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No longer a trope.


* YourCheatingHeart: Even though Beatrice has died, Dante feels he must preserve the memory of her wonder through poetry and continue to grieve her even a year later, yet he soon comes to harbor base desire for some pretty women who sympathize with him. He struggles with his heart over whether this is sincere love, but a vision of Beatrice fully convinces Dante his desires were leading him astray.
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The collection is made up of over 30 poems (mainly sonnets) written during the 80's and 90's of the 13th century with prose sections before and after each poem to provide historical context. All of the poetry relates to the poet's infatuation with Beatrice, starting from their meeting at age nine to a vision he has of her a year past her passing.

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The collection is made up of over 30 poems (mainly sonnets) written during the 80's 129th and 90's 130th decade of the 13th century with prose sections before and after each poem to provide historical context. All of the poetry relates to the poet's infatuation with Beatrice, starting from their meeting at age nine to a vision he has of her a year past her passing.
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* AsTheGoodBookSays: Before mentioning Beatrice's death for the first time, Dante quotes the opening line [[Literature/BookOfJeremiah Book of Lamentations]] to set the extreme desolation of the world sans his lady.

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* AsTheGoodBookSays: Before mentioning Beatrice's death for the first time, Dante quotes the opening line of the [[Literature/BookOfJeremiah Book of Lamentations]] to set the extreme desolation of the world sans his lady.



* GossipEvolution: Dante writes a lot of poetry about a pretty women he doesn't really care about to throw people off the trail for his real love, Beatrice. Problem is, he writes so much cover poetry that Florence's gossipers make Dante out to be lusting after his defense. Not wanting to cause a scandal, Beatrice refuses even to say hello to her secret admirer.

to:

* GossipEvolution: Dante writes a lot of poetry about a pretty women woman he doesn't really care about to throw people off the trail for his real love, Beatrice. Problem is, he writes so much cover poetry that Florence's gossipers make Dante out to be lusting after his defense. Not wanting to cause a scandal, Beatrice refuses even to say hello to her secret admirer.
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A collection of CourtlyLove poems by [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] that attempt to capture the divine beauty of the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman, Beatrice.

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A collection of CourtlyLove poems by [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] that attempt to capture the divine beauty of the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman, Beatrice.
[[WorldsMostBeautifulWoman Beatrice]].
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A collection of CourtlyLove poems by [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] that attempt to capture the divine beauty of the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman, Beatrice, in verse.

to:

A collection of CourtlyLove poems by [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] that attempt to capture the divine beauty of the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman, Beatrice, in verse.
Beatrice.
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* WhatBeautifulEyes: The ''Vita Nuova'' makes note that one can see the perfect image of Love in Beatrice's eyes. What that means in practice is that no one who sees her gaze at her can resist the spirits of love from moving their hearts.
* YourCheatingHeart: There's a post-humous example in the ''Vita Nuova''. Even though Beatrice has died, Dante feels he must preserve the memory of her wonder through poetry and continue to grieve her even a year later, yet he soon comes to harbor base desire for some pretty women who sympathize with him. He struggles with his heart over whether this is sincere love, but a vision of Beatrice fully convinces Dante his desires were leading him astray.

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* WhatBeautifulEyes: The ''Vita Nuova'' One of the poems makes note that one can see the perfect image of Love in Beatrice's eyes. What that means in practice is that no one who sees her gaze at her can resist the spirits of love from moving their hearts.
* YourCheatingHeart: There's a post-humous example in the ''Vita Nuova''. Even though Beatrice has died, Dante feels he must preserve the memory of her wonder through poetry and continue to grieve her even a year later, yet he soon comes to harbor base desire for some pretty women who sympathize with him. He struggles with his heart over whether this is sincere love, but a vision of Beatrice fully convinces Dante his desires were leading him astray.
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* VirginInAWhiteDress: In the ''Vita Nuova'', Beatrice is seen dressed in pure white when she first greets Dante, a moment surrounded by assurances of her benevolence and predestined beatitude in Heaven. The next time Beatrice is seen in white is five years later, when a white veil shroud her corpse after her soul was taken by a legion of angels to Heaven.

