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Stanje: | Polovan bez oštećenja |
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Plaćanje: | Tekući račun (pre slanja) Ostalo (pre slanja) Pouzećem Lično |
Grad: |
Novi Sad, Novi Sad |
ISBN: Ostalo
Godina izdanja: 1850 - 1899.
Tematika: Književnost
Kulturno dobro: Predmet koji prodajem nije kulturno dobro ili ovlašćena institucija odbija pravo preče kupovine
Jezik: Srpski
Autor: Strani
lepo očuvano
OPERE ED. NAPOLETANA - UGO FOSCOLO - ROSSI ROMANO --- 2a ed. - 1854- C- XFS37. Autore: Ugo Foscolo. Edizione: 2°a edizione Napoli 1854. Editore: Francesco Rossi Romano Ed. Titolo: OPERE
Ugo Foscolo (Italian: [ˈuːɡo ˈfoskolo, fɔs-];[1] 6 February 1778 – 10 September 1827), born Niccolò Foscolo, was an Italian writer, revolutionary and poet.[2]
Niccolò Ugo Foscolo
Portrait by François-Xavier Fabre, 1813
Portrait by François-Xavier Fabre, 1813
Born
6 February 1778
Zakynthos (Zante), Ionian Islands, Republic of Venice, now Greece
Died
10 September 1827 (aged 49)
Turnham Green, now London, England
Resting place
Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence
Pen name
Didimo Chierico
Occupation
Poet, writer, soldier
Language
Italian
Nationality
Venetian
Citizenship
Venetian (1778–1799), Italian (until 1814), Britain (1814–1827)
Period
1796–1827
Genres
Lyrical poetry, epistolary novel, literary critic
Literary movement
Neoclassicism, Pre-Romanticism
Partner
Isabella Teotochi Albrizzi (1795–1796)
Isabella Roncioni (1800–1801)
Antonietta Fagnani Arese (1801–1803)
Fanny `Sophia` Emerytt-Hamilton (1804–1805)
Quirina Mocenni Magiotti (1812–1813)
Children
Mary `Floriana` Hamilton-Foscolo
(from Fanny Hamilton)
Signature
He is especially remembered for his 1807 long poem Dei Sepolcri.
Early life
Politics and poetry
London
edit
His now-empty tomb in the churchyard of St Nicholas Church, Chiswick
During the eleven years spent by Foscolo in London, until his death there, he enjoyed all the social distinction which the most brilliant circles of the English capital could confer on foreigners of political and literary renown, and experienced all the misery which follows on from a disregard of the first conditions of domestic economy.
His contributions to the Edinburgh Review and Quarterly Review, his dissertations in Italian on the text of Dante Alighieri and Giovanni Boccaccio, and still more his English essays on Petrarch (1821), of which the value was enhanced by Barbarina Brand`s admirable translations of some of Petrarch`s finest sonnets, heightened his previous fame as a Man of Letters. However, he was frequently accused of financial ineptitude, and ended up spending time in debtors` prison, which affected his social standing after his release.[9]
According to the History of the County of Middlesex, the scientist and businessman William Allen hired Foscolo to teach Italian at the Quaker school he co-founded, the Newington Academy for Girls.[20] His general bearing in society – as reported by Walter Scott – had not been such as to gain and retain lasting friendships. He died at Turnham Green on 10 September 1827, and was buried at St Nicholas Church, Chiswick, where his restored tomb remains to this day; it refers to him as the `wearied citizen poet`, and incorrectly states his age as 50. Forty-four years after his death, on 7 June 1871, his remains were exhumed at the request of the King of Italy and taken to Florence, where with all the pride, pomp and circumstance of a great national mourning, found their final resting-place beside the monuments of Niccolò Machiavelli and Vittorio Alfieri, of Michelangelo and Galileo, in the church of Santa Croce,[9][21] the pantheon of Italian glory he had celebrated in Dei Sepolcri.
As noted by historian Lucy Riall, the glorification of Ugo Foscolo in the 1870s was part of the effort of the Italian government of this time (successful in completing the Italian unification but at the cost of a head-on confrontation with the Catholic Church) to create a gallery of `secular saints` to compete with those of the Church and sway popular feeling in favor of the newly created Italian state.[22]
References in modern culture
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Ugo Foscolo is the subject of a composition, La fuga di Foscolo, written in 1986 by Italian composer Lorenzo Ferrero.
His sonnet `Alla sera` appears in the movie La meglio gioventù.[23]
His house in Edwardes Square in Kensington, west London, has an English Heritage blue plaque.
Works
edit
Poetry
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Ai novelli repubblicani, ode (1797)
A Bonaparte liberatore [To Bonaparte the liberator], ode (1797)
A Luigia Pallavicini caduta da cavallo [To Luigia Pallavicini fallen from a horse], ode (1800)
All`amica risanata [To the healed (female) friend], ode (1802)
Non son chi fui, perì di noi gran parte, sonnet (1802)
Che stai?, sonnet (1802)
Te nudrice alle Muse, sonnet (1802)
E tu ne` carmi avrai perenne vita, sonnet (1802)
Perché taccia il rumor di mia catena, sonnet (1802)
Così gl`interi giorni in lungo incerto, sonnet (1802)
Meritamente, però ch`io potei, sonnet (1802)
Solcata ho fronte, sonnet (1802)
Alla sera [To the night (evening)], sonnet (1803)[24]
A Zacinto [To Zakinthos], sonnet (1803)
Alla Musa [To the Muse], sonnet (1803)
In morte del fratello Giovanni [In death of brother John], sonnet (1803)
Dei Sepolcri [Of the sepulchres], carmen (1807)
Delle Grazie [Of the Graces], short poem (1803–1827, unfinished)
Novels
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Sesto tomo dell`io (1799–1801)[25]
Ultime lettere di Jacopo Ortis [The last letters of Jacopo Ortis] (1802)
Plays
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Tieste [Thyestes] (1797)
Ajace [Ajax] (1811)
Ricciarda (1813)
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