|
1901 2011
Prize category:
|
The Nobel Prize in Literature 1906
Giosuè Carducci
Award Ceremony Speech
Presentation Speech by C.D. af Wirsén, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy, on December 10, 1906
From the unusually large number of poets
and authors proposed for the Nobel Prize this year, the Swedish
Academy has chosen a great Italian poet who for a long time has
attracted the attention both of the Academy and of the entire
civilized world.
Since antiquity, Northern men have been drawn to Italy by her
history and her artistic treasures as well as by her sweet and
gentle climate. The Northerner does not stop until he has arrived
in the eternal city of Rome, just as the war for Italian unity
could not stop before Rome was conquered. But before arriving in
Rome the visitor is fascinated by the beauty of so many other
places. Among these, in the Appenines, is the Etruscan city of
Bologna, which is known to us through the Songs of Enzo by
Carl August Nicander.
Since the Middle Ages, when a famous university gave it the title
of learned, Bologna has been of great importance in the cultural
history of Italy. Although in ancient times it was renowned as an
authority on jurisprudence, it has now become especially famous
for its poetic marvels. Thus, it is today still worthy of the
expression «Bononia docet» (Bologna teaches). For its
greatest poetic attainments of the present, it is indebted to the
man to whom the Nobel Prize has been awarded this year -
Giosuè Carducci.
Carducci was born on July 27, 1835, in Val di Castello. He
himself has given an interesting account of his impressions from
his childhood and youth, and he has been the subject of several
good biographies.
In order to judge properly the development of his mind and his
talents, it is important to know that his father, Dr. Michele
Carducci, was a member of the Carboneria (a secret political
society working for Italian unity) and was active in the
political movements for Italian liberty, and that his mother was
an intelligent and liberal woman.
Michele obtained a position as a doctor in Castagneto. The young
poet thus spent his earliest years in the Tuscan Maremma. He
learned Latin from his father, and Latin literature was to become
very familiar to him. Although Carducci later opposed Manzoni's
ideas with great fervour, he was also strongly influenced for a
long time by his father's admiration for the poet. At this time
he also studied the Iliad and the Aeneid, Tasso's
Gerusalemme, Rollin's Roman history, and Thier's work on
the French Revolution.
It was a time of great political tension, and one can well
believe that in those days of discord and oppression the young
poet's fiery imagination absorbed everything which had to do with
ancient liberty and the impending unification.
The boy soon turned into a little revolutionary. As he himself
recounts, in his games with his brothers and friends he organized
little republics which were governed by archons or consuls or
tribunes. Vigorous brawls frequently broke out. Revolution was
considered a normal state of affairs; civil war was always the
order of the day. The young Carducci stoned a make-believe Caesar
who was about to cross the Rubicon. Caesar had to flee and the
republic was saved. But the next day the little patriotic hero
got a sound trouncing from the conquering Caesar.
Not too much stress need be laid on these games, since they are
frequent among young boys. But Carducci did, in fact, embrace
strong republican sympathies in later life.
In 1849 the family moved to Florence, where Carducci was enrolled
in a new school. Here, in addition to his required studies, he first
read the poetry of Leopardi, Schiller, and Byron. And soon he started
writing poetry - satiric sonnets. He later studied at the Scuola
Normale Superiore in Pisa, where he seems to have shown a great
deal of energy in his work. After finishing his studies he became
a teacher of rhetoric in San Miniato. Because of his expressions
of radical ideas, the grand-ducal government annulled his later
election to a post at the Arezzo elementary school. Afterward, however,
he taught Greek at the lyceum in Pistoia. Finally he obtained a
chair at the University of Bologna, where he has had a long and
highly successful career.
These in brief are the general lines of his external life. There
has been no lack of struggle in his career. He was, for example,
even suspended for some time from teaching in Bologna, and on
several occasions he was involved in lively polemics with several
Italian authors. He suffered great personal tragedies, of which
his brother Dante's suicide was undoubtedly the most painful. But
his family life and his love for his wife and children have
offered him great consolation.
The fight for Italian liberty was extremely important to the
development of his sensibility. Carducci was a passionate
patriot; he followed the war with all the fire of his soul. And
no matter how much he may have been embittered by the defeats at
Aspromonte and Mentana, and no matter how much he was
disillusioned by the new parliamentary government, which was not
being organized in accordance with his desires, he was,
nevertheless, overjoyed at the triumph of his sacred patriotic
cause.
His ardent nature was tormented by anything which in his opinion
interfered with the fulfilment of the work for Italian unity. He
was not one to wait patiently; he continuously demanded immediate
results and felt a strong aversion to diplomatic delays and the
diplomatic festina lente.
In the meantime his poetry blossomed abundantly. Although he is
also the author of excellent historical and literary criticism,
we should be concerned above all with his poetry, for it is
through his poetry that he has won his greatest fame.
The volume Juvenilia (1863) contains, as the title
indicates, his youthful work of the 1850's. Two qualities
characterize this collection: on the one and, its classical cast
and intonation, sometimes carried to the point where Carducci
salutes Phoebus Apollo and Diana Trivia; and on the other, its
profoundly patriotic tone, accompanied by a violent hatred of the
Catholic Church and of the Pope's power, the strongest obstacles
to Italian unity.
In strong opposition to ultramontanism, Carducci in his songs
evokes the memories of ancient Rome, the images of the great
French Revolution, and the figures of Garibaldi and Mazzini. At
times, when be believes Italy's state hopeless and fears that all
of its ancient virtues and valiant deeds have been vitiated, he
plunges into the profoundest despair.
This bitterness helps to explain Carducci's numerous attacks on
various authors and on other people; Carducci was generally
violent in his polemics. But in Juvenilia there are also
poems with a more positive content, like the song to Victor
Emanuel, written in 1859 at the moment when it became obvious
that a war with Austria would soon break out. In this song he
jubilantly celebrates the monarch who bore the banner of Italian
unity.
True patriotism is expressed in the sonnet «Magenta»
and in the poem «II Plebiscito», in which he renews his
enthusiastic praise of Victor Emanuel. . . The most beautiful of
the poems in Juvenilia is probably the poem to the Savoy
cross...
The later collection called Levia Gravia ( 1868) [Light
and Heavy ] contains the poems of the sixties. A certain
sadness can be heard in many of these poems. The long delay of
the conquest of Rome contributed much to Carducci's bitter
feelings, but there were a great many other things which Carducci
passionately regretted in the prevailing politics of the day.
Carducci had expected more from the new political conditions than
they could offer. Yet we encounter some very beautiful poems in
this collection. Carducci was familiar with fourteenth-century
poetry, and a great many echoes of this epoch are heard, for
instance, in «Poeti di Parte Bianca» [«Poets of
the White Party»] and in his poem on the proclamation of the
Italian kingdom.
Only in the Rime nuove (1877) [New Rhymes] and in the
three collections of the Odi barbare (1877-89) [The
Barbarian Odes ] do Carducci's full lyrical maturity and
accomplished stylistic beauty appear. Here we no longer find the
same disdainful poet who fought with sword and fire under the
pseudonym of Enotrio Romano. Instead, the character of the poet
seems wholly transformed; sweeter, softer melodies are to be
heard. The introductory poem «Alla Rima» [«To
Rhyme»] is extremely musical, a true hymn to the beauty of
rhyme. Its ending excellently characterizes Carducci himself...
Evidently Carducci understood his own temperament, which he
compares with the Tyrrhenian Sea. But his uneasiness is not
continuous, and notes of real joy resound in the enchanting poem
«Idillio di Maggio» [«A May Eclogue»].
«Mattinata» [«Morning»], which clearly
recalls Hugo, is also lovely, as are the songs entitled
«Primavere Elleniche» [«Hellenic
Springtimes»] ...
«Ca Ira» [«The Rebellion»], a section of the
Rime nuove, is composed of a series of sonnets. Although
it is not of great poetic value, it does represent Carducci's
more or less unreserved apotheosis of the French
Revolution.
The poet's greatness is more fully revealed in his Odi
barbare, the first collection of which came out in 1877, the
second in 1882, and the third in 1889. There is some
justification, however, for criticism of the work's form.
Although Carducci adopted ancient meters, he transformed them so
entirely that an ear accustomed to ancient poetry will not hear
the classical rhythms. Many of these poems attain the pinnacle of
perfection in their poetic content. Carducci's genius has never
reached greater heights than in some of his Odi barbare.
One need only name the fascinating «Miramar» and the
melodious and melancholy poem «Alla Stazione in una
Mattinata d'Autunno» [«To the Station On an Autumn
Morning»], products of the most noble inspiration. The song
«Miramar» is about the unfortunate emperor Maximilian
and his brief Mexican adventure. It excels as much in its moving
tragic tone as it does in its vivid nature imagery. The Adriatic
shore is depicted with perfect mastery. This song exhales a
certain feeling of compassion which is rare in Carducci's
treatment of Austrian subject matter, but which he expressed yet
another time in the beautiful song on the Empress Elizabeth's sad
fate in Rime e Ritmi (1898) [Rhymes and Rythms]...
