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Canti

The Poems of Leopardi

Canti( )
Author: Leopardi, Giacomo
Translator: Galassi, Jonathan
ISBN:978-0-14-119387-8
Publication Date:Dec 2010
Publisher:Penguin Books, Limited
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:AUD $32.99
Book Description:

'So my mind sinks in this immensity- and foundering is sweet in such a sea' Revisited and reorganized over his lifetime, this extraordinary work was described by Leopardi as a 'reliquary' for his ideas, feelings and deepest preoccupations. It encompasses drastic shifts in tone and material, and includes early personal elegies and idylls; radical public poems on history and politics; philosophical satires; his great, dark, despairing odes such as 'To Silvia'; and...
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Book Details
Pages:528
Detailed Subjects: Poetry / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):13.2 x 20.7 x 2.3 cm
Book Weight:0.356 Kilograms
Author Biography
Leopardi, Giacomo (Author)
Italian poet Giacomo Leopardi, son of Count Monaldo and Countess Adelaide, was born in Recanati, Italy, on June 29, 1798. Leopardi enjoyed the company of his brother Carlo and sister Paolina, with whom he played such games as dressing up in clerical wear and saying mass, or acting in historical dramas. Encouraged to learn by his parents, Giacomo Leopardi was able to read and write Greek by the age of 15. It was his ability at poetry that kept him sane when, at 18, he lost most of his eyesight and developed a severely curved spine.

Leopardi fell in love with his married cousin Countess Geltrude Cassi, with whom he had a powerful affair, in 1817. Nine years later, Leopardi fell in love with yet another married countess, Teresa Carniani Malvezzi, whose husband put an end to the affair.

Leopardi channeled his anguish over his physical condition and emotionally exhausting romances into his poetry, fueled by the enthusiasm of his mentor, Pietro Giordani, and by the financial aid of such persons as publisher Antonio Stella, who paid Leopardi for his editing of works by classical writers.

Although his poetry is usually grim and gloomy, his attention to detail with outdoor scenes is praised by critics, such as in his shortly-before-death poem, "The Broom," about a flower's growth.

Giacomo Leopardi died on June 15, 1837, in Naples, Italy.

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