The Pine of Formentor (Catalan; Valencian: Lo Pi de Formentor, Spanish; Castilian: El pino de Formentor) is one of the most well-known and celebrated poems by Miquel Costa i Llobera. Technically, it is considered as the culmination of the Romantic poetry in the Catalan language.[1]
Miquel Costa i Llobera wrote the poem in Catalan language in 1875, during his first period of production, when he was only 21 years old.[2]
To compose it, the poet took inspiration from the majestic landscapes and visions of the pine trees rooted in the cliffs of the Formentor peninsula on Mallorca island. He frequented those sites from an early age. The landscape of Formentor portrayed by Costa i Llobera is real, whilst being a symbol of the Mediterranean. Reflecting the ideal of an elevated life, the pine tree also serves as a metaphor for our life's struggles, echoing lessons of constancy and strength.[3]
Years later, in 1899, he published a version of the poem in Spanish.
The poem is written entirely in alexandrine verses (6+6 syllables), with caesurae in the middle. It is composed of quintain stanzas, with an ABAAB rhyme. The last line of each quintain contains only 6 syllables.[4]
Its beginning is often quoted in Catalan:
Whilst Costa i Llobera himself would publish a translation years later, in Spanish. The same first stanza reads:
The poem has been sung, among others, by Spanish singer Maria del Mar Bonet.
In his Symphony No. 16 - Songs of Mallorca, English composer Derek Bourgeois named the first movement The Pine of Formentor.[5]
Artists such as Joan Miró[6] and Hermen Anglada Camarasa[7] used it as inspiration for their paintings.