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Orso, e’ non furon mai fiumi nè stagni - 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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Orso, e’ non furon mai fiumi nè stagni

  • Orso, there never was a pool nor stream,
  • Nor sea (whereto all brooks and rivers run),
  • Nor shadow of a wall or hill or limb,
  • Nor mist, that bathes the earth and hides the sun,
  • No bar to feet, nor obstacle to sight
  • That frets me like that veil, which seems to say,
  • While it doth stifle all the gracious light
  • Of two fair eyes—‘Now weep and pine away.’
  • Her downcast look my greeting doth deny—
  • From modesty or pride? It kills my joy;
  • ’Twill be the cause that ere my time I die.
  • Her white hand too doth bring my heart annoy
  • That makes itself a barrier to mine eyes
  • And hides her face behind its frail disguise.
  • xxxviii

Petrarch’s remonstrances are gracefully expressed in the following sonnet, which greatly resembles the gallantries and conceits of the troubadours.