
Christian History Home > Issue 70 > Dante in Love

Dante in Love
The poet's feelings for Beatrice far exceeded a childhood crush.
Charles Williams | posted 4/01/2001 12:00AM
Charles Williams (1886-1945), a regular member of the Oxford "Inklings," was a literary critic as well as a prolific writer of poetry, novels, drama, and theology. He believed that human love and divine love are intricately connected and that earthly pleasures, often seen as distractions or even evils, can actually bring people closer to God. He explores this idea at the beginning of his landmark book on Dante, The Figure of Beatrice, excerpted here.
Dante is one of those poets who begin their work with what is declared to be an intense personal experience. That experience is, as such, made part of the poetry; and it is not only so, with Dante, at the beginning, but also when, in his later and greater work, the experience is recalled and confirmed.
He defined the general kind of experience to which the figure of Beatrice belongs in one of his prose books, the Convivio (IV.xxv). He says there that the young are subject to a "stupor" or astonishment of the mind which falls on them at the awareness ... To view this item, you must be a member of ChristianHistory.net.
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