Ricardo Reis (heteronym) explained

Ricardo Reis
Birth Date:19 September 1887
Birth Place:Oporto, Portugal
Death Date:unknown date
Death Place:Brazil
Occupation:Doctor, Poet
Language:Portuguese, English
Nationality:Portuguese

Ricardo Reis (pronounced as /pt-PT/; 19 September 1887 – ?), was one of the most important heteronyms created by the Portuguese writer Fernando Pessoa.

Born in Oporto in 1887, Ricardo Reis was one year younger than Fernando Pessoa who describes him as very little shorter and stronger, but slim and a vague matte brown. Reis was educated at a Jesuit boarding school becoming a Latinist by education and a semi-Hellenist by his own, thus writing better than Pessoa, but with a purism that his author considered exaggerated. He was a doctor and Neoclassical poet who wrote neopagan, epicurist and stoicist odes. Politically a monarchist, he went into exile to Brazil after the defeat of a monarchical rebellion in Oporto against the Portuguese Republic in 1919.

Critical overview

Reis Odes were first published in 1924 in the , founded by Fernando Pessoa and Ruy Vaz. Further eight odes were later published between 1927 and 1930 in the literary journal Presença. The remaining poems and prose were published posthumously.[1] In a letter to William Bentley, director of the journal Portugal, on October 31, 1924, to announce his journal Athena, Pessoa wrote that "a knowledge of the language would be indispensable, for instance, to appraise the 'Odes' of Ricardo Reis, whose Portuguese would draw upon him the blessing of António Vieira, as his stile and diction that of Horace (he has been called, admirably I believe, 'a Greek Horace who writes in Portuguese')".Since Pessoa didn't determine the death of Reis, one can assume that he survived his author who died on November 30, 1935. In the novel The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis (1984), the Portuguese writer José Saramago rebuilds, in his own personal outlook, the literary world of this heteronym after 1935, creating a dialog between Ricardo Reis and the ghost of his author.

Books

Notes and References

  1. FLUL - Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa . RICARDO REIS (1887-1936) . Nuno . Amado . FLUL - University of Lisbon .