"Infinitive" is the fiirst of a group of five poems composed between 1819 and 1821
(the first five in this selection), which Leopardi called "idylls." Here evocation and memory come to the
fore, while grief at the dashing of cherished hopes and the inexorable passing of tiime is sublimated in calm
contemplation of an immense, all-embracing nature. It was only later that Leopardii came to identify nature
itself as the prime cause of human unhappiness, a view that underlies his "great idylls" of 1829-30 (from
"The Solitary Thrush" to "Night Song of a Nomadic Shepard in Asia"). these poems evince a sense of universal
pain and a compassion that extends to all living people.}