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In mezzo di duo amanti, onesta, altera - 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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In mezzo di duo amanti, onesta, altera

  • My lady stood between her lovers twain
  • Stately and proud, and with her there was one—
  • A lord who reigneth over gods and men—
  • And I on this side, and on that the sun.
  • Yet while she was engirdled by the rays
  • Of him who was more fair, all tenderly
  • To eyes of mine she turned her radiant gaze,
  • (O that she ne’er had been more stern to me!)
  • And now to gladness all the jealousy
  • Was quickly changed that I at first had felt
  • Within my heart for my bright enemy.
  • Then came a cloud with rainy tears to melt
  • Before his face, grown dark with sullen gloom
  • So much it vexed him thus to be o’ercome.
  • cxv

1339. See Mascetta, 464.

In more serious vein, but still exultant, is the following: