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Giambattista Marino |
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Marino, Giambattista
Born Oct. 18, 1569, in Naples; died there Mar. 25, 1625. Italian poet. Marino gave his name to a trend in baroque poetry, marinismo, which was prevalent in 17th-century Italian literature. His attitude was one of hedonism combined with a belief in the transitory nature of everything and in the disharmony of the universe. He was a skillful poet, although he fell back upon mannered images, complicated metaphors, and forced antitheses and comparisons. His most important work is Adonis (Paris, 1623; Russian translation, 1783), a narrative poem in 20 cantos, written in octaves. His fame was short-lived. WORKSPoesia e prosa. Milan, 1930.In Russian translation: Khrestomatiia po zapadno-evropeiskoi literature XVII v., 2nd ed. Compiled by B. I. Purishev. Moscow, 1949. REFERENCESArtamanov, S. D., and R. M. Samarin. Istoriia zarubezhnoi literatury XVII v. Moscow, 1958.De Sanctis, F. Istoriia ital’ianskoi literatury, vol. 2. Moscow, 1964. Flora, F. Storia della letteratura italiana, vol. 3. Milan, 1940. Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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