Vita NuovaOxford University Press, 1992 - 94 sayfa Vita Nuova (1292-94) is regarded as Dante's most profound creation. The thirty-one poems in this, the first of his major writings, are linked by a lyrical prose narrative celebrating and debating the subject of love. Composed upon Dante's meeting with Beatrice and the "Lord of Love," it is a love story set to the task of confirming the "new life" this meeting inspired. With a critical introduction and explanatory notes, this is a new translation of a supreme work which has been read variously as biography, religious allegory, and a meditation on poetry itself. |
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Sayfa 21
... in the second person were addressed , since the ballad is nothing more than the words I myself speak ; and therefore , I say that I intend to solve and clear up this uncertainty in an even more difficult section of this little Vita Nuova ...
... in the second person were addressed , since the ballad is nothing more than the words I myself speak ; and therefore , I say that I intend to solve and clear up this uncertainty in an even more difficult section of this little Vita Nuova ...
Sayfa 33
... addressed me had a very pleasing manner of speaking , and when I stood before this group of ladies and saw that my most gracious lady was not among them , gaining confidence , I greeted them and asked what I could do to please them ...
... addressed me had a very pleasing manner of speaking , and when I stood before this group of ladies and saw that my most gracious lady was not among them , gaining confidence , I greeted them and asked what I could do to please them ...
Sayfa 92
... addressing a wider audience . A 1314 letter addressed to the Italian cardinals meeting in Carpentras uses the same quotation from Jere- miah . How doth the city sit solitary : in Latin in the text . are all in Latin : Dante's letter ...
... addressing a wider audience . A 1314 letter addressed to the Italian cardinals meeting in Carpentras uses the same quotation from Jere- miah . How doth the city sit solitary : in Latin in the text . are all in Latin : Dante's letter ...
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Aeneid ballad Beatrice's beauty began behold blessed bliss Chapter colour compose a sonnet Conv Convivio Dante DANTE ALIGHIERI Dante's Vita Nuova death of Beatrice decided to write desire Divine Comedy dream earth eyes face Florence gaze grace gracious Beatrice gracious heart gracious lady greeting grief grieving Guido Cavalcanti Guido Guinizzelli Guinizzelli happened hear heard heaven Italian lady's lament Lamentations of Jeremiah Latin look Love appears Love's faithful Mark Musa mention mind miraculous move movement in love number nine Oxford Petrarch pilgrim spirit pity poems poet poetry praise prose Provençal reader reason second begins second I tell second part begins seemed sighs sonnet which begins soul spirits of sight spoke stanza sweet chastity tears theme things thinking third I tell thought Tony Tanner Translated troubadour understand vernacular verse vision vision of Love weeping words worthy ladies wrote this sonnet