheses are continued in the same style throughout a whole page.

102 Mais quero asno que me leve, que cavallo que me derrube.

103 The following passage is selected from one of the most burlesque scenes. Pero Marquez, the simpleton suitor, takes his seat next his mistress with his back turned towards her. He is about to produce some pears, which he intended to present to her in complimentary allusion to her name, for Pereyra in Portuguese signifies a pear tree. The lover has, however, lost the destined present:—

Per. Mais gado tenho eu ja quanto,
et o mayor de todo a gado
digo mayor algum tanto,
E desejo ser casado.
Prouguesse ao Spiritu santo,
com Ines, que eu mespanto
quem me fez seu namorado.
Parece moça de bem
et eu de bem er tambem.
ora vos er yde rendo
se lhe vem milhor ninguem.
a segundo o que eu entendo.
Cuydo que lhe trago aqui
peras da minha pereyra;
ham destar na derradeyra.
Tende ora Inez per hi.
Ines. Eysso ey de ter na maõ?
Pero. Deitay as peras no cham.
Ines. As perlas pera infiar
tres chocalhos et hum nouelo
et as peas no capelo
et as peras onde estam?
Per. Nunca tal me aconteceo.
Algum rapaz mas comeo,
que as meti no capelo,
et ficou aqui o nouelo
et o pentem nam se perdeo:
pois trazias de boa mente. &c.

104 The following is the whole of the stanza:—

A OS BONS ENGENHOS.

A vòs sò canto, spritos bem nascidos,
A vòs, e às Musas, offreço a lyra,
A o Amor meus ays e me us genuidos,
Compostos do seu fogo e da sua ira.
Em vossos peitos saõs, limpos ouvidos
Cayaõ meus versos, quas me Phebo inspira.
En desta gloria sò fico contente,
Que a minha terra amei, e a minha gente.

105 The biographical sketch here given is collected from the well written Vida do Doutor Antonio Ferreira, prefixed to the new edition of Ferreira’s Poemas Lusitanos, Lisboa, 1771, in 2 volumes octavo. This edition, though not remarkable for elegance, is printed with tolerable correctness, and contains also the author’s dramas. Notices extracted from Nicolas Antonio and Barbosa Machado, respecting the older editions of Ferreira’s works, may be found in Dieze’s Remarks on Velasquez.

106 Ferreira in scanning, avails himself of the peculiarity of the Portuguese diphthongs, in order to omit at pleasure, as in latin verse, the m at the termination of words; for the Portuguese m in that situation is not an alphabetic character, but merely denotes the nasal sound which may also be marked by a circumflex over the diphthongs according to the fancy of the writer. Ferreira, for example, thus scans a line in his beautiful elegy on spring:—

Huns s’ou | vem, huns | nos tron | cos fi | cam escri | tos.

Here the m in the word ouvem concludes a metrical syllable, which it does not in the word ficam.

107 Poemas Lusitanos is a title which in the sixteenth century no Portuguese poet except Ferreira would have applied to his writings. The word Poema has never been received into the language of common life in Portugal.

108 Manuel de Faria y Sousa in his preface to the 4th vol. of the Fuente de Aganippe, alluding to Ferreira’s eclogues, says, they are written con perdurable dureza y poca dicha en pensamientos y afectos (with tedious frigidity and but little happiness of thought and sentiment.) As far as regards the eclogues, this observation is not altogether erroneous; but in general Faria y Sousa was by no means competent to pronounce an opinion on Ferreira’s works. See History of Spanish Literature, p. 428.

109

A primeira ley minha he, que de mim
Primeiro me guarde eu, e a mim naõ crea,
Nem os que levemente se me rim;
Conheça-me a mim mesmo: figa a vea
Natural, naõ forçada: o juizo quero
De quem com juizo, e sem paixaõ me lea.
Na boa imitaçaõ, e uso, que o féro
Ingenho abranda, ao inculto dá arte,
No conselho do amigo douto espero.
Das Cartas Livr. I. Carta 12.

110 For instance the following:—

Quando entoar começo com voz branda
Vosso nome d’amor, doce, e suave,
A terra, o mar, vento, agoa, flor, folha, ave
Ao brando som s’alegra, move, e abranda.
Nem nuvem cobre o Ceo, nam na gente anda
Trabalhoso cuidado, ou peso grave.
Nova cor toma o Sol, ou se erga, ou lave
No claro Tejo e nova luz nos manda.
Tudo se ri, se alegra, e reverdece.
Todo Mundo parece que renova,
Nem ha triste planeta, ou dura sorte.
A minh’ alma sò chora, e se entristece.
Maravilha d’Amor cruel, e nova!
O que a todos traz vida, a mim traz morte.

111 One sonnet commences with an association of ideas of this fantastic kind:—

Quem vio neve queimar? Quem vio tam frio
Hum fogo, de que eu arço? &c.

112 These sonnets please, by the beauty of expression, even when the thoughts are unimportant, for instance:—

Nimphas do claro Almonda, em cujo seo
Nasceo, e se eriou a alma divina,
Qu’ hun tempo andou dos Ceos ea peregrina,
Ja lá tornou mais rica, do que veo;
Maria, da virtude firme esteo,
Alma sancta, Real, de imperio dina
A baiyeza deixou, de qu’ era indina,
Ficou sem ella o Mundo escuro, e feo.
Nimphas, que tam pouco ha qu’ os bõs amores
Nossos cantastes cheas de alegria,
Chorai a vossa perda, e minha mágoa.
Naõ se cante entre vós jà, nem se ria,
Nem dè o monte herva, nem o prado flores,
Nem dessa fonte mais corra clara agoa.

113 An imitation of the Odi profanum vulgus forms also the overture to Ferreira’s odes. His first ode commences thus:—

Fuja daqui o odioso
Profano vulgo! Eu canto
A brandas Musas, a huns spritos dados
Dos Ceos ao novo canto
Heroico; &c.

114 In an ode A os principes D. Joaõ e a D. Joana, every stanza commences with the following pompous words:—

Vivey felices, pios, vencedores!

115 As for instance in the following passage:—

Naõ teme, naõ espera,
Naõ pende da fortuna, ou vaõs cuidados
A consciencia pura
E assi naõ desespera
De chegar aos bons dias esperados
Tam léda, et tam segura,
Que o Mundo desprezando
Consigo se enriquece, e mais descansa
De si tam satisfeita,
Que em si se está prezando
De desprezar o porque o Mundo cansa.
De ver que ella a direita
Via seguindo vay
A virtude levandosó por guia.
Naõ torce, naõ duvida,
Já mais della se fay,
Por mais qu’ o Mundo della se desvia.

116 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 240.

117 The following stanzas, which form the commencement of an ode to Spring, will afford an idea of Ferreira’s descriptive talent.

Eis nos torna a nascer o anno fermoso,
Zefiro brando, e doce Primavera.
Eis o campo cheiroso:
Eis cinge o verde Louro já a nova Hera.
Ja do ar caydo géra
O cristalino orvalho hervas, e flores.
As Graças, e os Amores
Coroados de alegria
Em doce companhia
De Nimphas, e Pastores ao som brando
Doces versos de Amor vaõ revezando.
Apôs a branda Deosa do terceiro
Ceo, que triumphando vay de Apollo, e Marte.
E entre elles o frexeiro
O seu doce fogo, onde quer, reparte.
Fogem de toda parte
Nuvens; a neve ao Sol té entaõ dura
Se converte em brandura,
E d’alta, o fria serra
Cayndo, rega a terra
Agoa já clara: a cujo som adormece
Toda féra serpente, é o Myrtho cresce.

118 This elegy, which is here transcribed at length, is calculated to banish every doubt respecting Ferreira’s poetic genius:—

Vem Mayo de mil hervas, de mil flores
As frontes coroado, e riso, e canto,
Com Venus, com Cupido, cos Amores,
Vença o prazer á dor, o riso ao pranto
Vase longe daqui cuidado duro,
Em quanto o lédo mez de Venus canto.
Eis mais alva a menham, mais claro, e puro
Do Sol o rayo: eis correm mais fermosas
Nuvens afugentando o ar grosso e escuro.
Sae a branda Diana entre as lumiosas
Estrellas tal, qual já ao pastor fermoso
Veo pagar mil horas saudosas.
Mar brando, sereno ar, campo cheiroso,
Foge a Tristeza, o Prazer folto voa,
O dia mais dourado, e vagaroso.
Tecendo as Graças vaõ nova coroa
De Myrtho á mãy, ao filho mil Spritos.
O fogo resplandece, a aljaba soa.
Mil versos, e mil vozes, e mil gritos
Todos de doce amor, e de brandura,
Huns s’ouvem, huns nos troncos ficam escritos.
Ali soberba vem a Fermosura,
Apôs ella a Affeiçaõ cega, e cativa.
Quanto huma mais chorosa, outra mais dura.
Ah manda Amor assi: assi quer que viva
Contente a triste, do que seu Deos manda,
De seja inda mais dor, pena mais viva.
Mas quanto o moço encruece, a mãy abranda,
Ella a peçonha, e o fogo lhe tempéra:
Assi senhora de mil almas anda.
Ali o Engano em seu mal cego espera
Hum’ hora doce: ali o Encolhimento
Sem causa de si mesmo desespera.
Aos olhos vem atádo a Pensamento,
Naõ voa a mais qu’ao qu’ali tem presente,
E em tanto mal, tudo he contentamento.
E riso, em festa corre a léda gente,
Tras o fermoso fogo, em que sempr’arde,
Cada hum, quanto mais arde, mais contente.
Manda Venus ao Sol menham, e tarde
Que seus crespos cabellos loure, e estenda,
Qu’em vir s’apresse, qu’em se tornar tarde.
Ao brando Norte, que assopre, e defenda
Do ardor da sesta a branda companhia,
Em quanto alçam de Myrtho fresca tenda,
Corre por toda parte clara, e fria
Agoa: cae doce sombra do alto Louro,
Canta toda ave canto d’alegria.
Ella a neve descobre, e solta o ouro:
Banham-na as Graças na mais clara fonte;
Aparece d’Amor rico thesouro.
Caem mil flores da dourada fronte,
Arde d’Amor o bosque, arda a altra serra,
Aos olhos reverdece o campo, e o monte.
Despende Amor seus tiros, nenhum erra,
Mil de baixo metal, algum do fino,
Fica de seus despojos chea a terra.
Vencida d’huma molher, e d’hum minino.

119 The didactic epistolary character appears in the following passage, from the elegy on Luis Fernandez de Vasconcellos, which is, in other respects, exceedingly beautiful:—

Naõ frias sombras, naõ os brandos leitos
Altos spritos provam: que ociosos
Se gastam, e como em cinza estaõ desfeitos.
Melhor comprados foram, mais custosos
Aquelles nomes altos, que inda soam,
Dos que virtude, e esforço fez famosos.
Inda entre nós de boca em boca voam
De tanto tempo já os spritos puros:
Inda de verdes folhas se coroam.
Por duras armas, por trabalhos duros
Varios costumes, varias gentes vendo
Tornáram inda erguer fermosos muros.
Hora a furia do bravo mar rompendo,
Hora os lançava a sorte á praya imiga
Quanto móres perigos, mais vencendo.

120 See History of Spanish Literature, page 392.

121

O nosso bom Joam tambem guiado
De seu sprito, viva em ti seguro,
E nos mais, de quem he bem conselhado.
Abrasan-se castellos, cae o muro
Cansam forças, e braços, e ardidezas.
No bom conselho só está o bom seguro.
Do saber saõ as boas fortalezas.
Escolhan-se bons zelos, bons spritos,
Mais no Mundo soarám nossas grandezas.
Aquelles claros feitos, altos ditos,
De que os livros saõ cheos, desprezemos.
Mores feitos ha cá, naõ taõ bem escritos.
Vençamos no melhor, o outro imitemos.
Livr. I. Cart. 2.

122

Cuida melhor que quanto mais honraste,
E em mais tiveste essa lingua estrangeira,
Tanto a esta tua ingrato te mostraste.
Volve, pois volve, Andrade, da carreira,
Que errada levas (com tua paz o digo).
Alcançarás tua gloria verdadeira.
Te quando contra nós, contra ti imigo
Te mostrarás? obrigue-te a razaõ,
Que eu, como posso, a tua sombra sigo.
As mesmas Musas mal te julgaraõ,
Serás em odio a nós teus naturais,
Pois, cruel, nos roubas o que em ti nos daõ.
Livr. I. Cart. 3.

123 For example:—

O bem sempre por mal, o mal por bem,
Por virtude o mor vicio, e por prudencia
O que menos o he, seguem, e crem.
Ao vaõ prodigo dam magnificencia,
Chamam o deshonesto, homem de damas,
E louvam, e ham iveja a incontinencia.
Aquelle, que tu bom, e prudente chamas,
Que lança suas contas bem lançadas,
E seu pouco falar, bom e raro amas,
Frio, e malecioso; e o de danadas
Entranhas, que c’um riso prazenteiro
Encobre suas peçonhas simuladas,
He só prudente, e canto: falso arteiro
O que conhece bem, e sabe facer
Differença do amigo ao lisongeiro.
Livr. I. Carta 5.

124 As in the following lines:—

Apareça a Rezaõ fermosos e bella,
Criada em nossos peitos! Ah, que amores
Nos nasceram tam vivos logo dellos!
Cairan os perigos e os temores,
O campo livre, o ceo claro e sereno
Veremos sem trabalhos e sem dores.
Livr. I. Carta 7.

125 For instance in an epistle to Andrade Caminha, which begins in the following manner:—

Deste meu peito saõ em teu saõ peito
Candidissimo Andrade, vaõ seguras
Minhas palavras chãs, meu nú conceito.
Ivos daqui fingidas, ivos duras
Linguas e condiçoes: pura clareza
Saya de claros peitos, e almas puras.
Riome, bom amigo, da estreiteza
D’alguns curtos amigos, e da ousada
D’outros livres errada, e vam largueza.
Seja a amizade facil, confiada
Doce, aprazivel, branda; mas honesta,
Mas de sam liberdade acompanhada.

126 This is exemplified in the epistle to his tutor Diogo de Teive. It commences thus:—

Prometti-te, meu Teive, á tua partida
Mil prosas, e mil versos; e em mil mezes
Huma carta té outra teras lida.
Naõ sohiam mentir os Portuguezes.
Entrou novo costume, e he ley antiga
Romano en Roma, Francez cos Francezes.
Quem queres que por força cá naõ siga
A ley de terra? e mais tam bem guardada
Dos que em mal nosso tem a fortuna amiga?
Seja com tanto honrado desculpada
Minha mentira: a sam nossa amizade
Nunca esquecida foy, nunca mudada.
Mas entaõ chea, em tam grã Cidade,
Onde o sprito e a vista leva a gente,
Quem póde ser senhor da sua vontade?
Mora hum lá fóra alem do grã Vicente,
Outro cá na Esperanças e ey de vér ambos,
Foge inda o dia ao muito diligente.
Pelas ruas mil cambos, mil recambos,
Cargas vem, cargas vaõ, mil mós, mil traves,
Hum arranca, outra foge, e encontro entrãbos.
Livr. II. Carta 8.

127 The following is one of the best.

Forjava em Lemno com destreza e arte
Setas a Amor de Venus o marido:
A branda Venus lhe poem mel d’huma parte,
Mas d’outra parte lhe poem fel Cupido.
Entrou brandindo o grossa lança Marte,
Rio-se das setas. Queres ser ferido
D’huma? (Amor diz) próva hora se te praz.
Ferio-o; rio-se Venus: Marte jaz.

128

Foy o cruel Pagaõ e monstruoso
(Segundo aquellos gentes fama daõ)
Grande, membrado, e como usso velloso,
E huma orelha de Asno, outra de caõ.

129 See History of Spanish Literature, p. 296.

130 The following are the two first stanzas:—

Quando Amor nasceo,
Nasceo ao Mundo vida,
Claros rayos ao Sol, luz ás estrellas.
O Ceo resplandeceo,
E de sua luz vencida
A escuridaõ mostrou as cousas bellas.
Aquella, que subida
Está na terceira esphéra,
Do bravo mar nascida
Amor ao Mundo dá, doce amor géra.
Por amor s’orna a terra
D’agoas, e de verdura,
As arvores dá folhas, cor ás flores.
Em doce paz a guerra,
A dureza em brandura.
E mil odios converte em mil amores.
Quantas vidas a dura
Morte desfaz, renova:
A fermosa pintura
Do Mundo, Amor a tem inteira, e nova.

131 A passage from this scene may be transcribed here:—

Rey. Tristes foram teus fados, Dona Ines,
Triste ventura a tua.
Cast. Antes ditosa
Senhor, pois que me vejo antes teus olhos
Em tempo tam estreito: poem-nos hora,
Como nos outros soes, nesta coitada.
Enche-os de piedade com justiça.
Vens-me, Senhor, matar? porque me matas?
Rey. Teus peccados te matam: cuida nelles.
Cast. Peccados meus! ao menas contra ti
Nenhum, meu Rey, me accusa. Contra Deos
Me podem accusar muitos: mas elle ouve
As vozes d’alma triste, em que lhe pede
Piedade. O Deos justo, Deos benigno,
Que naõ mata, podendo com justiça,
Mas dá tempo de vida, e espera tempo
Só pero perdoar: assi o fazes,
Assi o fizeste sempre: pois naõ mudes
Agora contra mim teu bom costuma.
Act IV.

132

N’huma maõ livros, n’outra ferro e aço,
N’huma maõ sempre a espada, n’outra a pena, &c.

133 The allusion to this event occurs in the tenth canto of the Lusiad, in which the goddess Thetis from the summit of a hill, points out to Vasco de Gama the theatre of the future conquests of the Portuguese. Thetis says, pointing to the coast of Camboya, but without naming Camoens:—

Este recevera placido e brando
No seu regaço os Cantos, que molhados
Vem de naufragia triste e miserando,
Dos procellosos baixos escapados.

134 Barbosa Machado, in his dictionary says of Camoens:—

Salvou se em huma taboa com o seu divino poema, imitando a Julio Cesar, que no porto de Alexandria em huma maõ levava la espada e em a outra os seus commentarios.

In order to render the miracle perfect in analogy, Dieze in his appendix to Velasquez, has applied to Camoens these last words in which Machado refers exclusively to Cæsar. Inadvertencies of this sort must be expected occasionally to occur in the history of literature.

135 The original source whence these biographic notices are derived is, it must be admitted, somewhat obscure. About the middle of the seventeenth century, a writer named Manoel Severim de Faria compiled a biographical account of Camoens from the poet’s own works. This biography served as a ground work for Manoel de Faria e Sousa, who annexed a Vida del Poeta to his edition of Camoens and his commentaries on the Lusiad. The facts thus collected were afterwards rectified and arranged by subsequent writers, and among others by Barbosa Machado. Manoel de Faria attaches particular importance to the noble extraction and armorial bearings of Camoens. He gives the passage from the letter which the poet is said to have written on the approach of death, and which Barbosa Machado has re-printed. The words are:—

Quem houvio dizer nunca, que em tam pequeno theatro, como o de hum pobre leito, quisisse Fortuna representar tam grande desventura?

And again:—

Procurar resistir a tantos males, pareceria especie de desavergonhamento.

136 The first edition of the Lusiad was printed in the year 1572, and the poem itself was chiefly written in the East Indies. Tasso read it, and praised the author in a sonnet which has been preserved. The first edition of Jerusalem Delivered appeared in 1580, and consequently, a year after the death of Camoens. (See the History of Italian Poetry and Eloquence, vol. ii. p. 226.)

137 Even the apology for Camoens which precedes Mickle’s version of the Lusiad, defeats itself, for the English translator makes the Homeric epic his standard, and in order to justify the Lusiad misconstrues the machinery of the Iliad. The remarks on the Lusiad by Voltaire, in his Discours sur le poème épique are beneath criticism; and the judgment pronounced on this poem by Von Junk in the introduction to his Portuguese grammar, evinces a total want of poetic taste. No one should attempt a translation of the Lusiad, who does not possess an intimate acquaintance with the Portuguese language and poetry, for it is otherwise impossible to seize the spirit of Camoens. The English translation by Mickle is hitherto the only one in which it can be said that at least the elegant dignity of Camoens’s style is represented.

138 See the History of Spanish Literature, p. 408.

139 The edition with the commentaries of Faria e Sousa published in the year 1636, has the old title of Lusiadas; but in the book itself the poem is frequently styled the Lusiada. The latter title is, therefore, far from being a recent innovation.

140 Camoens was no doubt influenced by the recollection of Virgil’s Arma virumque. But in his opening stanza the Portuguese poet alludes to the heroes of his native country, without distinguishing any one in particular; and thus at the very outset the Lusiad differs from the Æneid. The second stanza resembles Ariosto. The two first stanzas are here subjoined in the original:—

As Armas, e os Barões assinalados,
Que da Occidental praia Lusitana,
Por mares nunca d’antes navegados,
Passáram ainda além da Taprobana:
Que em perigos e guerras esforçados,
Mais do que promettia a força humana.
Entre gente remota edificaram
Novo Reino, que tanto sublimáram:
E tambem as memorias gloriosas
Daquelles Reis, que foram dilatando
A Fé, o Imperio; e as terras viciosas
De Africa, e de Asia, andaram devastando:
E aquelles que por obras valerosas
Se vaõ da lei da morte libertando;
Cantando espalharei por toda parte,
Se a tanto me ajudar o engenho, e arte.

141

Jà no largo Oceano navegavam
As inquietas ondas apartando;
Os ventos brandamente respiravam,
Das náos as vélas concavas inchando:
Da branca escuma os mares se mostravam
Cobertos, onde as proas vaõ cortando
As maritimas aguas consagradas,
Que do gado de Prótheo saõ cortadas.
Quando os deoses no Olympo luminoso,
Onde o governo está da humana gente,
Se ajuntam em concilio glorioso
Sobre as cousas futuras do Oriente:
Pizando o crystallino Ceo formoso
Vem pela Via Lactea juntamente,
Convocados da parte de Tonante,
Pelo neto gentil do velho Atlante.

142 Thus, for example, the stormy commotion in the council of the Gods is compared to the ragings and howlings of a whirlwind in the forest:—

Qual Austro fero ou Boreas na espessura,
De sylvestre arvoredo abastecida,
Rompendo os ramos vaõ da mata escura,
Com impeto, e braveza desmedida:
Brama toda a montanha, o som murmura,
Rompem se as folhas, ferve a serra erguida;
Tal andava o tumulto levantado,
Entre os deoses no Olympo consagrado.
Cant. I. 36.

143

Vasco da Gama, o forte capitaõ,
Que a tamanhas emprezas se offerece,
De soberbo e de altivo coraçaõ,
A quem Fortuna sempre favorece.

144 For example:—

Comendo alegremente perguntavam,
Pela Arabica lingua, donde vinham;
Quem eram, de que terra: que buscavam;
On que partes do mar corrido tinham.
Os fortes Lusitanos lhe tornavam
As discretas respostas que convinham:
Os Portuguezes somos do Occidente;
Imos buscando as terras do Oriente.
Cant. I. 50.

145 For example in the following description, which is in other respects excellent:—

Andam pela ribeira, alva, arenosa,
Os bellicosos Mouros acenando,
Com a adarga, e co’a hastea perigosa,
Os fortes Portuguezes incitando.
Naõ soffre muito a gente generosa
Andarlh’os cães os dentes amostrando:
Qualquer em terra salta, taõ ligeiro,
Que nenhum dizer póde que he primeiro.
Qual no corro sanguino o ledo amante,
Vendo a formosa dama desejada,
O touro busca, e pondo-se diante,
Salta, corre, sibila, acena, e brada;
Mas o animal atroce nesse instante,
Com a fronte cornigera inclinada,
Bramando duro corre, e os olhos cerra,
Derriba, fere, mata, e põe por terra.

A comparison such as this, which, it must be recollected is perfectly national, atones for many faults.

146

Mostrandose Christaõ, e fabricava
Hum altar sumptuoso, que adorava.
Alli tinha em retrato affigurada
Do alto e Sancto Espiritu a pintura,
A candida Pombinha debuxada
Sobre a unica Phenis, Virgem pura, &c.

147 The following stanzas are part of the description of the ascent of Venus to heaven, and her appearance before the throne of Jupiter.

Ouvio-lhe estas palavras piedosas
A formosa Dióne, e commovida,
De entre as Nymphas se vai, que saudosas
Ficáram desta subita partida.
Já penetra as estrellas luminosas;
Já na terceita Esphera recebida
Avante passa; e lá no sexto Ceo
Par onde estava o Padre se moveo.
***
E por mais mormorar o soberano
Padre, de quem foi sempre amada, e chara,
Se lhe apresenta asi como ao Troiano
Na selva Idea já se apresentára.
Se a víra o caçador, que o vulto humano
Perdeo, vendo a Diana na agua clara,
Nunca os famintos galgos o matáram;
Que primeiro desejos o acabáram.
O crespos fios de ouro se esparziam
Pelo colo, que a neve escurecia;
Andando, as lacteas tetas lhe tremiam,
Com quem Amor brincava, e naõ se via.
***
Canto II.

148 One of the stanzas commences as follows:—

Eis aqui se descobre a nobre Hespanha,
Como cabeça alli de Europa toda;

And another runs thus:—

Eis aqui como cume da cabeça
De Europa toda o Reino Lusitano.

149 Cant. III. Estancia 35:—

Is this Egaz, or Egas Moniz, the same individual who is celebrated as one of the earliest Portuguese poets? See p. 5.

150 In these descriptions the poet invariably seizes every favourable opportunity of introducing picturesque comparisons. Similies are indeed crowded together as closely as in the battle pictures of the Iliad; for example:—

Qual co’os gritos e voces incitado,
Pela montanha o rabido moloso,
Contra o touro remette, que fiado
Na força está do corno temeroso.
Ora pega na orelha, ora no lado,
Latindo mais ligeiro que forçoso.
Até que em fim rompendo lhe a garganta,
Do bravo a força horrenda se quebranta:
Tal do Rei novo o estomago accendido,
Por Deos, e pelo povo juntamente,
O barbaro comette apercebido,
Co’o animoso exército rompente.
Levantam nisto os perros o alarido
Dos gritos; tocam arma, ferve a gente:
As lanças e arcos tomam; tubas sôam;
Instrumentos de guerra tudo astrôam.
Bem como quando a flamma, que ateada
Foi nos áridos campos (assoprando
O sibilante Boreas) animada
Co’o vento o secco mato vai queimando.
A pastoral companha, que deitada
Co’o doce somno estava, despertando
Ao estridor do fogo, que se atêa,
Recolhe o fato, e foge para a aldêa:
Desta arte o Mouro attonito e torvado,
Toma sem tento as armas mui depressa;
Naõ foge, mas espera confiado,
E o ginete belligero arremessa.
O Portuguez o encontra denodado,
Pelos peitos as lanças lhe atravessa:
Huns cahem meios mortos, e outros vaõ
A ajuda convocando de Alcoraõ.
Canto III. 47.

151 This description commences as follows:—

Entrava a formosissima Maria
Pelos paternaes paços sublimados;
Lindo o gesto, mas fóra de alegria,
E seus olhos em lagrimas banhados:
Os cabellos angelicos trazia
Pelos eburneos hombros espalhados:
Diante do pai lédo, que a agasalha,
Estas palavras taes chorando espalha.
Quantos povos a terra próduizio
De Africa toda, gente fera, e estranha,
O graõ Rei de Marrocos conduzio,
Para vir possuir a nobre Hespanha.
Poder tamanho junto naõ se vio,
Despois que o falso mar a terra banha.
Trazem ferocidade, e furor tanto,
Que a vivos medo, e a mortos faz espanto.
Aquelle que me déste por marido,
Por defender sua terra amedrontada,
Co’o pequeno poder offerecido
Ao duro golpe está da Maura espada,
E se naõ for comtigo soccorrido,
Vêr-me-has delle, e do Reino ser privada:
Viuva, e triste, e posta em vida escura,
Sem marido, sem Reino, e sem ventura.
Cant. III. 102. etc.

152 The first stanzas on the introduction of Inez or Ignez (for the Portuguese orthography adopts the latter form of the name) are not to be surpassed.

Estavas, linda Ignez, posta em socego,
De teus annos colhendo doce fruto,
Naquelle engano da alma, lédo, e cego,
Que a fortuna naõ deixa durar muto;
Nos saudos campos do Mondego,
De teus formosos olhos nunca enxuto,
Aos montos ensinando, e ás hervinhas,
O nome que no peito escripto tinhas.
Do teu Principe alli te respondiam
As lembranças que na alma lhe moravam;
Que sempre ante seus olhos te traziam,
Quando dos teus formosos se apartavam;
De noite em doces sonhos que mentiam,
De dia em pensamentos que voavam;
E quanto em fim cuidava, e quanto via,
Eram tudo memorias de alegria.

Among the succeeding stanzas it is difficult to make an election; and as the specimens introduced in this work are intended to form a collection for literary study, it is still more difficult to resist the temptation of transcribing the whole episode. At all events the following six stanzas must find a place:—

Traziam-na os horrificos algozes
Ante o Rei, já movido a piedade,
Mas o povo com falsas e ferozes
Razões à morte crua o persuade.
Ella com tristes e piedosas vozes,
Sahidas só da mágoa, e saudade
Do seu principe, e filhos, que deixava,
Que mais que a propria morte a magoava:
Para o Ceo crystallino alevantando
Com lagrimas os olhos piedosos;
Os olhos, porque as maõs lhe estava atando
Hum dos duros ministros rigorosos:
E despois nos meninos attentando,
Que taõ queridos tinha, e taõ mimosos,
Cuja orphandade como mãi temia,
Para o avô cruel assi dizia:
Se já nas brutas feras, cuja mente
Natura fez cruel de nascimento,
E nas aves agrestes, que sómente
Nas rapinas aerias tem o intento,
Com pequenas crianças vio a gente,
Terem taõ piedoso sentimento,
Como co’a mãi de Nino já mostráram,
E co’os irmaõs que Roma edificáram:
O’tu, que tens de humano gesto, e o peito,
(Se de humano he matar huma donzella
Fraca, e sem força, só por ter sujeito
O coraçaõ a quem soube vencella)
A estas criancinhas tem respeito,
Pois o naõ tens à morte escura della:
Mova-te a piedade sua, e minha,
Pois te naõ move a culpa que naõ tinha.
E se vencendo a Maura resistencia
A morte sabes dar com fogo, e ferro;
Sabe tambem dar vida com clemencia
A quem para perdê-la naõ fez erro.
Mas se to assi merece esta innocencia,
Poem-me em perpétuo e misero desterro,
Na Scythia fria, ou lá na Libya ardente,
Onde em lagrimas viva eternamente.
Poem-me onde se use toda a feridade;
Entre leões, e tigres, e verei
Se nelles achar posso a piedade
Que entre peitos humanos naõ achei,
Alli co’o amor intrinseco, e vontade,
Naquelle por quem mouro, criarei
Estas reliquias suas que aqui viste,
Que refrigerio sejam da mãi triste, etc.
Canto III.

153 The description of this battle, and the account of the internal agitations of the kingdom, which preceded it, occupy a great portion of the fourth canto.

154 Here again the poet displays his command of beautiful imagery. The following passage resembles the retreat of Ajax in the Iliad.

Rompem-se aqui dos nossos os primeiros;
Tantos dos inimigos a elles vaõ:
Está alli Nuno, qual pelos outeiros
De Ceita está o fortissimo leaõ,
Que cercado se vê dos Cavalleiros,
Que os campos vaõ correr de Tetuaõ:
Perseguem-no co’as lanças, e elle iroso,
Torvado hum pouca está, mas naõ medroso.
Com torva vista os vê, mas a natura
Ferina, e a ira, naõ lhe compadecem
Que as costas dê, mas antes na espessura
Das lanças se arremessa, que recrecem.
Tal está o Cavalleiro, que a verdura
Tinge co’o sangue alheio: alli perecem
Alguns dos seus. Que o animo valente
Perde a virtude contra tanta gente.
Canto IV. 134. etc.

155 The description of the battle commences in the following brilliant style:—

Deo signal a trombeta Castelhana
Horrendo, fero, ingente, e temeroso:
Ouvio-o monte Artabro; e Guadiana
Atraz tornou as ondas de medroso:
Ouvio-o o Douro, e a terra Transtagana;
Correo ao mar o Tejo duvidoso;
E as mãis que o som terribil escuitáram,
Aos peitos os filhinhos apertáram.
Quantos rostos alli se vem sem côr,
Que ao coraçaõ acode o sangue amigo;
Que nos perigos grandes, o temor
He maior muitas vezes que o perigo:
E se o naõ he, parece-o; que o furor
De offender, ou vencer o douro imigo,
Faz naõ sentir que he perda grande, e rará,
Dos membros corporaes, da vida chara.
Começa-se a travar a incerta guerra;
De ambas partes se move a primeira ala;
Huus levam a defensão da propria terra,
Outros as esperanças de ganhala:
Logo o grande Pereira, em quem se encerra
Todo o valor, primeiro se assinala;
Derriba, e encontra, e a terra em fim semêa
Dos que a tanto desejam, sendo alhêa.
Já pelo espesso ar os estridentes
Farpoens, settas, e varios tiros vôam:
Debaixo dos pés duros dos ardentes
Cavallos, treme a terra, os valles sôam:
Espedaçam-se as lanças; e as frequentes
Quêdas co’as duras armas tudo atrôam:
Recrescem os imigos sobre a pouca
Gente do fero Nuno, que os apouca.
Cant. IV. 28. &c.

156 Canto IV. Estancia 69, &c.

157 Canto IV. est. 90, &c.

158 The old man exclaims:—

Oh gloria de mandar! Oh vaã cobiça
Desta vaidade, a quem chamamos fama!
Oh fraudulento gusto, que se atiça
Co’ huma aura popular, que honra se chama!
Que castigo tamanho, e que justiça
Faces no peito vaõ que muito te ama!
Que mortes! Que perigos! Que tormentas!
Que crueldades nelles exprimentas!
Dura inquietaçaõ da alma, e da vida;
Fonte de desamparos, e adulterios;
Sagaz consumidora conhecida
De fazendas, de Reinos, e de Imperios,
Chamam-te illustre, chamam-te subida,
Sendo digna de infames vituperios:
Chamam-te fama, e gloria soberana;
Nomes com quem se o povo nescio engana.
Cant. IV. 95.

159 This passage is one of the most celebrated in the Lusiad. It commences with the following stanzas:—

Naõ acabava, quando huma figura
Se nos mostra no ar, robusta, e válida;
De disforme e grandissima estatura,
O rosto carregado, a barba esquálida:
Os olhos encovados, e a postura
Medonha, e má, e o cor terrena, e pálida,
Cheos de terra, e crespos os cabellos,
A boca negra, os dentes amarellos.
Taõ grande era de membros, que bem posso
Certificar-te, que este era o segundo
De Rhodes estranhissimo Colosso,
Que hum dos sete milagres foi do Mundo:
Co’hum tom de voz nos falla horrendo, e grosso,
Que pareceo sahir do mar profundo:
Arrepiam-se as carnes, e o cabello,
A mi, e a todos, só de ouvi-lo, e vello.

But a stanza still more admired, is that in which the gigantic spirit describes his rage on discovering that he was embracing a rock, while he fancied he held in his arms the goddess of whom he was enamoured:—

Oh, que naõ sei de noja como o conte!
Que crendo ter nos braços quem amava,
Abraçando me achei co hum duro monte
De aspero mato e de espessura brava.
Estando co’hum penedo fronte a fronte,
Que eu per o rosto angelico apertava,
Naõ fiquei homem, naõ, mas mundo e quedo,
E junto a hum penedo, outro penedo.
Canto V.

160 Canto V. Estancia 35.—The recollection of this merry shipmate seems to have been preserved among Portuguese seamen, from Vasco da Gama’s time down to the age of Camoens.

161

Entrava neste tempo e eterno lume
No animal Nemeo truculento,
E o mundo, que co o tempo se consume
Na sexta idade andava inferno e lento;
Nella vè, como tinha per costume,
Cursos do Sol catorze veces cento,
Com mais noventa e sete, en que corria,
Quando no mar a armada se estendia.
Canto V. Est. 2.

162

Algum repouso, em fim, com que pudesse
Refocilar a lassa humanidade
Dos navegantes seus, como interesse
Do trabalho que encurta a breve idade.
Canto IX. est. 20.

163 In quoting the commencement of this description it is difficult to know where to stop:—

Tres formosos outeiros se mostravam
Erguidos com soberba graciosa,
Que de gramineo esmalte se adornavam,
Na formosa Ilha alegre, e deleitosa:
Claras fontes, e limpidas manavam
Do cume, que a verdura tem viçosa:
Por entre pedras alvas se deriva
A sonorosa lympha fugitiva.
N’hum valle ameno, que os outeiros fende,
Vinham as claras aguas ajuntar-se,
Onde huma mesa fazem, que se estende,
Taõ bella, quanto póde imaginar-se:
Arvoredo gentil sobre ella pende,
Como que prompto está para affeitar-se,
Vendo-se no crystal resplandecente,
Que em si o está pintando propriamente.
Mil arvores estaõ ao Ceo subindo,
Com pomos odoriferos, e bellos:
A larangeira tem no fructo lindo
A côr que tinha Daphne nos cabellos:
Encosta-se no chaõ, que está cahindo
A cidreira co’os pesos amarellos:
Os formosos limões, alli cheirando,
Estaõ virgineas tetas imitando.
Cant. IX.

The flowers of this enchanted garden are then described with the most charming luxuriance.

164 The festival commences with the following description of the simulated flight of the nymphs when they first espy the Portuguese:—

Sigamos estas deosas, e vejamos
Se phantasticas saõ, se verdadeiras.
Isto dito; velozes mais que gamos,
Se lançam a correr pelas ribeiras,
Fugindo as Nymphas vaõ por entre os ramos;
Mas mais industriosas, que ligeiras,
Pouco e pouco sorrindo, e gritos dando,
Se deixam ir dos galgos alcançando
De huma os cabellos de ouro o vento leva
Correndo, e d’outra as faldas delicadas:
Accende-se o desejo, que se ceva
Nas alvas comes subito mostradas.
Huma de industria cahe, e já releva
Com mostras mais macias, que indignadas,
Que sobre ella empecendo tambem caia
Quem a seguio por a arenosa praia.
Outros por outra parte vaõ topar
Com as deosas despidas, que se lavam:
Ellas começam subito a gritar
Como que assalto tal naõ esperavam.
Humas fingido menos estimar
A vergonha, que a força se lançavam
Nuas por entre o mato aos olhos dando
O que ás maõs cobiçosas vaõ negando.
Cant. IX.

