Book Read Free

Collected Poetical Works of Francesco Petrarch

Page 34

by Francesco Petrarch


  Alas! that in the world grief only should endure.

  My song! in each sad change,

  These visions, as they rise, sweet, solemn, strange,

  But show how deeply in thy master’s breast

  The fond desire abides to die and be at rest.

  MACGREGOR.

  BALLATA I.

  Amor, quando fioria.

  HIS GRIEF AT SURVIVING HER IS MITIGATED BY THE CONSCIOUSNESS THAT SHE NOW KNOWS HIS HEART.

  Yes, Love, at that propitious time

  When hope was in its bloomy prime,

  And when I vainly fancied nigh

  The meed of all my constancy;

  Then sudden she, of whom I sought

  Compassion, from my sight was caught.

  O ruthless Death! O life severe!

  The one has sunk me deep in care,

  And darken’d cruelly my day,

  That shone with hope’s enlivening ray:

  The other, adverse to my will,

  Doth here on earth detain me still;

  And interdicts me to pursue

  Her, who from all its scenes withdrew:

  Yet in my heart resides the fair,

  For ever, ever present there;

  Who well perceives the ills that wait

  Upon my wretched, mortal state.

  NOTT.

  Yes, Love, while hope still bloom’d with me in pride,

  While seem’d of all my faith the guerdon nigh,

  She, upon whom for mercy I relied,

  Was ravish’d from my doting desolate eye.

  O ruthless Death! O life unwelcome! this

  Plunged me in deepest woe,

  And rudely crush’d my every hope of bliss;

  Against my will that keeps me here below,

  Who else would yearn to go,

  And join the sainted fair who left us late;

  Yet present every hour

  In my heart’s core there wields she her old power,

  And knows, whate’er my life, its every state!

  MACGREGOR.

  CANZONE IV.

  Tacer non posso, e temo non adopre.

  HE RECALLS HER MANY GRACES.

  Fain would I speak — too long has silence seal’d

  Lips that would gladly with my full heart move

  With one consent, and yield

  Homage to her who listens from above;

  Yet how can I, without thy prompting, Love,

  With mortal words e’er equal things divine,

  And picture faithfully

  The high humility whose chosen shrine

  Was that fair prison whence she now is free?

  Which held, erewhile, her gentle spirit, when

  So in my conscious heart her power began.

  That, instantly, I ran,

  — Alike o’ th’ year and me ’twas April then —

  From these gay meadows round sweet flowers to bind,

  Hoping rich pleasure at her eyes to find.

  The walls were alabaster, the roof gold,

  Ivory the doors, the sapphire windows lent

  Whence on my heart of old

  Its earliest sigh, as shall my last, was sent;

  In arrowy jets of fire thence came and went

  Arm’d messengers of love, whereof to think

  As then they were, with awe

  — Though now for them with laurel crown’d — I shrink

  Of one rare diamond, square, without a flaw,

  High in the midst a stately throne was placed

  Where sat the lovely lady all alone:

  In front a column shone

  Of crystal, and thereon each thought was traced

  In characters so clear, and quick, and true,

  By turns it gladden’d me and grieved to view.

  To weapons such as these, sharp, burning, bright,

  To the green glorious banner waved above,

  — ‘Gainst which would fail in fight

  Mars, Polypheme, Apollo, mighty Jove —

  While still my sorrow fresh and verdant throve,

  I stood defenceless, doom’d; her easy prey

  She led me as she chose

  Whence to escape I knew nor art nor way;

  But, as a friend, who, haply, grieves yet goes,

  Sees something still to lure his eyes and heart,

  Just so on her, for whom I am in thrall,

  Sole perfect work of all

  That graced her age, unable to depart,

  With such desire my rapt regards I set,

  As soon myself and misery to forget.

  On earth myself, my heart in Eden dwelt,

  Lost in sweet Lethe every other care,

  As my live frame I felt

  To marble turn, watching that wonder rare;

  When old in years, but youthful still in air,

  A lady briefly, quietly drew nigh,

  And thus beholding me,

  With reverent aspect and admiring eye,

  Kind offer made my counsellor to be:

  “My power,” she said, “is more than mortals know —

  Lighter than air, I, in an instant, make

  Their hearts exult or ache,

  I loose and bind whate’er is seen below;

  Thine eyes, upon that sun, as eagles’, bend,

  But to my words with willing ears attend.

  “The day when she was born, the stars that win

  Prosperity for man shone bright above;

  Their high glad homes within

  Each on the other smiled with gratulant love;

  Fair Venus, and, with gentle aspect, Jove

  The beautiful and lordly mansions held:

  Seem’d as each adverse light

  Throughout all heaven was darken’d and dispell’d,

  The sun ne’er look’d upon a day so bright;

  The air and earth rejoiced; the waves had rest

  By lake and river, and o’er ocean green:

  ‘Mid the enchanting scene

  One distant cloud alone my thought distress’d,

  Lest sometime it might be of tears the source

  Unless kind Heaven should elsewhere turn its course.

  “When first she enter’d on this life below,

  Which, to say sooth, not worthy was to hold,

  ’Twas strange to see her so

  Angelical and dear in baby mould;

  A snowy pearl she seem’d in finest gold;

  Next as she crawl’d, or totter’d with short pace,

  Wood, water, earth, and stone

  Grew green, and clear, and soft; with livelier grace

  The sward beneath her feet and fingers shone;

  With flowers the champain to her bright eyes smiled;

  At her sweet voice, babbling through lips that yet

  From Love’s own fount were wet,

  The hoarse wind silent grew, the tempest mild:

  Thus clearly showing to the dull blind world

  How much in her was heaven’s own light unfurl’d.

  “At length, her life’s third flowery epoch won,

  She, year by year, so grew in charms and worth,

  That ne’er, methinks, the sun

  Such gracefulness and beauty saw on earth;

  Her eyes so full of modesty and mirth,

  Music and welcome on her words so hung,

  That mute in her high praise,

  Which thine alone may sound, is every tongue:

  So bright her countenance with heavenly rays,

  Not long thy dazzled vision there may rest;

  From this her fair and fleshly tenement

  Such fire through thine is sent

  (Though gentler never kindled human breast),

  That yet I fear her sudden flight may be

  Too soon the cause of bitter grief to thee.”

  This said, she turn’d her to the rapid wheel

  Whereon she winds of mortal life the thread;

  Too true did she revealr />
  The doom of woe which darken’d o’er my head!

  A few brief years flew by,

  When she, for whom I so desire to die,

  By black and pitiless Death, who could not slay

  A fairer form than hers, was snatch’d away!

  MACGREGOR.

  SONNET LV.

  Or hai fatto l’ estremo di tua possa.

  DEATH MAY DEPRIVE HIM OF THE SIGHT OF HER BEAUTIES, BUT NOT OF THE MEMORY OF HER VIRTUES.

  Now hast thou shown, fell Death! thine utmost might.

  Through Love’s bright realm hast want and darkness spread,

  Hast now cropp’d beauty’s flower, its heavenly light

  Quench’d, and enclosed in the grave’s narrow bed;

  Now hast thou life despoil’d of all delight,

  Its ornament and sovereign honour shed:

  But fame and worth it is not thine to blight;

  These mock thy power, and sleep not with the dead.

  Be thine the mortal part; heaven holds the best,

  And, glorying in its brightness, brighter glows,

  While memory still records the great and good.

  O thou, in thine high triumph, angel blest!

  Let thy heart yield to pity of my woes,

  E’en as thy beauty here my soul subdued.

  DACRE.

  Now hast thou shown the utmost of thy might,

  O cruel Death! Love’s kingdom hast thou rent,

  And made it poor; in narrow grave hast pent

  The blooming flower of beauty and its light!

  Our wretched life thou hast despoil’d outright

  Of every honour, every ornament!

  But then her fame, her worth, by thee unblent,

  Shall still survive! — her dust is all thy right;

  The rest heaven holds, proud of her charms divine

  As of a brighter sun. Nor dies she here —

  Her memory lasts, to good men ever dear!

  O angel new, in thy celestial sphere

  Let pity now thy sainted heart incline,

  As here below thy beauty vanquish’d mine!

  CHARLEMONT.

  SONNET LVI.

  L’ aura e l’ odore e ‘l refrigerio e l’ ombra.

  HER OWN VIRTUES IMMORTALISE HER IN HEAVEN, AND HIS PRAISES ON EARTH.

  The air and scent, the comfort and the shade

  Of my sweet laurel, and its flowery sight,

  That to my weary life gave rest and light,

  Death, spoiler of the world, has lowly laid.

  As when the moon our sun’s eclipse has made,

  My lofty light has vanish’d so in night;

  For aid against himself I Death invite;

  With thoughts so dark does Love my breast invade.

  Thou didst but sleep, bright lady, a brief sleep,

  In bliss amid the chosen spirits to wake,

  Who gaze upon their God, distinct and near:

  And if my verse shall any value keep,

  Preserved and praised ‘mid noble minds to make

  Thy name, its memory shall be deathless here.

  MACGREGOR.

  The fragrant gale, and the refreshing shade

  Of my sweet laurel, and its verdant form,

  That were my shelter in life’s weary storm,

  Have felt the power that makes all nature fade:

  Now has my light been lost in gloomy shade,

  E’en as the sun behind his sister’s form:

  I call for Death to free me from Death’s storm,

  But Love descends and brings me better aid!

  He tells me, lady, that one moment’s sleep

  Alone was thine, and then thou didst awake

  Among the elect, and in thy Maker’s arms:

  And if my verse oblivion’s power can keep

  Aloof, thy name its place on earth-will take

  Where Genius still will dote upon thy charms!

  MOREHEAD.

  SONNET LVII.

  L’ ultimo, lasso! de’ miei giorni allegri.

  HE REVERTS TO THEIR LAST MEETING.

  The last, alas! of my bright days and glad

  — Few have been mine in this brief life below —

  Had come; I felt my heart as tepid snow,

  Presage, perchance, of days both dark and sad.

