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ANTONIO FELICIANO DE CASTILHO (1800-1875) , Portuguese See also: man of letters, was See also: born at See also: Lisbon
.
He lost his sight at the age of six, but the devotion of his See also: brother Augusto, aided by a retentive memory, enabled him to go through his school and university course with success; and he acquired an almost See also: complete mastery of the Latin language and literature
.
His first See also: work of importance, the Cartels de See also: Echo e Narciso (1821), belongs to the pseudo-classical school in which he had been brought up, but his romantic leanings became apparent in the Primavera (1822) and in Amor e See also: Melancholia (1823), two volumes of honeyed and prolix bucolic See also: poetry
.
In the poetic legends A noite de See also: Castello (1836) and Cuimes do bardo (1838) Castilho appeared as a full-blown Romanticist
.
These books exhibit the defects and qualities of all his work, in which lack of ideas and of creative See also: imagination and an atmosphere of artificiality are See also: ill compensated for by a certain emotional charm, See also: great purity of diction and melodious versification
.
Belonging to the didactic and descriptive school, Castilho saw nature as all sweetness, pleasure and beauty, and he lived in a dreamland of his imagination
.
A fulsome epic on the succession of See also: King
See also: John VI. brought him an office of profit at
See also: Coimbra
.
On his return from a stay in See also: Madeira, he founded the Revista Universal Lisbonense, in imitation of Herculano's Panorama, and his profound knowledge of the Portuguese See also: classics served him well in the introduction and notes to a very useful publication, the Livraria Classica Portugueza (1845–1847, 25 vols.), while two years later he established the " Society of the See also: Friends of Letters and the Arts." A study on Camoens and See also: treatises on metrification and mnemonics followed from his See also: pen
.
His praise-worthy zeal for popular instruction led him to take up the study of pedagogy, and in 185o he brought out his Leitura Repentina, a method of See also: reading which was named after him, and he became See also: government commissary of the See also: schools which were destined to put it into practice
.
Going to See also: Brazil in 1854, he there wrote his famous " Letter to the Empress." Though Castilho's lack of strong individuality and his over-great respect for authority prevented him from achieving See also: original work of real merit, yet his See also: translations of See also: Anacreon, Ovid and Virgil and the Chave do See also: Enigma, explaining the romantic incidents that led to his first See also: marriage with D
.
Maria de See also: Baena, a niece of the satirical poet See also: Tolentino, and a descendant of Antonio See also: Ferreira, reveal him as a master of See also: form and a purist in language
.
His versions of Goethe's See also: Faust and See also: Shakespeare's Midsummer See also: Night's Dream, made without a knowledge of See also: German and See also: English, scarcely added to his reputation
.
When the Coimbra question arose in 1865, Garrett was dead and Herculano had ceased to write, leaving Castilho supreme, for the moment, in theSee also: realm of letters
.
But the youthful Anthero de See also: Quental withstood his claim to See also: direct the rising generation and attacked his superannuated leadership, and after a fierce war of See also: pamphlets Castilho was dethroned
.
The rise of Joao de See also: Deus reduced him to a secondary position in the Portuguese See also: Parnassus, and when he died ten years later much of his former fame had preceded him to the See also: tomb
.
See also " Memorias de Castilho" in the Instituto of Coimbra; .Innocencio da See also: Silva in Diccionario bibliographic() Portuguez, i
.
130 and viii
.
132: Latino Coelho's study in the Revista Gontemporanea de See also: Portugal e Brazil, vols. i. and ii
.
; Dr Theophilo See also: Braga, Historia do Romantismo (Lisbon, 188o)
.
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