165

Vaõ os annos descendo, e ja do Estio
Ha pouco que passar até o Outono;
A Fortuna me faz o engenho frio,
De qual ja me naõ jacto, nem me abono.
Os desgostos me vaõ levando ao rio
Do negro esquecimento e eterno sono.

166 The translator who undertakes to produce a good version of the Lusiad, must, in the first place, adopt no other metre than that of the original, for on the structure of the verse the style of the poem materially depends. He must, moreover, diffuse over the whole composition a character equally natural and dignified, and, where mythological ornament is not introduced, perfectly simple. Finally, he must avoid all antiquated and uncommon turns of expression; for the language of Camoens is always elegant and modern.

167 Manuel de Faria y Sousa was the first who started this question, which is now generally decided against Diogo Bernardes. Notices on this subject maybe found in the prefaces to the third and fourth volumes of the new and elegant edition of the Obras de Luis de Camoõe, segunda edição da que se fez em Lisboa, nos annos 1779 e 1780. Lisbon 1782, in five small volumes. A mythological and historical index to the Lusiad, though a very imperfect one, enhances the value of this edition. The older editions of the works of Camoens are noticed by Dieze in his appendix to Velasquez. Manuel de Faria y Sousa’s commentary on the works of Camoens, pedantic as it is, contains some useful historical elucidations.

168 For instance the following, which certainly takes a very bold flight, in order to place in a new point of view the marvellous beauty of the lady to whom it is addressed:—

Quando da bella vista, e doce riso,
Tomando estaõ meus olhos mantimento,
Taõ elevado sinto o pensamento,
Que me faz ver na terra o Paraiso.
Tanto do bem humano estou diviso,
Que qualquer outro bem julgo por vento:
Assi que em termo tal, segundo sento,
Pouco vem a fazer quem perde o siso.
Em louvar-vos, Senhora, naõ me fundo;
Porque quem vossas graças claro sente,
Sentirá que naõ póde conhecellas.
Pois de tanta estranheza sois ao Mundo,
Que naõ he de estranhar, Dama excellente,
Que quem voz fez, fizesse Ceo, e Estrellas.

169 Such, for example, is the romantic reminiscence of the fourteen years service of the patriarch Jacob. This sonnet is particularly esteemed, and has been glossed by other poets.

Sete annos de Pastor Jacob servia
Labaõ, pai de Raquel, Serrana bella,
Mas naõ servia ao pai, servia a ella,
Que a ella só por premio pertendia
Os dias na esperança de hum só dia
Passava, contentando-se com vella:
Porém o pai, usando de cautella,
Em lugar de Rachel lhe deo a Lia.
Vende o triste Pastor que com enganos,
Assi lhe era negada a sua Pastora,
Como se a naõ tivera merecida;
Começou a servir outros sete annos,
Dizendo: Mais servíra, senaõ fora
Pera taõ longo amor taõ curta a vida.

170 Can any thing more strongly resemble Petrarch, both in spirit and style than the following stanza? The whole cançaõ is, however, imitated from Bembo.

Hum naõ sei que suave respirando
Causava hum desusado, e novo espanto,
Que as cousas insensiveis o sentiam:
Porque as garrulas aves entretanto
Vozes desordenadas levantando
Como eu em meu desejo, se encendiam.
As fontes crystillinas naõ corriam,
Inflammadas na vista clara, e pura:
Florecia a verdura,
Que andando, co’os ditosos pès tocava:
As ramas se baixavam,
Ou de inveja das hervas que pizavam,
Ou porque tudo ante elles se baixava.
O ar, o vento, o dia,
De espiritos continuos influia.

171 The following is a specimen of a lyric description of morning in a lover’s taste:—

Já a roxa manhãa clara
As portas do Oriente vinha abrindo,
Dos montes descobrindo
A negra escuridaõ da luz avara.
O Sol, que nunca pára,
Da sua alegre vista saudoso,
Traz ella presuroso
Nos cavallos cansados do trabalho,
Que respiram nas hervas fresco orvalho,
Se estende claro, alegre, e luminoso.
Os passaros voando,
De raminho em raminho vaõ saltando;
E com suave, e doce melodia
O claro dia estaõ manifestando.
A manhãa bella, amena,
Seu rosto descobrindo, a espessura
Se cobre de verdura
Clara, suave, angelica, serena.
Oh deleitosa pena!
Oh effeito de amor alto, e potente!
Pois permitte, e consente,
Que ou donde quer que eu ande, ou donde esteja,
O seraphico gesto sempre veja,
Por quem de viver triste sou contentes,
Mas tu, Aurora pura,
De tanto bem dá graças à ventura,
Pois as foi pôr em ti taõ excellentes,
Que representes tanta formosura.

172

Detém hum pouco, Musa, o largo pranto
Que amor te abre do peito;
E vestida de rico, e lédo manto,
Demos honra, e respeito,
A’quella, cujo objeito
Todo o Mundo allumía,
Trocando a noite escura em claro dia.
O’Delia, que a pezar da nevoa grossa,
Co’os teus raios de prata,
A noite escura fazes que naõ possa
Encontrar o que trata,
Eo que na alma retrata
Amor por teu divino
Raio, porque endoudeço, e desatino.
Tu, que de formosissimas estrellas
Coròas, e rodêas
Tua candida fronte, e faces bellas;
E os campos formosêas
Co’as rosas que semêas,
Co’as boninas que gera
O teu celeste humor na Primavera.

173

Secreta noite, amiga, a que obedeço,
Estas rosas (por quanto
Meus queixumes me ouviste) te offereço,
E este fresco amaranto,
Humido inde do pranto
E lagrimas da esposa
Do cioso Titam, branca e formosa.

174 The first of these elegies commences very much like versified prose, and in a manner which would scarcely induce the reader to suppose he was perusing even the opening of an epistle. The spirit of the composition does not begin to manifest itself until the sixteenth line:—

O Poeta Simonides fallando
Co’o Capitam Themistocles hum dia,
Em cousas de sciencia praticando,
Hum’ arte singular lhe promettia,
Que entaõ compunha, com que lhe ensinasse
A lembrar-se de tudo o que fazia;
Onde taõ subtis regras lhe mostrasse,
Que nunca lhe passassem da memoria
Em nenhum tempo as cousas que passasse.
Bem merecia, certo, fama, e gloria,
Quem dava regra contra o esquecimento
Que sepulta qualquer antigua historia.
Mas o Capitam claro, cujo intento
Bem differente estava, porque havia,
Do passado as lembranças, por tormento;
Oh illustre Simonides! (dizia)
Pois tanto em teu engenho te confias,
Que mostras á memoria nova via;
Se me désses hum’ arte, que em meus dias
Me naõ lembrasse nada do passado,
Oh quanto melhor obra me farias!

175 The following passage, which is from the beautiful fifth elegy, must not be omitted in this collection:—

Oh bemaventurado seja o dia
Em que tomei taõ doce pensamento,
Que de todos os outros me desvia!
E bemaventurado o soffrimento
Que soube ser capaz de tanta pena,
Vendo que o foi da causa o entendimento.
Faça-me quem me mata, o mal que ordena,
Trate-me com enganos, desamores;
Que entaõ me salva quando me condena.
E se de taõ suaves desfavores,
Penando vive hum’ alma consumida,
Oh que doce penar! Que doces dores!
E se huma condição endurecida
Tambem me nega a morte por meu dano,
Oh que doce morrer! Que doce vida!

176 The principal idea of this song of sorrow, the beauties of which are perfectly national, is the comparison of the present and the past in the situation of the poet, with an imaginary Babylon and Sion. Sion represents the past. The first half of the poem affords no anticipation of the nature of the second half:—

Sobre os rios, que vaõ
Por Babylonia me achei,
Onde sentado charei
As lembranças de Siaõ,
E quanto nelle passei.
Alli o rio corrente
De meus olhos foi manado,
E todo bem comparado,
Babylonia ao mal presente,
Siaõ ao tempo passado.

Among the most beautiful stanzas are those in which the poet celebrates the power of song in sorrow, and the limits of that power.

Canta o caminhante lédo,
No caminho trabalhoso,
Por entre o espesso arvoredo,
E de noite o temeroso
Cantando refrê a o medo.
Canta o preso docemente,
Os duros grilhões tocando;
Canta o segador contente;
E o trabalhador cantando,
O trabalho menos sente.
Eu que estas cousas senti
N’alma, de mágoas taõ chêa,
Como dirá, respondi,
Quem alheo está de si,
Doce canto em terra alhêa?
Como poderá cantar
Quem em choro banha o peito?
Porque, se quem trabalhar,
Canta por menos cansar,
Eu só descansos engeito.
Que naõ parece razaõ
Nem seria cousa idonia,
Por abrandar a paixaõ,
Que cantasse em Babylonia
As cantigas de Siaõ,
Que quando a muita graveza,
De saudade quebrante
Esta vital fortaleza,
Antes morra de tristeza,
Que por abrandá-la cante.

177 See page 30.

178 For example:—

Verdes saõ os campos,
De côr e limaõ:
Assi saõ os olhos
De meu coraçaõ.
Campo, que te estendes
Com verdura bella;
Ovelhas, que nella
Vosso pasto tendes;
De hervas vos mantendes,
Que traz o Veraõ,
E eu das lembranças
Do meu coraçaõ,
Gados, que passeis
Com contentamento,
Vosso mantimento
Naõ o entendeis.
Isso que comeis,
Naõ saõ hervas, naõ
Saõ graça dos olhos
Do meu coraçaõ.

179 For example:—

Na fonte está Leonor,
Lavanda a talha, e chorando,
Ás amigas perguntando:
Vistes lá o meu amor?
Posto o pensamento nelle,
Porque a tudo o amor a obriga,
Cantava, mas a cantiga
Eram sospiros por elle.
Nisto estava Leonor
O seu desejo enganando,
Ás amigas perguntando:
Vistes lá o meu amor?
O rosto sobre huma maõ,
Os olhos no chaõ pregados,
Que do chorar já cansados,
Algum descanso lhe daõ,
Desta sorte Leonor
Suspende de quando em quando
Sua dor; e em si tornando,
Mais pezada sente a dor.
Naõ deita dos olhos agoa,
Que naõ quer que a dor se abrande
Amor, porque em mágoa grande
Sécca as lagrimas a mágoa
Que despois de seu amor
Soube novas perguntando,
D’ improviso a vi chorando
Olhai que extremos de dor!

180 That a short specimen of Camoens’s dramatic style may not be wanting in this collection of examples, a passage is here subjoined from a scene which is intended to be jocular. Duriano is a spruce country lover, and Solina is his town-bred mistress.

Dur. O que vos quero m’ engana,
Mas o que desejo naõ.
Naõ ha aqui senaõ paredes,
As quaes naõ fallam, nem vem.
Solin. Está isso muito bem.
Bem e vós, Senhor, naõ vedes,
Que poderá vir alguem,
Dur. Que vos custam dous abraços?
Solin. Naõ quero tantos despejos.
Dur. Pois que faraõ meus desejos,
Que querem ter-vos nos braços
E dar-vos trezentos beijos?
Solin. Olhai que pouca vergonha!
Hi-vos di, boca de praga.
Dur. Eu naõ sei certo a que ponha
Mostrardes-me a triaga,
E virdes-me a dar peçonha.
Solin. Ora ide rir á feira,
E naõ sejas dessa laia.
Dur. Se vedes minha canseira,
Porque lhe naõ dais maneira?
Solin. Que maneira?
Dur. A da saia.
Solin. Por minha alma, hei de vos dar
Meia duzia de portadas.
Dur. Oh que gostosas pancadas!
Mui bem vos podeis vingar,
Que em mim saõ bem empregadas.
Solin. Ao diabo, que o eu dou.
Como me doeo a maõ!
Dur. Mostrai cá, minha affeiçaõ,
Que essa dor me magoou
Dentro no meu coraçaõ.
Filodemo, Act. II.

181 See preceding vol. p. 217.

182 See present vol. p. 33.

183 See preceding vol. p. 258.

184 The different editions of the Cancionero, or the collection of the miscellaneous poems of Montemayor, are noticed by Barbosa Machado, under the head Jorge de Montemayor.

185 This neat edition is entitled, Poezias de Pedro de Andrade Caminha, mandadas a publicar pela real Academia das Sciencias de Lisboa, Lisb. 1791, in 8o. The preface contains the history of the discovery of these poems, and notices of the manuscript copies of them which are contained in different libraries.

186 In his second epistle he thus addresses his own book, that is to say, his collection of poems:—

Cuidará, Livro, alguem que te dezejo
Azas, com que por tudo vás voando
E enchas o Mundo do que sinto, e vejo.
Ciudará que te quero hir procurando
Que sejas entre todos bem ouvido
E que a teu nome os vás afeiçoando.
Mas eu, Livro naõ sou descomedido;
Conheço-te, e sei bem que o naõ mereço,
Que nunca fui das Muzas conhecido.
Sempre as ouvi de longe, só conheço
Que as deve dezejar todo alto esprito,
Que dezeja no Mundo hum alto preço.

187 For example, he thus addresses himself to Ferreira as a friend and pupil:—

Antonio, quando vejo o ingenho raro,
O puro esprito que nos vás mostrando,
O estilo facil, alto, limpo e claro,
Vejo que vás em tudo renovando
Aquella antiguidade, que inda agora
Com grande nome, e fama está espantando.
Vejo em ti sempre maravilhas, hora
Cantes da viva, da amorosa chamma
Que um’ Alma faz captiva, outra senhora;
Ou nos mostres do que baixamente ama
Amores em baixezas só fundados,
Destruidores máos da limpa fama;
Hora sejam teus versos entoados
O’ som da doce frauta, a cujo som
Forom os do gram Titiro cantados.
Epist. IX.

188 To such critics he very properly says:—

O espirito que nom voa, nem atina
O bem, ou mal do que se canta, e escreve,
Quando bem, ou mal julga desatina.
Se dá razaõ, mais fria a dá que neve,
Sem fundamento louva, e assi reprova,
Qu’ em juizo appressado á razaõ leve.
A reprensaõ no mundo nom é nova,
Mas quem melhor entende, mais d’espaço
O máo reprende, ou o melhor approva.
Tem as lingoas agudas mais que d’aço
Estes que querem ser graves censores,
Se lhes armas, caem logo em qualquer laço.
Juízos vaõs, indontos reprensores,
Nom sofrem as Musas ser assi tratadas,
Nem recebem de vós inda louvores.
Epist. XVII.

189 The following is the commencement of an elegy on Winter, which was probably intended as a companion to Ferreira’s elegy on May:—

Apos o Veram brando, o Inverno duro
Começa triste, e cheo de asperezas,
Importuno, pezado, frio, e escuro.
Entra o tempo com furias, e bravezas
Na terra, n’agoa, no ar faz movimentos
Que ameaçaõ mil danos, e tristezas.
Revolvem tudo os furiosos ventos,
E parece que tem aspera guerra
Uns com outros os grandes elementos.
Mais pezada se torna, e grave a terra
E tudo quanto de antes produzia
Nega, e dentro em si mesma esconde, e encerra.
O que hora ós olhos mostra, o que hora cria,
Tojos, espinhos, cardos, o seccura,
Tudo alheo de graça, e d’alegria.
Cessou aquella varia fermosura
De differentes rosas, varias flores
De que se ornaõ as plantas, e a verdura.
Das fontes nom taõ claros as liquores
Correm, como corriaõ; turvo é tudo;
Tem as aves silencio em seus amores.

190 The following epitaph on Queen Maria is none of the most insignificant.

Filha de Reys, e may, e irmã; e tia,
Avó de Reys, e de tudo isto dina,
De qual outra outro tanto se diria
Como dest’ alta Rainha já divina?
Mulher de Manoel, grande Maria,
Por quem todo alto esprito inda s’ensina.
E pode com tudo isto a ley da Morte
Darlhe esta estreita sepultura em sorte.

191 As in the following epitaph on Prince Dom Duarte:—

Duarte foy, filho de Joaõ Terceiro
Este que aqui debaixo está encerrado.
Do Pay em tudo filho verdadeiro,
Na flor da idade da morte cortado.
Pouco viveo, inuito mostrou primeiro,
Com que de todos era bem amado.
Mostrouse tarde, mas foy tam sentido,
Como que sempre fora conhecido.

192

Um corpo aqui se guarda governado
Em outro tempo d’um tam claro Esprito:
Que nunca poderá ser igualado
D’ humano canto, ou de mortal escrito.
Affonso d’Albuquerque foi chamado,
De quem levanta a Fama immortal grito:
De Reis vem, Reis honrou, a Reis venceo,
E de seu nome a todo mundo encheo.

193

Aqui Ferreira jaz, aqui Ferreira
De mil, e mil amigos é chorado.
E seu nome com fama verdadeira
De mil, e mil espritos é cantado.
Da Morte, no chegar sempre ligeira,
Da vida antes de tempo foy levado.
Seu corpo aqui, su Alma está na Gloria,
Seu nome em todo mundo, e sua memoria.

194 As in the epigrammatic description of Echo, or the transformed nymph of that name:—

Para mim nom, para outros tenho vida;
Nom tendo corpo, occupo grandes valles;
Nom tenho propria voz, e som ouvida;
Nom ouvindo, respondo a bens, e males;
Sem nunca vista ser, som conhecida;
Lugar proprio nom tenho, e em muitos ando.
Nisto fui transformada de improviso
Do Amor, que a meu amor nunca foi brando.
Foi meu nome Echo, e meu Amor Narcizo.
E minha morte, a morte de Narcizo.

195 In one of the epigrams he thus speaks of the wounds of love:—

Toda chaga no peito é perigosa,
Mortal no coraçaõ toda ferida.
Pois como nelles deixa a venenosa
Setta o Amor duro, e faz que dure a vida?
Porque assim duramente o Amor ordena,
Que dure a vida, porque dure a pena.

196 For example, the following on a nosegay:—

Ditosas, bem nacidas, brandas flores,
D’uns olhos vistas, d’umas maõs tocadas,
Que em suavidade, e cheiro, graça, e cores
Vos teraõ cora vantajem conservadas:
Das Graças, e do Amor e dos Amores
Com rezaõ sereis sempre acompanhadas;
E o vosso fermosissimo concerto,
Trará toda Alma em grande desconcerto.

197 The following is on an eccentric poet:—

Dizes que o bom Poeta á de ter furia;
Se nom á de ter mais, és bom Poeta.
Mas se o Poeta á de ter mais que furia,
Tu nom tens mais que furia de Poeta.

198 The article Diogo Bernardes in Barbosa Machado’s Lexicon of learned men, is very honourable to Bernardes; and this writer is mentioned in terms of still higher commendation in the biographical preface to the new edition of Ferreira’s poems. (See p. 114 of the present vol.) Barbosa Machado also gives notices of the old editions of the various works of this poet, who is scarcely known on this side of the Pyrenees even by name.

199 Varias rimas ao bom Jesus, e à virgem gloriosa sua mái, &c. Com outras mais do honesta e proveitosa liçam. Por Diogo Bernardes, natural de Ponte de Lima. Lisboa, 1770, 1 vol. octavo. This new edition proves that the recollection of Bernardes has been again revived among the Portuguese public, and also that poetic works of devotion are still well received in Portugal.

