The Lusiad; Or, The Discovery of India by Camões1572 Part 1
Portuguese authorLuís Vaz de
Camões and the epic of the
Lusiads. At the centre of
The Lusiads is
Vasco da Gama's pioneer voyage via southern
Africa to
India in 1497-98. It was published in 1572. This translation is by
Sir Richard Burton, 1821-1890. It was translated earlier by
William Mickle 1735-1788.
https://archive.org/details/oslusadasthelu01camuoft
Camoens was born in
Lisbon in 1524, lost his father by shipwreck in infancy, and was educated by his mother at the
University of Coimbra. On leaving the university he appeared at court, where his graces of person and mind soon rendered him a favorite. Here a love affair with the
Donna Catarina de Atayde, whom the king also loved, caused his banishment to
Santarem. At this place he began the
Lusiad, and continued it on the expedition against the
Moors in Africa sent out by
John III., an expedition on which he displayed much valor and lost an eye. He was recalled to court, but jealousies soon drove him thence to India, whither he sailed in 1553, exclaiming, "
Ungrateful country, thou shall not possess my bones." In India his bravery and accomplishments won him friends, but his imprudences soon caused his exile to
China, where he accumulated a small fortune and finished his poem.
Happier circumstances permitted him to return to Goa; but on the way the ship laden with his fortune sank, and he escaped, saving only his poem. After sixteen years of misfortune abroad, Camoens returned to Lisbon in 1569.
The pestilence that was then raging delayed the publication of the Lusiad until 1572. The poem received little attention; a small pension was bestowed on the poet, but was soon withdrawn, and the unfortunate Camoens was left to die in an almshouse. On his death-bed he deplored the impending fate of his country, which he alone could see. "I have loved my country. I have returned not only to die on her bosom, but to die with her."
The Lusiad tells the story of the voyage of Vasco da Gama. The sailors of
Prince Henry of Portugal, commander of the Portuguese forces in Africa, had passed Cape Nam and discovered the
Cape of Storms, which the prince renamed the
Cape of Good Hope. His successor
Emmanuel, determined to carry out the work of his predecessor by sending out da
Gama to undertake the discovery of the southern passage to
India. The Portuguese were generally hostile to the undertaking, but da Gama, his brother, and his friend
Coello gathered a company, part of which consisted of malefactors whose sentence of death was reversed on condition that they undertake the voyage, and reached India.