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Among
the Italian texts Elliott
Carter sets for his new
song cycle Tempo
e Tempi are works by
Salvatore Quasimodo. Sospeso performs these songs on Thursday, January 22,
2004 with soprano Lucy
Shelton.
Salvatore Quasimodo (1901-1968), the Italian poet, critic, and translator, was awarded the
Nobel Prize for Literature in 1959. Quasimodo's works fall roughly into two periods,
divided by World War II. His early poems were difficult with their metaphysical and highly
personalized imagery, but in later works he was more concerned with the interpretation of
contemporary history, social conditions, horrors of war, and the problems of human
suffering.
Quasimodo was born in Modica, a small town near Syracuse, Sicily, as the son of a railway
officer. He started to write in his childhood. When his parents felt that technical training
would be more practical, Quasimodo moved to Rome where he studied engineering at the
Polytechnical Institute. Because of financial problems, he left the school and then held a
number of jobs. In 1926 he was appointed to the government Civil Engineering
Department. Quasimodo's brother-in-law, Elio Vittorini, who became a novelist,
introduced him to the lirerary circles. Among his friends were
Eugenio
Montale, Giuseppe
Ungaretti and Alessandro Bonsati.
Quasimodo's earliest poems appeared in magazines. His first collection of poems,
Acque e Terre (Water and Land), was published in 1930.
Acque e Terre contained nostalgic
poems about Sicily, and reveal moods of loneliness and melancholy. It was followed by
Oboe Sommerso (1932),
Erato e Apollion (1936), and
Poesie (1938), in
which Quasimodo's poetic language showed
the influence of symbolism and was rarefied to
verbalize his personal impressions. In 1938 he resigned from his work, and became an
assistant to Cesare Zavattini, who was editor of several periodicals. Quasimodo was named
in 1941 professor of Italian literature at Milan's Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory.
During WW II Quasimodo was a member of an anti-Fascist group, and was briefly
imprisoned. His most widely read book,
Ed è Subito sera, appeared in 1942. After
the war he joined the Italian Communist party, but resigned in protest, when the party
insisted that he should write political poems.
Giorno Dopo Giorno (1947) reflected
his country's hardships and his horror at Italy's role in the war. It has been characterized
perhaps the best volume of poetry to come out of World War II in any country.
Quasimodo's first wife Bice Donetti died in 1948, and he married the dancer Maria
Cumani. They separated permanently in 1960. His daughter Orietta was born out of
wedlock in 1935 to Amelia Specialetti. Quasimodo's last four volumes of verse show a
continuing concern for social justice, fond memories of past friends and past loves. His last
book of verse was Dare e
Avere (1966, To Give and to Have). While presidenting over
a poetry competition in Amalfi, he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died in Naples, on
June 14, 1968.
"Poetry, even lyrical poetry, is always 'speech.' The listener may be the physical or
metaphysical interior of the poet, or a man, or a thousand men."
Recurrent themes in Quasimodo's works are memories of childhood and Sicily. He recalls
certain landscapes, his experiences of them, what they meant to him, and connects his
impressions to historical and literary associations, and the cultural heritage from Greeks,
Romans, Arabs, and other invaders. In the 1930s he became a leader of the 'hermeneutic'
poet with Eugenio Montale (1896-1981) and
Giuseppe Ungaretti (1888-1970), abandoning
realism. After WW II his poetry dealt largely with social issues, reflecting deep concern of
the fate of Italy. He also wrote many essays on literature and translated classical poetry and
drama, among them such writers as William Shakespeare, Molière (Tartuffe), Homer,
Aeschylus, Sophocles, Virgil, Catullus. Translations from European and American
contemporaries include e.e. cummings and Pablo Neruda.
From The
Author's Calendar.
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