Fernando Pessoa
Fernando Pessoa (1888-1935), the Portuguese poet, fiction writer, literary critic, and
translator, is one of the most significant literary figures of the 20th century. By the time of his passing, at the age of 47, Pessoa had created nearly 140 fictional alter egos or heteronyms as he later called them and for whom he is now celebrated—writing poetry and prose under such names as Karl P. Effield, Charles Robert Anon, Alexander Search, Jean Seul de Méluret, Vicente Guedes, Frederick Wyatt, and more. Alberto Caeiro was the central heteronym of the poetic coterie; the other two major heteronyms were Ricardo Reis and Álvaro de Campos, and Pessoa himself considered Caeiro to be their literary Master.
Álvaro de Campos is a heteronym created by Portugal’s greatest modernist writer
Fernando Pessoa. According to Pessoa, Campos was born in Tavira (Algarve) in 1890 and
studied mechanical engineering in Glasgow (Scotland) though never managed to
complete his degree. Orphaned at an early age, he embarked to the East in his early 20s
where he became an opium addict, much like the Portuguese symbolist poet Camilo
Pessanha (1867-1926). Back in Portugal, on a visit in the Ribatejo province, Campos met
Alberto Caeiro—the literary master of Pessoa’s fictitious coterie. A dandy and flaneur,
Álvaro de Campos read Blake, Whitman, and Nietzsche, among others. In his own day
he was celebrated and slandered for his vociferous poetry imbued with Whitmanian free verse rhythms, his praise of the rise of technology and polemical views on the industrial civilization—also attested in manifestos, interviews and essays. Some of his most notable works such as the “Ode Marítima” [Maritime Ode], “Ultimatum,” and “Tabacaria” [Tobacconist’s Shop] were published during Pessoa’s lifetime. Fernando Pessoa didn’t end Campos’s life, so that this heteronym would survive his author who died in 1935.
Fernando Pessoa. According to Pessoa, Campos was born in Tavira (Algarve) in 1890 and
studied mechanical engineering in Glasgow (Scotland) though never managed to
complete his degree. Orphaned at an early age, he embarked to the East in his early 20s
where he became an opium addict, much like the Portuguese symbolist poet Camilo
Pessanha (1867-1926). Back in Portugal, on a visit in the Ribatejo province, Campos met
Alberto Caeiro—the literary master of Pessoa’s fictitious coterie. A dandy and flaneur,
Álvaro de Campos read Blake, Whitman, and Nietzsche, among others. In his own day
he was celebrated and slandered for his vociferous poetry imbued with Whitmanian free verse rhythms, his praise of the rise of technology and polemical views on the industrial civilization—also attested in manifestos, interviews and essays. Some of his most notable works such as the “Ode Marítima” [Maritime Ode], “Ultimatum,” and “Tabacaria” [Tobacconist’s Shop] were published during Pessoa’s lifetime. Fernando Pessoa didn’t end Campos’s life, so that this heteronym would survive his author who died in 1935.