Dante Alighieri, the Italian poet, takes us on a celestial tour in "Paradiso," the final chapter of his epic "Divine Comedy." ⬇️
Dante Alighieri, the Italian poet, takes us on a celestial tour in "Paradiso," the final chapter of his epic "Divine Comedy." ⬇️
My Dante odyssey is at an end. A strategy to studying was hard to find. A break between the Purgatorio and Paradiso lit classes would have helped. When I found the Longfellow translation on YouTube, I discovered the poetry of this canticle. For class, I read the Musa translation with its footnotes and then followed up by listening to the Longfellow translation. Longfellow's 1860's translation should not be discounted for modern readers.
What can I say about this? It‘s not fun in the way Inferno and Purgatory are. It‘s difficult, idea heavy, obscuring all references, churning out Dante‘s take on St. Thomas, sketching a little heresy oh so gently here or there. Also, it‘s science fiction as we visit the moon, planets and the starry space. This completes one of my 2020 goals. Dante is nice place to spend a year. (And the Hollander translation and notes make it easy.)
I mentioned that our son took our dog Dante, who was nearly 17 at the time, b/c my husband couldn't be around animals during his transplant. I didn't expect to see Dante again. But our son came to Fl for 3 wks in Oct and brought Dante, so we got to visit. He is now nearly 19 & blind, but he is happy. Here he is in my lap.
Hope posting this doesn‘t mean I‘m leaving anyone in anguished craving. 🙂😇
I showed him this page and told him, who said I don‘t do sci fi? This was his reaction.
Ok, here it goes. The commentary tells me less narrative and more theology (and philosophy).
Dante‘s finally in heaven, third and final book of The “Divine Comedy” saga. Really good out of the Saga I believe this is my favorite. Must read definitely