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Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer

Gustavo Adolfo Claudio Domínguez Bastida (17 February 1836 – 22 December 1870),[1] better known as Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer (Spanish pronunciation: [ɡusˈtaβo aˈðolfo ˈβekeɾ]), was a Spanish Romantic poet and writer (mostly short stories), also a playwright, literary columnist, and talented in drawing. Today he is considered one of the most important figures in Spanish literature, and is considered by some as the most read writer after Miguel de Cervantes.[2] He adopted the alias of Bécquer as his brother Valeriano Bécquer, a painter, had done earlier. He was associated with the romanticism and post-romanticism movements and wrote while realism was enjoying success in Spain. He was moderately well known during his life, but it was after his death that most of his works were published.[3][4] His best known works are the Rhymes and the Legends, usually published together as Rimas y leyendas. These poems and tales are essential to the study of Spanish literature and common reading for high-school students in Spanish-speaking countries.

Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer
Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer by his brother, Valeriano Bécquer
BornGustavo Adolfo Domínguez Bastida
(1836-02-17)17 February 1836
Seville, Spain
Died22 December 1870(1870-12-22) (aged 34)
Madrid, Spain
OccupationPoet, writer, journalist
NationalitySpanish
Signature

His work approached the traditional poetry and themes in a modern way, and he is considered the founder of modern Spanish lyricism. Bécquer's influence on 20th-century poets of the Spanish language can be felt in the works of Luis Cernuda, Octavio Paz, Giannina Braschi, Antonio Machado, and Juan Ramón Jiménez. Bécquer himself was influenced – both directly and indirectly — by Cervantes, Shakespeare,[5] Goethe,[6] and Heinrich Heine.[7]

Biography edit

Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer was born in 1836, in Sevilla, Spain, with the last name of Domínguez Bastida, but he chose his Flemish father's second last name of Bécquer, as the family was known around town. His father, José Domínguez Bécquer, who descended from an originally-Flemish family established in the Andalusian capital in the 16th century that was well respected in the city, was a painter of relatively good repute in his native town. His paintings were sought after, particularly among tourists visiting the area. José had a great talent, and this greatly influenced young Gustavo, who showed a love for painting and an innate ability for drawing and sketching at an early age. He was very talented, and continued drawing throughout his life, though it was never his main focus.

 
Glorieta de Bécquer in Seville, Spain

Bécquer was left an orphan at an early age: he lost his father at age 5, and his mother only 6 years later. Young Gustavo began his education at San Antonio Abad school, until he was admitted as a student of San Telmo school in 1846, a nautical institution. It was at that school where he met Narciso Campillo, with whom he built a strong friendship. It was also with Campillo that Bécquer began to show his literary vocation, as the two boys started writing while sharing time at San Telmo. A year later, the school was closed by royal order. Gustavo and his siblings were then taken in by their uncle, Don Juan de Vargas, who cared for the children as if they were his own. Shortly after, Gustavo went on to live with his godmother, Doña Manuela Monahay, whose extensive library provided young Bécquer with endless hours of entertainment, which Doña Manuela allowed with pleasure. During this period, Campillo remembers that the poet barely left his godmother's house, as he spent hours devouring the volumes of her library. Gustavo's godmother, a well-educated person and also well-to-do, supported his passion for study of the arts and history. However, she wanted Gustavo to have a profession, so in 1850 she got him admitted as a pupil into the studio of Don Antonio Cabral Bejarano, at the Santa Isabel de Hungría school. Gustavo worked at the studio for only two years, when he moved to his uncle Joaquin's studio and continued developing his skills alongside his brother Valeriano, who was already studying there. Gustavo and Valeriano became from this point very close friends, and they both influenced each other greatly throughout their lives. Luciano, another brother of the poet, also studied with them during this period. Studying the art of drawing did not distract Gustavo from his passion for poetry; furthermore, his uncle Joaquin paid for his Latin classes, which brought him closer to his beloved Horace, one of his earliest influences. Joaquin also noticed the great aptitude of his nephew for words, and encouraged him to pursue writing as a career, contrary to the designs of Doña Manuela, with whom Gustavo was still living at the time.

In 1853, at the age of seventeen, he moved to Madrid to follow his dream of making a name for himself as a poet. Along with his friends Narciso Campillo and Julio Nombela, both poets also, they had dreamed of moving to Madrid together and selling their poetry for good money, though reality proved to be quite different. Nombela was the first to leave for Madrid that year, alongside his family. After long arguments over the trip with Doña Manuela, who resisted the idea, Bécquer finally left for Madrid in October of that same year, alone and quite poor, except for the little money that his uncle provided for him. The third friend, Campillo, did not leave Seville until some time later.

