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Gabriela
Mistral, pseudonym for Lucila Godoy y Alcayaga, was born in Vicuna, Chile.
The daughter of a dilettante poet, she began to write poetry as a village
schoolteacher after a passionate romance with a railway employee who committed
suicide. She taught elementary and secondary school for many years until
her poetry made her famous. She played an important role in the educational
systems of Mexico and Chile, was active in cultural committees of the
League of Nations, and was Chilean consul in Naples, Madrid, and Lisbon.
She held honorary degrees from the Universities of Florence and Guatemala
and was an honorary member of various cultural societies in Chile as well
as in the United States, Spain, and Cuba. She taught Spanish literature
in the United States at Columbia University, Middlebury College, Vassar
College, and at the University of Puerto Rico.
The love poems in
memory of the dead, Sonetos de la muerte (1914), made her known throughout
Latin America, but her first great collection of poems, Desolacion [Despair],
was not published until 1922. In 1924 appeared Ternura [Tenderness], a
volume of poetry dominated by the theme of childhood; the same theme,
linked with that of maternity, plays a significant role in Tala, poems
published in 1938. Her complete poetry was published in 1958.
From Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1901-1967.
Gabriela Mistral
died in 1957.
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