  As one in nerves, and pulse, and spirits bad,

  Who of some frequent fever waits the blow,

  E’en so I felt — for how could I foreknow

  Such near end of the half-joys I have had?

  Her beauteous eyes, in heaven now bright and bless’d

  With the pure light whence health and life descends,

  (Wretched and beggar’d leaving me behind,)

  With chaste and soul-lit beams our grief address’d:

  “Tarry ye here in peace, beloved friends,

  Though here no more, we yet shall there be join’d.”

  MACGREGOR.

  Ah me! the last of all my happy days

  (Not many happy days my years can show)

  Was come! I felt my heart as turn’d to snow,

  Presage, perhaps, that happiness decays!

  E’en as the man whose shivering frame betrays,

  And fluttering pulse, the ague’s coming blow;

  ’Twas thus I felt! — but could I therefore know

  How soon would end the bliss that never stays?

  Those eyes that now, in heaven’s delicious light,

  Drink in pure beams which life and glory rain,

  Just as they left mine, blinded, sunk in night,

  Seem’d thus to say, sparkling unwonted bright, —

  “Awhile, beloved friends, in peace remain,

  Oh, we shall yet elsewhere exchange fond looks again!”

  MOREHEAD.

  SONNET LVIII.

  O giorno, o ora, o ultimo momento.

  HE MOURNS HIS WANT OF PERCEPTION AT THAT MEETING.

  O Day, O hour, O moment sweetest, last,

  O stars conspired to make me poor indeed!

  O look too true, in which I seem’d to read.

  At parting, that my happiness was past;

  Now my full loss I know, I feel at last:

  Then I believed (ah! weak and idle creed!)

  ’Twas but a part alone I lost; instead,

  Was there a hope that flew not with the blast?

  For, even then, it was in heaven ordain’d

  That the sweet light of all my life should die:

  ’Twas written in her sadly-pensive eye!

  But mine unconscious of the truth remain’d;

  Or, what it would not see, to see refrain’d,

  That I might sink in sudden misery!

  MOREHEAD.

  Dark hour, last moment of that fatal day!

  Stars which to beggar me of bliss combined!

  O faithful glance, too well which seem’dst to say

  Farewell to me, farewell to peace of mind!

  Awaken’d now, my losses I survey:

  Alas! I fondly thought — thoughts weak and blind! —

  That absence would take part, not all, away;

  How many hopes it scatter’d to the wind.

  Heaven had already doom’d it otherwise,

  To quench for ever my life’s genial light,

  And in her sad sweet face ’twas written so.

  Surely a veil was placed around mine eyes,

  That blinded me to all before my sight,

  And sank at once my life in deepest woe.

  MACGREGOR.

  SONNET LIX.

  Quel vago, dolce, caro, onesto sguardo.

  HE SHOULD HAVE FORESEEN HIS LOSS IN THE UNUSUAL LUSTRE OF HER EYES.

  That glance of hers, pure, tender, clear, and sweet,

  Methought it said, “Take what thou canst while nigh;

  For here no more thou’lt see me, till on high

  From earth have mounted thy slow-moving feet.”

  O intellect than fore
st pard more fleet!

  Yet slow and dull thy sorrow to descry,

  How didst thou fail to see in her bright eye

  What since befell, whence I my ruin meet.

  Silently shining with a fire sublime,

  They said, “O friendly lights, which long have been

  Mirrors to us where gladly we were seen,

  Heaven waits for you, as ye shall know in time;

  Who bound us to the earth dissolves our bond,

  But wills in your despite that you shall live beyond.”

  MACGREGOR.

  CANZONE V.

  Solea dalla fontana di mia vita.

  MEMORY IS HIS ONLY SOLACE AND SUPPORT.

  I who was wont from life’s best fountain far

  So long to wander, searching land and sea,

  Pursuing not my pleasure, but my star,

  And alway, as Love knows who strengthen’d me,

  Ready in bitter exile to depart,

  For hope and memory both then fed my heart;

  Alas! now wring my hands, and to unkind

  And angry Fortune, which away has reft

  That so sweet hope, my armour have resign’d;

  And, memory only left,

  I feed my great desire on that alone,

  Whence frail and famish’d is my spirit grown.

  As haply by the way, if want of food

  Compel the traveller to relax his speed,

  Losing that strength which first his steps endued,

  So feeling, for my weary life, the need

  Of that dear nourishment Death rudely stole,

  Leaving the world all bare, and sad my soul,

  From time to time fair pleasures pall, my sweet

  To bitter turns, fear rises, and hopes fail,

  My course, though brief, that I shall e’er complete:

  Cloudlike before the gale,

  To win some resting-place from rest I flee,

  — If such indeed my doom, so let it be.

  Never to mortal life could I incline,

  — Be witness, Love, with whom I parley oft —

  Except for her who was its light and mine.

  And since, below extinguish’d, shines aloft

  The life in which I lived, if lawful ‘twere,

  My chief desire would be to follow her:

  But mine is ample cause of grief, for I

  To see my future fate was ill supplied;

  This Love reveal’d within her beauteous eye

  Elsewhere my hopes to guide:

  Too late he dies, disconsolate and sad,

 

‹ Prev