- Pantazi Ghica
Infobox Writer
name = Pantazi Ghica
imagesize = 200px
caption = Pantazi Ghica, photographed in courtroom attire
pseudonym = Tapazin, G. Pantazi, Ghaki
birthdate = birth date|1831|3|15
birthplace =
deathdate = death date and age|1882|7|17|1831|3|15
deathplace =Bucharest
occupation = journalist, dramatist, poet, short story writer, essayist, politician, lawyer
nationality =Romania n
period = 1859–1882
genre =comedy ,satire ,memoir ,drama ,literary criticism
subject =
movement =Romanticism
Realism
influences =Vasile Alecsandri ,Dimitrie Bolintineanu ,Alessandro Manzoni ,C. A. Rosetti
influenced =Alexandru Macedonski
website =Pantazi Ghica (also known under the
pen name s Tapazin, G. Pantazi, and Ghaki; [Călinescu, p.390, 515]March 15 ,1831 -July 17 ,1882 ) was aWallachia n-bornRomania n politician and lawyer, also known as a dramatist, poet, short story writer, and literary critic. A prominent representative of the liberal current, he was the younger brother and lifelong collaborator ofIon Ghica , who served as Prime Minister of the Romanian Kingdom in 1866-1867 and again in 1870-1871. Pantazi Ghica began his political career as a participant in theWallachian Revolution of 1848 , a collaborator of the Romantic historian and activistNicolae Bălcescu , and a member of the radical grouping headed byC. A. Rosetti . Although twice involved in the administration ofBuzău County , Ghica lived much of his life in exile or inBucharest , and was also a soldier for theOttoman Empire during theCrimean War . After 1875, he was a prominent member of the National Liberal Party.Generally seen as a mediocre writer, he was foremost noted for his associations with the literary figures
Nicolae Filimon ,Vasile Alecsandri ,Dimitrie Bolintineanu ,Alexandru Odobescu andAlexandru Macedonski , as well as for his extended polemic with the conservative literary society "Junimea ". Ghica's work and political convictions were criticized and often ridiculed by "Junimist" intellectuals such asTitu Maiorescu ,Mihai Eminescu , andIon Luca Caragiale . He is most likely one of the unnamed liberal politicians who are negatively portrayed in Eminescu's poem "Scrisoarea a III-a ".Pantazi Ghica suffered from
kyphosis . Notably, this physical defect is mentioned for satirical effect in Eminescu's poem and in Caragiale's autobiographical work, "Din carnetul unui vechi sufleur ".Biography
Early life and revolutionary activities
Pantazi was born into the
Ghica family , a prestigious group of Phanariote "hospodars " andboyar s in theDanubian Principalities , whose origins were Greek and Albanian. [Neagu Djuvara , "Între Orient şi Occident. Ţările române la începutul epocii moderne", Humanitas, Bucharest, 1995, p.90-91. ISBN 9732805234] He was the twelfth of fifteen children born to "Ban" Dimitrie Ghica and his wife Maria Câmpineanu (a boyaress of theCâmpineanu family ). [Călinescu, p.381, 386] Ion, Pantazi, Temistocle and Maria Ghica were the only four children to survive into adulthood. [Călinescu, p.381]Like his siblings, Pantazi Ghica studied at the
Saint Sava College in Wallachia's capital. [Călinescu, p.386] It was around that time that he befriended the poet Bolintineanu, who was twelve years his senior and by then already a friend of Ion Ghica. [Călinescu, p.229] His mother later took him toFrance , where he is known to have been enlisted in aboarding house . [Călinescu, p.387] Upon his return to Wallachia in 1847, together with his brother, Ghica was involved in the agitation leading up to the 1848 uprising, and became Bălcescu's secretary. [Călinescu, p.387] ro iconAndrei Pippidi , [http://www.dilemaveche.ro/index.php?nr=164&cmd=articol&id=5331 "Acasă la Pantazi Ghica"] , in "Dilema Veche ", 164/IV,March 30 ,2007 ; retrievedAugust 19 ,2007 ] Before the revolution toppled PrinceGheorghe Bibescu and created a new administration, Bălcescu sent Pantazi Ghica as an agitator, in service to the revolutionary organization "Frăţia". [Călinescu, p.387] Ghica was assigned the task of spreadingpropaganda in the counties of Buzău and Prahova. [Călinescu, p.387] A common Russian-Ottoman intervention quelled the rebellion in autumn of the same year, to reestablish the "Regulamentul Organic " government. Both Ghica brothers, like most other revolutionaries, were arrested and exiled from Wallachia. [Călinescu, p.387]Exile
[
Ion Ghica (seated) andVasile Alecsandri , photographed inIstanbul (1855)] The younger Ghica again settled in Paris, were his mother Maria was still residing. [Călinescu, p.387] Following her death, he moved toIstanbul , joining his brother Ion (who was soon after offered protection by SultanAbdülmecid ). [Călinescu, p.387] Again in Paris by 1849, he became close friends with a group of Wallachian revolutionaries in exile, including D. Berindey, the physician Iatropolu, Alexandru Zissu andGeorge Creţeanu ; the five exiles signed ablood brother hood pact. [Călinescu, p.387]Ghica attended
high society meetings, and befriended atenor at theOpéra National de Paris . [Călinescu, p.387] He later claimed to have maintained close contacts with famous Parisian literary figures such as Alexandre Dumas andAlfred de Musset , and to have introduced them to Romanian culture — this was to be disputed by his Romanian adversaries, who noted that the account provided inaccurate details.Alexandru Odobescu , "Scene istorice. Pseudo-cynegetikos",Editura Minerva , Bucharest, 1984, p.241-242. OCLC|13700632] Reportedly, he also associated with literary criticJean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr , composersDaniel Auber andFromental Halévy , and playwrightEugène Scribe . [Călinescu, p.387] He probably studied for a while at theUniversity of Paris ' Law Faculty, but it is unclear whether he ever completed his education. [Călinescu, p.387] His detractors later claimed that Pantazi Ghica had spent more time in thedebtors' prison than among students, while Ion Ghica is known to have objected to his brother's lifestyle and to have asked Bălcescu to supervise him. [Călinescu, p.387]Around 1850, he fell in love with Camila de Fernex, who was related to the family of his French host, Aimé Guyet de Fernex. [Călinescu, p.387] They were married in March 1852, when the Catholic Camila obtained a
matrimonial dispensation fromMarie-Dominique-Auguste Sibour , theArchbishop of Paris . Records of the events show that the matter of his marriage was only settled at the end of a long debate: the Romanian Orthodox Ghica had initially consented to have his children baptized Catholic, and then retracted his statement, leaving Archbishop Sibour to consent after obtaining a less compelling verbal agreement from him. [Călinescu, p.387] The wedding ceremony took place at a Greek Orthodox church inMarseille . [Călinescu, p.387]The brothers Ghica returned to Bucharest separately during the late 1850s. Their arrival coincided with the outbreak of the
Crimean War : Pantazi Ghica joined the Ottoman Army, serving as a "Yüzbaşı" in the Cossack Corps (part of the Imperial Guard). [Călinescu, p.387] Decorated and promoted, [Călinescu, p.387] he was again present in Bucharest as Russia was defeated and the Treaty of Paris allowed Wallachia to decide a new administration. Ion Ghica, who was promoted "Bey " ofSamos Island in 1854, unsuccessfully applied for the office of Wallachian Prince during 1858, and later rose to ministerial offices. [Călinescu, p.383]Prosecutor, lawyer and journalist
[
Bucharest , 1866] In 1856-1858, he was aprosecutor inDâmboviţa County , before starting a private practice as a lawyer on Bucharest's Podul Mogoşoaiei. [Călinescu, p.387] Pantazi Ghica subsequently became one of the main liberal activists, and rallied with its most radical wing, that headed by Rosetti. [Vianu, Vol.II, p.85, 347] This came at a time when Wallachia's united withMoldavia under the rule ofAlexander John Cuza (proclaimed in 1859, and effected in 1862). Following Cuza's election in both countries, Ghica joined thecivil service : he first replaced his friend George Creţeanu as inspector in the Ministry of Justice (April-September 1859) and department head in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (before 1860). [Călinescu, p.387] He returned to his practice, and, in 1861, was a legal representative for people arrested during the anti-unionist riots inCraiova . [Călinescu, p.391] In 1862, he was appointed attorney for the Ministry of Education. [Călinescu, p.387]In 1859, Pantazi Ghica joined
Dimitrie Bolintineanu in editing the journal "Dâmboviţa", but, just a year later, his articles were the subject of a scandal, and he was arrested for allegedly breaking the ethics of journalism. [Călinescu, p.341, 387, 388] He shared a cell with his colleague,N. T. Orăşanu , a noted adversary of Carol's rule. [Călinescu, p.341] He was also an associate of the writerAlexandru Odobescu , and, after 1861, collaborated on his monthlyliterary magazine "Revista Română". [Vianu, Vol.I, p.99-100] It was here that he published a critical review of "Ciocoii vechi şi noi ", a novel by his friendNicolae Filimon , which upset the latter (as a consequence, relations between the two soured).ro icon [http://www.bmb-on-line.ro/biblioteca/148/169/normala/P92.html "Introductory note to Nicolae Filimon, "Ciocoii vechi şi noi"] , at the [http://www.bmb-on-line.ro/scripts/master.htm Bucharest Municipal Library] ; retrievedAugust 19 ,2007 ] For a while during those years, Ghica edited two satirical magazine, "Păcală" (named in honor of the eponymous folk hero) and "Scrânciobul". [Adamescu, "Epoca lui Alecsandri. b"]In 1863, he went on a trip to Moldavia, where he notably visited his relative Cleopatra Ghica (married into the Russian
Trubetskoy family). [Călinescu, p.387] He was again involved in a trial forcalumny , but he was able to prove that the incriminated article was not his. [Călinescu, p.387] Ghica also took interest in the activities ofIacob Negruzzi , a Moldavian-born writer who arrived in Bucharest around 1865 — it was Ghica who introduced Negruzzi to the Rosetti circle. [Vianu, Vol.II, p.85] By the 1870s, he was also contributing articles to Rosetti's journal "Românul ". [Ornea, p.293] During the same period, he began publishing his literary pieces in "Revista Contimporană ". [Cazimir, p.150]In 1866, "
Domnitor " Cuza was replaced with Carol of Hohenzollern. Apparently, Pantazi Ghica had played a secondary part in the conspiracy that toppled Cuza, as a local commander of the Citizens' Guard. [Călinescu, p.387] Ghica was subsequently assigned the office of Buzău County prefect by the first of his brother's cabinets. [Călinescu, p.387] The appointment was welcomed byVasile Alecsandri , who was keeping a detailed correspondence with both brothers. [Călinescu, p.387] However, his time in office was cut short, allegedly because he came to be disliked by Carol. He returned to the capital, where he purchased a villa on Cometei Street (the present-day Căderea Bastiliei Street), nearbyPiaţa Romană . For a second time in eight years, he was exposed to public scrutiny for having failed to honor his debts: in 1868, his possessions inBuzău were sequestrated. [Călinescu, p.387] Late in the year, he was Alecsandri's representative during a legal conflict with the peasants residing on his domain (after winning the trial, Alecsandri reciprocated by introducing Ghica to his friend, Minister of the InteriorMihail Kogălniceanu ). [Călinescu, p.388]Final years
His new Bucharest residence became a meeting spot for literary figures. Ghica notably associated with the much younger Symbolist poet
Alexandru Macedonski , who was also his neighbor. [Adamescu, "Epoca lui Alecsandri. b"; Vianu, Vol.II, p.347] In 1875, Pantazi Ghica was witness to a scandal involving theRomanian Army andIon Emanuel Florescu , the Minister of War. That year, the officer Ioan Crainic, who considered himself insulted by Florescu, handed in his resignation from the military and challenged the Minister to aduel (asking Ghica to serve as both his courier and witness); the problems were eventually avoided after Florescu ordered his subordinates to arrest Crainic. [Călinescu, p.391] At the time, Macedonski engaged in liberal politics, and, in 1876, co-founded the short-lived newspaper "Stindardul", alongside Ghica,Bonifaciu Florescu , andGeorge Fălcoianu . [Vianu, Vol.II, p.347] The publication was inspired by the renowned journalistNicolae Moret Blaremberg . [Vianu, Vol.II, p.347] Later, Ghica also published essays in Macedonski's newly-founded and more prestigious magazine, "Literatorul ". [Adamescu, "Epoca lui Alecsandri. b"; Ornea, p.301-302]He was for long a member of the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, representing the liberal tendency and, late in life, the National Liberals. In June 1881, promoting the designs of one Traian Theodorescu, he unsuccessfully presented Parliament with a proposal to have a
submarine built for the Romanian Navy. [Florin Manolescu, "Literatura S.F.",Editura Univers , Bucharest, 1980, p.47. OCLC|7174578] During the same year, he was a cabinet-appointed inspector of historical monuments in Moldavia. [Călinescu, p.387] In spring of 1882, shortly before his death, Ghica, like many of his fellow National Liberals, spoke out against I. Filibiliu, a teacher at theMatei Basarab High School who had administered a mild form ofcorporal punishment to one of his pupils. [Perpessicius, p.242-244]Pantazi Ghica died at his house on Cometei Street, and was buried at his family's estate in
