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Three Pensieri by Leopardi
Since I can think of nothing more ridiculous than reviewing a book of aphorisms, which must speak for themselves even more completely than poems do, I’m simply offering up some of my favorites from Leopardi’s Pensieri (I quoted from another in an earlier post). The Roman numeral following each refers to the Louisiana State University Press edition, Pensieri: A Bilingual Edition, translated and introduced by W. S. Di Piero.Read More
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An Ancient Custom
This I find delicious: If I had Cervantes’ genius, just as he purged Spain of the imitation of knights errant, I too would write a book purging Italy–indeed, the entire civilized world–of […] the habit of reading or reciting one’s own compositions to others. This very ancient custom was in past centuries a tolerable misery, since it was rare. But today, when everybody can write and when the hardest thing to find is someone who is not an author, this practice has become a scourge, a public calamity, one of life’s newest hardships.Read More