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  1. www.cliffsnotes.com › literature › dCanto XV - CliffsNotes

    The most significant moment in Canto XV is the meeting between Dante and Ser Brunetto, Dante's mentor and a source of encouragement. Dante was influenced by Ser Brunetto's works, one of which he mentions — the Treasure. This is one of the high points in the Inferno. Clearly, Dante felt that Ser Brunetto was an important man and cared for him ...

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    • Canto III

      Summary Canto III opens with the inscription on the gate of...

    • Canto Vii

      Canto Vii - Canto XV - CliffsNotes

    • Canto VI

      Aside from brief mention in earlier cantos, Canto VI...

    • Canto Xxiii

      Summary. The poets walk unattended for a while, and Dante...

    • Canto Xxxiv

      Canto Xxxiv - Canto XV - CliffsNotes

  2. Vittorio Imbriani took issue with that concept, saying Brunetto was far too busy a man to have been a mere teacher. Dante immortalized him in the Divine Comedy (see Inferno, XV. 22–87). It is also believed that there was an intellectual and affectionate bond between the elderly man and the young poet.

  3. The Tesoretto is often recognized as a precursor to Dante’s Divine Comedy. The poem follows in the medieval tradition of philosophical poetry in which a narrator recounts a dream-like vision.

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  5. [26] How magisterially the poet manipulates us in this encounter, modelling through the pilgrim the “shock” that generations of readers have proceeded to feel at meeting Brunetto Latini in Hell. As I write in The Undivine Comedy:

  6. Brunetto Latini: Circle 7, Inferno 15. One of the most important figures in Dante's life and in the Divine Comedy, Brunetto Latini is featured among the sodomites in one of the central cantos of the Inferno.

  7. Inferno Canto XV:1-42 The Violent against Nature: Brunetto Latini. Now one of the solid banks takes us on, and the smoke from the stream makes a shadow above, so that it shelters the water and its margins. Just as the Flemings between Bruges and Wissant make their dykes to hold back the sea, fearing the flood that beats against them; and as the ...

  8. Dante’s Inferno – Canto 15 - Dante's Divine Comedy. Virgil and Dante continue across the burning sands. Dante meets and talks with his mentor, Brunetto Latini. (To read a footnote, click the number in the text. To come back from a footnote, click the up arrow at the note number.)

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