
Rimas de dentro
Unamuno called poetry "the supreme language of the soul," and these verses prove it. Rimas de dentro peels back the mask of the renowned philosopher to reveal a man haunted by mortality, faith, and the unfathomable mystery of being. Spanning decades of his life, these are not mere philosophical exercises rendered in verse, but something far more unsettling: the raw interior of a thinker who interrogated existence with the same ferocity he brought to his essays and novels. Some poems date from his student years; another was famously penned on a train journey. Yet what emerges across this collection is the particular anguish of a consciousness that cannot look away from the void. For readers who have felt the weight of Unamuno's famous anxiety, that dizzying sense of being suspended between faith and doubt, this volume offers the most intimate access to his mind. It is poetry as existential excavation, every rhyme a wound opened to the light.






![Night Watches [complete]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fd3b2n8gj62qnwr.cloudfront.net%2FCOVERS%2Fgutenberg_covers75k%2Febook-12161.png&w=3840&q=75)