 
Bécquer at 19

Life in Madrid was not easy for the poet. The dream of fortune that had guided his steps towards the city were replaced by a reality of poverty and disillusionment. The two friends were soon joined by Luis García Luna, also a poet from Seville, who shared the same dreams of greatness. The three began writing and trying to make themselves known as authors, without much luck. Bécquer, the only one of the three without a real job and a steady income, went to live with an acquaintance of Luna, Doña Soledad. A year later, in 1854, he moved to Toledo with his brother Valeriano, a lovely place in which he was able to write his book: "History of the Spanish temples". The poet was interested in Lord Byron and his "Hebrew Melodies" or his "Heine del Intermezzo", with Eulogio Florentino's help in the translation.

The poet died on 22 December 1870 from tuberculosis, an illness known as "the romantic illness" because of how common it was during the romantic period in Spain. Before this tragic sickness took his life away, Bécquer asked his good friend, Augusto Ferrán, also a poet, to burn all his letters and publish his poems instead, since he thought once he was dead, his work would be more valuable. His body was buried in Madrid, and afterwards was moved to Seville along with his brother's.

Early career edit

After several failed commercial attempts with his friends, the writer finally accepted a job as a writer for a small newspaper. This, however, did not last long, and soon Gustavo was out of a job again. It was then that, in 1855, Valeriano arrived in Madrid, and Gustavo went to live with his brother. They would never be apart after that.

After a few other unsuccessful attempts at publishing their work, Bécquer and Luna began working together writing comic plays for theater, as a means of making a living. This collaboration continued until 1860. At that time, Bécquer worked intensively on his belated project Historia de los templos de España (History of Spain's temples), the first volume of which saw the light of day in 1857. It was also during this period that he would meet the young Cuban poet Rodríguez Correa, who would later play a major role in collecting his works for posthumous publication. It was around this time, between 1857 and 1858, that Bécquer became ill, and was left to the care of his brother and friends. Shortly after, he met by chance a girl by the name of Julia Espín, with whom he fell deeply in love, and who also served as an inspiration for much of his romantic poetry. This love, however, was unrequited.

Around 1860, Rodríguez Correa found Bécquer a government position, from where he was fired shortly after for spending his time writing and drawing while on the job.

Love life and literary career edit

In 1861, Bécquer met Casta Esteban Navarro, and married her in May 1861. Bécquer was believed to have had a romance with another girl named Elisa Guillén shortly before the marriage, which is also thought to have been arranged, (if not somewhat forced), by the parents of the girl. The poet was not happy in the marriage, and took any chance he got to follow his brother Valeriano on his constant trips. Casta began to take up with a man with whom she had had a relationship shortly before marrying Bécquer, something that was later blamed on Bécquer's trips and lack of attention by Casta's acquaintances. The poet wrote very little about Casta, as most of his inspiration at this time, (as it is the case with the famous rima LIII), came from his feelings towards Elisa Guillén. Casta and Gustavo had three children: Gregorio Gustavo Adolfo, Jorge, and Emilio Eusebio. The third child was possibly fruit of the extramarital relations of Casta.

In 1865, Bécquer stopped writing for the prolific literary section of the newspaper El Contemporáneo, where he had finally gained fame as a writer, and began writing for two others, El Museo Universal and Los Tiempos, the latter founded after El Contemporáneo was dissolved. He had also been appointed to a government post, fiscal de novelas (supervisor attorney for novels and published literature) by his friend, patron and benefactor, founder of both newspapers El Contemporáneo and Los Tiempos, former President of Spain, and the then Spanish Minister of Home Affairs, Luis González Bravo. This was a well-paid job, which Bécquer held on and off until 1868. From this government job he was able to get his brother Valeriano a government pension as an art painter of "Spanish regional folk costumes and traditions". During this period, the poet concentrated on finishing his compilations of poems Rimas (Rhymes) and Libro de los gorriones (Book of the Sparrows), so he did not publish a great deal of his works. A completed manuscript of his poems was given for its publication to Luis González Bravo, (President of Spain for a second time in 1868), as he had supportively offered so to Bécquer, but regrettably it was lost during the political revolution of 1868, which hastily exiled President Luis González Bravo and Queen Isabella II of Spain to France. It was at this time that the poet left Spain for Paris, although he returned not long after. By 1869, the poet and his brother went back to Madrid together, along with Gustavo's sons. Here, he started re-writing the book that had gone missing, due to his loyal benefactor Luis González Bravo's forced exile to France the year before. Gustavo was, by then, living a bohemian life, as his friends later described. With the sole purpose of putting bread on the table, Bécquer went back to writing for El museo universal, and then left to take the job of literary director of a new artistic magazine called La ilustración de Madrid. Valeriano also collaborated with this project. Gustavo's publications in this magazine consisted mostly of short texts to accompany his brother's illustrations. Around this time, between 1868 and 1869, the two brothers published a book of satiric and erotic illustrations under a pseudonym, which humorously critiqued the life of royalty in Spain, called Los Borbones en pelotas.

