Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 21 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 112514 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 69 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 Italy 13 Rome 12 italian 11 Renaissance 10 french 10 Pope 10 Florence 9 France 9 Duke 9 Church 8 Cardinal 7 Venice 7 St. 7 Naples 7 Medici 7 God 7 Ferrara 6 Urbino 6 Paris 6 Lorenzo 6 Giovanni 6 Francesco 6 Europe 6 Charles 5 Spain 5 Milan 5 Middle 5 Maria 5 Lord 5 King 5 Footnote 5 England 5 Emperor 5 Borgia 5 Bologna 5 Ages 4 illustration 4 Tasso 4 Sforza 4 Pesaro 4 MSS 4 Leo 4 Holiness 4 Henry 4 Francis 4 Duchess 4 Dante 4 Court 4 Alfonso 3 roman Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 4211 time 4137 man 2654 life 2550 year 2432 work 2237 century 2167 art 1876 day 1600 death 1544 letter 1463 p. 1447 age 1424 place 1415 note 1407 book 1383 hand 1374 history 1341 order 1326 world 1317 city 1306 name 1247 son 1213 part 1194 poet 1182 people 1164 period 1112 woman 1103 power 1074 way 1065 character 1060 state 1058 thing 1036 poetry 1013 house 998 word 963 father 958 form 949 family 940 love 931 influence 928 court 926 spirit 894 illustration 878 country 865 literature 864 mind 841 subject 834 nothing 826 study 823 nature Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 26569 _ 2591 Italy 2589 ii 2423 Rome 2266 Duke 1742 Footnote 1693 Urbino 1468 de 1450 Pope 1414 Renaissance 1401 Florence 1322 . 1206 Church 1196 i. 1166 | 1097 Francesco 1093 France 1019 S. 946 Cardinal 909 Venice 868 Ferrara 860 Charles 853 King 843 Maria 830 St. 828 II 820 vol 808 di 772 Tasso 748 Naples 747 Paris 724 Federigo 712 Medici 677 Borgia 659 Lucretia 638 et 638 God 609 Alexander 602 Sforza 601 Giovanni 599 Europe 593 da 589 e 587 la 584 Century 583 Count 578 Spain 576 Milan 575 England 573 Lord Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 18007 he 14376 it 7811 i 6646 they 6578 him 4746 we 4293 them 2948 she 2438 you 1972 himself 1674 me 1588 her 1401 us 950 themselves 669 itself 277 one 259 myself 259 herself 160 thee 137 ourselves 89 yourself 40 mine 31 his 25 ours 24 theirs 23 yours 16 thyself 16 oneself 10 ye 9 hers 6 guelf 5 thy 4 yt 4 vvith 4 vp 4 em 3 je 3 ''em 2 thou 2 indulgences.--marks 2 ii 1 à 1 yourselves 1 wish-- 1 whereof 1 voltaire 1 virtue:-- 1 us:-- 1 u 1 tô Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 64479 be 22866 have 3941 make 3868 do 2717 see 2674 give 2636 say 2447 take 2292 find 2053 come 1884 know 1768 become 1713 write 1408 seem 1401 call 1353 go 1279 bring 1249 follow 1214 leave 1083 receive 1019 pass 1017 show 961 remain 958 think 956 bear 920 send 875 hold 860 appear 857 die 844 begin 804 use 804 carry 790 live 781 tell 779 learn 732 fall 705 set 702 regard 667 form 654 return 643 feel 640 speak 637 keep 635 describe 631 seek 625 read 618 lose 586 place 581 enter 570 lead Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 9305 not 4515 so 4214 more 3769 great 3036 most 2852 only 2738 other 2626 first 2523 well 2275 such 2155 own 2155 many 1980 even 1978 now 1939 then 1925 very 1924 good 1907 much 1875 as 1687 also 1680 long 1601 same 1588 italian 1557 new 1497 thus 1421 up 1382 still 1367 however 1294 little 1293 out 1212 old 1189 early 1118 high 1058 less 1042 never 1039 last 1011 far 999 too 976 there 968 young 967 modern 943 ever 893 few 862 here 845 almost 842 yet 830 french 804 therefore 745 again 741 indeed Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 614 good 540 most 428 great 411 least 241 high 133 early 89 bad 79 eld 75 fine 64 noble 59 Most 44 late 39 low 31 strong 31 slight 31 large 29 young 29 pure 26 rich 26 near 24 fair 24 deep 23 old 22 small 21 dear 19 manif 16 full 16 bitter 15 l 14 sweet 14 mean 14 happy 14 bright 13 true 12 wise 11 close 11 choice 10 sure 10 subtle 10 rare 10 keen 9 wide 9 simple 9 chief 9 brave 8 grave 8 grand 8 e 8 dark 8 bl Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2496 most 119 well 64 least 3 worst 3 goethe 2 tempest 2 highest 1 whitest 1 shortest 1 richest 1 opprest 1 near 1 