Vincenzo Cardarelli (born May 1, 1887, Tarquinia, Italy—died June 15, 1959, Rome) was an Italian poet, essayist, literary critic, and journalist whose traditional, lyrical verse was influenced by the poet Giacomo Leopardi.
With no formal schooling beyond the fifth grade, Cardarelli was largely self-educated. He worked in Rome (from 1905) and in Florence (from 1914) as a journalist for such periodicals as Voce (“Voice”), Marzoco, Lirica (“Lyric Poetry”), and Avanti! (“Onward!”). In Rome he helped found the literary journal La ronda (1919–22; “The Rounds”), which supported Classicism over the avant-garde movements of Futurism and Hermeticism.
Cardarelli was noted for his early verse—collected in Poesie (1936; enlarged 1942, 1948)—which was characterized by a nostalgic attention to nature, sorrow, and his homeland. His most celebrated prose writings included Il sole a picco (1929; “The Sun Overhead”), Cielo sulle città (1938; “The Sky over the Cities”), Lettere non spedite (1944; “Letters Never Sent”), Villa Tarantola (1948), and Viaggio d’un poeta in Russia (1954; “Voyage of a Poet in Russia”), as well as the posthumous collection Opere complete (1962; “Complete Works”).