L'aeroplano Del Papa: Romanzo Profetico in Versi Liberi
1912
L'aeroplano Del Papa: Romanzo Profetico in Versi Liberi
1912
Written in 1912, when the Wright brothers' invention was still a miraculous novelty, this visionary work erupts from the page like an engine catching fire. Marinetti, the inflammable poet who would launch Futurism into the cultural bloodstream of the twentieth century, constructs his novel as a delirium of motion, celebrating the airplane not as machine but as liberator of the human spirit. The protagonist, confined to the suffocating dreariness of earth, aches for the sky; when he finally takes flight, the prose itself seems to lift, to soar, to shatter the gravitational pull of conventional language. Italy unspools beneath him in vivid landscapes, and the act of flying becomes indistinguishable from the act of being alive. This is not a book about aviation. It is a manifesto in narrative form, a furious love letter to speed, machinery, and the intoxication of breaking free from everything that weighs us down. Marinetti worships the future with a religious fervor that feels almost sacred, and the free verse structure mirrors the unbound trajectory of flight itself. For readers who want to understand how the twentieth century learned to worship the new, there is no better entry point than this blazing, prophetic artifact.







