西班牙 人物列錶
德·拉·剋魯斯 Saint John of the Cross德·拉·維加 Garcilaso de la Vega
貝剋爾 Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer貢戈拉 Luis de Gongora y Argote
希梅內斯 Juan Ramon Jimenez馬查多 Antonio Machado
烏納穆諾 Miguel de Unamuno洛爾迦 Federico Garcia Lorca
阿萊桑德雷 Vincente Aleixandre拉法埃爾·阿爾維蒂 Rafael Alberti
薩利納斯 Pedro Salinas迪埃戈 Gerardo Diego
阿隆索 Damaso Alonso紀廉 Jorge Guillén
埃爾南德斯 Miguel Hernandez塔倫斯 Jenaro Talens
佩德羅•阿爾莫多瓦 Pedro Almodovar馬裏奧·魯納 马里奥鲁纳
馬利亞·埃赫尼亞·林孔 Maria Eugenia Rieōn塞萬提斯 Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
剋拉林 Leopoldo Alas伊巴涅斯 Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
薩爾瓦多·達利 Salvador Dali茱莉婭•納瓦羅 Julia Navarro
巴爾塔沙·葛拉西安 Baltasar Gracián鬍安·岡薩雷斯·德·門多薩 Juan González de Mendoza
約翰·莫爾丁菲爾·柯樂
羅貝托·波拉尼奧達索·薩爾迪瓦爾
茱蒂絲·耶特林德茱莉婭·納瓦羅
弗裏茨·馬剋盧普費爾南多·德裏亞斯迪貝斯
紀廉 Jorge Guillén
西班牙  (1893年1984年)

詩詞《詩選 anthology》   

閱讀紀廉 Jorge Guillén在诗海的作品!!!
  主要作品有《聖歌》、《吶喊》、《我們的空氣》和《其他詩歌》等。


  Jorge Guillén y Álvarez (January 18, 1893 – February 6, 1984) was a Spanish poet, a member of the Generation of '27.
  
  Biography
  Jorge Guillén was born in Valladolid. His life paralleled that of his friend Pedro Salinas, whom he succeeded as a Spanish teaching assistant at the Collège de Sorbonne in the University of Paris from 1917 to 1923. He was also a professor at the University of Murcia from 1925 to 1929, Oxford University from 1929 to 1931, and the University of Seville from 1932 to 1938. Exiled, he was forced to establish himself in the United States to continue his postsecondary teaching. He was a professor of Spanish at Wellesley College from 1941 to 1967.[1] He retired to Italy, where he married for the second time. He later moved to the city of Málaga. In 1977, he was awarded the Miguel de Cervantes Prize, one of the most prestigious prizes for Spanish-language writers. He died in Málaga in 1984, age 91.
  
  
  Analysis of his work
  Because of his inclination to pure poetry, some critics consider Guillén to be a disciple of poet Juan Ramón Jiménez. Guillén broke into the literary scene at a relatively late age: his first book, Cántico, was published when he was 35 years old.
  
  Cántico was initially published in the Revista de Occidente and included only 75 poems. Three successively larger editions were later published. The final version, published in 1950 in Buenos Aires, consisted of 334 poems divided into five sections: Al aire de tu vuelo, Las horas situadas, El pájaro en la mano, Aquí mismo and Pleno ser. In this work, he basked in the joy of existence, the harmony of the universe, the peak of humanity, and the integration of the poet into a universe of perfection where one more often finds himself loved. Optimism and serenity characterize the poetry of his first book.
  
  With the experience of the Spanish Civil War, he wrote his second book of poetry, Clamor. This second work shows an awareness for the temporary nature of life and allows the introduction of the negative side of history: misery, war, pain, death. It is composed of three parts: Maremágnum (1957), whose central focus - Luzbel desconcertado and La hermosa y los excéntricos - presented a lack of harmony; Que van a dar en el mar (1960), where the idea of the continuity brought by death is developed; and A la altura de las circumstancias (1963), where the struggle to re-establish balance appears. If Cántico exalted the perfection of creation, Clamor tore it down. In spite of this, the book was not perceived as an overly anguished or pessimistic work because in it Guillén re-assesses his will to live.
  
  Homenaje was published in 1967. As it is indicated in its title, Guillén honoured outstanding people of the world of art and science using the techniques of dramatic monologue and of imagery.
  
  He gave the title Aire nuestro to the compilation of his three great poetry books prior to 1968. He would later publish Y otros poemas (1973) and Final (1982).
  
  The complexity of Guillén's work resides in his ideal of pure poetry, which can be summarised as:
  
  Removal of anecdotes;
  Transforming adjectives into nouns;
  Lack of verbs;
  Linguistical accuracy; and
  Thematic concentration.
  
  Poetic Work
  Cántico (75 poems), M., Revista de Occidente, 1928
  Cántico (125 poems), M., Cruz y Raya, 1936
  Cántico (270 poems), México, Litoral, 1945
  Cántico (334 poems), Bs. As., Sudamericana, 1950
  Huerto de Melibea, M., Ínsula, 1954
  Del amanecer y el despertar, Valladolid, 1956
  Clamor. Maremagnun, Bs. As., Sudamericana, 1957
  Lugar de Lázaro, Málaga, Col. A quien conmigo va, 1957
  Clamor... Que van a dar en la mar, Bs. As., Sudamericana, 1960
  Historia Natural, Palma de Mallorca, Papeles de Sons Armadans, 1960
  Las tentaciones de Antonio, Florencia/Santander, Graf. Hermanos Bedia, 1962
  Según las horas, Puerto Rico, Editorial Universitaria, 1962
  Clamor. A la altura de las circunstancias, Bs. As., Sudamericana, 1963
  Homenaje. Reunión de vidas, Milán, All'Insegna del Pesce d'oro, 1967
  Aire nuestro: Cántico, Clamor, Homenaje, Milán, All'Insegna del Pesce d'oro, 1968
  Guirnalda civil, Cambridge, Halty Eferguson, 1970
  Al margen, M., Visor, 1972
  Y otros poemas, Bs. As., Muchnik, 1973
  Convivencia, M., Turner, 1975
  Final, B., Barral, 1981
  La expresión, Ferrol, Sociedad de Cultura Valle-Inclán, 1981
  Guillén also translated Le cimetière marin (French: The aquatic cemetery) by Paul Valery (M., Paris, Bs. As., 1930).
  
  
  See also
  Miguel de Cervantes Prize
  Pedro Salinas
  Juan Ramón Jiménez
  
  References
  ^ Jorge Guillen Is Dead at 91; A Spanish Poet and Teacher - New York Times
    

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