greatest 1 fairest 1 est 1 cleverest 1 brightest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 www.gutenberg.org 3 archive.org 2 www.gutenberg.net 1 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/44235 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50577 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/42560 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/7/7/6/27766/27766-h/27766-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/2/7/7/6/27766/27766-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/centurycolumbus01walsgoog 1 http://archive.org/details/memoirsofdukesof03dennuoft 1 http://archive.org/details/memoirsofdukesof01dennuoft 1 http://archive.org/details/memoirsofdukeso02dennuoft Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 77 _ see _ 5 _ did not 5 men were not 4 _ is not 4 italy was still 4 men did not 4 renaissance did not 4 time was not 4 time went on 3 _ is more 3 _ is really 3 age had not 3 century was not 3 death took place 3 italy is not 3 life is not 3 men are not 3 men are so 3 men have always 3 rome was not 3 time did not 3 work was originally 3 works are still 3 year was out 2 _ came next 2 _ gave rise 2 _ was _ 2 _ was also 2 _ was ever 2 _ was first 2 age is not 2 art is not 2 book has not 2 book is full 2 book is not 2 book is now 2 book was never 2 book was widely 2 books are mere 2 books were not 2 century is almost 2 century is st. 2 century was as 2 century was so 2 death did not 2 death is certainly 2 duke did not 2 duke was very 2 florence were parties 2 hand being now Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ did not immediately 1 _ has no trace 1 _ is not diabolical 1 _ is not merely 1 _ makes no mention 1 _ was not inconsistent 1 _ were no exception 1 age had no knowledge 1 age is not less 1 age was not naïve 1 art had not even 1 art is not incorrect 1 book is not merely 1 books are not so 1 books were not abundant 1 books were not so 1 century does not strictly 1 century is not very 1 century was not more 1 century was not only 1 century was not yet 1 day has no experience 1 day is no mean 1 duke found no great 1 duke is not apparent 1 duke was no pain 1 florence had no mythus 1 florence had no press 1 florence were no less 1 history has not yet 1 history knows no more 1 italy had no quarrel 1 italy has no one 1 italy is not only 1 letter gives no further 1 life had not yet 1 life is no more 1 life is not easy 1 life is not far 1 life is not permanently 1 life left no room 1 life was not so 1 man is not answerable 1 man was no poet 1 man was not blameless 1 man were not marble 1 men are not prone 1 men had no claim 1 men have no other 1 men have not at A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 15810 author = Allen, P. S. (Percy Stafford) title = The Age of Erasmus Lectures Delivered in the Universities of Oxford and London date = keywords = Abbot; Basle; Bishop; Brethren; Butzbach; Cambridge; Church; Colet; Deventer; Ellenbog; England; Erasmus; Europe; Germany; God; Greek; Henry; Italy; Jerome; John; Latin; London; New; Oxford; Paris; Peter; Pope; Renaissance; Rome; St.; Testament; University; year summary = life of Erasmus (1466-1536); from the days when Northern scholars copy which reached Erasmus for the second edition of his New Of Erasmus'' life in the school we have little knowledge. great many Greek and Hebrew words are given transliterated into Latin, hard-working teacher of the day, instead of printing his lectures on In great poverty, Erasmus made his way somehow, occasionally writing Erasmus wished him to come and teach Greek to Fisher, Bishop of At the time of Erasmus'' first visit to England, 1499, London was far getting good men to serve him--Erasmus to edit books, Gerbell and him in his Paris days, some presents from friends sent or brought from Erasmus was about to set out from Louvain to Basle, to work at a new Henry''s book against Luther appeared in 1521, people said that Erasmus priority rests with Erasmus, whose New Testament in Greek with a Latin id = 18839 author = Belloc, Hilaire title = Avril: Being Essays on the Poetry of the French Renaissance date = keywords = Bellay; Charles; Dieu; France; Malherbe; Orleans; Paris; Renaissance; Rome; Ronsard; Villon; french; great; line; man summary = Italian land as a legacy to the French crown--to his own son; till earlier work), are by far the most famous of the many things he wrote; Pour les grans biens qui sont en elle, Qui m''esté a plus doulx que mere, If in Charles of Orleans the first note of the French Renaissance is trees at last, these great poets of a better age, and find Ronsard a like all the best he wrote, a song; it needs the varying time of human permanent reputation in verse, a great simplicity of form. Ceste ville qui fust plus que la Phrygienne rendering Latin into French verse, Du Bellay had written this down, he When what the French have entitled "the great time," when the generation man, so that in ending the types of the French Renaissance with him you line="sans que" and the whole means, "Do not ask this week or this year id = 27766 author = Champney, Elizabeth W. (Elizabeth Williams) title = Romance of Roman Villas (The Renaissance) date = keywords = Aldobrandino; Brandilancia; Cardinal; Celio; Chigi; Colonna; Dovizio; Duchess; Duke; Emperor; Essex; Florence; Grand; Imperia; Ippolito; Italy; King; Margherita; Maria; Medici; Pope; Princess; Queen; Radicofani; Raphael; Richard; Rome; Sancie; Vatican; Villa; illustration summary = the great house led a more extravagant life in his Roman villa than the Rome from the villa of her uncle, Cardinal Ferdinando, and wandered relief in that new villa, ''The Antinous of Cardinal Albani,'' not knowing _old_ Rome, together revisit our loved villas and win the confidences of Arrived at Rome, the Pope assigned the captives to the Villa of the gentle Maria was in utter ignorance, Raphael returned to the villa, and Through my pain I vaguely heard Chigi calling and returned to the villa. any chance with Maria Dovizio; and you shall be mistress of this villa Chigi''s villa, together with her great longing for sympathy in this who are his guests, and he loves his villa, whose beauties he is into the hands of the Grand Duke Ferdinando de'' Medici, at his villa in the Villa Medici on its way to supply the fountains of Rome. id = 42560 author = Dennistoun, James title = Memoirs of the Dukes of Urbino, Volume 1 (of 3) Illustrating the Arms, Arts, and Literature of Italy, from 1440 To 1630. date = keywords = Alexander; Alfonso; Borgia; Cardinal; Cesare; Charles; Church; Count; Dennistoun; Duke; Federigo; Ferdinand; Ferrara; Florence; Footnote; Francesco; Giovanni; Gubbio; Guidobaldo; Holiness; III; Italy; July; King; Lord; Lorenzo; Louis; MSS; Majesty; Malatesta; Maria; Medici; Milan; Montefeltro; Naples; Orsini; Pesaro; Piccinino; Pontiff; Pope; Rimini; Romagna; Rome; Sanzi; Sforza; Siena; Sigismondo; St.; Urbino; Venice; french; italian summary = But by far the most considerable result of Mr. Dennistoun''s Italian sojourn was his _Memoirs of the Dukes of Urbino_, [Footnote *18: The story of the Counts and Dukes of Urbino in Gubbio, upon Federigo in 1474.[19] On the death of his son, Duke Guidobaldo, OF FEDERIGO DI MONTEFELTRO, COUNT AND SECOND DUKE OF URBINO OF FEDERIGO DI MONTEFELTRO, COUNT AND SECOND DUKE OF URBINO Central Italy, and upon the fortunes of Count Federigo of Urbino. Count Federigo''s domestic life--His second marriage--New war Count Federigo''s domestic life--His second marriage--New war FEDERIGO, DUKE OF URBINO, AND BATTISTA, HIS WIFE Count of Urbino, the King and the Duke of Milan made every effort to BATTISTA SFORZA, DUCHESS OF URBINO, SECOND WIFE OF DUKE FEDERIGO Federigo of Montefeltro, Count of Urbino, Lord of Gubbio, is inscribed "FEDERIGO DUKE OF URBINO AND COUNT OF MONTEFELTRO." We Florence, and Milan, in whose service Duke Federigo had met his death, id = 44235 author = Dennistoun, James title = Memoirs of the Dukes of Urbino, Volume 2 (of 3) Illustrating the Arms, Arts, and Literature of Italy, from 1440 To 1630. date = keywords = Angelo; Bembo; Bologna; Borgia; CAP; Cardinal; Castiglione; Cesare; Church; Count; Duchess; Duke; Federigo; Ferrara; Florence; Francesco; Francis; Gallery; Giovanni; Giuliano; Gubbio; Guidobaldo; Holiness; Italy; Julius; Leo; Lord; Lorenzo; MSS; Madonna; Maria; Medici; Milan; Naples; Pesaro; Pietro; Pontiff; Pope; Prefect; Raffaele; Rome; Siena; Sinigaglia; St.; Urbino; Valentino; Vatican; Venice; chapter; christian; footnote; french; italian summary = OF LITERATURE AND ART UNDER THE DUKES DI MONTEFELTRO AT URBINO OF FRANCESCO MARIA DELLA ROVERE, FOURTH DUKE OF URBINO " " Influence of the Dukes of Urbino on letters 107 Letter from the Duke of Urbino to Cardinal On hearing that the Pope and Cesare were both ill, the Duke of Urbino the state of Urbino would lapse to the Holy See on the Duke''s death, after having directed the Duke of Urbino and his nephew to march remained in the service of Duke Francesco Maria della Rovere, his narrating the early life of Duke Francesco Maria I.; another, Urbino to his nephew Francesco Maria della Rovere; and by attaching "To Guidobaldo, son of Federigo, third Duke of Urbino, who, emulating inscribed to Duke Francesco Maria I., he probably returned to Italy whom are three names belonging to Urbino,--Duke Francesco Maria I., 2. FRANCESCO MARIA, who, as Duke of Urbino, will occupy attention in id = 50577 author = Dennistoun, James title = Memoirs of the Dukes of Urbino, Volume 3 (of 3) Illustrating the Arms, Arts, and Literature of Italy, from 1440 To 1630 date = keywords = Angelo; Antonio; Baroccio; Bologna; Borgia; Camerino; Cardinal; Castel; Charles; Clement; Colonna; Count; Duchess; Duke; Durante; Emperor; Federigo; Ferrara; Florence; Francesco; Gallery; Giovanni; Girolamo; God; Gubbio; Guidobaldo; Holiness; Italy; Julius; Leo; Lord; MSS; Majesty; Maria; Marquis; Medici; Montefeltro; Mr.; Naples; Paul; Pesaro; Pietro; Pitti; Pontiff; Pope; Prince; Princess; Raffaele; Rome; Sforza; Spain; St.; Tasso; Titian; Urbino; Venice; Vittoria; footnote; french; iii; illustration; italian summary = MEMOIRS OF THE DUKES OF URBINO--III OF FRANCESCO MARIA DELLA ROVERE, FOURTH DUKE OF URBINO OF FRANCESCO MARIA DELLA ROVERE, FOURTH DUKE OF URBINO Antonio, Count of Montefeltro and Urbino, iii, 463 note _Autobiography_ of Francesco Maria II., iii, 129 and note, 155, 156 -shoots the Duke of Bourbon, iii, 11 and note Claudia, Princess, of Urbino, marriage of, to Prince Federigo, iii, Clemente of Urbino, his medallions, ii, 270; iii, 376 note -letter of, to Francesco Maria I., iii, 79, 80 note Federigo, Prince of Urbino, authorities for, iii, 129 note -patronised by Dukes of Urbino, iii, 348-52 -letter from him to the Duke Guidobaldo II., iii, 120, 121 Leonora, Duchess of Urbino, i, 267 note; ii, 232; iii, 348 -under the protection of the Dukes of Urbino, iii, 101, 102 -his works for the Dukes of Urbino, iii, 390-7 id = 20804 author = Gregorovius, Ferdinand title = Lucretia Borgia According to Original Documents and Correspondence of Her Day date = keywords = Alexander; Alfonso; Borgia; Cardinal; Church; Cæsar; Don; Duke; Ercole; Este; Excellency; Farnese; Ferrara; France; Giovanni; Giulia; Gonzaga; Holiness; Italy; Lucretia; Madonna; Majesty; Mantua; Naples; October; Orsini; Pesaro; Pope; Rodrigo; Rome; Sforza; Urbino; Vatican summary = that everything about Alexander VI, Cæsar, and Lucretia Borgia, every We possess the history of Alexander VI and Cæsar, but of Lucretia Borgia Lucretia lived in Rome than to the time she spent in Ferrara, because Of Alexander''s sons there now remained in Rome, Cæsar, who was to be For some time longer Lucretia''s spouse remained in Rome, where the Pope Lucretia Borgia lived in Rome surrounded by these passions, and she was Alexander VI and Cæsar Borgia could live in Rome at one and the same city, where the arms of the Borgias, of Cæsar, the Pope, and Lucretia, Lucretia, Ferrara, Cæsar, and Alexander. 