The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa
The Washington Post Book World has written that Fernando Pessoa was "Portugal's greatest writer of the twentieth century [though] some critics would even leave off that last qualifying phrase" and "one of the most appealing European modernists, equal in command and range to his contemporaries Rilke and Mandelstam." The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa, a Los Angeles Times Best Book of 2001, spans playful philosophical inquiry, Platonic dialogue, and bitter intellectual scrapping between Pessoa and his many literary alter egos ("heteronyms"). The heteronyms launch movements and write manifestos, and one of them attempts to break up Pessoa's only known romantic relationship. Also included is a generous selection from Pessoa's masterpiece, The Book of Disquiet, freshly translated by Richard Zenith from newly discovered materials. The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa is an important record of a crucial part of the literary canon. "Zenith's selection is beautifully translated, compact while appropriately diverse." -- Benjamin Kunkel, Los Angeles Times "[Pessoa] is one of those writers as addictive, and endearing, as Borges and Calvino." -- Michael Dirda, The Washington Post Book World
1100624481
The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa
The Washington Post Book World has written that Fernando Pessoa was "Portugal's greatest writer of the twentieth century [though] some critics would even leave off that last qualifying phrase" and "one of the most appealing European modernists, equal in command and range to his contemporaries Rilke and Mandelstam." The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa, a Los Angeles Times Best Book of 2001, spans playful philosophical inquiry, Platonic dialogue, and bitter intellectual scrapping between Pessoa and his many literary alter egos ("heteronyms"). The heteronyms launch movements and write manifestos, and one of them attempts to break up Pessoa's only known romantic relationship. Also included is a generous selection from Pessoa's masterpiece, The Book of Disquiet, freshly translated by Richard Zenith from newly discovered materials. The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa is an important record of a crucial part of the literary canon. "Zenith's selection is beautifully translated, compact while appropriately diverse." -- Benjamin Kunkel, Los Angeles Times "[Pessoa] is one of those writers as addictive, and endearing, as Borges and Calvino." -- Michael Dirda, The Washington Post Book World
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The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa

The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa

by Fernando Pessoa
The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa

The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa

by Fernando Pessoa

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Overview

The Washington Post Book World has written that Fernando Pessoa was "Portugal's greatest writer of the twentieth century [though] some critics would even leave off that last qualifying phrase" and "one of the most appealing European modernists, equal in command and range to his contemporaries Rilke and Mandelstam." The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa, a Los Angeles Times Best Book of 2001, spans playful philosophical inquiry, Platonic dialogue, and bitter intellectual scrapping between Pessoa and his many literary alter egos ("heteronyms"). The heteronyms launch movements and write manifestos, and one of them attempts to break up Pessoa's only known romantic relationship. Also included is a generous selection from Pessoa's masterpiece, The Book of Disquiet, freshly translated by Richard Zenith from newly discovered materials. The Selected Prose of Fernando Pessoa is an important record of a crucial part of the literary canon. "Zenith's selection is beautifully translated, compact while appropriately diverse." -- Benjamin Kunkel, Los Angeles Times "[Pessoa] is one of those writers as addictive, and endearing, as Borges and Calvino." -- Michael Dirda, The Washington Post Book World

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780802139146
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Publication date: 07/19/2002
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

FERNANDO PESSOA was born in Lisbon and spent his adult life there, earning a modest living as a commercial translator. Most of his vast body of work was published posthumously.

A writer and renowned translator, RICHARD ZENITH has received grants from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Table of Contents

General Introductionxi
Fernando Pessoa the Man and Poetxi
Fernando Pessoa, Prose Writerxiv
Fernando Pessoa, English Writerxvii
About This Editionxviii
Thanksxxi
Aspects1
The Artist as a Young Man and Heteronym6
Introduction6
"I was a poet animated by philosophy ..."9
"The artist must be born beautiful ..."10
"I have always had in consideration ..."10
Three Prose Fragments11
"Ten thousand times my heart broke ..."11
"I saw the little children ..."11
"I, Charles Robert Anon ..."12
"I am tired of confiding in myself ..."12
[An Unsent Letter to Clifford Geerdts]14
Two Prose Fragments15
"Bond entered into by Alexander Search ..."15
"No soul more loving or tender ..."15
Rule of Life17
The Mariner18
Introduction18
The Mariner--A Static Drama in One Act20
To Fernando Pessoa35
The Master and His Disciples36
Introduction36
Notes for the Memory of My Master Caeiro38
from Translator's Preface to the Poems of Alberto Caeiro50
[On Alvaro de Campos]55
[On the Work of Ricardo Reis]56
Sensationism and Other Isms58
Introduction58
Preface to an Anthology of the Portuguese Sensationists61
"All sensations are good ..."64
[Intersectionist] Manifesto65
Sensationism66
Ultimatum69
Translator's Preface to Ultimatum69
Ultimatum72
from "What Is Metaphysics?"88
Letter to Mario de Sa-Carneiro89
Riddle of the Stars92
Introduction92
[Letter to His Aunt Anica]98
[30 Astral Communications]103
from Essay on Initiation E120
Treatise on Negation121
Letter to Two French Magnetists F124
Selected Letters to Ophelia Queiroz128
[Phase 1: Pessoa in Love?] (March-November 1920)129
[Phase 2: Pessoa Insane?] (September-October 1929)139
Neopaganism147
from The Return of the Gods147
"Without yet going into the metaphysical foundations ..."148
"Humanitarianism is the last bulwark ..."149
"Only now can we fully understand ..."150
"We are not really neopagans ..."151
from Preface to the Complete Poems of Alberto Caeiro153
"The work of Caeiro represents the total reconstruction ..."153
"When I once had occasion ..."154
"Alberto Caeiro is more pagan than paganism ..."155
"For modern pagans, as exiles ..."156
Portugal and the Fifth Empire158
Introduction158
1."Any Empire not founded on the Spiritual Empire ..."161
2."The Fifth Empire. The future of Portugal ..."162
3."The promise of the Fifth Empire ..."162
4."Only one kind of propaganda can raise the morale ..."163
5."What, basically, is Sebastianism?"164
6."To justify its present-day ambition ..."164
7."An imperialism of grammarians?"165
8."A foggy morning."166
The Anarchist Banker167
Pessoa on Millionaires197
from An Essay on Millionaires and Their Ways197
from American Millionaires198
Environment200
[Self-Definition]201
Erostratus: The Search for Immortality202
Introduction202
from Erostratus205
On the Literary art and its Artists213
[The Task of Modern Poetry]213
Shakespeare215
[On Blank Verse and Paradise Lost]216
From Charles Dickens--Pickwick Papers217
From Concerning Oscar Wilde218
[The Art of James Joyce]222
[The Art of Translation]222
From Essay on Poetry224
From France in 1950231
Random Notes and Epigrams234
Two Letters to Joao Gaspar Simoes239
[Letter of 11 December 1931]239
[Letter of 28 July 1932]247
Three Letters to Adolfo Casais Monteiro250
[Letter of 11 January 1930]250
[Letter of 13 January 1935]251
[Another Version of the Genesis of the Heteronyms]261
[Letter of 20 January 1935]262
The Book of Disquiet265
Introduction265
From The Book of Disquiet270
From the Education of the Stoic (Baron of Teive)300
From the Preface to Fictions of the Interlude311
Letter from a Hunchback Girl to a Metalworker314
Notes319
Bibliography341
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