Criticism > Classical and Medieval Literature Criticism > Petrarch - Ugo Foscolo (essay date 1823)
Petrarch - Ugo Foscolo (essay date 1823)
Ugo Foscolo (essay date 1823)
SOURCE: Ugo Foscolo, "A Parallel between Dante and Petrarach," in Essays on Petrarch, John Murray, 1823, pp. 163-208.
[In the following essay, Foscolo, a renowed Italian poet, compares the poetry and philosophy of Dante and Petrarch.]
L'UN DISPOSTO A PATIRE E L'ALTRO A FARE. DANTE, PURG. C. XXV.
The excess of erudition in the age of Leo the Tenth, carried the refinements of criticism so far as even to prefer elegance of taste to boldness of genius. The laws of the Italian language were thus deduced, and the models of poetry selected exclusively from the works of Petrarch; who being then proclaimed superior to Dante, the sentence remained, until our times, unreversed. Petrarch himself mingles Dante indiscriminately with others eclipsed by his own fame—
Ma ben ti prego, che in la terza spera,
Guitton saluti, e Messer Cino, e Dante,
Franceschin nostro, e tutta quella...
[The entire page is 9805 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Ugo Foscolo (essay date 1823)
- Littell's Living Age (essay date 1878)
- Henry Dwight Sedgwick (essay date 1904)
- Annie Russell Marble (essay date 1904)
- Nathan Haskell Dole (essay date 1908)
- Theodor E. Mommsen (essay date 1946)
- Thomas P. Roche, Jr. (essay date 1974)
- Francis X. Murphy (essay date 1974)
- Concetta Carestia Greenfield (essay date 1975)
- Robert M. Durling (essay date 1976)
- Charles Trinkaus (essay date 1979)
- Mariann Sanders Regan (essay date 1982)
- Gordon Braden (essay date 1986)
- Peter Hainsworth (essay date 1988)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
