: Edward Bulwer-Lytton
: Zanoni
: Charles River Editors
: 9781537811727
: 1
: CHF 1.10
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: English
: 628
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
Edward Bulwer-Lytton was a prominent English writer and politician in the 19th century.  Bulwer-Lytton is notable for being one of the first authors to earn a considerable fortune from just his books.  Bulwer-Lytton also was responsible for famous sayings such as 'pursuit of the almighty dollar' and 'the pen is mightier than the sword'.  Some of his most famous works include The Last Days of Pompeii, Zanoni, and The Coming Race.



Zanoni, published in 1842, is a novel that features love and the occult.  The action is set during the French Revolution and centers around the title character, an immortal Rosicruican who can't fall in love or he will lose his power.  Will Zanoni ultimately find love with a promising young opera singer?

CHAPTER 1.I.


..................

Vergina era

D’ alta belta, ma sua belta non cura:

....

Di natura, d’ amor, de’ cieli amici

Le negligenze sue sono artifici.

“Gerusal. Lib.,” canto ii. xiv.-xviii.

(She was a virgin of a glorious beauty, but regarded not her

beauty...Negligence itself is art in those favoured by Nature, by

love, and by the heavens.)

At Naples, in the latter half of the last century, a worthy artist named Gaetano Pisani lived and flourished. He was a musician of great genius, but not of popular reputation; there was in all his compositions something capricious and fantastic which did not please the taste of the Dilettanti of Naples. He was fond of unfamiliar subjects into which he introduced airs and symphonies that excited a kind of terror in those who listened. The names of his pieces will probably suggest their nature. I find, for instance, among his MSS., these titles: “The Feast of the Harpies,” “The Witches at Benevento,” “The Descent of Orpheus into Hades,” “The Evil Eye,” “The Eumenides,” and many others that evince a powerful imagination delighting in the fearful and supernatural, but often relieved by an airy and delicate fancy with passages of exquisite grace and beauty. It is true that in the selection of his subjects from ancient fable, Gaetano Pisani was much more faithful than his contemporaries to the remote origin and the early genius of Italian Opera.

That descendant, however effeminate, of the ancient union between Song and Drama, when, after long obscurity and dethronement, it regained a punier sceptre, though a gaudier purple, by the banks of the Etrurian Arno, or amidst the lagunes of Venice, had chosen all its primary inspirations from the unfamiliar and classic sources of heathen legend; and Pisani’s “Descent of Orpheus” was but a bolder, darker, and more scientific repetition of the “Euridice” which Jacopi Peri set to music at the august nuptials of H