The period in which he flourished was a heady time in Buenos Aires. The nation of Argentina had finally come together with the uniting of the city of Buenos Aires with the rest of the country,
Domingo Faustino Sarmiento and
Bartolomé Mitre were still alive, and Buenos Aires was striving to become the "Queen City" of South America. He was the founder and first editor of the Argentine Magazine
Caras y Caretas ("Faces and Masks"). The magazine featured a mixture of cartoons and illustrations along with national and foreign subjects taken from social news, notes of general interest and fashion. The magazine also published literary and rural literature. Its contributors include some of the leading lights of Argentine letters:
Roberto Payró,
Horacio Quiroga, and
José Ingenieros, among others. He was the first professional writer of Argentina. In his descriptions of regional customs, the narrator is a watching observer. He wrote at times in the different modes of Buenos Aires speech including the "
lunfardo" (the argot or slang of Buenos Aires which still exists). His writing was part of a movement of
modernism which was a reaction against the prevailing
romanticism and the rigidity of the Castilian
Spanish language and literature before his time, and which had a counterpart in the
Paris of the same period. One of his most praised works was the book
En El Mar Austral (On the Southern Sea), a tale of a year spent traveling on a whaling boat around the southern tip of
Chile and Argentina (
Tierra del Fuego) beginning in the town of
Punta Arenas in Chile. It describes in detail the scenery and life in the southernmost tip of South America. It does not appear that Mocho ever got within 500 miles of Tierra del Fuego and yet his descriptions are extremely accurate, and the source of his information is still not known. Mocho died on 23 August 1903, just three days short of his 45th birthday; an illness that had troubled him for years eventually causing his death. It is said that "he feared no one and nothing because he had damaged no one and had a pure heart" (as is stated in an edition of
En El Mar Austral published in 1960 by The
University of Buenos Aires). His last words were "I die fighting" ("muero luchando" in Spanish). His magazine lived on until 1941. == Bibliography ==