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Vittorio Alfieri

Count Vittorio Alfieri (/ˌælfiˈɛəri/, also US: /ɑːlˈfjɛri/,[1][2][3] Italian: [vitˈtɔːrjo alˈfjɛːri]; 16 January 1749 – 8 October 1803) was an Italian dramatist and poet, considered the "founder of Italian tragedy."[4] He wrote nineteen tragedies, sonnets, satires, and a notable autobiography.[5]

Vittorio Alfieri
portrait by François-Xavier Fabre, 1793
BornVittorio Amedeo Alfieri
(1749-01-16)16 January 1749
Asti, Kingdom of Sardinia
Died8 October 1803(1803-10-08) (aged 54)
Florence, Kingdom of Etruria
Resting placechurch of Santa Croce, Florence
Occupationdramatist, poet
Genretragedy
Signature

Early life edit

Alfieri was born at Asti, Kingdom of Sardinia, now in Piedmont.

His father died when he was very young, and he was brought up by his mother, who married a second time, until, at the age of ten, he was placed in the academy of Turin. After a year at the academy, he went on a short visit to a relative at Coni (mod. Cuneo). During his stay there he composed a sonnet chiefly borrowed from lines in Ariosto and Metastasio, the only poets he had at that time read. At thirteen, Alfieri began the study of civil and canon law, but this only made him more interested in literature, particularly French romances. The death of his uncle, who had taken charge of his education and conduct, left him free, at the age of fourteen, to enjoy his paternal inheritance, augmented by the addition of his uncle's fortune. He began to attend a riding-school, where he acquired an enthusiasm for horses and equestrian exercise that continued for the rest of his life.[6]

Having obtained permission from the king to travel abroad, he departed in 1766, under the care of an English tutor. Seeking novelty in foreign cultures, and being anxious to become acquainted with the French theatre, he proceeded to Paris, but he appears to have been completely dissatisfied with everything he witnessed in France and did not like the French people. In the Netherlands he fell in love with a married woman, but she went with her husband to Switzerland. Alfieri, depressed by the incident, returned home and again began studying literature. Plutarch's Lives inspired him with a passion for freedom and independence. He recommenced his travels; and his only gratification, in the absence of freedom among the continental states, came from contemplating the wild and sterile regions of the north of Sweden, where gloomy forests, lakes and precipices encouraged his sublime and melancholy ideas. In search of an ideal world, Alfieri passed quickly through various countries. During a journey to London he engaged in an intrigue with Lady Penelope Ligonier, a married woman of high rank. The affair became a widely publicised scandal and ended in a divorce that ruined Lady Ligonier and forced Alfieri to leave the country. He then visited Spain and Portugal, where he became acquainted with the Abbe Caluso, who remained through life the most attached and estimable friend he ever possessed. In 1772, Alfieri returned to Turin. This time he fell for the Marchesa Turinetti di Prie, but it was another doomed affair. When she fell ill, he spent his time dancing attendance on her, and one day wrote a dialogue or scene of a drama, which he left at her house. When the couple quarreled, the piece was returned to him, and being retouched and extended to five acts, it was performed at Turin in 1775, under the title of Cleopatra.[6]

Literary career edit

 
Frontispiece for Works by Alfieri, 1809 edition

From this moment Alfieri was seized with an insatiable thirst for theatrical fame, to which he devoted the remainder of his life. His first two tragedies, Filippo and Polinice, were originally written in French prose. When he came to versify them in Italian, he found that, because of many dealings with foreigners, he was poor at expressing himself. With the view of improving his Italian, he went to Tuscany and, during an alternate residence at Florence and Siena, he completed Filippo and Polinice, and had ideas for other dramas. While thus employed, he became acquainted with Princess Louise of Stolberg-Gedern, also known as the Countess of Albany, who was living with her husband, Charles Edward Stuart ("Bonnie Prince Charlie"), at Florence. For her he formed a serious attachment. With this motive, to remain at Florence, he did not wish to be bound to Piedmont. He therefore ceded his whole property to his sister, the countess Cumiana, keeping for himself an annuity that was about half his original income. Louise, motivated by the ill-treatment she received from her husband, sought refuge in Rome, where she at length received permission from the Pope to live apart from him. Alfieri followed her to Rome, where he completed fourteen tragedies, four of which were published at Siena.[6]

For the sake of Louise's reputation, he left Rome, and, in 1783, travelled through different states of Italy, publishing six additional tragedies. The interests of his love and literary glory had not diminished his love of horses. He went to England solely for the purpose of purchasing a number of these animals, which he took back to Italy. On his return he learned that Louise had gone to Colmar in Alsace, where he joined her, and they lived together for the rest of his life. They chiefly passed their time between Alsace and Paris, but at length took up their abode entirely in that metropolis. While here, Alfieri made arrangements with Didot for an edition of his tragedies, but was soon after forced to quit Paris by the storms of the French Revolution. He recrossed the Alps with the countess, and finally settled at Florence. The last ten years of his life, which he spent in that city, seem to have been the happiest of his existence. During that long period, his tranquility was only interrupted by the entrance of the Revolutionary armies into Florence in 1799.

