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I’ vidi in terra angelici costumi - 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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I’ vidi in terra angelici costumi

  • Here upon earth I saw those heavenly charms
  • Unique in all the world; those angel ways
  • Whose memory both delights me and alarms,
  • Till all I see seems shadow, dream and haze.
  • In tears I saw those two entrancing eyes
  • Whose beauty was the envy of the sun,
  • And heard the sound of such sweet words and sighs
  • As made the rivers stand and mountains run,
  • Love, honour, tender pity, grief sincere,
  • Weeping did utter sweeter melodies
  • Than any that the world is wont to hear;
  • While heaven attentive, drank the harmonies,
  • And every leaf on every branch was stilled;
  • With such delight the charmèd air was filled;
  • clvi

1346. See De Sade, ii. p. 260.

De Sade thinks some sorrow had befallen Laura perhaps the death of her mother, but this seems unnecessary for the explanation of the sonnet. The combination of love, honour, pity, and grief might well refer to her pity and sorrow for her lover from whom her honour required her to withhold her favours. Tears from such a cause might well account for Petrarch’s ecstasies.