 
Title page of Bécquer's 'Obras' (1871), First Edition

In 1870, Valeriano fell ill and died on September 23. This had a terrible impact on Gustavo, who suffered a serious depression as a result. After publishing a few short works in the magazine, the poet also became gravely ill and died in poverty in Madrid, on December 22, almost three months after his beloved brother. The cause of death is debated: while his friends described symptoms of pulmonary tuberculosis, a later study indicates that he may have died of liver complications. Some of his last words are said to be "Acordaos de mis niños" ("remember-don't forget- my children".)

After his death, his friend Rodríguez Correa, with the collaboration of Campillo, Nombela, and Augusto Ferrán, collected and organized his manuscripts for publication, as a way to help the widow and children of the poet. The first edition of their effort was published in 1871, and a second volume was published six years later. Further revisions came out on the editions released in 1881, 1885, and 1898.

In such prose tales as El Rayo de Luna, El Beso, and La Rosa de Pasión, Bécquer is manifestly influenced by E.T.A. Hoffmann, and as a poet he has analogies with Heine. His work is unfinished and unequal, but it is singularly free from the rhetoric characteristic of his native Andalusia and, according to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, its lyrical ardor is of a beautiful sweetness and sincerity.[8] He also wrote in an epistolary style: Cartas desde mi Celda – written during his travels to Veruela's Monastery – or La Mujer de Piedra or little theatre plays La novia y el pantalón. It is not so well known that he was an excellent graphic artist. Most of his work concentrated on spontaneity of love and the solitude of nature. His work, and in particular his Rimas, are considered some of the most important work in Spanish poetry, greatly influencing the following generations of writers, notably authors like Antonio Machado and Juan Ramón Jiménez, writers belonging to the Generation of '27, such as Federico García Lorca and Jorge Guillén, and many Hispano-American writers like Rubén Darío.

Works edit

Rhymes (Rimas) edit

Bécquer's poems were recited from memory by his contemporaries, and greatly influenced the generations afterwards. Modeled in brief stanza forms, both musical and erotic, Bécquer's 77 Rimas came to a few thousand lines, considered the foundation of modern Spanish poetry. Luis Cernuda wrote: 'There is in Bécquer an essential poet quality: that of expressing with a clarity and firmness that only classics have... Bécquer plays in our modern poetry a role equivalent to Garcilaso's in our classic poetry: that of creating a new tradition, which he bestows upon his descendants. His book was composed after his death from many sources, the primary one being a manuscript by Bécquer himself, The Book of Sparrows.

 
Autograph of Bécquer's Rima XXVII

Birds are a motif that shows up frequently in Bécquer's canon, such as in "Rima LIII" (Rhyme 53), where swallows appear as a sign of the end to a passionate relationship.

The refrain "¡Esas... no volverán!" appears in the 20th novel Yo-Yo Boing! by Puerto Rican poet Giannina Braschi, who references Bécquer's swallows to describe the sorrow and angst of a failed romance.

In Rhymes (Rhyme 21) Bécquer wrote one of the most famous poems in the Spanish language. The poem can be read as a response to a lover who asked what was poetry:

Legends edit

The Legends are a variety of romantic tales. As the name implies, most have a legendary tone. Some depict supernatural and semi-religious (Christian) events, like The Mount of the Souls, The Green Eyes, The Rose of the Passion (a blood libel) with references to the Holy Child of la Guardia and The miserere (a religious song). Others cover more or less normal events from a romantic view, like The Moonlight Ray and Three Dates.

The Leyendas (Legends) are:

  • El caudillo de las manos rojas, 1858.
  • La vuelta del combate, 1858. (Continued: El caudillo de las manos rojas).
  • La cruz del diablo, 1860.
  • La ajorca de oro, 1861.
  • El monte de las ánimas, 1861.
  • Los ojos verdes, 1861.
  • Maese Pérez, el organista, 1861.
  • Creed en Dios, 1862.
  • El rayo de luna, 1862.
  • El Miserere, 1862.
  • Tres fechas, 1862.
  • El Cristo de la calavera, 1862.
  • El gnomo, 1863.
  • La cueva de la mora, 1863.
  • La promesa, 1863.
  • La corza blanca, 1863.
  • El beso, 1863.
  • La Rosa de Pasión, 1864.
  • La creación, 1861.
  • ¡Es raro!, 1861.
  • El aderezo de las esmeraldas, 1862.
  • La venta de los gatos, 1862.
  • Apólogo, 1863.
  • Un boceto del natural, 1863.
  • Un lance pesado.
  • Memorias de un pavo, 1865.
  • Las hojas secas.
  • Historia de una mariposa y una araña.
  • La voz del silencio, 1923, Released by Fernando Iglesias Figueroa.
  • La fe salva, 1923, Released by Fernando Iglesias Figueroa.
  • La mujer de piedra, Unfinished.
  • Amores prohibidos.
  • El rey Alberto.

Narrative edit

He also wrote some narrative pieces in prose, "Narraciones", which are loaded with imagination and implausibility, such as "Memorias de un Pavo" (Memoirs of a Turkey) in which, as the title implies, he describes the trip of a turkey from its home farm to the city, and its purchase to be eaten, when its writings are discovered inside the already cooked body.

References edit

  • Díaz, José Pedro. "Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer: vida y poesía". 2da ed. Madrid: Gredos, 1964.
  • Blanc, Mario A. "Las rimas de Bécquer: su modernidad". 1ra ed. Madrid: Pliegos, 1988.
  • Montesinos, Rafael. "Bécquer: Biografía e imagen". Barcelona: RM, 1977.
  • Carlos BOUSOÑO, "Las pluralidades paralelísticas en Bécquer", en ALONSO, Dámaso y BOUSOÑO, Carlos, Seis calas en la expresión literaria española, Madrid, Gredos, 1951.
  • Giannina Braschi, "La poesía de Bécquer: El tiempo de los objetos o los espacios en la luz", Universidad Estatal de Nueva York-Stony Brook, 1981.
  • David K.Heerrzberger, "The contrasting poetic theories of Poe and Bécquer", Romance Notes, 21, (3), 1980.
  • William Samuel Hendrix, "From the Spanish of Gustavo Bécquer", Hispania, California, V, 1922.
  • Pablo Muñoz Covarrubias, "Garcilaso de la Vega y la Crítica Literaria de Luis Cernuda". El Colegio de México.

References edit

  1. ^ "Biografía de Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer - Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer". Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  2. ^ "´Bécquer es el escritor más leído después de Cervantes´". La Provincia. Diario de las Palmas (in Spanish). July 28, 2011. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  3. ^ Brown, Rica (1969-12-30). "La fama póstuma de Bécquer y nuevos datos". Revista de Filología Española (in Spanish). 52 (1/4): 525–535. doi:10.3989/rfe.1969.v52.i1/4.815. ISSN 1988-8538.
  4. ^ Palenque, Marta (2009-06-01). "Fama y fortuna de Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer". Bulletin hispanique. Université Michel de Montaigne Bordeaux (in Spanish) (111–1): 165–193. doi:10.4000/bulletinhispanique.926. ISSN 0007-4640.
  5. ^ Rubio Jiménez, Jesús (January 26, 2011). La fama póstuma de Gustavo Adolfo y Valeriano Bécquer. Universidad de Zaragoza. p. 12. ISBN 9788415031666.
  6. ^ Magallanes Latas, Fernando. Actualidad de Goethe (PDF) (in Spanish).
  7. ^ "Life & works of Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer". Classical Spanish Books. 2011. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  8. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bécquer, Gustavo Adolfo". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 611.

