Text, translation, and commentary, canto XVI-XXXIII. IndexMacmillan Company, 1897 |
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47 sonuçtan 1-5 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 37
... seen through the darkness , not so the rays of the Sun. The words L'Angelo è ivi are the explana- tion of the cause . Dante describes the more excessive brilliancy of this radiance , when , in the next Canto , the Poets approach the ...
... seen through the darkness , not so the rays of the Sun. The words L'Angelo è ivi are the explana- tion of the cause . Dante describes the more excessive brilliancy of this radiance , when , in the next Canto , the Poets approach the ...
Sayfa 38
... seen by him . " So he turned back , and would not hear me more . 145 Marco has to turn back into the smoke before the appearance of the Angel . He can only present him- self before him when his penance shall have been completed . END OF ...
... seen by him . " So he turned back , and would not hear me more . 145 Marco has to turn back into the smoke before the appearance of the Angel . He can only present him- self before him when his penance shall have been completed . END OF ...
Sayfa 41
... seen , it is the popular practice to speak of rats as talpi . There was once an amusing dispute on this subject between my two friends , the late Sir James Lacaita and Count Ugo Balzani . They agreed to refer it to the porter at the ...
... seen , it is the popular practice to speak of rats as talpi . There was once an amusing dispute on this subject between my two friends , the late Sir James Lacaita and Count Ugo Balzani . They agreed to refer it to the porter at the ...
Sayfa 43
... seen before , and as he could not get any better opportunity of seeing it , he leant his breast against an apothecary's counter and read the whole book through with such attention ( steadfastly keeping his eyes fixed upon it from the ...
... seen before , and as he could not get any better opportunity of seeing it , he leant his breast against an apothecary's counter and read the whole book through with such attention ( steadfastly keeping his eyes fixed upon it from the ...
Sayfa 50
... seen by Dante , so must the voice have sounded like no mortal voice , and hence his desire to behold the speaker . At this point Virgil , seeing Dante's inability to dis- tinguish the shining form which has addressed him , explains the ...
... seen by Dante , so must the voice have sounded like no mortal voice , and hence his desire to behold the speaker . At this point Virgil , seeing Dante's inability to dis- tinguish the shining form which has addressed him , explains the ...
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Accidie alcun altra altri altro amore ancor Angel anima autem Avarice avea Beatrice Benvenuto says Biagioli Boccaccio Buti Canto Capet Cesari Chariot Charles of Anjou Chè Church cielo ciò Commentators Compare Inf Compare Purg Convito Cornice cose Dante Dante's describes Divina Divina Commedia Division Division II dolce donna esser esso eyes fece Forese Fraticelli gente Gioberti Gran Dizionario Gryphon Guido Heaven holy Hugh Capet interprets Lethe Lombardi Marco Matelda means mente modo mondo Nannucci Nuova occhi ogni Ovid parlare parole passage peccatum Petrarch più poco Poets Pope primo può Purgatory quæ quale quali quod quotes ragione Scartazzini Scartazzini says secondo sempre sense soul speaks spirits Statius Summ tells tempo terra Terrestrial Paradise thee Theol Thomas Aquinas thou Tommaséo tosto tree tutta tutte tutto veder vero Virgil virtù virtue vita voler words