Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Hattori Knives Japanese Kitchen Knives?

L'angolo della poesia 5

All middle school and high school we studied the Romantic is not it?
literary movement of 1800.

The nineteenth century was a century marked by the historical so-called Restoration: the Congress of Vienna (1814-1815) in various countries was restored to the political situation prior to the first French Revolution (1789) and the Napoleonic era, bringing to power the old dynasties.
A change of this restoration came with the uprisings of 1848, a date which marks a clear break in Europe.
etc. etc. .... XD

The Romantic movement was born therefore in a long troubled period of history!
It comes with a strong identity and antilluminista anticlassicista, proposing a new sensibility in the arts which would develop the feelings, passion, irrational aspects ... that "turbulent time and creative genius."
The term Romantic is documented for the first volta in inglese con l'aggettivo ROMANTIC, usato nel Seicento per indicare in modo spregiativo la materia avventurosa e amorosa degli antichi romances(ossia i romanzi cavallereschi). Nel corso del Settecento, invece, l'aggettivo perse la sua accezione negativa designando il gusto per l'evasione fantastica dal reale.
ROMANTIC venne poi tradotto in francese con i termini pittoresque(pittoresco), romanesque(romanzesco) e in seguito romantique per sottolineare il rapporto sentimentale con la natura e il paesaggio.
Ma la traduzione del termine inglese(romantic) che ha designato il movimento letterario vero e proprio è quella tedesca ROMANTIK..(parola già in uso grazie a Friedrick Schlegel)
Il Romanticismo nacque nel 1798, dalla "Battle" of the German magazine 's Athenaum and Lyrical Ballads (ballad opera) British Wordswort and Coleridge.
Wordswort and Coleridge are two poets who are part of the "first generation Romantic," in which he renewed his poetic sensibility and language as the poets chose to use that everyday.
In the "second generation Romantic poets also influenced the costume, fashion, the very conception of the poet .. I'm talking about Percy Bysshe Shelley, John Keats and Lord Byron. They
than the first two, had wider European influence, because they lived too long abroad: Shelley and Keats died in Italy, Byron in Greece! You might

asking, but because he wrote this? .. could not directly write a poem and amen? XD

Yes, but one that when they start talking about something always starts from prehistoric ahahahaha cmq ... Then get the basics (I would say minimum! On Romanticism and its historical period, you can write pages and pages ... I have told you about done, just not to be pedantic XD) does not hurt .. I'm at the limit you can skip all the preamble and get to the point that what I write now: D

The other day, by chance, making a some healthy and lazy to zap TV channels, I came across a trailer for a film of 2009, "Bright Star"
I immediately realized that this was a story love, set to judge from the clothes in the eighteenth or nineteenth centuries secc .. Because I'm always fascinated me then and there I said: "I can try to see it from the" .. smugly XD But when, on screen, towards the end of the trailer has appeared as JHON KEATS, I exclaimed, "is to see assolutissimamente": D. ... Because I have studied the poet ehehehehehe

Who is John Keats?
What is English as I have said, which is also a poet, but that is the greatest English Romantic poet no XD
A poet who blends classical aspects in his works: the study of works in Latin, the interest in mythology , the taste of beauty not far from the neoclassical; with a romantic sensibility: a poem based on the cult of feeling, of feeling pervaded the medieval from the exoticism.
Keats studied medicine and became an apprentice surgeon, but came into contact with Leigh Hunt, poet, eclectic and radical politician, he devoted himself to poetry publishing in 1817 his first poems, though he wrote the works of more prominent between 1818 and 1820: Hyperion, The Eve of St. Agnes, La belle dame sans merci, the Odes etc.
forced to watch his brother tubercular, weakened by a journey on foot to go to Scotland, tormented by love for Fanny Brawne, Keats soon began to show signs of physical failure. In February of 1820 manifested the first symptoms of the disease: tuberculosis! Recommended by doctors, he sailed for Italy (the warmer climate would help). He settled in Rome where he died a few months later in February 1821.

The love story that I saw in the film treiler then is that between Keats and Fanny Brawne, his neighbor! He was a tormented love for economic reasons as the film suggests (because then I searched on the internet and I have seen him out of curiosity XD) .. At that time, poets and writers, they were really hungry and her mother did not see a good degree of their union, only to retrace his steps as soon as the young Keats had success.
But illness removed him from England and also by his love for ever!

By John Keats I bought a book where the collection of his sonnets and odes! .. Just to get an idea of \u200b\u200bthe poet wider (sometimes the school anthologies do not comply strictly in terms of content) will carry the
'eleventh sonnet (from which the title to the film), mostly just to Fanny:


BRIGHT STAR

Oh I like you, shining star,
constant - not outstanding in solitary splendor
up in the night, and spying , his eyelids parted

eternally patient and as a hermit sleepless
of nature, the mobile water in their priestly role

of pure ablution round the shores
earth humans, or gazing
the form of new snow fell softly

above the mountains and over the moors, no - but always constant and unchanging

lay his head on ripening
beautiful breasts and feel my love eternally
lowered and raised her sweet,
awake forever in a sweet anxiety,
always hear his breath
and keep living like this forever -
or else swoon to death.



Since there are, maybe you're curious if you also leave you the links of the film: the first part
- http://www.megavideo.com/?v=FXUBU4KK
Part II - http://www.megavideo.com/?v=PHLMXBK3
(buona visione)


Baci e abbracci a tutti

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