1503, Duke Ercole wrote his ambassador in Rome to take charge of Cæsar''s of Pope Alexander and mother of the Duchess of Ferrara and the Duke Borgia, Lucretia, daughter of Cardinal Rodrigo and Vannozza, Borgia, Rodrigo, son of Lucretia and Alfonso of Naples, his id = 13403 author = Howard, Clare title = English Travellers of the Renaissance date = keywords = Court; Duke; Earl; Edward; England; English; Englishman; Footnote; France; Francis; Hall; Henry; Italy; James; John; Letters; Life; London; Lord; Oxford; Paris; Robert; Rome; Sir; Spain; State; Thomas; William; french; italian; travel summary = great horse--Attempts to establish academies in England--Why travellers traveller of Stuart times was the young gentleman who was sent to France for the first time in an English book for travellers: "The Grand Tour of "travelled through Italy Five times, as Tutor to several of the English their governor, from their foreign travels into France and Italy. Footnote 91: _The Travels and Life of Sir Thomas Hoby_, 1547-1564, ed. Footnote 91: _The Travels and Life of Sir Thomas Hoby_, 1547-1564, ed. Footnote 100: Sir Thomas Overbury, _An Affectate Traveller_, in Footnote 111: _Travels and Life of Sir Thomas Hoby, Written by Himself_, Footnote 128: _Life and Travels of Thomas Hoby, Written by Himself_, p. Footnote 180: _Life and Letters of Sir Henry Wotton_, vol. Footnote 180: _Life and Letters of Sir Henry Wotton_, vol. Footnote 180: _Life and Letters of Sir Henry Wotton_, vol. Footnote 312: "That young men travel under some tutor, or grave servant, id = 10940 author = Jacob, P. L. title = Manners, Customs, and Dress During the Middle Ages and During the Renaissance Period date = keywords = Ages; Burgundy; Century; Charlemagne; Charles; Church; Châtelet; Corporation; Court; Duke; Emperor; Europe; Fifteenth; Figs; Fourteenth; France; Francis; Franks; Germany; Grand; Henry; Italy; Jews; King; Library; Louis; Manuscript; Middle; Miniature; National; Paris; Parliament; Philip; Philippe; Queen; Sixteenth; St.; Thirteenth; Venice; Woodcut; fig; french; illustration; roman summary = King''s Court, The, or Grand Council, Fifteenth Century [Illustration: Fig. 6.--King or Chief of Franks armed with the Seramasax, [Illustration: Fig. 8.--Charles, eldest Son of King Pepin, receives the [Illustration: Fig. 17.--King Charlemagne receiving the Oath of Fidelity [Illustration: Fig. 40.--Various Arms of the Fifteenth Century.] [Illustration: Fig. 50.--King Philip le Bel in War-dress, on the Occasion [Illustration: Fig. 64.--Country Life--Fac-simile of a Woodcut in a folio In the fourteenth century, Charles V., King of France, having asked Pope [Illustration: Fig. 130.--Grand Ceremonial Banquet at the Court of France [Illustration: Fig. 202.--Craftsmen in the Fourteenth Century--Fac-simile [Illustration: Fig. 299.--The Court of the Nobles.--Fac-simile of a [Illustration: Fig. 304.--The King''s Court, or Grand Council.--Fac-simile [Illustration: Fig. 308.--Supreme Court, presided over by the King, who is [Illustration: Fig. 396.--"How the King-at-Arms presents the Sword to the [Illustration: Fig. 402.--Costume of King Clovis (Sixth Century).--From a [Illustration: Fig. 422.--Costume of Charles V., King of France.--From a id = 31303 author = Lee, Vernon title = Euphorion - Vol. I Being Studies of the Antique and the Mediaeval in the Renaissance date = keywords = Ages; Antiquity; Ariosto; Dante; Florence; Ford; French; Giotto; Italy; Lorenzo; Mantegna; Marston; Medici; Middle; Raphael; Renaissance; Shakespeare; Tourneur; Webster; antique; art; century; german; italian; like; man; thing summary = BEING STUDIES OF THE ANTIQUE AND THE MEDIÆVAL IN THE RENAISSANCE Italy, and the Germans: strong mediæval nations, like the French, with men of modern times, the Middle Ages seem to know nothing. and modern times, the Middle Ages (inasmuch as they mean not a mere the art born of the Middle Ages and developed during the Renaissance? Titian: double, like its origin, antique and modern, real and ideal. things Antiquity did give to the artists of the Renaissance. What would have been the art of the Renaissance without the antique? Italian art, in the Middle Ages; like it, full of strength and power of art of the sixteenth century might have been