Glad to Go for a Feast: Milton, Buonmattei, and the Florentine AccademiciP. Lang, 1998 - 186 стор. Glad To Go For a Feast focuses upon Milton's intellectual contacts in Florence during his sojourn from 1638 to 1639, especially those accademici surrounding the grammarian and Dantista Benedetto Buonmattei (1581-1648), including Carlo Roberto Dati (1619-1676) and Agostino Coltellini (1613-1693). Dr. A. M. Cinquemani provides a brief life of Buonmattei as priest, scholar, and accademico as well as a discussion of Della Lingua Toscana (1623-1643) as having perhaps shaped Milton's representation of prelapsarian language in Paradise Lost. The tendencies of contemporary Florentine criticism, as suggested by the work of Buonmattei, are considered with a view to understanding the particular version of Dante to which Milton was exposed. Large portions of Della Lingua Toscana and Buonmattei's commentaries on Dante, as well as Coltellini's «Tuscan Areopagitica, » the Introduzione all' Anatomia (1651), are presented here for the first time in English. |
З цієї книги
Результати 1-3 із 9
Сторінка 51
... defenders of Italian argue that its sphere is Italy : it is a living language , learned naturally , and connected to everyday life . By contrast , one must learn Latin by artificial means : it is an extraneous , even foreign , language ...
... defenders of Italian argue that its sphere is Italy : it is a living language , learned naturally , and connected to everyday life . By contrast , one must learn Latin by artificial means : it is an extraneous , even foreign , language ...
Сторінка 52
... defenders of Latin regarded it as intrinsically superior : more artful , elegant , and noble than Italian . Both Leon Battista Alberti and Bembo conceded that Italian had not yet attained to the perfection of the classical languages ...
... defenders of Latin regarded it as intrinsically superior : more artful , elegant , and noble than Italian . Both Leon Battista Alberti and Bembo conceded that Italian had not yet attained to the perfection of the classical languages ...
Сторінка 118
... defenders . With the exception of della Casa , whose posthumous Galateo ( Venice , 1558 ) he might have read , and Tasso , whose estimate of Dante is somewhat ambivalent , Milton cites in his writings and refers to his acquaintance with ...
... defenders . With the exception of della Casa , whose posthumous Galateo ( Venice , 1558 ) he might have read , and Tasso , whose estimate of Dante is somewhat ambivalent , Milton cites in his writings and refers to his acquaintance with ...
Зміст
Introduction Milton and the Florentine Accademici | 1 |
Chapter Two Buonmatteis Della Lingua Toscana | 63 |
Chapter Three The Buonmatteian Dante | 117 |
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Загальні терміни та фрази
Accademia accademici Adam Adam and Eve Adam's answer authority begins Benedetto Book Buonmattei century character colore Coltellini Commedia commentary concerning consider conversation course criticism Crusca Dante Dante's Dati defenders derived discourse edition effect English especially Eve's evidently example expression fact Fiorentina Florence Florentine Francesco Further Galileo gestural Giovanni given grammar human ideas implies impresa Inferno intellect Italian Italy known language Latin learned lectures letter lines Lingua Toscana linguistic live manner matter meaning Milton mind motto nature never noted notion observes origins Paradise Lost particular perhaps person poem poet prelapsarian principally proem publishes Purgatorio question reading reason reference regards represents rule Satan says seems sense serve signs social sort sound speaking speech suggests takes things thought Tuscan understanding University Vallombrosa Venice vernacular VIII visits writes
Посилання на книгу
Milton's Secrecy: And Philosophical Hermeneutics James Dougal Fleming Обмежений попередній перегляд - 2008 |