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Pope says read 'I Promessi Sposi'

Says they should take lessons from classic novel by Manzoni

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Vatican City, May 27 - Pope Francis on Wednesday urged young Italians to read the classic 19th-century historical and romantic novel 'I Promessi Sposi' (The Betrothed), by Alessandro Manzoni, a cornerstone of modern Italian literature.
    He said the troubled love story of the two fiancés, Renzo and Lucia, held lessons the youth of today would do well to heed. "You Italians in your literature have a masterpiece on engagement and youngsters should be familiar with it, read it; it is a masterpiece that tells the story of fiancés who have undergone difficulties and walked a road to marriage. Don't overlook this masterpiece on engagement in Italian literature, go on and read it and you will see the beauty," the pope said.
    I Promessi Sposi is considered the greatest Italian novel of the 19th century and a landmark in European literature.
    Though written with an undercurrent of religious belief - Manzoni was a devout Catholic - its seminal style, sharp psychological insights and vivid characterisations have been seen as anticipating modernist works.
    It deals with a variety of themes, from the cowardly, hypocritical nature of one prelate, Don Abbondio, and the heroic sainthood of other priests - Fra' Cristoforo, Archbishop Federico Borromeo - to the unwavering strength of love in the long-separated protagonists. Its pioneering use of a combination of Lombard and Tuscan language set the paradigm for all future works, both fiction and non-fiction.
    Generations of Italian school children have it drummed into them piecemeal, with little discussion of its innovative design and far-reaching themes - and many youngsters later anecdotally cite their studies as involving more labour than love.
    But it is a fundamental work on Italian literature curricula the world over.
    Bestselling novelist Susanna Tamaro told ANSA after the pope's call that I Promessi Sposi is "a European masterpiece that shouldn't be served up in slices.
    "You do it a disservice teaching it like that. That's why people end up hating it at school".
    http://popefrancisnewsapp.com/

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