In this volume, David R. Slavitt, the distinguished translator
and author of more than one hundred works of fiction, poetry, and
drama, turns his skills to "Il Canzoniere" (Songbook) by Petrarch,
the most influential poet in the history of the sonnet. In Petrarch
s hands, lyric verse was transformed from an expression of courtly
devotion into a way of conversing with one s own heart and mind.
Slavitt renders the sonnets in "Il Canzoniere," along with the
shorter madrigals and ballate, in a sparkling and engaging idiom
and in rhythm and rhyme that do justice to Petrarch s
achievement.
At the center of "Il Canzoniere "(also known as "Rime Sparse,
"or Scattered Rhymes) is Petrarch s obsessive love for Laura, a
woman Petrarch asserts he first saw at Easter Mass on April 6,
1327, in the church of Sainte-Claire d Avignon when he was
twenty-two. Though Laura was already married, the sight of her woke
in the poet a passion that would last beyond her premature death on
April 6, 1348, exactly twenty-one years after he first encountered
her. Unlike Dante s Beatrice a savior leading the poet by the hand
toward divine love Petrarch s Laura elicits more earthbound and
erotic feelings. David Slavitt s deft new translation captures the
nuanced tone of Petrarch s poems their joy and despair, and
eventually their grief over Laura s death. Readers of poetry and
especially those with an interest in the sonnet and its history
will welcome this volume.
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