Glad to Go for a Feast: Milton, Buonmattei, and the Florentine AccademiciP. Lang, 1998 - 186 páginas 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. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 5
Página xviii
... proem , the treatises Dell'affisso and Della pronunzia . The first edition of the grammar is republished in Venice by Aromatori d'Assisi ( Subasiano ) as part of Raccolta degli autori del ben parlare . Bardi serves his last consularship ...
... proem , the treatises Dell'affisso and Della pronunzia . The first edition of the grammar is republished in Venice by Aromatori d'Assisi ( Subasiano ) as part of Raccolta degli autori del ben parlare . Bardi serves his last consularship ...
Página 74
... proem to Book VII interrupts the two narratives to permit the poet / speaker to engage in the performative mode , colloquy with Urania , who herself , before the creation , " with Eternal Wisdom didst converse " ( VII . 9 ) . One of the ...
... proem to Book VII interrupts the two narratives to permit the poet / speaker to engage in the performative mode , colloquy with Urania , who herself , before the creation , " with Eternal Wisdom didst converse " ( VII . 9 ) . One of the ...
Página 147
... proem as Dante conceived of it . In his lecture to the Fiorentina of February 17 , 1632 , Buonmattei begins by distinguishing exordium , proem , and prologue from one another , defining exordium as the beginning of an oration and citing ...
... proem as Dante conceived of it . In his lecture to the Fiorentina of February 17 , 1632 , Buonmattei begins by distinguishing exordium , proem , and prologue from one another , defining exordium as the beginning of an oration and citing ...
Contenido
Introduction Milton and the Florentine Accademici | 1 |
Chapter Two Buonmatteis Della Lingua Toscana | 63 |
Chapter Three The Buonmatteian Dante | 117 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 2 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Accademia della Crusca accademici Adam and Eve Adam's Adamic language Andrea Corsini Apatisti Areopagitica Aristotelian Arno Barberini Bardi Battista Bembo Benedetto Buonmattei Book Buonmattei Cardinal Carlo Casa Casotti Coltellini Commedia commentary comuni concerning Condillac conversation criticism Dante Dante's Dantean Dati discourse Don Prospero edition Ermini Eve's expression Familiar Letter VIII Fiorentina Florence Florentine Francesco Francesco Barberini Galileo gestural Giovanni grammar ideas impresa Inferno intellect Italian Latin lectures Lingua Toscana linguistic Lodi lucerna manner meaning Milton publishes Milton's visits motto nature Niccolò notion observes orazione Paradise Lost particular perhaps Petrarca Pisa pittura poem poet prelapsarian prelapsarian language proem pronunzia Prose Purgatorio quale questione della lingua Raccolta reading Renaissance ripieno Roman Inquisition Santa Satan scrittura seems segni Seicento sense impressions signification sort speaking speech subtext suggests Svogliati thir Trattato Tuscan tutte tutto understanding University of Pisa Valdarno Vallombrosa Vallone Varchi Venice vernacular Vita Vocabolario volgare words