Day Lasts Forever
Day Lasts Forever
Mario dell'Arco
The first English-language collection of post-war poet Mario dell'Arco, the most significant voice in modern Roman dialect poetry after Belli and Trilussa. Dell'Arco (1905-1996) wrote concise, epigrammatic poems about personal loss and everyday astonishment. His stance was skeptical and bittersweet, yet infused with a sense of epiphany at every turn. Deeply influenced by Martial, Horace and the poets of the Greek anthology, he published roughly 60 collections of Romanesco verse in a career which spanned half a century. His subjects included cats, wine, and of course his beloved native city of Rome. His work is colored by the death of his infant son, about whom he wrote often and movingly. Critically acclaimed in his lifetime, his work has never before been available to a general readership in English.
'I'm not sure if this is a book, a butterfly, or a handful of angels.' – Piero Paolo Pasolini