Un incubo di guerra, tra Virgilio e Pascoli: la chiusa del Pueri ludentes di Camillo Morelli (1915)

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15162/2465-0951/1100

Keywords:

Camillo Morelli, Vergil, Giovanni Pascoli, Neo-Latin Poetry

Abstract

Camillo Morelli (1885-1916), philologist and teacher of Latin Literature at the Military College of Rome, was poet and soldier, died fighting during the Great War. One of his Latin poems, the Pueri ludentes, written at the end of 1914 and awarded with the magna laus at the certamen Hoeufftianum 1915, shows Morelli’s skills in adapting the classical hexametric forms (especially of Vergil) to the representation of social and political passions of his age. Looking at Pa­scoli’s Latin Poetry as a model too, the writer reveals, especially in the final verses (vv. 182-217), the brutality of the conflict, showing a feeling of dislike and distrust towards Men, destined once again to succumb to their most violent instincts through the War.

Author Biography

Angelo Luceri, Università degli Studi Roma tre

Dipartimento di Studi Umanistici - Professore associato di Lingua e letteratura latina

Published

2019-05-29

Issue

Section

The Old Lie. I classici e la Grande Guerra - a cura di Roberta Berardi, Nicoletta Bruno, Anna Busetto, Luisa Fizzarotti