Rubén Darío

Rubén
Darío, pseudonym of Félix Rubén García
Sarmiento (b. January 18, 1867, Metapa,
Nicaragua—d. February 6, 1916, León),
influential Nicaraguan poet, journalist,
and diplomat. As a leader of the Spanish
American literary movement known as
Modernismo, which flourished at the end
of the 19th century, he revivified and
modernized poetry in Spanish on both
sides of the Atlantic through his
experiments with rhythm, metre, and
imagery. Darío developed a highly
original poetic style that founded a
tradition.
Life
and work
Precocious and prolific, from the
age of 14 he signed the name Rubén Darío
to his poems and stories of love,
heroism, and adventure, which, although
imitative in form, showed a strikingly
vivid imagination. In 1886 he left
Nicaragua, beginning the travels that
continued throughout his life. He
settled for a time in Chile, where in
1888 he published his first major work,
Azul (“Blue”), a collection of short
stories, descriptive sketches, and
verse. This volume was soon recognized
in Europe and Latin America as the
herald of a new era in Spanish American
literature. Darío had only recently
become acquainted with French Parnassian
poetry, and Azul represents his attempt
to apply to Spanish the tenets of that
stylistic movement. In the prose works
in Azul he discarded the traditional
long and grammatically complex Spanish
sentence structure, replacing it with
simple and direct language. Both the
prose and poetry in this volume are
generally concerned with objective
description, and both deal with exotic
subjects, chiefly classical mythology,
France, and Asia. As a whole, the volume
exhibits Darío’s concern with “art for
art’s sake,” and it reveals little
interest in everyday life.
After
his return to Central America in 1889
and two brief marriages (the first ended
by his wife’s death and the other by
separation), he left to take up an
appointment in 1893 as Colombian consul
in Buenos Aires, where he found the
cosmopolitan atmosphere stimulating.
Young writers there hailed him as their
leader, and the modernist movement
organized around him. Darío’s next
significant work, Prosas profanas y
otros poemas (1896; “Profane Hymns and
Other Poems”), a collection of verse,
continued the innovative stylistic
trends of Azul but treated its exotic
scenes and personages in a manner more
symbolic than objective, for it was
influenced by the contemporary French
Symbolist poets.
Darío
went to Europe in 1898 as a
correspondent for the Buenos Aires
newspaper La Nación. Based in Paris and
Majorca, he traveled extensively on the
European continent on journalistic and
diplomatic missions. By this time, world
events and his own advancing age had
brought about a profound change in his
outlook on life. He became vitally
concerned with the world outside the
realm of art: the possible threat of
North American imperialism after the
defeat of Spain in 1898, the solidarity
of Spanish-speaking peoples, the future
of Spanish America after the collapse of
Spain’s empire in the New World, and the
age-old problems of human existence. The
collection that is generally considered
to be his masterpiece, Cantos de vida y
esperanza (1905; “Songs of Life and
Hope”), reflects these concerns and is
the culmination of his technical
experimentation and his artistic
resourcefulness.
On the
outbreak of World War I in 1914, Darío
left Europe, physically ill and on the
brink of poverty. In an attempt to
alleviate his financial difficulties, he
began a lecture tour of North America,
but he developed pneumonia in New York
and died shortly after his return to his
homeland.
Among
the many editions of Darío’s work in
Spanish is Obras completas, 2 vol.
(1971), edited by A.M. Plancarte.
Selected Poems, translated by Lysander
Kemp (1965), contains an introduction by
Octavio Paz and a tribute—originally
given before the Buenos Aires Pen Club
in 1933—by Federico García Lorca and
Pablo Neruda.
Assessment
In addition to the three major
collections on which his greatest fame
rests, Darío wrote approximately 100
short stories and tales, several volumes
of poetry and penetrating literary
criticism, and the journalistic articles
that appeared in La Nación and
elsewhere.
From
the standpoint of artistic
resourcefulness and technical
perfection, Darío is considered by many
to be one of the greatest poets who ever
wrote in Spanish. Throughout his career
he boldly experimented with many forms
of verse, and he probably introduced
more metrical innovations than any other
Spanish-language poet. Darío’s poetry is
notable for its remarkable musicality,
grace, and sonority, and he had a
masterly command of rhyme and metrical
structure. His earlier anecdotal and
descriptive poems treat faraway places,
mythology, and other exotic subjects
with a rich lyricism, while the later
poems in Cantos de vida contain a
pronounced philosophical note and
exhibit a poignant and powerful sense of
the tragic side of life.