Knowledge (XXG)

Porfirio Barba-Jacob

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he adopted a new pseudonym which he would use for the rest of his life: Porfirio Barba-Jacob. Around 1907, still in Barranquilla, he wrote his first poems, such as "Árbol viejo", "Campiña florida", and his most famous work, "Canción de la vida profunda"
126:), which he managed under the pseudonym Marín Jiménez. Short after, he wrote the novel "Virginia", which was never published because the original manuscript was confiscated by the 323: 298: 328: 343: 308: 218: 217:. Four years after his death, on 11 January 1946, his ashes were claimed by the Colombian government and were returned to the 333: 170: 276: 338: 303: 53: 200:
and Cuba. In 1927 he returned to Colombia and, after some recitals and contributions to the Colombian journal
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where he adopted the pseudonym Ricardo Arenales. He continued to use this pseudonym until 1922 when in
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Bronze and concrete monument to Porfirio Barba Jacob in the central municipal park of
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In 1918 he returned to Mexico, where it is said that he wrote a biography of
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and fled again to Guatemala, from where he was again expelled in 1924 by
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and the US, he contributed to many magazines and journals. He befriended
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and the United States, before finally settling down in 1930 in
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Bust of Porfirio Barba Jacob in the Pilot Public Library in
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Index

Porfirio Barba Jacob
Barba (disambiguation)

Medellín
Colombia

Santa Rosa de Osos
Antioquia
Colombia
Rodrigo Arenas Betancur
pseudonym
poet
Santa Rosa de Osos
Antioquia
Angostura
Central America
Mexico City
Bogotá
mayor
Barranquilla
Guatemala
Central America
Mexico
Porfirio Díaz
Guatemala
Cuba
Manuel Estrada
Pancho Villa
Álvaro Obregón
Jorge Ubico

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