"Let those come to us -- whosoever they be -- who, pressed by the
management of civil and domestic life, have felt the human hunger
for" True Knowledge," . . and let all of us sit together at one
table -- for the Banquet "
Written in his final days, after the completion of his masterful
"Divine Comedy," Dante Alighieri's "The Banquet" presents many of
his most compelling thoughts as to how a life of maturity and
civility should be conducted.
A fitting sequel to Dante's works celebrating his love for
Beatrice, "The Banquet," or "Convivio," sets out to relate all
forms of "human" knowledge to the "natural" and "spiritual" realms.
True to his talent as a poet, Dante frames many of his philosophic
meditations in verse.
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