La vita nuova

La vita nuova, (Italian: “The New Life”) work written about 1293 by Dante regarding his feelings for Beatrice, who comes to represent for Dante the ideal woman. La vita nuova describes Dante’s first sight of Beatrice when both are nine years of age, her salutation when they are 18, Dante’s expedients to conceal his love for her, the crisis experienced when Beatrice withholds her greeting, Dante’s anguish when he perceives that she is making light of him, his determination to rise above anguish and sing only of his lady’s virtues, anticipations of her death and her actual death, Dante’s mourning, the temptation of the sympathetic donna gentile (a young woman who temporarily replaces Beatrice), Beatrice’s final triumph and apotheosis, and, in the last chapter, Dante’s determination to write at some later time about her “that which has never been written of any woman.”

Geoffrey Chaucer (c. 1342/43-1400), English poet; portrait from an early 15th century manuscript of the poem, De regimine principum. Quiz The ABCs of Poetry: Fact or Fiction? Prose and poetry are the same thing.

The work contains 42 brief chapters with commentaries on 25 sonnets, one ballata, and four canzones; a fifth canzone is left dramatically interrupted by Beatrice’s death. The prose commentary provides the frame story, which is not treated by the poems themselves.

For a discussion of La vita nuova in the context of Dante’s life and work, see Dante: Early life and the Vita nuova.

This article was most recently revised and updated by J.E. Luebering, Executive Editorial Director.