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  1. Petrarch's poetry is characterized by its musicality, introspection, and focus on love and loss. He is best known for his Canzoniere , a collection of poems dedicated to Laura, an idealized woman who served as his muse.

  2. Influenced by his interest in the classics, many of Petrarch’s poems are highly allegorical and constructed using Italian forms such as terza rima, ballate, sestine and canzoni. His poems investigate the connection between love and chastity in the foreground of a political landscape, though many of them are also driven by emotion and ...

  3. on the green grass and the lovely nearby mountain, from which poetry descends and rests; and the nightingale that laments and weeps. all night long, sweetly, in the shadows, fills the heart with thoughts of love: but you by departing from us my lord, only cut off such beauty, and make it imperfect.

  4. Oct 25, 2015 · If Petrarch still knows and feels the consummate beauty of these earthly things, it may seem to him some repayment for the sorrows of a lifetime that one reader, after all this lapse of years, should choose his sonnets to match this grass, these blossoms, and the soft lapse of these blue waves.

  5. From 1327 to 1368, Petrarch wrote 366 poems as part of a sequence, centered on the theme of his love for Laura. The sequence—collected in a canzoniere, or song-book, usually called Rime Sparse, or Scattered Rhymes in English—includes 317 sonnets, a form based on rules established by the thirteenth-century Italian poet, Guittone of Arezzo.

  6. Jun 16, 2002 · Petrarchs Canzoniere is an innovative collection of poems predominantly celebrating his idealised love for Laura, perhaps a literary invention rather than a real person, whom Petrarch allegedly first saw, in 1327, in the Church of Sainte Claire in Avignon.

  7. Petrarch is widely regarded as the father of the Italian sonnet, and his poetry is marked by his exploration of love, beauty, and desire, as is seen in this beautiful sonnet. His influence can be seen in the works of later poets, and his sonnets continue to be studied and admired today.

  8. Jan 31, 2006 · In that holy but horrible cavern, as Petrarch calls it, they remained three days and three nights, though Petrarch sometimes gave his comrades the slip, and indulged in rambles among the hills and forests; he composed a short poem, however, on St. Mary Magdalen, which is as dull as the cave itself. The Dauphin Humbert was not a bright man; but ...

  9. Sonnet 131 [I’d sing of Love in such a novel fashion] Petrarch. 1304 –. 1374. I’d sing of Love in such a novel fashion. that from her cruel side I would draw by force. a thousand sighs a day, kindling again. in her cold mind a thousand high desires; I’d see her lovely face transform quite often.

  10. By Petrarch. Translated by Geoffrey Chaucer. If no love is, O God, what fele I so? And if love is, what thing and which is he? If love be good, from whennes cometh my woo?

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