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Quel vago impallidir, che ’l dolce riso - 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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Quel vago impallidir, che ’l dolce riso

  • That pallid hue, which clothed her gentle smile
  • In tender mist, gave with such delicate grace
  • Its kindly welcome that my heart the while
  • Leaped forth in greeting through my eager face.
  • Then did I know how souls in Paradise
  • Do gaze on one another. I saw revealed
  • That pitying thought, unmarked by other eyes
  • Than mine alone which to all else were sealed.
  • Every angelic look or gracious mien
  • Of womankind where love might chance to be,
  • Was proud disdain to that which I have seen.
  • Silent she asked (as it did seem to me)
  • While down to earth her gracious eyes did bend,
  • ‘Who drives away from me my faithful friend?’
  • cxxiii

1345. See De Sade, ii. p. 223.

And when Petrarch is away her image is constantly before him—witness the following sonnet, composed as early as 1333, while he was journeying through the forest of Ardennes on his way back from Flanders, as well as the succeeding ode, which was written at a much later period on one of his journeys in Italy and shortly before his return to Vaucluse, possibly in 1345 while he was at Verona.