Orlando Furioso (Poema épico Completo)

Front Cover
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Dec 3, 2015 - Fiction - 334 pages
Orlando furioso es un poema épico caballeresco escrito por Ludovico Ariosto y cuya redacción definitiva se publicó en 1532. Ariosto (1474 - 1533) fue un poeta italíano, autor del poema épico Orlando furioso (1516). Además de su personalidad de poeta de gran renombre, escribió para la escena obras como: Arquilla, Los supuestos, El nigromante, La alcahueta y Los estudíantes, entre otras. El poema y epopeya, extensísimo, se compone de cuarenta y seis cantos escritos en octavas (38.736 versos) por los que deambulan personajes del ciclo carolingio, algunos del ciclo bretón (gruta de Merlín, visita de Reinaldos de Montalbán a Inglaterra) e incluso algunos seres inspirados en la literatura clásica griega y latina. Es, y así la presenta el autor, una continuación del Orlando enamorado de Matteo María Boíardo. Allá donde dejó éste inacabada su obra, la derrota del ejército de Carlomagno en los Pirineos por los moros, es donde arranca el Ariosto la suya, que suele, al reintroducir los personajes de su predecesor, dedicar una o dos octavas a resumir las aventuras narradas por Boíardo en el Enamorado.

About the author (2015)

Born in Reggio, Italy, in 1474, Ludovico Ariosto lived most of his life in Ferrara, in northern Italy. He enjoyed the patronage first of Cardinal Ippolito and then of the cardinal's brother, Alfonso, Duke of Este, who had been his inseparable companion in youth. Aristo composed a mock epic of chivalry titled Orlando Furioso. It appeared in 1516 and 1521 before the definitive edition of 1532. Hegel observed that Ariosto prepared the way for the treatment of chivalry in Cervantes's Don Quixote and Shakespeare's Falstaff in a gently veiled humor. A translation of Orlando Furioso into English heroic verse by Sir John Harrington was published in 1591, but by then Edmund Spenser had already sought to outdo Ariosto's epic in his own Faerie Queene. Walter Scott read a translation by John Hoole in 1783, and Byron drew on it for his Don Juan. In addition to the mock epic, Ariosto wrote many lyric poems in Latin and Italian, seven satires in terza rima, and five comedies in unrhymed lines of 11 syllables. His satires were read and imitated by Thomas Wyatt. One of his comedies, I suppositi, was translated and adapted into English by George Gascoigne and performed at Gray's Inn in 1566. It provided Shakespeare with much of the content and inspiration for The Taming of the Shrew. Ariosto died on July 6,1533.

Bibliographic information