Items related to Inferno Volume 1

Dante Alighieri Inferno Volume 1 ISBN 13: 9781236279743

Inferno Volume 1 - Softcover

 
9781236279743: Inferno Volume 1

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Synopsis

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1886 Excerpt: ...Spendthrift Club, they also being all rich, together with them, not spending but squandering, in a short time he consumed all that he had and became very poor." Joining some Florentine troops sent out against the Aretines, he was in a skirmish at the parish of Toppo, which Dante calls a joust; "and notwithstanding he might have saved himself," continues Boccaccio, "remembering his wretched condition, and it seeming to him a grievous thing to bear poverty, as he had been very rich, he rushed into the thick of the enemy and was slain, as perhaps he desired to be." 125. Some commentators interpret these dogs as poverty and despair, still pursuing their victims. The Ottimo Comento calls them "poor men who, to follow pleasure and the kitchens of other people, abandoned their homes and families, and are therefore transformed into hunting dogs, and pursue and devour their masters." 133. Jacopo da St. Andrea was a Paduan of like character and life as Lano. "Among his other squanderings," says the Ottimo Comento, "it is said that, wishing to see a grand and beautiful fire, he had one of his own villas burned." 143. Florence was first under the protection of the god Mars; afterwards under that of St. John the Baptist. But in Dante's time the statue of Mars was still standing on a column at the head of the Ponte Vecchio. It was overthrown by an inundation of the Arno in 1333. See Canto XV. Note 62. 149. Florence was destroyed by Totila in 450, and never by Attila. In Dante's time the two seem to have been pretty generally confounded. The Ottimo Comento remarks upon this point, "Some say that Totila was one person and Attila another; and some say that he was one and the same man." 150. Dante does not ment...

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  • PublisherRarebooksclub.com
  • Publication date2012
  • ISBN 10 1236279743
  • ISBN 13 9781236279743
  • BindingPaperback

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Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780143124788: Inferno: Volume 1 of The Divine Comedy

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0143124781 ISBN 13:  9780143124788
Publisher: Penguin Books, 2013
Softcover