â¦
âIntroduction
to Part IIâ (in
Early Italian Poets)
189-193
â¦
Foster and Boyd, Dante's Lyric Poetry,
I.66-67 (II. 109-110)
.
â¦
De Robertis, ed., Vita Nuova, 138-142
.
This collection contains 10 texts and images, including:
Early Italian Poets text.
Scholarly Commentary
IntroductionÂ
Neither Dante's sonnet nor DGR's translation are especially remarkable, a fact made all the more apparent by the allusion in lines 2-4 to Cavalcanti's great sonnet âWho is she coming, whom all gaze uponâ, translated so well by DGR. This sonnet's importance lies in its position in the Vita Nuova as a whole. The âgracious miracleâ of Beatrice will shortly become even more dramatically apparent after her death, when her vitalizing influence persists. Indeed, the action of the autobiography, written as it was after Beatrice's death, carries this idea as a regular and crucial subtext of its argument.
DGR's source text was âNegli occhi porta la mia donna Amoreâ 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
bThe translation was first published in 1861 in The Early Italian Poets; it was reprinted in 1874 in Dante and his Circle.