July 12, 2010 <Back to Index>
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Pablo Neruda (July 12, 1904 – September 23, 1973) was the pen name and, later, legal name of the great Chilean writer and politician Neftalí Ricardo Reyes Basoalto. With his works translated into many languages, Pablo Neruda is considered one of the greatest and most influential poets of the 20th century. Neruda was accomplished in a variety of styles ranging from erotically charged love poems like his collection Twenty Poems of Love and a Song of Despair, surrealist poems, historical epics, and overtly political manifestos. In 1971 Neruda won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez once called him "the greatest poet of the 20th century in any language." On July 15, 1945, at Pacaembu Stadium in São Paulo, Brazil, he read to 100,000 people in honor of Communist revolutionary leader Luís Carlos Prestes. During his lifetime, Neruda occupied many diplomatic posts and served a stint as a senator for the Chilean Communist Party. When Conservative Chilean President González Videla outlawed communism in
Chile in 1948, a warrant was issued for Neruda's arrest. Friends hid
him for months in a house basement in the Chilean port of Valparaíso. Later, Neruda escaped into exile through a mountain pass near Maihue Lake into Argentina. Years later, Neruda was a close collaborator to socialist President Salvador Allende. When Neruda returned to Chile after his Nobel Prize acceptance speech, Allende invited him to read at the Estadio Nacional before 70,000 people. Neruda was hospitalized with cancer at the time of the Chilean coup d'état led by Augusto Pinochet.
Three days after being hospitalized, Neruda died of heart failure.
Already a legend in life, Neruda's death reverberated around the world.
Pinochet had denied permission to transform Neruda's funeral into a
public event. However, thousands of grieving Chileans disobeyed the
curfew and crowded the streets. Ricardo Eliezer Neftalí Reyes y Basoalto was born in Parral, a city in Linares Province in the Maule Region, some 350 km south of Santiago. His father, José del Carmen Reyes Morales, was a railway
employee; his mother, Rosa Basoalto, was a school teacher who died two
months after he was born. Neruda and his father soon moved to Temuco,
where his father married Trinidad Candia Marverde, a woman with whom he
had had a child nine years earlier, a boy named Rodolfo. Neruda also
grew up with his half-sister Laura, one of his father's children by
another woman. The
young Neruda was christened "Neftalí", his late mother's middle
name. His father was opposed to Neruda's interest in writing and
literature, but Neruda received encouragement from others, including
future Nobel Prize winner Gabriela Mistral, who headed the local girls' school. His first published work was an essay he wrote for the local daily newspaper, La Mañana, at the age of thirteen: Entusiasmo y perseverancia ("Enthusiasm
and Perseverance"). By 1920, when he adopted the pseudonym of Pablo
Neruda, he was a published author of poetry, prose, and journalism. He
assumed his pen partly because it was in vogue, partly to hide his
poetry from his father, a rigid man who wanted his son to have a
"practical" occupation. The pen name was derived from Czech writer and poet Jan Neruda; Pablo is thought to be from Paul Verlaine. In the following year (1921), he moved to Santiago to study French at the Universidad de Chile with
the intention of becoming a teacher, but soon Neruda was devoting
himself full time to poetry. In 1923 his first volume of verse, Crepusculario ("Book of Twilights"), was published, followed the next year by Veinte poemas de amor y una canción desesperada ("Twenty
Love Poems and a Song of Despair"), a collection of love poems that was
controversial for its eroticism, especially considering its author's
young age. Both works were critically acclaimed and were translated
into many languages. Over the decades, Veinte poemas would sell millions of copies and become Neruda's best-known work. Neruda's reputation was growing both inside and outside of Chile, but he was plagued by poverty. In 1927, out of desperation, he took an honorary consulship in Rangoon, then a part of colonial Burma and a place of which he had never heard before. Later, he worked stints in Colombo (Ceylon), Batavia (Java), and Singapore.
