Sign in  |  Register

The New Criterion

Quite simply, the best cultural review in the world
- John O’Sullivan

Features

April 1999

Eça de Queirós

by Alexander Coleman

On the influential Portuguese novelist

There is a photograph of the Portuguese novelist José Maria Eça de Queirós (1845– 1900) surrounded by his friends in a Lisbon salon in the late 1880s. They all convey a notable elegance of attire and toilette —striped pants, burnished top hats, abundant beards, and finely-waxed upturned moustaches. Eça de Queirós is seated at a table in front of the group, walking stick in hand, eyes cast down demurely. This group of eleven men represented the intellectual elite of Portugal at that time. They were poets, diplomats, statesmen, politicians who for a time gathered weekly at the Hotel Braganza or at the home of one of the group.

Energetic achievers in many realms, they paradoxically called themselves Os vencidos da vida (“Those defeated by life”). The morose title given to the group has as much to do with the apparent glories of Portugal’s past—the adventures i ...

This article is available to subscribers and for individual purchase

Subscribe to TNC (Print and Online editions)

Subscribe to TNC (Online only)

Purchase article credit and clip this article

If you already have an account login first

Alexander Coleman was a long-time contributor to The New Criterion and a close friend of the editors. He died on June 17th, 2002.


 


more from this author

This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 17 April 1999, on page 28

Copyright © 2012 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com

http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/E-ccedil-a-de-Queir-oacute-s-2879
rate this article for your user profile

E-mail to friend


The New Criterion

By the author

The gypsy balladeer

by Alexander Coleman

A review of Collected Poems, by Federico Garcia Lorca.

Toscanini in his letters

by Alexander Coleman

The great conductor as revealed in his letters.

Houses of repute

by Alexander Coleman

A review of Molto Agitato: The Mayhem Behind the Music at the Metropolitan Opera, by Johanna Fiedler, Covent Garden: The Untold Story, by Norman Lebrecht, Valery Gergiev and the Kirov: A Story of Survival, by John Ardoin.

You might also enjoy

Christopher, for better & for worse

by Peter Collier

On the critic, polemicist & raconteur Christopher Hitchens (1949–2011).

Let's tickle the ivories

by David Dubal

On the joys of playing the piano.

Most popular

view more >

The New Criterion is now optimized for Mobile Devices

Webcasts

Anthony Daniels on the Euro Crisis
The New Criterion author Anthony Daniels delivers remarks in New York City about the "European experiment." With an introduction by editor Roger Kimball. Recorded on November 30, 2011.


Andrew C. McCarthy: The Muslim Threat
The New Criterion contributor Andrew C. McCarthy delivers remarks in Effingham, Illinois, about the threat of Islamism to the United States. A Friend of The New Criterion, Dwight Erskine, introduces McCarthy to the Effingham audience. Recorded on October 1, 2011.


Roger Kimball: The Grim Future of Statism
The New Criterion editor Roger Kimball delivers remarks in Effingham, Illinois, about the future of statism and The New Criterion's 30th anniversary. A Friend of The New Criterion, Dwight Erskine, introduces Roger Kimball to the Effingham audience. Recorded on October 1, 2011.