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* VirginInAWhiteDress: In the ''Vita Nuova'', Beatrice is seen dressed in pure white when she first greets Dante, a moment surrounded by assurances of her benevolence and predestined beatitude in Heaven. The next time Beatrice is seen in white is five years later, when a white veil shroud her corpse after her soul was taken by a legion of angels to Heaven.
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A collection of CourtlyLove poems by [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] that attempt to capture the divine beauty of Beatrice in words.

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A collection of CourtlyLove poems by [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] that attempt to capture the divine beauty of Beatrice the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman, Beatrice, in words.
verse.
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* BoyMeetsGirl: The collection begins with Dante and Beatrice meeting for the first time when they're nine years old. Dante falls in love and spends a good few years trying to find her again, only to meet her nine years later and to get straight up [[SubvertedTrope rejected]]. Still feeling indebted to her beauty, Dante continues to base his poetry off her even if he now hides his deep love for her.


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* CardiovascularLove: The poem "Amore e ‘l cor gentil" is all about how love and an open heart can only exist together, as judged by the wise man, legislated by Nature, and executed by Lord Love. For a heart to exist, Love must at least be hibernating within it so that it is ready to act when the heart encounters beauty.


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* DidNotGetTheGirl: ExaggeratedTrope; our hero can't even manage to get his crush to say hello to him before she dies in her twenties, much less love him back.
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* ReligiousAndMythologicalThemeNaming: Giovanna from the ''Vita Nuova'' is named so because, like how John (Giovanni) the Baptist came before [[UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}} Christ]], she appears just before Beatrice when Dante first sees her in adulthood.
* TheScottishTrope: Most of the poems in the ''Vita Nuova'' go out of their way not to mention Beatrice's name to keep his love for her a secret. The only time he writes down her name is in the poem he makes to mourn her death and in the last poem of the collection, when he sees her in a vision.

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* ReligiousAndMythologicalThemeNaming: Giovanna from the ''Vita Nuova'' is named so because, like how John (Giovanni) the Baptist came before [[UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}} Christ]], she appears just before Beatrice when Dante first sees her in adulthood.
* TheScottishTrope: Most of the poems in the ''Vita Nuova'' collection go out of their way not to mention Beatrice's name to keep his love for her a secret. The only time he writes down her name is in the poem he makes to mourn her death and in the last poem of the collection, when he sees her in a vision.



* SuperEmpowering: One of Beatrice's powers listed in the ''Vita Nuova'' is the ability to dignify any man who looks upon her, transforming them from a wretched slave of sin to a noble soul in union with [[{{God}} the Omnipotent]].

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* SuperEmpowering: One of Beatrice's powers listed in the ''Vita Nuova'' is the ability to dignify any man who looks upon her, transforming them from a wretched slave of sin to a noble soul in union with [[{{God}} the Omnipotent]].



* TimeSkip: The ''Vita Nuova'' begins with a brief prose section about Beatrice and Dante's first meeting in 1274 before segueing into Dante's poetry about her written from 1283 to 1293. The poet explains that he didn't want to go much into his youth since stories about kids tend to sound like tall tales.

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* TimeSkip: The ''Vita Nuova'' collection begins with a brief prose section about Beatrice and Dante's first meeting in 1274 before segueing into Dante's poetry about her written from 1283 to 1293. The poet explains that he didn't want to go much into his youth since stories about kids tend to sound like tall tales.
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* GirlWatching: The''Vita Nuova'' is all about a few times Dante saw the most beautiful woman in the world from a distance and wrote poetry trying to capture her beauty.

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* GirlWatching: The''Vita The ''Vita Nuova'' is all about a few times Dante saw the most beautiful woman in the world from a distance and wrote poetry trying to capture her beauty.



* HeartTrauma: A rare positive example; a dream where Beatrice eats the poet's heart marks the beginning of his love for her and his quest to capture her beauty in any of the dozens of poems in the''Vita Nuova''.

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* HeartTrauma: A rare positive example; a dream where Beatrice eats the poet's heart marks the beginning of his love for her and his quest to capture her beauty in any of the dozens of poems in the''Vita the ''Vita Nuova''.
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* OpinionChangingDream: A dream of Beatrice at age nine reminds Dante of his OneTrueLove, convincing him to renounce the other women he's fallen for and only write about his first muse.
* OrganAutonomy: A symptom of LoveAtFirstSight in the ''Vita Nuova'' is that your organs give a play-by-play commentary of the romance. The heart starts to worship the beloved, the brain recognizes Beatrice as a true source of happiness, and the stomach laments that the lover has a higher goal than satisfying his hunger.

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* OpinionChangingDream: A The course of the [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]]'s life is changed when a dream of Beatrice at age nine reminds Dante of his OneTrueLove, convincing convinces him to renounce give up loving anyone but his deceased OneTrueLove. The dream is probably the other women he's fallen for least spectacular in the ''Vita Nuova'', since it avoids any cannibalized hearts or crying stars in favor of a lone vision of the WorldsMostBeautifulWoman at the moment Dante saw her and only write about his first muse.
experienced LoveAtFirstSight.
* OrganAutonomy: A symptom of LoveAtFirstSight in the ''Vita Nuova'' is that your organs give a play-by-play commentary of the romance. The heart starts to worship the beloved, the brain recognizes Beatrice as a true source of happiness, and the stomach laments that the lover has a higher goal than satisfying his hunger.
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* NoAntagonist: Whatever conflict there is in the ''Vita Nuova'' is driven by the narrator's fears, passions, and weaknesses. He has only himself to blame when his lady refuses to speak to him, when he mistakes base attractions for love, and when he finds himself unable to handle the death of the most beautiful woman on Earth.
* OneTrueLove: Beatrice is the only woman the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' can truly love; all the women he fawns after her death are just distractions from the memory of his true beloved.

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* NoAntagonist: Whatever conflict there is in the ''Vita Nuova'' is driven by the narrator's fears, passions, and weaknesses. He has only himself to blame when his lady refuses to speak to him, when he mistakes base attractions for love, and when he finds himself unable to handle the death of the most beautiful woman on Earth.
* OneTrueLove: Beatrice is the only woman the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' can truly love; all the women he fawns after after her death are just distractions from the memory of his true beloved.
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* TheMourningAfter: According to the ''Vita Nuova'', it takes a year after Beatrice's death for Dante to even think about other women. Even then, one dream about his lost Lenore is enough to make him repent of writing poetry for any other women and dedicate his life to [[Literature/TheDivineComedy offer her praise never written before]].

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* TheMourningAfter: According to the ''Vita Nuova'', it It takes a year after Beatrice's death for Dante to even think about other women. Even then, one dream about his lost Lenore is enough to make him repent of writing poetry for any other women and dedicate his life to [[Literature/TheDivineComedy offer her praise never written before]].
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* MeaningfulName: In the ''Vita Nuova'', the poet's muse is named Beatrice, a fact known to all who meet her because they realize their beatitude by contemplating her beauty. Yes, Dante goes so far to say that his lady's beauty offers a glimpse of the eternal beatitude of {{Heaven}}, a praise that only becomes more apt after she passed into that world.

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* MeaningfulName: In the ''Vita Nuova'', the The poet's muse is named Beatrice, a fact known to all who meet her because they realize their beatitude by contemplating her beauty. Yes, Dante goes so far to say that his lady's beauty offers a glimpse of the eternal beatitude of {{Heaven}}, a praise that only becomes more apt after she passed into that world.
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* LoveAtFirstSight: The ''Vita Nuova'' begins with Dante seeing Beatrice for the first time. Every part of his being s cried in praise of her as Love took control of Dante, never to let go of him for as long as Beatrice was on Earth.
* LovePotion: In the''Vita Nuova'', Dante admits that if his speech could fully communicate the worth of his lady, it would turn any of his listeners into lovers.

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* LoveAtFirstSight: The ''Vita Nuova'' begins with Dante [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] seeing Beatrice [[WorldsMostBeautifulWoman Beatrice]] for the first time. time and adoring her. Every part of his being s cried cries in praise of her as Love took control claims dominion of Dante, his heart, never to let go of him go free for as long as Beatrice was is on Earth.
* LovePotion: In the''Vita Nuova'', Dante admits that if his speech could fully communicate the worth of his lady, it would turn any of his listeners into lovers.
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* LongingLook: When the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' is having a bit of a panic attack, he notices a young woman looking at him compassionately from a window. The poet is moved to tear by this look and even begins to feel Love in his soul for the first time since his lady's death.

