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Fifteen sonnets of Petrarch

Francesco Petrarca

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Book Excerpt: 
. . . possible, by bringing such a book into the open air, to separate it from the grimness of commentators, and bring it back to life and light and Italy? The beautiful earth is the same as when this poetry and passion were new; there is the same sunlight, the same blue water and green grass; yonder pleasure-boat might bear, for aught we know, the friends and lovers of five centuries ago; Petrarch and Laura might be there, with Boccaccio and Fiammetta as comrades, and with Chaucer as their stranger guest. It bears, at any rate, if I know its voyagers, eyes as lustrous, voices as sweet. With the world thus young, beauty eternal, fancy free, why should these delicious Italian pages exist but to be tortured into grammatical examples?-viii- Is there no reward to be imagined for a delightful book that can match Browning’s fantastic burial of a tedious one? When it has sufficiently basked in sunshine, and been cooled in pure salt air, when it has bathed in heaped clover, and . . . Read More

Community Reviews

An ode to Petrarch's unrequited love Laura, written in varying rhyme schemes such as a-b-a-b or a-b-b-a. These 15 sonnets are part of a larger piece of work and in this edition only circa 200 lines are presented. My proficiency in the old-Italian style in which it was written is insufficient to be a

I knew I was in for a treat when I read the introduction, by Thomas Wentworth Higginson, which was just so incredibly beautiful, take this example,
“There is to-day such a live sparkle on the water, such a luminous freshness on the grass, that it seems, as is often the case in early June, as if al