GOMEZ CARRILLO.
Contemporary novelist, essayist, and chroniqueur.
[[1]] L'Evolution de la poésie lyrique en France au XIXe siécle, Paris, 1899, p. 134.
[[2]] "Tzar of three colours, black, white, and Indian (red)—who governs the American continent—and is called the Sovereign People."
[[3]] "Thou shalt suffer the martyrdom—that for him who is born a poet—is reserved by impious fate."
[[4]] "I live only when I dream—that my heart has broken all ties with the world— ... Come, for my life and my joy hardly begin to be—save when I know I have left mankind far behind me."
[[5]] "Like the ruins of a silent temple,—empty, abandoned, fearful,—without light and without sound."
[[6]] "Men refuse me a tomb in their cities,—in my country I was expelled from the house of my fathers."
[[7]] "My God, Lord my God, who is there in the world—that is not sorrow's?—Man is born and lives a moment—and suffers unto death."