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* LongingLook: When the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' is having a bit of a panic attack, he notices a young woman looking at him compassionately from a window. The poet is moved to tear by this look and even begins to feel Love in his soul for the first time since his lady's death.
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* InternalMonologue: In the aftermath of Lord Love's vision, the ''Vita Nuova'' portrays an argument between voices in Dante's head about whether to submit to Love or to resist him. The internal argument forces Dante to constantly start, scrap, and re-start his poetry until he prays to Mercy herself.

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* InternalMonologue: In the aftermath of Lord Love's vision, the ''Vita Nuova'' a sonnet portrays an argument between voices in Dante's head about whether to submit to Love or to resist him. The internal argument forces Dante to constantly start, scrap, and re-start his poetry until he prays to Mercy herself.
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* HorrifyingHero: Once he's in mourning, the poet ofthe ''Vita Nuova'' scares off all men who see him because his face is as dead as a ghost's.
* HumbleHero: Beatrice was so devoid of pride that it astonished {{God}} and merited her entrance into the heaven of humility, sitting within reach of the Virgin Mary herself.

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* HorrifyingHero: Once he's in mourning, the poet ofthe ''Vita Nuova'' Dante scares off all men who see him because his face is as dead as a ghost's.
* HumbleHero: Beatrice was is so devoid of pride that it astonished astonishes {{God}} and merited merits her entrance into the heaven of humility, sitting within reach of the Virgin Mary herself.
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* DieOrFly: Beatrice in the ''Vita Nuova'' is said to make any who look upon her experience the joy of {{Heaven}} on Earth or kill them where they stand. This is exaggerated, of course, but beyond poetic license, Dante does tend either to enter into a state of radical bliss or despair depending on how his encounters with Beatrice go.
* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: Upon realizing his lover's mortality in the ''Vita Nuova'', the poet has a nightmare where the entire world falls apart upon her death. The sun goes black, the stars begin to cry, birds drop from the sky, and the whole earth quakes, in a scene right out of the Literature/BookOfRevelation.

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* DieOrFly: Beatrice in the ''Vita Nuova'' is said to make any who look upon her experience the joy of {{Heaven}} on Earth or kill them where they stand. This is exaggerated, of course, but beyond poetic license, Dante does tend either to enter into a state of radical bliss or despair depending on how his encounters with Beatrice go.
* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: Upon realizing his lover's mortality in the ''Vita Nuova'', mortality, the poet has a nightmare where the entire world falls apart upon her death. The sun goes black, the stars begin to cry, birds drop from the sky, and the whole earth quakes, in a scene right out of the Literature/BookOfRevelation.



* FeverDreamEpisode: A poem from the ''Vita Nuova'' begins with Dante begging for death as some women wake him up from a fever-induced nightmare. The middle and end of the poem are the poet detailing his nightmare, where Beatrice died and ascended to Heaven while all the Earth was left in chaotic mourning.

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* FeverDreamEpisode: A One of the later poem from the ''Vita Nuova'' begins with Dante begging for death as some women wake him up from a fever-induced nightmare. The middle and end of the poem are the poet detailing his nightmare, where Beatrice died and ascended to Heaven while all the Earth was left in chaotic mourning.



* GriefSong: The ''Vita Nuova'' includes a three-part canzone written immediately after Beatrice's death. It mentions a lot about crying.

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* GriefSong: The ''Vita Nuova'' collection includes a three-part canzone written immediately after Beatrice's death. It mentions a lot about crying.
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None


* GossipEvolution: Dante writes a lot of poetry about a pretty women he doesn't really care about to throw people off the trail for his real love, Beatrice. Problem is, he writes so much cover poetry that Florence's gossipers make Dante out to be lusting after his defense. Hearing these rumors about his licentiousness, Beatrice refuses even to say hello to her secret admirer.

to:

* GossipEvolution: Dante writes a lot of poetry about a pretty women he doesn't really care about to throw people off the trail for his real love, Beatrice. Problem is, he writes so much cover poetry that Florence's gossipers make Dante out to be lusting after his defense. Hearing these rumors about his licentiousness, Not wanting to cause a scandal, Beatrice refuses even to say hello to her secret admirer.
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None


* DeathSeeker: A fever causes the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' such misery that he prays for death. His despair of life only grows worse as he hallucinates an apocalypse brought upon by the death of his love.

