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VISCONDE DE CORREIA BOTELHO CAMILLO C...

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 472 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VISCONDE DE CORREIA BOTELHO CAMILLO

CASTELLO BRANCO (1825–1890)  , Portuguese novelist, was born out of wedlock and lost his parents in
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infancy . He spent his early years in a
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village in Traz-os-Montes . He learnt to love
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poetry from Camoens and Bocage, while Mendes Pinto gave him a lust for adventure, but he dreamed more than he read, and grew up undisciplined and proud . He studied in Oporto and
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Coimbra with much irregularity, and since his disdain for the intrigues and miseries of politics in
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Portugal debarred him from the chance of a government
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post, he entered the career of letters to gain a livelihood . After a spell of journalistic
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work in Oporto and Lisbon he proceeded to the Episcopal seminary in the former city with a view of studying for the priesthood, and during this period wrote a number of religious
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works and translated Chateaubriand . He actually took minor orders, but his restless nature prevented him from following one course for long "and he soon returned to the
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world, and henceforth kept up a feverish
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literary activity to the end . He was created a viscount in 1885 in recognition of his services to letters, and when his
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health finally broke down and he could no longer use his pen, parliament gave him a pension for
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life . When, having lost his sight, and suffering from chronic
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nervous disease, he died by his own hand in 1890, it was generally recognized that Portugal had lost" the most
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national of her
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modern writers . Apart from his plays and verses, Castello Branco's works may be divided into three sections . The first comprises his romances of the
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imagination, of which Os mysterios de Lisboa, in the style of Victor Hugo, is a
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fair example . The second includes his novels of manners, a style of which he was the creator and remained the chief exponent until the appearance of 0 Crime de Padre Amaro of E9a de Queiroz . In these he is partly idealist and partly realist, and describes to perfection the domestic and social life of Portugal in the early
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part of the 19th century .

The third

division embraces his writings in the domain of
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history, biography and literary criticism . Among these may be cited Noites de
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Lamego, Cousas level e pesadas, Cavar em ruinas, Memorias do Bispo do Grao Para and Bohemia do Espirito . In all, his publications number about two
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hundred and sixty, belonging to many departments of letters, but he owes his
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great and lasting reputation to his romances . Notwithstanding the fact that his slender means obliged him to produce very rapidly to the order of publishers, who only paid him from 30 to X6o a
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book, he never lost his individuality under the pressure . Knowing the life of the
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people by experience and not from books, he was able to fix in his pages a succession of stronglymarked and national types, such as the brazileiro, the old fidalgo of the north, and the Minho priest, while his lack of
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personal acquaintance with
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foreign countries and his relative ignorance of their literatures preserved him from the temptation, so dangerous to a Portuguese, of imitating the classical writers of the larger nations . Among the most notable of his romances are O
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Romance de un Homem Rico, his favourite, Retrato de Ricardina, Amor de Perdicao, and the magnificent series entitled Novellas do Minho . Many of his novels are autobiographical, like Onde estd a felicidade, Memorias do Carcere and Vinganga . Castello Branco is an admirable story-teller, largely because he was a brilliant
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improvisatore, but he does not attempt character study . Nothing can exceed the richness of his vocabulary, and no other Portuguese author has shown so profound a knowledge of the popular language . Though nature had endowed him with the poetic temperament, his verses are mediocre, but his best plays are cast in bold lines and contain really dramatic situations, while his comedies are a triumph of the
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grotesque, with a
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mordant vein
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running through them that recalls Gil Vicente . The collected works of Camillo Castello Branco are published by the Companhia Editora of Lisbon, and his most esteemed books have had several
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editions . The Diccionario Bibliographico Porluguez, vol. ix. p .

7 et seq., contains a lengthy but incomplete

list of his publications . See Romance do Romancista, by A . Pimentel, a badly put together but informing biography; also a study on the novelist by J . Pereira de Sampaio in A Geracao Nova (Oporto, 1886) ; Dr Theophilo
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Braga, As Modernas Ideias na litteratura Portugueza (Oporto, 1892) ; Padre Senna Freitas, Peril de Camillo Castello Branco (S . Paulo, 1887) ; and Paulo Osorio, Camillo, a sua vida, o seu genio, a sua
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obra (Oporto, 1908) . (E .

End of Article: VISCONDE DE CORREIA BOTELHO CAMILLO CASTELLO BRANCO (1825–1890)
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