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Due rose fresche e còlte in paradiso - 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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Due rose fresche e còlte in paradiso

  • Two roses fresh that grew in Paradise
  • The day that May was born in all her pride,
  • As a fair gift, a lover, old and wise,
  • ’Twixt two who still were youthful, did divide;
  • And added such sweet speech and smile so gay
  • That e’en a savage heart to love would turn,
  • And glow and sparkle with an amorous ray;
  • And thus with changing hues their faces burn.
  • ‘Ne’er did the sun such pair of lovers see,’
  • Laughing (yet not without a sigh), he said,
  • And then, embracing each, he turned away.
  • Thus flowers and words he portioned; till in me
  • Around my heart a trembling gladness spread.
  • O blessed gift of speech! O joyful day!
  • ccxlv

Many and various are the conceits that appear everywhere throughout the Canzoniere. Some are mere mediaeval affectations, others, however, have a curious charm; for instance, the following where the lady Laura stands in the sunshine accompanied by Love and where the bright god of day and the poet himself are imagined as rivals for her favour.