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Solea lontana in sonno consolarme - 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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Solea lontana in sonno consolarme

  • My love was wont to comfort me in dreams,
  • Smiling with angel face from far away;
  • But now with gloom and dread the vision teems
  • And help is none, my terrors to allay.
  • For tender pity, joined to solemn grief
  • Full often in her face I seem to see,
  • And hear the thing that fills me with belief,
  • Yet strips my heart of all felicity.
  • ‘Dost thou remember not’, I hear her say,
  • ‘That final evening when we needs must part?
  • Late was the hour; I could no longer stay,
  • And left thee tearful, but I had no heart
  • To tell thee then what now is proved and plain:
  • Hope not on earth to see my face again.’
  • ccl

1347. Cochin, p. 115.

These forebodings were only too well founded, for it was while Petrarch was still in Italy that Laura died. His first sonnet afterwards is a wild, incoherent wail of despair, in which he recalls and invokes her face, her look, her bearing, her speech, her laughter, her soul, in all of which he needs must dwell and can feel or know no other sorrow now that he is deprived of these.