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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: GAG-GEO |
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GARBLE (a word derived from the Arab. gharbala, to sift, and related to ghirbal, a sieve; the Arabic words are of foreign origin, probably from the Lat. cribrum, a sieve) , originally a medieval commercial term in the Mediterranean ports, meaning to sort out, or to sift merchandize, such as corn, spices, &c., in order to separate what was good from the refuse or waste; hence to select the best of anything for retention. Similarly a " garbler " was an official who was appointed to sort out, or test the work of those who had already sorted, the spices or drugs offered for sale in the London markets. In this original
GARCcAO, PEDRO ANTONIO JOAQUIM CORR)@A (1724 followed in 1823 by his Il Fazzoletto. In 1824 he went to London, 1772), Portuguese lyric poet, was the son of Philippe Correa da Serra, a fidalgo of the royal house
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_Taking Horace as his model, and aided by sound judgment, scholarship and wide reading, Garcao set out to raise and purify the standard of poetical taste, and his verses are characterized by a classical simplicity of form and expression. His sonnets ad sodales show a charming personality; his vigorous and elegant odes and epistles are sententious in tone and reveal an inspired poet and a man chastened by suffering. His two comedies in hendecasyllables, the Theatro Novo (played in January 1766) and the Assemblea, are excellent satires on the social life of the capital ; and in the Cantata de Dido
Garcao wrote little and spent much time on the labor limae. His works were published posthumously in 1778, and the most complete and accessible edition is that of J. A. de Azevedo Castro (Rome, 1888). An English version of the Cantata de Dido
(E. PR.) End of Article: GARBLE (a word derived from the Arab. gharbala, to sift, and related to ghirbal, a sieve; the Arabic words are of foreign origin, probably from the Lat. cribrum, a sieve) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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