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Petrarch |
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Petrarch (1304-1374)Italian poet, humanist, and leader of the revival of classical learning. His Il canzoniere/Songbook (also known as Rime Sparse/Scattered Lyrics) contains madrigals, songs, and sonnets in praise of his idealized love, ‘Laura’, whom he first saw in 1327 (she was a married woman and refused to become his mistress). These were Petrarch's greatest contributions to Italian literature; they shaped the lyric poetry of the Renaissance and greatly influenced French and English love poetry. Although he did not invent the sonnet form, he was its finest early practitioner and the ‘Petrarchan sonnet’ was admired as an ideal model by later poets. Petrarch was anxious to restore the glories of Rome and Roman pre-eminence in world affairs; he urged the rulers of his day to imitate the heroes of Roman history and wanted the papal court to return from Avignon to Rome. A passionate believer in the power of ancient literature to restore antique virtue, culture, and social order to a degraded age, he inspired the new feeling in Italy and Europe towards study of the classics and more than anyone else directed young scholars towards ancient learning. He was a friend of the poet Boccaccio, and supported the political reformer Cola di Rienzi's attempt to establish an ancient Roman-style republic in 1347. His Italian poetry includes the Trionfi/Triumphs (allegorical processions, of ‘triumphs’ of Love, Chastity, Death, Fame, Time, and Eternity). Among his works written in Latin are the epic poem Africa, De viris illustribus/On Illustrious Men, Bucolicum carmen/Bucolic Songs, De remediis utriusque fortunae/Remedies Against Good and Evil, and the treatises De otio religiosorum/On the Virtue of Religious Life and De vita solitaria/On the Solitary Life. The Secretum meum/My Secret is a spiritual biography in the form of a dialogue between the poet and St Augustine.
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| I had already a slight general notion of Italian letters from Leigh Hunt, and from other agreeable English Italianates; and I knew that I wanted to read not only the four great poets, Dante, Petrarch, Ariosto, and Tasso, but that whole group of burlesque poets, Pulci, Berni, and the rest, who, from what I knew of them, I thought would be even more to my mind. Let the world go on fretting about Laura and Petrarch if it will; but as for me, my tears and my lamentations shall be lavished upon the unsung defendant. From this time, and especially after his other visit to Italy, five years later, he made much direct use of the works of Petrarch and Boccaccio and to a less degree of those of their greater predecessor, Dante, whose severe spirit was too unlike Chaucer's for his thorough appreciation. |
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