>Dante's courtly love for Beatrice continued for nine years, before the pair finally met again. This meeting occurred in a street of Florence, which she walked along dressed in white and accompanied by two older women. She turned and greeted him, her salutation filling him with such joy that he retreated to his room to think about her. In doing so, he fell asleep, and had a dream which would become the subject of the first sonnet in La Vita Nuova.
one of ours
>being productive
Nope.
>The only source of this is a fiction work.
HAHAHAHAHAHA
>>9514883
s-so what
>>9515056
it ain't true m8
just face it and move on
>>9515121
nah
>>9515130
yeah
>>9515143
nope
>>9515151
yep
>>9515156
nuh-uh
>>9515159
yea-ah
I think this is just the OP replying to himself now.
>>9514883
Well, the content of his work implies that it is most likely true.
>tfw you'll never find your Beatrice
>>9515760
JDIMSA
>>9515743
>implies
Great "fact" you have there.
>>9515760
That's the point. She is meant to be unattainable in order to remain your muse. As dante once said, "never meet your heroes".
>>9514873
Any Italian here? How is Beatrice pronounced per feudal Florentine? Heard somewere it's along Beatriche.
>>9516228
Italian speaker here. Yes that's right, Beatriche with ch as cherry. It grinds my gears to hear Anglos pronounce it Beatris
>>9516166
I think he means you'll never have a muse like Beatrice.
>>9516140
>he doesn't know that a lot of history is implications
Great "education" you have there.
You are like little baby, watch this
>When he was 28 years old, because of some personal affliction (possibly venereal disease) Kierkegaard forced himself to spurn the affections of the most popular woman in Copenhagen—18-year-old Regine Olsen, whom he dearly loved—without explaining to her why. Initially crushed by the rejection, Regine later married the successful philosopher Fritz Schlegel.
>Kierkegaard never recovered, and his love for Regine festered into a disturbing lifelong obsession. Hundreds of pages of his journals are filled with fantasies about her, fragments of imagined conversations, cryptic book dedications, and unsent letters.
I wonder what she'd think of Dante's work.
>>9516281
It probably had a lot to do with her marrying 'successful' 'philosopher' Fritz Schlegel.
>>9516279
>he doesn't know the difference between ancient history and modern anciety
Great reading of Paul Veyne you have there.
>>9516290
>What the fuck am I reading?
>>9516325
i laughed
>In the year 1831, Schopenhauer fell in love with a girl named Flora Weiss. At a boat party in Germany he made his advance by offering her a bunch of grapes. Flora’s diary records this event as follows: "I didn’t want the grapes because old Schopenhauer had touched them, so I let them slide, quite gently into the water."Apparently, she was underwhelmed."
>>9516281
iktf
>>9516166
I have a suspicion that the waifu phenomenon is a corruption of this practice.
>>9516690
Wonder how many writers were really writing for their waifu.
>>9516454
>>9516281
Jeez. I wish I could like a girl this much.
>>9514873
>retreated to his room to think about her
>In doing so, he fell asleep
>>9514873
>one of ours
except for the part where he writes something good. or anything for that matter. fucking faggot losers.
>>9514873
>our guy
Didn't he eventually smash though?
What a beta, lol. Bet she was railed by Chad while he was jerking off in his chamber.
>>9518091
his other wife Gemma, yes