Page:The Golden verses of Pythagoras (IA cu31924026681076).pdf/114

 Le donne, i cavalier, l'arme, gl'amori Le cortesíe, l'audaci imprese io canto, Che furo al tempo che passaro i Mori D'Africa il mare, e in Francia nocquer tanto, Seguendo l'ire e i giovenil furori D'Agramante lor re, che si diè vanto Di vendicar la morte di Troiano Sopra re Carlo imperator romano.

Dirò d'Orlando in un medesmo tratto Cosa non detta in prosa mai, nè in rima; Che per amor venne in furore e matto, D'uom che si saggio era stimato prima: Se da colei che tal quasi m'ha fatto Che'l poco ingegno ad or ad or mi lima, Me ne sarà però tanto concesso, Che mi basti a finir quanto ho promesso.

It is very easy to see, in reading these two strophes, that there exists in the exposition no sort of resemblance either with that of Homer, or with that of Vergil. It is a third style, wholly foreign to the other two. Homer mingling the exposition and the invocation, commands his Muse to sing what she inspires in him; Vergil distinguishing one from the other, prays his Muse to acquaint him with what he is about to sing; whereas Ariosto, announcing simply the subject of his songs, makes no invocation. It is evident that he relies upon himself, and that in the style that he adopts he understands very well that he has no other Muse, no other guide than his imagination. His subject is in accord with his manner of treating it. If one wishes to reflect upon this decisive point, one will feel and realize, for the first time perhaps, why in the opinion of all the world concerning two works from the same hand, La Pucelle and La Henriade, the one is a poem, whereas the other, composed with a far greater pretension, is not. Voltaire, in imitating Ariosto in a subject that he has rendered romanesque and frivolous, has received the second inspiration; but in imitating Lucan in an historic subject he received nothing,