Alfieri's political writings were among those which had contributed to the revolutionary atmosphere. His essay, Della Tirannide, denounced absolutism and was dedicated to liberty as a universal right.[7] In Del Principe e delle Lettere, he declared poets to be the heralds of freedom and human dignity and the natural enemies of tyrants. He supported the American Revolution and wrote a collection of odes published as L’America libera and dedicated a play about the ancient Romans to George Washington.[7] When the French Revolution broke out, he supported its initial liberal phase, but the violence of the Reign of Terror turned him strongly against the radical Jacobins.[7] Despite Alfieri's increasingly anti-French sentiments, he was honored when the French army arrived in Italy and Napoleon himself attended a performance of Alfieri's Virginia, a play set in ancient Rome in which the people demand liberty and rise to overthrow a tyrant.[7] Alfieri's ideas continued to influence Italian liberals and republicans such as Piero Gobetti throughout the Risorgimento and well into the twentieth century.[8]

He spent the concluding years of his life studying Greek literature and perfecting a series of comedies. His labor on this subject exhausted his strength and made him ill. He eschewed his physicians prescriptions in favor of his own remedies, which made the condition worse. He died in Florence in 1803.[9] His last words were "Clasp my hand, my dear friend, I die!"[10]

He is buried in the Church of Santa Croce, Florence next to Machiavelli.

 
Antonio Canova, monumental tomb of Vittorio Alfieri, Santa Croce, Florence, 1810

Character edit

Alfieri's character may be best appreciated from the portrait he drew of himself in his own Memoirs of his Life.[11][12] He was evidently of an irritable, impetuous, and almost ungovernable temper. Pride, which seems to have been a ruling sentiment, may account for many apparent inconsistencies of his character. But his less amiable qualities were greatly softened by the cultivation of literature. His application to study gradually tranquillized his temper and softened his manners, leaving him at the same time in perfect possession of those good qualities he inherited from nature: a warm and disinterested attachment to his family and friends, united to a generosity, vigour and elevation of character, which rendered him not unworthy to embody in his dramas the actions and sentiments of Grecian heroes.[13]

Contribution to Italian literature edit

It is to his dramas that Alfieri is chiefly indebted for the high reputation he has attained. Before his time the Italian language, so harmonious in the Sonnets of Petrarch and so energetic in the Commedia of Dante, had been invariably languid and prosaic in dramatic dialogue. The pedantic and inanimate tragedies of the 16th century were followed, during the Iron Age of Italian literature, by dramas of which extravagance in the sentiments and improbability in the action were the chief characteristics. The prodigious success of the Merope of Maffei, which appeared in the commencement of the 18th century, may be attributed more to a comparison with such productions than to intrinsic merit. In this degradation of tragic taste, the appearance of the tragedies of Alfieri was perhaps the most important literary event that had occurred in Italy during the 18th century.[13]

On these tragedies, it is difficult to pronounce a judgment, as the taste and system of the author underwent considerable change and modification in the intervals between the three periods of their publication. An excessive harshness of style, an asperity of sentiment, and total want of poetical ornament are the characteristics of his first four tragedies, Filippo, Polinice, Antigone, and Virginia. These faults were in some measure corrected in the six tragedies he wrote some years after, and in those he published along with Saul, the drama that enjoyed the greatest success of all his productions. This popularity is partly attributable to Alfieri's severe and unadorned style, which fit the patriarchal simplicity of the age. Though there is a considerable difference in his dramas, there are certain qualities common to all. None of the plots are of his own invention, but are founded on either mythological fable or history. Most of them had been previously treated by the Greek dramatists or by Seneca. Rosmunda, the only one that could be of his own contrivance, and which is certainly the least happy effusion of his genius, is partly founded on the eighteenth novel of the third part of Bandello and partly on Prévost's Mémoires d'un homme de qualité (Memoirs of a Man of Quality).[13]

Another characteristic common to every Alfieri's tragedy is that the main character is always a tragic "hero of freedom" whose ambition and need of revolution push him to fight tyranny and oppression wherever they exist. Usually, this is accomplished in the most radical manner, up to killing the tyrant and facing death for it afterwards. This desire for freedom always moves the hero into a dimension of solitude, pessimism, and internal torment, but he keeps going despite knowing that the majority of the people around him can't understand or share his views and struggles, or that his goals are almost impossible to reach. This concept is called titanism.[citation needed]