External links edit

  • Complete Works of Bécquer, in Spanish
  • An annotated edition of Rhymes , in Spanish
  • Works by Gustavo Adolfo Becquer at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer at Internet Archive
  • Works by Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Obra de Bécquer 2007-12-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • Audiobooks. Read, listen along and download the Rhymes and Legends in Spanish. (Some in English) Free

gustavo, adolfo, bécquer, confused, with, gustavo, adolfo, becker, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, october, 20. Not to be confused with Gustavo Adolfo Becker This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Dominguez and the second or maternal family name is Bastida Gustavo Adolfo Claudio Dominguez Bastida 17 February 1836 22 December 1870 1 better known as Gustavo Adolfo Becquer Spanish pronunciation ɡusˈtabo aˈdolfo ˈbekeɾ was a Spanish Romantic poet and writer mostly short stories also a playwright literary columnist and talented in drawing Today he is considered one of the most important figures in Spanish literature and is considered by some as the most read writer after Miguel de Cervantes 2 He adopted the alias of Becquer as his brother Valeriano Becquer a painter had done earlier He was associated with the romanticism and post romanticism movements and wrote while realism was enjoying success in Spain He was moderately well known during his life but it was after his death that most of his works were published 3 4 His best known works are the Rhymes and the Legends usually published together as Rimas y leyendas These poems and tales are essential to the study of Spanish literature and common reading for high school students in Spanish speaking countries Gustavo Adolfo BecquerGustavo Adolfo Becquer by his brother Valeriano BecquerBornGustavo Adolfo Dominguez Bastida 1836 02 17 17 February 1836Seville SpainDied22 December 1870 1870 12 22 aged 34 Madrid SpainOccupationPoet writer journalistNationalitySpanishSignatureHis work approached the traditional poetry and themes in a modern way and he is considered the founder of modern Spanish lyricism Becquer s influence on 20th century poets of the Spanish language can be felt in the works of Luis Cernuda Octavio Paz Giannina Braschi Antonio Machado and Juan Ramon Jimenez Becquer himself was influenced both directly and indirectly by Cervantes Shakespeare 5 Goethe 6 and Heinrich Heine 7 Contents 1 Biography 2 Early career 3 Love life and literary career 4 Works 4 1 Rhymes Rimas 4 2 Legends 4 3 Narrative 5 References 6 References 7 External linksBiography editGustavo Adolfo Becquer was born in 1836 in Sevilla Spain with the last name of Dominguez Bastida but he chose his Flemish father s second last name of Becquer as the family was known around town His father Jose Dominguez Becquer who descended from an originally Flemish family established in the Andalusian capital in the 16th century that was well respected in the city was a painter of relatively good repute in his native town His paintings were sought after particularly among tourists visiting the area Jose had a great talent and this greatly influenced young Gustavo who showed a love for painting and an innate ability for drawing and sketching at an early age He was very talented and continued drawing throughout his life though it was never his main focus nbsp Glorieta de Becquer in Seville SpainBecquer was left an orphan at an early age he lost his father at age 5 and his mother only 6 years later Young Gustavo began his education at San Antonio Abad school until he was admitted as a student of San Telmo school in 1846 a nautical institution It was at that school where he met Narciso Campillo with whom he built a strong friendship It was also with Campillo that Becquer began to show his literary vocation as the two boys started writing while sharing time at San Telmo A year later the school was closed by royal order Gustavo and his siblings were then taken in by their uncle Don Juan de Vargas who cared for the children as if they were his own Shortly after Gustavo went on to live with his godmother Dona Manuela Monahay whose extensive library provided young Becquer with endless hours of entertainment which Dona Manuela allowed with pleasure During this period Campillo remembers that the poet barely left his godmother s house as he spent hours devouring the volumes of her library Gustavo s godmother a well educated person and also well to do supported his passion for study of the arts and history However she wanted Gustavo to have a profession so in 1850 she got him admitted as a pupil into the studio of Don Antonio Cabral Bejarano at the Santa Isabel de Hungria school Gustavo worked at the studio for only two years when he moved to his uncle Joaquin s studio and continued developing his skills alongside his brother Valeriano who was already studying there Gustavo and Valeriano became from this point very close friends and they both influenced each other greatly throughout their lives Luciano another brother of the poet also studied with them during this period Studying the art of drawing did