| Walter Savage Landor - 1853 - Broj stranica: 554
...the Decameron which require more genius to conceive and execute than all the poetry of Petrarca, and indeed there is in Boccaccio more variety of the mental...over the human heart, than in any other but Dante. Honesty, manliness, a mild and social independence, rendered him the most delightful companion and... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - 1876 - Broj stranica: 538
...the Decameron which require more genius to conceive and execute than all the poetry of Petrarca, and indeed there is in Boccaccio more variety of the mental...over the human heart, than in any other but Dante. Honesty, manliness, a mild and social independence, rendered him the most delightful companion and... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - 1888 - Broj stranica: 458
..." Decameron" which require more genius to conceive and execute than all the poetry of Petrarca; and indeed there is in Boccaccio more variety of the mental...over the human heart, than in any other but Dante. Honesty, manliness, a mild and social independence, rendered him the most delightful companion and... | |
| Walter Savage Landor - 1893 - Broj stranica: 380
...the Decameron which require more genius to conceive and execute than all the poetry of Petrarca, and indeed there is in Boccaccio more variety of the mental...over the human heart, than in any other but Dante. Honesty, manliness, a mild and social independence, rendered him the moit delightful companion and... | |
| Paget Jackson Toynbee - 1909 - Broj stranica: 776
...the Decameron which require more genius to conceive and execute than all the poetry of Petrarca, and indeed there is in Boccaccio more variety of the mental...over the human heart, than in any other but Dante. (Ibid. pp. 439, 441.) [Petrarch and the Divina Commedia] On his return to Florence, Boccaccio sent... | |
| Paget Jackson Toynbee - 1909 - Broj stranica: 774
...the Decameron which require more genius to conceive and execute than all the poetry of Petrarca, and indeed there is in Boccaccio more variety of the mental...over the human heart, than in any other but Dante. (Ibid. pp. 439,441.) [Petrarch and the Divina Commedia] On his return to Florence, Boccaccio sent his... | |
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