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GIUSEPPE See also: born at Monsummano, a small See also: village of the Valdinievole, on the 12th of May 1809
.
His See also: father, a cultivated and See also: rich See also: man, accustomed his son from childhood to study, and himself taught him, among other subjects, the first rudiments of See also: music
.
After-wards, in See also: order to curb his too vivacious disposition, he placed the boy under the See also: charge of a See also: priest near the village, whose severity did perhaps more evil than See also: good
.
At twelve See also: Giusti was sent to school at Florence, and afterwards to See also: Pistoia and to Lucca; and during those years he wrote his first verses
.
In 1826 he went to study See also: law at See also: Pisa; but, disliking the study, he spent eight years in the course, instead of the customary four
.
He lived gaily, however, though his father kept him See also: short of See also: money, and learned to know the See also: world, seeing the vices of society, and the folly of certain See also: laws and customs from which his country was suffering
.
The experience thus gained he turned to good account in the use he made of it in his satire
.
His father had in the meantime changed his place of abode to See also: Pescia; but Giuseppe did worse there, and in See also: November 1832, his father having paid his debts, he returned to study at Pisa, seriously enamoured of a woman whom he could not marry, but now commencing to write in real earnest in behalf of his country
.
With the poem called La Ghigliottina (the See also: guillotine), Giusti began to strike out a path for himself, and thus revealed his See also: great See also: genius
.
From this See also: time he showed himself the See also: Italian
See also: Beranger, and even surpassed the Frenchman in richness of language, refinement of See also: humour and See also: depth of satirical conception
.
In Beranger there is more feeling for what is needed for popular See also: poetry
.
His poetry is less studied, its vivacity perhaps more boisterous, more spontaneous; but Giusti, in both manner and conception, is perhaps more elegant, more refined, more penetrating
.
In 1834 Giusti, having at last entered the legal profession, See also: left Pisa to go to Florence, nominally to practise with the advocate Capoquadri, but really to enjoy See also: life in the capital of See also: Tuscany
.
He See also: fell seriously in love a second time, and as before was abandoned by his love
.
It was then he wrote his finest verses, by means of which, although his poetry was not yet collected in a See also: volume, but for some years passed from See also: hand to hand, his name gradually became famous
.
The greater See also: part of his poems were published clandestinely at Lugano, at no little See also: risk, as the See also: work was destined to undermine the See also: Austrian See also: rule in See also: Italy
.
After the publication of a volume of verses at See also: Bastia, Giusti thoroughly established his fame by his Gingillino, the best in moral See also: tone as well as the most vigorous and effective of his poems
.
The poet sets himself to represent the vileness of the See also: treasury officials, and the See also: base means they used to conceal the necessities of the See also: state
.
The Gingillino has all the character of a classic satire
.
When first issued in Tuscany, it struck all as too impassioned and See also: personal
.
Giusti entered See also: heart and soul into the See also: political movements of 1847 and 1848, served in the See also: national guard, sat in the parliament for Tuscany; but finding that there was more talk than See also: action, that to the tyranny of princes had succeeded the tyranny of demagogues, he began to fear, and to express the fear, that for Italy evil rather than good had resulted
.
He fell, in consequence, from the high position he had held in public estimation, and in 1848 was regarded as a reactionary
.
His friendship for the See also: marquis Gino Capponi, who had taken him into his See also: house during the last years of his life, and who published after Giusti's See also: death a volume of illustrated proverbs, was enough to compromise him in the eyes of such men as Guerrazzi, See also: Montanelli and Niccolini
.
On the 31st of May 185o he died at Florence in the palace of his friend
.
The poetry of Giusti, under a See also: light trivial aspect, has a lofty civilizing significance
.
The type of his satire is entirely See also: original, and it had also the great merit of appearing at the right moment, of wounding judiciously, of sustaining the part of the See also: comedy that " castigat ridendo mores." Hence his verse, apparently jovial, was received by the scholars and politicians of Italy in all seriousness
.
See also: Alexander Manzoni in some of his letters showed a hearty admiration of the genius of Giusti; and the weak Austrian and Bourbon governments regarded them as of the gravest importance
.
His poems have often been reprinted, the best
See also: editions being those of Le See also: Monnier, Carducci (1859; 3rd ed., 1879), Fioretti (1876) and See also: Bragi (189o)
.
Besides the poems and the proverbs already mentioned, we have a volume of select letters, full of vigour and written in the best Tuscan language, and a See also: fine critical discourse on Giuseppe See also: Parini, the satirical poet
.
In some of his compositions the elegiac rather than the satirical poet is seen
.
Many of his verses have been excellently translated into See also: German by See also: Paul See also: Heyse
.
Good See also: English See also: translations were published in the See also: Athenaeum by Mrs T
.
A
.
See also: Trollope, and some by W
.
D
.
See also: Howells are in his See also: Modern Italian Poets (1887)
.
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