Dei Sepolcri

Dei Sepolcri is a poem written by the Italian poet, Ugo Foscolo, in 1806, and published in 1807. It consists of 295 hendecasyllabic verses. The carme (as the author defined it) is dedicated to another poet, Ippolito Pindemonte, with whom Foscolo had been discussing the recent Napoleonic law regarding tombs.

Foscolo held materialistic views about man's destiny after death, but he strongly affirmed the value of tombs as memorials to noble souls or bright intellects.

Political and Cultural Background

The idea behind the poem can be traced to 1804, when the Napoleonic edict of Saint-Cloud was issued. On September 5, 1806, the edict was applied to Italy. In short, it stated that all burials must take place outside the city walls; that, for democratic reasons, the burial monuments must all be of the same size; and that their inscriptions would be controlled by a special commission. The edict's implementation caused Foscolo to meditate upon the nature and philosophy of death.

An atheist, Foscolo did not share the view of his fellow poet Pindemonte, who defended the Christian view, as opposed to the new "illuminist" ideas introduced by the French regime. Even so, Foscolo was critical of the decree, mostly for civic reasons; even though he asserts that there is no life after death, he acknowledges that human beings will still aspire to transcend death. Tombs, monuments for fallen heroes and virtuous men from the past, may inspire those living today, including artists and poets. Long after the marble monuments are destroyed by time, those memorialized can survive in artworks they have inspired, and can in turn inspire virtue in new generations.

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