![]() And trembling it spoke these words: “Ecce deus fortior me, qui veniens dominabitur michi.” * At that time the animal spirit, which dwells in the high chamber to which all the spirits of sensation carry their perceptions, began to marvel, and speaking especially to the spirits of vision it said: “Apparuit iam beatitudo vestra.” † At that time the natural spirit, which dwells where our food is digested, started to cry, and crying it spoke these words: “Heu miser, quia frequenter impeditus ero deinceps!” ‡įrom then on, I swear that Love dominated my soul, which was wedded to him so early, and began to rule me with such confidence and power, by means of the force my imagination lent him, there was no choice but for me to do whatever he wanted. ![]() ![]() She appeared, dressed in a very stately color, a subdued and dignified crimson, girdled and adorned in a manner that was fitting for her young age.Īt that time, truly, I say, the vital spirit, which dwells in the innermost chamber of the heart, started to tremble so powerfully that its disturbance reached all the way to the slightest of my pulses. She had already been in this life long enough for the heaven of the fixed stars to have moved toward the east a twelfth of a degree since she was born, so that she was at the beginning of her ninth year when she appeared to me, and I saw her when I was almost at the end of my ninth. Nine times, the heaven of the light had returned to where it was at my birth, almost to the very same point of its orbit, when the glorious lady of my mind first appeared before my eyes-she whom many called Beatrice without even knowing that was her name. 41 (1986) p.In the book of my memory-the part of it before which not much is legible-there is the heading Incipit vita nova. Under this heading I find the words which I intend to copy down in this little book if not all of them, at least their essential meaning. 99-144Ī proposito della "specificità valdese" tardo-medievale Boccassini, Daniela. 35-58įra saggezza e ardimento: l'Orlando di Boiardo Boccassini, Daniela. (1997) - In: Studi Danilo Aguzzi-Barbagli p. Love, magic, and storytelling in Boiardo's Orlando innamorato: the Dragontina episode Boccassini, Daniela. 7-25įifteenth-century 'istoria': Texts, images, contexts Boccassini, Daniela. I libri di Orlando: saggezza ed erranza in Boiardo Boccassini, Daniela. 5-23įalconry as a Transmutative Art: Dante, Frederik II, and Islam Boccassini, Daniela. 199-226Įgo tanquam centrum circuli: La Vita nuova, percorso di reminiscenza e psicocosmogramma Boccassini, Daniela. (2009) - In: Sport and culture in early modern Europe p. 29-44Ĭhasse et fauconnerie du Moyen Age à la Renaissance: les recueils cynégétiques français Boccassini, Daniela. (2012) - In: Desire in Dante and the Middle Ages p. 'L'ora che volge il disio': Comparative Hermeneutics of Desire in Dante and 'Attar Boccassini, Daniela. Dante fra letteratura, eresia e storia p. 133-155ĭante, la via del cuore e il destino di Guido da Montefeltro Boccassini, Daniela. ![]() 367-388įalconry as a transmutative art: Dante, Frederick II, and Islam Boccassini, Daniela. Stony Brook, NY (1997)įalconry as royal "delectatio": understanding the art of taming and its philosophical foundations in 12th- and 13th-century Europe Boccassini, Daniela. Studi filologici e letterari in Memoria di Danilo Aguzzi-Barbagli Boccassini, Daniela. Il volo della mente: falconeria e sofia nel mondo mediterraneo: Islam, Federico II, Dante Boccassini, Daniela. Sogni e visioni nel mondo indo-mediterraneo = Dreams and visions in the Indo-Mediterranean world. Forward to Karlsruher Virtueller Katalog search engine: Boccassini, Daniela
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