â¦
âIntroduction
to Part IIâ (in
Early Italian Poets)
189-193
â¦
Foster and Boyd, Dante's Lyric Poetry,
I.64-65 (II. 104-107)
.
â¦
De Robertis, ed., Vita Nuova, 133-136
.
This collection contains 10 texts and images, including:
Early Italian Poets text.
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
The sonnet explicates the ideasâwhich is also to say, the practiseâof the great canzone preceding it in the Vita Nuova, âLadies that have intelligence in loveâ. Once again the inventive excellence of DGR's translation leaps to attention. As DGR's note indicates, Dante's sonnet references Guinizzelli's famous canzone, also translated by DGR, âWithin the gentle heart Love shelters himâ. DGR's translation is particularly interesting in the opening passage where the Guinizzelli allusion is made. DGR's purpose comes into focus in line 3, which departs drastically from the literal sense of Dante's Italian (âE così senza l'un l'altro esser osaâ). The differential is measured by DGR's clear effort to evoke the figure of Samuel Taylor Coleridge by echoing a famous passage from âThe Rime of the Ancient Marinerâ in the context of a theoretical discussion of the psycho-dynamics of love. Indeed, Dante's (and DGR's) argument for the intimate relation of form and matter (see Dante's divisio for this sonnet) has no force unless the âpower [sustaining that relation] translates itself into actâ. That prose explanation from the divisio involves its own remarkable act of translation, for the Italian source of âtranslates itselfâ is âsi riduceâ. We know that DGR asked WMR to translate the Vita Nuova's divisions for him. Whichever Rossetti brother was responsible for this translation, it is a trenchant linguistic moment.
DGR's source text was âAmore e cor gentil sono una cosaâ in the third volume of Fraticelli's Opere Minori di Dante Alighieri .
Textual History: CompositionÂ
This is an early translation, in the 1840s, perhaps as early as 1846.
Printing HistoryÂ
The translation was first published in 1861 in The Early Italian Poets; it was reprinted in 1874 in Dante and his Circle.