Online Encyclopedia

GIACOMO ZANELLA (1820-1888)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 955 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GIACOMO

ZANELLA (1820-1888)  ,
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Italian poet, was born at Chiampo, near
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Vicenza, on the 9th of September 1820, and was educated for the priesthood . After his ordination he be-came professor at the
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lyceum of his native place, but his patriotic sympathies excited the jealousy of the
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Austrian authorities, and although protected by his diocesan, he was compelled to resign in 1853 . After the liberation of
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Venetia, the Italian government conferred upon him a professorship at Padua, and he achieved distinction as a poet on the publication of his first
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volume of poems in 1868 . In 1872 grief for the
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death of his
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mother occasioned a
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mental malady, which led to the resignation of his professorship . After his
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complete and permanent recovery he built himself a
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villa on the
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bank of his native
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river, the Astichello, and lived there in tranquillity until his death on the 17th of May 1888 . His last published volume contains a series of sonnets of singular beauty, addressed to the river, resembling Wordsworth's " Sonnets to the Duddon," but more perfect in form; and a blank verse idyll, "11 Pettirosso " (" The
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Redbreast "), bearing an equally strong, though equally accidental, resemblance to the similar compositions of Coleridge . His ode to
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Dante, and that on the opening of the
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Suez Canal, are distinguished by
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great dignity . Of his other compositions, the most individual are those in which, deeply impressed by the problems of his day, he has sought to reconcile science and religion, especially the
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fine
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dialogue between Milton and Galileo, where the former, impressed by Galileo's predictions of the intellectual consequences of scientific progress, resolves " to justify the ways of
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God to man." Zanella was a broad-minded and patriotic ecclesiastic, and his character is justly held in equal honour with his
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poetry, which, if hardly to be termed powerful, wears a stamp of
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peculiar elegance and finish, and asserts a place of its own in
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modern Italian literature .

End of Article: GIACOMO ZANELLA (1820-1888)
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