Fernando Pessoa - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
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 Fernando Pessoa
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Fernando Pessoa (1888 - 1935) was born in Lisbon
and is regarded today as the greatest Portuguese poet
since Camoens. Pessoa died in 1935 leaving only one book
of poems published in Portuguese under his own name. He
wrote under a number of pseudonyms in several different
styles: as Alvaro de Campos, Alberto Caeiro and Ricardo
Reis.
At the age of seven, Pessoa accompanied his mother to
Durban where her second husband, Commander Joao Miguel
Rosa had been posted as Portuguese Consul. Fernando Pessoa
went to the West Street Convent School where he first
learnt to read and speak English. In 1899 he was enrolled
at Durban High School and three years later, after
spending a year in Portugal and Azores, enrolled at
Durban's Commercial School. The English essay he wrote for
his entrance examination to the University of Good Hope
won him the Queen Victoria Prize. After successfully
completing the Intermediate Bachelor of Arts degree at
Cape Town University in 1905, he returned to Portugal,
never to return to South Africa.
In 1987 a commemorative statue of Pessoa, funded by the
Antonio de Almeida Foundation, was erected on the corner
of Pine and Gardiner Streets in Durban.
(Adapted from John Torres Fernando Pessoa - the Man
with Four Faces)
View locality map for
Fernando Pessoa's
Statue, Durban.
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 Statue of Fernando Pessoa in Durban
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Selected WorkAmongst the poems written while he was still a schoolboy
in Durban, is the following sonnet, denouncing Joseph
Chamberlain for being the cause of the Anglo-Boer War.
Durban poet Douglas Livingstone commented on this poem: '
...the poet, a self-confessed imperialist all his life, a
staunch Anglophile drunk on the older English poets of the
school curriculum, was reacting angrily to the Empire's
war on a 'farmer race', in the middle of chauvinistic,
stridently pro-British Durban. Here was Albion at its most
perfidious, and poem's sentiments surprisingly accord with
uncommon liberal convictions obtaining in England but
relatively unknown - and certainly not fashionable - in
English-speaking Natal at the time. '(In fact, the editor
[of the Natal Mercury] who saw the poem decided against
its publication.)'
Joseph Chamberlain
Their blood on thy head, whom the Afric waste
Saw struggling, puppets with unwilful hand,
Brother and brother: their bought souls shall brand
Thine own with horrors. Be thy name erased
From the full mouths of men: nor be there traced
To thee one glory of thy parent land:
But 'fore us, as 'fore God, e'er do thou stand
In that thy deed forevermore disgraced.
Where lie the sons and husbands, where those dear
That thy curst craft hath lost? Their drops of blood
One by one fallen, and many a cadenced tear,
With triple justice weighted trebly dread,
Shall each, rolled onward in a burning flood,
Crush thy dark soul. Their blood be on thy head!
Bibliography1986. Hubert Jennings. Fernando Pessoa in Durban.
Durban Corporation: Durban.
Poetry
1918. Antinous
1918. Sonnets
1918. English Poems
1933. Mensagem(The Message)
1942. Poesias de Fernando Pessoa
1942. Poesias de Alvaro de Campos
1946. Odes de Ricardo Reis
1952. Poemas dramaticos
1956. Poemas ineditas: 1919-1930
1974. Selected Poems. (Translated by Jonathan
Griffin).
1986. O manuscrito de O Guardador de Rebanhos de
Alberto Caeiro (The Maunscript of The Keeper of
Sheep by Alberto Caeiro)
1998. Fernando Pessoa & Co.: Selected Poems (edited by
Richard Zenith)
1998. Poems of Fernando Pessoa
Prose
1978. Cartos de amor de Fernando Pessoa
1982. Livro do dessassogego por Bernardo Soares
(The Book of Disquiet for Bernardo Soares)
1988. Always Astonished: Selected Prose
- Durban -
- Index -
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