Abstract

AbstractIn appendix to the second edition of Giorgio Dati's translation into Tuscan of Tacitus' Annales, published in Venicein 1582, there appears, for the first time in print, a work announced by the title-page of the volume as ‘un discorso del C.L.S. sopra Ie prime parole dell'autore’ (i.e. Tacitus). The ‘Discorso,’ its author still indicated by initials only, is reprinted after some linguistic modification in the third edition of Dati's translation, published in 1589. Subsequent reprints, all in the nineteenth century, invariably ascribe the composition to the ‘cavalier Lionardo SalviatL’.

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