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The Poetry of Petrarch

Page 15

by David Young


  What sweetness in the spring to see her walking

  alone and pensive, picking buds and weaving

  a garland for her shining golden curls!

  161

  Oh, scattered steps, oh, ardent, craving thoughts,

  oh, stubborn memory, wild eagerness,

  oh, powerful desire, feeble heart,

  and oh, my eyes, not eyes but running fountains—

  oh, leaves that honor brows of fame and glory,

  oh, single symbol of twofold importance;

  oh, life of laboring, oh, sweet mistaking

  that sends me questing, over shores and mountains;

  oh, lovely face, where Love has placed his spurs

  and reins as well, so he can prod and guide me

  just as he pleases while I can’t unseat him;

  oh, noble, loving souls, if you exist,

  anywhere in the world, you shades and dust,

  ah, stay so you can witness all my suffering!

  162

  Lucky, happy flowers, and well-born grass

  whereon my lady’s apt to walk in thought,

  and shore, that listens to her sweet words spoken

  and keeps some imprint of her lovely foot,

  and slender trees, green leaves on unripe branches,

  delicate violets, pale in forest light,

  the shady woods where sunlight filters through

  and helps the saplings grow into tall trees,

  oh, gentle countryside, and river pure,

  bathing her lovely face and brilliant eyes,

  taking your worth from their illumination;

  how much I envy you your dear, chaste contact!

  By now there’s probably no stone among you

  that hasn’t learned to burn with my same passion.

  163

  Love, you who can see clearly all my thoughts

  and those harsh steps where you alone can guide me,

  look searchingly into my heart’s recesses,

  open to you, though they are hid from others.

  You know what I have suffered in your service

  and still, day after day, you climb these mountains

  with no attention to my great fatigue

  or to the awful steepness of the trail.

  I do see in the distance that sweet light

  you drag me toward, while goading me so harshly,

  but I lack wings like yours with which to fly.

  And yet you satisfy my wild passions

  by giving me a great love to consume me,

  and I don’t think she minds my sighs at all.

  164

  Now that the heavens, earth, and winds are silent,

  and sleep restrains the birds and wild beasts,

  night drives her starry chariot overhead,

  and in its heavy bed the sea lies waveless.

  I am awake; I burn, think, weep; and she,

  sweet pain who ruins me, is always there

  before my eyes; I am at war, I’m wounded;

  thinking of her is all the help I get.

  Thus, from one clear and living fountain

  come both the sweet and bitter in my life;

  one single hand can pierce me and then heal me,

  and since my suffering has no end in sight,

  I die a thousand times a day and then

  I am reborn, still distant from true health.

  165

  As her white foot moves forward through cool grass,

  her sweet and quiet walking starts to spread

  a power, emanating from her soles,

  that acts to open and renew the flowers.

  Love only bothers trapping noble hearts

  and doesn’t try to wield his power elsewhere;

  he makes such warmth rain down from her sweet eyes

  that I forget about all other bait.

  Her words are matched exactly with her gait

  and with her gentle glance at things around,

  and with her measured, modest, mild gestures.

  From four such sparks, though not from them alone,

  comes this great fire in which I live and burn,

  for I’ve become a night bird in the sunlight.

  166

  If I’d remained within that selfsame cave

  in which Apollo turned into a prophet,

  Florence might have a poet of her own,

  not just Verona, Mantua, Arunca.

  But since my land no longer grows good reeds

  from water of that rock, another planet

  must be my guide as I reap thorns and thistles

  from this bare field of mine with my hooked sickle.

  Dry olive tree, the waters trickle elsewhere

  that flowed down from Parnassus and helped make

  it flower, flourishing in other times.

  Bad fortune or my own mistakes deprive me

  of all good fruit, if great eternal Jove

  will not let grace from Heaven rain on me.

  167

  Maybe Love makes her drop her lovely eyes

  toward earth, and uses his own hands to shape

  her vagrant breath into a sigh, releasing it

  in a clear, soft, divine, angelic voice;

  sweetly my heart is being stolen from me,

  my thoughts and wishes altering, within;

  I say: “They’re going to finish plundering:

  Heaven’s designed this martyr’s death for me.”

  The sound, though, ties my senses up with sweetness

  and keeps my soul, though eager to depart,

  rapt in the act of listening, feeling blessed;

  so I live on, and thus she winds the spool

  of my appointed life, and then unwinds it,

  this heavenly siren, peerless in our midst.

  168

  Love sends me that sweet thought, the one which is

  a confidant of old between us two,

  and comforts me, says I was never closer

  to having what I yearn for than right now.

  His words, I’ve found, are sometimes true and then

  are sometimes false; I don’t know what to think,

  and so I live somewhere between the two:

  no yes or no rings honest to my heart.

