Page:A History of Italian Literature - Garnett (1898).djvu/90

72 All look angelicaly all tender gest That e'er on man by grace of woman beamed At side of this had shown discourtesy. The gentle visage, modestly depressed Earthward, inquired with silence, as meseemed,  'Who draws my faithful friend away from me?' "

Long after this, which surely should have satisfied a Platonic lover, he is looking forward to a more perfect consummation of his wishes:

What hope's fruition was we learn from numerous sonnets composed after the death of Laura, in which the poet expresses his thankfulness that his mistress did not yield to his too ardent entreaties, but kept him in order by her frowns, a function attributed to her even in the first book of sonnets:

Laura's attitude towards Petrarch seems not ill expressed in the sonnet composed in the eighteenth century by Ippolito Pindemonte:

To thee, immortal lady lowly laid Where Sorga glassed thy loveliness divine, I bow in worship; not because was thine The beauty solely for the coffin made; But for the soul that animating swayed, And, cold and colder growing, did incline Brighter and brighter yet to soar and shine Thy lover's flame of passion unallayed.