Twenty Love Poems and a Song of DespairIntroduction
I. Body of a Woman
II. The Light Wraps You
III. Ah Vastness of Pines
IV. The Morning Is Full
V. So that You Will Hear Me
VI. I Remember You As You Were
VII. Leaning into the Afternoons
VIII. White Bee
IX. Drunk with Pines
X. We Have Lost Even
XI. Almost out of the Sky
XII. Your Breast Is Enough
XIII. I Have Gone Marking
XIV. Every Day You Play
XV. I Like for You to Be Still
XVI. In My Sky at Twilight
XVII. Thinking, Tangling Shadows
XVIII. Here I Love You
XIX. Girl Lithe and Tawny
XX. Tonight I Can Write
The Song of Despair
Selected Bibliography
Suggestions for Further Reading
Neftali Ricardo Reyes, whose pseudonym was to be Pablo
Neruda, was born in Parral, Chile, in 1904. He grew up in the
pioneer town of Temuco, briefly encountering Gabriela Mistral, who
taught there for a time. In 1920 he went to Santiago to study, and
the following year published his first collection of poetry,La
Cancion de la Fiesta. A second collection, Crepusculario,
brought him critical recognition; and in 1924 the hugely
successful Veinte Poemas de Amor y una Cancion
Desesperada appeared. From 1927 to 1943, Neruda lived abroad,
serving as a diplomat in Rangoon, Colombo, Batavia, Singapore,
Buenos Aires, Barcelona, Madrid, Paris, and Mexico City. This is
the period that saw the publication of the first two volumes of his
celebrated Residencia en la Tierra. He joined the Communist
Party of Chile after World War II, was prosecuted as a subversive,
and began an exile that took him to Russia, Eastern Europe, and
China. Already the most renowned Latin American poet of his time,
he returned to Chile in 1952. He died there in 1973, having just
seen the fourth edition of his Obras Completas through
the press. In receiving the Nobel Prize in 1971, he had said that
the poet must achieve a balance “between solitude and solidarity,
between feeling and action, between the intimacy of one's self, the
intimacy of mankind, and the relevation of nature.”
W. S. Merwin (translator; 1927–2019) published many highly
regarded books of poems, for which he received a number of
distinguished awards—the Pulitzer Prize (twice), the National Book
Award, the Bollingen Prize, a Fellowship of the Academy of American
Poets, and the Governor's Award for Literature of the state of
Hawaii among them. The U.S. poet laureate from 2010 to 2011, he
translated widely from many languages, and his versions of classics
such as The Poem of the Cid and The Song of
Roland are standards.
Cristina García (introducer) is the author
of Dreaming in Cuban, which was nominated for the National
Book Award.
By the Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature
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