Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 17 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 25
Page 77
whom Dante names Virgil first - are to be studied for the acquisition of ' the most regular degree of construction'.3 Lo bello stilo may thus be understood of the poetic art in general , and perhaps more particularly of what Dante calls ...
whom Dante names Virgil first - are to be studied for the acquisition of ' the most regular degree of construction'.3 Lo bello stilo may thus be understood of the poetic art in general , and perhaps more particularly of what Dante calls ...
Page 83
It is Dante's emphatic repudiation of the legend of Virgil the magician . " Dante would have found no hints for his Purgatorio in the passage , in the sixth book of the Aeneid , where Anchises speaks of spirits after death suffering ...
It is Dante's emphatic repudiation of the legend of Virgil the magician . " Dante would have found no hints for his Purgatorio in the passage , in the sixth book of the Aeneid , where Anchises speaks of spirits after death suffering ...
Page 87
In the last canto of the Paradiso , St. Bernard proffers all his prayers to the Blessed Virgin on Dante's behalf : perchè tu ogni nube li disleghi di sua mortalità co ' prieghi tuoi , sì che ' l sommo piacer li si dispieghi.1 Even so ...
In the last canto of the Paradiso , St. Bernard proffers all his prayers to the Blessed Virgin on Dante's behalf : perchè tu ogni nube li disleghi di sua mortalità co ' prieghi tuoi , sì che ' l sommo piacer li si dispieghi.1 Even so ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19301 | 7 |
VERGILS CREATIVE ARt Annual Lecture on Aspects of Art | 14 |
VIRGIL IN ITALIAN POETRY Annual Italian Lecture By Edmund | 28 |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
already appeared Ashby belief body British called century complete continued course critical Dante death dispatch Divine early edition Elliot English evidence existence experience fact feeling further give Greek hand human idea important interest interpretation Italy Johnson knowledge known later Latin lectures less lines literature lived lizard Lord magic means mentioned mind nature never once original passed perhaps period philosophy picture play poet poetry position possible present probably Professor published question quotes reference regard relation religion remains reported Roman Rome scholia School seems sense sources story suggested things thought tion translation Turkish Turks University Virgil volume whole writing written δε εν και