Orlando Furioso

ORLANDO FURIOSO: PART ONE
LUDOVICO ARIOSTO was born in 1474, the son of an official of the Ferrarese court. He first studied law, but later acquired a sound humanistic training. His adult life was spent in the service of the Ferrarese ducal family. Essentially he was a writer; his lifetime’s service as a courtier was a burden imposed on him by economic difficulties. His fame rests on his major work, Orlando Furioso. The poem was probably begun about 1505. It was first published in 1516. The most important of Ariosto’s minor works are five comedies, written for production in the Ferrarese court. Ariosto died in 1533.
BARBARA REYNOLDS was for twenty-two years Lecturer in Italian at Cambridge University and subsequently Reader in Italian Studies at Nottingham University and Honorary Reader at Warwick. Her first book was a textual reconstruction of the linguistic writings of Alessandro Manzoni. The General Editor of the Cambridge Italian Dictionary, she was created Cavaliere Ufficiale al Merito della Repubblica Italiana in 1978. She has been awarded silver medals by the Italian Government and by the Province of Vicenza and the Edmund Gardner Prize for her services to Italian scholarship and to Anglo-Italian cultural relations. She has been Visiting Professor in Italian at the University of California, Berkeley, at Wheaton College, Illinois, at Hope College, Michigan, and at Trinity College, Dublin. Barbara Reynolds has translated Dante’s Paradiso, left unfinished by Dorothy L. Sayers on her death in 1957, and La Vita Nuova, and Ariosto’s Orlando Furioso, for which she was awarded the Monselice International Literary Prize in 1976, for the Penguin Classics. She is the author of The Passionate Intellect: Dorothy L. Sayers’ Encounter with Dante and Dorothy L. Sayers: Her Life and Soul. She is also the editor of The Letters of Dorothy L. Sayers, in four volumes. She holds three Honorary Doctorates and is the co-founder and managing editor of SEVEN: An Anglo-American Literary Review.
ORLANDO FURIOSO
(THE FRENZY OF ORLANDO)

A Romantic Epic by
Ludovico Ariosto
PART ONE

TRANSLATED
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
BARBARA REYNOLDS
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Published by the Penguin Group
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This translation first published 1973
17
Introduction, translation and notes copyright © Barbara Reynolds, 1975
All rights reserved
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
ISBN: 9781101492802
FOR
ADRIAN
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
I. The Poem
II. The Literary Origins of the Poem
i. Carolingian
ii. Celtic
iii. Classical
iv. Integration of Carolingian, Celtic and Classical Components in the Character of Orlando
III. Ludovico Ariosto and his Times
IV. The Orlando Furioso and English Literature
V. The Translation and its Predecessors
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
CHARACTERS AND DEVICES
The Principal Warriors
Women
Sorcerers and Sorceresses
Supernatural Beings
Personifications
Monsters
Horses
Chief Weapons and Items of Armour
Magic Devices
Anonymous Characters
CANTOS I–XXIII
MAPS
1.
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