Prose and poetic literature within western regions, most prominently in England during the early
modern era, had a distinct
Biblical influence which only began to be rejected during the Enlightenment period of the 18th century. The term
metaphysics was coined by poet
John Dryden, and during 1779 its meaning was extended to represent a group of poets of the time, then called "
metaphysical poets". Major poets of the time included
John Donne,
Andrew Marvell and
George Herbert.
John Donne was a prominent metaphysical poet of the 17th century. Donne's poetry explored the pleasures of life through strong use of conceits and emotive language. Donne adopted a more simplistic vernacular compared to the common
Petrarchan diction, with imagery derived mainly from God. This period is known in the history of Italian literature as the
Secentismo. Its writers deployed complex, far-fetched comparisons, paradoxes, and paralogical statements (
acutezze) in order to exhibit the writer's genius and ingenuity (
ingegno), and provoke wonder (
meraviglia) in the reader. by
Frans Pourbus the Younger At the head of the school of the
Secentisti was
Giambattista Marino, especially known for his epic poem, ''L'Adone
. Marino himself, as he declared in the Preface to La lira
, wished to be a new leader and model for other poets. Second, he wished to surprise and shock the reader through the marvellous (meraviglioso
) and the unusual (peregrino
). The qualities he and his followers most valued were ingegno
and acutezza'', as demonstrated through far-fetched metaphors and
conceits, often ones that would assault the reader's senses. This meant being ready, in fact eager, to break literary rules and precepts. Marino and his followers mixed tradition and innovation: they worked with existing poetic forms, notably the
sonnet, the
sestina, the
canzone, the
madrigal, and less frequently the
ottava rima, but developed new, more fluid structures and line lengths. They also treated hallowed themes (love, woman, nature), but they made the senses and sensuality the dominant element. The passions, which had attracted the attention of Paduan writers and theorists in the mid-16th century as well as of Tasso, take centre stage, and are depicted in extreme forms in representations of subjects such as martyrdom, sacrifice, heroic grandeur, and abysmal existential fear. The Marinists also take up new themes—notably the visual and musical arts and indoor scenes—with a new repertoire of references embracing modern scientific advances, other specialized branches of knowledge, and exotic locations and animals. There are similarities with Tasso, but the balance between form and content in Tasso is deliberately unbalanced by Marino and his followers, who very often forget all concerns about unity in their poems (witness the
Adone). The most striking difference, however, is the intensified role of
metaphor. Marino and his followers looked for metaphors that would arrest the reader by suggesting a likeness between two apparently disparate things, thus producing startling metamorphoses, conceits (
concetti), and far-fetched images that send sparks flying as they create a friction between two apparently diverse objects. The extent to which this new metaphorical freedom reveals a new world is still open to critical debate. In some ways it seems to make poetry a form of intellectual game or puzzle; in others it suggests new ways of perceiving and describing reality, parallel to the mathematical measures employed by Galileo and his followers in the experimental sciences. Almost all the poets of the 17th century were more or less influenced by Marinism. Many
secentisti felt the influence of another poet,
Gabriello Chiabrera. Enamoured of the Greeks, he made new metres, especially in imitation of
Pindar, treating of religious, moral, historical, and amatory subjects.
Carlo Alessandro Guidi was the chief representative of an early Pindarizing current based on imitation of Chiabrera as second only to Petrarch in Italian poetry. He was extolled by both Gravina and Crescimbeni, who edited his poetry (1726), and imitated by Parini. Alfieri attributed his own self-discovery to the power of Guidi's verse.
Fulvio Testi was another major exponent of the Hellenizing strand of Baroque classicism, combining Horatianism with the imitation of Anacreon and Pindar. His most important and interesting writings are not, however, his lyrics (only collected in 1653), but his extensive correspondence, which is a major document of Baroque politics and letters. headquarters in Piazza Sant'Agostino in Rome Marino's work, with its sensual metaphorical language and its non-epic structure and morality, stirred up a debate over the rival claims of classical purity and sobriety on the one hand and the excesses of marinism on the other. The debate went on until it was finally decided in favour of the classical by the
Accademia dell'Arcadia, whose view of the matter prevailed in Italian criticism well into the 20th century. The Accademia dell'Arcadia was founded by
Giovanni Mario Crescimbeni and
Gian Vincenzo Gravina in 1690. The
Arcadia was so called because its chief aim was to imitate the simplicity of the ancient shepherds who were supposed to have lived in
Arcadia in the golden age. The poems of the Arcadians are made up of
sonnets,
madrigals,
canzonette and
blank verse. The one who most distinguished himself among the sonneteers was
Felice Zappi. Among the authors of songs,
Paolo Rolli was illustrious.