Ghergani . [Călinescu, p.388] Camila Ghica survived him by 21 years: reportedly afflicted bydementia in old age, she died in 1908, at the age of 80. [Călinescu, p.388]In culture
Works
[
Romantic aesthetics in an illustration to "Nemesis", one ofDimitrie Bolintineanu 's poems] Ghica published the first of his many Romanticnovella s by the 1860s, when he collaborated on Odobescu's magazine. [Vianu, Vol.I, p.99-100] Literary criticTudor Vianu noted that some of his works had a strong connection withBohemianism , [Vianu, Vol.II, p.237] while others are thought to be influenced by the Romantic authorDimitrie Bolintineanu . [Călinescu, p.389, 390] With time, however, Ghica moved away from Romanticism, and developed his own brand of Realism, which did not exclude imagination and speculation, and which hailed Alecsandri as a prime example of writing. [Călinescu, p.388] He was also opposed to Macedonski's notion of "sublime absurdity", arguing that the definitive criterion for creating poetic imagery was significance, and proposing elements ofdidacticism to feature in every work. [Călinescu, p.388, 391] In one instance, he argued that beauty "must absolutely be united with the good". [Călinescu, p.388]Ghica's work of hidden memoirs, the novella "Un boem român" ("A Romanian Bohemian"), was a tale of adventure and
unrequited love : its main character, Paul, whose adventures mirror many in Ghica's life, elopes with a married woman, only to find that she is not faithful to him either. [Călinescu, p.388] In 1850, he authored a piece in honor of the deceased poetVasile Cârlova , titled "O lacrimă a poetului Cârlova" ("One of Poet Cârlova's Tears"). It depicted Cârlova drinking from a skull-shaped cup with the inscription "Lina, adu-ţi aminte!" ("Lina, remember!", allegedly in honor of a nun he had loved). [Călinescu, p.389]In addition, Pantazi Ghica wrote a lengthy
satire thehigh society in his day ("Schiţe din societatea română", "Sketches of the Romanian Society"), and, as a result of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, the play "Răniţii români" ("The Wounded Romanians"). [Călinescu, p.390, 391] Ghica was outraged to find that the National Theater did not accept his play, and, as a consequence, issued a formal protest. [Călinescu, p.391] He contributed several romantic comedies, including, among others, "Iadeş" ("Wishbone") and "Sterian Păţitul" (roughly, "Sterian Who Has Learned"). [Călinescu, p.391] He is also the most likely author of a piece sometimes attributed to his brother, in which the author explores the literary legacy ofDon Juan . [Călinescu, p.390]"Beţia de cuvinte"
By the close of 1860s, Pantazi Ghica was among the main targets of early criticism from "
Junimea " — a literary society which expressed a conservative vision and was opposed to the cultural and political tenets of liberalism. Ghica's works were among those discussed by "Junimea"'sTitu Maiorescu in his famous essay of 1873, "Beţia de cuvinte". The title, meaning literally "inebriation with words", attacked Romantic liberals over their experiments withRomanian language , their Romantic nationalist aesthetic guidelines, and their emphatic prose. The influential Maiorescu saw these as a main source for the widespread cultural and social problems facing Romania during its process ofWesternization . [Ornea, p.291-292]Thus, "Revista Contimporană" contributors such as Ghica,
V. A. Urechia ,August Treboniu Laurian , andGheorghe Sion are listed by Maiorescu as negative examples in Romanian literature, for their use of coinedneologism s, as well as for their tautologies and contradictions.ro iconTitu Maiorescu , [http://ro.wikisource.org/wiki/Be%C5%A3ia_de_cuvinte_%C3%AEn_%22Revista_Contimporan%C4%83%22 "Beţia de cuvinte în "Revista Contimporană"] (wikisource)] [Ornea, p.292] Maiorescu sarcastically recorded that Ghica was introducing new words to theRomanian lexis , through the means ofFrancization . Among other samples, the author used as illustrations several fragments from Pantazi Ghica's novella "Marele vistier Cândescu" ("The Great Treasurer Cândescu"). He noted the implicit tautology in Ghica's term "silenţiu lugubru" ("lugubrious silence"), pointing out that the first word covered the meaning of "silent" (thus leaving the notion to be read "silent silence"). [Ornea, p.292] A more complex one, listing severalsynonym s on end, read:" [...] all left in silence but their faces showed the same pain, the same exasperation, the same desperation." [Ornea, p.292]
