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         Petrarch:     more books (100)
  1. The Sonnets, Triumphs, and Other Poems of Petrarch by Francesco Petrarca, 2009-10-04
  2. The Augustinian Epic, Petrarch to Milton by J. Christopher Warner, 2005-09-14
  3. On Religious Leisure by Francesco Petrarch, Ronald G. Witt, 2002-10-01
  4. Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio: Studies in the Italian Trecento in Honor of Charles S. Singleton (Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, V. 22) by Anthony L. Pellegrini, Aldo S. Bernardo, 1983-05
  5. Augustine in the Italian Renaissance: Art and Philosophy from Petrarch to Michelangelo by Meredith J. Gill, 2005-05-28
  6. Petrarch (Modern critical views)
  7. Canzoniere by PETRARCH, 2001-01-01
  8. The Sonnets of Petrarch
  9. Petrarch and the Renascence by J. H. Whitfield, 1966
  10. The Sonnets, Triumphs, and Other Poems of Petrarch (Illustrated Edition) (Dodo Press) by Francesco Petrarch, 2007-01-10
  11. Humanism and Secularization: From Petrarch to Valla (Duke Monographs in Medieval and Renaissance Studies) by Riccardo Fubini, 2002-01-01
  12. Ronsard, Petrarch, and the Amours by Sara Sturm-Maddox, 1999-12-31
  13. Authorizing Petrarch by William J. Kennedy, 1994-12
  14. Education's Great Amnesia: Reconsidering the Humanities from Petrarch to Freud With a Curriculum for Today's Students by Robert E. Proctor, 1988-12

21. Francis Petrarch And Art History

http://www3.sympatico.ca/liliane.caron/Petrarca/fpframes_english.html

22. Humanism/Petrarch (Francesco Petrarca)
petrarch (Francesco Petrarca). Occupation petrarch was crowned poet laureate in Rome in 1341, and was a classical scholar, diplomat, historian and philosopher.
http://www.swil.ocdsb.edu.on.ca/ModWest/HUMANISM/art/Petrarch.html
Petrarch (Francesco Petrarca)
Birth: Occupation:
Petrarch was crowned poet laureate in Rome in 1341, and was a classical scholar, diplomat, historian and philosopher. Petrarch wrote a great deal of poetry, much of it in the vernacular, making it easily accessible to those of the general public who were literate. His most famous collection of poems is his Canzoniere, a collection of 366 love songs, in which he expresses his love of the earthly things that surround him. Most of it was inspired by his idealised love of a beautiful girl named Laura; a symbol of spiritual beauty and erotic attraction. It was his poetry more than anything which brought him the fame and recognition he desired. His works made popular the sonnet and influenced poets such as Chaucer, Ronsard, Spencer, and Shakespeare . Out of Petrarch's many sonnets, perhaps his most famous are those written for Laura. He first saw her in 1327 in the church of Santa Clara in Avignon, but to his dismay she was already married. His love for her was to be never more than platonic. For him she was a vision of idealised beauty, of love, of desire and of what he could not attain in this world.
Petrarch argued that all philosophical thought and rhetoric should have the purpose of making men virtuous, enabling them to cultivate their lives into something of value. He believed however, that men would never be able to achieve complete self-transcendence, and had this to say about his own lot in life:

23. Guardian Unlimited Books | News | Petrarch - The Poet Who Lost His Head
petrarch the poet who lost his head Italian who defined the sonnet at centre of medieval whodunnit John Hooper in Rome Tuesday April 6, 2004 The Guardian,
http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,6109,1186654,00.html
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Petrarch - the poet who lost his head
Italian who defined the sonnet at centre of medieval whodunnit
John Hooper in Rome
Tuesday April 6, 2004