Carlo Innocenzo Frugoni was the best known. The members of the Arcadia were almost exclusively men, but at least one woman,
Maria Antonia Scalera Stellini, was elected on poetical merits.
Vincenzo da Filicaja had a lyric talent, particularly in the songs about
Vienna besieged by the
Turks. by
Francesco Cozza The philosopher, theologian, astrologer, and poet
Tommaso Campanella is an interesting albeit isolated figure in 17th century Italian literature. His
Poesie, published in 1622, consist of eighty-nine poems in various metrical forms. Some are autobiographical, but all are stamped with a seriousness and directness which bypasses the literary fashions of his day. He wrote in Latin on dialectics, rhetoric, poetics, and historiography, as well as the Italian
Del senso delle cose e della magia, composed in 1604 and published in 1620. In this fascinating work, influenced by the teachings of
Bernardino Telesio, Campanella imagines the world as a living statue of God, in which all aspects of reality have meaning and sense. With its animism and sensuality this vision foreshadows in many ways the views of
Daniello Bartoli and Tesauro. Campanella's theological work, closely connected with his philosophical writings, includes the
Atheismus triumphatus and the thirty-volume
Theologia (1613–24). His most famous work, and the one that brings together all his interests, is
La città del sole, first drafted in 1602 in Italian and then later translated into Latin in 1613 and 1631. In it a Genoese sailor from
Christopher Columbus' crew describes the ideal state of the City of the Sun ruled over in both temporal and spiritual matters by the Prince Priest, called Sun or Metaphysician. Under him there are three ministers: Power (concerned with war and peace), Wisdom (concerned with science and art, all written down in one book), and Love (concerned with procreation and education of the citizens of the Sun). The life of the citizens is based on a system of
communism: all property is held publicly, there are no families, no rights of inheritance, no marriage, and sexual relations are regulated by the state. Everyone has his or her function in the society, and certain duties are required of all citizens. Education is the perfect training of the mind and the body, and it is radically opposed to the bookish and academic culture of Renaissance Italy: the objects of study should be not 'dead things' but nature and the mathematical and physical laws that govern the physical world. There are links here with the burgeoning modernism of the
Querelle des anciens et des modernes, and with the methods and scientific aspirations of Galileo, whom Campanella defended in writing in 1616. by
Justus Sustermans The
Lyncean Academy, the first and most famous of the scientific academies in Italy, was founded in 1603 in Rome by
Federico Cesi. The academy dedicated its activities to the study of the natural and mathematical sciences and to the use of the experimental method associated with Galileo. The European dimension of the academy was characteristic of the founders' foresight and perspective: elections were made of foreign corresponding members, a practice that continues to this day. Members included
Claudio Achillini,
Pietro Della Valle, Galileo (from 1611),
Francesco Sforza Pallavicino,
Giambattista Della Porta (from 1610 ), and
Filippo Salviati. Their work involved the large-scale publishing of scientific results based on direct observation, including Galileo's work on the moon's surface (1610) and his
Assayer (1623). The academy defended Galileo at his trial in 1616, and played a crucial role in the early diffusion and promotion of his method. The successor of the Lynceans was the
Accademia del Cimento, founded in Florence in 1657. Never as organized as the Lynceans had been, it began as a meeting of disciples of Galileo, all of whom were interested in the progress of the experimental sciences. Official status came in 1657, when cardinal
Leopoldo de' Medici sponsored the academy's foundation. With the motto 'provando e riprovando', the members, including
Carlo Roberto Dati,
Lorenzo Magalotti, and
Vincenzo Viviani, set seriously about their work. Unlike Galileo, who tackled large-scale issues, the Cimento worked on a smaller scale. One of the legacies of the Cimento is the elegant Italian prose, capable of describing things accurately, that characterizes the
Saggi di naturali esperienze edited by Magalotti and published in 1667.
Galileo occupied a conspicuous place in the history of letters. A devoted student of Ariosto, he seemed to transfuse into his prose the qualities of that great poet: clear and frank freedom of expression, precision and ease, and at the same time elegance.
Paganino Bonafede in the
Tesoro dei rustici gave many precepts in agriculture, beginning that type of georgic poetry later fully developed by
Luigi Alamanni in his
Coltivazione, by
Girolamo Baruffaldi in the
Canapajo, by
Rucellai in
Le Api, by
Bartolomeo Lorenzi in the ''Coltivazione de' monti
, and by Giambattista Spolverini in the Coltivazione del riso''. == 18th century ==