Pantazi Ghica, Urechia,
D. A. Laurian andPetru Grădişteanu decided to issue a common reply to Maiorescu's accusations, using "Românul " as their venue. [Ornea, p.293] The "Junimist" intellectual believed that their answer was an "ignoratio elenchi ", and dismissed their defense as "besides the point" ("nu e la chestie").ro iconTitu Maiorescu , [http://ro.wikisource.org/wiki/R%C4%83spunsurile_%22Revistei_Contimporane%22 "Răspunsurile "Revistei Contimporane"] (wikisource)] [Ornea, p.293] On the occasion, he also presented Ghica with more of his own mistakes.Although not a "Junimist", Odobescu himself agreed with such views, and pointed out further inexactitudes in the works of Pantazi Ghica — these comments are featured in a chapter of his major book, the "
Pseudo-cynegetikos ", in its revised edition of 1887. [Vianu, Vol.II, p.249] Odobescu recorded the polemic between Ghica and the contributors to "Junimea"'s magazine "Convorbiri Literare " — the former stood accused of having embellished his own biography by claiming to have won the interest of French writers during his stay inParis . Odobescu hinted that he agreed with this assessment, stressing that Alexandre Dumas andAlfred de Musset had since died, and thus could not confirm that Pantazi Ghica had befriended them. He also noted, like the "Junimists", that the chronological order indicated by Ghica was spurious. The latter argument referred to Ghica's statement that, in 1852, Dumas and de Musset had listened to his rendition ofVasile Alecsandri 's poem "Înşiră-te Mărgărite", which had in fact been completed in 1856, and first made available for the public four years later.Ghica was unnerved by Maiorescu's reaction to his work, and verbally attacked the younger literary critic in several contexts spanning his career. [Călinescu, p.387] This was the case in 1878, when both of them stood in the Chamber for opposite camps, and when Ghica heckled Maiorescu, who was giving a speech. [Călinescu, p.387] On one occasion, Pantazi Ghica depicted Maiorescu as "a sort of a literary trickster", and himself claimed that his adversary was "at odds with grammar". [Călinescu, p.387] Elsewhere, he claimed that Maiorescu's style "entirely lacks the conditions of serious criticism". [Călinescu, p.388] With time, the conflict between Ghica and "Convorbiri Literare" degenerated into open hostility. Thus, in an unsigned piece of 1875, the magazine claimed to translate
Victor Hugo 's "Chansons des rues et des bois": instead of the hunchbackMayeux , whom Hugo had placed at the end of a cortege grouping all animals, the "Convorbiri Literare" version had introduced "Pantazi" and adapted the rhyme accordingly. [Călinescu, p.387]Maiorescu's verdicts on Pantazi Ghica were shared by more modern Romanian critics. Tudor Vianu called Ghica "prolific, but not gifted". [Vianu, Vol.I, p.100] Elsewhere, he backed Ghica's inclusion among the "victims of "Inebriation with words" [italics in the original] ", as well as Maiorescu's criticism of his Francized speech. [Vianu, Vol.II, p.237] Vianu's generation colleague
George Călinescu defined Pantazi Ghica as "untalented" (although he acknowledged his "vast literary culture"), [Călinescu, p.388] whileŞtefan Cazimir likened his writings for the stage to what he believed wasIon Luca Caragiale 's worst play, themelodrama "O soacră ". [Cazimir, p.150] Călinescu referred to "Marele vistier Cândescu" as featuring "annoyingneologism s" and "the lack of any intuition, no matter how modest, for historical color." [Călinescu, p.389] Two exceptions among commentators wereGheorghe Adamescu , who valued several of Ghica's works (including his 1850 piece aboutVasile Cârlova ), [Adamescu, "Epoca lui Alecsandri. a"] andŞtefan Sihleanu , who credited Ghica with having single-handedly introducedAlessandro Manzoni 's type ofhistorical novel s to local literature, in their adapted novella form. [Călinescu, p.387]Ghica's politics and the "Junimists"
The conservative groupings were especially critical of Pantazi Ghica's politics.
Iacob Negruzzi , who eventually rallied with the "Junimists", resented Rosetti's radical circle, and left an unflattering memoir of its meetings. [Vianu, Vol.II, p.85] Several other writers who associated with "Junimea" attacked the two brothers Ghica for their alleged corruption anddemagogy . InMihai Eminescu 's lengthy poem "Scrisoarea a III-a ", an entire section elaborates a virulent anti-liberal discourse. Of it, a group of lyrics are believed to refer to Pantazi Ghica (identified by his appearance and hiskyphosis ) [Călinescu, p.387] or, alternatively, to a composite portrayal of the two brothers. [Ornea, p.197-198] They read:Eminescu followed Ghica's political career with interest. In one of his articles for the Conservative journal "
Timpul ", published in early 1882, he examined the Filibiliu affair, he took the teacher's side, arguing that both Ghica and Filibiliu's other National Liberal detractor,Petru Grădişteanu , were exaggerating. [Perpessicius, p.243] He commented that the scandal was largely owed to the victim's father having made use of his political connections with theIon Brătianu cabinet, and protested when the teacher assigned a provincial post as a punitive measure. [Perpessicius, p.242-248] This was one of several polemics between Eminescu and various associates of Rosetti: literary historianPerpessicius argued that they were partly responsible for the "super-tensed" relations between "Românul " and "Timpul". [Perpessicius, p.246-247] George Călinescu identified other, less-known, poems by Eminescu, which also allude to Ghica's style, politics and personal life. [Călinescu, p.387]The dramatist Ion Luca Caragiale, who wrote many of his works under the influence of "Junimist" principles, developed his own thesis on the political shortcomings of the liberal trend. As part of it, he argued that there was an essential difference between, on one hand, the major liberal figures of the 1848 revolution (
Nicolae Bălcescu ,Ion Câmpineanu andIon Heliade Rădulescu ) and, on the other, members of the National Liberal Party such as Pantazi Ghica,Nicolae Misail andMihail Pătârlăgeanu . [Ornea, p.203] In his view, the latter group usurped the revolutionary legacy, while the former could have found itself best represented by the emerging Conservative Party. [Ornea, p.203]Anecdotes
A socialite, Ghica was famed for his hectic lifestyle and his eclectic culture, which earned him the moniker "Fantazaki" (a pun on his two names, it originated in "fantezie", the Romanian word for "fantasy") and the colloquial title of "king of the Romanian Bohemia". [Călinescu, p.387] Among his recorded eccentricities were the contrast in his attitudes toward dogs and cats (a lover of the former, he despised the latter), and his refusal to travel anywhere except by coach. [Călinescu, p.388] A rumor which probably made it into Eminescu's poetry had it that Pantazi Ghica, the alleged lover of famed and usually foreign actresses, sold tickets to their shows in front of coffee houses. [Călinescu, p.387, 388] Nonetheless, others knew him as a
gentleman , praising him for his kindness and sociability. [Călinescu, p.387-388]At some stage in their lives, Pantazi Ghica and his friend C. A. Rosetti briefly associated with a circle of actors meeting in the house of theater manager
