Juan María Acebal

Juan María Acebal or Xuan María Acebal (8 March 1815 11 February 1895), was an Asturian writer who wrote both in Spanish and Asturian.

He was born in Oviedo, studied Humanities and philosophy with the Jesuits, and after their expulsion from Spain in 1835, he had to abandon his studies and return to Oviedo. There, along with his brother, was involved in various businesses, noting especially his artistic side as a sculptor. Acebal, who had traditionalist ideas, deeply religious and Carlist Party member, was exiled to Bayonne (France), in 1873 after the last Carlist War.

His poetry was always published in the regional press and was not collected in book until 1925 when Enrique Garcia Rendueles collected it for the work "Los nuevos bablistas".

It is often referred to him as the "prince of bable poets" due to its linguistic rigor and literary quality of his works.

Works

  • Cantar y más cantar
  • La fonte de Fascura
  • A María Inmaculada
  • Refugium peccatorum
  • ¡Pobre madre!
  • El amor del hogar
  • Trébole
  • Charada
  • ¡Qué despacio el tiempo pasa!
  • A Enrique Tamberlick
gollark: Stuff is seemingly not magically self-computing. At least, I haven't seen algorithms somehow run themselves.
gollark: That is a good question. "I think therefore I am" and all, but that really only implies that in some form "I" am running on some kind of processing hardware which can do consciousness, whether it is my foolish mortal brain in a universe with quarks and everything or a simulation of that on, I don't know, some kind of massive cellular automaton.
gollark: Well, the computer and jar have to physically exist in some form.
gollark: Besides that, the bee-image is quite clearly distinguishable from a bee in many ways.
gollark: The simplest and most sensible explanation is the non-jar thing.
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