24. Petrarch: A Young Lady Beneath A Green Laurel
petrarch A young lady beneath a green laurel (mid14th century). Francesco object. What qualities does petrarch ascribe to Laura?
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_1/petrarch.htm
Petrarch: A young lady beneath a green laurel (mid-14th century)
What qualities does Petrarch ascribe to Laura? Who is more vividly depicted in this poem, the lover or his beloved?
A young lady beneath a green laurel
I saw, whiter and colder than is a snow (1)
untouched by the sun for many, many years;
and her speech and her beauty and her face and all her hair
so pleased me that I carry her before my eyes
forever wherever I am, on hill or shore.
When my thoughts will come to rest on that shore
when the green leaves are no more on the laurel,

when I have quieted my heart, dried my eyes,

then you will see burning ice and snow; (1)
to await that day, I have fewer hairs than I would be willing to spend in years. But because time flies and fleeing go the years and death suddenly casts one from shore, crowned either with brown or with white hair, (2) I will follow the shadow of that sweet laurel through the burning sun or through the snow, until the last day closes these eyes. Never have there been seen such beautiful eyes, in our times or in the first years

25. Discovery Channel :: Experts Exhume Petrarch's Bones
A team of 14 researchers exhumed the bones of the 14th century Italian poet Francesco petrarch on Monday, in the attempt to uncover new aspects about his
http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20031117/petrarch.html
May 28, 2004 EDT
Experts Exhume Petrarch's Bones Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News See Photos From the Exhumation. Nov. 19, 2003 "The bones have slid on the marbled bottom. We will have to find a way to remove the pieces of wood and take them out as they are very fragile and could disintegrate at the touch," main scientist Vito Terribile Wiel Marin, professor of pathological anatomy at the University of Padua, told Discovery News.
  • On TV: Get a reminder to watch "Discovery Spotlight" , Discovery Channel's current events program.
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    Get more and unlock the secrets of the past.
  • One of the great figures of Italian literature, considered second only to Dante, Petrarch was a great classical scholar and the first modern poet. In doing so, he perfected the sonnet form that was adopted as an ideal model by later poets such as Shakespeare and Chaucer. His remains were dug up again 1943, during WWII, and put in a safe place in the underground rooms of Venice's Ducal Palace. "Apart from this, the skeleton is almost intact. Even the cranium's fragments are large enough to make possible a reconstruction," Wiel Marin said. The researchers plan to work on the remains for at least seven months. The results of their analysis will be announced in time for the celebrations of the 700th anniversary of the poet's birth on July 20, 1304 in Arezzo, Tuscany.

    26. Discovery Channel :: News :: Poet Petrarch Loses His Head
    May 10, 2004 EDT. news main. Poet petrarch Loses His Head. By Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News. petrarch s Bones. petrarch s Bones.
    http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20040510/petrarch.html
    postionList = "compscreen,admedia,tile300x250,nuiad"; OAS_RICH("admedia");
    May 28, 2004 EDT
    Poet Petrarch Loses His Head By Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News Petrarch's Bones May 10, 2004
  • On TV: Solve a history mystery by watching "Unsolved History"
    Read about researchers
    working in the field featured in our Discovery Quest series.
  • "DNA tests confirmed what we thought as we saw the skull: it could not belong to Petrarch. The contours above the eyes and below the ears are indeed typical of a woman. On the contrary, there is no doubt about the body," lead scientist Vito Terribile Wiel Marin, professor of pathological anatomy at the University of Padua, told Discovery News. One of the great figures of Italian literature, considered second only to Dante, Petrarch was a great classical scholar and the first modern poet. In doing so, he perfected the sonnet form that was adopted as an ideal model by later poets such as Shakespeare and Chaucer. Petrarch's venerable head was in fragments when a crane lifted the two ton lid from his pink marble tomb last November. One of the main reasons for the exhumation was to reconstruct the poet's face in time for the 700th anniversary of his birth on July 20, 1304 in Arezzo, Tuscany. While dashing hopes of recreating a definitive portrait of the poet, the discovery has also unveiled an unsolved crime dating back hundreds of years.

    27. Petrarch: Familiar Letters 1-1
    petrarch S PREFACE TO HIS Familiar Letters. ditiorimpeditior This is one example of the quite untranslatable wordplay in which petrarch s writing abounds.
    http://www.towson.edu/~tinkler/reader/petrarch.html
    PETRARCH'S PREFACE TO HIS Familiar Letters
    Being a new translation with notes by John F. Tinkler (c)
    of Book 1, Letter 1 of Rerum familiarium libri
    by Francesco Petrarca ca. 1350 * Asterisks indicate endnotes accessible as hypertext.
    To His Socrates
    What will we do now, brother? Indeed, we have already tried almost everything, and there is no rest anywhere. When can we expect it? Where shall we look for it? Time, as they say, has run through our fingers; our earlier hopes are buried with our friends. It was the year that rendered us lonely and helpless; nor did it take from us the kinds of things that can be restored from the Indian, or Caspian, or Carpathian seas; these latest blows are irreparable, for any wound that death has inflicted is untreatable. Only one comfort remains: we shall follow those whom we have sent before us. How short the wait will be, I do not know; this I know, that it cannot be long. And indeed however short it is, it cannot fail to weigh heavily. But we must restrain ourselves from complaints, at least in the beginning. As for you, brother, what your concerns are and what you are thinking about, I do not know; but I am putting together little bundles and, as wanderers do, I am looking around at what I should bring with me, what I should share among my friends, and what I should commit to the fire. For nothing of mine is for sale. I am, indeed, more richly provided [ ditior ], or rather more fettered

    28. Francis Petrarch (general Note)
    petrarchFrancis petrarch (13041374) Letter to Cicero Original Electronic Text at the web site of the Hanover Historical Texts Project.
    http://icg.harvard.edu/~chaucer/special/authors/petrarch/
    THE GEOFFREY CHAUCER PAGE Francis Petrarch
    (Francesco Petrarca, 1304-1374) Fraunceys Petrak, the lauriat poete,
    Highte this clerk, whos rethorike sweete
    Enlumyned al Ytaille of poetrie,

    (ClPro IV.31-33) Francis Petrarch had an enormous influence on English literature, beginning in the sixteenth century the fact that we customarily Anglicize his name, Francesco Petrarca, into "Francis Petrarch" shows how deeply embedded his works are in the English poetic tradition. His poems shaped much of Elizabethan lyric poetry, and Shakespeare's sonnets could not exist without Petrarch's previous sonnets and canzone. Chaucer was the first English writer to know these poems. and centuries before Petrarch's work entered the mainstream of English literature he draws on Petrarch for Troilus' song in Troilus and Criseyda For a text of this sonnet see: Petrarch's "If Love Does Not Exist" Petrarch was as celebrated in his time for his Latin works as for his Italian; (when Chaucer calls him the "laureat poete" he refers to the Latin works. Most, like his ambitious but finally unsuccessful epic Africa (celebrating Scipio Africanus), are now almost forgotten, but his often charming Latin letters (such as the letter to posterity) are still worth reading. See

    29. Francesco Petrarch
    Francis petrarch Selections from his Correspondences from James Harvey Robinson, ed. and trans. Selection 28 petrarch s Intention to Work until the Last.
    http://history.hanover.edu/early/petrarch.html
    Francis Petrarch
    Selections from his Correspondences
    from
    James Harvey Robinson, ed. and trans.
    Francesco Petrarca: The First Modern Scholar and Man of Letters
    (New York: G.P. Putnam, 1898)
    Hanover Historical Texts Project

    Scanned by Jason Boley and Jacob Miller in August, 1995.
    Proofread by Monica Banas, Stephanie Hammett, and Heather Haralson in April, 1996.
    Contents

    30. Petrarch. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
    The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. petrarch. At Avignon in 1327 petrarch first saw Laura, who was to inspire his great vernacular love lyrics.
    http://www.bartleby.com/65/pe/Petrarch.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Petrarch (p KEY ) or Francesco Petrarca p KEY Italia mia.

    31. 76. A Translation From Petrarch. J. M. Synge. Modern British Poetry
    Modern British Poetry. 1920. JM Synge. 1871–1909. 76. A Translation from petrarch (He is Jealous of the Heavens and the Earth).
    http://www.bartleby.com/103/76.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Verse Anthologies Louis Untermeyer Modern British Poetry ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD Louis Untermeyer, ed. Modern British Poetry.

    32. The San Antonio College LitWeb Petrarch Page
    The petrarch Page. ( 13041374 ). Works Triumphs (1351-1374). petrarch s Lyric Poems.Translated and edited by Robert M. Durling. Harvard, 1976.
    http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/petrarch.htm
    The Petrarch Page
    Works

    Triumphs
    On the Solitary Life
    Rime
    (1374). Predominately sonnets, love lyrics.
    Petrarch's Lyric Poems .Translated and edited by Robert M. Durling. Harvard, 1976. Literal prose translations. Bilingual edition.
    Canzoniere . Translated into verse with notes and commentary by Mark Musa. Indiana, 1996.
    About Petrarch
    Morris Bishop, Petrarch and His World . Indiana, 1963.
    James Harvey Robinson, Francesco Petrarca: The First Modern Scholar and Man of Letters . Putnam, 1898.
    Francis Petrarch: Selections from his Correspondences
    . From Robinson's Petrarch ( See above ). Back to Medieval Literature

    33. Who's Who In Medieval History - Francesco Petrarca
    Petrarca, known to us in English as Francis petrarch, was one of the most influential poets of the Middle Ages. In Print. petrarch in Print Related Resources.
    http://historymedren.about.com/library/who/blwwpetrarch.htm
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    Francesco Petrarca
    Cleric Italy
    France
    Petrarca, known to us in English as Francis Petrarch, was one of the most influential poets of the Middle Ages. He studied law until his father's death, at which time he took minor ecclesiastical orders and devoted his time to writing and scholarship. The poems and sonnets written to his inspiration "Laura" have in their turn inspired poets of succeeding generations, most notably Shakespeare and Edmund Spenser. Considered one of the era's finest scholars, Petrarch's focus on reviving Classical literature led him to explore libraries and monasteries all over Italy and in much of France in search of ancient texts. He was a friend and mentor to Boccaccio , and together with the earlier Dante , the works of the three writers are considered to have formed the basis of Italian Humanism in literature.

    34. Francesco Petrarch Quotes And Quotations - BrainyQuote
    Francesco petrarch Quotes, Five Francesco petrarch How difficult it is to save the bark of reputation from the rocks of ignorance. Francesco
    http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/f/francesco_petrarch.html
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    Francesco Petrarch Quotes Five enemies of peace inhabit with us - avarice, ambition, envy, anger, and pride; if these were to be banished, we should infallibly enjoy perpetual peace.
    Francesco Petrarch

    How difficult it is to save the bark of reputation from the rocks of ignorance.
    Francesco Petrarch

    It is more honorable to be raised to a throne than to be born to one. Fortune bestows the one, merit obtains the other.
    Francesco Petrarch

    Man has no greater enemy than himself.
    Francesco Petrarch
    Sameness is the mother of disgust, variety the cure. Francesco Petrarch Suspicion is the cancer of friendship. Francesco Petrarch To be able to say how much love, is love but little. Francesco Petrarch Who naught suspects is easily deceived. Francesco Petrarch Type: Poet Quotes Date of Birth: Year of Birth: Year of Death: Nationality: Italian Find on Amazon: Francesco Petrarch Quotes RSS Feeds About Us Inquire Privacy Terms

