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TEOFILO See also: principal See also: Italian macaronic poets, was See also: born of See also: noble parentage at Cipada near See also: Mantua on the 8th of See also: November 1491
.
From his See also: infancy he showed See also: great vivacity of mind, and a remarkable cleverness in making verses
.
At the age of sixteen he entered the monastery of See also: Monte See also: Casino near See also: Brescia, and eighteen months afterwards he became a professed member of the See also: Benedictine See also: order
.
For a few years his See also: life as a See also: monk seems to have been tolerably
See also: regular, and he is said to have produced a considerable quantity of Latin verse, written, not unsuccessfully, in the Virgilian See also: style
.
About the See also: year 1516 he forsook the monastic life for the society of a well-born See also: young woman named Girolama Dieda, with whom he wandered about the country for several years, often suffering great poverty, having no other means of support than his talent for versification
.
His first publication was the Merlini Cocaii macaronicon, which relates the adventures of a fictitious See also: hero named Baldus
.
The coarse buffoonery of this See also: work is often relieved by touches of genuine See also: poetry, as well as by graphic descriptions and acute criticisms of men and See also: manners
.
Its macaronic style is rendered peculiarly perplexing to the foreigner by the frequent introduction of words and phrases from the Mantuan See also: patois
.
Though frequently censured for its occasional grossness of idea and expression, it soon attained a wide popularity, and within a very few years passed through several See also: editions
.
See also: Folengo's next production was the Orlandino, an Italian poem of eight cantos, written in rhymed octaves
.
It appeared in 1526, and See also: bore on the title-page the new pseudonym of Limerno Pitocco (Merlin the See also: Beggar) da Mantova
.
In the same year, wearied with a life of dissipation, Folengo returned to his ecclesiastical obedience; and shortly afterwards wrote his See also: Chaos del tri per uno, in which, partly in See also: prose, partly in verse, sometimes in Latin, sometimes in Italian, and sometimes in macaronic, he gives a veiled account of the vicissitudes of the life he had lived under his various names,
We next find him about the year 1533 writing in rhymed octaves a life of Christ entitled L'Umanitd del Figliuolo di Die; and he is known to have composed, still later, another religious poem upon the creation, fall and restoration of See also: man, besides a few tragedies
.
These, however, have never been published . Some of his later years were spent in See also: Sicily under the patronage of See also: Don Fernando de Gonzaga, the See also: viceroy; he even appears for a See also: short See also: time to have had See also: charge of a monastery there
.
In 1543 he retired to See also: Santa Croce de Campesio, near Bassano; and there he died on the 9th of See also: December 1544•
Folengo is frequently quoted and still more frequently copied by See also: Rabelais
.
The earlier editions of his See also: Opus macaronicum are.now extremely rare
.
The often reprinted edition of 153o exhibits the text as revised by the author after he had begun to amend his life
.
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