Stories from the Italian Poets: with Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 by Leigh Hunt
page 57 of 336 (16%)
page 57 of 336 (16%)
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remain there in spite of the moral and religious absurdities with which
they are mingled, and of the inability which the best-natured readers feel to associate his entire memory, as a poet, with their usual personal delight in a poet and his name. [Footnote 1: As notices of Dante's life have often been little but repetitions of former ones, I think it due to the painstaking character of this volume to state, that besides consulting various commentators and critics, from Boccaccio to Fraticelli and others, I have diligently perused the _Vita di Dante_, by Cesare Balbo, with Rocco's annotations; the _Histoire Littéraire d'Italie,_ by Ginguéné; the _Discorso sul Testo della Commedia_, by Foscolo; the _Amori e Rime di Dante_ of Arrivabene; the _Veltro Allegorico di Dante_, by Troja; and Ozanam's _Dante et la Philosophie Catholique an Treixième Siècle._] [Footnote 2: Canto xv. 88.] [Footnote 3: For the doubt apparently implied respecting the district, see canto xvi. 43, or the summary of it in the present volume. The following is the passage alluded to in the philosophical treatise "Risponder si vorrebbe, non colle parole, ma col coltello, a tanta bestialità." _Convito,--Opere Minori_, 12mo, Fir. 1834, vol. II. p. 432. "Beautiful mode" (says Perticeri in a note) "of settling questions."] [Footnote 4: _Istorie Fiorentine, II_. 43 (in _Tutte le Opere_, 4to, 1550).] [Footnote 5: The name has been varied into _Allagheri_, _Aligieri_, _Alleghieri_, _Alligheri_, _Aligeri_, with the accent generally on the |
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