Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Archipiélago sonoro, poemas sinfónicos. 1913; Ars-verba. 1913. En las zarzas del Horeb. 1913. El alma de los lirios. 1914; El rosal Pensante. 1914; La muerte del cóndor; del Poema de la tragedia y de la historia. 1914. Los parias; Pretéritas, Prólogo de R. Palacio Viso. 1915. Clepsidra roja. 1915? En las cimas. 1915? La demencia de Job ...
Born in the Andalusian city of Málaga in 1905, Altolaguirre's collaborative poets included Emilio Prados, Vicente Aleixandre, and Federico García Lorca.After completing law studies in Granada, Altolaguirre founded the magazine Ambos and returned to Málaga to start the printing shop Imprenta Sur ('Southern Press'), where he drew together many of his friends, publishing most of their early verse.
Poesia y Cantares; Poem for my mother (Poema para mi Madre). Premio Casa de la Cultura de Long Beach, 1996. Eres el comienzo y el final de mi poesia. Premio Casa de la Cultura de Long Beach, 1997. Ese, Su Guayaquil Viejo. 1995; Como me gustaria. La Batalla del Pichincha. Mis Montañas, las de California. Poesia en el Pent-house. Epicentro.
Flora Alejandra Pizarnik (29 April 1936 – 25 September 1972) was an Argentine poet. Her idiosyncratic and thematically introspective poetry has been considered "one of the most unusual bodies of work in Latin American literature", [1] and has been recognized and celebrated for its fixation on "the limitation of language, silence, the body, night, the nature of intimacy, madness, [and] death".
España: poema en cuatro angustias y una esperanza (1937) Cantos para soldados y sones para turistas (1937) El son entero (1947) Elegías (1948–1958) Tengo (1964) Poemas de amor (1964) El gran zoo (1967) La rueda dentada (1972) El diario que a diario (1972) Por el mar de las Antillas anda un barco de papel. Poemas para niños y mayores de ...
The Lonely Woman (Spanish: No encontré rosas para mi madre, lit. 'I Didn't Find Roses for My Mother'; French : Roses rouges et Piments verts , lit. 'Red Roses and Green Peppers'; Italian : Peccato mortale , lit.
Editor’s Note: Help is available if you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts or mental health matters. In the US: Call or text 988, the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.
Salomé Ureña Díaz de Henríquez (October 21, 1850 – March 6, 1897) was a Dominican poet and teacher, being one of the central figures of 19th-century lyrical poetry and advocator for women's education in the Dominican Republic, influenced by the positivist schools and the normal education of Eugenio María de Hostos, of whom she was an advantaged student.