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preceded by four, and followed by ten, minor poems, like the first in inverse order. Thus the arrangement appears as follows:

10 minor poems

I canzone

4 minor poems

I canzone

4 minor poems

I canzone

Io minor poems

Here, leaving the central canzone to stand by itself, we have three series of ten poems each. It will be observed further that the first and the third canzone stand at the same distance from the central poem, and that ten minor poems separate the one from the beginning, the other from the end of the book, and in each instance nine of these poems are sonnets. It is also worth remark that while the first canzone is followed by four sonnets, and the third is preceded by three sonnets and an imperfect canzone, this imperfect canzone is a single stanza, which has the same number of lines, and the same arrangement of its lines in respect to rhyme, as a sonnet, differing in this respect from the other canzoni. It may be fairly classed as a sonnet, its only difference from one being in the name that Dante has given to it.

The symmetrical construction now appears still more clearly:

10 minor poems, all but one of them sonnets

I canzone

4 sonnets

I canzone

4 sonnets

I canzone

10 minor poems, all but one of them sonnets

It may be taken as evidence that this regularity of arrangement was intentional, that a comparison of the first with the third canzone shows them to be mutually related, one being the balance of the other. The first begins:

Donne ch' avete intelletto d'amore

Io vo' con voi della mia donna dire;

and the last line of its first stanza is :

Chè non è cosa da parlarne altrui.

In the first stanza of the third there is a distinct reference to these words:

E perchè mi ricorda ch' io parlai

Della mia donna, mentre che vivia,
Donne gentili, volentier con vui,
Non vo' parlarne altrui

Se non a cor gentil che 'n donna sia.

The second stanza of the first canzone relates to the desire which is felt in Heaven for Beatrice. The corresponding stanza of the third declares that it was this desire for her which led to her being taken from the world. The third stanza of the one relates to the operation of her virtues and beauties upon earth; of the other, to the remembrance of them. There is a similarity of expression to be traced throughout.

In the last stanza, technically called the commiato, or dismissal, in which the poem is personified and sent on its way, in the first canzone it is called figliuola d'amor, in the third, figliuola di tristizia. One was the daughter of love, the other of sorrow; one was the poem recording Beatrice's life, the other her death. It is thus that one

is made to serve as the complement and balance of the other, in the structure of the New Life.

It may be possible to trace a similar relation between some of the minor poems of the beginning and the end of the volume; but I have not observed it, if it exists.

The second canzone is, as I have said, the most important poem in the volume, from the force of imagination displayed in it, as well as from its serving to connect the life of Beatrice with her death; and thus it holds, as of right, its central position in relation to the poems which precede and follow it.

But another, not less numerically symmetrical division of these poems, no longer according to their form, but according to their subject, may be observed by the careful reader. The first ten of them relate to the beginning of Dante's love, and to his own early experiences as a lover. At their close he says that it seemed to him he had said enough of his own state, and that it behoved him to take up a new theme, and that he thereupon resolved thenceforth to make the praise of his Lady his sole theme (cc. xvii, xviii). This theme is the ruling motive of the next ten poems. The last of them is interrupted by the death of Beatrice, and thereafter he takes up, as he again says, a new theme, and the next ten poems are devoted to his affliction, to the episode of the gentle lady, and to his return to his faithful love of Beatrice. One poem, the last, remains. It differs from all the rest; he calls it a new thing. It is the consummation of his experience of love in the vision of his Lady in glory.

It is to be noted as a peculiarity of this final poem, and an indication of its composition at a later period than

those which precede it, that whereas the visions which they report have reference, without exception, to things which the poet had experienced, or seen, or fancied, when awake, thus appearing to be dependent on previous waking excitements, the vision related in this sonnet seems, on the contrary, to have had its origin in no external circumstance, but to be the result of a purely internal condition of feeling. It was a new Intelligence that led his sigh upwards a new Intelligence which prepared him for his vision at Easter in 1300.

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If a reason be inquired for that might lead Dante thus symmetrically to arrange the poems of this little book in a triple series of ten around a central unit, or in a triple series of ten, followed by a single poem in which he is guided to Heaven by a new Intelligence, it may perhaps be found in the value which he set upon ten as the perfect number; while in the three times repeated series, culminating in a single central or final poem, he may have pleased himself with some fanciful analogy to that three and one on which he dwells in the passage in which he treats of the friendliness of the number nine to Beatrice. At any rate, as he there says, 'this is the reason which I see for it, and which best pleases me; though perchance a more subtile reason might be seen therein by a more subtile person.' 1

1 Charles Eliot Norton, The New Life of Dante Alighieri, pp. 129-134.

V. SOME OF THE TOPICS DISCUSSED BY
DANTE IN HIS TREATISE DE VULGARI
ELOQUENTIA

The illustrious Italian language is equally fit for use in prose and in verse.

The illustrious language must only be used in treating of the worthiest subjects, that is, Arms, Love, and Virtue. The canzone is the noblest form of poetry.

Of the different lines admissible in canzoni. The line of eleven syllables is the stateliest, and therefore the most eligible; next come the lines of seven, five, and three syllables.

Of construction, that is, the arrangement of words in

sentences.

Classification of the words admissible in canzoni.

The canzone defined as a joining together of stanzas; definition of the stanza.

The arrangement of the parts of the stanza; the relation between its several parts in regard to the number of lines and syllables they contain.

Arrangement of the parts of the stanza in relation to the different kinds of lines employed.

Rhyme in relation to the arrangement of the different parts of the stanza.

The number of lines and syllables in the stanza.1

1 From the translation by A. G. Ferrers Howell. The Latin Works of Dante (Temple Classics), pp. 65 ff.

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