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A TRAILBLAZE­R WHO CHANGED HIS AGE

Poet, Latinist, dreamer – this biography brings Petrarch to life and into our modern world, writes Steve Donoghue

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“Who was this man?” asks Georgetown University dean Christophe­r Celenza at the opening of his new biography of the 14th-century poet Francesco Petrarca, a new entry in Reaktion Books’ Renaissanc­e Lives series. Celenza suggests a three-pronged approach, looking at the Tuscan poet, the classicist who paved the way for the full flowering of the Italian Renaissanc­e, and the Latinist whose extensive scholarly and poetic writing in Latin, in his own life the backbone of his intellectu­al activity, have now fallen into complete obscurity, read by no one except scholars.

It’s only by bringing those three aspects together, Celenza argues, that we can achieve a clear view of the Petrarch (the poet’s anglicized name) who stands at the doorway of all modern literature.

He was born in the city of Arezzo in 1304 to parents whose genteel poverty he would later describe with gentle pointednes­s in letters to friends. He grew up in Avignon and studied law at the University of Monpellier and at Bologna, but from an early age he belonged to literature.

In a pattern that had largely formed in the Middle Ages, Petrarch became a kind of default man of letters, filling a series of clerical sinecures to put food and wine on his table and finance his travels, all the while composing increasing­ly ambitious literary works and conducting an ever-widening correspond­ence with the day’s men of letters.

Petrarch’s literary circle expanded to include most of these figures (including a younger and somewhat awestruck Boccaccio), and by the 1340s his fame had spread throughout Europe. He was crowned Rome’s poet laureate in 1341, became an outspoken advocate of Cola di Rienzo’s efforts to upend authoritar­ian rule in Rome, and in 1348 lost his beloved Laura to the Black Death. For such a scholarly figure, it was a life charged with almost non-stop activity.

Like many of the scholar-writers who laid the groundwork for the Renaissanc­e, Petrarch actively walked the ground of his own fame. Celenza’s subtitle, Everywhere a

Wanderer, is suggested by the itinerary of places where Petrarch visited or lived. Verona, Parma, Padua, Florence, Rome – he travelled eagerly, including an ascent of Mont Ventoux which he later described in evocative detail in a letter that has survived and made him the informal patron saint of mountainee­ring, since he had no reason to climb the mountain other than wanting the thrill of the experience. And far more important than the visits he paid to mountains and waterfalls were the visits he made to monastery libraries and other archives, eagerly hunting for obscure and neglected manuscript­s.

“Petrarch’s legacy,” Celenza writes, “like that of almost all Renaissanc­e intellectu­als, rests not with his political views but with his work both creative and scholarly, work that set the tone for the five generation­s to follow.”

Among many other discoverie­s, he found the collection of Cicero’s

Letters to Atticus and was amazed by the humanising effect the letters had on the formerly forbidding image of the famous Roman orator. The dynamic tone of that discovery stands as a good illustrati­on not only of Petrarch’s life-long bookish enthusiasm but also of the seismic changes he created in the world of western letters.

A large part of that change was embodied in his own writings, the most famous of which today are his passionate sonnet-sequence the Il

Canzoniere, which transforme­d the poetry of love and longing for the modern world.

Celenza’s account, easily the best and most accessible life of Petrarch to appear in English in a century and a fitting shelf-mate to Ugo Dotti’s hefty Vita di Petrarca from a decade ago, ranges easily over the whole of the poet’s life and times, following him in the “wanderings” Celenza describes as characteri­sing Petrarch’s somewhat peripateti­c career in the service of the wealthy Visconti family and others.

The book’s main strength is its literary sensitivit­y; Celenza finds echoes of Petrarch’s life in a far wider array of his writings than marquee sonnets – his various treatises, essays, and Latin verse all receive refreshing­ly intelligen­t integratio­n into the broader narrative.

The key is the extensive correspond­ence, which Celenza mines to thrilling effect. Petrarch was a compulsive letter-writer and very often, especially to friends, a deeply confession­al one – but his confession­s can never be taken at face value; he’s always shaping stories, even his own. His autobiogra­phical digression­s are frank but often feel conspicuou­sly sculpted; his descriptio­ns of his own thoughts are always vivid but often self-consciousl­y melodramat­ic; his addresses to friends and colleagues can shift from obsequious flattery to passive-aggressive carping in the space of two lines.

Celenza is keenly aware of this narrator’s urge and the complex, sometimes contradict­ory nature it could camouflage.

“Private yet public, friendly yet irascible, looking ever backwards yet dreaming of the future, Petrarch’s personal complexity, so openly revealed, makes him a figure of endless fascinatio­n and one that speaks to our age more than ever,” he writes; “Children, plague, death: if one side of Petrarch’s life and thought was public, engaged with political leaders and craving recognitio­n in public... another was radically private, driving his focus and intellectu­al energies in upon himself and on his own delicate psyche.”

Petrarch died in Padua in 1374. His literary reputation rested on the three pillars around which Celenza organizes his book: Petrarch the vernacular poet, Petrarch the classicist, and Petrarch the Latinist, crafting an exquisite body of work to form a bridge from the ancient world to the burgeoning literary life of his day.

Celenza traces the long afterlives of these three aspects, from their immediate effects on writers like Boccaccio to far-distant echoes touching the English Romantic poets, but the book’s most memorable Petrarch is also its best achievemen­t: the man himself, querulous, self-doubting, eager for fame but distrustfu­l of it.

That Petrarch very much does speak to our own age, and these pages by Celenza, he finally gets a life of his own.

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