
The Black Heralds
About this book
Throughout his life, César Vallejo (1892–1938) focused on human suffering and the isolation of people victimized by inexplicable forces. One of the great Spanish language poets, he merged radical politics and language consciousness, resulting in the first examples of a truly new world poetry.The Black Heralds is Vallejo’s first book and contains a wide range of poems, from love sonnets in which he struggles to free his erotic life from the bounds of Spanish Catholicism to the linguistically inventive sequence, "Imperial Nostalgias," where he parodies with considerable savagery the pastoral romanticism of Indian and rural life.In this bilingual volume, translator Rebecca Seiferle attempts to undo the "colonization" of Vallejo in other translations. As Seiferle writes in her introduction: "Reading and translating Vallejo has been a long process of trying to meet him on his own terms, to discover what those terms were within the contexts of his particular time and, finally, taking his word for it."from "Our Bread"And in this frigid hour, when the earthsmells of human dust and is so sad,I want to knock on every doorand beg forgiveness of I don’t know whom,and bake bits of fresh bread for him,here, in the oven of my heart...!César Vallejo (1892–1938) was born in Peru to a family of mixed Spanish and native descent. He wrote two books of poetry, the second of which was partly composed during a short prison term. Disappointed by the reception of his poetry in his own country, Vallejo moved to Paris, where he became active in Marxist politics and the antifascist campaign in Spain, while publishing essays, political articles, a play, and short stories.Vallejo died in Paris, in utter poverty, on the day Franco’s armies entered Madrid.
Where to buy
No purchase options available at this time.
More by César Vallejo

Neruda and Vallejo: Selected Poems
Pablo Neruda, César Vallejo

Spain, Take This Chalice from Me and Other Poems
César Vallejo

The Peru Reader: History, Culture, Politics
José María Arguedas, Bartolomé de las Casas, Manuel González Prada, César Vallejo, Gustavo Gutiérrez, Carleton Beals, Antonio Cisneros, Ricardo Palma, Brian M. Fagan, John Hemming, Garcilaso de la Vega, Javier Sologuren, Alfredo Bryce Echenique, Hiram Bingham, Jaime Bayly, Orin Starn, Florencia E. Mallon, Steve J. Stern, Cecilia Blondet, Pedro Cieza de León, Flora Tristan, Nicomedes Santa Cruz, Gustavo Gorriti, Catherine J. Allen, Irene Silverblatt, César Moro, José Carlos Mariátegui, Juan Velasco, Giovanna Pollarolo, Victor Raul Haya de la Torre, Eduardo González Viaña, Alberto Flores Galindo, Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala, John Murra, Javier Heraud, Carmen Ollé, María Emilia Cornejo, PANCHO, Ponciano del Pino, José María Salcedo, Marco Martos, Jose Antonio de Areche, Luis Minaya, Luis Valcarcel, Abimael Guzmán, Alberto Fujimori, Josephe de Mugaburu y Honton, Manuel Cordova, Juan Pevez, Gabriel Aragon, Mercedes Torribio, Julio Ramon Ribreyo, Osman Morote, Nicario, Raquel Martin de Mejia, Ranulfo Fuentes, Maria Elena Moyano, Salomon Lerner, Jo Ann Dawell, Chaname, Caretas, Alberto Kouri, Vladimiro Montesinos, Nosquien y los Nosecuantos, Enrique Bossio, Mario Vargas Lllosa

Trilce
César Vallejo