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Ite, rime dolenti, al duro sasso - 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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Ite, rime dolenti, al duro sasso

  • Go, mourning rhymes, unto the senseless stone
  • That hides my precious treasure in the ground;
  • There call her, she will answer from her throne,
  • Although her body to the earth is bound.
  • Tell her that I am weary of my days,
  • Tossing for ever on this angry sea;
  • I fain must follow, step by step, the ways
  • She trod, and gather leaves of memory.
  • Only of her, living or dead, I sing
  • (Nay she will always live—immortal made),
  • That the dull world shall with her praises ring,
  • And bring her sweet renown that will not fade.
  • O may she run to meet me when I die,
  • And call, and lead me to her home on high
  • cccxxxiii

So deep is his grief that he believes he could not live except for that which is his greatest consolation, the appearance of Laura in his dreams.