Url https://mint-shrew.lnx.warwick.ac.uk/s/dante-s-female-public/item/1323 Resource class bibo:Book Title A Walk into Other Worlds with Dante Creator 1124 Subject https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/100769994 A Walk into Other Worlds with Dante - Hathi Trust (Search only) Digitised by Cornell University Publisher 3129 Date 1914 Type 4349 Format 8vo Source Biblioteca del Gabinetto Scientifico Letterario G.P. Vieusseux (biblioteca circolante 1864-1892) Language 2395 Relation 6s. net. The book is marketed along with other Italy and Italian-related titles from George Routledge's Broadway House List. This include Dante-titles such as D. G. Rossetti's translation of the Vita Nuova, Longfellow's translation of the Divine Comedy. Along with them, Elizabeth Haig's Floral Symbolism of the Great Masters, and a number of guide books by Douglas Sladen and J. C. Hare. Table Of Contents "This book is a reply to many requests for simple information from those who say 'Dante is too deep' for them. [...] It is not a given to all to have leisure or inclination either to penetrate deeply enough into the long mazes of the Divina Commedia, or to study the Italian language sufficiently to appreciate the subtle touches and apt allusions which , when pointed out, are such a help and delight. Therefore the most notable of these, with explanations, have been collected and arranged in this little book, so that they be readily found and assimilated with very small effort by those who have only few moments to spare in this hurrying age. [...] This is not a commentary nor is the book compiled from an argumentative or historical point of view: it is merely an endeavour to gather together in a. compact form some of the beautiful and elevating thoughts [...] Together with Dante's own words quotations are added from commentaries on Dantesque literature, which has been so largely enriched by the grand perception and laborious study of the finest minds since that day when the poet passed. Extent xv, 253, 7 pl. (incl. front) port. 21 cm; 7 plates (including front) portrait. Green cloth-covered boards with gilt lettering and illustration of figures and stars on upper board, gilt lettering on spine. Spatial Coverage 2619 Temporal Coverage 3482 3481 Provenance Britain University of Bristol Libraries University of Cambridge Libraries Cardiff University Libraries University of Edinburgh Libraries University of Leeds Library University of Manchester Library National Library of Wales / Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru University of Oxford Libraries University of Southampton Library National Library of Scotland British Library https://ucl.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/44UCL_INST/155jbua/alma990016258860204761 UCL Library Services University of Reading Library Bookplate on front pastedown endpaper: ex libris H. St. John Brooks. From the Library of Huxley St. John Brooks, acquired 1926, with his bookplate. Inscription in pencil on half title page: [G.J.] Amery, Ruhleben 1916. Ireland Trinity College Dublin Library Italy Biblioteca comunale Adolfo Betti - Bagni di Lucca (LU) Biblioteca della Società napoletana di storia patria - Napoli (NA) Biblioteca del Centro dantesco - Ravenna (RA) Owner British Institute of Florence, Library, donated by the London Dante Society (1934) 1524 ReproducedIn The Times; The Times Literary Supplement; The Illustrated London News; Westminister Gazette; Sheffield Telegraph; Birmingham Daily Post; The Sphere Review of The Scotsman - 20th July 1914 "Deeper books might be needed by profound students; but this is a capital book for a beginner in Dante study". Sheffield Daily Telegraph - 20th August 1914 "It is delightful to discover how great is the interest in Italian literature, and Dante has a fascination fro very many minds. Here is another Dante book, whose charm of letterpress is wonderfully helped out by the full-page plates, of which there are eight." The reviewer misgenders the author by writing "Mr [?] Bainbrigge himself shall describ the content of his book." Birmingham Daily Post - 4th September 1914 "The work of selection and compression must have been very difficult and, while such work will always bear some marks of individual predilection, it has in this instance been carried out with careful discriminating thought" The Spectator - 3rd October 1914 Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer - 25th November 1914 "It is a modestly, sensibly and most pleasently written book which should amply serve is unambitious purpose of indicating some of the beautiful and most significant passages and thoughts of the immortal poem. The writer has studied her subject well and lovingly, and has also made herself familiar with much of its vast literature". Content Along with seven plates, the volume features illustration of the White Rose of the Saints from Paradiso hand-painted by Bainbrigge's sister, Edith M. Bainbrigge 1633 Number of volumes 1 ShortDescription 3601 --