not distract Gustavo from his passion for poetry furthermore his uncle Joaquin paid for his Latin classes which brought him closer to his beloved Horace one of his earliest influences Joaquin also noticed the great aptitude of his nephew for words and encouraged him to pursue writing as a career contrary to the designs of Dona Manuela with whom Gustavo was still living at the time In 1853 at the age of seventeen he moved to Madrid to follow his dream of making a name for himself as a poet Along with his friends Narciso Campillo and Julio Nombela both poets also they had dreamed of moving to Madrid together and selling their poetry for good money though reality proved to be quite different Nombela was the first to leave for Madrid that year alongside his family After long arguments over the trip with Dona Manuela who resisted the idea Becquer finally left for Madrid in October of that same year alone and quite poor except for the little money that his uncle provided for him The third friend Campillo did not leave Seville until some time later nbsp Becquer at 19Life in Madrid was not easy for the poet The dream of fortune that had guided his steps towards the city were replaced by a reality of poverty and disillusionment The two friends were soon joined by Luis Garcia Luna also a poet from Seville who shared the same dreams of greatness The three began writing and trying to make themselves known as authors without much luck Becquer the only one of the three without a real job and a steady income went to live with an acquaintance of Luna Dona Soledad A year later in 1854 he moved to Toledo with his brother Valeriano a lovely place in which he was able to write his book History of the Spanish temples The poet was interested in Lord Byron and his Hebrew Melodies or his Heine del Intermezzo with Eulogio Florentino s help in the translation The poet died on 22 December 1870 from tuberculosis an illness known as the romantic illness because of how common it was during the romantic period in Spain Before this tragic sickness took his life away Becquer asked his good friend Augusto Ferran also a poet to burn all his letters and publish his poems instead since he thought once he was dead his work would be more valuable His body was buried in Madrid and afterwards was moved to Seville along with his brother s Early career editAfter several failed commercial attempts with his friends the writer finally accepted a job as a writer for a small newspaper This however did not last long and soon Gustavo was out of a job again It was then that in 1855 Valeriano arrived in Madrid and Gustavo went to live with his brother They would never be apart after that After a few other unsuccessful attempts at publishing their work Becquer and Luna began working together writing comic plays for theater as a means of making a living This collaboration continued until 1860 At that time Becquer worked intensively on his belated project Historia de los templos de Espana History of Spain s temples the first volume of which saw the light of day in 1857 It was also during this period that he would meet the young Cuban poet Rodriguez Correa who would later play a major role in collecting his works for posthumous publication It was around this time between 1857 and 1858 that Becquer became ill and was left to the care of his brother and friends Shortly after he met by chance a girl by the name of Julia Espin with whom he fell deeply in love and who also served as an inspiration for much of his romantic poetry This love however was unrequited Around 1860 Rodriguez Correa found Becquer a government position from where he was fired shortly after for spending his time writing and drawing while on the job Love life and literary career editIn 1861 Becquer met Casta Esteban Navarro and married her in May 1861 Becquer was believed to have had a romance with another girl named Elisa Guillen shortly before the marriage which is also thought to have been arranged if not somewhat forced by the parents of the girl The poet was not happy in the marriage and took any chance he got to follow his brother Valeriano on his constant trips Casta began to take up with a man with whom she had had a relationship shortly before marrying Becquer something that was later blamed on Becquer s trips and lack of attention by Casta s acquaintances The poet wrote very little about Casta as most of his inspiration at this time as it is the case with the famous rima LIII came from his feelings towards Elisa Guillen Casta and Gustavo had three children Gregorio Gustavo Adolfo Jorge and Emilio Eusebio The third child was possibly fruit of the extramarital relations of Casta In 1865 Becquer stopped writing for the prolific literary section of the newspaper El Contemporaneo where he had finally gained fame as a writer and began writing for two others El Museo Universal and Los Tiempos the latter founded after El Contemporaneo was dissolved He had also been appointed to a government post fiscal de novelas supervisor attorney for novels and published literature by his friend patron and benefactor founder of both newspapers El Contemporaneo and Los Tiempos former President