Cecília Meireles (born November 7, 1901, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil—died November 9, 1964, Rio de Janeiro) was a poet, teacher, and journalist, whose lyrical and highly personal poetry, often simple in form yet containing complex symbolism and imagery, earned her an important position in 20th-century Brazilian literature.
Orphaned at an early age and brought up by her grandmother, Meireles began to write poetry at the age of nine. She became a public school teacher at 16 and two years later established her literary reputation with the publication of Espectros (1919; “Ghosts”), a collection of sonnets in the Symbolist tradition.
The 1920s were a time of revolution in Brazilian literature, but Meireles’s work of the period showed little affinity with the prevailing nationalistic tendencies or the radical technical innovations in free verse and colloquial language. Her poetry is considered by most critics to have found its best expression in such traditional forms as the sonnet.
Between 1925 and 1939 Meireles concentrated on her career as a teacher, writing several books for children and in 1934 founding the Biblioteca Infantil in Rio de Janeiro, the first children’s library in Brazil. That year she lectured on Brazilian literature in Portugal at the universities of Lisbon and Coimbra; in 1936 she was appointed lecturer at the new Federal University in Rio de Janeiro.
Meireles reestablished her reputation as a poet after 14 years of silence with Viagem (1939; “Journey”), considered by many critics to mark her attainment of poetic maturity and individuality. From that time she devoted herself to her literary career, continuing to publish collections of poetry regularly until her death. Much of her work is collected in Obra poética (1958; “Poetic Work”), and several of her poems have been translated into English for anthologies.