But whatever subject he chooses, his dramas are always formed on the Grecian model and breathe a freedom and independence worthy of an Athenian poet. Indeed, his Agide and Bruto may rather be considered oratorical declamations and dialogues on liberty than tragedies. The unities of time and place are not so scrupulously observed in his dramas as in the ancients, but he rigidly adheres to a unity of action and interest. He infuses each play with one great action and one ruling passion, taking care to remove as much as possible every other event or feeling. In this excessive zeal for the observance of unity he seems to have forgotten that its charm consists in producing a common relation between multiplied feelings, and not in the bare exhibition of one, divested of those various accompaniments that give harmony to the whole. Consistently with the austere and simple manner he thought the chief excellence of dramatic composition, he excluded from his scene all coups de theatre, all philosophical reflexions, and that highly ornamented versification so assiduously cultivated by his predecessors. In his anxiety, however, to avoid all superfluous ornament, he has stripped his dramas of the embellishments of imagination; and for the harmony and flow of poetical language he has substituted, even in his best performances, a style that, though correct and pure, is generally harsh, elaborate and abrupt; often strained into unnatural energy or condensed into factitious conciseness.

The chief excellence of Alfieri consists in powerful delineation of dramatic character. In his Filippo he has represented, almost with the masterly touches of Tacitus, the sombre character, the dark mysterious counsels, the suspensa semper et obscura verba, of the modern Tiberius. In Polinice, the characters of the rival brothers are beautifully contrasted; in Maria Stuarda (Mary Stuart), that unfortunate queen is represented as unsuspicious, impatient of contradiction and violent in her attachments. In Mirra, the character of Ciniro is perfect as a father and king, and Cecri is a model of a wife and mother. In the representation of that species of mental alienation where the judgment has perished but traces of character still remain, he is peculiarly happy. The insanity of Saul is skilfully managed, and the horrid joy of Orestes in killing Aegisthus rises finely and naturally to madness in finding that, at the same time, he had inadvertently slain his mother.[13]

Whatever the merits or defects of Alfieri, he may be considered as the founder of a new school in the Italian drama. His country hailed him as her sole tragic poet, and his successors in the same path of literature have regarded his bold, austere and rapid manner as the genuine model of tragic composition.[13]

Besides his tragedies, Alfieri published during his life many sonnets; five odes on American independence; one tramelogedia, (Abele); and the poem of Etruria, based on the assassination of Alexander, duke of Florence. Of his prose works the most distinguished for animation and eloquence is the Panegyric on Trajan, composed in a transport of indignation at the supposed feebleness of Pliny's eulogium. His books La Tirannide and the Essays on Literature and Government are remarkable for elegance and vigour of style, but are too evidently imitations of the manner of Machiavelli. His Antigallican, which he wrote while composing his Defence of Louis XVI, presents a historical and satirical view of the French Revolution.

The posthumous works of Alfieri consist of satires, six political comedies, and the Memoirs of his Life, work that will always be read with interest in spite of the cold and languid gravity he applies to the most interesting adventures and strongest passions of his agitated life.[13]

Death edit

Alfieri caught a "chill on his stomach" while out driving on 3 October 1803. His health deteriorated and he died in his chair on 8 October. He was buried in the church of Santa Croce, Florence. Louise arranged for Antonio Canova to erect a monument in his memory. This took 6 years to be executed, being finally installed in Santa Croce in the autumn of 1810.[14][a]

Freemasonry edit

The name of Vittorio Alfieri was never registered in the official publications of the Piedmont Freemasonry. It is proved Alfieri was initiated in the regular Masonic Lodge "Vittoria" of Naples which was an obedience of the Gran Loggia Nazionale "Lo Zelo", founded in 1874-185 by aristocrat Freemasons closely linked to the queen Maria Carolina of Austria.[16]

Many of Alfieri's friends were Freemasons, as it is attested by the documents conserved in the center of studies located in the town of Asti. The first edition of the Alfieri's tragedy was published in 1763 and sent to the following notable Freemasons: the von Kaunitz brothers of Turin, Giovanni Pindemonte e Gerolamo Zulian in Venice, Annibale Beccaria (brother of Cesare), Luigi Visconte Arese e Gioacchino Pallavicini in Milan, Carlo Gastone Rezzonico in Parma, Saveur Grimaldi in Genoa, Ludovico Savioli in Bologna, Kiliano Caraccioli which was Venerable Master in Naples, Giuseppe Guasco in Rome.[17]

