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Born in May 4, 1866 / Died in April 22, 1924 / Brazil / Portugese

Biography

He was the son of Major Hyginus José Botelho de Carvalho and Augusta Carolina Bueno, descendant of Amador Bueno, the Listing.

Formed on November 8, 1886, aged 20, of the Law School of São Paulo, in the course of Law and Social Sciences (where to enroll had to get special permission of the General Assembly of the Empire, by not having the minimum age to attend the professorship of law) .1

When deputy, was a member of the drafting committee of the Constitution of the State of São Paulo and Secretary of Interior, having abandoned the policy soon after.

Farmer was in France, between 1896 and 1901, when he returned to Santos and settled there as a lawyer.

Moved to São Paulo in 1907, and was appointed judge of law the following year and, since 1914, the Minister of the Court of Justice of the State of São Paulo.

As a journalist, collaborated in various newspapers such as The State of São Paulo and the Tribune. In 1889, he founded the Daily Morning in Santos and in 1905, The Journal.

He served as editor of the magazine Idea and Republic. Having published verse, prose debuted in a controversy with the poet Days Rocha.2

In 1885 he published his first book Ardentias. Three years later came Reliquary (1888). When he returned to Santos, boiled the abolitionist movement. In 1902 he published the Rose, love.

The work that marked his poetic career, Poems and Songs, was first published in 1908 with a foreword by his friend Euclides da Cunha. Had seventeen editions.

He married in 1888 with Ermelinda Ferreira de Mesquita (Biloca) in Santos, with whom he had fifteen children.