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Mi hija mayor va a Buenos Aires, Havana, 1993 Algo semejante a los monstruos antediluvianos. Poesías escogidas 1949-1988, Havana, 1994 Las cosas del corazón, Havana, 1994 Una salva de porvenir, Matanzas, Cuba, 1995 Aquí, Caracas, 1995 Esta especie de poema. Antología poética, Puerto Rico, 1999 Versos, Havana, 1999. Felices los normales.
Alicia Mabel Partnoy (born 1955 in Bahía Blanca, Argentina) is a human rights activist, poet, college professor, and translator. [1]After Argentinian President Juan Perón died, the students from the left of the Peronist political party organized with fervor within the country's universities and, along with workers, were persecuted and imprisoned.
The poem tells the story of a black Puerto Rican who "answers" a white-skinned Puerto Rican after the latter calls the Afro-Puerto Rican "black" and "big lipped." In his answer, the black man describes both his own African attributes while also describing the Caucasian attributes of the white Puerto Rican as well as that person's light-skinned daughter.
Simple Verses (Spanish: Versos sencillos) is a poetry collection by Cuban writer and independence hero José Martí.Published in October 1891, it was the last of Martí's works to be printed before his death in 1895. [1]
hija del sol de Oriente, su fuego ardiente en ti latiendo está. Patria de amores, del heroísmo cuna, los invasores no te hollarán jamás. En tu azul cielo, en tus auras, en tus montes y en tu mar esplende y late el poema de tu amada libertad. Tu pabellón que en las lides la victoria iluminó, no verá nunca apagados sus estrellas ni su sol.
Dulce María Loynaz Muñoz (Havana, Cuba; 10 December 1902 – 27 April 1997) was a Cuban poet, and is considered one of the principal figures of Cuban literature.She was awarded the Miguel de Cervantes Prize in 1992.
Born in Barcelona on 13 April 1928, in an upper class Spanish-only speaking family (that is, non Catalan-speaking though he spoke perfect Catalan and translated Catalan poems into other languages [1]), his family was brutally shaken by the death of his mother (Julia Gay) in a Francoist Nationalist bombardment in 1938.
Her parents were José Veintimilla and Jerónima Carrión y Antepara, who were from Loja, Ecuador. On February 16, 1847, at the age of 18, she married Dr. Sixto Antonio Galindo y Oroña from Colombia. They had a son named Santiago, whose godmother was Rosa Ascázubi, the first lady of Ecuador (married to P