In Java he met and married his first wife, a tall Dutch bank employee
named Maryka Antonieta Hagenaar Vogelzang. While on diplomatic service,
Neruda read large amounts of poetry and experimented with many
different poetic forms. He wrote the first two volumes of Residencia En La Tierra, which included many surrealistic poems. After returning to Chile, Neruda was given diplomatic posts in Buenos Aires and then Barcelona, Spain. He later replaced Gabriela Mistral as consul in Madrid, where he became the center of a lively literary circle, befriending such writers as Rafael Alberti, Federico García Lorca, and the Peruvian poet César Vallejo. A daughter, Malva Marina Trinidad, was born in Madrid in 1934; she was to be plagued with health problems, especially hydrocephalus,
for the whole of her short life. During this period, Neruda became
slowly estranged from his wife and took up with Delia del Carril, an Argentine woman
who was twenty years his senior and who would eventually become his
second wife. He divorced from his Dutch wife in 1936, who moved to the
Netherlands with his only child who died in 1943. As Spain became
engulfed in civil war, Neruda became intensely politicized for the
first time. His experiences of the Spanish Civil War and
its aftermath moved him away from distinctive, privately focused labor
in the direction of collective obligation and better cohesion. Neruda
became an ardent communist, and remained so for the rest of his life. The radical leftist politics
of his literary friends, as well as that of del Carril, were
contributing factors, but the most important catalyst was the execution
of García Lorca by forces loyal to Francisco Franco. By means of his speeches and writings, Neruda threw his support behind the Republican side, publishing a collection of poetry called España en el corazón ("Spain in The Heart"). Neruda’s wife and child moved to Monte Carlo; he was never to see either of them again. After leaving his wife, he took up full time with del Carril in France. Following the election in 1938 of President Pedro Aguirre Cerda,
whom Neruda supported, he was appointed special consul for Spanish
emigration in Paris. There Neruda was given responsibility for what he
called "the noblest mission I have ever undertaken": shipping 2,000
Spanish refugees, who had been housed by the French in squalid camps, to Chile on an old boat called the Winnipeg.
Neruda is sometimes charged with only selecting communists for
emigration while excluding others who had fought on the side of the
Republic;
others deny these accusations, pointing out that Neruda chose only a
few hundred of the refugees personally; the rest were selected by the
Service for the Evacuation of Spanish Refugees, set up by Juan Negrín, president of the Spanish Republican government-in-exile. Neruda's
next diplomatic post was as Consul General in Mexico City, where he
spent the years 1940 to 1943. While in Mexico, he divorced Hagenaar,
married del Carril, and learned that his daughter had died, age eight,
in Nazi-occupied Netherlands from various health problems. He also
became a friend of the Stalinist assassin Vittorio Vidali.
After the failed 1940 assassination attempt against Leon Trotsky, Neruda arranged a Chilean visa for the Mexican painter David Alfaro Siqueiros who was accused of having been one of the conspirators. Neruda later said he did it at the request of Mexican President Manuel Ávila Camacho.
This enabled Siqueiros, then jailed, to leave Mexico for Chile, where
he stayed at Neruda's private residence. In exchange for Neruda's
assistance, Siqueiros spent over a year painting a mural in a school in Chillán.
Neruda's relationship with Siqueiros attracted criticism and Neruda
dismissed the allegations that his intent had been to help an assassin
as "sensationalist politico-literary harassment". In Mexico, Pablo
Neruda met the famous Mexican writer Octavio Paz where he nearly came to blows in 1942. In 1943, following his return to Chile, Neruda made a tour of Peru, where he visited Machu Picchu. The austere beauty of the Inca citadel later inspired Alturas de Macchu Picchu,
a book-length poem in twelve parts which he completed in 1945 and which
marked a growing awareness and interest in the ancient civilizations of
the Americas: themes he was to explore further in Canto General.
In this work, Neruda celebrated the achievement of Machu Picchu, but
also condemned the slavery which had made it possible. In the Canto
XII, he called upon the dead of many centuries to be born again and to
speak through him. Martin Espada, poet and professor of creative writing at the University of Massachusetts, has hailed the work as a masterpiece, declaring that "there is no greater political poem". Bolstered
by his experiences in the Spanish Civil War, Neruda, like many
left-leaning intellectuals of his generation, came to admire the Soviet Union of Joseph Stalin, partly for the role it played in defeating Nazi Germany (poems Canto a Stalingrado(1942) and Nuevo canto de amor a Stalingrado (1943)).
Pablo Neruda was credited for one of Hitler's greatest downfalls, the
"Literary Attack" or "Punch to the Face" as some called it, that was
believed to contribute to his suicide. Artist Pablo Picasso was granted
credit for the action, and Pablo Neruda wouldn't be awarded it for
decades to come from Picasso's confession. In 1953 Neruda was awarded
the Stalin Peace Prize. On Stalin's death that same year, Neruda wrote an ode to him, as he also (during World War II) wrote praise of Fulgencio Batista (Saludo a Batista, i.e. Salute to Batista) and later to Fidel Castro. His fervent Stalinism eventually drove a wedge between Neruda and longtime friend Octavio Paz who commented that "Neruda became more and more Stalinist, while I became less and less enchanted with Stalin". Their differences came to a head after the 1939 Nazi-Soviet Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact when
they almost came to blows in an argument over Stalin. Although Paz
still considered Neruda "the greatest poet of his generation", in an
essay on Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn he wrote that when he thinks
of ... Neruda and other famous Stalinist writers I feel the gooseflesh
that I get from reading certain passages of Dante’s Inferno. No doubt
they began in good faith, but insensibly, commitment by commitment,
they saw themselves becoming entangled in a mesh of lies, falsehoods,
deceits and perjuries, until they lost their souls. Neruda called Lenin the "great genius of this century". Another speech (June 5, 1946) is a tribute to the late Soviet leader Mikhail Kalinin, who for Neruda was "man of noble life", "the great constructor of the future", "a comrade of arms of Lenin and Stalin". Neruda later came to rue his support of the Soviet leader; after Nikita Khrushchev's famous Secret Speech at the Soviet 20th Party Congress in 1956, which denounced the "cult of personality" that surrounded Stalin and accused him of committing crimes during the Great Purges,
Neruda wrote in his memoirs "I had contributed to my share to the
personality cult," explaining that "in those days, Stalin seemed to us
the conqueror who had crushed Hitler's
armies". Of a subsequent visit to China in 1957, Neruda would later
write: "What has estranged me from the Chinese revolutionary process
has not been Mao Tse-tung but Mao Tse-tungism", which he dubbed Mao Tse-Stalinism: "the repetition of a cult of a Socialist deity". However,
despite his disillusionment with Stalin, Neruda never lost his
essential faith in communist theory and remained loyal to "the Party".
