Poet
Paulo Teixeira
Paulo Teixeira
(Mozambique, 1962)
© Pieter Vandermeer
Biography
Paulo Teixeira was born in what is now called Maputo, Mozambique. He is seen as the most important member of the generation of Portuguese poets who made their début in the 1980s. Portuguese poetry has been melancholy at all times, and more so in times of crisis.
For Teixeira an almost obsessive awareness of the passage of time heightens his sense of desolation when looking at the present. His apocalyptic vision finds expression in poems like \'De temporum fine comoedia (I)\' and \'Waiting (2)\', in which he demonstrates how television trivializes evil into an everyday banality. In \'The Head of State\' the protagonist sees his country ravaged, depopulated and laid waste, as a \'Troy without epic\'. In \'Waiting (3)\' the elegiac tone with its frequent use of the subjunctive brings echoes of the odes of Fernando Pessoa\'s heteronym Ricardo Reis. Compare, for instance, Teixeira\'s \'Now let us stay in bed, the here and now will / soon be part of the beginning\' with Reis\': \'Let us free our hands, why should we tire ourselves\', or \'Let us remind ourselves . that life / goes by and . never comes again.\'
In Waiting (1997) as in most of his work, Paolo Teixeira presages with poignant accuracy the present state of Europe.
© August Willemsen (Translated by Ko Kooman)
[Paulo Teixeira took part in the Poetry International Festival Rotterdam 1999. This text was written on that occasion.]Also on PIW on Teixeira
{id="4627" title="Gravitas Poetica in the Work of Paulo Teixeira"}
Links
Paulo Teixeira on Lyrikline
Poems
Poems of Paulo Teixeira
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