Pedro Kilkerry
Pedro Kilkerry | |
---|---|
Born | Pedro Militão dos Santos Kilkerry March 10, 1885 |
Died | March 25, 1917 Salvador, Brazil | (aged 32)
Nationality | Brazilian |
Occupation(s) | Poet, journalist |
Parent(s) | John Kilkerry Salustiana do Sacramento Lima |
Pedro Militão dos Santos Kilkerry[1] (March 10, 1885 – March 25, 1917) was a Brazilian journalist and Parnassian/Symbolist poet.
He was born in Salvador, in the state of Bahia, on March 10, 1885. His father, John Kilkerry, was a British engineer, and his mother, Salustiana do Sacramento Lima, was a freed Afro-Brazilian slave. Poor and bohemian, details about Kilkerry's life are very sparse, but it is known that he wrote some poems and articles for newspapers such as Os Anais and A Nova Cruzada before dying prematurely due to tuberculosis. He never published any book during his lifetime.
His work remained forgotten for many years, until it was rediscovered in the 1950s by Brazilian essayist and literary critic Andrade Muricy. Augusto de Campos would praise Kilkerry in his 1970 work (Re)Visão de Kilkerry as a forerunner of the Modernist poetry in Brazil.[2]
Singer Adriana Calcanhotto set Kilkerry's poem "O Verme e a Estrela" to music; it is present in her 1994 album A Fábrica do Poema.
References
- ^ CAMPOS, Augusto de. (Re)Visão de Kilkerry. 1970
- ^ Antônio Miranda - Pedro Kilkerry Template:Pt icon
External links
- Works by Pedro Kilkerry at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- 1885 births
- 1917 deaths
- Portuguese-language writers
- 20th-century Brazilian poets
- Brazilian male writers
- Brazilian male poets
- Brazilian people of African descent
- Brazilian people of British descent
- 20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
- Infectious disease deaths in Brazil
- People from Salvador, Bahia
- Symbolist poets
- Brazilian writer stubs
- South American poet stubs