Stories from the Italian Poets: with Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about Stories from the Italian Poets.

Stories from the Italian Poets: with Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about Stories from the Italian Poets.
Philosophy of the Thirteenth Century, “in spite” (as a critic says) “of the Beatrice, his daughter, wife of Messer Simone de’ Bardi, of the paternal will,” describes her as dying in “all the lustre of virginity.” [8] The assumption appears to be thus gloriously stated, as a counterpart to the notoriety of its untruth.  It must be acknowledged, that Dante himself gave the cue to it by more than silence; for he not only vaunts her acquaintance in the next world, but assumes that she returns his love in that region, as if no such person as her husband could have existed, or as if he himself had not been married also.  This life-long pertinacity of will is illustrative of his whole career.

Meantime, though the young poet’s father had died, nothing was wanting on the part of his guardians, or perhaps his mother, to furnish him with an excellent education.  It was so complete, as to enable him to become master of all the knowledge of his time; and he added to this learning more than a taste for drawing and music.  He speaks of himself as drawing an angel in his tablets on the first anniversary of Beatrice’s death.[9] One of his instructors was Brunetto Latini, the most famous scholar then living; and he studied both at the universities of Padua and Bologna.  At eighteen, perhaps sooner, he had shown such a genius for poetry as to attract the friendship of Guido Cavalcante, a young noble of a philosophical as well as poetical turn of mind, who has retained a reputation with posterity:  and it was probably at the same time he became acquainted with Giotto, who drew his likeness, and with Casella, the musician, whom he greets with so much tenderness in the other world.

Nor were his duties as a citizen forgotten.  The year before Beatrice’s death, he was at the battle of Campaldino, which his countrymen gained against the people of Arezzo; and the year after it he was present at the taking of Caprona from the Pisans.  It has been supposed that he once studied medicine with a view to it as a profession; but the conjecture probably originated in nothing more than his having entered himself of one of the city-companies (which happened to be the medical) for the purpose of qualifying himself to accept office; a condition exacted of the gentry by the then democratic tendencies of the republic.  It is asserted also, by an early commentator, that he entered the Franciscan order of friars, but quitted it before he was professed; and, indeed, the circumstance is not unlikely, considering his agitated and impatient turn of mind.  Perhaps he fancied that he had done with the world when it lost the wife of Simone de’ Bardi.

Weddings that might have taken place but do not, are like the reigns of deceased heirs-apparent; every thing is assumable in their favour, checked only by the histories of husbands and kings.  Would the great but splenetic poet have made an angel and a saint of Beatrice, had he married her?  He never utters the name of the woman whom he did marry.

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Stories from the Italian Poets: with Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.