Alessandro Manzoni
The Life Of Alessandro Manzoni
Alessandro Manzoni is an Italian poet and novelist best known for
his lyric poem Il Cinque Maggio, which is an ode on the death of Napoleon,
and his novel I promessi sposi or translated as The Betrothed.
Manzoni
was born in Milan on March 7, 1785 to Pietro Manzoni and Donna Giulia.
His father Pietro was a fifty-year-old rich landowner with an estate
near Lecco and his mother Giulia was a 26-year-old daughter of a famous
Italian writer Cesare Beccaria. Alessandro's parents separated in 1792
and Alessandro stayed with his father and grew up in Milan. He went
to the University of Pavia for a short time but in most of the school
Manzoni attended he was considered a dunce until when at 15 he became
passionate about poetry. In 1805 after his father's death, Manzoni went
to Paris to live with his mother. Here he spent two years talking with
18th century literary idealists and became friends with Claude Charles
Fauriel. He also became acquainted with the anti-catholic creed of Volitarianism
and adhered to its ideals.
In 1806 Manzoni wrote In morte di Carlo Imbonati translated this
poem is entitled On the Death of Count Carlo Imbonati. This elegy is
in blank verse. Manzoni and his mother gained a large property as a
result of the death of Count Carlo Imbonati. This property included
the villa of Brusuglio, which became Manzoni's principal residence.
In 1808 Manzoni married Henrietta-Louise Blondel, whose father was a
Swiss banker. Blondel was Protestant, but joined the Catholic Church
in 1810 shortly after the marriage to Manzoni. Manzoni joined the Catholic
Church as well and his writings began to exhibit the ideals of Catholicism,
and patriotism. Manzoni and his wife settled down in Milan, where Manzoni
stayed for the rest of his life. He took only one visit outside of Milan
to Tuscany in 1827 to study Tuscan Italian.
In 1818 Manzoni had to sell his father's estate near Lecco because
much of his money had been lost to a dishonest agent. Manzoni who is
considered characteristically generous cancelled all of his peasant's
heavy debts to him on the spot and even told them to keep the income
from the coming maize harvest.
In 1819 Manzoni published his first tragedy, Il Conte di Carmagnola.
This work openly violated classical conventions which had been the ideal
through the renaissance. Il Conte di Carmagnola excited a controversy
and was severely criticized in a Quarterly Review article. This began
Manzoni's rise to fame in the literary world. In 1821 Napoleon died.
His death inspired Manzoni's to write Il Cinque maggio, the most popular
lyric in the Italian language. Many of Manzoni's friends were imprisoned,
Italy's political world was in upheaval and these things bothered Manzoni
greatly. From this, came the famous lines of the poem.
In 1821, Manzoni began work on one of the most highly regarded novels
of the 19th century, I promessi sposi (The Betrothed). The novel is
set in 16th century Milan and is the story of peasant lovers who through
their faith overcome all obstacles to be together. The story was written
under the influence of Sir Walter Scott who later regarded the novel
as the greatest romance of modern times. The novel was completed in
September of 1822 and then turned over to friends for revisions. The
novel was revised from 1825-1827. It was published shortly after he
finished it, but Manzoni continued to revise the novel and in 1840 released
a new version in Tuscan Italian. The work was extremely popular and
by 1875, 118 editions had appeared, and the novel was widely translated.
This work had an incredible influence on the emergence of consistency
in Italian prose. Many writers following Manzoni praised him for his
work one example is Giuseppe Verdi wrote who wrote Requiem for the first
anniversary of Manzoni's death.
In 1833, Manzoni's wife passed away followed by many of their children
and Manzoni's mother. Manzoni married again in 1837 but outlived his
second wife Teresa Born. Between his two marriages Manzoni had nine
children, only two of them lived longer than their father. With the
occupation of Rome in 1870, Manzoni was made a Roman citizen; for unknown
reasons he never went to take his seat as a senator. On April 28, 1873
Manzoni's eldest son Pier Luigi died. Manzoni was devastated and immediately
became sick. After his death on May 22, 1873 the country mourned their
loss and gave him a huge funeral where many of the royal princes and
officers of state were in attendance.
Manzoni's works include:
- Il Trionfo della Libert (1801)
- In morte di Carlo Imbonati (1806)
- Urania (1809)
- La Resurrezione (1812)
- Il Nome di Maria (1813)
- Il Natale (1813)
- La Passione (1815)
- Osservazioni sulla morale cattolica (1819)
- Il Conte di Carmagnola (1820)
- I Promessi Sposi (1821)
- L'Adelchi (1822)
- Il Cinque Maggio (1822)
- Storia della Colonna infame (1840)
- Dell' Invenzione (1845)
- An essay on the unity of the Italian language (1868)
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