Online Encyclopedia

IMPROVISATORE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 348 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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IMPROVISATORE  , a word used to describe a poet who recites verses which he composes on the

spur of the moment, without previous preparation . The
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term is purely
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Italian, although in that language it would be more correctly spelt improvvisatore . It became recognized as an
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English word in the
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middle of the eighteenth century, and is so used by Smollett in his Travels (1766); he defines an improvisatore as " an individual who has the surprising talent of reciting verses extempore, on any subject you propose." In speaking of a woman, the
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female form improvisatrice is sometimes used in English . Improvisation is a, gift which properly belongs to those
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languages in which a
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great variety of grammatical inflections, wedded to simplicity of rhythm and abundance of
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rhyme, enable a poet to slur over difficulties in such a way as to satisfy the ear of his audience . In ancient times the greater
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part.of the popular
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poetry with which the leisure of listeners was beguiled was of this rhapsodical nature . But in
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modern
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Europe it was the troubadours, owing to the extreme flexibility of the languages of Provence, who distinguished themselves above all others as improvisatores . It is difficult to believe, however, that the elaborate compositions of these poets, which have come down to us, in which every exquisite artifice of versification is taken
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advantage of, can have been poured forth without pre-meditation . These poets, we must rather suppose, took a pride in the ostentation of a prodigious memory, most carefully trained, and poured forth in public what they had laboriously learned by heart in private . The Italians, however, in the 16th century, cultivated what seems to have been a genuine improvisation, in which the bards rhapsodized, not as they themselves pleased, but on subjects which were unexpected by them, and which were chosen on the spot by their patrons . Of these, the most extraordinary is said to have been Silvio Antoniano (1540-1603), who from the age of ten was able to pour out melodious verse on any subject which was suggested to him . He was brought toe Rome, where successive popes so delighted in his talent that in 1598 he was made a cardinal . In the 17th century thecelebrated Metastasio first attracted attention by his skill as an improvisatore .

But he was excelled by Bernardino Perfetti (1681-1747), who was perhaps the most extraordinary

genius of this class who has ever lived . He was seized, in his moments of composition, with a transport which transfigured his whole person, and under this excitement he poured forth verses in a miraculous flow . It was his custom to be attended by a guitarist, who played a recitative accompaniment . In this way Perfetti made a triumphal procession through the cities of Italy, ending up with the Capitol of Rome, where Pope Benedict XIII. crowned him with
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laurel, and created him a
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Roman citizen . One of the most remarkable improvisatores of modern times appeared in Sweden, in the person of Karl Mikael Bellman(174o-1795), who used to take up a position in the public gardens and parks of
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Stockholm, accompanying himself on a guitar, and treating metre and rhythm with a virtuosity and originality which place him among the leading poets of
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Swedish literature . In England, somewhat later, Theodore Hook (1788-1841)
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developed a surprising talent for this kind, but his verses were rarely of the serious or sentimental character. of which we have hitherto spoken . Hook's animal
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spirits were unfortunately mingled with vulgarity, and his
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clever jeux d'esprit had little but their smartness to recommend them . A similar talent, exercised in a somewhat more
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literary direction, made Joseph Wry (1798-1865) a delightful companion in the Parisian society of his day . It is rare indeed that the productions of the improvisatore, taken down in shorthand, and read in the cold
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light of criticism, are found to justify the impression which the author produced on his
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original audience . Imperfections of every kind become patent when we read these transcripts, and the reader cannot avoid perceiving weaknesses of style and grammar . The eye and voice of the improvisatore so hypnotize his auditors as to make them incapable of forming a sober
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judgment on matters of mere literature . IN-ANTIS, the architectural term given to those temples the entrance part of which consisted of two columns placed between the antae or pilasters (see TEMPLE) .

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