Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Sonnet XXXI. by Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch)
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Sonnet XXXI.

    By Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch)



    Io temo sė de' begli occhi l' assalto.

    HE EXCUSES HIMSELF FOR HAVING SO LONG DELAYED TO VISIT HER.


        So much I fear to encounter her bright eye.
    Alway in which my death and Love reside,
    That, as a child the rod, its glance I fly,
    Though long the time has been since first I tried;
    And ever since, so wearisome or high,
    No place has been where strong will has not hied,
    Her shunning, at whose sight my senses die,
    And, cold as marble, I am laid aside:
    Wherefore if I return to see you late,
    Sure 'tis no fault, unworthy of excuse,
    That from my death awhile I held aloof:
    At all to turn to what men shun, their fate,
    And from such fear my harass'd heart to loose,
    Of its true faith are ample pledge and proof.

    MACGREGOR.



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