Page:Dante and the early astronomers (1913).djvu/25

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INTRODUCTION.
3

Therefore, for full enjoyment and understanding of Dante's works it is necessary to have a rudimentary knowledge of astronomy.

Many of his readers think that Dante's astronomy is very complicated and difficult to understand. What makes it seem difficult is that in this age we are generally unfamiliar with the skies. We do not eat our breakfast or go to our office by the sun, nor do we watch the stars to see when grouse-shooting begins or the summer holidays end. If it is important for us to know at what hour the sun sets and lamps must be lighted, or if we wish to see a view by moonlight, we consult an almanac. When we think at all of the movements of the heavenly bodies, our notions are usually taken from diagrams and tables, not from what is actually seen in the skies. We only think, for instance, of the seasons as caused by the earth's journey round the sun, and the tilt of her axis: therefore, when Dante speaks of Venus as a Morning Star veiling the Fishes with her rays, or the horn of the Celestial Goat touching the sun, it conveys little, although the seasons of spring and of winter are as clearly indicated as if he had spoken of the blossoming of primroses or the fall of snow. When Cacciaguida, in the heaven of Mars, tells the date of his birth by counting how many times the planet had since then returned to his Lion, those who only think of Mars as circling round the Sun, and have never traced his path among the stars, are at a loss, and think the method very far-fetched. A short description, and especially a little individual watching, of the apparent movements of the heavenly bodies, would put us in a position to realize the meaning of a large number of Dante's astronomical descriptions