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Silvio Pellico ha avuto poche, ma intense storie d'amore.
Piero Maroncelli nella nota biografica, pubblicata insieme all'edizione parigina de Le mie prigioni, ricorda il primo amore dell'amico: un'adolescente torinese di nome Carlottina, morta a quindici anni, un amore delicato e innocente che il Pellico, chiuso nello Spielberg, ricordava ancora con tenerezza.
In una cantica composta nel 1835 e intitolata Le passioni Silvio Pellico ricorda così la prima donna che ha amato: "Del me passato aggiugnesi indivisa / Di palpiti d'amor soave istoria / Quando un'egregia m'infiammava in guisa, / Ch'io per lei sola ambia pietate e gloria, / Ch'io sempre in lei tenea l'anima fisa, / Che d'un sorriso suo per farmi degno, / Sempre agognava ingentilir lo ingegno!"
VERSI SCELTI TRATTI DALLE CANTICHE E DALLA TRAGEDIE DEL PELLICO CON UNA RICOSTRUZIONE NELL'INTRODUZIONE DELLE SUE STORIE D'AMORE.
A propos de l'auteur
Silvio Pellico was an Italian author, poet, and dramatist born on June 24, 1789, in Saluzzo, Piedmont, to parents whose names are not widely recorded in historical sources. He spent his early years in Pinerolo and Turin, receiving his education under the guidance of a priest named Manavella. From a young age, Pellico displayed literary talent, composing a tragedy inspired by Ossianic poetry at just ten years old. He later moved to Lyon to live with his twin sister Rosina and studied French literature for four years. In 1810, he returned to Milan and became a professor of French at the Collegio degli Orfani Militari. His first significant literary success came in 1818 with the tragedy Francesca da Rimini, followed by Euphemio da Messina, though the latter was censored before its performance. He also worked as a tutor to noble families and was a central figure in the literary-political circle around Il Conciliatore, a short-lived publication opposing Austrian rule. In 1820, Pellico was arrested for his involvement in the Carbonari movement and imprisoned by Austrian authorities. His time in prison profoundly shaped his later writing, including his most famous work, My Ten Years' Imprisonment.