E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Charlie Kirschner,
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team



Editorial note:

Project Gutenberg has an earlier version of this work, which is titledBeacon Lights of History, Volume III, part 2: Renaissance andReformation.  See E-Book#1499,https://www.gutenberg.org/etext98/32blh10.txt orhttps://www.gutenberg.org/etext98/32blh10.zip.   The numberingof volumes in the earlier set reflected the order in which thelectures were given.  In the current (later) version, volumeswere numbered to put the subjects in historical sequence.




LORD'S LECTURES






BEACON LIGHTS OF HISTORY.

BY JOHN LORD, LL.D.

AUTHOR OF "THE OLD ROMAN WORLD," "MODERN EUROPE,"ETC., ETC.



VOLUME VI.

RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION.






CONTENTS.


DANTE.

RISE OF MODERN POETRY.

The antiquity of Poetry


The greatness of Poets


Their influence on Civilization


The true poet one of the rarest of men


The pre-eminence of Homer, Dante, Shakspeare, and Goethe


Characteristics of Dante


His precocity


His moral wisdom and great attainments


His terrible scorn and his isolation


State of society when Dante was born


His banishment


Guelphs and Ghibellines


Dante stimulated to his great task by an absorbing sentiment


Beatrice


Dante's passion for Beatrice analyzed


The worship of ideal qualities the foundation of lofty love.


The mystery of love


Its exalted realism


Dedication of Dante's life-labors to the departed Beatrice


The Divine Comedy; a study


The Inferno; its graphic pictures


Its connection with the ideas of the Middle Ages


The physical hell of Dante in its connection with the Mediaeval doctrine of Retribution


The Purgatorio; its moral wisdom


Origin of the doctrine of Purgatory


Its consolation amid the speculations of despair


The Paradiso


Its discussion of grand themes


The Divina Commedia makes an epoch in civilization


Dante's life an epic


His exalted character


His posthumous influence



GEOFFREY CHAUCER.

ENGLISH LIFE IN THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY.

The characteristics of the fourteenth century


Its great events and characters


State of society in England when Chaucer arose


His early life


His intimacy with John of Gaunt, the great Duke of Lancaster


His prosperity


His poetry


The Canterbury Tales


Their fidelity to Nature and to English life


Connection of his poetry with the formation of the English Language


The Pilgrims

...

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