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Gabriele Rossetti

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:1,500.00 - 2,000.00 USD
Gabriele Rossetti

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Auction Date:2018 May 09 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Italian poet and scholar (1783–1854) who was the father of Pre-Raphaelite painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti. ALS, one page both sides, 4.25 x 7, no date but likely circa 1850. Detailed letter to "mio carissimo Generale," the Naples general Guglielmo Pepe, regarding his "Narrative of Scenes and Events in Italy from 1847 to 1849." Pepe published the book to describe his experiences during the Italian revolution of 1848, during which he participated in the siege of Venice. In part (translated): "I have taken the pen several times to answer the standard article you have given me; but how to defend the work from that newspaper…criticized, if I had not read the work before? How to defend what you do not know? This made my pen fall from my hands, waiting for my work to be well known to me. So now I am considering it carefully, and I will tell you the first sensations that excites me. I will tell you about this first volume for now, which will give substance to this first letter; and when I read the second, I will give you my opinion on the total: and then I will tell you frankly what should be done about the Standard article, which I have already read. I find this 1. vol. excellent in every respect, which arouses great interest in the reader, and which will become a repertoire of authentic and safe facts for the historian, who will find in you not only the well-informed contemporary, but almost the eyewitness testimony of what he tells say quorum pars magna fui.

I will point out to you some of the parts that satisfied me most. I repeat before I've read everything I like so far; but I praise you principally for the various reflections you make in the pa. 116 and 117 (ed. of London) on what should have been done in Naples and Piedmont, in order for the Italian revolution to have good success. Your ideas coincide perfectly with mine. Depose Ferdinando from the throne, and…the regency of his son; and in Piedmont to sincerely join Carlo-Alberto, and second it in the great undertaking of the independence of the whole peninsula. Oh what mistake the Liberals did in both parts! It is a mistake that caused an important revolution to be aborted, begun with so auspicious auspices! The Ricciardi and the Ricciardeschi, the Mazzini and Mazzineschi, yes in the one that in the other kingdom have made the ruin of the great cause. To want too much they have lost everything! And who knows how long we will feel the effect…We are troubled by it, but they must have also re-bitten it. Curse of Fernando, praise and excuse to Carlo Alberto: what you do; and this demanded justice. This has always been my language; and I enjoy seeing it confirmed by yours. Hurray…Chap. VII. we read with increasing pleasure and education, but you should have put your hand on Bozzelli a little more. You certainly do not ignore that all those who have produced our ruin, even if they excuse themselves, reject the wrong on Carlo-Alberto that they call a traitor. So Mazzini is now doing here publicly. I will never cease to cry against such a slander.

Chapter VIII, from the point which exposes the re-call of the Neapolitan troops to the kingdom, causes me the same pain that I felt in those nefarious moments when I read this on the public papers. I feel excited at crying. The Carrascora of which you speak is certainly not Michael. Is it his son? And where is Michael, and what is it? I lost sight of him. In Chapter IX, which exposes the fatal catastrophe of Naples, the unfortunate seed of the whole Italica ruina, it devours me so much that I can not follow the reading…I will start again tomorrow. Oh, fate, awake, and when…to go through the progress of Italy? When those who most love it…as its most declared enemies? When will we make judgments? Never! Too bad that there were so many striations of names…in the press. Why did not you order I'd see them again? I would have done two good things in time: I would have read the work in time, and I would have made many adjustments. But essentially the facts are true, and the names will be corrected by your ed." In fine condition, with some light staining.