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Canto

Canto is a division or section of a long poem or song. In literary usage, a canto is a major subdivision of a narrative poem or epic, usually organizing the work into self-contained units. The term comes from Italian canto meaning “a song” or “a singing”; it derives from Latin cantus, meaning “song” or “melody.” In English, cantos are typically pluralized as cantos, though the Italian plural canti is sometimes used in discussions of specific works.

The most famous example is Dante’s Divine Comedy, in which the poem is divided into 100 cantos:

In music, canto has a related sense rooted in its Latin origin: it can refer to a

See also: Cantus.

34
in
Inferno,
33
in
Purgatorio,
and
33
in
Paradiso.
The
canto
form
provides
a
way
to
structure
long
verse
and
to
spotlight
recurring
motifs
or
climactic
moments
within
each
unit.
Other
poets
have
used
cantos
as
well,
and
the
title
of
Ezra
Pound’s
The
Cantos
highlights
this
tradition.
song
or
the
melodic
line
of
a
piece,
and
historically
it
has
been
used
to
describe
singing
parts
or
cantus.
The
term
also
appears
in
discussions
of
polyphony,
early
music,
and
liturgical
or
secular
songs.