Pedro Salinas y Serrano (born November 27, 1891, Madrid, Spain—died December 4, 1951, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.) was a Spanish poet, scholar, dramatist, and essayist who was one of the outstanding writers of the Generation of 1927, an influential group of poets that included Jorge Guillén and Federico García Lorca.
Salinas studied and lectured at the Sorbonne for three years (1914–17) and then returned to Spain as professor of Spanish at Sevilla (1918). He later taught at the University of Cambridge, and, after the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War (1936), he lived in the United States, lecturing at Wellesley College, Massachusetts, and Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.
Salinas’s first poems were published in the literary magazine Prometeo. His volumes of poetry include Presagios (1923; “Omens”), Seguro azar (1929; “Certain Disaster”), La voz a ti debida (1934; My Voice Because of You, 1976), and Todo más claro y otros poemas (1949; “Everything Clearer and Other Poems”). A selection of his love poems in English translation, To Live in Pronouns, was published in 1974. Salinas was also a respected scholar, known for studies on the 15th-century Spanish poet Jorge Manrique, the Nicaraguan poet Rubén Darío, and a modern verse rendition of the Poem of the Cid. The leading literary figures of his time were among his friends. Salinas also helped effect the revival of interest in the 17th-century Spanish poet Luis de Góngora.