On August 27, 1782, the name of Alfieri is cited in the Tableau des Membres de la Respectable Loge de la Victoire à l'Orient de Naples ("List of the members of the Venerable Lodge "Victoire" in the Orient of Naples") as Comte Alfieri, Gentilhomme de Turin (count Alfieri, gentleman of Turin). Some months later, the Savoia dynasty banned any Masonic activity from the Piedmont and the Great Master count Asinari of Bernezzo was obliged to transfer his title to the prince Diego Naselli of Naples. Napes become the official seat of the Italian Scottish Rite Freemasonry.[18]

His poetry Vita, published in 1775, says:

Egli ti additi il murator primiero,

Del grande Ordine infin l'origo estrema
E se poi ti svelasse un tanto arcano,
Avresti tu sì nobili concetti
E ad inalzare il vol bastante mano?
Ah, scusatela si, fratei diletti;
Non ragiona l'insana, oppur delira

Quando canta di voi con versi inetti.

— V. Alfieri, Vita, 1775

The chapter continues mentioning the Scottish Rite degrees of Venerabile, primo Vigilante, Oratore and Segretario.

Works edit

Tragedies edit

Published in 1783
  • Fillipo (Philip)
  • Polinice (Polynices)
  • Antigone
  • Virginia
  • Agaménnone (Agamemnon)
  • Oreste (Orestes)
  • Rosmunda
  • Ottavia (Octavia)
  • Timoleone (Timoleon)
  • Merope
Published in 1788
  • Maria Stuarda (Mary Stuart)
  • La Congiura De'Pazzi (The Conspiracy of the Pazzi)
  • Don Garzia (Don Garcia)
  • Saul
  • Agide (Agis)
  • Sofonisba (Sophonisba)
Published in 1792
  • Bruto Primo (The First Brutus)
  • Mirra (Myrrha)
  • Bruto Secondo (The Second Brutus)
Published posthumously in 1804
  • Abéle (Abel)
  • Le Due Alcesti (Alcestis II)
  • Antony and Cleopatra

English translation of all 22 tragedies by Charles Lloyd and Edgar Alfred Bowring: The Tragedies Volume 1 & Volume 2 at the Internet Archive

Notes edit

  1. ^ Louise died on 29 January 1824 and was also buried in Santa Croce, with a monument by Charles Percier.[15]

Sources edit

Vaughan, Herbert M, The Last Stuart Queen, 1st edition, Brentano's, 1911

References edit

  1. ^ "Alfieri". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  2. ^ "Alfieri". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  3. ^ "Alfieri". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
  4. ^ Beach, Chandler B., ed. (1914). "Alfieri" . The New Student's Reference Work . Chicago: F. E. Compton and Co.
  5. ^ Norwich, John Julius (1990). Oxford Illustrated Encyclopedia Of The Arts. USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 12. ISBN 978-0198691372.
  6. ^ a b c Chisholm 1911, p. 580.
  7. ^ a b c d Davis, John Anthony (2000). Italy in the Nineteenth Century: 1796-1900. Oxford University Press. pp. 207–208.
  8. ^ Martin, James (2008). Piero Gobetti and the Politics of Liberal Revolution. Springer. p. 73.
  9. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 580–581.
  10. ^ Marvin, Frederic Rowland (2019). The Last Words (Real and Traditional) of Distinguished Men and Women. Good Press.
  11. ^ "Memoirs of the life and writings of Victor Alfieri; written by himself. Translated from the Italian". London: Henry Colburn. 1810. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  12. ^ "Review of Vita di Vittorio Alfieri, &c. Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Victor Alfieri, written by himself and The Tragedies of Vittorio Altieri, translated by Charles Lloyd". The Quarterly Review. 14: 333–368. January 1816.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Chisholm 1911, p. 581.
  14. ^ Vaughan, pp 246-252
  15. ^ Vaughan, p 338
  16. ^ ^Vittorio Gnocchini, L'Italia dei Liberi Muratori. Brevi biografie di Massoni famosi, Roma-Milano, Erasmo Edizioni-Mimesis, 2005, p. 9. OCLC 255343438; BNF cb41149329b; LCCN 2005448654.
  17. ^ R. Marchetti, Vittorio Alfieri, fratel massone, in Il Platano, anno VII, Asti, 1982.
  18. ^ . Alfieri, Vita, Epoca I, Primi sintomi di carattere appassionato.

References edit

Attribution:

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alfieri, Vittorio". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 580. Endnote: See
    • Mem. di Vit. Alfieri
    • Sismondi, De la lit. du midi de I'Europe
    • Walker's Memoir on Italian Tragedy
    • Giorn. de Pisa, tom. lviii.
    • Life of Alfieri, by Centofanti (Florence, 1842)
    • Vita, Giornuli, Lettere di Alfieri, by Teza (Florence, 1861)
    • Vittorio Alfieri, by Antonini and Cognetti (Turin, 1898)
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1907). "Count Vittorio Alfieri". Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links edit

  • Works by Vittorio Alfieri at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Vittorio Alfieri at Internet Archive
  • Works by Vittorio Alfieri at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by Vittorio Alfieri at Open Library
  • on audio MP3
  • "The Foe of Tyrants: Vittorio Alfieri's 'L'America Libera' (1781; 1783)"
  • Daniel Winkler, "Körper, Revolution, Nation. Vittorio Alfieri und das republikanische Tragödienprojekt der Sattelzeit". Wilhelm Fink, Munich 2016, ISBN 978-3-7705-6129-2.

vittorio, alfieri, count, ɛər, also, ɑː, italian, vitˈtɔːrjo, alˈfjɛːri, january, 1749, october, 1803, italian, dramatist, poet, considered, founder, italian, tragedy, wrote, nineteen, tragedies, sonnets, satires, notable, autobiography, portrait, françois, xa. Count Vittorio Alfieri ˌ ae l f i ˈ ɛer i also US ɑː l ˈ f j ɛr i 1 2 3 Italian vitˈtɔːrjo alˈfjɛːri 16 January 1749 8 October 1803 was an Italian dramatist and poet considered the founder of Italian tragedy 4 He wrote nineteen tragedies sonnets satires and a notable autobiography 5 Vittorio Alfieriportrait by Francois Xavier Fabre 1793BornVittorio Amedeo Alfieri 1749 01 16 16 January 1749Asti Kingdom of SardiniaDied8 October 1803 1803 10 08 aged 54 Florence Kingdom of EtruriaResting placechurch of Santa Croce FlorenceOccupationdramatist poetGenretragedySignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Literary career 3 Character 4 Contribution to Italian literature 5 Death 6 Freemasonry 7 Works 7 1 Tragedies 8 Notes 9 Sources 10 References 11 References 12 External linksEarly life editAlfieri was born at Asti Kingdom of Sardinia now in Piedmont His father died when he was very young and he was brought up by his mother who married a second time until at the age of ten he was placed in the academy of Turin After a year at the academy he went on a short visit to a relative at Coni mod Cuneo During his stay there he composed a sonnet chiefly borrowed from lines in Ariosto and Metastasio the only poets he had at that time read At thirteen Alfieri began the study of civil and canon law but this only made him more interested in literature particularly French romances The death of his uncle who had taken charge of his education and conduct left him free at the age of fourteen to enjoy his paternal inheritance augmented by the addition of his uncle s fortune He began to attend a riding school where he acquired an enthusiasm for horses and equestrian exercise that continued for the rest of his life 6 Having obtained permission from the king to travel abroad he departed in 1766 under the care of an English tutor Seeking novelty in foreign cultures and being anxious to become acquainted with the French theatre he proceeded to Paris but he appears to have been completely dissatisfied with everything he witnessed in France and did not like the French people In the Netherlands he fell in love with a married woman but she went with her husband to Switzerland Alfieri depressed by the incident returned home and again began studying literature Plutarch s Lives inspired him with a passion for freedom and independence He recommenced his travels and his only gratification in the absence of freedom among the continental states came from contemplating the wild and sterile regions of the north of Sweden where gloomy forests lakes and precipices encouraged his sublime and melancholy ideas In search of an ideal world Alfieri passed quickly through various countries During a journey to London he engaged in an intrigue with Lady Penelope Ligonier a married woman of high rank The affair became a widely publicised scandal and ended in a divorce that ruined Lady Ligonier and forced Alfieri to leave the country He then visited Spain and Portugal where he became acquainted with the Abbe Caluso who remained through life the most attached and estimable friend he ever possessed In 1772 Alfieri returned to Turin This time he fell for the Marchesa Turinetti di Prie but it was another doomed affair When she fell ill he spent his time dancing attendance on her and one day wrote a dialogue or scene of a drama which he left at her house When the couple quarreled the piece was returned to him and being retouched and extended to five acts it was performed at Turin in 1775 under the title of Cleopatra 6 Literary career edit nbsp Frontispiece for Works by Alfieri 1809 editionFrom this moment Alfieri was seized with an insatiable thirst for theatrical fame to which he devoted the remainder of his life His first two tragedies Filippo and Polinice were originally written in French prose When he came to versify them in Italian he found that because of many dealings with foreigners he was poor at expressing himself With the view of improving his Italian he went to Tuscany and during an alternate residence at Florence and Siena he completed Filippo and Polinice and had ideas for other dramas While thus employed he became acquainted with Princess Louise of Stolberg Gedern