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Pablo
Neruda (1904-1973), whose real name is Neftali Ricardo Reyes Basoalto,
was born on 12 July, 1904, in the town of Parral in Chile. His father
was a railway employee and his mother, who died shortly after his birth,
a teacher. Some years later his father, who had then moved to the town
of Temuco, remarried dona Trinidad Candia Malverde. The poet spent his
childhood and youth in Temuco, where he also got to know Gabriela Mistral,
head of the girls' secondary school, who took a liking to him.
At the early age
of thirteen he began to contribute some articles to the daily "La Manana",
among them, Entusiasmo y Perseverancia - his first publication - and his
first poem. In 1920, he became a contributor to the literary journal "Selva
Austral" under the pen name of Pablo Neruda, which he adopted in memory
of the Czechoslovak poet Jan Neruda (1834-1891). Some of the poems Neruda
wrote at that time are to be found in his first published book: Crepusculario
(1923). The following year saw the publication of Veinte poemas de amor
y una cancion desesperada, one of his best-known and most translated works.
Alongside his literary activities, Neruda studied French and pedagogy
at the University of Chile in Santiago.
Between 1927 and 1935, the government put him in charge of a number of
honorary consulships, which took him to Burma, Ceylon, Java, Singapore,
Buenos Aires, Barcelona, and Madrid. His poetic production during that
difficult period included, among other works, the collection of esoteric
surrealistic poems, Residencia en la tierra (1933), which marked his literary
breakthrough.
The Spanish Civil War and the murder of Garcia Lorca, whom Neruda knew,
affected him strongly and made him join the Republican movement, first
in Spain, and later in France, where he started working on his collection
of poems Espana en el Corazon (1937). The same year he returned to his
native country, to which he had been recalled, and his poetry during the
following period was characterised by an orientation towards political
and social matters. Espana en el Corazon had a great impact by virtue
of its being printed in the middle of the front during the civil war.
In 1939, Neruda was appointed consul for the Spanish emigration, residing
in Paris, and, shortly afterwards, Consul General in Mexico, where he
rewrote his Canto General de Chile, transforming it into an epic poem
about the whole South American continent, its nature, its people and its
historical destiny. This work, entitled Canto General, was published the
same year in Mexico, and also underground in Chile. It consists of approximately
250 poems brought together into fifteen literary cycles and constitutes
the central part of Neruda's production. Shortly after its publication,
Canto General was translated into some ten languages. Nearly all these
poems were created in a difficult situation, when Neruda was living abroad.
In 1943, Neruda returned to Chile, and in 1945 he was elected senator
of the Republic, also joining the Communist Party of Chile. Due to his
protests against President Gonzelez Videla's repressive policy against
striking miners in 1947, he had to live underground in his own country
for two years until he managed to leave in 1949. After living in different
European countries he returned home in 1952. A great deal of what he published
during that period bears the stamp of his political activities; one example
is Las Uvas y el Viento (1954), which can be regarded as the diary of
Neruda's exile. In Odas elementales (1954- 1959) his message is expanded
into a more extensive description of the world, where the objects of the
hymns - things, events and relations - are duly presented in alphabetic
form.
Neruda's production is exceptionally extensive. For example, his Obras
Completas, constantly republished, comprised 459 pages in 1951; in 1962
the number of pages was 1,925, and in 1968 it amounted to 3,237, in two
volumes. Among his works of the last few years can be mentioned Cien sonetos
de amor (1959), which includes poems dedicated to his wife Matilde Urrutia,
Memorial de Isla Negra, a poetic work of an autobiographic character in
five volumes, published on the occasion of his sixtieth birthday, Arte
de pajeros (1966), La Barcarola (1967), the play Fulgor y muerte de Joaquin
Murieta (1967), Las manos del dia (1968), Fin del mundo (1969), Las piedras
del cielo (1970), and La espada encendida.
Further works:
Geografia infructuosa/Barren
Geography (poetry), 1972
El mar y las campanas/The Sea and the Bells, tr. (poetry), 1973 Incitacion
al nixonicidio y alabanza de la revolucion chilena/A Call for the Destruction
of Nixon and Praise for the Chilean Revolution, tr. (poetry), 1974
El corazon
amarillo/The Yellow Heart (poetry), 1974
Defectos escogidos/Selected Waste Paper (poetry), 1974 Elegia/Elegy (poetry),
1974
Confieso que he vivido. Memorias/Memoirs, tr. (prose), 1974
Para nacer he nacido/Passions and Impressions, tr. (prose), 1978
From Nobel Lectures,
Literature 1968-1980.
Pablo Neruda died
in 1973.
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