  Meantime the days go by, and in my mirror

  I watch myself approximate that season

  that contradicts his promise and my hope.

  Well, let it come. I’m not the only one

  who’s aging. My desire doesn’t age,

  but how much time, I wonder, have I left?

  169

  Full of one longing thought that sends me far

  from others, lone wayfarer in the world,

  from time to time I even hide from me,

  still seeking only she whom I should shun;

  then she walks by, so cruel and so sweet

  that my soul flutters, trying to take flight;

  she leads a mob of armored sighs around,

  this lovely enemy of Love and me.

  If I’m not wrong, I can make out a gleam

  of pity on her proud and cloudy brow,

  which partly clears the sorrow in my heart:

  I gather up my soul at that, and when

  I feel I’m ready to explain my sorrow,

  I have so much to say I can’t begin!

  170

  How many times, using my faithful guides,

  have I learned courage from her kind expression,

  to meet my enemy with skillful words

  and take advantage of her humble bearing.

  But then her eyes expose that thought as useless,

  since all my fortune, all my destiny,

  my good, my ill, my life, my death, are placed

  by Love, who has that power, in her hands.

  Result: I’ve never managed to bring forth

  a word that anyone but I could fathom,

  because Love’s
made me quivering and weak.

  And I see well how burning love can tie

  one’s tongue up, steal away one’s breath: he who

  can say he’s burning isn’t much on fire.

  171

  Love’s put me in the grasp of fair, cruel arms

  that kill unjustly, and if I protest,

  my suffering is doubled; better, then,

  to die in loving silence, as I’m used to;

  for she could burn the Rhine up with her eyes

  and break his icy ridges when he’s frozen;

  her pride is so connected to her beauty

  that it displeases her to know she’s pleasing.

  My own wit won’t reduce or wear away

  the lovely diamond that makes up her heart;

  the rest of her is moving, breathing marble;

  but she can never, by contempt or by

  the darkened looks she gives me, take away

  the hopes I harbor or the sighs I sigh.

  172

  Oh, Envy, you old enemy of virtue,

  so eagerly opposed to good beginnings,

  along what path did you so silently

  enter that lovely breast, with what art change it?

  You pulled up my salvation by the roots:

  you made her think I was a lucky lover,

  she who had heard my chaste and humble prayers,

  and now appears to hate them and reject them.

  But even if, with cruel and bitter gestures,

  she weeps about my luck, laughs at my weeping,

  she cannot alter any thought of mine;

  a thousand times a day she may destroy me,

  and I’ll still love her and have hopes of her;

  when she affrights me, Love will give me courage.

  173

  Admiring the clear sun of her great eyes,

  where there is one who makes mine wet and bloodshot,

  my weary soul takes leave of my poor heart

  and sets out for its earthly paradise;

  then finding that it’s full of sweet and bitter,

  it sees the world is made of spiderwebs,

  and it complains to Love accordingly,

  about his searing spurs and his hard bit.

  Between these opposite and mixed extremes,

  with frozen passion, then with kindled longing,

  it stays part happy and part miserable;

  its happy thoughts are few, its sad ones many,

  and mostly it repents its bold endeavors;

  such is the fruit that springs from such a root.

  174

  Cruel star (if heavens have indeed the power

  they’re thought to have), beneath which I was bred,

  cruel cradle where I lay, newborn, and cruel

  earth on which I later set my feet,

  and cruel lady, she who used her eyes

  (the bow that loved to have me as a target)

  to make the wound I’ve mentioned to you, Love,

  since with those very weapons you could heal it.

  But you enjoy my pain, it pleases you;

  that’s not her case, I think, she’s not that harsh;

  the blow is from an arrow, not a spear.

  And that consoles me: better pine for her

  than be with someone else. By your gold arrow

  you swear that that is true, and I believe you.

  175

  When I recall the time and place where I

  first lost myself, and think of that dear knot

  Love tied me up with, using his own hands

  (making the bitter sweet, weeping a pleasure),

  I’m tinder, sulfur, and my heart’s a fire

  lit by those gentle words I always hear,

  such flames that I enjoy the conflagration,

  and live on it and care for little else.

  The sun that seems to shine for my eyes only

  still warms me with her beams when evening comes

  just as she did quite early in the day;

  and from afar she so ignites and kindles

  that memory survives, still fresh and whole,

  to make me see the time, the place, the knot.

  176

  Right through the midst of savage, hostile woods,

  where even men at arms travel at risk,

  I walk secure, and nothing can alarm me,

  except the sun, whose rays are living Love.

  And I go singing (oh, my foolish thoughts!)

  of her, whom Heaven cannot keep me from;

  she stays before my eyes, accompanied

  by maids and ladies who are firs and beeches.

