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Ballad I: Lassare il velo o per sole o per ombra - 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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Ballad I

Lassare il velo o per sole o per ombra

  • Lady, I have not seen you draw aside
  • In shadow dark or under skies serene
  • The veil wherein your gracious face doth hide
  • Since first you did perceive the passion keen
  • That from my heart doth drive all else away.
  • While I could keep my precious thoughts concealed—
  • Those dreams that all my burning senses slay—
  • I saw compassion in your face revealed,
  • But after Love his yearning did betray,
  • A veil around your golden locks you threw,
  • And your kind glance within itself withdrew.
  • What most I cherish now no more I see—
  • So close that heavy veil restraineth me,
  • Which both in summer airs and wintry skies
  • Doth darken the sweet light of your fair eyes.
  • xi

This reserve appears to have continued (perhaps intermittently) for a long period, for it is the subject of a sonnet written to Orso, Count of Anguillara, whom Petrarch visited at Capranica on his way to Rome in 1337, and from whom he afterwards received the laurel crown upon the Capitol.