also known as the Countess of Albany who was living with her husband Charles Edward Stuart Bonnie Prince Charlie at Florence For her he formed a serious attachment With this motive to remain at Florence he did not wish to be bound to Piedmont He therefore ceded his whole property to his sister the countess Cumiana keeping for himself an annuity that was about half his original income Louise motivated by the ill treatment she received from her husband sought refuge in Rome where she at length received permission from the Pope to live apart from him Alfieri followed her to Rome where he completed fourteen tragedies four of which were published at Siena 6 For the sake of Louise s reputation he left Rome and in 1783 travelled through different states of Italy publishing six additional tragedies The interests of his love and literary glory had not diminished his love of horses He went to England solely for the purpose of purchasing a number of these animals which he took back to Italy On his return he learned that Louise had gone to Colmar in Alsace where he joined her and they lived together for the rest of his life They chiefly passed their time between Alsace and Paris but at length took up their abode entirely in that metropolis While here Alfieri made arrangements with Didot for an edition of his tragedies but was soon after forced to quit Paris by the storms of the French Revolution He recrossed the Alps with the countess and finally settled at Florence The last ten years of his life which he spent in that city seem to have been the happiest of his existence During that long period his tranquility was only interrupted by the entrance of the Revolutionary armies into Florence in 1799 Alfieri s political writings were among those which had contributed to the revolutionary atmosphere His essay Della Tirannide denounced absolutism and was dedicated to liberty as a universal right 7 In Del Principe e delle Lettere he declared poets to be the heralds of freedom and human dignity and the natural enemies of tyrants He supported the American Revolution and wrote a collection of odes published as L America libera and dedicated a play about the ancient Romans to George Washington 7 When the French Revolution broke out he supported its initial liberal phase but the violence of the Reign of Terror turned him strongly against the radical Jacobins 7 Despite Alfieri s increasingly anti French sentiments he was honored when the French army arrived in Italy and Napoleon himself attended a performance of Alfieri s Virginia a play set in ancient Rome in which the people demand liberty and rise to overthrow a tyrant 7 Alfieri s ideas continued to influence Italian liberals and republicans such as Piero Gobetti throughout the Risorgimento and well into the twentieth century 8 He spent the concluding years of his life studying Greek literature and perfecting a series of comedies His labor on this subject exhausted his strength and made him ill He eschewed his physicians prescriptions in favor of his own remedies which made the condition worse He died in Florence in 1803 9 His last words were Clasp my hand my dear friend I die 10 He is buried in the Church of Santa Croce Florence next to Machiavelli nbsp Antonio Canova monumental tomb of Vittorio Alfieri Santa Croce Florence 1810Character editAlfieri s character may be best appreciated from the portrait he drew of himself in his own Memoirs of his Life 11 12 He was evidently of an irritable impetuous and almost ungovernable temper Pride which seems to have been a ruling sentiment may account for many apparent inconsistencies of his character But his less amiable qualities were greatly softened by the cultivation of literature His application to study gradually tranquillized his temper and softened his manners leaving him at the same time in perfect possession of those good qualities he inherited from nature a warm and disinterested attachment to his family and friends united to a generosity vigour and elevation of character which rendered him not unworthy to embody in his dramas the actions and sentiments of Grecian heroes 13 Contribution to Italian literature editIt is to his dramas that Alfieri is chiefly indebted for the high reputation he has attained Before his time the Italian language so harmonious in the Sonnets of Petrarch and so energetic in the Commedia of Dante had been invariably languid and prosaic in dramatic dialogue The pedantic and inanimate tragedies of the 16th century were followed during the Iron Age of Italian literature by dramas of which extravagance in the sentiments and improbability in the action were the chief characteristics The prodigious success of the Merope of Maffei which appeared in the commencement of the 18th century may be attributed more to a comparison with such productions than to intrinsic merit In this degradation of tragic taste the appearance of the tragedies of Alfieri was perhaps the most important literary event that had occurred in Italy during the 18th century 13 On these tragedies it is difficult to pronounce a judgment as the taste and system of the author underwent considerable change and modification in the intervals between the three periods of their publication An excessive harshness of style an asperity of sentiment and total want of poetical ornament are the characteristics of his first four tragedies Filippo Polinice Antigone and Virginia These faults were in some measure corrected in the six tragedies he wrote some years after and in those he published along with Saul the drama that enjoyed the greatest success of all his productions This popularity is partly attributable to Alfieri s severe and unadorned style which fit the patriarchal simplicity of the age Though there is a considerable difference in his dramas there are certain qualities common to all None of the plots are of his own invention but are founded on either mythological fable or history Most of them had been previously treated by the Greek dramatists or by Seneca Rosmunda the only one that could be of his own contrivance and which is certainly the least happy effusion of his genius is partly founded on the eighteenth novel of the third part of Bandello and partly on Prevost s Memoires d un homme de qualite Memoirs of a Man of Quality 13 Another characteristic common to every Alfieri s tragedy is that the main character is always a tragic hero of freedom whose ambition and need of revolution push him to fight tyranny and oppression wherever they exist Usually this is accomplished in the most radical manner up to killing the tyrant and facing death for it afterwards This desire for freedom always moves the hero into a dimension of solitude pessimism and internal torment but he keeps going despite knowing that the majority of the people around him can t understand or share his views and struggles or that his goals are almost impossible to reach This concept is called titanism citation needed But whatever subject he chooses his dramas are always formed on the Grecian model and breathe a freedom and independence worthy of an Athenian poet Indeed his Agide and Bruto may rather be considered oratorical declamations and dialogues on liberty than tragedies The unities of time and place are not so scrupulously observed in his dramas as in the ancients but he rigidly adheres to a unity of action and interest He infuses each play with one great action and one ruling passion taking care to remove as much as possible every other event or feeling In this excessive zeal for the observance of unity he seems to have forgotten that its charm consists in producing a common relation between multiplied feelings and not in the bare exhibition of one divested of those various accompaniments that give harmony to the whole Consistently with the austere and simple manner he thought the chief excellence of dramatic composition he excluded from his scene all coups de theatre all philosophical reflexions and that highly ornamented versification so assiduously cultivated by his predecessors In his anxiety however to avoid all superfluous ornament he has stripped his dramas of the embellishments of imagination and for the harmony and flow of poetical language he has substituted even in his best performances a style that though correct and pure is generally harsh elaborate and abrupt often strained into unnatural energy or condensed into factitious conciseness The chief excellence of Alfieri consists in powerful delineation of dramatic character In his Filippo he has represented almost with the masterly touches of Tacitus the sombre character the dark mysterious counsels the suspensa semper et obscura verba of the modern Tiberius In Polinice the characters of the rival brothers are beautifully contrasted in Maria Stuarda Mary Stuart that unfortunate queen is represented as unsuspicious impatient of contradiction and violent in her attachments In Mirra the character of Ciniro is perfect as a father and king and Cecri is a model of a wife and mother In the representation of that species of mental alienation where the judgment has perished but traces of character still remain he is peculiarly happy The insanity of Saul is skilfully managed and the horrid joy of Orestes in killing Aegisthus rises finely and naturally to madness in finding that at the same time he had inadvertently slain his mother 13 Whatever the merits or defects of Alfieri he may be considered as the founder of a new school in the Italian drama His country hailed him as her sole tragic poet and his successors in the same path of literature have regarded his bold austere and rapid manner as the genuine model of tragic composition 13 Besides his tragedies Alfieri published during his life many sonnets five odes on American independence one tramelogedia Abele and the poem of Etruria based on the assassination of Alexander duke of Florence Of his prose works the most distinguished for animation and eloquence is the Panegyric on Trajan composed in a transport of indignation at the supposed feebleness of Pliny s eulogium His books La Tirannide and the Essays on Literature and Government are remarkable for elegance and vigour of style but are too evidently imitations of the manner of Machiavelli His Antigallican which he wrote while composing his Defence of Louis XVI presents a historical and satirical view of the French Revolution The posthumous works of Alfieri consist of satires six political comedies and the Memoirs of his Life work that will always be read with interest in spite of the cold and languid gravity he applies to the most interesting adventures and strongest passions of his agitated life 13 Death editAlfieri caught a chill on his stomach while out driving on 3 October 1803 His health deteriorated and he died in his chair on 8 October He was buried in the church of Santa Croce Florence Louise arranged for Antonio Canova to erect a monument in his memory This took 6 years to be executed being finally installed in Santa Croce in the autumn of 1810 14 a Freemasonry editThe name of Vittorio Alfieri was never registered in the official publications of the Piedmont Freemasonry It is proved Alfieri was initiated in the regular Masonic Lodge Vittoria of Naples which was an obedience of the Gran Loggia Nazionale Lo Zelo founded in 1874 185 by aristocrat Freemasons closely linked to the queen Maria Carolina of Austria 16 Many of Alfieri s friends were Freemasons as it is attested by the documents conserved in the center of studies located in the town of Asti The first edition of the Alfieri s tragedy was published in 1763 and sent to the following notable Freemasons the von Kaunitz brothers of Turin Giovanni Pindemonte e Gerolamo Zulian in Venice Annibale Beccaria brother of Cesare Luigi Visconte Arese e Gioacchino Pallavicini in Milan Carlo Gastone Rezzonico in Parma Saveur Grimaldi in Genoa Ludovico Savioli in Bologna Kiliano Caraccioli which was Venerable Master in Naples Giuseppe Guasco in Rome 17 On August 27 1782 the name of Alfieri is cited in the Tableau des Membres de la Respectable Loge de la Victoire a l Orient de Naples List of the members of the Venerable Lodge Victoire in the Orient of Naples as Comte Alfieri Gentilhomme de Turin count Alfieri gentleman of Turin Some months later the Savoia dynasty banned any Masonic activity from the Piedmont and the Great Master count Asinari of Bernezzo was obliged to transfer his title to the prince Diego Naselli of Naples Napes become the official seat of the Italian Scottish Rite Freemasonry 18 His poetry Vita published in 1775 says Egli ti additi il murator primiero Del grande Ordine infin l origo estrema E se poi ti svelasse un tanto arcano Avresti tu si nobili concetti E ad inalzare il vol bastante mano Ah scusatela si fratei diletti Non ragiona l insana oppur deliraQuando canta di voi con versi inetti V Alfieri Vita 1775 The chapter continues mentioning the Scottish Rite degrees of Venerabile primo Vigilante Oratore and Segretario Works editTragedies edit Published in 1783Fillipo Philip Polinice Polynices Antigone Virginia Agamennone Agamemnon Oreste Orestes Rosmunda Ottavia Octavia Timoleone Timoleon MeropePublished in 1788Maria Stuarda Mary Stuart La Congiura De Pazzi The Conspiracy of the Pazzi Don Garzia Don Garcia Saul Agide Agis Sofonisba Sophonisba Published in 1792Bruto Primo The First Brutus Mirra Myrrha Bruto Secondo The Second Brutus Published posthumously in 1804Abele Abel Le Due Alcesti Alcestis II Antony and Cleopatra English translation of all 22 tragedies by Charles Lloyd and Edgar Alfred Bowring The Tragedies Volume 1 amp Volume 2 at the Internet ArchiveNotes edit Louise died on 29 January 1824 and was also buried in Santa Croce with a monument by Charles Percier 15 Sources editVaughan Herbert M The Last Stuart Queen 1st edition Brentano s 1911References edit Alfieri The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 25 June 2019 Alfieri Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 25 June 2019 Alfieri Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 25 June 2019 Beach Chandler B ed 1914 Alfieri The New Student s Reference Work Chicago F E Compton and Co Norwich John Julius 1990 Oxford Illustrated Encyclopedia Of The Arts USA Oxford University Press pp 12 ISBN 978 0198691372 a b c Chisholm 1911 p 580 a b c d Davis John Anthony 2000 Italy in the Nineteenth Century 1796 1900 Oxford University Press pp 207 208 Martin James 2008 Piero Gobetti and the Politics of Liberal Revolution Springer p 73 Chisholm 1911 pp 580 581 Marvin Frederic Rowland 2019 The Last Words Real and Traditional of Distinguished Men and Women Good Press Memoirs of the life and writings of Victor Alfieri written by himself Translated from the Italian London Henry Colburn 1810 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Review of Vita di Vittorio Alfieri amp c Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Victor Alfieri written by himself and The Tragedies of Vittorio Altieri translated by Charles Lloyd The Quarterly Review 14 333 368 January 1816 a b c d e f Chisholm 1911 p 581 Vaughan pp 246 252 Vaughan p 338 Vittorio Gnocchini L Italia dei Liberi Muratori Brevi biografie di Massoni famosi Roma Milano Erasmo Edizioni Mimesis 2005 p 9 OCLC 255343438 BNF cb41149329b LCCN 2005448654 R Marchetti Vittorio Alfieri fratel massone in Il Platano anno VII Asti 1982 Alfieri Vita Epoca I Primi sintomi di carattere appassionato References editAttribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Alfieri Vittorio Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 580 Endnote See Mem di Vit Alfieri Sismondi De la lit du midi de I Europe Walker s Memoir on Italian Tragedy Giorn de Pisa tom lviii Life of Alfieri by Centofanti Florence 1842 Vita Giornuli Lettere di Alfieri by Teza Florence 1861 Vittorio Alfieri by Antonini and Cognetti Turin 1898 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1907 Count Vittorio Alfieri Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 1 New York Robert Appleton Company External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vittorio Alfieri nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Vittorio Alfieri Works by Vittorio Alfieri at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Vittorio Alfieri at Internet Archive Works by Vittorio Alfieri at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Vittorio Alfieri at Open Library from Mirra Atto III Scena II on audio MP3 The Foe of Tyrants Vittorio Alfieri s L America Libera 1781 1783 Daniel Winkler Korper Revolution Nation Vittorio Alfieri und das republikanische Tragodienprojekt der Sattelzeit Wilhelm Fink Munich 2016 ISBN 978 3 7705 6129 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vittorio Alfieri amp oldid 1188779804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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