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* DeathSeeker: A fever causes the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' such misery that he prays for death. His despair of life only grows worse as he hallucinates an apocalypse brought upon by the death of his love.
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None


* BlasphemousPraise: According to the ''Vita Nuova'', Beatrice's beauty is so great that even an angel admits to God's face that Heaven is flawed for the lack of her.

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* BlasphemousPraise: According to the ''Vita Nuova'', Beatrice's beauty is so great that even an angel admits to God's face that Heaven is flawed for the lack of her.



* ColorMotif: The''Vita Nuova'' makes use of red to represent love, most strikingly in the crimson dress Beatrice wears when she first meets Dante and when she appears to him posthumously.

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* ColorMotif: The''Vita Nuova'' The poem makes use of red to represent love, most strikingly in the crimson dress Beatrice wears when she first meets Dante and when she appears to him posthumously.
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* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Many of the poems address Love as if it were a man, one who forced Beatrice to take the poet's heart and lorded over the poet for most of his life. There's a significant segment of Dante's commentary dedicated to establishing that he has the ArtisticLicense to speak in such a fantastical way by citing writers like Creator/{{Virgil}} and Creator/{{Ovid}}.

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* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Many of the poems address Love as if it were a man, bodily lord, one who forced Beatrice to take the poet's heart and lorded over the poet for most of his life.heart. There's a significant segment of Dante's commentary dedicated to establishing that he has the ArtisticLicense to speak in such a fantastical way by citing writers like Creator/{{Virgil}} and Creator/{{Ovid}}.
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None
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* AbhorrentAdmirer: The narrator of the ''Vita Nuova'' spend nine years pining after his lady, but when he treated to talk to her for the second time, she refused to even speak to him thanks to all the gossip hurting his good name. The narrator spends the rest of his lady's life content with being spurned while capturing her beauty in verse.
* AccompliceByInaction: The ninth poem of ''Vita Nuova'' accuses those who see the poet [[BrownNote struck to death by beauty]] of sinning if they do not comfort the poet in his weakness.
* AndShowItToYou: In the first poem of the ''Vita Nuova'', Love appears out of thin air holding Dante's heart in his hand while it burns. Dante doesn't seem to be dying without the heart and the poem doesn't record his reaction to seeing Love feed it to someone, because dreams are weird like that.
* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Many of the poems in ''Vita Nuova'' address Love as if it were a man, one who forced Beatrice to take the poet's heart and lorded over the poet for most of his life. There's a significant segment of Dante's commentary dedicated to establishing that he has the ArtisticLicense to speak in such a fantastical way by citing writers like Creator/{{Virgil}} and Creator/{{Ovid}}.

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* AbhorrentAdmirer: The narrator of the ''Vita Nuova'' spend spends nine years pining after his lady, but when he treated a girl, only to talk to have her for the second time, she refused refuse to even speak to greet him thanks due to all the gossip hurting his good name. some MaliciousSlander. The narrator spends works the rest of his lady's life content with being spurned while capturing her beauty in verse.
* AccompliceByInaction: The ninth poem of ''Vita Nuova'' accuses those who see the poet [[BrownNote struck to death by beauty]] of sinning if they do not comfort the poet in his weakness.
* AndShowItToYou: In the first poem of the ''Vita Nuova'', poem, Love appears out of thin air holding Dante's heart in his hand while it burns. Dante doesn't seem to be dying without the heart and the poem doesn't record his reaction to seeing Love feed it to someone, because dreams are weird like that.
* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Many of the poems in ''Vita Nuova'' address Love as if it were a man, one who forced Beatrice to take the poet's heart and lorded over the poet for most of his life. There's a significant segment of Dante's commentary dedicated to establishing that he has the ArtisticLicense to speak in such a fantastical way by citing writers like Creator/{{Virgil}} and Creator/{{Ovid}}.
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* {{Biography}}: The ''Vita Nuova'' is largely a prose account by Creator/DanteAlighieri explaining the historical circumstances behind the love poetry included in the collection.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ezio_anichini___beatrice_and_dante_alighieri_vita_nuova_3.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:DATING TIP #9: Eat his actual heart out.]]

->''"Incipit vita nova."''

A collection of CourtlyLove poems by [[Creator/DanteAlighieri Dante]] that attempt to capture the divine beauty of Beatrice in words.