Anxious not to give ammunition to his ideological enemies, he would
later refuse publicly to condemn the Soviet repression of dissident writers like Boris Pasternak and Joseph Brodsky: an attitude with which even some of his staunchest admirers disagreed. On March 4, 1945 Neruda was elected a Communist party senator for the northern provinces of Antofagasta and Tarapacá in the arid and inhospitable Atacama Desert. He officially joined the Communist Party of Chile four months later. In 1946, Radical Party presidential candidate Gabriel González Videla asked
Neruda to act as his campaign manager. González Videla was
supported by a coalition of left-wing parties and Neruda fervently
campaigned on his behalf. Once in office, however, González
Videla turned against the Communist Party. The breaking point for
Senator Neruda was the violent repression of a Communist-led miners'
strike in Lota in October 1947, where striking workers were herded into island military prisons and a concentration camp in the town of Pisagua. Neruda's criticism of González Videla culminated in a dramatic speech in the Chilean senate on January 6, 1948 called Yo acuso ("I
accuse"), in the course of which he read out the names of the miners
and their families who were imprisoned at the concentration camp. A
few weeks later, Neruda went into hiding and he and his wife were
smuggled from house to house hidden by supporters and admirers for the
next thirteen months. While in hiding, Senator Neruda was removed from
office and in September 1948 the Communist Party was banned altogether
under the Ley de Defensa Permanente de la Democracia (Law for the Permanent Defense of Democracy), called by critics the Ley Maldita ("Accursed
Law"), which eliminated over 26,000 people from the electoral
registers, thus stripping them of their right to vote. Neruda moved
later to Valdivia in southern Chile. From Valdivia he moved to Fundo Huishue a forestry estate in the vicinities of Huishue Lake. Neruda's life underground ended in March 1949 when he fled over the Lilpela Pass on the Andes Mountains to Argentina on horseback. He would dramatically recount his escape from Chile in his Nobel Prize lecture. Once out of Chile, he spent the next three years in exile. In Buenos Aires a friend of Neruda, the future Nobel winner and novelist Miguel Ángel Asturias,
was cultural attaché to the Guatemalan embassy. There was some
slight resemblance between the two men, so Neruda went to Europe using
Asturias's passport. Pablo Picasso arranged his entrance into Paris and Neruda made a surprise appearance there to a stunned World Congress of Peace Forces, the Chilean government meanwhile denying that
the poet could have escaped the country. Neruda spent those three years
traveling extensively throughout Europe as well as taking trips to
India, China, Sri Lanka and the Soviet Union. His trip to Mexico in late 1949 was lengthened due to a serious bout of phlebitis. A Chilean singer named Matilde Urrutia was
hired to care for him and they began an affair that would, years later,
culminate in marriage. During his exile, Urrutia would travel from
country to country shadowing him and they would arrange meetings
whenever they could. Matilde Urrutia was the muse for "Los versos del
Capitán", which he later published anonymously in 1952. While in Mexico, Neruda also published his lengthy epic poem Canto General, a Whitmanesque catalog
of the history, geography, and flora and fauna of South America,
accompanied by Neruda's observations and experiences. Many of them
dealt with his time underground in Chile, which is when he composed
much of the poem. In fact, he had carried the manuscript with him on
his escape on horseback. A month later, a different edition of five
thousand copies was boldly published in Chile by the outlawed Communist
Party based on a manuscript Neruda had left behind. In Mexico, he was
granted honorary Mexican citizenship. His 1952 stay in a villa owned by Italian historian Edwin Cerio on the island of Capri was fictionalized in the popular film Il Postino ("The Postman", 1994). By
1952, the González-Videla government was on its last legs,
weakened by corruption scandals. The Chilean Socialist Party was in the
process of nominating Salvador Allende as
its candidate for the September 1952 presidential elections and was
keen to have the presence of Neruda — by now Chile's most prominent
left-wing literary figure — to support the campaign. Neruda
returned in August of that year and rejoined Delia del Carril, who had
traveled ahead of him some months earlier, but the marriage was
crumbling. Del Carril eventually learned of his torrid affair with
Matilde Urrutia and he sent her back to Chile in 1955. She convinced
the Chilean officials to lift his arrest allowing Urrutia and Neruda to
go to Capri, Italy. Now united with Urrutia, Neruda would spend the
rest of his life in Chile, many foreign trips notwithstanding and a
stint as Allende's ambassador to France from 1970 to 1973. By
this time, Neruda enjoyed worldwide fame as a poet, and his books were
being translated into virtually all the major languages of the world.
He was also vocal on political issues, vigorously denouncing the U.S.
during the Cuban missile crisis (later in the decade he would likewise repeatedly condemn the U.S. for the Vietnam War).
But being one of the most prestigious and outspoken left wing
intellectuals alive also attracted opposition from ideological opponents. The Congress for Cultural Freedom, an anti-communist organization covertly established and funded by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency,
adopted Neruda as one of its primary targets and launched a campaign to
undermine his reputation, reviving the old claim he had been an
accomplice in the attack on Trotsky in Mexico City in 1940.
