Que nadie sepa mi sufrir

"Que nadie sepa mi sufrir" (Spanish pronunciation: [ke ˈnaðje ˈsepa mi suˈfɾiɾ]; "Let no one know my suffering"), also known as "Amor de mis amores" (pronounced [aˈmoɾ ðe mis aˈmoɾes]; "Love of my loves") is a song originally composed by Ángel Cabral [es] that has been recorded by numerous Spanish language artists such as Alberto Castillo, Julio Jaramillo and María Dolores Pradera.

The song "Que nadie sepa mi sufrir", was composed in 1936 by Ángel Cabral, with Spanish lyrics by Enrique Dizeo, both of Argentine origin, as a Peruvian waltz.

Almost twenty years after the song's initial South American release, during a Buenos Aires concert tour,[3] Edith Piaf heard it from the 1953 recording by Alberto Castillo.

[4] Michel Rivgauche's lyrics relate the chance meeting between the female singer and a man in the middle of a dense and festive crowd.

"The crowd acts as a sort of demiurge (creator), like destiny, playing with the human beings who are helpless against the vagaries of chance.