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Pablo Neruda
1904-1973
Original name
Neftalí Ricardo Reyes Basoalto. Adopted the name Pablo Neruda legally
in 1946 after using it over 20 years as a writer
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Chilean
poet, diplomat, and Marxist, winner of the Nobel
Prize for Literature in 1971. Neruda is the most widely read
of the Spanish American poets. From the 1940s his works reflected
the political struggle of peasants and workers and socio-historical
developments in South America, but he also wrote love poems. Neruda's
Twenty Love Poems and Songs of Despair (1924) have sold over
a million copies since it first appeared.
"Sucede que me canso de ser hombre.
Sucede que entro es las sasterías y en los cines
marchito, impenetrable, como un cisne de fieltro
navegando en un agua de origen y ceniza."
(from 'Walking Around')
(in English)
I happen to be tired of being a man
I happen to enter tailor shops and movie houses
withered, impenetrable, like a felt swan
navigating in a water of sources and ashes.
Neruda was born in Parral, a small town in central Chile. His father
was a poor railway worker and mother was a schoolteacher, who died
of tuberculosis when Neruda was an infant. Neruda started to write
poetry when he was ten years old and at the age of 12 he met the
Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral, who encouraged his literary efforts.
In 1920 he published poems in the magazine Selva Austral,
using the pen name Pablo Neruda to avoid conflict with his family,
who disapproved his literary ambitions. From 1921 he studied at
the Instituto Pedagógico in Santiago. In 1924 Neruda gained international
fame as an writer with VEINTE POEMAS DE AMOR Y UNA CANCÍON, which
is his most widely read work.
At
the age of only 23 Neruda was appointed by the Chilean government
as a consul in Burma (now Myanmar). He held diplomatic posts in
various East Asian and European Countries, befriending among others
the Spanish poet Federico García Lorca. In 1935-36 Neruda was in
Spain but he had to resign from his post because he sided with the
Spanish Republicans. As a consul in Paris in 1939 Neruda helped
Spanish refugees by re-settling them in Chile. In 1930 he married
María Antonieta Hagenaar, but they separated in 1936. In the 1930s
and 1940s Neruda lived with the Argentine painter Delia del Carril,
who encouraged Neruda's interest in the politics of the Left. They
married in 1943. The marriage was not recognized in Chile and in
1955 they separated. In 1966 Neruda married the Chilean singer Matilde
Urrutia, who was the inspiration of much of his later poetry.
In 1943 Neruda joined the Communist Party, and in 1945 he was elected
to Chilean Senate. He attacked President González Videla in print
and when right-wing extremists took the government, he fled to Mexico.
In exile Neruda produced CANTO GENERAL (1950), a monumental work
of 340 poems. In this work Neruda recreated Latin American history
from a Marxist point of view. The central theme is the struggle
for social justice. Neruda shows his deep knowledge about the history,
geography and politics of the continent - he sees that labour is
the driving force of history. Canto General included Neruda's famous
poem 'Alturas de Macchu Picchu', which was born after he visited
the Incan ruins of Macchu Picchu in 1943.
While in exile, Neruda was awarded the Stalin Prize and the Lenin
Peace Prize. He travelled in Russia and China and in 1952 he returned
to Chile, after the victory of the anti-Videla forces and the order
to arrest leftist was rescinded. He was deeply shaken in 1956 by
Khrushchev's revelation in the Twentieth Party Congress of the crimes
committed during the Stalin regime. His collection EXTRAVAGARIO
(1958) reflects this change in the themes in his works. Neruda turns
into his youth; he presents the reader his daily life and examines
critically his Marxist beliefs. The tone is partly mocking; the
poet looks his personal experiences ironically.
"Poetry is a deep inner calling in man; from it came liturgy,
the psalms, and also the content of religions."
(from Memoirs, 1974)
Establishing
a permanent home on the Isla Negra, Neruda continued to travel extensively,
visiting Cuba in 1960 and the United States in 1966. When Salvador
Allende was elected president, he appointed Neruda as Chile's ambassador
to France (1970-72). Neruda died of leukemia in Santiago on 23 September
in 1973. His death was probably accelerated by the Pinochet coup
earlier that month. During his long literary career, Neruda produced
more than forty volumes of poetry, translations, and verse drama.
