{
    "url": "https://modernbeatricesarchive.org/s/mba/item/1322",
    "o:resource_class": "bibo:Book",
    "dcterms:title": [
        "Dante the Wayfarer"
    ],
    "dcterms:creator": [
        "1123"
    ],
    "dcterms:subject": [
        "https://archive.org/details/dantewayfarer00hareuoft/page/xviii/mode/2up Dante The Wayfarer - Archive.org",
        "Digitised by the University of Toronto Robarts Library"
    ],
    "dcterms:publisher": [
        "3134"
    ],
    "dcterms:date": [
        "1905"
    ],
    "dcterms:type": [
        "4301",
        "4347"
    ],
    "dcterms:format": [
        "demy 8vo."
    ],
    "dcterms:source": [
        "Biblioteca del Gabinetto Scientifico Letterario G.P. Vieusseux (biblioteca circolante 1864-1892) \nThe London Library"
    ],
    "dcterms:language": [
        "2395",
        "2397",
        "Used for epigraphs and quotes from Dante's works"
    ],
    "dcterms:relation": [
        "10s. 6d."
    ],
    "dcterms:tableOfContents": [
        "\"My aim  reaches not to another world, but I am content to  take Dante himself as my guide for an earthly pilgrimage ; following him through the ancient cities of  Northern Italy from one refuge to another in his long  exile, up the steep mountain path, by the river side,  along many a by way far from the busy haunts of men,  where the world which the poet saw still lives unchanged after six centuries.  To stand where he stood, to look upon the scenes which met his eyes, seems to bring him very near us.",
        "Thus I have sought to follow step by step the poet  of the Divina Commcdia, telling in his own words the  story of all the men and women he met by the way,  and gathering together the legends which sprang up  like flowers wherever his footsteps passed\".  From the Prelude."
    ],
    "dcterms:extent": [
        "xviii, 354 p. : ill., ports. ; 22 cm. \n\nPublisher's green cloth binding; gilt lettering and centrepiece on upper board; gilt lettering on spine; gilt top edge."
    ],
    "dcterms:spatial": [
        "2619",
        "2628"
    ],
    "dcterms:temporal": [
        "3485"
    ],
    "dcterms:provenance": [
        "Britain \nUniversity of Birmingham Libraries \nBritish Library \nUniversity of Cambridge Libraries \nCardiff University Libraries \nDurham University Library \nUniversity of Edinburgh Libraries \nUniversity of Exeter Library \nUniversity of Liverpool Library \nUniversity of Manchester Library \nNational Library of Scotland \nSenate House Library\nYork Minster\nUniversity of Reading",
        "https://ucl.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/44UCL_INST/155jbua/alma990016350770204761 University of London UCL Library Services\nH. St. John Brooks Collection, with marginalia.",
        "Tick sign next to works of reference, pp. 337-8, perhaps indicating ownership of the following titles:\nAretino, \"Leonardo Vita di Dante\"  \nBianchi, Brunone, \"La commedia di Dante Alighieri\" \nButler Arthur J., \"Dante, his Times and his work\" 1895 \nGardner, E. \"Dante Ten Heavens\"  \nRossetti, D. G. \"The New life, by Dante Alighieri\"  \nVernon, W. W. \"Readings on the Inferno and Purgatorio of Dante\"  \nVillani Giovanni, \"Cittadino Fiorentino, Cronica universale de suoi Tempi\" Pub. 1554 \nTemple Classics \"Dante\" Italian and English text.",
        "University of Oxford Libraries.\nCopies in the Toynbee Collection (Weston Library) and Moore Collection (Taylorian Instute). Another copy was bequeathed by Lucy Ethel Willock to the library of Lady Margaret Hall College, but is now lost. \n(Toynbee Collection; Moore Collection)",
        "Ireland \nTrinity College Dublin\n\nItaly \nBiblioteca Clarence Bicknell dell'Istituto internazionale di studi liguri - Bordighera (IM)\nBiblioteca del Centro dantesco - Ravenna (RA) \nBiblioteca Nazionale Universitaria - Torino (TO)"
    ],
    "bibo:authorList": [
        "Christopher Hare"
    ],
    "bibo:owner": [
        "Cambridge Public Library (1921)\nWaterford Johnstown (IR)",
        "Athenaeum Library,  Liverpool"
    ],
    "bibo:reproducedIn": [
        "London Evening Standard - Tuesday 05 Dec. 1905; \nWestminster Gazette - Wednesday 06 Dec. 1905; \nGlobe - Wednesday 13 December 1905; \nDaily Telegraph & Courier - Wednesday 13 Dec. 1905"
    ],
    "bibo:reviewOf": [
        "Times Literary Supplement - 22 September 1905\n'The best part of the book is that in which Mr. Hare follows Dante through the Lunigiana and the Casentino. The contributions to criticism and interpretation are not very happy. […] The amazing statement that nothing remains of Guido Guinicelli’s work shakes one’s trust in Mr. Hare’s knowledge of Italian Poetry; we commend to him Rossetti’s translation of the Canzone “Al cor gentil ripara sempre amore”. […] Yet, in spite of serious faults in point of accuracy and style, one cannot wholly quarrely with the book, for the writer seems to have a true love for the hills and byways of Italy, and has made some attempt to realize the man Dante as he lived and walked upon them. But a shorter book, with more wayfaring and less commentary, would have produced a better effect’.",
        "Irish News and Belfast Morning News - Monday 25 September 1905\n\nGraphic - Saturday 30 September 1905\n\nThe Scotsman - Thursday 28 September 1905\n\nDaily Telegraph & Courier (London) - Friday 06 October 1905\n\nThe Academy - 14 October 1905 \n\nMorning Post - Thursday 16 November 1905\n\nThe Spectator - 19 November 1905\n\nThe Bookman - Dec 1905\n\nThe Modern Language Review - 1 April 1906",
        "Weekly Irish Times - Saturday 14 October 1905 \n'some good descriptions, some interesting chapters, some very useful historical knowledge and a great number of interesting illustrations, but we are inclined to say that the lover of Dante will not need the volume, and that those not familiar with him better not delay here from the massive epic itself. […] We can only wonder why Mr Hare considered it right to give so many, and such long quotations in both Italian and English. With Cary’s translation – a masterpiece of itself – available, there was surely no need for this. […] the result of eschewing Cary is not always felicitous.’"
    ],
    "bibo:content": [
        "Illustrated. With a \"Chronology of the chief historical events during the life of Dante\" (p. ix-xiii). It includes bibliographical references (p. 337-338) and index."
    ],
    "bibo:edition": [
        "American Edition",
        "1321"
    ],
    "bibo:numVolumes": [
        "1"
    ],
    "bibo:shortDescription": [
        "3601"
    ],
    "oa:sourceDate": [
        "5551"
    ]
},
