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・ Alfonso Fidalgo
・ Alfonso Flores
・ Alfonso Flórez Ortiz
・ Alfonso Fontanelli
・ Alfonso Fraga
・ Alfonso Fraile
・ Alfonso Franco
・ Alfonso Frazer
・ Alfonso Freeman
・ Alfonso Fróilaz
・ Alfonso G. Pablo, Sr.
・ Alfonso Gagliano
・ Alfonso Garcia
・ Alfonso García
・ Alfonso García Robles
Alfonso Gatto
・ Alfonso Gesualdo
・ Alfonso Giacomo Gaspare Corti
・ Alfonso Gomez-Rejon
・ Alfonso González Fernández
・ Alfonso González Ruiz
・ Alfonso Grosso
・ Alfonso Grosso Sánchez
・ Alfonso Guerra
・ Alfonso Guillermo Bravo y Mier
・ Alfonso Gumucio Dagron
・ Alfonso Gumucio Reyes
・ Alfonso Gutiérrez
・ Alfonso Gómez
・ Alfonso Gómez (disambiguation)


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Alfonso Gatto : ウィキペディア英語版
Alfonso Gatto

Alfonso Gatto (17 July 1909 – 6 March 1976) was an Italian author. Along with Giuseppe Ungaretti and Eugenio Montale, he is one of the foremost Italian poets of the 20th century and a major exponent of hermetic poetry.
==Biography==
Gatto had a difficult childhood, studied at the Salerno classic lycaeum where he discovered his passion for poetry and literature. In 1926 he attended the University of Naples Federico II, but he had to discontinue his studies due to financial problems. Like many Italian poets of his age, such as Eugenio Montale and Salvatore Quasimodo, he never graduated.
Gatto fell in love with the daughter of his maths teacher, Jole, and being only 21 he eloped with her to Milan. From that moment his life became quite restless and adventurous, with many changes of residence and employment: he was first a bookshop assistant, a college instructor, a proofreader, a journalist, a teacher. In 1936, because of his open anti-fascist activism, he was arrested and jailed at the San Vittore prison in Milan.
During those years, Gatto had been a contributor to various innovative journals and magazines of the Italian literary culture.〔Comprising, int. al., ''Italia letteraria, Rivista Letteratura, Circoli, Primato'' and ''Ruota''.〕 In 1938 he founded the magazine ''Campo di Marte'' together with writer Vasco Pratolini and commissioned by Italian publisher Vallecchi, but it only lasted a year. It was however a significant experience for Gatto, who was able to enter the leading literary circles.
"Campo di Marte" had been created as a fortnightly magazine (first issued on 1 August 1938) and with the specific remit of educating the public in the artistic and literary production of all genres. The magazine was directly connected with the so-called Florentine Hermeticism.
In 1941 Gatto was appointed professor of Italian literature for "high merits", at the Art School of Bologna, and a special correspondent for the newspaper ''L'Unità'', thus being placed in a primary position for the promotion of literature of communist inspiration. Subsequently Gatto abandoned the Italian Communist Party and became a ''dissident'' communist.
The poet died in a car accident on 8 March 1976 at Capalbio in the province of Grosseto. He is buried in the cemetery of Salerno and on his tomb (which has a boulder as its tombstone) is engraved his friend Montale's funeral farewell:

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