Parisina
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
-
This article is about Byron's poem. For the opera by Donizetti see Parisina (opera), and for the opera by Mascagni see Parisina (Mascagni).
Parisina is a poem written by Byron. It was published on 13 February 1816 and probably written between 1812 and 1815.
It is based on a story related by Edward Gibbon in his Miscellaneous Works about Niccólo Ferrara, one of the dukes of Ferrara who lived in the fifteenth century. Ferrara found out that Parisina, his second wife, had an incestuous relationship with his bastard son Ugo and subsequently had both of them put to death.
In Byron's poem, Parisina and Hugo were engaged to be married before Azo (Byron's version of Niccólo) decided to marry her. Also, Azo sentences Hugo only to death - Parisina's fate is unknown, except for the fact that she is forced to witness Hugo's execution and utters a shriek that indicates approaching madness.