Life's Vanquished (Portuguese: Vencidos da Vida) is the name by which became known an informal group of intellectuals of great relevance to Portuguese cultural life in the last three decades of the 19th century. Among the Vanquished were some of the writers, politicians, and aristocrats that had strived to modernise the country in their youths during the Regeneration — and whose perceived failure had led them to channel their disenchantment into an elegant and ironic decadent dilettantism.[1]

In 1889, José Maria de Eça de Queirós, arguably the most notable member of the group, explained the perverse name of the group:

If a fellow walks through existence with the career of hairdresser his supreme ideal in life, that individual is a victor, a great victor, from the moment he holds in his hands a tangled mane and a pair of scissors to shear it with, even though you might find him walking across Chiado looking crestfallen and in ragtag boots. If, on the other hand, a young man of twenty, the age one has to choose a career, decides to become a millionaire, a sublime poet, an undefeated general, a tamer of men (or women, depending on the circumstance) and after the most strenuous effort reaches only halfway toward the vaunted million, poem, or cocked hat, then he is, for all intents and purposes, someone who has been vanquished, a dead man alive, even though you might find him strutting across the Baixa shrouded in a Poole frock coat, the luster of resignation on his top hat.

Eça de Queirós, O Tempo (29 March 1889)[2]

See also

References

  1. "Vencidos da Vida". Infopedia. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  2. Mónica, Maria Filomena (2001). "Os fiéis inimigos: Eça de Queirós e Pinheiro Chagas" [The faithful enemies: Eça de Queirós and Pinheiro Chagas] (PDF). Análise Social (in Portuguese). XXXVI (160): 711–733. Retrieved 11 July 2019.


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