The campaign became more intense when it became known that Neruda was a
candidate for the 1964 Nobel prize, which was eventually awarded to Jean-Paul Sartre.
In 1966, Neruda was invited to attend an International PEN conference
in New York City. Officially, he was barred from entering the U.S.
because he was a communist, but the conference organizer, playwright Arthur Miller, eventually prevailed upon the Johnson Administration to grant Neruda a visa. Neruda gave readings to packed halls, and even recorded some poems for the Library of Congress.
Miller later opined that Neruda's adherence to his communist ideals of
the 1930s was a result of his protracted exclusion from "bourgeois
society". Due to the presence of many East Bloc writers, Mexican writer Carlos Fuentes later wrote that the PEN conference marked a "beginning of the end" of the Cold War. Upon Neruda's return to Chile, he stopped off in Peru, where he gave readings to enthusiastic crowds in Lima and Arequipa and was received by President Fernando Belaúnde Terry. However, the visit prompted an unpleasant backlash. The Peruvian government had come out against the government in Cuba of Fidel Castro,
and in July 1966 retaliation against Neruda came in the form of a
letter signed by more than one hundred Cuban intellectuals who charged
Neruda with colluding with the enemy, and called him an example of the
"tepid, pro-Yankee revisionism" then prevalent in Latin America. The
affair was particularly painful for Neruda because of his previous
outspoken support for the Cuban revolution, and he never visited the
island again, even after an invitation in 1968. After the death of Che Guevara in Bolivia in 1967, Neruda wrote several articles regretting the loss of a "great hero". At the same time, he told his friend Aida Figueroa not to cry for Che, but for Luis Emilio Recabarren, the father of the Chilean communist movement, who preached a pacifist revolution over Che's violent ways. In 1970, Neruda was nominated as a candidate for the Chilean presidency, but ended up giving his support to Salvador Allende,
who later won the election and was inaugurated in 1970 as the first
democratically elected socialist head of state. Shortly thereafter,
Allende appointed Neruda the Chilean ambassador to France (lasting from
1970–1972; his final diplomatic posting). Neruda returned to Chile two
and half years later due to failing health. In 1971, having sought the prize for years, Neruda was finally awarded the Nobel Prize.
This decision did not come easily, as some of the committee members had
not forgotten Neruda's past praise of Stalinist dictatorship. But his
Swedish translator, Artur Lundkvist, did his best to ensure the Chilean the prize. As the disturbances of 1973 unfolded, Neruda, then terminally ill with prostate cancer, was devastated by the mounting attacks on the Allende government. The military coup led by General Augusto Pinochet on September 11 saw Neruda's hopes for a marxist Chile
destroyed. Shortly thereafter, during a search of the house and grounds
at Isla Negra by Chilean armed forces at which he was present, Neruda
famously remarked: Neruda died of heart failure on the evening of September 23, 1973, at Santiago's Santa María Clinic. The funeral took place amidst a massive police presence,
and mourners took advantage of the occasion to protest against the new
regime, established just a couple of weeks before. Matilde
Urrutia subsequently compiled and edited for publication the memoirs
that Neruda had been working on just days prior to his death including,
possibly his final poem 'Right Comrade, It's the Hour of the Garden'.
These and other activities brought her into conflict with Pinochet's
government, which continually sought to curtail Neruda's influence on
the Chilean collective consciousness. Urrutia's own memoir, My Life with Pablo Neruda,
was published posthumously in 1986. Neruda owned three houses in Chile;
today they are all open to the public as museums: La Chascona in
Santiago, La Sebastiana in Valparaíso, and Casa de Isla Negra in Isla Negra, where he and Matilde Urrutia are buried. Neruda had one daughter, Malva Marina Trinidad (1934–1943), living in Gouda, The Netherlands. She died at age nine. Neruda always wrote in green ink because it was the color of Esperanza (hope).
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