200 The two following opening stanzas of a hymn by Bernardes to the Virgin, are only a higher kind of litany:—

Oh Virgem, das mais Sanctas a mais Sancta,
Do inconstante mar fiel estrella,
Porta do Paraiso, estrada, e guia,
Volvei os olhos bellos, Virgem bella,
Vede tanta estreiteza, magoa tanta,
Quanta com magoa choro a noute, e o dia.
Naõ me dexeis sumir, doce Maria,
Neste profundo pego;
Porque povo tam cego,
Como se ri de mi, de vós naõ ria,
E salba que deixastes castigarme
Por gram peccador ser,
E naõ por naõ poder do seu livrarme.
Oh Virgem d’humildade, e graça chea,
Que converteis em riso o triste pranto,
Da triste miseravel vida nossa;
Como vos cantarei alegre canto
Cativo, sem repouso, em terra alheia,
Entre barbara gente imiga vosso?
Desatai vós esta cadea grossa,
Que meus erros sem fim
Forjaraõ para mim,
Porque solto por vós, cantar vos possa
Na ribeira do Lima sem receo,
(Oh Madre de Jesus)
Naõ de turvo Lucuz, de sangue cheo.

201 The following is one of these romantic spiritual sonnets:—

Oh Virgem bella, e branda, quem já vira
Este coraçaõ meu tam inflammado
Em vosso doce amor, que outro cuidado,
Outro querer em si naõ consentira!
Oh quem azas me dera que sobira,
Das affeições humanas desatado,
A tam seguro, e venturoso estado,
Onde em vaõ naõ se chora, nem suspira.
Em tanto como póde desejarvos
Sem culpa, quem reparte o seu desejo,
Todo devido a vós sem falar nada?
Tal vos vejo, Senhora, e tal me vejo,
Que sei de mi que naõ mereço amarvos,
Merecendo vós só de ser amada.

202 They are in this manner added to the new edition of the Rimas ao bom Jesus, already mentioned.

203 The following is a passage from one of these elegies. Bernardes addresses the shades of the friends who fell by his side in the unfortunate battle:—

Oh amigos, com quem m’aventurei,
Com quem fui sem ventura aventureiro,
Sempre, pois vos perdi, triste serei.
Sendo no fero assalto companheiro,
A vós pos-vos no Ceo o fim da guerra,
A mim em miseravel cativeiro.
Bem vedes qual o passo nesta serra,
Inda que naõ he justo que vejais
Terra, que vos negou tam pouca terra;
Terra, que quanto nella choro mais,
Tanto mais com meu choro se endurece,
E menos move a dôr seus naturais.
Tudo, o que nella vejo, m’entristece,
Triste me deixa o Sol em transmontãdo,
Triste me torna a ver quando amanhece.
Sempre com humor triste estou banhado
O pé deste soberbo alto rochedo,
Que minha dôr está accrescentando.

204 For example, a moral composition of this kind, which commences thus:—

Alma minha, oh alma
De ti esquecida
Porque das á vida
De ti mesma a palma?
Ella te maltrata,
Tu tras ella corres:
Porque tanto morres
Pelo que te mata?
Quanto se deseja,
Quanto se procura,
Doulhe que se veja,
Que val, ou que dura?
Naõ sei donde vem
Desconcerto tal,
Trocar certo bem
Por mui certo mal.

205 In one of these epistles he attributes all the poetic merit which his poetry may possess, to the instructions of Ferreira:—

Se me naõ dera ao Mundo em taõ ditosos
Annos, de mim que fora? que por ti
Espero de ter nome entre os famosos.
Por mim nunca subira, onde subi,
Meu nome com a vida s’acabára,
O Mundo naõ soubera se nasci.
Confesso dever tudo aquella rara
Doutrina tua, que me quiz ser guia
Do celebrado monte a fonte clara.
E por te dever mais, se a luz do dia
Te parecer, que saiaõ meus escritos,
Na tua pena está sua valia.

206 It is reprinted as a supplement to the new edition of Ferreira’s works.

207 See preceding vol. p. 406.

208 Barbosa Machado gives a catalogue of the writings of Cortereal.

209 Barbosa Machado enumerates the titles of the comedies of Ferreira de Vasconcellos. I have had no opportunity of perusing them myself.

210 These scanty notices are furnished by Niclas Antonio and Barbosa Machado. Dieze has collected from the same sources the particulars respecting Rodriguez Lobo, which are contained in his appendix to Velasquez. The works of this poet, are published under the inappropriate title of Obras politicas, moraes e metricas do insigne poeta Portuguez Francisco Rodriguez Lobo, &c. Lisboa, 1723, in one neatly printed folio volume. But even this edition which was intended to revive the recollection of one of the best Portuguese poets, contains no account of that poet’s life.

211 Perto da Cidade principal da Lusitania está huma graciosa Aldea, que com igual distancia fica situada à vista do mar Oceano, fresca no Veram, com muytos favores da naturesa, et rica no Estio, et Inverno com os frutos, et commodidades, que ajudam a passar a vida saborosamente; porque com a vesinhança dos portos do mar por huma parte, et da outra com a communicaçam de huma ribeyra, que enche os seus vales, et outeyros de arvoredos, et verdura, tem em todos os tempos de anno, o que em differentes lugares costuma buscar a necessidade dos homens: et por este respeyto foy sempre o sitio escolhido, para desvio da Corte, et voluntario desterro do trafego della: dos Corlesaõs que alli tinham quintas, amigos, ou heranças que costumaõ ser valhacouto dos excessivos gastos da Cidade; &c.

212 Entre outros homens, que naquella companhia se achavam, eraõ nella mais costumados em anoytecendo; hum letrado, que alli tinha hum casal, et que já tivera honrados cargos do governo da Justiça na Cidade, homem prudente, concertado na vida, douto na sua profiçam, et lido nas historias da humanidade. Hum Fidalgo mancebo, inclinado ao exercicio da caça, et muyto afeyçoado às cousas da Patria, em cujas historias estava bem visto. Hum Estudante de bom engenho, que entre os seus estudos se empregava algumas veses nos da Poesia. Hum velho naõ muyto rico, que tinha servido a hum dos Grandes da Corte, com cujo galardaõ se reparara naquelle lugar, homem de boa criaçam, et alem de bem entendido, notavelmente engraçado no que dizia, et muyto natural de huma murmuraçam que ficase entre o couro et a carne, sem dar ferida penetrante.

213 The delicacy with which one of the party apologizes for the ill-breeding of his servant, possesses at least the merit of not being trivial.

E eu (respondeo elle) se vos naõ encontrara, ainda naõ tinha entendido o vosso moço, porque de màneyra embaraçou o que me mandaveis dizer, que nem por discrição pude tirar o recado; nem vos desfaçais delle para os que forem de importancia, que val a peso de ouro; a isto se começaraõ todos a rir, et tornou Solino: O meu moço, Senhor D. Julio, tem disculpa em ser nescio, porque he meu moço, que se soubera mais, eu o servira a elle. Mas os criados dos grandes, como vos, esses ande ser discretos, pois saõ taõ bons como eu, et com tudo eu vos sey dizer que hà aqui moço que no dar hum recado o podera fazer como ao que là mãdey, que naõ he dos peores da sua ralé et já entremete de ler carta mãdadeyra, mas nos recados ainda agora lè por nomes, et naõ acerta a nenhuma cousa.

214 As in the following reasoning concerning the fashionable education of young men of rank at court.

Quatro maneyras de exercicios ha na Corte, que para todas as cousas civis fazem hum homem politico, cortez, et agradavel aos outros. A primeyra he o trato dos Principes, et a communicaçaõ das pessoas que andaõ junto a elle: nesta consiste o principal do a que chamamos Corte, que he conhecimento daquelle supremo tribunal da terra, do Rey, ou Principe a quem pertence mandar, como a todos os inferiores obedecer na conformidade das leys porque se governaõ. Tras isto o estado, et serviço do mesmo Rey, et dos seus, a obediencia, a cortesia, a inclinaçaõ, a mesura, a discrição no fallar, a policia no vestir, o estylo no escrever, a confiança no apparecer, a vigilancia no servir, a gentileza, et bizarria que para os lugares publicos se requere. O trato do Principe no Paço, na mesa, no conselho, na caça, nos caminhos, et occasiones, como se grangeaõ os validos, se visitaõ os Grandes, et como se haõ de haver os cortesaõs para cõmunicar a huns et outros.

215 The commencement of one of the stories which are interspersed through this book may be transcribed here:—

Na Corte do Emperador de Alemanha Oton terceyro deste nome, que foy a mais florente et frequentada de Princepes, que houve muytos annos antes, et despois naquelle Imperio, assistio com grande satisfaçaõ de suas partes, Aleramo filho do Duque de Saxonia, mancebo de pouca idade, et de muyta gentilesa, magnanimo, esforçado, liberal, et tam cheyo de graças naturaes, que nelle como em hum thesouro, parece que as depositàra todas a naturesa. Tinha o Emperador hum filha da mesma idade, et de tanta fermosura, que sem o que a sorte devia a seu nascimento, merecia ter o Imperio do mundo; et se em bellesa tinha esta ventagem a todas as Damas de Alemanha, ainda lha fazia muy to mayor na descrição, aviso, et galantaria.

216 See p. 34.

217 For example:—

Pela parte por onde vem decendo o rio Lis, antes de chegar aos espaçosos valles, que com sua corrente vay regando, toma hum estreyto caminho entre altos arvoredos, aonde com profundo se detem atè chegar á queda de huma alta penedia, et alli repartidas as agoas, medrosas vaõ fugindo por entre as raizes de amargosas novigueyras, outras offerecendose aos penedos com saudoso som estaõ nelles quebrando, et depois ficaõ derramadas em dous ribeyros, o mayor depois de muytas voltas se vay a encontrar primeyro com as agoas de que se apartou entre altos ciprestes, et loureyros. O outro ao voltar de hum valle se vay encostando a huma alta rocha por bayxo de espessas aveleyras, et esperando as agoas humas pelas outras descobrem a boca de huma lapa encuberta entre huns ramos, que vay por bayxo do chaõ huma legoa, et nesta havia fama, que vivia hum sabio de muyta idade, que por encantamento a fabricára, &c.

218 The following are the commencing stanzas of this song:—

Ja nasce o bello dia
Principio do veraõ fermoso e brando,
Que com nova alegria
Estaõ denunciando,
As aves namoradas
Dos floridos raminhos penduradas.
Jà abre a bella Aurora
Com nova luz as portas do Oriente,
E mostra a linda Flora
O prado mais contente,
Vestido de boninas,
Aljofradas de gotas cristalinas.
Jà o Sol mais fermoso
Està ferindo as agoas prateadas,
E Zefiro queyxoso
Hora as mostra encrespadas
A vista dos penedos,
Hora sobre ellas move os arvoredos.
De reluzente area
Se mostra mais fermosa a rica prata,
Cuja riba se arrea
Do alemo, et da faya,
Do freyxo, et do salgueyro,
Do ulmo, da aveleyra, et do loureyro.

219 For instance, at the close of a beautiful cançaõ, which a shepherd sings in his solitude.

Porem, se sonha fora
Como este prado e valle inda apparece,
Estas ramos sombrios, este onteiro,
Que mostram ainda agora
A verdura das folhas, que escurece
A falta do seu sol, como primeiro?
Como naõ foi ligeiro
O monte, a valle, as plantas e a verdura
Tras sua formosura!
Porque era todo agreste;
Solo que ella levava, era celeste.

220 For example:—

Passa o bem como sombra, et na memoria
He mayor quanto foy mais desejado;
A pena ensina a conhecer a gloria,
Naõ se conhece o bem senaõ passado.
Em mim o caso soube desta historia,
E no que mostrou ja meu cuydado,
Vejo no que naõ vejo, et no que via,
Quaõ pouco tempo dura huma alegria,
Quanto melhor me fora se naõ vira
Hum enganoso, et vaõ contentamento,
Que ainda que faltarme alli sentira,
Era muyto menor o sentimento.
Mas vio minha alma o bem porque suspira,
Foy traz elle seguindo o pensamento,
Que como era novel, naõ conhecia
Quam pouco tempo dura huma alegria.

221 As in the following pleasing sonnet:—

Agoas, que penduradas desta altura
Cahis sobre os penedos descuydadas,
Aonde em branca escuma levantadas
Offendidas mostrais mais fermosura;
Se achais essa dureza tam segura,
Para que porfiais aguas cansadas?
Ha tantos annos ja desenganadas,
E esta rocha mais aspera, et mais dura.
Voltay a traz por entre os arvoredos,
Aonde os camenhareis com liberdade,
Atè chegar ao fim tam desejado.
Mas ay que saõ de amor estes segredos,
Que vos naõ valerà propria vontade,
Como a mim naõ valeo no meu cuidado.

222

Sae o Sol desejado,
Dà aos campos a cor, o ser ao dia,
O pasto ao manso gado.
Correndo vem traz elle a noyte fria,
Onde jà sua luz naõ resplandece,
E alli quando amanhece
Nos deyxe conhecer,
Que para aparecer desaparece.
Hum dia vay fugindo,
E o que corre traz elle nos alcança,
E todos se vaõ rindo
De meu engano vaõ, minha esperança,
Que por mais que a ventura me desvia,
Vivo nesta porfia,
Segundo meus enganos,
Esperando em mil annos hum só dia.

223 They must be transcribed here at length, for fragments would not afford an idea of their spirit. It would be difficult to find any more tender sports of fancy of this kind.

Reposta de Ardenio à pergunta primeyra.

Quem ama sem esperança,
Se ama mais perfeytamente?
Ninguem ama sem querer,
Ninguem quer sem esperar,
O que ama, espera, et quer,
Poderà nunca alcançar,
Mas sempre ha de pertender.
Se a era lhe falta à planta,
Em cujo tronco se arrime,
Nem cresce, nem se alevanta,
Que em fim naõ tem força tanta,
Que se levante, et sublime.
E se a amor lhe faltàra
Esperança, que o sustente,
Na raiz propria se cura,
E inda naõ sey se brotàra,
Ou se afogára a semente.
De sorte que em qualquer peyto,
Sem esperança ou favor
De seu desejado objecto,
Naõ só falta Amor perfeyto,
Mas falta de todo Amor.

Reposta da pastora Dinarea à mesma pergunta.

Amor, que a proprio respeyto
Todo o dezejo offerece
Só por seu gosto, ou proveyto,
Naõ se chame amor perfeyto,
Antes perfeyto interesse.
Amor he somente amar,
Este he seu meyo, et seu fim,
E o que pretende alcançar,
Nem se ha de lembrar de sim,
Nem do que pode esperar.
O que he verdadeyro amante
Naõ se funda na esperança,
Só seu querer poem diante,
E se por ventura alcança,
Sem ventura he mais constante.
Quando n’alma huma bellesa
Mostra seu rayo invencivel,
E amor seu preço, et grandeza,
Naõ faz differente empreza
Entre facil, et impossivel.
E he ja cousa averiguada,
Que somente este rigor
Merece ante a cousa amada,
E o que quizer mais de amor,
Nem quer, nem mereceo nada.

224 To these three competition songs a page or two must be devoted. Fanciful compositions of this kind, though now out of date, are curious; and ingenious simplicity in so elegant a form is seldom to be met with even in romantic literature.

Reposta de Riseo à tercera pergunta»

Que parentesco chegado
Tem amor com o ciume.
Amor como se presume
Ouve por certa affeyçaõ,
Hum filho da ocasiaõ,
A que chàmaraõ Ciume.
He igual ao pay, et mór,
Que amor com muyta grandeza,
Palreyro por natureza,
Que em fim he filho de Amor.
Vè muyto aonde quer que vay,
Naõ voa, antes he pezado,
E em qualquer parte tocado,
Tem o topete da mãy.
Vive de enganos que faz,
E anda nelles de contino,
E como Amor he menino,
Tambem o filho he rapaz.
Dà ao pay sempre mà vida,
E assim naõ me maravilho,
Que disconheçaõ por filho,
Porque Amor mesmo duvida.

Reposta de Egerio à mesma pergunta.

Estes irmaõs desiguaes,
Ambos de Venus nascèraõ,
E tiranos se fizeraõ
Do Imperio de seus pays.
Nasceo de Vulcano cego
O Ciume, et logo entaõ
Tomou o cargo este irmaõ,
A quem nunca deu socego.
E parecia acertado
Que hum filho que tal parece
Da fermosura nascesse,
E de hum pay desconfiado.
Ambos nascem juntamente,
E vivem fazendo dano,
Hum com redes de Vulcano,
Outro com seu fogo ardente.
Seguem differente fim,
E vivem sempre em perigo,
Cada hum do outro inimigo,
E acompanhaõ sempre assim.
Mostre por prova melhor,
Quem o contrario presume,
Se vio Amor sem ciume,
Ou ciume sem amor?

Reposta de Lereno à mesma pergunta.

Nestes dous naõ ha liança,
Nem pode haver amizade,
Que hum he filho da vontade,
Outro da confiança.
Hum de nobre, inda que agora
Degenere do em que estava,
Ciume he filho de escrava,
E Amor filho de senhora.
E claramente se apura
Ser o outro escravo seu,
Porque em dote se lhe deu,
Casando co a fermosura.
Servio de guia, et da fè
Mil vezes falsa, et errada,
E porque Amor naõ vè nada
Lhe mostra mais do que vè.
Da senhora, et do senhor
Quem jà conheçe o costume,
Sirvase bem do Ciume,
Porque he escravo de Amor.

225 The word desenganado (in Spanish desengañado) is not so happy an expression as the English disenchanted, or the German entzauberte. It is the word commonly used to designate one who is no longer enamoured. The Desengaño (the disenchantment in affairs of love) is also employed by the Spanish poets as an allegorical character.

226 See preceding vol. page 407.

227 See page 171.

228 Naõ estranheis ouvir rusticos filosofos e avisados Aldeaãs.—E assim, como na arte do pintar representaõ as cores differentes o natural de huma figura, e a forma della e substancia e attençaõ, porque foy figurada, assim o que nesta minha naõ parecer que representa o modo dos Pastores, attribui ao intento, que he, mostrar debaixo o seu barel a condição dos vicios e o sossejo das virtudes, &c.

229 See page 20.

230

Mis señores romancistas
Poetas de Lusitania,
Que hurtastes las invenciones,
A la lengua Castellana.
Buelved ya vuestros papeles,
Entregadlos a la fama,
Que donde ay tan buenas plumas
No es razon que falten alas.
No veis que estan ya sin hojas
Los laureles de Castalia,
Que dana cada español
Romancista, una grinalda, &c.

231

No correremos tambien
El Alhambra, el Alpuxarra,
Do estan Daraxa y Celinda,
Adalifa y Celidaxa?

232 See preceding vol. page 306.

233 See preceding vol. page 49.

234 The Ribeiras are here the streams which flow into the Mondego. As, however, the word ribeira also signifies a bank, the title of this unimportant romance may in translation be more conveniently expressed by the latter sense.

235 The commencement of the tale may be transcribed here as a specimen. It is preceded by an introductory song:—

Se alguem chorando canta, assi cantava hum pastor à vista do Rio do Mondego, sentado sobre huma sepultura, cuja antiguidade a pezar do tempo, et da inveja descobria a fama entre as ruynas de huns derribados edificios na entrada de hum valle, a quem altos Cyprestes, et outras funebras plantas faziaõ com carregadas sombras morada eterna da tristeza. Corria o Rio alegre, et nunca tanto atras da fermosa Arethusa o namorado Alpheo. Agora com appressado curso, por se appartar das Ribeyras humildes, que o perseguem, mostrava seu furor na crespa escuma, et logo desfazendoa jà livre dellas hia mais vagoroso. Retratavaõse nelle (como em espelho) os frescos arvoredos, que de huma, e doutra parte o assombravaõ em cerrada espessura.