  I seem to hear her when I hear the branches,

  the breeze, the leaves, the birds’ complaints, the waters

  that run with murmurs soft among green grass.

  Seldom has silence or the lonely horror

  of shady forests thrilled my heart so much,

  except this fear that I may lose my sun.

  177

  In just a single day I have been shown

  a thousand slopes and then a thousand rivers

  by Love, who gives his followers winged feet

  and wingèd hearts, to fly to the third sphere.

  Sweet to be in this famous Ardennes forest,

  alone, unarmed where Mars can lie in ambush;

  a ship adrift, dismasted, rudderless,

  filled with a host of grave and secret thoughts.

  But now, at this dark day’s approaching close,

  recalling where I came from, on what wings,

  I start to falter at my own great daring;

  the lovely country, the delightful river,

  welcome me back and reassure my heart,

  already turning to the source of light.

  178

  Love spurs me on and reins me in at once,

  comforts and terrifies, burns and freezes me,

  is kind, then scorns me, summons and dismisses,

  thrills me with hope, then fills me up with sorrow,

  now high, now low, he leads my weary heart;

  until my wandering desire’s lost

  and starts to hate its only source of pleasure,

  and most peculiar notions fill my mind.

  A kind thought shows my mind the river crossing

  (not through the water pouring from the eyes)

  where it might get to where it feels contentment;

  but then, as if a great force turned it back,

  it has to go along another path,

  agreeing to slow death, against its will.

  179

  Geri, when my sweet enemy gets angry

  the way she sometimes does, in her great pride,

  I have one comfort keeping me alive,

  and by its strength my soul can go on breathing:

  whichever way she turns her eyes in anger,

  as if she thought to take my life and light,

  I gaze right back with such humility

  that she relents and throws away her scorn.

  Were that not so, I’d no more go to see her

  than I’d seek out Medusa’s face, the one

  that turned so many victims into marble.

  You try this too; all other aids are useless,

  as far as I can see, and flight won’t help

  because our lord has speedy wings to chase us.

  180

  Po, you can bear my outer shell along

  upon your rapid current’s forceful waves,

  but the spirit housed within the shell is not

  subject to your force, or to anyone’s;

  he moves straight on ahead, he does not tack

  to port or starboard, straight into the wind,

  toward golden foliage, beating his strong wings

  against the wind and water, sail and oars.

  Monarch among the rivers, proud god, you

  who greet the sun when it is bringing day<
br />
  and leave behind a fairer light, to westward:

  you carry on your horn my mortal part;

  the spirit part, befeathered by his love,

  is flying back to where he started from.

  181

  Love spread out in the grass a graceful net

  of gold and pearls, underneath a branch

  of that same evergreen I love so well,

  despite the ways its shadows make me sad.

  The bait was seed he scatters and then reaps,

  bitter and sweet, my fear and my desire;

  such gentle, quiet notes had not been heard

  since that first day when Adam came awake;

  bright light was growing all around and making

  the sun itself grow dim; she held the rope

  in hands that rival ivory and snow.

  And so I fell, into the net, and I’ve

  been trapped by her sweet bearing, and her words,

  and by desire, pleasure, and my hope.

  182

  Love fires up my heart with ardent zeal,

  then makes it shrink again with icy fear;

  he makes my mind uncertain which is greater,

  the hope or fear, the mighty flame or frost.

  I shiver when it’s hot, I burn in cold,

  I’m filled with fear and also with desire,

  as if a lady seemed to have concealed

  a full-grown man beneath her dress and veil.

  My own especial pain’s the first of these:

  I burn by day and night, an illness sweet

  beyond all comprehension, verse, or rhyme;

  the other pains are less; the flame itself

  sees everyone alike; who thinks to fly

  up toward her light would spread his wings in vain.

  183

  If that sweet glance of hers can murder me,

  and little words, so soft and sweet and gentle,

  and if Love gives her total mastery

  when she just speaks or simply when she smiles,

  then what, alas, will happen to me if

  through some mistake of mine or some bad luck

  she who protects me now should take away

  the pity from her eyes and thus dispatch me?

  That’s why I tremble, feel my heart freeze up,

  if her expression changes in the least,

  a fear that’s born of long experience:

  All women are by nature changeable;

  I know quite well that any state of love

  may not persist for long within their hearts.

  184

  Nature, and Love, and that sweet, humble soul

  where all high virtues congregate and rule,

  contrive to thwart me: Love intends to kill me,

  promptly, ingeniously, as is his style;

  Nature sustains that soul by just a thread,

  so delicate that it can bear no strain;

  she’s shy and shows no tendency to dwell

 

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