Poliziano
Italian classical scholar and poet (1454-1494)
(Redirected from Angelo Poliziano)
Poliziano (14 July 1454 – 24 September 1494), commonly known by his nickname Poliziano (anglicized as Politian; Latin: Politianus), was an Italian classical scholar and poet of the Florentine Renaissance. His scholarship was instrumental in the divergence of Renaissance (or Humanist) Latin from medieval norms and for developments in philology.
This article on an author is a stub. You can help out with Wikiquote by expanding it! |
Quotes
edit- Non exprimis, aliquis inquit, Ciceronem. Quid tum? Non enim sum Cicero; me tamen, ut opinor, exprimo.
- Someone might object, "But you do not express yourself like Cicero". What of it? I am not Cicero. But I think I express my own self.
- Epistolae 8, 16. Quoted in Literary Imitation in the Italian Renaissance (1995) by Martin L. McLaughlin, p. 203.
- Someone might object, "But you do not express yourself like Cicero". What of it? I am not Cicero. But I think I express my own self.
External links
edit- Encyclopedic article on Poliziano on Wikipedia