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Francesco Pona
Francesco Pona. Line engraving by H. David.
Born11 October 1595 Edit this on Wikidata
Verona, Republic of Venice
Died2 October 1655 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 59)
Verona, Republic of Venice
Other namesEureta Misoscolo
Alma mater
OccupationHistorian, playwright, physician, writer Edit this on Wikidata
Movement
Parent(s)Giovanni Pona and Camilla Pona (née Gipsi)

Francesco Pona (11 October 1595 – 2 October 1655) was an Italian medical doctor, philosopher, Marinist poet and writer from Verona, whose works ranged from scientific treatises and history to poetry and plays.

Biography

A Veronese medical doctor and member of many academies, Pona was a prolific writer, producing medical and scientific texts, historiography, literary translation, drama, lyric poetry, prose romances, and tales. A follower of Cesare Cremonini, a heterodox Aristotelian professor at Padua, Pona was a leading member of the influential Accademia degli Incogniti - a society of Venetian intellectuals famous for the libertine and anti-clerical tendencies of many of its members.[1] By the mid-1630s, Pona converted to a strict Catholicism and abjured his juvenile production.[1] He died in Verona on 2 October 1655.[1]

Pona is best known for the horrific and macabre stories of La lucerna (The Lamp, 1625). This is a dialogue between a young student, Eureta, and a soul imprisoned in his oil lamp. The soul tells the boy the story of its many reincarnations in various people, animals, and objects, emphasizing the pathological and cruel aspects of its experiences.[2] Despite its heterodoxy (in March 1626 La lucerna was included in the Index Librorum Prohibitorum by the Catholic Church),[3] the work was so popular that it was reprinted in five editions before the end of the decade.[4]

Ormondo (1635), with its five insert-stories, offers an interesting blend of romance and novella traditions.[5] Pona is also known for his translations of Ovid's Metamorphoses (1617) and John Barclay's Argenis (1629).[6] Later in his life, he wrote an emblem book, Cardiomorphoseos, sive ex corde desumpta emblemata sacra (1645), called by a leading scholar "a point of suture between Renaissance imprese and Baroque emblems".[7]

Works

Cardiomorphoseos sive ex corde desumpta emblemata sacra, Verona, 1645

References

Works cited

Bibliography