The collection is made up of over 30 poems (mainly sonnets) written during the 80's and 90's of the 13th century with prose sections before and after each poem to provide historical context. All of the poetry relates to the poet's infatuation with Beatrice, starting from their meeting at age nine to a vision he has of her a year past her passing.

The ''Vita Nuova'' is the epitome of the CourtlyLove genre and [[UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} Christian]] treatments of beauty. The promise the poet makes here to praise Beatrice in a wholly new way would only be completed in the collection's {{Sequel}}, ''Literature/TheDivineComedy''.

The [[https://digitaldante.columbia.edu/text/library/la-vita-nuova/ Italian text]] and [[https://digitaldante.columbia.edu/text/library/la-vita-nuova-frisardi/ Andrew Frisardi's translation]] are both freely available online. Unless noted otherwise, English quotes on this page are probably from Frisardi's translation.
----
!!The ''Vita Nuova'' provides examples of...
* AbhorrentAdmirer: The narrator of the ''Vita Nuova'' spend nine years pining after his lady, but when he treated to talk to her for the second time, she refused to even speak to him thanks to all the gossip hurting his good name. The narrator spends the rest of his lady's life content with being spurned while capturing her beauty in verse.
* AccompliceByInaction: The ninth poem of ''Vita Nuova'' accuses those who see the poet [[BrownNote struck to death by beauty]] of sinning if they do not comfort the poet in his weakness.
* AndShowItToYou: In the first poem of the ''Vita Nuova'', Love appears out of thin air holding Dante's heart in his hand while it burns. Dante doesn't seem to be dying without the heart and the poem doesn't record his reaction to seeing Love feed it to someone, because dreams are weird like that.
* AnthropomorphicPersonification: Many of the poems in ''Vita Nuova'' address Love as if it were a man, one who forced Beatrice to take the poet's heart and lorded over the poet for most of his life. There's a significant segment of Dante's commentary dedicated to establishing that he has the ArtisticLicense to speak in such a fantastical way by citing writers like Creator/{{Virgil}} and Creator/{{Ovid}}.
* AsTheGoodBookSays: Before mentioning Beatrice's death for the first time, Dante quotes the opening line [[Literature/BookOfJeremiah Book of Lamentations]] to set the extreme desolation of the world sans his lady.
* BlasphemousPraise: According to the ''Vita Nuova'', Beatrice's beauty is so great that even an angel admits to God's face that Heaven is flawed for the lack of her.
* CatapultNightmare: The poet awakens from his fever dream and immediately screams Beatrice's name in fear, although anyone besides Dante would have a hard time discerning the name between his sobs.
* ColorMotif: The''Vita Nuova'' makes use of red to represent love, most strikingly in the crimson dress Beatrice wears when she first meets Dante and when she appears to him posthumously.
* DeathSeeker: A fever causes the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' such misery that he prays for death. His despair of life only grows worse as he hallucinates an apocalypse brought upon by the death of his love.
* DieOrFly: Beatrice in the ''Vita Nuova'' is said to make any who look upon her experience the joy of {{Heaven}} on Earth or kill them where they stand. This is exaggerated, of course, but beyond poetic license, Dante does tend either to enter into a state of radical bliss or despair depending on how his encounters with Beatrice go.
* TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt: Upon realizing his lover's mortality in the ''Vita Nuova'', the poet has a nightmare where the entire world falls apart upon her death. The sun goes black, the stars begin to cry, birds drop from the sky, and the whole earth quakes, in a scene right out of the Literature/BookOfRevelation.
* EvilCannotComprehendGood: The first GriefSong for Beatrice claims anyone wicked enough to leave that perfect lady unmourned must lack the mind to even picture her.
* FauxSymbolism: [[invoked]] After defending his use of personified emotions, Dante makes it clear that using such symbolic devices without any deeper meaning is a shameful thing and that his friends know plenty of poets who write in such a "stupid manner."
* FeverDreamEpisode: A poem from the ''Vita Nuova'' begins with Dante begging for death as some women wake him up from a fever-induced nightmare. The middle and end of the poem are the poet detailing his nightmare, where Beatrice died and ascended to Heaven while all the Earth was left in chaotic mourning.
* GenreBusting: The ''Vita Nuova'' switches between large prose sections that provide background to the poetic sections, which in themselves take on genres like romance sonnet, GriefSong, prayerful ballad, and even a [[FeverDreamEpisode visionary]] apocalypse canzone.
* GirlWatching: The''Vita Nuova'' is all about a few times Dante saw the most beautiful woman in the world from a distance and wrote poetry trying to capture her beauty.
* GossipEvolution: Dante writes a lot of poetry about a pretty women he doesn't really care about to throw people off the trail for his real love, Beatrice. Problem is, he writes so much cover poetry that Florence's gossipers make Dante out to be lusting after his defense. Hearing these rumors about his licentiousness, Beatrice refuses even to say hello to her secret admirer.
* GriefSong: The ''Vita Nuova'' includes a three-part canzone written immediately after Beatrice's death. It mentions a lot about crying.
* HeartTrauma: A rare positive example; a dream where Beatrice eats the poet's heart marks the beginning of his love for her and his quest to capture her beauty in any of the dozens of poems in the''Vita Nuova''.
* HorrifyingHero: Once he's in mourning, the poet ofthe ''Vita Nuova'' scares off all men who see him because his face is as dead as a ghost's.
* HumbleHero: Beatrice was so devoid of pride that it astonished {{God}} and merited her entrance into the heaven of humility, sitting within reach of the Virgin Mary herself.
* InMediasRes: The FeverDreamEpisode of the ''Vita Nuova'' opens with Dante being awoken from his nightmare, while the rest of the poem details what he actually hallucinated.
* InternalMonologue: In the aftermath of Lord Love's vision, the ''Vita Nuova'' portrays an argument between voices in Dante's head about whether to submit to Love or to resist him. The internal argument forces Dante to constantly start, scrap, and re-start his poetry until he prays to Mercy herself.
* JerkWithAHeartOfJerk: Dante maintains that anyone who does not remember Beatrice and mourn must have a heart made of granite with no space for goodness.
* KeepingSecretsSucks: Dante's attempts to keep the prying eyes of Florence from knowing which woman he's in love with ends up ruining his chances with her. Turns out, pretending to love other ladies makes you look like a medieval whore, something Beatrice in no way wants to associate with much to Dante's secret misery.
* KilledOffscreen: The story of how Beatrice's passed from Earth to Heaven is left unsung in Dante's poetry, because he didn't feel he could do the subject justice.
* LongingLook: When the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' is having a bit of a panic attack, he notices a young woman looking at him compassionately from a window. The poet is moved to tear by this look and even begins to feel Love in his soul for the first time since his lady's death.
* LoveAtFirstSight: The ''Vita Nuova'' begins with Dante seeing Beatrice for the first time. Every part of his being s cried in praise of her as Love took control of Dante, never to let go of him for as long as Beatrice was on Earth.
* LovePotion: In the''Vita Nuova'', Dante admits that if his speech could fully communicate the worth of his lady, it would turn any of his listeners into lovers.
* MeaningfulName: In the ''Vita Nuova'', the poet's muse is named Beatrice, a fact known to all who meet her because they realize their beatitude by contemplating her beauty. Yes, Dante goes so far to say that his lady's beauty offers a glimpse of the eternal beatitude of {{Heaven}}, a praise that only becomes more apt after she passed into that world.
* MistakenDeclarationOfLove: People mistake Dante's longing poems for a declaration of love to an attractive woman that the poet doesn't really know that well. He's actually quite happy with the mistake, since it means no one will know who he really is in love with and he can continue with his writing without drawing suspicion.
* TheMourningAfter: According to the ''Vita Nuova'', it takes a year after Beatrice's death for Dante to even think about other women. Even then, one dream about his lost Lenore is enough to make him repent of writing poetry for any other women and dedicate his life to [[Literature/TheDivineComedy offer her praise never written before]].
* NoAntagonist: Whatever conflict there is in the ''Vita Nuova'' is driven by the narrator's fears, passions, and weaknesses. He has only himself to blame when his lady refuses to speak to him, when he mistakes base attractions for love, and when he finds himself unable to handle the death of the most beautiful woman on Earth.
* OneTrueLove: Beatrice is the only woman the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' can truly love; all the women he fawns after her death are just distractions from the memory of his true beloved.
* OpinionChangingDream: A dream of Beatrice at age nine reminds Dante of his OneTrueLove, convincing him to renounce the other women he's fallen for and only write about his first muse.