236 Let, for example, the following verses be compared with similar passages in the works of Camoens and Rodriguez Lobo:—

Faz o tempo hum breve ensayo
Do bem, que em nacendo morre,
E mostrame quanto corre
Na ligeireza de hum rayo:
Passa o bem, e o tempo assi,
De hum, et doutro vivo ausente,
E vejo, porque o perdi,
Para lembrarme sòmente
Aquelle tempo, que vi.
Em quanto quiz a ventura,
O que meus olhos naõ vem,
Entaõ via sò meu bem,
Mas hoje quam pouco dura!
Faz o tempo o officio seu,
E o bem no mal, a que venho,
Larga experiencia deu,
Este bem he o que naõ tenho,
Que sò pude chamar meu.

237 Rebello is sometimes called Rebelo, and sometimes Rabelo. And, in like manner, in his tales the names of Justin and Leonidas are occasionally written Gustino and Leonitas, The Constante Florinda has been frequently printed. The edition which I have before me was published so recently as the year 1722. There have also been several editions of Rebello’s novels.

238 In the preface he moralizes thus:—

Muytos servos há no Mundo, que sam servos do Mundo, os quais sò com elle tratam seus negocios, metidos em os bosques de cuydades mundanos, sustentando-se em os montes de pensamentos altivos: sem quererem tomar conselho com hum livro espiritual que lhes ensine o que devem fazer. Compadecido destes quis disfarçar exemplos, et moralidades com as roupas de historias humanas. Para que vindo buscar recreaçam, para o entendimento, em a elegancia das palavras, em o enredo das historias, em a curiosidade das sentenças, et em a liçaõ das fabulas, achem tambem e proveyto, que estam offerecendo, que he hum claro desengano das cousas do Mundo, et fiquem livres dos perigos, a que estaõ muy arriscados, cõ seus ruins conselhos.

239 Thus, in describing melancholy, he with pompous gravity compares it to sea sickness:—

Assim como os que navegaõ sobre as ondas do mar que enjoande em hum navio, nem por se passarem a outro perdem a nauzea que os atormenta, porque naõ nasce do lugar, senaõ dos ruins humores que em si trazem levantados. Assim os tristes, et affligidos ainda que mudem o lugar, nem por isso deyxa a fortuna de os perseguir; porque naõ lhes nascem os males do lugar que deyxaõ, se naõ da fortuna que contra elles anda levantada.—Part II. cap, 5.

240 See preceding vol. p. 205.

241 Asia de Joaõ de Barros, dos feitos que os Portuguezes fizeram no descobrimento e conquista dos mares e terras do Oriente. The first edition of the first decade was published at Lisbon in the year 1553. The whole work has been frequently printed since that period.

242 For example, (in Decad 1. livr. iii. cap. 2.) Barros describes Columbus as visiting the King of Portugal with a malignant joy on his return from his expedition to America, and as acting the part of an empty boaster. But was the discoverer of America a braggart?

243 The following is the commencement of the description of the city of Ormus, which before the discovery of the new passage by the Cape of Good Hope, was the mart for the merchandize of India in its progress to Alexandria:—

A cidade Ormuz estâ situada em huma pequena ilha chamada Gerum, que jaz quasi na garganta de dentro do estreito do mar Persio, taõ perto da costa de terra de Persia, que averâ de huma â outra tres leguoas, et dez da outra Arabia, et terà em roda pouco mais de tres leguoas: toda mui esteril, et a major parte huma maneira de sal, et enyofre sem naturalmente ter hum ramo ou herva verde. A cidade em si he mui magnifica em edificios, grossa em trato por ser huma escala, onde concorrem todalas mercadorias orientaes, et occidentaes a ella, et as que vem da Persia, Armenia, et Tartaria que lhe jazem ao Norte: de maneira, que naõ tendo a ilha em si cousa propria per carreto tem todalas estimadas do mundo. Porque atè aguoa, cousa taõ cõmum, tirando alguma de tres poços et cisternas, toda lhe vem da terra firme da Persia, della em vasilhas, et outra solta em barcas cõ toda hortaliça, verdura, fruta verde et sorodea que despende, que he em abastança: assi da comarca a que elles chamaõ Mogostaõ, como destas ilhas que tem por vinzinhas, Queixome, Larec, et outras com que a cidade he taõ vizosa et abastada, que dizem os moradores della, que o mundo he hum anel, et Ormuz huma pedra preciosa engastada nelle.—Decada II. livr. ii. cap. 2.

244 Of this an excellent example is afforded in the description of the perplexing situation in which the Portuguese were placed at the taking of the Indian town of Calecut, when confined in the narrow streets, and overpowered by the fatigues of the combat, they were in danger of being forced to yield to an enemy far weaker than themselves:—

E certo que era cousa digna de admiraçaõ, et pera se muito condoer de taõ triste caso, porque contemplando obra de seiscentos homens que seriaõ os nossos, entalados entre aquelles vallos: tanto sobrelevava o fervor do sol, et a poeira dos pés, et trabalho que a noite passada té aquelles oras tinhaõ sofrido, sobre toda a força do seu animo, que naõ se podiaõ defender de até otienta Naires, que pela estrada os perseguiaõ derribando poucos et poucos: et o que era maes miseravel, se de cima dos vallos lançavaõ naquelle cardume dos nossos hum zarguncho, huma seta, huma pedrada, nunca dava no chaõ, et qualquer que acurvava os pés de todos trilhando o acabavaõ de matar. Finalmente aqui dous, ali quatro, seis, oito, sempre foraõ caindo té que sairaõ daquella estreiteza do vallo ao largo da cidade: a qual ainda que ardia em fogo, menos sentiraõ o que nella andava, que aquella forno de morte, donde vinhaõ afogados, et cegos de sede et pó. E vendo neste largo quaõ poucos eraõ os imigos que os perseguiaõ fezeraõ rosto a elles: cõ que converterão parte da soltura que traziaõ, em fugir, et naõ em cometer como d’ante faciaõ.—Dec. II. livr. 4. cap. 1.

245 The Portuguese Public is introduced speaking, in order to represent in a forcible way the disapprobation with which the enterprizing spirit of the Infante Henry was at first regarded:—

Ora onde o Infante manda descobrir, he ja tanto dentro no fervor de sol, que de brancos que os homems sam, se la for algum de nós, ficará (se escapar) taõ negro como sam os Guineos vezinhos a esta quentura. Se ao Infante parece que como ora achou estas duas ilhas que o tem maes elevado neste descobrimento, póde achar outras terras hermas grossas et fertiles como dizem que ellas sam: terras et maninhos ha no Reyno pera romper, et a proveitar sem perigo de mar, nem despesas desordenadas. E maes temos exemptos contrarios a esta sua opiniaõ, porque os Reyes passados deste Reyno sempre dos Reynos alheos pera o seu trouxeraõ gente a este a fazer novas povoações: et elle quer levar os naturaes Portugueses a povoar terras hermas per tantos perigos, de mar, de fome et sede, como vemos que passam os que lá vam.—Dec. I. Livr. i. cap. 4.

246 He makes Antaõ Gonsalvez, a Portuguese admiral, thus address his inferior officers:—

Amigos, nós temos feito parte daquillo a que somos inviados, que ora carregar este navio: et dado que os servos muito mereçaõ em acabar os mandados de quem os invia, mayor louvor será se fizermos o que o Infante mais deseja, que he levarlhe alguma lingua desta terra. Porque a sua tençaõ neste descobrimento, naõ he a fim da mercadoria que levamos, mas buscar gente desta terra taõ remota da Igreja, et a trazer ao baptismo: et depois ter com elles communicaçaõ et commercio pera hõra et proveito do Reyno. E pois isto a todos he mui notorio, justa cousa me parece trabalharmos por levar algum dos moradores desta terra: porque a meu ver se Affonso Gonçalvez per esta comaria per onde este rio vem achou gente, buscandonos bem per força devemos achar alguma provoaçaõ, &c.—Dec. I. livr. i. cap. 6.

247 A continencia do seu vulto era assossegada, a palavra mança et constante no que dizia, et sempre eraõ castas et honestas: et esta religiaõ de honestidade guardou naõ somente em as obras, mas ainda nos vestidos, trajos de sua pessoa, et serviço de casa. Todas estas cousas procediaõ da limpeza de sua alma, porque se ere que foi virgem. Em seus trabalhos et paixões, era mui sofrido et senhor de si: et em ambas as fortunas humildoso, et taõ benigno em perdoar erros que lhe foi tachado. Teve grande memoria et concelho a cerca dos negocios: et muita authoridade pera os graves, et de muito peso.—Dec. II. livr. i. cap. 16.

248 This Historia do descobrimento e da conquista da India pelos Portuguezes, feita por Fernaõ Lopez de Castanheda, was on account of its historical merit reprinted with the old orthography at Lisbon, in the year 1797, in two octavo volumes.

249 Commentarios do grande Affonso d’Alboquerque, &c. An elegant edition was published at Lisbon in 1774, in four octavo volumes. In order to understand this work the reader must not spare himself the pains of learning the maritime language of Portugal. The book will sufficiently repay this trifling labour.

250 These celebrated Commentaries are written throughout nearly in the style of the following passage:—

Passadas todas estas cousas, mandou o grande Afonso Dalboquerque aos Capitães, que levassem suas amarras, e partio-se do porto de Adem a quatro dias do mes de Agosto, e com toda sua Armada foi á vista do cabo de Guardafum, e dali fizeram sua navegaçaõ á outra banda da terra, e afferrâram Diolocindi, e foram correndo toda a costa de longo, e chegáram a Diu, onde foram muito bem recebidos de Miliqueaz, e bem festejados de dadivas, que deo a todos os Capitães, e ali estave seis dias, e mandou concertar os bateis das náos, que vinham muito desbaratados; e como chegou, veio logo Miliqueaz velo á nào, e estiveram ambos praticando em cousas desapegadas.—Parte IV. cap. 12.

251 Monarchia Lusitana, composta por Frey Bernardo de Brito, &c. The edition with which I am acquainted is in two folio volumes. The first volume was printed in the convent of Alcobaça, in the year 1597, and the second by a bookseller of Lisbon, in 1609.

252 See preceding vol. p. 315.

253 In order to form a just notion of Brito’s rhetorical merit, it is necessary to peruse the second part of his work, in which he had no longer the opportunity of following the ancient writers; for example, his description of the final stroke of fate which visited the Visigoth King Roderick, who lost the decisive battle against the Arabs. He thus describes how the king in his retreat took refuge in the church of a deserted convent:—

Chegado el Rey a este lugar cõ desejo de achar nelle alguma consolaçaõ pera seu spiritu, encontrou materia de mayor lastima, et dobrado sentimento, por que os mõges atemorizados cõ a nova que chegara poucos dias antes et solicitos por salvar os ornamentos, et cousas sagradas, huns eraõ jà fugidos pera dentro de Merida, outros se retiraraõ pella terra dentro buscando guarida em outros conventos, et os menos aguardavaõ o fim do negocio dentro no mosteiro, desejando acabar a vida pella honra et defensão da Fé Catholica dentro naquelle santuario. Entrou el Rey na Igreja, et vendoa nua de ornamentos, et desempesada de Religiosos, se pos em oraçaõ com tanta dòr et angustia de coraçaõ, que desfeito em lagrimas, se naõ lembrava que podia ser ouvido de alguma pessoa, aquem o excesso dellas desse conhecimento de quem podia ser, et como a fraqueza de naõ ter comido alguns dias, o desfalecimento do cerebro, pella falta do sono, et o quebrantamento de caminhar a pé, lhe tivessem as forças debilitadas, se lhe cerraraõ os spiritus, de maneira, que ficou em terra com hum desmayo em que esteve privado dos sentidos a te o achar hum monge antigo, &c.—Livr. VII. cap. 3.

The facility of the accentuation in these long sentences is particularly remarkable.

254 Me deziam, que—me livrara da grosseria o ruim methodo de historiar da Portugueza.

255 Tendo dentro de si filhos tam ingratos, que a modo de venenosas viboras lhe rasgaô a reputaçaõ.

256 Se alguma cousa me lastima, he ver, que a pouca noticia que della (a lingoa Portugueza) tenho, me fara levar o estilo de historia menos lustroso do que podera ir, sendo composto porque fizera seu fundamento na elegancia e fermosura da pratica mais que na verdade e certeza do que se conta; o que se naõ permitte em homem que professa nome de historiador authentico.—Prologo, p. 4.

257 With regard to these portraits, it may be observed that they are not well engraved; but according to the assurance of Brito, they were faithfully copied from the best likenesses extant. It would not be easy to find a portrait of Philip II. of Spain, who is here described as the eighteenth King of Portugal, which so decidedly expresses the character of that austere despot.

258 I am acquainted with this work only by means of the Spanish translation which is entitled:—Historia oriental de las peregrinaciones de Fernan Mendez Pinto, Portuguez. Madr. 1620. fol.

259 They are noticed by Barbosa Machado.

260 These works are more particularly noticed at the commencement of the preceding volume, page 14.

261 See preceding vol. page 431.

262 A writer of Spanish verse, and the author of several approved Spanish comedies.

263 Jacinto Cordero (according to the Spanish orthography and pronunciation of Cordeiro), Elogio de poetas Lusitanos. Lisb. 1631. Those who wish to study the progress of Portuguese poetry, will derive no information from this book.

264 A sufficient acquaintance with the more celebrated of these Portuguese sonneteers, may be acquired from the collection of Portuguese poems, edited by Matthias Pereira da Sylva, under the following fantastical title:—A Fenix renascida, ou Obras poeticas dos melhores engenhos Portugueses (though only those of the seventeenth century are included). Segunda ediçaõ. Lisb. 1746, in 3 volumes octavo. Not one half of this collection is worth perusing.

265 See preceding vol. page 428.

266 Barbosa Machado notices this polygraphic author with nearly as much enthusiasm as the Spaniards speak of Lope de Vega. He even asserts, that, in point of style Faria y Sousa may be placed on a parallel with the most distinguished of the ancient writers.

267 They are included in the first and fourth volumes of his Fuente de Aganippe. (Madrid, 1446).

268 The following sonnet will afford a specimen of these compositions. It is not indeed totally free from affected phrases; for example, the sixth line. But that line is sufficiently atoned for by the rest:—

Ninfas, Ninfas, do prado, tam fermosas
que nelle cada qual mil flores gera,
de que se tece a humana Primavera
com cores, como bellas, deleitosas;
Bellezas, ô Bellezas luminosas,
que sois abono da constante esfera:
que todas me acudisseys, bem quisera,
com vossas luzes, e com vossas rosas.
De todas me, trazey maes abundantes,
porque me importa neste bello dia
a porta ornar da minha Albania bella.
Mas vôs, de vosso culto vigilantes,
o adorno me negays, que eu pretendia,
porque bellas nam soys diante della.

269

Cante de Amor os puntas penetrantes,
Que de huns divinos olhos despedidas,
Despois de dadas immortaes feridas
Sairam do meu peito triumfantes; &c.

270 This singular declamation is as follows:—

Vos Satiros biformes que lavando
neste ribeiro estays o pè ligeiro,
deixay, deixay, o limpido ribeiro,
que em profano exercicio ides turbando.
Porque os aureos cabellos vem mostrando
sobre essa superficie o meu Luzeiro,
que là no fundo della he Sol primeiro,
a donde o mesmo Sol està cegando.
Deixayme sô na liquida corrente;
porque nam sairà do vitreo seyo,
se acompanhado aqui de alguem me sente.
Assi Menalio disse de Amor cheyo:
e o lavor do lavar a torpe Gente
nam deixou nunca, nem Albania veyo.

271

Dizerte a minha pena me recrea;
Porem na boca sinto huma amargura,
De que he somente conhecida cura
A tua numerosa e doce vea; &c.

272 For example, the following reminiscential sonnet, which is disfigured only by the concluding phrase:—

Sempre que torno a ver o bello prado
onde primeira vez a soberana
divindade encontrey con forma humana,
ou humana esplendor deificado:
E me acordo do talhe delicado,
do riso donde ambrosia, e nectar mana,
da fala, que dà vida quando engana,
da branca maõ, e do cristal rosado:
Do meneo suave, que fazia
crer que de brando Zefiro tocada
a Primavera toda se movia;
De novo torno a ver a Alma abrasada;
e em desejar sômente aquelle dia
vejo a Gloria Real toda cifrada.

273 For instance the following:—

Passáram ja por mim loucos verdores
do fresco Abril da humana vaidade;
Primavera tam fora da verdade,
que as flores sam engano, o fruto errores.
Passáram ja por mim inuteys flores,
o Veraõ passou jà da ardente idade:
prazer acomodado à mocidade;
veneno da razam em bellas cores.
Bem creo que estou dellas retirado;
mas nam sey se de assaltos vaõs, tiranos,
que tem o entendimento ao jugo atado.
Porque mal me asseguram meus enganos,
que o fruto destas flores he passado,
se os costumes nam fogem como os annos.

274 They are contained in the first and fourth volumes of the Fuente de Aganippe, see page 279.

275 No es dar liberdad de consciencia, para introducir siempre escorias y licencias, sino advertir que un hombre grande puede hazer tal vez lo que quisiere, y es gravissime crimen el pedirlo cuenta; y mas, si se lo pide algun Pigmeo en estudios y en juizio.

276 Lo que ella (la poesia) solamente quiere,—es invencion, imagenes, affectos y alarde de todas sciencias.—And yet he has declared shortly before, that learning is not essential to poetry. It is not worth while to transcribe in the author’s own words, the other critical judgments here quoted.

277 Barbaso Machado, in his Lexicon of learned men, expressly says of Faria e Sousa, that he was indebted to his extraordinary talents and knowledge de ser venerado por Oraculo.

278 Those who understand, or imagine they understand Portuguese, may try how far it is practicable to translate verbally the commencement of one of these eclogues:—

Roque. He gram coisa bergonha ter no rosto;
a o tella nelle antrambos ugalmente,
agora a hum põto aqui ambos ha posto
A poys tàmen dos dous algó nõ mente
digeme, ò certo, se de mim Martinho
mal falou honte a aquella boa gente.
Afons. Se a todos lhe esquece o Samsodorninho,
como lhes lembrarias? Sò tratàmos
de dar ós bolos fim, a fim o binho.
Em tè, maes nom querer todos folgamos.

279 The commentary on the Lusiad is published separately. It is entitled, Lusiadas de Luis de Camoens, &c. commentadas por Manuel de Faria y Sousa. Madr. 1639, 4 parts, in 2 folio volumes. The commentary on the miscellaneous poems of Camoens is entitled: Rimas varias de Luis de Camoens, &c. commentadas por Man. de Faria y Sousa. Lisb. 1685, in 7 small folio volumes. The latter, therefore, was not printed until thirty-six years after the death of Faria e Sousa.

280 An abundant collection of comic sonnets, decimas, canções and epigrams by Noronha, may be found in the fifth volume of the Fenix renascida, already quoted.

281 A specimen shall be given here, little worthy as such fooleries are of perusal. The sonnet is written to rhymed endings (com consoantes forçados.)

Naõ socegue eu mais, que hum bonifrate,
De agoa sobre mim se vase hum pote,
As galas, que eu vestir, sejaõ picote,
Com sede me dem agua em açafate;
Se jogar o xadrez, me dem hum mate,
E jogando às trezentas hum capote,
Faltemme consoantes para hum mote,
E sem o ser me tenhaõ por orate;
Os licores, que beba, sejaõ mornos,
Os manjares, que coma, sejaõ frios,
Naõ passee mais ruo, que a dos fornos;
E para minhas chagas saltem fios,
Na cabeça por plumas traga cornos,
Se meus olhos por ti mais forem rios.

282 The language of this sonnet will enable the reader to form a right idea of the merits of the author, who was, however, much admired in the age in which he lived!

Desdourem-se as areas do Pactolo,
Turvem-se as claras aguas do Canópo,
O bebado de Bacco entorne o copo,
Rache a guitarra o franchinote Apollo.
Desencache-se o Ceo de polo a polo,
A douda Venus morra, e o seu cachopo,
Em fim pereça tudo quanto topo,
Que a Lereno matou o villaõ de Eolo.
Por Jesu Christo se entre maõs tomara
Este villaõ ruim, o Rei do vento,
Com hum vergalho de boy o debreara.
Por S. Pedro do Ceo, que hum momento
A miseravel alma lhe mandara
C’um piparote ao reino do tormento.

283 The Obras poeticas of Barbosa Bacellar were printed at Lisbon in the year 1716. The greater part consists of poems which are also dispersed through the Fenix renascida.

284 For instance, the following to a nightingale in a cage; a favourite theme with the Portuguese sonneteers:—

Ave gentil cativa, que os accentos
Inda dobras com tanta suavidade,
Como quando gozavas liberdade,
Sendo do cãpo Amfiaõ, Orfeo dos ventos:
Da vida livre os doces pensamentos
Perdestes junto à clara suavidade
De hum ribeirinho, que com falsidade
Grilhões guardava a teus cõtentamentos.
Eu tambem desse modo fuy cativo,
Que amor me tinha os laços emboscados
Na luz de huns claros olhos excellentes.
Mas tu vives alegre, eu triste vivo,
Com que somos conformes nos estados,
E somos na ventura diferentes.

285 The Portuguese Saudades must by no means be confounded with the Spanish Soledades in the style of Gongora. (See preceding vol. page 435). In the Portuguese word Saudade are singularly blended the significations of Saùde (a salutation), and Soledad (the Spanish word for solitude). Hence also the untranslatable adjective Saudoso.

286 In these Saudades Aonio thus discourses with flowers. He turns from one to another, and finds in each a peculiar sympathy with himself:—

Cada flor o detinha,
E a cada flor attento
Sequellas inferia ao seu tormento,
Huma rosa encarnada
Com melindres de bella.
Com presumpções de estrella
Fazia aqui galante
Ostentaçaõ de purpura brilhante:
Aonio commovido
Lhe disse eternecido:
Ay fermosa memoria,
Retrato de huma gloria,
Que possui taõ breve,
Nevoa ao Sol, fumo ao ar, ao vento neve,
Mal lograda fermosa,
Rosa defunta, quando a penas rosa.
Em huma mata verde
Hum jasmim odorifero nevava,
E derramando cheiro
Ao vento suavizava,
Quando Aonio passando,
As vezes a cabeça meneando,
Disse comsigo: Ah triste!
Quanto ha jà que me falta o brando alento
Daquella voz branda o doce acento,
Que alegre a meus ouvidos respirava,
Com que a vida animava,
Fazendo verdadeiras docemente
Mentiras do Oriente.

But these beautiful plays of fancy are protracted to a tedious length.

287

Ouvi de hum pastor triste
De injusto amor o sentimento justo.

288 De huma alma morta o sentimento vivo.

289

Porem vive a memoria
Na bronze de alma.

290 Some are included in the second volume of the Fenix renascida, and among them are the Saudades de Albano.

291 These comic tales and other poems by Freire de Andrada, are printed in the third volume of the Fenix renascida.

292

Naõ mais, Plataõ, cançada fantasia,
Que me tem cõ tres onças de discreto
Mais carregado jà, que huma elegia,
E mais sentencioso, que hum Soneto:
Levar á praça quero a livraria,
Vender da Instituta até o Decreto.
Com os Juristas Vinnios, e Donelos,
E os Letrados do tempo Machavelos.
Livros a meus estudos sempre ingratos,
Hoje vossa liçaõ deixo importuna;
Passome ao bairro jà dos mentecatos,
Só por avisinhar com a fortuna:
Cuidey fosseis a meus trabalhos gratos,
E do minhas paredes a coluna,
Fiey muito no tempo, andey errado;
Porque tratey o Mundo como honrado, &c.

293

Ja para as Musas faço outra mudança,
Divertindo entre burlas tanto engano,
Que por ver, se de gosto o lança hum dia,
Joga com dados falsos a alegria.

294

Os olhos de atrevidos ou de honrados
Naõ conhecem no Ceo luzes mais bellas.
Piratos sam do Sol, ja rebellados,
Outro Flandes emfim contra as estrellas.

295

Corada a boca està fazendo afrontes
As rosas que secar de inveja vemos.

296

Se he que me pedem campo, estou rendido,
Pois em dous olhos vejo o Sol partido.

297

Quem a casa destroe, aonde mora?
Muito mas o altar, onde se adora.

298

Naõ das fruto às aveças, comodo errado,
As lagrimas primeiro que o peccado.

299

Que o Demonio da carne acobardado
Foge da Cruz, e chega-se ao Cruzado.

The word Cruzado, which is the name of a Portuguese coin with the impression of a cross, may likewise signify a person who is crossed, or who bears the sign of the cross, or the cross of a military order.

300

Diz, que nasceo guerreiro—
No signo de Leão, que he deshumano.
Eu sey, que no do Tauro, e naõ me engano.

301

E se pecca no quinto mandamento,
Somente he por palavra, ou pensamento.

302

Tinha Narcisso assomos de soldado
Animados do tinto, e do palhete,
Porém este Annibal, este alentado
Melhor despeja os frascos, que o mosquete.
Sobremesa Leaõ com rosto irado,
O campo da batalha era o bofete,
Bizarrias nos traz já muito usadas.
Que ergueo sempre copas, joga espadas.
Meteo maõ trinta vezes na estacada,
Nunca ferio ninguem co’a columbrina,
Todos lhe sabem a cõpleiçaõ da espada,
Que he colerica sim, mas naõ sanguina.
Jà mais trouxe a tizona ensanguentada,
Sempre temava seca a disciplina,
Que he valente opilado alguem presume,
Por naõ trazer na espada o seu costume; &c.

303 There is only sufficient space for a short specimen of this prattling nonsense:—

Leva de amor privilegios
E de Diana licenças
Para castigo de brutos,
Para encanto de bellezas.
Contra as bellezas dos bosques,
E os moradores das penhas
Dos olhos fulmina rayos,
E das maõs despede settas.
Lastima, e horror a hum tempo
Monte, e valle representa,
Naquelle gemendo brutos,
Neste suspirando Deosas; &c.

304 Even this sonnet is inserted in the Fenix renascida as a sample of excellence:—

Naõ viste, ó Licio, o ar de horror vestido
Arrastar negras sombras enlutado?
Melancolico o Ceo como enfiado
No regaço da noite adormecido?
Naõ viste, que de luz destituido
Deo ao orbe celeste esse cuidado
O Sol, paludamente agonizado,
De opposiçaõ maligna comprehendido?
Pois agora verás no mal presente
Pela morte de Filis toda a esfera
Padecer alta dor, grave accidente.
Que se em fim nesta ordem, que se altera,
Por hum Sol eclipsado isto se sente
Por hum Sol já defunto que se espera?

305 The collection is entitled, Parnasso Lusitano de divinos e humanos versos, Lisb. 1733, in two vols. octavo. Several of Violante do Ceo’s poems, both Portuguese and Spanish, particularly sonnets, are included in the first volume of the Fenix renascida.

306 The whole sonnet is here subjoined. Were it not for the celebrity of the authoress, it would scarcely be worth while to augment this collection of examples by such a specimen:—

Musas, que no jardim do Rey do dia
Soltando a doce voz, prendeis o vento:
Deidades, que admirando o pensamento
As flores augmentais, que Apollo cria;
Deixay, deixay do Sol a companhia,
Que fazendo invejoso o Firmamento
Huma Lua, que he Sol, e que he portento,
Hum jardim vos fabrica de harmonia.
E porque naõ cuideis que tal ventura
Póde pagar tributo á variedade
Pelo que tem de Lua a luz mais pura:
Sabey que por mercé da divinidade,
Este jardim canoro se assegura
Com o muro immortal da eternidade.

307

Si fue para tal Sol el mundo Occaso,
Tambien es de tal Sol el ciel Oriente.

308

Tu que Arraes deves ser da vital barca
Que navega no mar do mal tyranno,
Novo Galeno, Apollo Lusitano,
Medico em fim do Portuguez Monarca.

309 The following is a patriotic sonnet in question and answer. Violante do Ceo could not easily have paid a more affected compliment to King John IV.

Que logras Portugal? Hum rey perfeito.
Quem o cõstituîo? Sacra piedade.
Que alcançaste com elle? A liberdade.
Que liberdade tens? Serlhe sujeito.
Que tens na sujeição? Hõra, e proveito.
Que he o novo Rey? Quasi deidade.
Que ostenta nas acções? Felicidade.
E que tem de feliz? Ser por Deos feito.
Que eras antes delle? Hum labyrinto.
Que te julgas agora? Hum firmamento.
Temes alguem? Naõ temo a mesma Parca.
Sentes alguma pena? Huma só sinto.
Qual he? Naõ ser hum mundo, ou naõ ser cento,
Para ser mais capaz de tal Monarca.

310 The five escutcheons which constitute the Portuguese arms.

311 This interminable epistle commences thus:—

Já que haveis de surcar as crystalinas
Aguas da Foz do Tejo áquellas prayas,
Que o mundo vio ao tremolar das Quinas.
Em quanto as vossas voadoras fayas
As azas desfraldando, levaõ ao vento,
Seguindo as suas prateadas rayas;
Ouvi o rouco som deste instrumento,
Que inda que toca, os pontos desentoa,
Que he differente a voz do pensamento.
Naõ julgueis o que he pelo que soa,
Que se na citra do papel a penna
Toca suave, rijamente atroa; &c.

312 It is contained in the second vol. of the Fenix renascida.

313 The fame of this Bahia must at last have totally died away. Barbosa Machado does not mention him. The editor of the Fenix renascida seems, however, to have entertained a particular partiality for this rhymester; for Bahia’s witticisms occupy a considerable portion of that work.

314 The following octave, which forms the commencement of Bahia’s Polyphemus, may be quoted as the last specimen of this monstrous style. These lines were afterwards parodied:—

Donde Neptuno cõ grilhões de argento
Prende o robusto pé do Lilibeo,
Que ao Ceo dá gosto, á terra dá tormento,
Gloria de Jove, inferno de Tyfeo:
Entre hum campo, que tem no monte assento,
Colosso o monte, o campo Colysseo,
Cerra hum penhasco huma caverna fria,
Donde a noite naõ sahe, nem entre o dia.

315 Such humorous descriptions as the following, occur not unfrequently in Bahia’s long romances of travels:—

As mininas dos meus olhos
Choravaõ como mininas
Pedaços d’alma, que entaõ
De cantaro parecia.
Perlas netas naõ choravaõ,
Que como saõ taõ tenrinhas,
Inda naõ tem perlas netas,
A penas tem perlas filhas.
Dava-me a agua pela barba,
E creyo se affogaria,
O meu rosto, se o meu rosto
Naõ nadára com bexigas.
Mas a fim, que o dia, e hora
Da jornada me esquecia,
Porque sobre ingenium tardum
Sou tambem memoria infirma; &c.

316 This lyric eulogy is thus superscribed:—

Ao serenissimo Rey D. Affonso, quando mandou alistar por soldado a Santo Antonio de Lisboa.

Bahia advises his sovereign to suspend the further levying of troops. He says:—

Deixay mais listas, pois jà
Santo Antonio se alistou,
Que como suo pay livrou,
Sua patria livrarà.

317 Barbosa Machado notices him in an ostentatious manner, and enumerates all his writings.

318 In the following the idea, though false in itself, is interestingly expressed. The poet asserts, that he who tells his pain, suffers more than he who conceals it.

Na queixa o sentimento se engrãdece,
No silencio se afrouxa o sentimento,
Que se o lembrar da dor dobra o tormento,
Quem suffoca o pezar, menos padece.
No silencio talvez a dor se esquece;
Na voz naõ póde ter esquecimento,
Com que a dor no silencio perde o alento,
Quando a magoa na queixa reverdece.
Se a memoria do mal dobra o penoso,
E quem o diz desperta essa memoria,
Mais sente, que quem dentro a pena feixa;
Porque este no silencio tem repouso,
E aquelle augmenta a dor, se a faz notoria,
Pois renova o pezar, quando se queixa.

319 The following sonnet, which is poetically conceived and executed shall serve as an example. It is addressed to a laurel tree against which a sun-flower reclines:—

Aqui tens a fineza bem nascida,
Se aqui tens Febo a queixa bem fundada,
Pois te segue huma flor enamorada,
Se te foge huma planta endurecida.
Nasce huma Clicie de attençaõ vestida,
Junto a huma Dafne de aspereza armada,
Que onde a belleza blasonou de amada,
Naõ se queixe a belleza de offendida.
Eu amo, e meu amor nada consegue,
E porque de esperanças me despoje,
O que me desagrada me persegue:
Oh como estamos differentes hoje,
Que a ti te foge o tronco, a flor te segue,
A mim me segue o tronco, a flor me foge.

320 His works have been with great veneration preserved by different collectors, and were published by Domingos Carneiro, under the title of Poesias varias da Andre Nunes da Sylva, recolhidas, &c. Lisb. 1671, in one vol. octavo, dedicated to the author.

321 The following sonnet on the catholic worship of the cross may serve as a specimen:—

Se em golfo de sereas proceloso,
Empenho repetido do cuidado,
O sabio Grego, ao duro Mastro, atado
âs Sereas escapa cauteloso.
Eu, no mar deste mundo tormentoso
De Sirtes et Sereas povoado,
â vossa Cruz, Senhor, sempre abraçado
Os perigos escape venturoso.
Oh livraime, meu Deos, de tanto astuto
Laberintho, de tanto cego encanto,
Para que colha desta planta o fruto;
Que he justo, doce Amor, em risco tanto,
Se salva a Ulisses hum madeiro bruto,
Que a mim me salve este madeiro Santo.

322

O tumulo de Isabella,
Do firmamento flor, do campo estrella.

And then again:—

Muzico Rouxinol, joga animada
Es Orpheo aos sentidos, flor á vista.

323 The following is a stanza of one of his patriotic odes:—

Suspendese confuso o Castelhano
De ver de Portugal o brio ouzado,
E guarnecendo a praça, troca ufana
O trofeo em cuidado;
Retirarse procura,
Porem o Luzo altivo
A batalha o provoca vingativo;
A hum monte se encomenda cautelozo;
Azas o Luzo veste bellicozo,
Hum comete feroz, outro reziste,
Este se anima, aquelle cahe por terra,
Tudo he mal, tudo he pena, tudo he guerra,
Que neste duro empenho de Mavorte
Reina a ira, arde o fogo, impéra a morte.

324 Besides the Fenix renascida, which contains an account of most of the Portuguese sonneteers of the seventeenth century, there is a later, but upon the whole a much worse collection of the same sort, which comprises only two volumes, though it extends beyond the close of the eighteenth century. It is entitled:—Eccos que o clarim da Fama dà; Postilhaõ de Apollo, &c. (Echos which resound from the trumpet of Fame, or the Postillion of Apollo.) The title is still longer, and the remainder is in still worse taste. The collection was published at Lisbon in the year 1761.

325 Retiro de cuidados, e vida de Carlos e Rosaura, composto pelo Padre Matheus Ribeyro, &c. Lisb. 1688. 4 parts in 2 vol. oct.

326 Seram politico, abuso emendado, &c. por Felix da Castanheira Turacem. Lisb. 1704, in 4to. Some of the certificates of the Censors, which are printed with this work, are dated in 1695. In old Portuguese the word Politico, signifies all that belongs to polite manners. Hence Rodriguez Lobo’s works are entitled, Obras politicas, see page 227. Seram or seraõ properly signifies the place where an evening party, for some period, regularly assembles.—Felix de Castanheira’s name does not occur in Machado’s dictionary of learned men.

327 Escrevo entre o rasteiro, et o empolado, que saõ o Scilla, et Charibdes no vasto mar da locuçaõ: algumas vezes me detenho a fazer aquada no esprayado da digressão; mas faço quanto posso por naõ perder de vista o difficil porto da clareza; com alguma me vou explicando, sed libera nos à metaphora.

328 The following passage, which will serve as an example, is the description of the fair Isabella, an intelligent young lady, who sustains a principal character in these evening parties.

Acompanhavaõ na mesma quinta duas primas, et huma irmã à fermosa Isabel, belleza tam adorada nos curtos limites de Villa Franca, como applaudida nas melhores escolas de Lisboa: contava vinte Primaveras, tam filhas de seu rosto, que segundo os numerava por flores, parece, que tirava os annos das faces; entendimento sem aquelles estrondos que levando as mulheres a cõpositoras, lhe estragaõ o patrimonio de sezudas: vicio introduzido em as Damas, que se passaõ da almofada à escola, et do estrado à academia: como se natureza se deixasse vencer da industria, ou como se no governo de hum recato, naõ tivera harto que fazer hum entendimento. Era Isabel sezuda sem as affectaçoens de soberba; retirada sem os melindres de presumida; &c.

329 The discourse is not satirical, and notwithstanding the trivial nature of the subject, it recommends itself by style and diction. It commences thus:—

Nam ha mais dificil palestra que o do entendimento. Nos encontros de Marte, se he varonil o animo, sempre sahe victorioso o pulso:—nas contendas de Minerva, inda quando he claro o entendimento, se nevoa tal vez o discurso. Naquelles atè com as cegueiras triunfa a colera; nestas, inda com as perspicacias desatina a agudeza. Nunca pasmou o animo o Alexandre no mais subito assalto do inimigo, et suspendeo-se à vista do enlaçado labyrinto, que se lhe offereceo no templo; porque o primeiro pertencia ao braço, o segundo ao engenho. Monarca era Alexandre, naõ menos entendido, que valeroso, et para que se visse quanto mais difficuldades encontrava o juizo, que o valor, antes se resolveo a romper em huma temeridade, que a aconselhar huma resolução. Cortou he huma golpe o difficultoso laço: acabou a espada, o que temeo a agudeza.

330 To the honour of Portugal this book has been frequently reprinted. Its title is simply as follows:—Vida de Dom Joaõ de Castro, quarto Viso-Rey da India, por Jacinto Freire de Andrada.

Barbaso Machado’s catalogue states that the first edition appeared in folio in the year 1651. A neat pocket edition in octavo was published by a Lisbon bookseller in Paris in the year 1759. The work was translated into English in the seventeenth century by Henry Herringman, and shortly afterwards a latin translation was executed by the Italian Jesuit Del Rosso, who in reference to Andrada’s historical style, not injudiciously observes: Elegantiam sectatur, sed non ieiunam; acumen, sed minime illiberale. To men of education, wishing to learn the Portuguese language, there is no book that I would more strongly recommend than this excellent biography.

331 The following are his own words:—

Outros queriam que me valesse do estrepito de vozes novas, a que chamam Cultura, deixando a estrada limpa, por caminhos fragosos, et trocando com estimaçam pueril, o que he melhor, pelo que mais se usa. Mas como nam determiney lisongear a gostos estragados, quiz antes com a singeleza da verdade servir ao applauso dos melhores, que à fama popular, et errada.

332 Escreverei a vida de Dom Joaõ de Castro, varaõ ainda mayor que seu nome, mayor que suas victorias; cujas noticias saõ hoje no Oriente, de pays a filhos, hum livro successivo, conservandose a fama de suas obras sempre viva; et nòs ajudaremos o pregaõ universal de sua gloria cõ este pequeno brádo: porque duraõ as memorias menos nas tradiçoens, que nos escritos.

333 One passage must be quoted as a specimen of Portuguese classical prose: it relates to the conquest of an Indian garrison.

Entràraõ os nossos de envolta com os Mouros a Cidade, onde os miseraveis se detinhaõ presos do amor, et lagrimas das mulheres, et filhos, que acompanhavaõ ja com piedade inutil, mais como testimanhas de seu sangue, que defensores d’elle; taes houve, que abraçadas com os maridos se deixavaõ trespassar de nossas lanças, inventando os miseraveis nova dor, como remedio novo; dos nossos soldados, huns as roubavaõ, outras as defendiaõ; quaes seguiaõ os affectos do tempo, que os da natureza. Algumas d’estas mulheres com desesperado amor se metiaõ por entre as esquadras armadas a buscar os seus mortos, mostrando animo para perder as vidas; lastimosas nas feridas alheas, sem lastima nas suas.

334 The following is the commencement of a speech of Coge Cofar to the Turkish soldiers, who had followed him to India.

Companheiros, et amigos, nam vos ensinarey a temer, nem a desprezar esses poucos Portugueses, que d’entro d’aquelles muros estais vendo encerrados, porque nã chegaõ a ser mais que homens, inda que saõ soldados. Em todo o Oriente atègora os acompanhou, ou servio a fortuna, et a fama das primeiras victorias lhes facilitou as outras. Com hum limitado poder fazem guerra ao mundo, nam podendo naturalmente durar hum Imperio sem forças, sustentado na opiniaõ, ou fraqueza dos que lhes saõ sugeitos. Apenas tem quinhentos homens naquella fortaleza, os mais d’elles soldados de presidio, que sempre custumaõ ser os pobres, ou os inuteis; por terra naõ podem ter soccorro, os do màr lhes tem cerrado o inverno.

335 A good account of the mode in which the Portuguese language was disfigured by the introduction of French words and phrases, may be found in the fourth volume of the Memorias de Litteratura Portugueza, (Lisb. 1793,) in a treatise by Antonio de Naves Pereira, on the language of the best Portuguese writers of the sixteenth century. These Memorias must, in the course of the present work, be more particularly noticed.

336 Even a learned Portuguese, well acquainted with the literature of his country, of whom I made enquiries respecting the fate of the Academia Portugueza, could give me no further information than that the institution was no longer in existence.

337 The Memorias da Academia Real das Sciencias de Lisboa, in which that academy exhibits its labours for the advancement of knowledge, more particularly of the mathematical and physical sciences, are totally distinct from the Memorias de Litteratura Portugueza, which have been published by that academy since the year 1792. These last Memorias consist partly of philological and critical treatises on the Portuguese language and literature, and partly investigations relating to the ancient history and constitution of Portugal. The singular union of two departments so essentially distinct, arose out of the French idea of littérature, which had been adopted in Portugal. The worthy members of the academy well might, as indeed they intimately did, find it difficult to determine what was to be called literature. To reconcile all opinions, therefore, they included under that title national history. Germans, however, are by no means entitled to make this mistake, a subject of reproach, while they continue to employ the comprehensive word literature to designate merely the knowledge of books.—I have seen as yet only six volumes of the Memorias de Litteratura Portugueza. The sixth was published in the year 1796.

338 Barbosa Machado, in his dictionary of learned men, gives a catalogue of the writings of the Count da Ericeyra, including those which remained unprinted up to the year 1747. None of these unprinted works have, it seems, been submitted to the press since that period, though they comprise a whole collection of the minor Obras Poeticas of the author, together with several prose works, on subjects of general utility; as for example, a Methodo dos Estudos (Plan of Study.)

339 Henriqueida, poema heroico, &c. composto pelo illustrissimo e excellentissimo Conde da Ericeyra D. Francisco Xavier de Menezes, &c. (including all the titles of the Count), Lisboa occidental, 1741, in 4to. The distinction of Lisboa oriental and Lisboa occidental is founded on an ecclesiastical division of the city.

340 See page 246.

341 The poem commences thus:—

Eu canto as Armas, e o Varaõ famoso,
Que deo a Portugal principio Regio,
Conseguindo por forte, e generoso,
Em guerra, e paz o nome mais egregio;
E animado de espirito glorioso
Castigou dos infieis o sacrilegio
Deixando por prudente, e por ousado,
Nas virtudes o Imperio eternizado.
Europa foy da espada fulminante
Teatro illustre, victima gloriosa,
Asia vio no seu braço a Cruz brilhante,
E ficou do seu nome temerosa:
De Africa a gente barbara, e triumfante
Selhe postrou rendida, e receosa,
Para ser fundador de hum quinto Imperio
Que do Mundo domine outro Emisferio.

342

Naõ Calliope heroica agora invoco.
Tu me inspira, ó Deidade, &c.

343 The following is part of the picturesque description of Henry’s entrance into the sybil’s cave.

Da horrenda gruta e entrada defendiaõ
Agudas folhas da arvore do Averno,
E enlaçadas raizes, que se uniaõ,
Mais que de Gordio no embaraço eterno:
Penhascos desde a terra ao Ceo sobiaõ
Lubricos os fez tanto o frio inverno,
Que Henrique vio, subindo resolutos,
Precipitarse os mais velozes brutos.
O mar, e a terra em horrida disputa
Gritavaõ com clamores desmedidos;
Que naõ entrassem na funesta gruta
Os que assim o intentavaõ presumidos:
A constancia mais forte, e resoluta,
De ondas, e rochas tragicos bramidos,
Temia vendo unirse em dura guerra
Contra hum sò coraçaõ o Mar, e a Terra.

344

Aves, penhascos, feras, troncos, ramas,
O Heroe venceo, e os mesmos elementos,
Pois fez o coraçaõ com vivas chamas
Secar as ondas, e acender os ventos.
Tu, diz Henrique, ó Genio, que me inflamas,
De sacrilegos livra os meus intentos;
Deixarey hum perigo, que se encobre,
Venerando ao sagrado hum medo nobre.

345

Exaltando o valor, e a fermosura
Em dous tronos os Principes sentados,
Na sala da mais rara arquitetura
Os Generaes esperaõ convocados:
A ouvir da gruta a incognita aventura
Alegres se apressaraõ, e adornados
De plumas, que elevando aos Ceos as glorias,
Escreveraõ sem letras as victorias.

346

No Porto as mesmas pedras das muralhas
Pareciaõ sensiveis aos clamores,
E quasi descobrirão as medalhas,
Que enterraraõ os claros fundadores:
Os povos ja taõ destros nas batalhas,
Que igualaõ os Soldados vencedores,
Ao pronto susto de pezar taõ alto
Se rendem à entrepreza deste assalto.

347 For example, in the first canto where Henry is compared to an eagle:—

Como no campo azul aves vorazes
De sangue, e pennas em diluvio vago,
Com o odio nativo contumazes
A terra inundaõ no funesto estrago,
Mas vendo do Aguia os voos efficazes,
Fogem do seu valor regio, e presago:
Assim vendo de Henrique o braço forte,
Fogem os Mouros da infalivel morte.

348 Thus, in the following stanza, where Henry, whose astonishment is to be described, is first compared to a frozen stream; then he is himself called a stream rich in virtues, and finally he is denominated a statue of fire and snow.

Rio, que corre em rapido desvelo
Parando ao forte impulso do Austro frio
Naõ muda o vago argente em duro gelo,
Que só rompe a prisaõ no ardente estio:
Como Henrique, que em nobre paralelo
He de virtudes caudeloso rio,
A hum perigo, a que heroico naõ se atreve,
Estatua ali se vio de fogo, e neve.

349 Lest it should appear that in this collection of examples justice had not been rendered to Ericeyra, three more stanzas, from the last canto of his poem, are here transcribed. The following passage is from the description of the last combat between Henry and Ali, his Moorish enemy.

Torrente de cristal, que arrebatada
Inunda os valles, e supèra os montes,
Exhalaçaõ sulfurea, que inflamada
Fulmina os torres, rasga os orisontes,
Vento setentrional, que em furia irada
Agita os mares, e congela as fontes,
De Deucalion o rapido diluvio,
Chamas do Ethna, ardores do Vesuvio.
Ainda que com seus rapidos effeitos
Causem no mundo estragos, e terrores,
A tanto impulso de cair desfeitos
Toda a izençaõ dos globos superiores,
Naõ sey se excedem dos valentes peitos
As nobres iras, e inclitos ardores,
Com que se vio ao impeto iracundo
Parar o Ceo, estremecerse o mundo.
Recebem os escudos taõ constantes
Os rayos nos seus globos refulgentes,
Que com tremor os braços arrogantes
Resistiraõ aos impetos ardentes:
Mas se os braços tremerão inconstantes,
Os escudos ficaraõ permanentes,
E todos do valor pelos effeitos
Viraõ tremer os braços, naõ os peitos.

350 The author introduces his plays of wit in a song to the miraculous image of Senhor Jesus de Pedra, (Lord Jesus of Stone), which was celebrated for its power of exciting in sinners a feeling of bitter repentance:—

Nessa Cruz (meu bom Jesus)
Dar sinal de vós quereis,
Quando eu cuido, que fareis
De nós o sinal da Cruz.
Para contrições lograr
Essa Pedra Almas desperta:
Mas quando huma pedra acerta,
A quem naõ fará chorar?
Mais rica Pedra naõ deo
A terra, que a manifesta
Taõ única, que só esta
Por milagre appareceo.
Se a compungir-se haõ de vir
Os Fieis, que vos vem buscar,
Se trouxerem que chorar,
Sempre levaõ que sentir, &c.

351 Here are two of the most intelligible; the first is on a barber who has an evil tongue:—

Se a tua lingua trabalha
Do credito, e honra em mingoa,
Face-me a barba co a lingoa,
Que corta mais que a navalha.

The following is addressed to an old man who paints his eyebrows:—

Deixe, ó Licio, o teu cuidado
Desse pincel o aparelho;
Que a tua Dama por velho
Nem te póde ver pintado.

352 His sonnet on a rose growing over the grave of a lady, deserves to be transcribed:—

Se essa Flor he padraõ, que à formosura
Erigio nesse jaspe a natureza;
Mal recorda os triunfos da belleza,
Se se funda no horror da sepultura.
Se até nas cinzas ostentar procura
Floridas producções a gentileza;
A mesma Rosa, a quem de flor se preza,
Que he caduco o seu ser hoje assegura;
O quanto ao desengano nos convida,
Ver hoje o fim, a que apressada corre
Desde que nasce a flor da humana vida!
Pois bem nos mostraõ (já a razaõ discorre)
Huma flor sepultada, outra nacida,
Quaõ perto está o que nace, do que morre.

353 For this little notice I am indebted to the verbal information of a literary Portuguese, through whose means I could have obtained from Lisbon, the name of this Hebrew dramatist, had the recording it been an object of importance.

354 I have seen two of these collections. The oldest, printed in the year 1746, is entitled, Operas Portuguezas que se representaram nos theatros publicos desta Corte, &c. It contains eight dramas in two octavo volumes. The latest collection is entitled Theatro comico Portuguez, ou Collecçaõ das Operas Portuguezas que se representaram, &c. in two octavo volumes, fourth edition, Lisbon, 1787. As to any merit which may be discovered in these collections they are nearly equal.

355 To shew that no injustice is done to the author, it will be sufficient to quote some of the witticisms, by which Æsop distinguishes himself in the first act:—

Zeno. Donde Esopo vás? Tu naõ ouves? Com quem fallo eu?

Esop. He comigo?

Zen. Sim.

Esop. Eu naõ me chamo Esopo Vaz, sou Esopo só, nú, e espurio como minha mãi me pario.

Zen. Aonde hias, entremetido?

Esop. Se eu fora entremetido perguntára a Vossa Mercé para que nos traz hoje a esta grande feira.

Zen. Para vender-vos a todos tres, pois todos tres sois intoleraveis pelas vossas manhas, porque tu és hum bebado, e tu hum ladraõ.

Esop. Visto isso, quem comprar a este sendo ladraõ, comprao siza, e tudo. E eu, Senhor, quaes saõ as minhas habilidades, ou virtudes?

Zen. Saõ boas; primeiramente mexiriqueiro, e bacharel.

Esop. Se eu fora Bacharel soubera Direito; seu eu soubera. Direito eu me endereitára, e naõ fora corcovado; naõ he por ahi que vai o gato ás filhozes; tem mais de que se accuse? &c.

356 The following is the commencement of the trial of wit:—

Xant. Está com subtileza. Ora dize-me; como te chamaõ?

Esop. A mim chamaõ-me como me querem chamar; naõ ha meia hora que huns me chamáraõ Poeta, e outros carcunda.

Xant. Pergunto o teu nome.

Esop. Eu, Senhor, com perdaõ de Vossa Mercé chamo-me Esopo.

Xant. Donde nasceste?

Esop. Do ventre de minha mãi.

Xant. Naõ me entendes? Em que lugar nasceste?

Esop. Tambem naõ me disse minha mãi se me pario em lugar alto, ou baixo; mas cuido que foi ahi a algures ao pé de alguma cousa.

Periand. Ennio, o escravo tem atacado ao Filosofo nosso Mestre.

Xant. Ou és mui simples, ou mui velhaco; pergunto-te, de donde és natural?

Esop. A’ que d’El Rei, Senhor, eu sou legitimo, naõ sou natural.

Xant. Valha-te Deos; aonde he a tua patria?

Esop. Isso he outra cousa; sou de donde me vai bem, que ahi he a minha terra.

357 The commencement of this duet will serve as a specimen of the verse of these operas.

Euripedes. Ingrata filha!
Filena. Brava mãisinha!
Eurip. Sempre doudinha
Te hei de encontrar!
Filen. Sempre doudinha
Me ha de chamar?
Eurip. Tu com amores!
Filen. Eu! Naõ ha tal.
Eurip. Para que negas?
Filen. Eu! Naõ ha tal.
Eurip. Eu bem ouvia,
Que lhe dizias,
Que lhe querias,
E que morrias;
Tudo sei já.
Filen. Basta mãisinha
De consumir-me
Ai, ouça cá.
Eurip. Ai, guarda lá.
Amb. Naõ quer ouvir-me?
Filen. Ai, ouça cá.
Eurip. Ai, guarda lá.

358 Obras de Claudio Manoel da Costa, &c. Coimbra 1768, in 8vo. The preface in which this amiable author unaffectedly communicates some notices respecting himself, is a very instructive contribution to the history of Portuguese poetry.

359 The following may serve as a specimen of the modern style of the Portuguese sonnet:—

Onde estou? Este sitio desconhêço:
Quem fez taõ differente aquelle prado!
Tudo outra natureza tem tomado;
E em contemplallo timido esmoreço.
Huma fonte aqui houve; eu naõ me esqueço
De estar a ella hum dia reclinado
Alli em valle hum monte esta mudado.
Quanto póde dos annos o progresso!
Arvores aqui vi taõ florescentes,
Que faziaõ perpetua a primavera:
Nem troncos vejo agora decadentes.
Eu me engano: a regiaõ esta naõ era.
Mas que venho a estranhar, se estaõ prezentes
Meus males, com que tudo degenera.

360 For example:—

Nize? Nize? onde estás? Aonde espera
Achar-te huma alma, que por ti suspira:
Se quanto a vista se dilata, e gira,
Tanto mais de encontrar-te dezespera!
Ah se ao menos teu nome ouvir pudéra
Entre esta aura suave, que respira!
Nize, cuido, que diz; mas he mentira.
Nize, cuidei que ouvia; e tal naõ era.
Grutas, troncos, penhascos da espessura,
Se o meu bem, se a minha alma em vós se esconde,
Mostray, mostray-me a sua formozura.
Nem ao menos o ecco me responde!
Ah como he certa a minha desventura!
Nize? Nize? onde estás? aonde? aonde?

361 One of Da Costa’s epicedios on the death of a friend commences thus:—

Commigo fallas; eu te escuto; eu vejo,
Quanto a pezar de meu lethargo, e pejo,
Me intentas persuadir, ò sombra muda,
Que tudo ignora, quem te naõ estuda.
Há poucas horas, que hum activo alento
Te dirigia o ardente movimento;
E em breve instante (oh dor!) em breve instante
Se torna em luto o resplendor brilhante.
Arrebatado em vaõ te solicito
Por qualquer parte, que se estenda o grito:
E aos eccos, ao clamor, que aos troncos passa,
(Funestissimo avizo da desgraça)
Apenas falla, apenas me responde
O dezengano, que esta penha esconde; &c.

362 Tornou innocentes os genios; restituio ao mundo a justiça, says Da Costa, in allusion to the dreaded Pombal; for this minister’s rigid system of judicial reform rendered him at first an object of terror.

363 For example, the poet says to his lyre, which he proposes to abandon:—

Amei-te (eu o confesso)
E fosse noite, ou dia,
Já mais tua harmonia
Me viste abandonar.
Qualquer penozo excesso,
Que atormentasse esta alma;
A teu obzequio em calma
Eu pude serenar.
Ah! Quantas vezes, quantas
Do somno despertando,
Doce instrumento brando,
Te pude temperar!
Só tu (disse) me encantas;
Tu só, bello instrumento,
Tu es o meu alento
Tu o meu bem serás.
Vê, de meu fogo ardente,
Qual he o activo imperio:
Que em todo emisferio
Se attende respirar.
O coraçaõ que sente
Aquelle incendio antigo,
No mesmo mal, que sigo,
Todo o favor me dá.

364 For example, in this passage:—

Sentado junto ao rio,
Me lembro, fiel Pastora,
Daquella feliz hora,
Que n’alma impressa está.
Que triste eu tinha estado,
Ao ver teu rosto irado!
Mas quando he, que tu viste
Hum triste
Respirar!
De Filis, de Lizarda
Aqui entre desvelos,
Me pede amantes zelos
A causa de meu mal.
Alegre o seu semblante
Se muda a cada instante:
Mas quando he, que tu viste
Hum triste
Respirar!
Aqui colhendo flores
Mimosa a Ninfa cara,
Hum ramo me prepara,
Talvez por me agradar:
Anarda alli se agasta;
Dalizo aqui se affasta:
Mas quando he, que tu viste
Hum triste
Respirar!

365 The following, which is the shortest of Da Costa’s cantatas, may be transcribed here, as a thing perfect in its kind:—

Naõ vejas, Nize amada,
A tua gentileza
No cristal dessa fonte. Ella le engana:
Pois retrata o suave,
E encobre o rigorozo. Os olhos bellos
Volta, volta a meu peito:
Verás, tyranna, em mil pedaços feito
Gemer hum coraçaõ: verás huma alma
Ancioza suspirar: verás hum rosto
Cheyo de pena, cheyo de desgosto.
Observa bem, contempla
Toda a mizera estampa. Retratada
Em hum copia viva
Verás distincta, e pura;
Nize cruel, a tua formosura.
Naõ te engane, ó bella Nize,
O cristal da fonte amena.
Que essa fonte he mui serena,
He muy brando esse cristal.
Se assim como vés teu rosto,
Viras, Nize, os seus effeitos,
Pode ser, que em nossos peitos
O tormento fosse igual.

366 Odes de Q. Horatio Flacco, &c. Lisb. 1781.

367 Satyras de Sulpicia, &c. Lisb. 1786.

368 Cartas de Ovidio, chamadas Heroides, &c. Lisb. 1789.

369 Comedias de Terencio, &c. Lisb. 1788.

370 Arminio, ou Alemanha Libertada, trad. de Aleman do Baron Schönaich. Lisb. 1791.

371 Lisboa reedificada, poema epico, por Miguel Mauricio Ramalho. Lisb. 1784.

372 Satyras e Elegias, por Miguel do Couto Guerreiro. Lisb. 1786.

373 Sonho, poema heroico, por Luis Rafael Soyé. Lisb. 1786.

374 Triumpho da Innocencia, poema epico, por José Anastasio da Costa. Lisb. 1785.

375 Lusitania transformada, por F. Alvares do Oriente. Lisb. 1781.

376 Gaticanea, &c. por J. J. de Carvalho. Lisb. 1781.

377 Obras poeticas de Pedro Antonio Correa Garçaõ. Lisb. 1778, in 8vo. Some of the poems in this collection seem to have been written about the middle of the eighteenth century. I have not been able to gather any particulars respecting the life of Garçaõ.

378 For example, in the Ode to Winter, which begins thus:—

Vê, Silvio, como sacondido o Inverno
As negras azas, sólta a grossa chuva!
Cobre os outeiros das erguidas serras
Humida nevoa.
Na longa costa brada o mar irado
Sobre os cachopos; borbotões de espuma
Erguem as ondas; as crueis cabeças
Nágoa negrejaõ.
O frio Noto, rigido soprando
Dobra os ulmeiros, os curraes derruba:
E o gado junto, pavido balando
Une os focinhos.

379 The following passage will afford a specimen of this and also of the didactic character of Garçaõ’s odes:—

Cobre a Virtude co’ as azas lubricas
O veloz tempo, logo que ao feretro
Cede o passo a Lisonja,
Rasgando a torpe mascara.
Com tardos passos calcando os tumulos
O Esquecimento, da maõ esqualida
Sólta as confusas cinzas,
Que espalha o vento rapido.
Mas eu ingrato, Silvio magnanimo,
Soffrer podia, que o canto melico
Esquecido deixasse
O teu nome magnifico?

380 See page 126.

381 It commences thus:—

Strophe.
Naõ Arabico incenso, ouro luzente,
Nem pérolas do Ganges,
Naõ tenho que offrecer-vos reverente
Malhas, arnezes, punicos alfanges
Mas soberbas Phalanges
De almos Hymnos Dirceos, q’immortaes tecem
Mil croas á Virtude, me obedecem.
Antistrophe.
Fuja o profano Vulgo, qual nos montes
O rebanho medroso
Quando vè fuzilar nos horizontes
O farpado corisco pavoroso,
Ouve o trovaõ ruidoso,
Correndo pelo valle se derrama,
E em seu balido o Pegureiro chama.
Epodo.
Nos mansos ares vejo
Já sobre as azas luzidas pezados
Meus fogosos Etontes, que banhados.
No doce, flavo Téjo
Os freios de diamantes mastigavaõ
Quando as Ninfas de rosas os croavaõ.

382 The commencement of this dythirambic deserves, on account of its literary singularity, to be transcribed here:—

Os brilhantes trançados enastrando
Com verde mirto, com cheirosas flores,
Nos lindos olhos vivo rutilando
O doce lume
Do cego Nume,
Alvas donzellas
A quem vos ama,
Da crespa rama
Que Bassareu
Ao mundo deo,
Co’ as brancas maõs no cópo crystallino
Lançai ligeiras
Louro Falerno, rubido Sabino,
Eia, voai,
Deitai, deitai;
Gró gró, tá tá,
Que cheio está.
Ora brindemos
As gentis Graças, castos Amores:
No mar lancemos
Rixas, tristezas, mágoas, temores. &c.

383 It is not easy to select a passage as a specimen; but the following, in which Garçaõ speaks of Portuguese poetry, may be quoted on account of its auxiliary interest.

Naõ busques pensamentos exquisitos
Em denegridas nuvens embrulhados;
Naõ tragas naõ metaforas violentas,
Imitando esse Corvo do Mondego,
Que entre os Cisnes do Téje anda grasnando:
Usa da pura lingua Portugueza,
Que aprendido já tens no bom Ferreira,
No Camões immortal, em Sousa, e Barros:
Em Grego naõ me escrevas, nem Latim;
Dá me conta da tua larga vida;
Desejo que me digas se inda preza
No pensamento trazes a Cachopa;
Se com tres companheiros n’uma banca
De panno verde ornada o Whist jogas;
Se ouves fallar Francez; e se inda lavra
O mal, de que hoje tantos adoecem;
Fallo daquella praga desastrada
Dos enfermos Poetas, que naõ querem
Os remedios tomar para sararem, &c.

384 For example, at the close of the epistle, which treats of the difficulties of house-keeping.

Que facil he sonhar felicidades!
Tu já rico me crês; eu já supponho,
Agora que te escrevo, e que te fallo:
Mas esta Scena subito se muda;
O Chico mostra rotos os çapatos;
Huma quer lenços, outra quer roupinhas,
O Nadegas dinheiro para a ceia;
A’ porta esta batendo o Alfaiate.
Se alguem aos caens lançou os patrios ossos;
Se foi traidor á Patria, se he falsario,
Seja lançado a filhos, e credores.

385

Sentemo-nos Senhores;
Que grave Tribunal! Que magestoso!
Mal sabe o Mundo agora, que pendente
Deste conclave está o seu destino.
Oh quanto, amada Patria, quanto deves
A teu bom Cidadaõ Aprigio Tafes,
Suando, e tressuando por salvarte
Do pélago profundo da Ignorancia,
Onde pobre jazias, atolada,
Entre pessimos Dramas corviqueiros! &c.

386 The following is a part of this patriotic apostrophe:—

Vós Manes do Ferreira, e de Miranda:
E tu, ó Gil Vincente, a quem as graças
Embaláraõ o berço, e te gravaraõ
Na honrada campa o nome de Terencio;
Esperai esperai, q’inda vingados,
E soltos vos vereis do esquecimento.
Illustres Portuguezes, no Theatro
Naõ negueis hum lugar ás vossas Musas:
Ellas, naõ as alheias, publicaráõ
De vossos bons Avôs os grandes feitos,
Que eternos soaráõ em seus Escritos:
E podeis esperar paga taõ nobre,
Se detestando parecer ingrato,
Lhe defenderdes o Paterno Ninho,
E quizerdes com honra agazalhallas.

387 In old and genuine Portuguese the word partida means parting, and has not the signification of the French partie.

388 Poesias de Paulino Cabral de Vasconcellos, &c. Porto, 1786, in 8vo. A second volume of these poems has been printed, but I have not seen it.

389 For example, the following sonnet on modern judges, who are at the same time men of fashion.

Vós que o mundo regeis, Padres conscriptos,
(O que eu vos naõ invéjo) e que prudentes
De promessas encheis aos pretendentes,
E de esperanças vans aos Réos afflictos:
Vós que lêdes processos infinitos;
Que soffreis cavilózos requerentes;
Cartas, memoriaes impertinentes;
E por fim castigaes poucos delictos;
Vós ficai-vos em paz; porque occupados
Naõ deveis ser com clausulas escriptas
De quem sem pleitos vive, e sem cuidados.
Basta-me só que ás vezes nas vizîtas.
As vêjaõ Petimetres namorados,
As ouçaõ sem desprêzo as Senhorîtas.

390 For example, the following:—

Ou fosse, Nize, em nós pouca cautella,
Ou que alguem presentisse o nosso enleyo,
Tudo se sábe já: tudo hé já cheio,
Qu’ algum cuidado ha muito nos disvella.
Dizem, qu’eu son feliz, que tu es bella;
E ás vêzes com satirico rodeio,
Hum murmûra, outra zomba, e sem receio
A fama cada qual nos atropella.
Mas se nunca se tapa a boca á gente,
E se amôr sempre activo nos devóra,
Porque aquella he mordaz, porque este ardente;
Adorêmo-nos pois como até agora:
Siga-se amôr; arraste-se a corrente;
E se o mundo fallar, que falle embóra.

391 Osmîa, tragedia de assumpto Portuguez, em cinco actos, coroada pela Academia Real das Sciencias de Lisboa, em 13 de Mayo de 1788. Segundo ediçaõ, Lisboa, 1795, in 4to.

392 A fragment from the scene in which Osmia first betrays a reciprocal love for the Prætor, will afford a specimen, though an imperfect one, of the merit of this tragedy.

Osmîa. Pretor, senaõ alcanço
Saber o que pertendo, mais naõ tenho
Que saber, ou que ouvir. A Eledia torno,
Que naõ longe deixei, ou tu m’a envia,
E á minha dor me deixa em tanto entregue.
Lelio. Se te agrada aggravar o duro aspecto
Da tua situaçaõ, fallemos della:
Naõ falta que dizer, e verás como
Sei prestar-me a teus votos, bem que sejaõ
Contrarios a meus proprios sentimentos.
Osmîa. Ah! cruel! como vejo em teu semblante
Reluzir a fereza que disfarças
D’uma falsa piedade na apparencia.
Lelio. Chamas falsa piedade a hum sentimento,
Que todo me transporta?
Osmîa. Que linguagem!
Lelio. E quanto soffro, Osmîa, sob o pezo
Do rigido silencio que m’imponho!
Osmîa. Mais naõ soffras, Pretor, vai explicar-te
Onde possas melhor ser percebido.
E que, naõ partes?
Lelio. Parto sim, Princeza!..
E que naõ farei eu por contentar-te?
Mas vê que o meu silencio.. a tua virtude..
Ah! que eu me precipito!
Osmîa, só.
Osmîa. Justos Deoses.
Valei-me! E que expressões.. que modo estranho
De persuadir!.. Que duro.. que terrivel
Incerto estado o meu! Ah! cara Eledia....

Eledia, who is apostrophized in the concluding line, is the Turdetanian prophetess who has begun to suspect the sentiments of Osmia.

393 The manner in which the interest rises cannot be developed in a fragment. One of the closing scenes may, however, be transcribed as a specimen. Osmia has made a promise to her husband to murder the Prætor. She meets him:—

Osmîa. Ah! porque a vida
Naõ cortas d’uma vez, sorte inhumana!
Lelio. Mas tal agitaçaõ!.... tanta amargura!
Osmîa. Pretor, naõ imagines.. naõ.. naõ creias,
Que a minha agitaçaõ.. naõ sei que digo.
Lelio. Prosegue, bella Osmîa, naõ m’escondas
O mal que teus espiritos transtorna.
Osmîa. Grata a teus beneficios, mas ligada
Com rigidas cadeias posso a penas
Dizer-te, que a virtude me levára
A lançar maõ de quanto m’offereces.
Que a gloria o requeria; que meu peito
(Sem poder desejallo) te acceitára
Taõ illustres, taõ grandes sacrificios;
Mas sou mais infeliz. Hum Deos irado
Me obriga.. a que naõ parta.. que despreze,
Lelio, teus grandes dons.. teus preciósos
Sublimes beneficios.. sorte insana,
Me condemna a viver infame vida....
E que te perca (oh Deos!) e que naõ possa
Compensar com meu sangue..
Lelio. Tu deliras?
Osmîa. Naõ Pretor, naõ deliro, sô pertendo,
Que o campo já levantes; que me deixes
Exhalar meu espirito opprimido
Em torno áquellas aras.. Mas naõ tardes....
Parte, parte daquí. He precioso
O tempo que esperdiças; naõ te exponhas....
Naõ posso dixer mais. Em paz me deixa.
Lelio. Que estranha confusão!
Osmîa. E inda naõ partes?
Que insania te detem!.. Infeliz! vai-te....

394 I have not had an opportunity of becoming sufficiently acquainted either with these Portuguese interludes or the comedies of Guita. A great number of interludes are printed at Lisbon.

395 Obras Poeticas de Nicolao Tolentino d’Almeida. Lisb. 1801; 2 volumes octavo.

396 The following sonnet on a gamester who has promised no longer to play at the pharo-bank, is not one of the wittiest pieces of the kind which might be selected from Tolentino’s works, but it is characteristic:—

A hum Taful, que protestou, naõ apontar à Banca.

Que tornas a apontar, prometto, e attesto,
Que eu, passaro bisnau, sino garoto,
Depois de já ter feito o mesmo voto,
Jógo o que trago, e jogarei de resto.
Seguimos os Tafues o mesmo aresto,
Que segue nas tormentas o Piloto;
Hum parolim desfeito, hum masto roto
Tem produzido muito vaõ protesto.
Ainda dos ardidos Jogadores
Vaõ as pragas subindo sobre o vento,
Já tornaõ para o jugo os taes Senhores.
He caso, em que naõ liga o juramento;
Qual parida, que grita com os dores,
E sabe prenhe no fim do regimento.

397 The following are a few stanzas from a satirical poem on war:—

Dizes que se compra Quina,
Porque altas febres desterra;
E que em Collegios se ensina,
Em huma Aula, a Arte da guerra,
Em outra, a da Medicina:
Que no frio, vasto Norte,
Cem Boerhaves eloquentes
Enchem de oire o cofre forte,
Porque perdidos doentes
Arrançaõ das maõs da morte:
Que alli mesmo grosso fruto
Colhe Saxe entre os Soldados,
Porque em minado reducto
Fez voar despedaçados
Dez mil homens n’hum minuto.

398 These translations are anonymously printed, and have never been regularly published. The design with which they are written, renders them, however, the more deserving of being known, since, according to the express declaration of the author, their object is,—“to counteract the too great predilection of the Portuguese nation for languishing pastoral poetry.” The commencement of the translation of Alexander’s Feast, shall now close the poetic portion of this selection of Portuguese extracts:—

Era a festa Real, que ao bellicozo
Macedonio, da Persia glorioso
Vencedor acclamava.
Excelso o Eroe brilhava
No solio majestozo.
Valentes Pares seus o rodeavaõ
Que de rosas e murta a frente ornavaõ
(Como ao valor compete se croavaõ.)
Thais mostrava ao regio lado airoza,
Qual outra oriental florente esposa,
Juventude e beldade radioza.
Feliz, feliz donzella!
Ninguem, se naõ o Eroe,
Ninguem, se naõ o Eroe,
Ninguem, se naõ o Eroe merece a bella.

399 Advertencias preliminares ao poema heroico da Henriqueida. See page 340.

400 O tenho (sc. o poema epico de Virgilio) pela obra humana, em que se achem menos imperfecções.

401 These critical Dissertações form an appendix to the Obras poeticas of Garçaõ, already noticed.

402 For example, in the following passage, in which Garçaõ justifies himself to the members of the Arcadian academy against the charge of arrogance:—

Naõ creio, ó Arcades, que em vossos corações se pervertesse a antiga sinceridade de costumes com taõ violenta metamorfose, que para reconciliar-me comvosco me seja preciso cantar a Palinodia. Vós estais offendidos? Eu ultrajei-vos? Havera entre Nós algum espirito taõ escravo da vangloria, que naõ possa, nem se atreva a soffrer a verdade? Chamar-me heis atrevido, porque sou zeloso da honra, e do credito da Arcadia? Porque naõ sei lisonjear-vos com fantasticas esperanças; porque vos naõ attribuo, se possivel he, maior merecimento do que o vosso? Ou finalmente porque naõ me atrevo a divulgar com soberba jactancia, que restauràmos a boa Poesia, e a verdadeira Eloquencia? Que peleijámos, e que vencemos? Naõ, Arcades, naõ sou taõ ingrato, que vos julgue destituidos de piedade, e de benevolencia.

403 This passage may likewise be transcribed, as a specimen of the Portuguese prose of the middle of the eighteenth century:—

Corre o tempo: ateia-se a epidemia; desprezaõ-se os bons Authores; naõ vale o exemplo da Antiguidade; apaga-se a memoria da Arte; e finalmente se transforma o genio da Naçaõ. Se no fim desta Epoca apparecesse huma Alma capaz de atalhar o damno, acha já com tantas forças o Inimigo, que ainda que adquira a honra de atacallo, raras vezes cólhe os louros do triunfo. Saõ taõ frequentes, e talvez taõ domesticos os exemplos, que naõ devo respeitallos. Prouvera Deos, ó Arcades, que ainda hoje em Portugal naõ avultassem mais as ruinas deste geral destroço, do que as miseraveis reliquias da restuida Lisboa. Só huma Academia, huma Sociedade de homens sabios, zelosos do bem, e da honra da sua Patria, he o Alexandre que póde cortar este Nó Gordiano, he o Achilles de que pende a expugnaçaõ de Troia.

404 See page 335.

405 Sobre a Poesia bucolica dos Poetas Portugueses. Memoria I. The continuation does not appear to have been published.

406 Espirito da lingoa Portugueza, extrahido das Decadas do insigno escritos Joaõ de Barros, in the third volume of the Memorias de Litt. Port.

407 Joaõ de Barros, exemplar de mais solida eloquencia Portuguesa; in the fourth volume of the Memorias de Litt. Port.

408 Analyse e combinações philosophicas sobre o elucaçaõ e estilo de Sà de Miranda, &c. in the fourth volume of the Mem. de Litt. Port.

409 See page 209.

410 The selection of extracts contained in this work may be closed by the following passage, which will afford a specimen of the recent style of didactic prose in the Portuguese language. The author is speaking of the value to be set on ancient and modern poetry.

Mas este concurso de circunstancias parece, que ainda naõ foi a causa suficiente da perfeiçaõ das Linguas: inda alli se diviza hum vacuo, que precisa ser occupado. Aqui vem a Poesia com toda a sua pompa e magestade, desatando os vóos, pulindo e aperfeiçoando os Idiomas, dando a tudo alma e vida, já elevando-se aos maiores assumptos nos louvores do Ente Supremo, e no panegyrico dos grandes homens, persuadindo a imitaçaõ das acções nobres, e dignas dos mais distinctos applausos. Ella lhe abre os seus thesouros; ella os enriquece; ella lhes dá força, elegancia, e harmonia, sem o que seriaõ huns cadaveres seccos, e inanimados. Sem a Poesia, nada seriaõ talvez os Gregos, e os Romanos, que tanto enchêraõ o mundo com o fama das suas victorias, com a grandeza das suas acções, e muito mais com a perfeiçaõ, com que cultiváraõ todas as artes de genio, de que tantos, e taõ admiraveis testemunhos nos deixáraõ principalmente nos seus escritos. A Poesia pois, que tendo entre os antigos hum caracter de harmonia muito diverso da Poesia moderna, veio pela ignorancia dos Seculos a tal decadencia, que pouco faltou para ficar inteiramente ignorada.

411 Ensayo critico, sobre qual seja o uso prudente das palavras &c. In the fourth volume of the Memorias de Litt. Port. The continuation is in the fifth volume.

412 It forms the commencement of the fifth volume of the Memorias de Litt. Port.

413 Compendio de Rhetorica Portuguesa, por Antonio de Teixeira a Magalhães. Lisb. 1782, in 8vo. I know nothing of this work except the title.

414 Rhetorica de Gisbert, traduzida do Frances. Lisb. 1789, in 8vo.

Transcriber’s Note:

Corrections listed in Errata have beeen made.

Obvious printer errors corrected silently.

Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.