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Peirol

From Wikiquote

Peirol or Peiròl (born c. 1160, fl. 1188–1222/1225, died in the 1220s) was an Auvergnat troubadour who wrote mostly cansos of courtly love in the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries. Thirty-four surviving poems written in Occitan have been attributed to him; of these, seventeen (sixteen of them love songs) have surviving melodies. He is sometimes called Peirol d'Auvergne or Peiròl d'Auvèrnha, and erroneously Pierol.

Quotes

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  • Gran talen ai qu'un baisar
    Li pogues tolre o emblar;
    É si pueis s'en iraissia,
    Volentiers lo li rendria.
    • I'm pining, from that lady gay
      A kiss to take or steal away;
      And should the deed her coyness pain,
      I'd freely give it back again.
    • Translated by Edgar Taylor, Lays of the Minnesingers and Troubadours (1825), p. 268, note
    • Cp. Catullus 5, l. 7, and Raoul de Soissons, from the Anthologie Françoise:
      How does my spirit eager pine,
      But once to press those lips of thine;— [...]
      And if the theft
        Thine ire awake,
      A hundred fold
        I'd give it back.
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