without the antique. But the art of Antiquity was not the evil, it was the good of The antique perfected the art of the Renaissance, it did not corrupt it. Antiquity could never have brought the art of the Renaissance to an id = 31304 author = Lee, Vernon title = Euphorion - Vol. II Being Studies of the Antique and the Mediaeval in the Renaissance date = keywords = Ages; Antiquity; Ariosto; Beatrice; Boiardo; Charlemagne; Dante; France; God; Gottfried; Italy; King; Middle; Nuova; Renaissance; Roland; Spenser; St.; Tasso; Tristram; Vita; Yseult; art; carolingian; italian; like; love; man summary = existing things of the world; and this in order to obtain the mere power sort: the beautiful portraits of ugly old men, of snub little boys, work surface and light, this art which makes beautiful busts of ugly men. Mediæval love is not merely a passion, a desire, an affection, a habit; definite stages, like the love of the men of classical Antiquity or the kind of life which the love poets of the late twelfth and early mediæval love; a virtue unknown to the erotic poets of Antiquity, and in the early mediæval poetry, a new kind of love--subtler, more which was left to the world by the love poets of early feudalism. Provence and Sicily the new element of mediæval love, of life devotion, passion of the Middle Ages; but of mediæval love chastened by the this mediæval love to a mere intellectual passion, seeking in woman id = 29574 author = Linche, Richard title = Seven Minor Epics of the English Renaissance (1596-1624) date = keywords = Barksted; Cupid; Diego; Dom; God; Gods; Gyneura; Ioue; Lady; Licia=; Loue; Mahomet; Mirrha; Myrha; Nurse; Ovid; Painter; Philos; Pyramus; Sun; Thisbe; Venus; come; doth; haue; like; thee; thou; thy summary = Loue looks as sweet in blacke as faire mens eies. Shall haue more cause for to admire thy beautie: Long hauing viewd Loues tower, thy wel built head, Ript by the Sun-shine of thy loue-blest eyes, Or if thou wantst one, fix thy loue on me. I''st true (quoth shee) for true loue doth he giue, Die thou (quoth he) so shall my loue nere thinke, and thou her feete (great Sun-Gods deerest loue) vnto thy selfe, quoth hee; ile heare no cares. (Faire loue) thy rigour I haue too much felt, I tell thee (Loue) when secret-tongued night loathed of thee that doth deserue all loue, Thou of thy teares (kind man) hast shed great store, Doe thou alone injoy those sweets, which beare thy Mirrhas name. Then loue thy selfe and thou wilt me affect, To kisse thy hand, shee is so in loue with thee, id = 2398 author = Pater, Walter title = The Renaissance: Studies in Art and Poetry date = keywords = Amile; Amis; Bellay; Botticelli; Dante; Florence; France; Giorgione; Goethe; Italy; Leonardo; Michelangelo; Pico; Plato; Renaissance; Rome; Saint; Winckelmann; art; french; greek; italian; life; work summary = excellent in them, or to use words like beauty, excellence, art, poetry, poetry, artistic and accomplished forms of human life--are indeed do, all works of art, and the fairer forms of nature and human life, as faculty, that strange, mystical sense of a life in natural things, and things of the intellect and the imagination, its concrete works of art, feeling, periods of taste, forms of art and poetry, which the narrowness few great painters, like Michelangelo or Leonardo, whose work has become understand to how great a place in human culture the art of Italy had form that sentiment took in the fifteenth century with men like Luca invention, scornful of whoever thought that art was a work of mere Thoughts on the Imitation of Greek Works of Art in Painting and beauty of art, like tears shed at a play, gives no pain, is without life, id = 26029 author = Slater, John Rothwell title = Printing and the Renaissance A paper read before the Fortnightly Club of Rochester, New York date = keywords = Aldus; Erasmus; Estienne; Renaissance; book; greek; printing summary = Printing did not begin the publication and dissemination of books. We must pass over entirely the history of publishing and book-selling in This