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Literary Contributions of Catholics in Nineteenth-Century Mexico: Part Two: The Díaz Regime (1867–1910)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
Extract
Whereas proper classification presents no difficulty in the case of Peón y Contreras, who was primarily a poet, it is not so apparent in which group of writers one should place José María Roa Bárcena. That he was a poet of real merit is recognized, for instance, by González Peña, who treats of him in the chapter on poetry. In the present study, following the plan originally adopted, he will be considered now only as a poet and later in the study be given attention as a prose writer.
José María Roa Bárcena was born in 1827 in Jalapa, State of Veracruz, and he breathed his last in 1908 in Mexico City at the ripe old age of eighty-one. Thus his devotion to letters was yielding fruit long before the collapse of the Second Empire and continued to do so during the transition period and most of the Díaz era that followed. In this respect he ranks with the two bishops, Pagaza and Montes de Oca, whose contributions to Mexican literature will be dealt with presently. To the vigilant care with which his deeply religious parents watched over his childhood and early youth and also to the beneficent influence of a private tutor who combined learning with piety must be ascribed the fact that throughout his long life José María not only clung tenaciously to the Catholic faith but also exemplified in his private life and fearlessly upheld in his writings the religious and social principles which this faith stood for.
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- Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 1946
References
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93 Quoted from Méndez Plancarte, op. cit., 111–112. Translation:
94 Quoted from Joaquín García Icazbalceta (ed.), El Alma en el Templo, 135. Translation:
95 Quoted from La Sociedad Católica, II (1870), 226. Translation:
96 Quoted from La Edad Feliz (México), December 18, 1873, p. 4. Translation:
97 Quoted from Gabriel Méndez Plancarte, op. cit., 115–116. Translation:
98 See González Peña, op. cit., 166.
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108 González Peña, op. cit., 217.
109 Quoted from Fernández Merino, op. cit., 171–172. Translation:
110 Quoted from Urbina, op. cit., 202. Translation:
111 Quoted from Castro Leal, op. cit., 205–206. Translation:
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114 Quoted from Antología de Poetas Mexicanos, 398–399. Translation:
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120 Quoted from Castillo y Piña, Cuestiones Históricas, 252–253. Translation:
121 Quoted from Abside, III (1939), No. 3, p. 48. Translation:
122 Quoted from Castillo y Piña, Cuestiones Históricas, 247. Translation;
123 Quoted from Abside, III (1939), No. 3, p. 23. Translation:
124 Following are the lines in question:
Dryden’s rendition of these lines reads:
H. Rushton Fairclough (Loeb Classical Library: Virgil, I, 27) offers this rendition:
125 Quoted from Carreño, Clearco Meonio, 18. Translation:
126 Ibidem, 35–36. Translation:
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131 Ibidem, 224.
132 Quoted from Antología de Poetas Mexicanos, 319–320. Translation:
133 Quoted from El Parnaso Mexicano (México), 2a serie, I de Abril de 1886, pp. 20–24 Translation:
134 Quoted from Gabriel Méndez Plancarte, Horacio en México, 147. Translation:
135 Quoted from Castro Leal, op. cit., 185–186. Translation:
136 Quoted from Abside, IV (1940), No. 6, p. 19. Translation:
137 Ibidem, 28.
138 Quoted from El Parnaso Mexicano, 2a serie, 1 de Abril de 1886, p. 34. Translation: