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20.
by their merit:
Men’s prayers perhaps not being sufficient, God has turned his gaze through divine
compassion alone toward the land where His Son was born.

25.
new Charles:
Philip VI, “successor” to Charlemagne.

26.
that vengeance:
Against the Saracens for their occupation of the Holy Land.

brought us harm:
Because of Christian tolerance for the fact that the Holy Sepulcher remains in the
hands of dogs” (Tassoni), the church has been shamed.

28.
much loved bride:
The Holy Roman Church.

29.
that One:
Jesus Christ.

33.
the Christianest:
An honorific name for the king of France (
Sa Majesté très Crétienne).

34.
cared about true worth:
Who followed in the advance footsteps of those most Christian standard-bearers.

36.
leave Spain empty:
The willing participation of all Spain’s provinces is not doubted by Petrarch.

38.
from the Wain to Columns:
All the off-shore islands from Iceland to the Straits of Gibralter.

40.
most sacred Helicon:
From whatever place sprang the immortal poetry and philosophy of the sons of Apollo.
Petrarch refers to the role of Greek in the development of religious ideas.

41.
language, arms, and customs:
However diverse the cultures. Cf.
Virgil, Aeneid VIII,
723: “Quam variae linguis, habitu, tam vestis et armis” (Vellutello).

42–45.
charity spurs … :
Summing up the double force of this religious war, motivated by love of God and vengeance
against persecution.

44–45.
ever / were subject:
According to a number of commentators, Petrarch refers to Minos’s revenge against
the Athenians for the death of his son and the Greeks’ against Troy for the seizure
of Helen.

47–48.
resting / … under ice and frozen snow:
The northern regions of Germany and Scandinavia. Unwarmed by the sun, the emotional
natures of the inhabitants seem frozen in impassivity.

50.
enemies by nature:
Lacking fire and warmth, they are ungifted by love and intellect (Zingarelli). Such
prejudices have their roots in the writings of Cicero, Virgil, and Lucan.

51.
dying does not hurt:
Because they have so little to live for, they do not feel the sting of death. Petrarch’s
violent opinions here derive also from Italy’s long history of invasions from the
north. Cf. poem 128.

52.
more devout than in the past:
If the warlike nature of the Teutons could be utilized toward Christian ends after
a past history of warring only against them.

53.
Teutonic rage:
Cf. Lucan
Pharsalia
I, 255: “furor teutonicus,” a kind of brute madness.

54.
Arabs, Turks… gods:
Muslims and therefore monotheists are lumped together with polytheists in this comparison
of fierce armor-clad northerners ranked against burnoosed desert archers.

56.
sea of bloody waves:
The Red Sea. He includes also the armies of Egypt, Libya, and Morocco.

58.
naked, slow, and cowardly:
Arabs were commonly believed by Europeans to be effeminate, running from close battle
encounters.

60.
trust the wind:
Avoiding the sword and depending on cavalry troops armed with bow and arrow. Cf.
Lucan
Pharsalia
VIII, 381.

62.
that old yoke:
Petrarch appeals to his contemporaries to put aside narrow concerns of personal salvation
and devote themselves to a greater cause.

63.
around our eyes:
Of Italians.

65.
immortal God Apollo:
God the poet, turning his compassionate eye to his living representative.

66.
display the power:
Reveal the
vertù
rather than veiling it. Petrarch speaks as one poet to another.

67.
praised writings:
Those written on sacred subjects.

69.
does not amaze:
If Colonna the Christian is immune to these pagan allegories, that is, that Amphion
could move stones with the music of his lyre and Orpheus the pity of Hell and the
trees of the forest with his song.

71.
clear voice:
His preaching at least can gain force from this insight into the responsive hearts
of his countrymen.

73.
ancient mother:
Italy.

75.
cause so fair, so glorious:
So distinguished by a true chivalry.

76.
true treasure:
Scripture.

77.
the ancient and the modern:
Petrarch also praised Colonna’s knowledge of history and literature in
Familiares
IV, 12.

78.
with your earthly weight:
Cf. line 3. Colonna’s being desired by Heaven empowers him to experience such a transcendence.

79–80. Mars’ own son … Augustus:
From the reign of Romulus in pre-Christian times to the Golden Age.

81.
three times triumphing:
Cf. Virgil,
Aeneid
VIII, 714: “Caesar, triplici invectus romana triumpho moenia, dis italis votum immortale
sacrabat.”

83.
in the defense of others:
Other peoples than Roman.

85.
pious and most grateful:
For basic Christian reasons rather than personal glory.

87.
glorious son:
Cf. line 79: “Mars’ own son.” Christ is the true father and son of Italy.

90.
Christ is part:
The line sums up an argument begun with the legends of Orpheus and Amphion that links
the veil of allegory with the real presence of the Holy Spirit.

91–93.
rashness of a Xerxes:
Xerxes I of Persia, described here as an inflamed and savage lover because he breached
Italian soil, bridging the Hellespont with ships and doing unnatural violence to the
mother sea.

94.
and you will see:
History will repeat itself.

95.
tainted red:
The troops of Xerxes were routed in their flight from battle.

99.
vouchsafe your victory:
By this example and the ones to follow, Petrarch claims the favor of God for the
cause of western peoples against the invading Muslims.

100.
Marathon:
Where the Persian king Darius I and his troops were defeated in 490
B.C.
by ten thousand Athenians led by Miltiades.

101.
defended by the Lion:
By the heroic Spartan king Leonidas at Thermopylae, where 300 of his troops died
impeding the crossing of the Persians under Xerxes in 480
B.C.

105.
so much good:
Contributing to the liberation of the Holy Land.

106.
the honored shore:
Rome and the Tiber, where Colonna was residing at the time.

109.
but only Love:
For Laura, a love that exiles him from “the honored shore.”

noble light:
Full of majesty and pomp, referring to Avignon.

110.
attracts me more:
Holds him in its spell, disqualifying him for the bold enterprise he seems to be
turning over to Colonna, the better man.

111.
not strong enough:
According to the terms of the canzone the “natural” thing to do is join the Crusade.
He, addicted to the vice of love, however, returns to his other war. In a sense he
compares himself with the “lazy” Saracens, or at least with folk who merely dream
and burn with a little flame for justice.

112.
don’t separate:
Don’t wander from the true subject matter, which carries it to Rome.

113.
not only beneath a veil:
Bende
, a word that can mean blindfolds as well as the face-obscuring veils of nuns and
noblewomen. When Love plays games he is known to wear a blindfold; but Petrarch perhaps
recalls that justice does too.

114.
joy and tears:
Causing laughter as well as pain. These words leave a little tag-end, appearing to
trivialize Petrarch’s intent for the poems to follow, which is the serious one of
continuing his war on a different front, in the new Babylon, Avignon.

29 C
ANZONE

This canzone makes a spectacular display of Provençal stanza construction, its form
and first line resembling a poem by Arnaut Daniel, “Arvei vermeills, vertz, blans
e blancs.” The lines rhyme from stanza to stanza with the same internal rhymes appearing
throughout in the fourth and sixth lines; the congedo echoes the last two lines of
each stanza and ends on a septenary, which sets the stage for the sestina to follow.
The canzone’s use of rhyme words, especially internal rhyme, echoes through a number
of the later poems, in particular the enigmatic 206.

1.
Green clothes:
Colors of the garments of noblewomen that range symbolically from the color of hope
(green) to blood (red) to the color of Christ’s passion and sacrifice (purple). Dante
noted in the
Convivio
that this purple (
perso
) was “un colore misto di purpureo e di nero, ma vince il nero.” Recent studies have
identified
perso
as violet, also the color of the Virgin.

3.
hair of gold … twisted in blond braid:
Gold is added, as are black and white in line 23. Yellow is also added. The braid
figure contrasts with the light and free locks of poem 90, for example, or with the
locks of poem 30.

5.
and from the path of freedom:
From his defended state before he saw Laura, before his transfiguration.

13.
all mad desire:
Petrarch uses a word close in meaning to the raving he confesses to in poems 1 and
6,
delira.
Since Laura “strips” him of this desire, figuratively
undressing or unveiling his verse, he speaks of the complex effect of her qualities
on his style.

all of my disdain:
That he exhibited toward love when he was in his green age.

14.
makes sweet:
He is disarmed of bitterness by the pleasure of seeing her.

17.
will cure it:
Cf. Dante,
Inferno
XXXI, 6. The image appeared in Virgil, Ovid, and in the Provençal poetry of Bernard
de Ventadorn. The sword of Achilles had the power to heal the one it wounded.

18.
rebel of mercy:
This endearment (
rubella di mercé
) derives from the Latin word for pale blushing.

19.
shall be revenged:
The vendetta of Love in 2.1 is recalled. Leopardi understood this to mean that she
would ultimately turn in pity toward him.

20.
does not lock shut:
In poem 23, anger at his telling the humble truth resulted in her shutting him in
stone so that he became mute.

21.
my lovely way to reach her:
Through the eyes or ears.

22.
The hour and the day:
He refers to Good Friday, 6 April 1327, the hour of terce. Cf. poem 3.1–4.

23.
to lovely black and whiteness:
Compassionate eyes, turned to him in a glance, into which he became absorbed after
Love took possession of his heart.

24.
Love ran to take:
Cf. 2.3–4.

25.
first root… my life of pain:
The hour and the day continue to pierce him with the pain of love. Cf. Francesca
da Rimini in Dante’s
Inferno
V, 124–25: “But if your great desire is to learn / the very root of such a love as
ours.”

26.
our century marvels:
Admires without fully understanding a strange and new phenomenon.

31.
in my left side:
The side of the heart.

33.
for on the right place the just sentence falls:
God alone is the judge of her meaning.

34.
my soul sighs:
Because the soul resides in his wounded heart.

37–38.
one driven …/ had plunged:
The reference is to Dido, who killed herself with the sword given her by Cupid when
Aeneas rejected her. For antecedents to this allusion, see Carducci.

39.
to set me free:
To let him die for love as Dido did.

44.
of that fortunate womb:
He blesses the mother who bore Laura as well as the stars that ruled at the time.
Cf. Dante,
Inferno
VIII, 45, “blessèd is she in whose womb you were conceived.”

46–48.
as the laurel leaf:
Laura immortalized in poetry.
and lightning never strikes it:
According to legend.

48–49.
unworthy / wind ever makes it bend:
Unworthy passion cannot subdue her.

51.
would vanquish:
Would exhaust the resources.

58.
a dearer pledge:
Cf. poem 341. The Latin
pignora
figuratively meant something you loved more than life that you gave up as security.

30 S
ESTINA

Several factors lend a unique quality to this first of the so-called anniversary poems
of the
Canzoniere.
Written in 1334 to commemorate the seventh year of his love, it follows
by a year Petrarch’s acquiring a copy of St. Augustine’s
Confessiones,
an event of great importance in his life. Petrarch was 30 when he wrote the poem.
Christ’s ministry began when he was 30. The books of the Bible number 30. In medieval
numerology, the number represented the active life, and as the product of 6 times
5, it was a marriage (thus a potent and creative) number. In the Hebrew and Greek
alphabets, the value of 30 was given to the letter
L
, whose name in Hebrew translates as the spit upon which the sacrificial lamb was
roasted. Last but not least,
L
is the first letter of Laura’s name.

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