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The Complete Canzoniere: 247. ‘Parrà forse ad alcun che ’n lodar quella’

The Complete Canzoniere
247. ‘Parrà forse ad alcun che ’n lodar quella’
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table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Section I - Poems 1 to 61
  3. Section II - Poems 62 to 122
  4. Section III - Poems 123 to 183
  5. Section IV - Poems 184 to 244
  6. Section V - Poems 245 to 305
  7. Section VI - Poems 306 to 366

247. ‘Parrà forse ad alcun che ’n lodar quella’

Perhaps it might seem to some that in praising

her whom I love on earth, my style’s too high,

setting her above all other nobleness,

sacred, wise, graceful, chaste and beautiful.

To me it seems otherwise: and I fear

she’s offended that my speech is over humble,

worthy of something nobler and more subtle:

and whoever doubts that let him come and see:

he’ll truly say: ‘This man here must aspire

to things that exhausted Athens and Arpinum,

Mantua and Smyrna, the Greek and Roman lyre.

Mortal tongue cannot express her divinity:

Love drives him and draws him on,

not by his choice, but by his destiny.’

Note: Athens, Arpinum, Mantua, and Smyrna, the birthplaces respectively of Demosthenes, Cicero, Virgil, and according to one tradition Homer.

Bust of Demosthenes, Hans Witdoeck

‘Bust of Demosthenes’ - Hans Witdoeck (Dutch, 1638), The Rijksmuseum

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