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Dante Alighieri

Italian poet, writer, and philosopher
Date of Birth : 21 May, 1265
Date of Death : 13 Sep, 1321
Place of Birth : Florence, Italy
Profession : Writer, Philosopher, Poet
Nationality : Italian
Dante Alighieri was an Italian poet, prose writer, literary theorist, moral philosopher, and political thinker. He is best known for the monumental epic poem La commedia, later named La divina commedia (The Divine Comedy).

Dante’s Divine Comedy, a landmark in Italian literature and among the greatest works of all medieval European literature, is a profound Christian vision of humankind’s temporal and eternal destiny. On its most personal level, it draws on Dante’s own experience of exile from his native city of Florence. On its most comprehensive level, it may be read as an allegory, taking the form of a journey through hell, purgatory, and paradise. The poem amazes by its array of learning, its penetrating and comprehensive analysis of contemporary problems, and its inventiveness of language and imagery. By choosing to write his poem in the Italian vernacular rather than in Latin, Dante decisively influenced the course of literary development. (He primarily used the Tuscan dialect, which would become standard literary Italian, but his vivid vocabulary ranged widely over many dialects and languages.) Not only did he lend a voice to the emerging lay culture of his own country, but Italian became the literary language in western Europe for several centuries.

In addition to poetry, Dante wrote important theoretical works ranging from discussions of rhetoric to moral philosophy and political thought. He was fully conversant with the classical tradition, drawing for his own purposes on such writers as Virgil, Cicero, and Boethius. But, most unusual for a layman, he also had an impressive command of the most recent scholastic philosophy and of theology. His learning and his personal involvement in the heated political controversies of his age led him to the composition of De monarchia (On Monarchy), one of the major tracts of medieval political philosophy.

Quotes

Total 20 Quotes
No sorrow is deeper than the remembrance of happiness when in misery.
Now you know how much my love for you burns deep in me when I forget about our emptiness, and deal with shadows as with solid things.
For she doth make my veins and pulses tremble.
It was the hour of morning, when the sun mounts with those stars that shone with it when God’s own love first set in motion those fair things.
I found myself within a forest dark, for the straightfoward pathway had been lost. Ah me! How hard a thing is to say, what was this forest savage, rough, and stern, which in the very thought renews the fear. So bitter is it, death is little more.
There is no greater pain than to remember, in our present grief, past happiness.
At grief so deep the tongue must wag in vain; the language of our sense and memory lacks the vocabulary of such pain.
Lost are we, and are only so far punished, That without hope we live on in desire.
O human race, born to fly upward, wherefore at a little wind dost thou so fall?
Midway in our life’s journey, I went astray from the straight road and woke to find myself alone in a dark wood.