* OrganAutonomy: A symptom of LoveAtFirstSight in the ''Vita Nuova'' is that your organs give a play-by-play commentary of the romance. The heart starts to worship the beloved, the brain recognizes Beatrice as a true source of happiness, and the stomach laments that the lover has a higher goal than satisfying his hunger.
* PropheticName: Love admits to Dante that Lady Giovanna was only given that name and her nickname, Primavera, to foreshadow the role she would play in coming before Beatrice on that early spring morning that Dante would see her again.
* ReligiousAndMythologicalThemeNaming: Giovanna from the ''Vita Nuova'' is named so because, like how John (Giovanni) the Baptist came before [[UsefulNotes/{{Jesus}} Christ]], she appears just before Beatrice when Dante first sees her in adulthood.
* TheScottishTrope: Most of the poems in the ''Vita Nuova'' go out of their way not to mention Beatrice's name to keep his love for her a secret. The only time he writes down her name is in the poem he makes to mourn her death and in the last poem of the collection, when he sees her in a vision.
* SequelHook: The ''Vita Nuova'' ends with a reference to an unseen vision which inspires the poet to praise his deceased beloved in ways never achieved before. Nine years later, that inspiration would bear fruit with first canto of the ''[[Literature/TheDivineComedy Inferno]]''.
* SuperEmpowering: One of Beatrice's powers listed in the ''Vita Nuova'' is the ability to dignify any man who looks upon her, transforming them from a wretched slave of sin to a noble soul in union with [[{{God}} the Omnipotent]].
* TemporaryLoveInterest: About a year after Beatrice's death, the poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' begins to write sonnet about another beautiful woman, only to have a vision of Beatrice that makes him realize his attraction to the new woman was a vain and shallow imitation of Love.
* TimeSkip: The ''Vita Nuova'' begins with a brief prose section about Beatrice and Dante's first meeting in 1274 before segueing into Dante's poetry about her written from 1283 to 1293. The poet explains that he didn't want to go much into his youth since stories about kids tend to sound like tall tales.
* TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth: Beatrice dies young as her humility and magnanimity made her too noble to suffer life on mortal Earth. Instead, she passed into the realm of the angels as was befitting her.
* TryingNotToCry: The poet of the ''Vita Nuova'' is overwhelmed by a LongingLook of pity from a beautiful woman and is barely able to hide away before bursting into tears.
* UnexpectedlyDarkEpisode: After a series of rather domestic poems about the beauty of a kind woman, the FeverDreamEpisode suddenly employs apocalyptic and spiritual imagery to describe how the poet wished to die after facing his love's mortality.
* UntranslatedTitle: The ''Vita Nuova'' is rarely ever translated under the title ''New Life'', with most translators preferring to keep Dante's title.
* VirginInAWhiteDress: In the ''Vita Nuova'', Beatrice is seen dressed in pure white when she first greets Dante, a moment surrounded by assurances of her benevolence and predestined beatitude in Heaven. The next time Beatrice is seen in white is five years later, when a white veil shroud her corpse after her soul was taken by a legion of angels to Heaven.
* WhamLine: The second line of Chapter 28 abruptly announces that Beatrice is with the Virgin Mary in {{Heaven}}, dead before Dante could ever express his love to her face. The entire course of the ''Vita Nuova'' and of the poet's life shifts in accordance with this single sentence.
* WhatBeautifulEyes: The ''Vita Nuova'' makes note that one can see the perfect image of Love in Beatrice's eyes. What that means in practice is that no one who sees her gaze at her can resist the spirits of love from moving their hearts.
* YourCheatingHeart: There's a post-humous example in the ''Vita Nuova''. Even though Beatrice has died, Dante feels he must preserve the memory of her wonder through poetry and continue to grieve her even a year later, yet he soon comes to harbor base desire for some pretty women who sympathize with him. He struggles with his heart over whether this is sincere love, but a vision of Beatrice fully convinces Dante his desires were leading him astray.
* YourSoulIsMine: Lord Love has ruled over Dante's soul since the age of nine, when the poet saw Beatrice for the first time. Since that day, Dante has had no choice but to do whatever Love commands.
* YouTasteDelicious: In a dream-vision, Beatrice is fed Dante's heart directly by Love to mark the beginning of his literary courtship with her.

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