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1901 2012
Prize category:
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The Nobel Prize in Literature 1945
Gabriela Mistral
Banquet Speech
Gabriela Mistral's speech at the Nobel
Banquet at the City Hall in Stockholm, December 10, 1945
(Translation)
Today Sweden turns toward a distant Latin
American country to honour it in the person of one of the many
exponents of its culture. It would have pleased the cosmopolitan
spirit of Alfred Nobel to extend the scope of his protectorate of
civilization by including within its radius the southern
hemisphere of the American continent. As a daughter of Chilean
democracy, I am moved to have before me a representative of the
Swedish democratic tradition, a tradition whose originality
consists in perpetually renewing itself within the framework of
the most valuable creations of society. The admirable work of
freeing a tradition from deadwood while conserving intact the
core of the old virtues, the acceptance of the present and the
anticipation of the future, these are what we call Sweden, and
these achievements are an honour to Europe and an inspiring
example for the American continent.
The daughter of a new people, I salute the spiritual pioneers of
Sweden, by whom I have been helped more than once. I recall its
men of science who have enriched its national body and mind. I
remember the legion of professors and teachers who show the
foreigner unquestionably exemplary schools, and I look with
trusting love to those other members of the Swedish people:
farmers, craftsmen, and workers.
At this moment, by an undeserved stroke of fortune, I am the
direct voice of the poets of my race and the indirect voice for
the noble Spanish and Portuguese tongues. Both rejoice to have
been invited to this festival of Nordic life with its tradition
of centuries of folklore and poetry.
May God preserve this exemplary nation, its heritage and its
creations, its efforts to conserve the imponderables of the past
and to cross the present with the confidence of maritime people
who overcome every challenge.
My homeland, represented here today by our learned Minister
Gajardo, respects and loves Sweden, and it has sent me here to
accept the special honour you have awarded to it. Chile will
treasure your generosity among her purest memories.
Prior to the speech, Professor A.H.T. Theorell of the Department of Biochemistry, Nobel Institute of Medicine, addressed the Chilean poet: «To you, Gabriela Mistral, I wish to convey our admiring homage. From a distant continent, where the summer sun now shines, you have ventured the long journey to Gösta Berling's land, when the darkness of winter broods at its deepest. A worthier voice than mine has praised your poetry earlier today. May I nevertheless be permitted to say that we all share in the gladness that the Nobel Prize has this time been awarded to a poetess who combines magnificent art with the deepest and noblest aims.»
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967, Editor Horst Frenz, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, 1969
Copyright © The Nobel Foundation 1945
MLA style: "Gabriela Mistral - Banquet Speech". Nobelprize.org. 18 May 2013 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1945/mistral-speech.html