preliminary sketch of the book-publishing business before printing In all these early German books, printed of course in Latin, the type Arnold Pannartz, and set them at work printing liturgical books for the Between 1470 and his death in 1480 he printed many fine books, times to a similar heavy type for the printing of German text; but the select five great printers of the Renaissance, and to examine their work on with my task of printing good books, it must great ecclesiastical printers of Venice and of Rome, the printing of the The very first book he published was an edition of the Greek Testament, years before Estienne published his edition in Paris, Froben published chiefly the Latin and Greek classics, Koberger the id = 36245 author = Spingarn, Joel Elias title = A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance With special reference to the influence of Italy in the formation and development of modern classicism date = keywords = Aristotle; Art; Arte; Bellay; Castelvetro; Defence; England; France; Giraldi; Horace; Ibid; Italy; Jonson; Minturno; Pléiade; Poetics; Renaissance; Ronsard; Scaliger; Sidney; Tasso; Vida; aristotelian; english; french; italian; poetry summary = Butcher''s _Aristotle''s Theory of Poetry and Fine Art_, a noble one who imitates without verse is a poet, in the best and truest poetry poetically treated become poetry, and Aristotle himself[66] says that imitation is what distinguishes the poetic art, Aristotle, by limiting Aristotle, as we know, regarded poetry as an imitation of human life, poetry he rates above tragedy, since the epic poet, more than any other, Tasso points out that if the actions of tragedy and of epic poetry were imitate nature because the great classical poets have always poetry, is based on Aristotle, Scaliger, and various Italian poet''s personality; that is, poetry is merely reasoned expression, a _Poetics_ (1561) is the work, not of a French critic, but of an Italian "Tragedy, as Aristotle says in his _Poetics_, is an imitation or "Poetry," says Sidney,[461] "is an art of imitation, for so Aristotle id = 15400 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) The Age of the Despots date = keywords = Alexander; Alfonso; Bologna; Borgia; Cardinal; Cesare; Charles; Chronicle; Church; Council; Duke; Emperor; Empire; Europe; Ferdinand; Ferrara; Filippo; Florence; Florentine; Francesco; Frederick; French; Galeazzo; Gian; Giovanni; God; Guicciardini; Italy; Leo; Lombardy; Lorenzo; Machiavelli; Maria; Medici; Milan; Naples; Papacy; Papal; Pavia; Pisa; Pope; Principe; Renaissance; Rome; Savonarola; Sforza; Sixtus; Spain; Urbino; VIII; Varchi; Venice; Villani; Visconti; history; italian; roman summary = At one time the Pope and Emperor use Italy as the arena of a deadly Italian differs from any other national history, why the people failed When Rome passed away, the fragments of the body politic in Italy, Venice, Milan, Rome, and Florence were in course of time made keenly There remained no power in Italy, except the Republic of Florence and point in the history of Italy to refrain from judging that the Italians influences at work in Italy during the age of the despots had rendered city of Italy at this period of the Renaissance, except Florence, could like Machiavelli, that the greatness of the Church prevented Italy from nation of the Renaissance was Spain, not Italy.[1] The Italians, as a The Italian States confront the Great Nations of Europe--Policy of Louis The Italian States confront the Great Nations of Europe--Policy of Louis id = 16504 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 6 and 7 (of 7) The Catholic Reaction date = keywords = Alessandro; Alfonso; Bologna; Bruno; Cardinal; Catholic; Catholicism; Charles; Christ; Church; Clement; Council; Counter; Court; Duchess; Duke; Emperor; England; Europe; Ferrara; Florence; Footnote; France; Francesco; General; Gerusalemme; God; Guarini; Holy; III; Ignatius; Index; Inquisition; Italy; Jesuits; Lettere; Loyola; Lucrezia; Marino; Milan; Naples; Office; Palestrina; Papacy; Papal; Paris; Paul; Pius; Pope; Reformation; Renaissance; Republic; Revival; Roman; Rome; Sarpi; Spain; State; Tasso; Trent; Tridentine; Urbino; Venice; Vittoria; french; italian; order; spanish summary = Tridentine Council, and added a new reigning family to the Italian the closing of the Tridentine Council to the profit of the Papal See. Negotiations for the settlement of Italian affairs were proceeding Revival--New Religious Spirit in Italy--Attitude of Italians toward Revival--New Religious Spirit in Italy--Attitude of Italians toward the Moderate Reformers--New Religious Orders--Paul III.