The divine comedy, tr. by H.W. Longfellow, Volume 31867 |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... with such acuteness felt ; Whence she , who saw me as I saw myself , To quiet in me my perturbed mind , Opened her mouth , ere I did mine to ask , 80 85 And she began : " Thou makest thyself so dull 4 The Divine Comedy.
... with such acuteness felt ; Whence she , who saw me as I saw myself , To quiet in me my perturbed mind , Opened her mouth , ere I did mine to ask , 80 85 And she began : " Thou makest thyself so dull 4 The Divine Comedy.
Page 14
... whence it is derived , The mingled virtue through the body shines , Even as gladness through the living pupil . From this proceeds whate'er from light to light Appeareth different , not from dense and rare : This is the formal principle ...
... whence it is derived , The mingled virtue through the body shines , Even as gladness through the living pupil . From this proceeds whate'er from light to light Appeareth different , not from dense and rare : This is the formal principle ...
Page 17
... Whence I to her : " In your miraculous aspects There shines I know not what of the divine , 50 55 Which doth transform you from our first conceptions . Therefore I was not swift in my remembrance ; But what thou tellest me now aids me ...
... Whence I to her : " In your miraculous aspects There shines I know not what of the divine , 50 55 Which doth transform you from our first conceptions . Therefore I was not swift in my remembrance ; But what thou tellest me now aids me ...
Page 24
... Whence they were dragged , as soon as they were free ; But such a solid will is all too rare . And by these words , if thou hast gathered them As thou shouldst do , the argument is refuted That would have still annoyed thee many times ...
... Whence they were dragged , as soon as they were free ; But such a solid will is all too rare . And by these words , if thou hast gathered them As thou shouldst do , the argument is refuted That would have still annoyed thee many times ...
Page 26
... whence springs all truth ; This put to rest my wishes one and all . " O love of the first lover , O divine , " Said I forthwith , " whose speech inundates me And warms me so , it more and more revives me , My own affection is not so ...
... whence springs all truth ; This put to rest my wishes one and all . " O love of the first lover , O divine , " Said I forthwith , " whose speech inundates me And warms me so , it more and more revives me , My own affection is not so ...
Common terms and phrases
Albumasar Amyclas Angels Apulia Aristotle Beatrice beautiful became behold Belisarius bien body Boethius Brunetto Latini Buti c'est Cacciaguida Cæsar call'd called Canto Christ Church circle Convito d'une Dante Dante's death descended desire Dionysius the Areopagite divine dost doth earth Emperor eternal être eyes fait faith father fire Florence Francis génie grace Guelfs hast heaven holy Justinian king l'Enfer Lady light living Lord Mars ment Milton mind monastery monde monks Monte Cassino Moon mortal motion moyen âge nature noble Ottimo Ovid Paradise Peter philosophie planet poëme poésie poëte Pope Pope Boniface VIII Primum Mobile Purg qu'il rays Roman Rome round saint says seen Sephira shalt siècle sight smile song soul speak sphere spirit splendor stars sweet temps thee thine things Thomas Aquinas thou tion tout truth turned Tzade unto Virgin virtue vision whence words