â¦
âIntroduction
to Part IIâ (in
Early Italian Poets),
189-193
â¦
Foster and Boyd, Dante's Lyric Poetry,
I.96-97 (II. 155-157)
.
â¦
De Robertis, ed., Vita Nuova, 245-246
.
This collection contains 10 texts and images, including:
Early Italian Poets text.
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
The Wordsworth allusion in line 4 is at once deft and shocking: deft because of the clear parallel between Wordsworth's Lucy figure and Dante's Beatrice; shocking because, as Byron would later say of Haidee and Aurora Raby, their beauties differ as âbetween a flower and gemâ. DGR's implicit argument here distinctly forecasts his famous declaration: âThy soul I know not from thy bodyâ (âHeart's Hopeâ line 7).
In a Dantean perspective the sonnet looks forward to the Commedia, as DGR's prose note to Chapter XLII indicates: Dante's âsospiroâ (line 2) conceals his guiding âperegrino spiritoâ (line 8), an understanding hidden within a longing desire (lines 9-10, 14). The forecast Paradiso thus becomes here a kind of figure for this climacic moment in Dante's autobiography, where he seems poised in an exquisite vision of the relation of the text and journey he is just finishing and the text and journey he has yet to take. This sonnet incarnates that moment of poised awareness. In the sonnet's Rossettian perspective, that entire Dantean dynamic is recuperated in the âlady round whom splendours move/ In homageâ, i.e., the Ideal lady of every idealizing poet's imagination, Wordsworth's natural one as well as Dante's supernatural one. In DGR's later famous (and consciously Dantean) words: âThis is that Lady Beauty, in whose praise/ Thy voice and hand shake still (âSoul's Beautyâ lines 9-10). DGR's final sonnetânot Dante'sâis a poetic splendour risen to do homage to that figure.
DGR's source text was âOltre la spera, che più larga giraâ in the third volume of Fraticelli's Opere Minori di Dante Alighieri.
Textual History: CompositionÂ
An early work, late 1840s.
Printing HistoryÂ
The translation was first published in 1861 in The Early Italian Poets; it was reprinted in 1874 in Dante and his Circle.