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“Benedetto sia ‘l giorno, et ‘l mese, et l’anno, / et la stagione, e’l tempo, et l’ora, e ‘l punto…” — Rvf 61

“Benedetto sia ‘l giorno, et ‘l mese, et l’anno, / et la stagione, e’l tempo, et l’ora, e ‘l punto…” — Rvf 61

Shelf Love

“quant’io parlo d’Amore, et quant’io scrivo” (Rvf.151.14).

“all that I speak of Love, and all that I write” (Kline).

Shelf Love

“quant’io parlo d’Amore, et quant’io scrivo” (Rvf.151.14).

“all that I speak of Love, and all that I write” (Kline).

Old Friends at the Biblioteca capitolare, Verona; taken on an Archival Trip

Reviews & Favorite Recommendations

"chi per prova intenda amore"
— Rvf 1

Petrarch: Everywhere a Wanderer

A luminous biography and intellectual history that traces Petrarch’s restless life and enduring influence. Essential reading for understanding the man behind the sonnets.

The Poetry of Petrarch

“Young’s translations capture the raw ache of Petrarch’s longing. A fresh take that honors the original’s musicality.” — Modern Poetry Review

Petrarch Commentary and Exegesis in Renaissance Italy and Beyond

Here is my review of the excellent Petrarch Commentary and Exegesis in Renaissance Italy and Beyond

Petrarch and the Origins of Textual Interpretation

This amazing contribution to scholarship, Petrarch and the Origins of Textual Interpretation, edited by Teodolinda Barolini and H. Wayne Storey in 2007, and including chapters by both of the editors, as well as Martin Eisner, Furio Brugnolo, Marcello Ciccuto, John Ahern, Roberta Antognini, and Kathy Eden, offers a brilliant study of the key philological issues undergirding – and constituting – Petrarch’s work.

Petrarch and Dante:Anti-Dantism, Metaphysics, Tradition

Published in the William and Katherine Devers Series in Dante and Medieval Italian Literature at Notre Dame, this 2009 volume edited by Zygmunt Baranski and Theodore Cachey (Petrarch and Dante:Anti-Dantism, Metaphysics, Tradition), is an informative read that helps elucidate the dynamic nature of the early vernacular tradition. See especially the chapters by Cachey, Barolini, Steinberg, Sturm-Maddox, and Martinez in this volume.

Petrarch: Everywhere a Wanderer

Christopher S. Celenza (2017)

A luminous biography and intellectual history that traces Petrarch’s restless life and enduring influence. Essential reading for understanding the man behind the sonnets.

Favorite Originals & Translations

"del dolce mio mal prima radice" — Rvf 321

Il Canzoniere (Contini edition)

The standard critical edition of Petrarch’s Italian poems. Indispensable for scholars and serious readers.

Ambrosian Virgil (Digitized)

Petrarch’s own annotated copy — the flyleaf where he recorded Laura’s death. Seen on my archival trip in 2023.

Personal & Things
of Note

"Sotto un gran sasso / in una chiusa valle" — Rvf 135

Christine de Pizan, Gaspara Stampa e la citazione come riorientamento: un approccio critico alla “imitazione” Petrarchesca

Alani Hicks-Bartlett

Here is an article I wrote in Rivista di Studi Italiani (vol. 41, no. 3, 2023, pp. 24-51) on Christine de Pizan and the wonderful Petrarchan poet Gaspara Stampa, and their engagement with Petrarchan praxes of citationality.

Recommendations & Web Resources

Recommended Reading

Petrarch: A Critical Guide to the Complete Works

The essential companion for scholars.

The Canzoniere in English: A Comparative Study

Eight translations side-by-side.

Laura: A Biography in Poetry

Reconstructing the muse through verse.

Web Resources

Peter Sadlon's Petrarch Page

Images, texts, and a wealth of free resources — with gratitude for shared image permissions.

Poetry in Translation (A.S. Kline)

Complete Canzoniere online, free to read.

Digital Petrarch Archive (University of Chicago)

High-resolution manuscript scans and diplomatic transcriptions.