Alfonso Cortés
Alfonso Cortés (9 December 1893 - 3 February 1969) was a Nicaraguan poet. He is often referred to as the most important poet after Rubén Darío (poet who initiated the Spanish-American literary movement known as modernismo (modernism)).[1] Before his death, he often said he was "less important than Darío, but more profound".[2]
Early life
Cortés was born in the colonial city of León, Nicaragua. At the age of 34, he moved into the house in which the famous and most celebrated Nicaraguan poet, Rubén Darío, spent his childhood. Cortés lost his mind on midnight of February 18, 1927 at the age of 34.[1] Cortés spent much of that year chained to the iron grillwork of his bedroom window as a result of his delirium growing violent. The next 25 years of Cortés life was spent in a mental hospital in Managua. Growing older and nearly at the end of his life Cortés was transferred to his sisters house in León where he eventually spent his last days and died in 1969 at the age of 75.[1]
Cortés had his moments of lucidity in which his family would unchain him and he would use that time to play guitar and write his poetry which he often wrote down in the margins of newspapers in a script so microscopic that they are hard to read without a magnifying glass. Song of Space was the first poem Cortés wrote after he went mad and it remains one of his most popular.[2]
After his death he was buried in the Cathedral of León next to the tomb of Rubén Darío.
Literary works
Poems
- La odisea del Istmo (1922)
- Poesías (1931)
- Tardes de oro (1934)
- Poemas eleusinos (1935)
- Las siete antorchas del sol (1952)
- 30 poemas de Alfonso (1952)
- Las rimas universales (1964)
- Las coplas del pueblo (1965)
- Las pumas del pasatiempo (1967)
- El poema cotidiano (1967)
- Treinta poemas (1968)
- Poemas (1971)
- Antología (1980)
- 30 poemas de Alfonso (1981)
- El tiempo es hambre y el espacio es frío (1981).
References
- 1 2 3 "Alfonso Cortés (1893 - 1969)". El Nuevo Diario (in Spanish). Retrieved 2007-07-26.
- 1 2 "A Tale Of Two Poets; Nicaragua's Passion For Poetry: Alfonso Cortés". Retrieved 2007-07-27.
External links
- Alfonso Cortés at nicaragua.com (in English)
- Alfonso Cortés at the Archive León Museum (in Spanish)
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