De Vulgari Eloquentia
Dante Alighieri
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
De vulgari eloquentia (On Eloquence in the vernacular) is a short essay written by Dante Alighieri in Latin. The work remains incomplete; only one and a half books are extant. It is believed to have been composed during Dante's exile, probably at some point between 1302 and 1305. The work revolves around the relationship between Latin and vernacular, and the need for a literary language, with an excourse on the poetic forms in vernacular. - Summary by Leni (1 hr 41 min)
Chapters
Book 1, Chapters I-IV | 11:52 | Read by Anna Simon |
Book 1, Chapters V-VIII | 12:59 | Read by Anna Simon |
Book 1, Chapters IX-XIII | 15:12 | Read by Mary J |
Book 1, Chapters XIV-XIX | 13:42 | Read by Mary J |
Book 2, Chapters I-IV | 15:31 | Read by Mary J |
Book 2, Chapters V-VIII | 15:16 | Read by Mary J |
Book 2, Chapters IX-XIV | 17:22 | Read by Mary J |
Reviews
great
wood
First, both readers are great. That said, the book itself is very unique. I am huge Dante fan and this book does not disappoint. It shows Dante's genius in another light. For those who even have a slight interest in Dante this cleaver work is highly recommended
Too fast
fabiola
The reader from the IX chapter on read to fast!!! It gave me anxiety
A LibriVox Listener
I would have liked a bit slower narration. Overall very good.