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the civilization of the renaissance in italy-第34章

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collections of novels。

The 'Hundred Old Novels;' which must have been composed about the end  of the thirteenth century; have as yet neither wit; the fruit of  contrast; nor the 'burla;' for their subject; their aim is merely to  give simple and elegant expression to wise sayings and pretty stories  or fables。 But if anything proves the great antiquity of the  collection; it is precisely this absence of satire。 For with the  fourteenth century comes Dante; who; in the utterance of scorn; leaves  all other poets in the world far behind; and who; if only on account of  his great picture of the deceivers; must be called the chief master of  colossal comedy。 With Petrarch begin the collections of witty sayings  after the pattern of Plutarch (Apophthegmata; etc。)。

What stores of wit were concentrated in Florence during this century is  most characteristically shown in the novels of Franco Sacchetti。 These  are; for the most part; not stories but answers; given under certain  circumstances shocking pieces of _naivete;_with which silly folks;  court jesters; rogues; and profligate women make their retort。 The  comedy of the tale lies in the startling contrast of this real or  assumed naivete with conventional morality and the ordinary relations  of the worldthings are made to stand on their heads。 All means of  picturesque representation are made use of; including the introduction  of certain North Italian dialects。 Often the place of wit is taken by  mere insolence; clumsy trickery; blasphemy; and obscenity; one or two  jokes told of Condottieri are among the most brutal and malicious which  are recorded。 Many of the 'burle' are thoroughly comic; but many are  only real or supposed evidence of personal superiority; of triumph over  another。 How much people were willing to put up with; how often the  victim was satisfied with getting the laugh on his side by a  retaliatory trick; cannot be said; there was much heartless and  pointless malice mixed up with it all; and life in Florence was no  doubt often made unpleasant enough from this cause。 The inventors and  retailers of jokes soon became inevitable figures; and among them there  must have been some who were classical far superior to all the mere  court…jesters; to whom competition; a changing public; and the quick  apprehension of the audience; all advantages of life in Florence; were  wanting。 Some Florentine wits went starring among the despotic courts  of Lombardy and Romagna; and found themselves much better rewarded than  at home; where their talent was cheap and plentiful。 The better type of  these people is the amusing man (l'uomo piacevole); the worse is the  buffoon and the vulgar parasite who presents himself at weddings and  banquets with the argument; 'If I am not invited; the fault is not  mine。' Now and then the latter combine to pluck a young spendthrift;  but in general they are treated and despised as parasites; while wits  of higher position bear themselves like princes; and consider their  talent as something sovereign。 Dolcibene; whom Charles IV had  pronounced to be the 'king of Italian jesters;' said to him at Ferrara:  'You will conquer the world; since you are my friend and the Pope's;  you fight with the sword; the Pope with his bulls; and I with my  tongue。' This is no mere jest; but the foreshadowing of Pietro Aretino。

The two most famous jesters about the middle of the fifteenth century  were a priest near Florence; Arlotto (1483); for more refined wit  ('facezie'); and the court…fool of Ferrara; Gonnella; for buffoonery。  We can hardly compare their stories with those of the Parson of  Kalenberg and Till Eulenspiegel; since the latter arose in a different  and half…mythical manner; as fruits of the imagination of a whole  people; and touch rather on what is general and intelligible to all;  while Arlotto and Gonnella were historical beings; colored and shaped  by local influences。 But if the comparison be allowed; and extended to  the jests of the non…Italian nations; we shall find in general that the  joke in the French _fabliaux; _as among the Germans; is chiefly  directed to the attainment of some advantage or enjoyment; while the  wit of Arlotto and the practical jokes of Gonnella are an end in  themselves; and exist simply for the sake of the triumph of production。  (Till Eulenspiegel again forms a class by himself; as the personified  quiz; mostly pointless enough; of particular classes and professions。)  The court…fool of the Este retaliated more than once by his keen satire  and refined modes of vengeance。

The type of the 'uomo piacevole' and the 'buffone' long survived the  freedom of Florence。 Under Duke Cosimo flourished Barlacchia; and at  the beginning of the seventeenth century Francesco Ruspoli and Curzio  Marignolli。 In Pope Leo X; the genuine Florentine love of jesters  showed itself strikingly。 This prince; whose taste for the most refined  intellectual pleasures was insatiable; endured and desired at his table  a number of witty buffoons and jack…puddings; among them two monks and  a cripple; at public feasts he treated them with deliberate scorn as  parasites; setting before them monkeys and crows in the place of savory  meats。 Leo; indeed; showed a peculiar fondness for the 'burla'; it  belonged to his nature sometimes to treat his own favorite pursuits… … music and poetryironically; parodying them with his factotum;  Cardinal Bibbiena。 Neither of them found it beneath him to fool an  honest old secretary till he thought himself a master of the art of  music。 The Improvisatore; Baraballo of Gaeta; was brought so far by  Leo's flattery that he applied in all seriousness for the poet's  coronation on the Capitol。 On the feast of St。 Cosmas and St。 Damian;  the patrons of the House of Medici; he was first compelled; adorned  with laurel and purple; to amuse the papal guests with his recitations;  and at last; when all were ready to split with laughter; to mount a  gold… harnessed elephant in the court of the Vatican; sent as a present  to Rome by Emmanuel the Great of Portugal; while the Pope looked down  from above through his eye…glass。 The brute; however; was so terrified  by the noise of the trumpets and kettledrums; and the cheers of the  crowd; that there was no getting him over the bridge of Sant' Angelo。

The parody of what is solemn or sublime; which here meets us in the  case of a procession; had already taken an important place in poetry。  It was naturally compelled to choose victims of another kind than those  of Aristophanes; who introduced the great tragedians into his plays。  But the same maturity of culture which at a certain period produced  parody among the Greeks; did the same in Italy。 By the close of the  fourteenth century; the love…lorn wailings of Petrarch's sonnets and  others of the same kind were taken off by caricaturists; and the solemn  air of this form of verse was parodied in lines of mystic twaddle。 A  constant invitation to parody was offered by the 'Divine Comedy;' and  Lorenzo il Magnifico wrote the most admirable travesty in the style of  the 'Inferno' (Simposio or I Beoni)。 Luigi Pulci obviously imitates the  Improvisatori in his 'Morgante;' and both his poetry and Boiardo's are  in par
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