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Today we read La pioggia nel pineto, by Gabriele D'Annunzio.
We are back with another staple poem that everyone my age is familiar with, and has probably had to at least partially know by heart at some point during their studies.
As a little testament of how ingrained it is in the collective Italian school unconscious, you can see it recited by the comedian Renato Pozzetto in one of his movies, as a grade teacher dealing with very rambunctious students.
The poem is set in Summer, in the titular pine grove and during the titular shower. The poet revels in the luxurious life that surrounds him, and urges his lover to listen to the sounds that envelop them.
It is the epitome of a musical poem, with free verses, rhymes, alliterations, onomatopoeia and all sorts of devices employed to convey the rich soundscape — but also the general sensoriality of the experience of being surrounded by nature and the resulting aesthetic enjoyment.
This Ermione the poem addresses is not a young wizard nerd but rather a classical nickname that hides none other than the then-stellarly-famous actress, Eleonora Duse, lover of D’Annunzio.
So… listen!
The original:
By Italian PoetryToday we read La pioggia nel pineto, by Gabriele D'Annunzio.
We are back with another staple poem that everyone my age is familiar with, and has probably had to at least partially know by heart at some point during their studies.
As a little testament of how ingrained it is in the collective Italian school unconscious, you can see it recited by the comedian Renato Pozzetto in one of his movies, as a grade teacher dealing with very rambunctious students.
The poem is set in Summer, in the titular pine grove and during the titular shower. The poet revels in the luxurious life that surrounds him, and urges his lover to listen to the sounds that envelop them.
It is the epitome of a musical poem, with free verses, rhymes, alliterations, onomatopoeia and all sorts of devices employed to convey the rich soundscape — but also the general sensoriality of the experience of being surrounded by nature and the resulting aesthetic enjoyment.
This Ermione the poem addresses is not a young wizard nerd but rather a classical nickname that hides none other than the then-stellarly-famous actress, Eleonora Duse, lover of D’Annunzio.
So… listen!
The original: