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L’aspetto sacro de la terra vostra - Francesco Petrarch, Some Love Songs [1915]

Edition used:

Some Love Songs of Petrarch, translated and annotated with a Biographical Introduction by William Dudley Foulke (Oxford University Press, 1915).

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L’aspetto sacro de la terra vostra

  • The sacred face of your dear land I see,
  • And pity for its evil fate it brings.
  • ‘Rise, wretched one!’ I cry; ‘what aileth thee?’
  • And the sight stirs my soul to higher things.
  • Then with this thought another doth contend
  • And asketh of me, ‘Wherefore dost thou flee?
  • Bethink thee! Why thy time thus vainly spend?
  • We must return our lady’s face to see.’
  • And while I mark the words, my heart grows cold,
  • Like one who doth some fateful message hear;
  • Then my first fancy doth return and hold
  • My spirit, while the other flees in fear.
  • And thus these thoughts in constant strife do dwell;
  • Which will prevail at last, I cannot tell.
  • lxviii

Sometimes in despair Petrarch prays for deliverance from his hopeless passion, as in a sonnet written April 6, 1338, a day regarded as the anniversary of the death of Christ, and eleven years after he had first met Laura in the church of Santa Clara.