Italian Renaissance - Italy - Narrative poems in hexameters...
Share travel photos on the Exploitz.com website, the leading travel photography site on the Internet!
exploitz.com


Italy Hotels
Italy Hostels
Italy Sights

Recommended Italy Pictures:

View of the Grand Canal
Italian Red Wines
Italian Place by Garoli
Italian Memorabilia
At Portofino
Spaghetti Italiano
Italy 1935 Vintage Print
Tuscan Palazzo

Other picture lists:

Egypt Posters
Egypt Posters, Page 2
Morocco Posters
Switzerland Posters
Mexico Posters
Portugal Posters Japan Posters
Vietnam Posters
Nepal Posters
Germany Posters



Arezzo Hotels
Bergamo Hotels
Bologna Hotels
Brescia Hotels
Capri Hotels
Catania Hotels
Como Hotels
Cortona Hotels
Ferrara Hotels
Firenze Hotels
Florence Hotels
Forte Dei Marmi Hotels
Genova Hotels
Ischia Hotels
Lucca Hotels
Merano Hotels
Messina Hotels
Milan Hotels
Milano Hotels
Montecatini Terme Hotels
Motta Anastasia Hotels
Naples Hotels
Padova Hotels
Paestum Hotels
Palermo Hotels
Palinuro Hotels
Parma Hotels
Perugia Hotels
Piacenza Hotels
Pisa Hotels
Positano Hotels
Rapallo Hotels
Ravenna Hotels
Ricadi Hotels
Rimini Hotels
Riva Del Garda Hotels
Roma Hotels
Rome Hotels
San Remo Hotels
Sardinia Hotels
Siena Hotels
Siracusa Hotels
Sorrento Hotels
Taormina Hotels
Torino Hotels
Trieste Hotels
Turin Hotels
Venezia Hotels
Venice Hotels
Verona Hotels
Vicenza Hotels
Vieste Hotels


History: The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy by Jacob Burckhardt

Index | pg. 94 |Previous Page - Next Page

Narrative poems in hexameters ...

Many, too, of the narrative poems in hexameters are merely exercises, or adaptations of histories in prose, which latter the reader will prefer, where he can find them. At last, everything-- every quarrel and every ceremony--came to be put into verse, and this even by the German humanists of the Reformation. and yet it would be unfair to attribute this to mere want of occupation, or to an excessive facility in stringing verses together. In Italy, at all events, it was rather due to an abundant sense of style, as is further proved by the mass of contemporary reports, histories, and even pamphlets, in the 'terza rima.' Just as Niccolo da Uzzano published his scheme for a new constitution, Machiavelli his view of the history of his own time, a third, the life of Savonarola, and a fourth the siege of Piombino by Alfonso the Great, in this difficult meter, in order to produce a stronger effect, so did many others feel the need of hexameters, in order to win their special public. What was then tolerated and demanded, in this shape, is best shown by the didactic poetry of the time. Its popularity in the fifteenth century is something astounding. The most distinguished humanists were ready to celebrate in Latin hexameters the most commonplace, ridiculous, or disgusting themes, such as the making of gold, the game of chess, the management of silkworms, astrology, and venereal diseases _(morbus gallicus), _to say nothing of many long Italian poems of the same kind. Nowadays this class of poem is condemned unread, and how far, as a matter of fact, they are really worth the reading, we are unable to say. One thing is certain: epochs far above our own in the sense of beauty--the Renaissance and the Greco-Roman world--could not dispense with this form of poetry. It may be urged in reply, that it is not the lack of a sense of beauty, but the greater seriousness and the altered method of scientific treatment which renders the poetical form inappropriate, on which point it is unnecessary to enter.

One of these didactic works has been occasionally republished--the 'Zodiac of Life,' by Marcellus Palingenius (Pier Angelo Manzolli), a secret adherent of Protestantism at Ferrara, written about 1528. With the loftiest .speculations on God, virtue, and immortality, the writer connects the discussion of many questions of practical life, and is, on this account, an authority of some weight in the history of morals. On the whole, however, his hi fruit of contrast, nor the 'burla,' for their subject; their aim is merely to give simple and elegant expression to wise sayings and pretty stories or fables. But if anything proves the great antiquity of the collection, it is precisely this absence of satire. For with the fourteenth century comes Dante, who, in the utterance of scorn, leaves all other poets in the world far behind, and who, if only on account of his great picture of the deceivers, must be called the chief master of colossal comedy. With Petrarch begin the collections of witty sayings after the pattern of Plutarch (Apophthegmata, etc.).

is no verbal imitation, in precisely the tone and style of the verses on Lesbia's sparrow. There are short poems of this sort, the date of which even a critic would be unable to fix, in the absence of positive evidence that they are works of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.



Index | pg. 94 |Previous Page - Next Page

Italy Hotels - Italy Hostels - Italy Sights

................................................................

Other popular Italy book pages:

Macaroni with Tomatoes
Macaroni alla Casalinga
Macaroni al Sughillo
Macaroni alla Livornese
Tagliarelle and Lobster
Polenta
Polenta Pasticciata








Italy Travel Guide
A good starting point for researching Italy for travel or reference.

Venice - Piazza St. Marco (St. Mark's Square)
Venice - Gondola along the Grand Canal
Venice - Walking around Venice Streets
Venice - Pictures from the Venice canals
Venice - From the Train Station to St. Mark's 1
Venice - From the Train Station to St. Mark's 2
Ceasar's European Discovery Pictures. Italy Pg.1
Breathtaking Italy and France
Ceasar's European Discovery Pictures. Italy Pg. 2
Florence and Venice
Arno River in Florence
Campania