    35. Medieval Sourcebook: Petrarch: The Ascent Of Mount Ventoux
    petrarch The Ascent of Mount Ventoux. first published here http//www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/petrarchventoux.html. To Dionisio da Borgo San Sepolcro.
    http://socialfiction.org/psychogeography/Petrarch.htm
    social fiction psychogeography archive Petrarch: The Ascent of Mount Ventoux first published here http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/petrarch-ventoux.html To Dionisio da Borgo San Sepolcro Happy the man who is skilled to understand
    Nature's hid causes; who beneath his feet
    All terrors casts, and death's relentless doom,
    And the loud roar of greedy Acheron. How earnestly should we strive, not to stand on mountain-tops, but to trample beneath us those appetites which spring from earthly impulses. With no consciousness of the difficulties of the way, amidst these preoccupations which I have so frankly revealed, we came, long after dark, but with the full moon lending us its friendly light, to the little inn which we had left that morning before dawn. The time during which the servants have been occupied in preparing our supper, I have spent in a secluded part of the house, hurriedly jotting down these experiences on the spur of the moment, lest, in case my task were postponed, my mood should change on leaving the place, and so my interest in writing flag. (320)You will see, my dearest father, that I wish nothing to be concealed from you, for I am careful to describe to you not only my life in general but even my individual reflections. And I beseech you, in turn, to pray that these vague and wandering thoughts of mine may some time become firmly fixed, and, after having been vainly tossed about from one interest to another, may direct themselves at last toward the single, true, certain, and everlasting good. Malaucene, April 26. 1336

    36. Laura And Petrarch: An Intriguing Case Of Cyclical Love Dynamics
    Laura and petrarch An Intriguing Case of Cyclical Love Dynamics. Sergio Rinaldi Access to the full text of this article is free. Abstract.
    http://epubs.siam.org/sam-bin/dbq/article/30592
    SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics
    Volume 58, Number 4

    pp. 1205-1221
    Laura and Petrarch: An Intriguing Case of Cyclical Love Dynamics
    Sergio Rinaldi Access to the full text of this article is free.
    Abstract. Key words. love dynamics, dynamical system, singular perturbation, cycles AMS Subject Classifications DOI
    Retrieve PostScript document ( 30592.ps : 13229926 bytes)
    Retrieve GNU Compressed PostScript document ( ...
    Retrieve reference links
    For additional information contact service@siam.org

    37. Petrarch's Books
    This paper, originally presented at the 1995 regional Phi Alpha Theta conference at Illinois State University, deals with the role of Francisco petrarch in the
    http://members.tripod.com/~kimmel/Petrarch.html
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    Petrarch: Books and the Life of the Mind
    A paper presented at the Phi Alpha Theta Regional Conference, May, 1995, Illinois State University
    During the Renaissance scholars began to turn their attentions to the great works of the pre-Christian writers. In rediscovering the classics, these scholars developed a new way of thinking, a new way of viewing themselves and their world. With this sea-change in the way scholars thought about knowledge, they went beyond the recovery of old knowledge to the development of new knowledge. However that rebirth of learning did not burst forth instantly. Many of its early figures still had one foot firmly in the Age of Faith. Although they saw the works of the ancient writers with new eyes, they still looked at the world with the eyes of the medieval scholars. One of these scholars Petrarch, who officially was a member of the clergy of the Catholic Church while he pursued his studies and writing in the new secular literature he and others like him were creating. Francisco Petrarca, whose name is commonly anglicized as Francis Petrarch, was born on July 20, 1304 in Arezzo.

    38. And I Am In This State, Lady, Because Of You. From Ben Hammersley's Dangerous Pr
    Historians examining the tomb of the great Italian Renaissance poet and scholar, Francesco Petrarca, or petrarch to the rest of the world, have found that
    http://www.benhammersley.com/dparchives/008270.html
    Ben Hammersley's Dangerous Precedent
    • Front Weblog Colophon ... UPDATED Auctorial is such a good word ->
      May 04, 2004
      and I am in this state, lady, because of you.
      It is, alas, the wrong bloody skull. Historians examining the tomb of the great Italian Renaissance poet and scholar, Francesco Petrarca, or Petrarch to the rest of the world, have found his writings perfected the sonnet Anyway, the thing that made Petrarch such the man, and what makes him popularly read today, is his total obsession with a woman called Laura. Whilst working in Avignon, on the sixth of April 1327, Petrarch saw her leaving the Church of Saint Clare. He would be obsessed by her beauty for the rest of his life, even though it is not entirely certain if they ever met again. No one really knows who she was, although there are some ideas . Either way, in his agony, Petrarch wrote The Canzoniere : a collection of three hundred and sixty six poems for Laura. I find no peace, and yet I make no war: and fear, and hope: and burn, and I am ice: and fly above the sky, and fall to earth

    39. Philadelphia Rare Books And Manuscripts: Petrarch
    petrarch. First US EDITION of This Woman Translator s petrarch — Louisville, 1849. Petrarca, Francesco. Canzone and sonnets Of Francesco Petrarca.
    http://www.prbm.com/interest/petrarch.shtml
    PETRARCH
    Petrarch the Newest Patented Carriage Steps (English Literary Periodical). [The monthly magazine, and British register. Vol. VII]. London: R. Phillips, 1799. 8vo (22.5 cm, 9"). [6], 580 pp.; 4 plts.
    [SOLD]
      very america Provenance From the collection of Joshua Gilpin, a Quaker from Philadelphia who established the first paper mill in Delaware, in 1787.
    For more MONTHLY MAGAZINE
    volumes, click here
    This Handsome Edition Is Its Own "Printing History" Footnote:
    The Type Used for It Travelled to America with Juan Pablos Petrarca, Francesco.
    De los remedios contra p[ro]spera y aduersa fortuna. [colophon: Sevilla: Jacobo Cromberger, 1513]. Small folio. [6], 169 ff. (lacks final blank leaf).
      the border element appearing at the top of the title-page here (see left) Doctrina breve muy provechosa (Mexico City, 1543). Here the type and woodcut border are crisp and new; by the time Juan Pablos received them in the late 1530s they were much worn, as clearly appears by the comparison of this work with early Juan Pablos imprints. This, Cromberger's printing of Petrarch's classic work on fortune and the conduct of life, is widely held to be an extremely handsome production. It begins with an elaborate woodcut title-page and presents throughout what Lyell, in his

    40. The Visions Of Petrarch
    The Visions of petrarch. Edmund Spenser. Please refer additions , corrections, or comments to rbear@oregon.uoregon.edu. THE VISIONS OF petrarch.
    http://darkwing.uoregon.edu/~rbear/petrarch.html
    The Visions of Petrarch
    Edmund Spenser
    Note on the Edmund Spenser Home Page edition: This html etext of The Visions of Petrarch Spenser's Minor Poems [1910] by Richard Bear at the University of Oregon Click here for a version of this text illustrated with woodcuts from A Theatre for Worldlings rbear@oregon.uoregon.edu THE VISIONS OF PETRARCH. formerly translated. Eing one day at my window all alone,
    So manie strange things happened me to see,
    As much it grieueth me to thinke thereon.
    At my right hand a Hynde appear'd to mee,
    So faire as mote the greatest God delite;
    Two eager dogs did her pursue in chace,
    Of which the one was blacke, the other white:
    With deadly force so in their cruell race
    They pincht the haunches of that gentle beast,
    That at the last, and in short time I spide,
    Vnder a Rocke where she alas opprest, Fell to the ground, and there vntimely dide. Cruell death vanquishing so noble beautie, Oft makes me wayle so hard a destinie. After at sea a tall ship did appeare, Made all of Heben and white Yuorie, The sailes of golde, of silke the tackle were

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