Iorgu Caragiale (Ion Luca's uncle).ro iconIon Luca Caragiale , [http://ro.wikisource.org/wiki/Din_carnetul_unui_vechi_sufleur "Din carnetul unui vechi sufleur"] (wikisource)]Ion Luca Caragiale 's 1907 work, "Din carnetul unui vechi sufleur ", featured an anecdote about Pantazi Ghica and Iorgu Caragiale, recounting how the former had fallen in love with an unnamed actress. According to the story, Ghica, who had asked the group of actors to facilitate an amorous meeting with the object of his affection, was the target of a prank: Iorgu Caragiale reportedly arranged for his colleague, a certain Matache Piţirigă, to dress up in female clothes and meet Ghica in an unlit room. The story went that the Pantazi Ghica caressed Piţirigă, causing the latter to become indignant and thus reveal his true identity. According to Ion Luca Caragiale, a shocked Pantazi Ghica ran out of the room and into the Fialcowsky coffee house. The amused reaction of the public surprised him, and he subsequently found that, in the dark, Piţirigă had smeared his face withsoot . [Călinescu, p.267, 387] In its initial unpublished version, "Din carnetul unui vechi sufleur" simply described Iorgu Caragiale's victim as "a hunchback". Caragiale later added to his own text:"...When, a couple of years back, I was adding the lines above to my notebook, the cheated young man was still alive; today he is dead — may God forgive all the lyrics and all the prose with which he has enriched our young literature, all the speeches he has held in succession in front of the two Chambers and during public meetings! — and since «one should only speak well of the dead», here is name pure and simple: Pantazi Ghica."
Another anecdote of the time had it that Pantazi Ghica was deeply resented by "
Domnitor " Carol. According to the story, this was sparked by one of Carol's hunting trips in the vicinity ofBuzău . Ghica, who was charged with organizing the event, allegedly thought he could gain more favor with the monarch by using a bear which, unbeknown to Carol, had been previously tamed by Romani trainers ("seeUrsari "). [Călinescu, p.387] Carol found out that this was the case, and, feeling insulted, ordered Pantazi Ghica to be relieved from his office of prefect.The short-lived magazine "Satyrul" once accused Ghica of having plagiarized for his "Iadeş", and of having only added a dog as a character to separate his text from the source. As a result, a series of satirical
lithograph s, with Pantazi Ghica as their subject, showed a hunchback man in the company of a hunchback dog. [Călinescu, p.391] Jokes about his medical condition even made it into the Chamber: a fellow deputy once made a public reference to Pantazi Ghica's arched spine, to which Ghica replied that it seemed arched because he only presented such colleagues with his back. [Călinescu, p.387]Notes
References
*ro icon
Gheorghe Adamescu , [http://biblioteca.euroweb.ro/adamescu.htm "Istoria literaturii române"] , at [http://biblioteca.euroweb.ro/ Biblioteca Românească] ; retrievedAugust 19 ,2007 :
** [http://biblioteca.euroweb.ro/adamescu/iii22a.htm II.2. "Epoca lui Alecsandri (1848-1870)". a) "1848-1859"]
** [http://biblioteca.euroweb.ro/adamescu/iii22b.htm II.2. "Epoca lui Alecsandri (1848-1870)". b) "1860-1870"]
** [http://biblioteca.euroweb.ro/adamescu.htm III.2. "Epoca lui Eminescu (1880-1900)". a) "1880-1890"]
*George Călinescu , "Istoria literaturii române de la origini până în prezent",Editura Minerva , Bucharest, 1986
*Ştefan Cazimir , "Caragiale: universul comic",Editura pentru Literatură , Bucharest, 1967. OCLC|7287882
*Z. Ornea , "Junimea şi junimismul", Vol. II,Editura Minerva , Bucharest, 1998. ISBN 973-21-0562-3
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NAME = Ghica, Pantazi
ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
SHORT DESCRIPTION = 19th century Romanian writer and politician
DATE OF BIRTH =March 15 ,1831
PLACE OF BIRTH =Wallachia ,Romania
DATE OF DEATH =July 17 ,1882
PLACE OF DEATH =
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