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Per mezz’ i boschi inospiti e selvaggi - 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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Per mezz’ i boschi inospiti e selvaggi

  • Through forests inhospitable and drear
  • Where even men at arms in danger go,
  • I walk secure, and naught shall make me fear
  • Save the sun’s rays that full of love do glow.
  • And here I sing of her (O foolish dream)
  • Whom heaven cannot keep apart from me.
  • In pine and beech I see her, and there seem
  • Matrons and maids in her sweet company;
  • I hear her as the summer breezes pass,
  • In rustling leaves, in songs that fill the glades
  • And in the brooks that murmur through the grass,
  • Till the low music of these sylvan shades
  • Is grateful to my heart, save that the light
  • Of my sweet sun is too much quenched in night.
  • clxxvi

The foregoing sonnet, as well as the three canzoni which follow, illustrates the fact that Petrarch constantly surrounds his mistress with natural beauties and establishes an intimate and mysterious connexion between her and Nature.