Silvio Pellico
Silvio Pellico (Italian:
Biography
Silvio Pellico was born in
His tragedy Francesca da Rimini, on the life and death of the noblewoman, was brought out with success by Carlotta Marchionni at Milan in 1818. Its publication was followed by that of the tragedy Euphemio da Messina, but the representation of the latter was forbidden.[1]
Pellico had in the meantime continued his work as a tutor, first to the unfortunate son of Count Briche, and then to the two sons of Count Porro Lambertenghi . He threw himself heartily into an attempt to weaken the hold of the Austrian despotism by indirect educational means.[1]
The Conciliatore, a review, appeared in 1818. Of the powerful literary executives that gathered about Counts Porro and Confalonieri, Pellico was the able secretary on whom most of the responsibility for the review, the organ of the association, fell. However, the paper, under the censorship of the Austrian officials, ran for a year only, and the society itself was broken up by the government. In October 1820, Pellico was arrested on the charge of
The sentence of death pronounced on him in February 1822 was finally commuted to fifteen years of jail in harsh condition, and in the following April he was placed in the
After his release in 1830, he commenced the publication of his prison compositions, of which the Ester was played at Turin in 1831, but immediately suppressed. In 1832, his Gismonda da Mendrisio, Erodiade and the Leoniero, appeared under the title of Tre nuove tragedie, and in the same year the work which gave him his European fame, Le mie prigioni , an account of his sufferings in prison. The last gained him the friendship of the Marchesa Juliette Colbert de Barolo, the reformer of the Turin prisons, and in 1834 he accepted from her a yearly pension of 1200 francs. His tragedy Tommaso Moro had been published in 1833, his most important subsequent publication being the Opere inedite in 1837. [1]
On the decease of his parents in 1838, he was received into the Casa Barolo, where he remained until his death, assisting the marchesa in her charities, and writing chiefly upon religious themes. Of these works, the best known is the Dei doveri degli uomini, a series of trite maxims which do honour to his piety rather than to his critical judgment. A fragmentary biography of the marchesa by Pellico was published in Italian and English after her death.[1]
He died in 1854 at Turin. He was buried in the Camposanto, Turin.
The late nineteenth-century English novelist
Main works
- Pellico, Silvio (1839). Published by William and Robert Chambers. Edinburgh. (ed.). The imprisonments of Silvio Pellico.
- Pellico, Silvio (1889). Introduction by Epes Sargent. (ed.). My Prisons: Memoirs of Silvio Pellico. Roberts Brothers, Boston.
Silvio Pellico.
- Pellico, Silvio (1897). Translated by Rev JF Bingham. (ed.). Francesca da Rimini: A Tragedy. Belknap and Warfield, Hartford.
Silvio Pellico.
References
Further reading
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Pellico, Silvio". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
- Ford, Jeremiah Denis Mathias (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
- Garofalo, Piero, "Silvio Pellico and Risorgimento." Rivista di Studi Italiani 29.2 (2011): 19–50.
- Gavriel Shapiro, "Nabokov and Pellico: Invitation to a Beheading and My Prisons." Comparative Literature 62#1 (2010): 55–67.
External links
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