of Spain and the then Spanish Minister of Home Affairs Luis Gonzalez Bravo This was a well paid job which Becquer held on and off until 1868 From this government job he was able to get his brother Valeriano a government pension as an art painter of Spanish regional folk costumes and traditions During this period the poet concentrated on finishing his compilations of poems Rimas Rhymes and Libro de los gorriones Book of the Sparrows so he did not publish a great deal of his works A completed manuscript of his poems was given for its publication to Luis Gonzalez Bravo President of Spain for a second time in 1868 as he had supportively offered so to Becquer but regrettably it was lost during the political revolution of 1868 which hastily exiled President Luis Gonzalez Bravo and Queen Isabella II of Spain to France It was at this time that the poet left Spain for Paris although he returned not long after By 1869 the poet and his brother went back to Madrid together along with Gustavo s sons Here he started re writing the book that had gone missing due to his loyal benefactor Luis Gonzalez Bravo s forced exile to France the year before Gustavo was by then living a bohemian life as his friends later described With the sole purpose of putting bread on the table Becquer went back to writing for El museo universal and then left to take the job of literary director of a new artistic magazine called La ilustracion de Madrid Valeriano also collaborated with this project Gustavo s publications in this magazine consisted mostly of short texts to accompany his brother s illustrations Around this time between 1868 and 1869 the two brothers published a book of satiric and erotic illustrations under a pseudonym which humorously critiqued the life of royalty in Spain called Los Borbones en pelotas nbsp Title page of Becquer s Obras 1871 First EditionIn 1870 Valeriano fell ill and died on September 23 This had a terrible impact on Gustavo who suffered a serious depression as a result After publishing a few short works in the magazine the poet also became gravely ill and died in poverty in Madrid on December 22 almost three months after his beloved brother The cause of death is debated while his friends described symptoms of pulmonary tuberculosis a later study indicates that he may have died of liver complications Some of his last words are said to be Acordaos de mis ninos remember don t forget my children After his death his friend Rodriguez Correa with the collaboration of Campillo Nombela and Augusto Ferran collected and organized his manuscripts for publication as a way to help the widow and children of the poet The first edition of their effort was published in 1871 and a second volume was published six years later Further revisions came out on the editions released in 1881 1885 and 1898 In such prose tales as El Rayo de Luna El Beso and La Rosa de Pasion Becquer is manifestly influenced by E T A Hoffmann and as a poet he has analogies with Heine His work is unfinished and unequal but it is singularly free from the rhetoric characteristic of his native Andalusia and according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition its lyrical ardor is of a beautiful sweetness and sincerity 8 He also wrote in an epistolary style Cartas desde mi Celda written during his travels to Veruela s Monastery or La Mujer de Piedra or little theatre plays La novia y el pantalon It is not so well known that he was an excellent graphic artist Most of his work concentrated on spontaneity of love and the solitude of nature His work and in particular his Rimas are considered some of the most important work in Spanish poetry greatly influencing the following generations of writers notably authors like Antonio Machado and Juan Ramon Jimenez writers belonging to the Generation of 27 such as Federico Garcia Lorca and Jorge Guillen and many Hispano American writers like Ruben Dario Works editRhymes Rimas edit Becquer s poems were recited from memory by his contemporaries and greatly influenced the generations afterwards Modeled in brief stanza forms both musical and erotic Becquer s 77 Rimas came to a few thousand lines considered the foundation of modern Spanish poetry Luis Cernuda wrote There is in Becquer an essential poet quality that of expressing with a clarity and firmness that only classics have Becquer plays in our modern poetry a role equivalent to Garcilaso s in our classic poetry that of creating a new tradition which he bestows upon his descendants His book was composed after his death from many sources the primary one being a manuscript by Becquer himself The Book of Sparrows nbsp Autograph of Becquer s Rima XXVIIBirds are a motif that shows up frequently in Becquer s canon such as in Rima LIII Rhyme 53 where swallows appear as a sign of the end to a passionate relationship Volveran las oscuras golondrinas En tu balcon sus nidos a colgar Y otra vez con el ala a sus cristales Jugando llamaran Pero aquellas que el vuelo refrenaban Tu hermosura y mi dicha a contemplar Aquellas que aprendieron nuestros nombres Esas no volveran The dark swallows will return to hang their nests upon your balcony And once more with their wings to its windows Playing they will call But the ones that used to slow their flight to behold your beauty and my bliss The ones that learned our names Those will not return The refrain Esas no volveran appears in the 20th novel Yo Yo Boing by Puerto Rican poet Giannina Braschi who references Becquer s swallows to describe the sorrow and angst of a failed romance In Rhymes Rhyme 21 Becquer wrote one of the most famous poems in the Spanish language The poem can be read as a response to a lover who asked what was poetry Que es poesia dices mientras clavas en mi pupila tu pupila azul Que es poesia Y tu me lo preguntas Poesia eres tu What is poetry you ask while fixing your blue pupil on mine What is poetry And you are asking me Poetry is you Legends edit The Legends are a variety of romantic tales As the name implies most have a legendary tone Some depict supernatural and semi religious Christian events like The Mount of the Souls The Green Eyes The Rose of the Passion a blood libel with references to the Holy Child of la Guardia and The miserere a religious song Others cover more or less normal events from a romantic view like The Moonlight Ray and Three Dates The Leyendas Legends are El caudillo de las manos rojas 1858 La vuelta del combate 1858 Continued El caudillo de las manos rojas La cruz del diablo 1860 La ajorca de oro 1861 El monte de las animas 1861 Los ojos verdes 1861 Maese Perez el organista 1861 Creed en Dios 1862 El rayo de luna 1862 El Miserere 1862 Tres fechas 1862 El Cristo de la calavera 1862 El gnomo 1863 La cueva de la mora 1863 La promesa 1863 La corza blanca 1863 El beso 1863 La Rosa de Pasion 1864 La creacion 1861 Es raro 1861 El aderezo de las esmeraldas 1862 La venta de los gatos 1862 Apologo 1863 Un boceto del natural 1863 Un lance pesado Memorias de un pavo 1865 Las hojas secas Historia de una mariposa y una arana La voz del silencio 1923 Released by Fernando Iglesias Figueroa La fe salva 1923 Released by Fernando Iglesias Figueroa La mujer de piedra Unfinished Amores prohibidos El rey Alberto Narrative edit He also wrote some narrative pieces in prose Narraciones which are loaded with imagination and implausibility such as Memorias de un Pavo Memoirs of a Turkey in which as the title implies he describes the trip of a turkey from its home farm to the city and its purchase to be eaten when its writings are discovered inside the already cooked body References edit nbsp Spanish Wikisource has original text related to this article Gustavo Adolfo Becquer nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gustavo Adolfo Becquer Diaz Jose Pedro Gustavo Adolfo Becquer vida y poesia 2da ed Madrid Gredos 1964 Blanc Mario A Las rimas de Becquer su modernidad 1ra ed Madrid Pliegos 1988 Montesinos Rafael Becquer Biografia e imagen Barcelona RM 1977 Carlos BOUSONO Las pluralidades paralelisticas en Becquer en ALONSO Damaso y BOUSONO Carlos Seis calas en la expresion literaria espanola Madrid Gredos 1951 Giannina Braschi La poesia de Becquer El tiempo de los objetos o los espacios en la luz Universidad Estatal de Nueva York Stony Brook 1981 David K Heerrzberger The contrasting poetic theories of Poe and Becquer Romance Notes 21 3 1980 William Samuel Hendrix From the Spanish of Gustavo Becquer Hispania California V 1922 Pablo Munoz Covarrubias Garcilaso de la Vega y la Critica Literaria de Luis Cernuda El Colegio de Mexico References edit Biografia de Gustavo Adolfo Becquer Gustavo Adolfo Becquer Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes in Spanish Retrieved 2023 05 25 Becquer es el escritor mas leido despues de Cervantes La Provincia Diario de las Palmas in Spanish July 28 2011 Retrieved February 22 2018 Brown Rica 1969 12 30 La fama postuma de Becquer y nuevos datos Revista de Filologia Espanola in Spanish 52 1 4 525 535 doi 10 3989 rfe 1969 v52 i1 4 815 ISSN 1988 8538 Palenque Marta 2009 06 01 Fama y fortuna de Gustavo Adolfo Becquer Bulletin hispanique Universite Michel de Montaigne Bordeaux in Spanish 111 1 165 193 doi 10 4000 bulletinhispanique 926 ISSN 0007 4640 Rubio Jimenez Jesus January 26 2011 La fama postuma de Gustavo Adolfo y Valeriano Becquer Universidad de Zaragoza p 12 ISBN 9788415031666 Magallanes Latas Fernando Actualidad de Goethe PDF in Spanish Life amp works of Gustavo Adolfo Becquer Classical Spanish Books 2011 Retrieved February 22 2018 nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Becquer Gustavo Adolfo Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 611 External links editComplete Works of Becquer in Spanish An annotated edition of Rhymes in Spanish Works by Gustavo Adolfo Becquer at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Gustavo Adolfo Becquer at Internet Archive Works by Gustavo Adolfo Becquer at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Obra de Becquer Archived 2007 12 23 at the Wayback Machine Audiobooks Read listen along and download the Rhymes and Legends in Spanish Some in English Free Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gustavo Adolfo Becquer amp oldid 1181123236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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