--His early the Moderate Reformers--New Religious Orders--Paul III.--His early city.[59] ''The Court of Rome,'' says the Venetian envoy in the year 1565, [Footnote 75: Sarpi writes: ''In my times Pius V., during five years, [Footnote 77: Sarpi''s Letters supply some details relating to Paul V.''s [Footnote 177: Sarpi, who was living at the time of Henri''s murder, and Races--Relation of Rome to Italy--Macaulay on the Roman Church--On Races--Relation of Rome to Italy--Macaulay on the Roman Church--On THEORY, Italian love of, in Tasso''s time, ii. THEORY, Italian love of, in Tasso''s time, ii. id = 41924 author = Symonds, John Addington title = Renaissance in Italy, Volume 2 (of 7) The Revival of Learning date = keywords = Ages; Aldo; Bembo; Boccaccio; Bologna; Bruni; Carlo; Church; Cicero; Cosimo; Court; Dante; Europe; Ferrara; Ficino; Filelfo; Florence; Florentine; Footnote; Francesco; Giovanni; Greek; Guarino; Italy; Learning; Leo; Lionardo; Lorenzo; MSS; Manetti; Medici; Middle; Milan; Naples; Niccolo; Nicholas; Papal; Petrarch; Pico; Plato; Poggio; Poliziano; Pope; Renaissance; Revival; Rome; Valla; Venice; Vespasiano; Virgil; Vita; Vittorino; christian; italian; latin; life; roman summary = No Greek Learning -The Spiritual Conditions of the Middle Ages Letter-writing -Revival of Greek Learning -Manuel Chrysoloras -Revival of Italian Literature -Printing -Florence, the Capital of Humanistic Literature -Study of Style -Influence of Cicero -Italian Humanism -Pico on the Dignity of Man. The conditions, political, social, moral, and religious, described in ancient Greeks by far excelled us Italians in humanity and gentleness Italian scholars despaired at this time of gaining Greek learning from [Footnote 86: Many of the earliest printed editions of the Latin poets Before passing from Florence to Rome, which at this time formed the [Footnote 226: He first came to Italy in 1430, professed Greek at princes, and held a kind of court at Florence among men of learning [Footnote 376: The first Greek book printed in Rome, an edition of cultivation of Latin poetry was no mere play-work to Italian scholars. id = 35095 author = Walsh, James J. (James Joseph) title = The Century of Columbus date = keywords = Ages; America; Cardinal; Century; Christ; Church; Columbus; England; English; Erasmus; Europe; Florence; Footnote; France; Francis; Germany; God; Henry; Italy; Jesuits; John; King; Latin; Learning; Leonardo; Lord; Lorenzo; Luther; Michelangelo; Middle; New; Paris; Pope; Queen; Raphael; Reformation; Renaissance; Rome; Sir; Spain; St.; Teresa; Thomas; University; Vinci; chapter; french; great; greek; history; illustration; italian; spanish; time; work summary = great men were at work in Columbus'' Century than in the preceding The artists of Columbus Century, this great Renaissance period, were work of art that has never been excelled in the more modern time. likely to think of it as time wasted by a great genius painter. Medical School, but every artist of the time studied anatomy for art works of this time that can be studied as the artist left it, or at Columbus'' Century closed, and as he began his work very early in life Columbus'' Century, paved the way for a great new development of art a life as many of the great Italian artists of the time. from the great men of the time whose critical ability in all matters the {294} story of two great women of the time, though the work of one the patient, time-taking work of this period in making books