Francisco Gavidia
Francisco Antonio Gavidia Guandique (1863 – 24 September 1955) was a prominent Salvadoran writer, historian, politician, speaker, translator, educator and journalist. His poetry evolved from romanticism to a reflective direction and conceptual character. He was greatly influenced by French poetry of the time and he introduced Rubén Darío to adapt the Alexandrian verse to the Castilian metre in addition to entering the story, poetry and essays. The trajectory of his poetry is similar to the one of his theater, as he demonstrates in his dramas Jupiter (1885), Ursino (1889), Count of San Salvador or the God of the things (1901), Lucia Lasso or the Pirates (1914) and the Ivory Tower (1920), and the dramatic poem Princess Catalá (1944).
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by Sierra-Beltrán, Arturo P., Barbera, Amelia La, Cortés-Altamirano, Roberto, Gavidia, Francisco
Published 2004
Get full textPublished 2004
Online