Leopardi, Giacomo - Beatrice Corrigan (essay date 1963)

Beatrice Corrigan (essay date 1963)

SOURCE: Corrigan, Beatrice. “The Poetry of Leopardi in Victorian England 1837-1878.” English Miscellany 14 (1963): 171-84.

[In the following essay, Corrigan discusses Leopardi's reputation in England in the mid-nineteenth century.]

«The first time an Englishman ever mentioned the name of Leopardi in print was, we believe, in a recent novel», wrote George Henry Lewes in an anonymous contribution to Fraser's Magazine in 18481. «Yet Germany has long known and cherished Leopardi. Even France, generally so backward in acknowledging a foreigner, has, on several occasions, paid tribute to his genius».

Some of Leopardi's poems had indeed been translated into German as early as 18232, and he had been the subject of an article in France in 18333. But during his lifetime an unfortunate barrier had already risen between English and Italian men of letters. No...

[The entire page is 5028 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: