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2 works in 1 volume. 8°, contemporary quarter sheep over marbled boards (some wear), spine with raised bands in five compartments, gilt letter and fillets. Scattered light soiling, mostly marginal. Overall in very good condition. Newspaper clippings tipped to front flyleaf & blank verso of title page. 144 pp. *** FIRST EDITION. The pedagogue and poet João de Deus (João de Deus de Nogueira Ramos, 1830-1896), was born in São Bartolomeu de Messines, Algarve. He studied law at Coimbra, where he was linked to the "Geração de 70", especially Teófilo Braga. Part of the second wave of romanticism in Portugal, he is credited with a revival of lyricism, and, along with Antero de Quental, the rehabilitation of the sonnet. *** Innocêncio X, 234-8; XI, 287: calling for only 138, (1) pp. See Saraiva & Lopes, História da literatura portuguesa (17th ed., 2001), pp. 730, 735, 964; Álvaro Manuel Machado in Machado, ed., Dicionário de literatura portuguesa, p. 162; Ester de Lemos in Biblos, II, 70-5; and Dicionário cronológico de autores portugueses, II, 148-50. Grande enciclopedia VIII, 848-9. Not located in BLC. NUC: MiU. OCLC: 23536454; 253725287. OCLC locates copies at University of Toronto, University of Michigan, and University of Arizona. Porbase locates two copies, both in the Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal. Not located in Jisc. Not located in Hollis or Orbis. *** BOUND WITH: RABELLO, Laurindo José da Silva. Poesias do Dr. Lourindo José da Silva Rebello, colleccionadas pelo Bacharel Eduardo de Sá Pereira de Castro e por elle oferecidas a S.M. o Imperador. Rio de Janeiro: Typ. de Pinheiro & Comp., 1867. 8°, scattered light browning, a few small stains, but overall a very good copy. Lithograph frontispiece portrait, xxvii, 173 pp.Third edition, augmented with 23 poems never previously published. First published in Bahia, 1853 with the title Trovas (101 pp.). A second edition appeared in Rio de Janeiro, 1855.Silva Rabello (Rio de Janeiro, 1826-Rio de Janeiro, 1864), of mixed race (variously described as a mestiço or a mulato), was a follower of Alvares de Azevedo with his own streak of genius, also mentioned in most literary manuals and histories along with Gonçalves Dias, Casimiro de Abreu, Junqueira Freire and Castro Alves. He studied for the priesthood and received minor orders, but abandoned the seminary for the military academy, later switching to the Faculdade de Medicina in Bahia, also studying medicine at Rio de Janeiro. For his extraordinary talent and propensity for controversy he was called the "Bocage Brazileiro". Despite humble origins, he managed to rise to hold a position as army medical officer, and taught Portuguese grammar, history, and geography at the preparatory school attached to the military academy of Rio de Janeiro.* Sacramento Blake V, 288-91. Innocêncio V, 168-9; XIII, 281-2. Ford, Whittem and Rafael, A Tentative Bibliography of Brazilian Belles-Lettres, p. 160 (without mention of the portrait). Carpeaux, Pequena bibliografia crítica da literatura brasileira (2nd ed., revised and augmented, 1955), p. 103; also p. 104 for 15 works of biography and criticism. See also Wilson Martins, História da inteligência brasileira, II, 488, 497, 495-6, 498-9; III, 14, 164, 270, 291, 520; Nelson Werneck Sodré, História da literatura brasileira (5th ed., 1969), pp. 216, 235, 307, 314, 338, 562; Bandeira, Brief History of Brazilian literature, p. 75; Goldberg, Brazilian Literature, pp. 78, 79, 85-7, 90, 134, 186; Veríssimo, História da literatura brasileira (5th ed., 1969), pp. 196, 203, 204. Not located in NUC. Not located in OCLC (which does locate an 1876 edition in the Biblioteca Nacional de Chile, as well as 1900 and 1944 editions at Harvard, as well as other later editions). Not located in Porbase. Jisc locates a copy in the British Library, which also has editions of 1876 (another copy cited at Glasgow), 1944, and 1966 (a copy of the 1946 edition is cited at Liverpool, which several locations are given for the 1963 edition.
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