by Raymond N. MacKenzie (Translator), ALPHONSE DE LAMARTINE (Author)
In its first modern translation, a novel-cum-memoir of a Frenchman\u2019s erotic awakening in Italy by a preeminent writer of the Romantic period In 1812 Alphonse de Lamartine, a young man of means, traveled through southern Italy, where, during a sojourn in Naples, he fell in love with a young woman who worked in a cigar factory-and whose death after he returned to France would haunt him throughout his writing life. Graziella, Lamartine called this lost girl in his poetry and memoirs-and also in Graziella, a novel that closely follows the story of his own romance.\u201cWhen I was eighteen,\u201d the narrator begins, as if penning his memoir, \u201cmy family entrusted me to the care of a relative whose business affairs called her to Tuscany.\u201d The tale that unfolds, of the young man\u2019s amorous experiences amid the natural grandeur and subtle splendors of the Italian countryside, is one of the finest works of fiction in the French Romantic tradition, a bildungsroman that is also a melancholy portrait of the artist as a young man discovering the muse who would both inspire and elude him.Remarkable for its contemplative prose, its dreamy passions and seductive drawing of the Italian landscape, and its place in the Romantic canon, Graziella is a timeless portrait of love, chronicling the remorse and the misguided ideals of youth that find their expression, if not their amends, in art.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 168
Edition: 3rd ed.
Publisher: Univ Of Minnesota Press
Published: 13 Nov 2018
ISBN 10: 1517902487
ISBN 13: 9781517902483
Alphonse de Lamartine (1790-1869) is best known as France's preeminent Romantic poet and, in later life, as a progressive politician who advocated for the abolition of slavery and freedom of the press.
Raymond N. MacKenzie is professor of English at the University of St. Thomas and translator of Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly's Diaboliques and Stendhal's Italian Chronicles, both published by Minnesota.