GABRIELE D' ANNUNZIO
\ɡˈabɹiːl dˈiː ɐnˈʌnzɪˌə͡ʊ], \ɡˈabɹiːl dˈiː ɐnˈʌnzɪˌəʊ], \ɡ_ˈa_b_ɹ_iː_l d_ˈiː__ ɐ_n_ˈʌ_n_z_ɪ__ˌəʊ]\
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An Italian novelist and poet; born on the yacht Irene in the Adriatic, near Pescara, in 1864. Educated at Prato; went to Rome in 1880; and is one of the most conspicuous Italian writers of the day. He abandoned Italian traditions for the modern French realism. His poems and novels are brilliant but sensual, the later works pessimistic. They include: "Pleasure" (1889); "The Triumph of Death" (1894); and "Maidens of the Crag" (1895). Among his poems are: "The New Song" (Rome, 1882); "Interludes of Verse" (1883); and "Marine Odes" (1893); "The Fire" (1900).
By Charles Dudley Warner