PetrarchJ.B. Lippincott & Company, 1877 - 148 páginas |
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Página 48
... never forgot the obligations they owed to that venerable tutor , Convennole , who was afterwards relieved by Petrarch at the expense of Cicero's treatise ' De Gloriâ . ' : " You may recollect , " says the poet , " that in the flower of ...
... never forgot the obligations they owed to that venerable tutor , Convennole , who was afterwards relieved by Petrarch at the expense of Cicero's treatise ' De Gloriâ . ' : " You may recollect , " says the poet , " that in the flower of ...
Página 141
... never reached his destination . He had become , he says , not so much a visitor as a denizen of the cities of Northern Italy , Milan , 1 Verona , then Parma and Ferrara , and lastly Padua . No doubt the favour of the reigning princes of ...
... never reached his destination . He had become , he says , not so much a visitor as a denizen of the cities of Northern Italy , Milan , 1 Verona , then Parma and Ferrara , and lastly Padua . No doubt the favour of the reigning princes of ...
Página 143
... never learnt it — could barely make out the letters and read what he knew of Homer in a Latin translation . Perhaps , too , Boccaccio brought with him , on some such occasion , the ' Divina Commedia , ' which Petrarch had never ...
... never learnt it — could barely make out the letters and read what he knew of Homer in a Latin translation . Perhaps , too , Boccaccio brought with him , on some such occasion , the ' Divina Commedia , ' which Petrarch had never ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
addressed affection afterwards appear Avignon beauty brother called century charm Church Cicero close Colonna complete Court crown Dante death desire died doubt early earth Emperor English existence expressed eyes fame father friendship gave give given glory grace greater hand heart heaven honour hope hour illustrious influence Italian Italy journey King known language Latin Laura learning less letters light lived look Lord mark memory mind mountain Naples nature never night noble object Parma passing passion peace perhaps Petrarch poems poet poetry Pope present princes pure reader received remained Rienzi Roman Rome says seek seems solitary sonnets sought soul speak spirit style success sweet thee things thou thought tion trace truth turned Vaucluse verse volume whilst whole writings written youth