António Feliciano de Castilho

Portuguese poet and translator
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Quick Facts
Born:
Jan. 28, 1800, Lisbon
Died:
June 18, 1875, Lisbon
Movement / Style:
Romanticism

António Feliciano de Castilho (born Jan. 28, 1800, Lisbon—died June 18, 1875, Lisbon) was a poet and translator, a central figure in the Portuguese Romantic movement.

Although blind from childhood, he became a classical scholar and at the age of 16 published a series of poems, translations, and pedagogical works. Castilho’s literary life may be divided into two phases, the midpoint occurring during the revolutionary period of the late 1840s. During the first he published a series of poems in which he tried to assimilate current Romantic trends while continuing to be guided by a basically Neoclassical spirit.

With the publication of his Obras Completas in 1837, Castilho gained recognition and became a literary figure in Lisbon. In the same year he was offered the directorship of an important journal, O Panorama, and in 1838 he began to collaborate with Almeida Garrett, the leading Portuguese Romantic poet, in the revival of national theatre. His romantic narratives of the lives of Portuguese medieval heroes, Quadros Históricos de Portugal, were begun in 1838, and in 1842 he took charge of the Revista Universal Lisbonense, a major cultural review.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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The second phase of Castilho’s career began after his return from a two-year residence in the Azores (approximately 1848–50), where he had promoted agriculture as a means of social reform. His acceptance of Romanticism was never wholehearted. Scholarly rather than imaginative, he began to return to a genteel traditionalism having much in common with the earlier generation of Portuguese arcadian poets. His personal prestige was at its height, however, and his lifeless style so dominated literary taste that it brought about a rebellion from the younger generation of writers. The attack against Castilho came from the young poet Antero de Quental, who wrote the pamphlet Bom-senso e Bom-gosto (1865; “Good Sense and Good Taste”) in reply to Castilho’s criticism of certain younger writers. This riposte gave rise to one of the most celebrated polemics in Portuguese literature, the questão Coimbrã (“Coimbra question”), which eventually dethroned Castilho as literary dictator.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.