Many contrasts clearly are to be found in a violent and rich
poetic nature like Carducci's. Disapproval from many sides has
thus been mixed with the just admiration for this poet. Yet
Carducci is without doubt one of the most powerful geniuses of
world literature, and such disapproval, voiced also by his
compatriots, has not been spared even the greatest poets. No one
is without defect.
The blame is not, however, directed at his sometimes passionate
republican tendencies. Let his opinions remain his own
possession. No one will contest his independent political
position. In any case, his hostility toward the monarchy has
subsided with the years. He has come more and more to consider
the Italian dynasty as the protector of Italian independence. In
fact, Carducci has even dedicated poems to the queen mother of
Italy, Margherita. A venerable woman revered by almost all
factions, her poetic soul has been celebrated by Carducci's
grandiose art. He has paid her beautiful and affectionate homage
in the magnificent song «alla Regina d'Italia»
[«To the Queen of Italy»] and in the immortal poem
«Il Liuto e la Lira» [«Lute and Lyre»], in
which, through the Provençal sirventes and the pastoral, he
expresses his admiration of the noble princess... The petty,
obstinate republicans, because of these and other tributes, have
looked upon Carducci as a deserter of their cause. He justly
responded, however, that a song of admiration dedicated to a
magnanimous and good woman has nothing whatever to do with
politics, and that he reserved the right to think and write
whatever he pleased about the reigning Italian family and its
members.
The reasons for the antagonism of his friends and political
partisans toward him are of a completely different origin. This
antagonism is occasioned less by his ferocious assaults on
persons of differing political opinions than by his
overenthusiastic paganism, which often assumes a biting tone
toward Christianity itself. His anti-Christian sentiments have
above all produced his much discussed hymn to Satan.
There is a good deal of justice in many of the attacks on
Carducci's anti-Christianity. Although one cannot perfectly
approve of the way in which he has tried to defend himself in
Confessioni e battaglie [Confessions and Battles] and in
other writings, a knowledge of the attendant circumstances helps
to explain, if not to justify, Carducci's attitudes.
Carducci's paganism is understandable to a Protestant, at least.
As an ardent patriot who saw the Catholic Church as in many ways
a misguided and corrupt force opposed to the freedom of his
adored Italy, Carducci was quite likely to confuse Catholicism
with Christianity, extending to Christianity the severe judgments
with which he sometimes attacked the Church.
Still we must not forget the genuine religious sentiments
expressed in some of his poems. It is helpful to remember the end
of «La Chiesa di Polenta» [«The Church of
Polenta«], which stands in healthy contrast to «In una
Chiesa Gotica» [«In a Gothic Church»].
And as to the impetuous Inno a Satana (1865) [Hymn to
Satan ], it would be a great wrong to Carducci to identify
him, for example, with Baudelaire and to accuse Carducci of
poisonous and unhealthy «Satanism» In fact, Carducci's
Satan has an ill-chosen name. The poet clearly means to imply a
Lucifer in the literal sense of the word - the carrier of light,
the herald of free thought and culture, and the enemy of that
ascetic discipline which rejects or disparages natural rights.
Yet it seems strange to hear Savanarola praised in a poem in
which asceticism is condemned. The whole of the hymn abounds with
such contradictions. Carducci himself in recent times has
rejected the entire poem and has called it a «vulgar
sing-song». Thus, there is no reason to dwell any longer on
a poem which the poet himself has disavowed.
Carducci is a learned literary historian who has been nurtured by
ancient literature and by Dante and Petrarch. But he cannot be
easily classified. He is not devoted to romanticism, but rather
to the classical ideal and Petrarchan humanism. Regardless of the
criticism which can justly be launched against him, the
irrefutable truth remains that a poet who is always moved by
patriotism and a love of liberty, who never sacrifices his
opinions to gain favour, and who never indulges in base
sensualism, is a soul inspired by the highest ideals.
And insofar as his poetry in the aesthetic sense attains a rare
force, Carducci can be considered worthy in the highest degree of
the Nobel Prize in Literature.
The Swedish Academy thus pays respect to a poet who already
enjoys a world-wide reputation, and adds its homage of admiration
to the many praises already given him by his country. Italy has
elected Carducci senator and repaid the honour he has brought her
by assigning him a life-long pension amounting to a considerable
sum.
At the banquet, C.D. af Wirsén spoke in Italian about the poet whom illness had prevented from coming to Stockholm. Subsequently he addressed himself to the Italian chargé d'affaires, Count Caprara, and recalled that through the Nobel Prize Sweden had wanted to honour his country and one of her greatest sons at the same time. Mr. Caprara expressed his gratitude in French and, after a speech addressed to the country of Alfred Nobel, promised to convey the homage to the poet.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1906
MLA style: "Nobelprize.org". Nobelprize.org. 10 Feb 2012 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1906/press.html
