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La Vita Nuova
In this celebration of a poet's passionate love for the woman he worshiped from afar, Dante weaves together rapturous sonnets and canzoni with prose commentaries and an autobiographical narrative. La Vita Nuova records the poet's adoration of Beatrice, the celestial figure who would ultimately guide him through his masterpiece, The Divine Comedy.
In addition to its appeal as a sublime meditation on the anguish and ecstasy of love, this volume also serves as a treatise on the art and technique of poetry. Dante's commentaries explicate each poem, further refining his concept of romantic love as the initial step in the spiritual development that culminates in the capacity for divine love. His unconventional approach — drawing upon personal experience, addressing readers directly, and writing in Italian rather than Latin — marked a turning point in European poetry, when writers departed from highly stylized forms in favor of a simpler style. This complete and unabridged edition features the distinguished translation by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
In addition to its appeal as a sublime meditation on the anguish and ecstasy of love, this volume also serves as a treatise on the art and technique of poetry. Dante's commentaries explicate each poem, further refining his concept of romantic love as the initial step in the spiritual development that culminates in the capacity for divine love. His unconventional approach — drawing upon personal experience, addressing readers directly, and writing in Italian rather than Latin — marked a turning point in European poetry, when writers departed from highly stylized forms in favor of a simpler style. This complete and unabridged edition features the distinguished translation by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
Reprint of La Vita Nuova from The Early Italian Poets from Ciullo d'Alcamo to Dante Alighieri (1100–1200–1300): in the original metres, together with Dante's Vita Nuova, Smith & Elder, London, 1861.
The New Life; 1295; medieval; courtly love; divine love; prosimetrum style; prose and verse; Italian; Tuscan dialect; narrative continuity; Provençal poets; Sicilian; Frederick II; Tuscan poets; sacred love poetry; Beatrice; Absolute; divine splendor; sonnets; balata; canzoni; Beatrice Portinari; Durante degli Alighieri; Italian; Italian poet; Late Middle Ages; Divine Comedy; Comedìa; Divina; Italian language; De vulgari eloquentia; On Eloquence in the Vernacular; il Sommo Poeta; the Supreme Poet; il Poeta$3.00
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Description
In this celebration of a poet's passionate love for the woman he worshiped from afar, Dante weaves together rapturous sonnets and canzoni with prose commentaries and an autobiographical narrative. La Vita Nuova records the poet's adoration of Beatrice, the celestial figure who would ultimately guide him through his masterpiece, The Divine Comedy.
In addition to its appeal as a sublime meditation on the anguish and ecstasy of love, this volume also serves as a treatise on the art and technique of poetry. Dante's commentaries explicate each poem, further refining his concept of romantic love as the initial step in the spiritual development that culminates in the capacity for divine love. His unconventional approach — drawing upon personal experience, addressing readers directly, and writing in Italian rather than Latin — marked a turning point in European poetry, when writers departed from highly stylized forms in favor of a simpler style. This complete and unabridged edition features the distinguished translation by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
In addition to its appeal as a sublime meditation on the anguish and ecstasy of love, this volume also serves as a treatise on the art and technique of poetry. Dante's commentaries explicate each poem, further refining his concept of romantic love as the initial step in the spiritual development that culminates in the capacity for divine love. His unconventional approach — drawing upon personal experience, addressing readers directly, and writing in Italian rather than Latin — marked a turning point in European poetry, when writers departed from highly stylized forms in favor of a simpler style. This complete and unabridged edition features the distinguished translation by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
Reprint of La Vita Nuova from The Early Italian Poets from Ciullo d'Alcamo to Dante Alighieri (1100–1200–1300): in the original metres, together with Dante's Vita Nuova, Smith & Elder, London, 1861.
The New Life; 1295; medieval; courtly love; divine love; prosimetrum style; prose and verse; Italian; Tuscan dialect; narrative continuity; Provençal poets; Sicilian; Frederick II; Tuscan poets; sacred love poetry; Beatrice; Absolute; divine splendor; sonnets; balata; canzoni; Beatrice Portinari; Durante degli Alighieri; Italian; Italian poet; Late Middle Ages; Divine Comedy; Comedìa; Divina; Italian language; De vulgari eloquentia; On Eloquence in the Vernacular; il Sommo Poeta; the Supreme Poet; il Poeta










