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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 ...
20 Ιουλ 1998 · Petrarch, Italian scholar, poet, and humanist whose poems addressed to Laura, an idealized beloved, contributed to the Renaissance flowering of lyric poetry. He was regarded as the greatest scholar of his age.
Francesco Petrarca, better known as Petrarch, was an Italian scholar and poet widely considered the "father of humanism." His rediscovery of Cicero's letters is often credited with initiating the 14th-century Italian Renaissance.
16 Ιουν 2002 · Petrarch’s 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.
Petrarch is best known for his Italian poetry, notably the Rerum vulgarium fragmenta ("Fragments of Vernacular Matters"), a collection of 366 lyric poems in various genres also known as 'canzoniere' ('songbook'), and I trionfi ("The Triumphs"), a six-part narrative poem of Dantean inspiration. However, Petrarch was an enthusiastic Latin scholar ...
The literary phenomenon known as Petrarchism developed rapidly within the poet’s lifetime and continued to grow during the following three centuries, deeply influencing the literatures of Italy, Spain, France, and England.
Contents. You who hear the sound, in scattered rhymes, To make a graceful act of revenge, It was on that day when the sun’s ray. What infinite providence and art. When I utter sighs, in calling out to you, My passion’s folly is so led astray. Greed and sleep and slothful beds. At the foot of the hill where beauty’s garment.