Pace Pasini

Italian poet and novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pace Pasini (17 June 1583  1644) was an Italian marinist poet and novelist. He is best known as the author of the Baroque novel L'historia del cavalier perduto (1644), which may have been a source for Alessandro Manzoni's The Betrothed, and combines chivalric, picaresque, and political themes.[1]

Born(1583-06-17)17 June 1583
Died1644(1644-00-00) (aged 60–61)
Padua, Republic of Venice
Occupations
  • Novelist
  • poet
  • civil servant
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Pace Pasini
Portrait of Pace Pasini. From the book "Le glorie degli Incogniti", 1647
Born(1583-06-17)17 June 1583
Died1644(1644-00-00) (aged 60–61)
Padua, Republic of Venice
Alma materUniversity of Padua
Occupations
  • Novelist
  • poet
  • civil servant
Writing career
LanguageItalian
Period
Genres
Literary movement
Notable worksL'historia del cavalier perduto
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Biography

Pace Pasini was the son of Pietro, a descendant of a family originally from Valle Sabbia, who had moved to Schio and then to Vicenza, where he was ascribed to the Noble Council of the city.[2] In the mid-seventeenth century - around the time of Pace's death - a member of the Pasini family from Vicenza figured among the merchants of silk and thick cloths.[3]

After completing his grammar studies in Vicenza, Pace attended the University of Padua, where he devoted himself to the study of law. He soon neglected his legal studies and took an interest in the new science - he corresponded with Galileo Galilei and Johannes Kepler - and above all in philosophy. He followed the university lessons of Cesare Cremonini, a follower of Pietro Pomponazzi's neo-Aristotelian rationalism who questioned the doctrine of the immortality of the soul and other Catholic dogmas.[3]

Pace was a member of the Accademia degli Incogniti, one of the most active and lively Venetian Academies of the seventeenth century.[3]

Following a dispute, Pace and his brother killed the lawyer Roberto Malo and seriously injured his brother. In March 1624 Pace was sentenced to five years of exile in Zara, later reduced by about half (he was acquitted and released on 28 January 1627).[3]

On 25 July 1630 he was appointed vicar in Barbarano and on 8 July 1635 he was appointed vicar in Orgiano.[3]

Pace Pasini died in Padua in the second half of 1644.

Works

  • Rime varie, et gli increduli, ouero De' rimedii d'amore dialogo. Dedicate al molto illustre ... Giacomo Godi. Vicenza: Francesco Grossi. 1612.
  • Campo Martio ouero Le bellezze di Lidia, dedicato al clariss. sig. Giulio da Molino, dell'illustriss. sig. Marco. Vicenza: presso Francesco Grossi. 1614.
  • Il sogno dell'illustrissimo sig. Pietro Memo. Dedicato all'illustrissimo signor Dominico Molino. Vicenza: Francesco Grossi. 1623.
  • La Metafora. Il Trattato e le Rime. Trattato de' passaggi dall'vna metafora all'altra, et de gl'innesti dell'istesse nel quale si discorre secondo l'opinione, e l'vso de' migliori, se senza commetter diffetto, si possano vsare da' poeti, et da gli oratori. Dedicato all'illustrissimo, et eccellentiss. sig. Nicola Da Ponte. Vicenza. 1632.
  • Rime di Pace Pasini diuise in errori, honori, dolori, verita, & miscugli. Vicenza: per gli heredi di Francesco Grossi. 1642. Pasini's Rime, characterized by a conventional conceptismo, have appended to them the Trattato de’ passaggi dall’una metafora all’altra e degli innesti dell’istesse, one of the earliest theoretical discussions of Baroque style.[1]
  • Historia del cavalier perduto. Venice: Francesco Valvasense. 1644.[3] In a careful comparative study the critic Giovanni Getto analyzes points of contact between Pasini's Historia del Cavalier Perduto, and Manzoni's masterpiece.[4][5] The similarities are striking. There is the story of a kidnapping: the gentlewoman Luciana Lucia's name may well be an echo) is carried off to the castle of the terrible Strappacuori. There is the description of a flight which bears some resemblance to Renzo's. There are several other analogies, both lexical and plot-related. A series of details, Getto correctly calls them, but sufficient to permit him to hazard the hypothesis that here at last is the anonymous manuscript Manzoni so often refers to.[6]

Notes

Bibliography

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