Dolores Veintimilla
Dolores Veintimilla | |
---|---|
Portrait of Dolores Veintimilla | |
Born |
1829 Quito, Ecuador |
Died |
May 23, 1857 (aged 27) Cuenca, Ecuador |
Occupation | Poet |
Nationality | Ecuadorian |
Spouse | Dr. Sixto Antonio Galindo y Oroña |
Dolores Veintimilla de Galindo (1829 in Quito – May 23, 1857 in Cuenca) was an Ecuadorian poet.
Her most well-known poem is "Quejas" (Complaints).
Veintemilla left few works, which were published posthumously in a collection by Celiano Monge in Quito.
Biography
Her parents were José Veintimilla and Jerónima Carrión y Antepara, who were from Loja, Ecuador.
On February 16, 1847, at the age of 18, she married Dr. Sixto Antonio Galindo y Oroña from Colombia. They had a son named Santiago, whose godmother was Rosa Ascázubi, the first lady of Ecuador (married to President Gabriel Garcia Moreno). Veintimilla, her husband, and son moved to Guayaquil where they were accepted by high society with open arms.
She committed suicide on May 23, 1857 in Cuenca.
Literary works
Her notable prose includes “Fantasía” (Fantasy) and “Recuerdos” (Recollections), in which she dialogues with the past and blames time for giving an early death to her dreams. She best expressed her pain in her poetry, which includes “Aspiración” (Aspiration), “Desencanto” (Disenchantment), “Anhelo” (Yearning), “Sufrimiento” (Suffering), “La noche y mi dolor” (The Night and My Pain), “Quejas” (Complaints), “A mis enemigos” (To My Enemies), “A un Reloj” (To a Clock) and “A mi madre” (To My Mother). Her literary style is characterized by rhythmic and musical verse, and she hardly made use of metaphors or imagery in her poetry.[1]