Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Auta de Souza

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Occupation
  
Poet

Notable works
  
Horto

Literary movements
  
Romanticism, Symbolism

Ethnicity
  
Afro-Brazilian

Books
  
Hôrto

Auta de Souza Auta de Souza seus versos e traos de sua vida breve Templo

Died
  
7 February 1901, Natal, Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil

M os chico xavier auta de souza


Auta de Souza (12 September 1876 — 7 February 1901) was a Brazilian poet. She wrote Romantic poems, with some Symbolistic influence.

Contents

Auta de Souza AUTA DE SOUZA 1876 1901 Poesia dos Brasis Rio Grande do Norte

Souza published only one book in her lifetime, Horto. Folklorist Luís da Câmara Cascudo deemed her as "the greatest mystical poet in Brazil".

Auta de Souza Auta de souza

Ta s ara jo auta de souza


Life

Souza was born in Macaíba, daughter of Elói Castriciano de Souza and Henriqueta Leopoldina Rodrigues.

Auta de Souza httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

She became an orphan when she was three, with her mother's death by tuberculosis; her father died of the same disease the next year. Souza was then raised by her maternal grandmother in Recife, where she took particular classes. When she was eleven, she was enrolled at the Colégio São Vicente de Paula, a Catholic school run by Vicentin nuns. Souza left school when she was fourteen because of a tuberculosis diagnostic, but then she became an autodidact.

Auta de Souza Poemas de Auta de Souza Lembrana de uma poetisa

At eighteen, she began to collaborate with the magazine Oasis, and at twenty wrote for A República, a larger circulation newspaper which gave her visibility to other regions' press. Her poems were published in Rio de Janeiro newspaper O Paiz.

Auta de Souza Auta de Souza Os versos mais tristes da poesia

The following year she would write assiduously for Natal newspaper A Tribuna, and her verses were published together with several writers from Brazil northeast. Between 1899 and 1900, she signed his poems under the pseudonyms "Ida Salúcio" and "Hilário das Neves". Several of her poems were adapted as lyrics for modinhas - popular songforms of nineteenth century Brazil.

In 1900 she published her only book, Horto, prefaced by Olavo Bilac.

Death

Auta de Souza died in 7 February 1901, in Natal, of tuberculosis. She was buried at Cemitério do Alecrim, but in 1904 her remains were moved to the family grave, at the church of Our Lady of Conception, in her birth city, Macaíba.

References

Auta de Souza Wikipedia