César Vallejo

Selected Writings of César Vallejo


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1927 308

       To Rafael Méndez Dorich, February 17, 1928 309

       To Pablo Abril de Vivero, March 17, 1928 309

       To Pablo Abril de Vivero, April 26, 1928 310

       To Pablo Abril de Vivero, October 19, 1928 310

       To Pablo Abril de Vivero, December 27, 1928 311

       Notebooks

       Entries from 1926–1928 313

       BOOK FOUR: 1929–1935

       From Human Poems

       Good Sense 317

       I Am Going to Speak of Hope 318

       “No one lives in the house” 319

       Height and Hair 319

       Hat, Overcoat, Gloves 320

       Black Stone on a White Stone 320

       “And don’t say another word to me” 321

       “It was Sunday in the clear ears of my jackass” 322

       “Today I like life much less” 322

       Epistle to the Passersby 323

       The Hungry Man’s Rack 324

       “Considering coldly” 325

       “Idle on a stone” 326

       Paris, October 1936 328

       “And if after so many words” 328

       Telluric and Magnetic 329

       “The miners came out of the mine” 331

       From Reflections at the Foot of the Kremlin

       8. Literature: A Meeting of Bolshevik Writers 333

       9. The Day of a Stonemason: Love, Sports, Alcohol, and Democracy 336

       14. Film: Russia Inaugurates a New Era on the Silver Screen 355

       From Russia Facing the Second Five-Year Plan

       What Is the Workers’ Club? 360

       Workers Discuss Literature 360

       The Mechanical Landscape 362

       Art and Revolution 363

       Dialectics and Manual Labor 364

       Articles and Chronicles

       The Lessons of Marxism 367

       The Youth of America in Europe 369

       Megalomania of a Continent 371

       The Economic Meaning of Traffic 373

       New Poetry from the United States 374

       Buried Alive 377

       From Warsaw to Moscow 380

       Mundial in Russia 381

       Mundial in Eastern Europe 383

       Three Cities in One 385

       Latest Theater News from Paris 387

       An Incan Chronicle 389

       The Incas, Revived 390

       From Tungsten

       Chapter 1 398

       Paco Yunque 426

       From Brothers Colacho

       Act 1, Scene 1 439

       Act 1, Scene 2 452

       Letters

       To Néstor P. Vallejo, October 27, 1929 468

       To José Carlos Mariátegui, October 17, 1929 468

       To Gerardo Diego, January 6, 1930 469

       To Gerardo Diego, January 27, 1932 470

       To Juan Larrea, January 29, 1932 471

       Notebooks

       Entries from 1929–1935 473

       BOOK FIVE: 1936–1938

       Articles and Chronicles

       Recent Discoveries in the Land of the Incas 485

       The Andes and Peru 487

       Man and God in Incan Sculpture 489

       The Great Cultural Lessons of the Spanish Civil War 491

       Popular Statements of the Spanish Civil War 493

       The Writer’s Responsibility 496

       From Human Poems

       “Today I would like to be happy willingly” 501

       Poem to Be Read and Sung 501

       “The tip of man” 502

       “My chest wants and does not want its color” 503

       “I stayed on to warm up the ink” 504

       “The peace, the wausp, the shoe heel, the slopes” 505

       “Confidence in glasses, not in the eye” 506

       “Alfonso: you are looking at me” 506

       “Chances are, I’m another” 508

       The Book of Nature 508

       “The anger that breaks the man into children” 509

       Intensity and Height 510

       Guitar 510

       The Nine Monsters 511

       “A man walks by with a baguette on his shoulder” 513

       The Soul That Suffered from Being Its Body 514

       “Let the millionaire walk naked, stark naked!” 515

       “The fact is the place where I put on” 517

       “In short, I have nothing with which” 518

       The Wretched 519

       Sermon on Death 521

       From Spain, Take This Cup from Me

       I. Hymn to the Volunteers for the Republic 523

       III. “He used to write with his big finger in the air” 527