"He was once referred as the Picasso of poetry, alluding to
his protean ability to be always in the vanguard of change. And
he himself has often alluded to his personal struggle with his
own tradition, to his constant need to search for a new system
in each book."
(Rene de Costa in The Poetry of Pablo Neruda, 1979)
For further reading: El viajero immóvil by Emir Rodríguez
Monegal (1966); The Word and the Stone by Frank Reiss (1972);
Pablo Neruda by Salvatore Bizzaro (1979); The Poetry of Pablo
Neruda by René de Costa (1979); Pablo Neruda by Marjorie Agosín
(1986); The Late Poetry of Neruda by Christopher Perriam (1989);
Pablo Neruda by Luis Poirot (1990); Neruda: an Intimate Biography
by Volodia Teitelboim (1991)
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Selected works:
- CREPUSCULARIO, 1923
- VEINTE POEMAS DE AMOR Y UNA CANCÍON
DESESPERADA, 1924 - Twenty Love Songs and a Song of Despair
-
RESIDENCIA EN LA TIERRA (1925-31) - Residence on Earth
- TENTIVA
DEL HOMBRE INFINITO, 1926 - Attempt of the Infinite Man
- ANILLOS,
1926 - Rings
- EL HONDERO ENTUSIASTA, 1933 - Enthusiastic Slingshooter
- RECIDENCIA EN LA TIERRE, 1933-35 - Residence on Earth
- ESPAÑA
EN EL CORAZÓN, 1937
- Selected Poems, 1944
- TERCERA RESIDENCIA,
1947
- CANTO GENERAL, 1950 - Canto General / General Song
- LOS
VERSOS DEL CAPITÁN, 1952 - The Captain's Verses
- POESÍA POLÍTICA,
1953 (2 vols.)
- LAS UVAS Y EL VIENTO, 1954
- ODAS ELEMENTALES
I-III, 1954-57 - Elementary Odes
- NUEVAS ODAS ELEMENTALES, 1956
- TERCER LIBRO DE LAS ÓDAS, 1957
- ESTRAVAGARIO, 1958 - Extravagaria
- NAVEGACIONES Y REGRESOS, 1959
- CIEN SONETOS DEL AMOR, 1960
- One Hundred Love Sonnets
- CANSIÓN DE GESTA, 1960 - Song of
Protest
- LAS PIEDRAS DE CHILE, 1960 - Stones of Chile
- CANTOS
CEREMONIALES, 1960
- Selected Poems, 1961
- PLENOS PODERES, 1962
- Fully Empowered
- MEMORIAL DE LA ISLA NEGRA, 1964 (5 vols.)
- Isla Negra, A Notebook
- ARTE DE PÁJAROS, 1966 - Art of Birds
- LA CASA DE ARENA, 1966 - The House in the Sand
- FALGOR Y MUERTE
DE JOAQUÍN MURIETA, 1967 - The Splendour and Death of Joaquín
Murieta
- LAS MANOS DEL DÍA, 1968
- COMIENDO EN HUNGARÍA, 1969
- Sentimental Journey around the Hungarian Cuisine
- FIN DEL MUNDO,
1969
- Early Poems, 1969
- A New Decade, 1969
- AÚN, 1969 - Still
Another Day
- LA ESPADA ENCENDIDA, 1970
- LAS PIEDRAS DEL CIELO,
1970 - Stones of the Skies
- GEOGRAFÍA INFRUCTUOSA, 1972
- OBRAS
COMPLETAS, 1973 ( 3 vols.)
- CONFIESO HABER VIVIDO, 1973
- INCITACIÓN
AL NIXONCIDIO Y ALABANZA DE LA REVOLUCÍON CHILENA, 1973 - A Call
for the Destruction of Nixon and Praise for the Chilean Revolution
- 2000, 1974 - transl. as 2000
- EL MAR Y LAS CAMPANAS, 1974 -
The Sea and the Bells
- ELEGÍA, 1974
- Five Decades, 1974
- EL
CORAZÓN AMARILLO, 1974
- EL LIBRO DE PREGUNTAS, 1974
- JARDÍN
DE INVIERNO, 1974 Winter Garden
- LA ROSA SEPARADA, 1974 - The
Separate Rose
- DEFECTOS ESCOGIDOS, 1974
- PARA NACER HE NACIDO,
1977 - Passions and Impressions
- EL FIN DE VIAJE, 1982
- Late
and Posthumous Poems 1968-1975, 1988
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This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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