Econlib

The Library

Other Sites

Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow Passa la nave mia colma d'oblio - Some Love Songs

Return to Title Page for Some Love Songs

Search this Title:

Also in the Library:

Subject Area: Literature

Passa la nave mia colma d’oblio - 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).

About Liberty Fund:

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals.


Passa la nave mia colma d’oblio

  • My bark the raging surges overwhelm,
  • Tossing at midnight on the winter sea
  • ’Twixt Scylla and Charybdis. At the helm
  • Sits Love, my master and my enemy.
  • At each oar stands some wicked thought and bold
  • That scoffs at death and shipwreck and the gale;
  • A driving blast, incessant, wet and cold
  • Of sighs and hopes and longings, strikes the sail;
  • Now tears rain hard in mists of wrath and scorn;
  • The weary sheets hang fluttering limp and drenched,
  • Twisted by ignorance, by error torn,
  • And my two beacon lights in gloom are quenched.
  • Amid these waves knowledge and skill are vain,
  • And I despair of reaching port again.
  • clxxxix

1338. See Mascetta, p. 325.

Sometimes he resolves to break off his unhappy attachment and even imagines he has succeeded in doing so, as in the following madrigal.