The journal was named
Orpheu after the Greek mythological character
Orpheus, the musician who had to travel from the world of the living without looking back to save his wife
Eurydice from
Hades. This metaphor inspired the Geração de Orpheu, who aspired to not look back, to relinquish the past and focus on the future for the "edification of Portugal in the twentieth century". After emerging onto the Portuguese literary scene in 1915, the journal folded due to financial insolvency, when the father of
Mário de Sá-Carneiro refused to continue sponsoring it. Only two issues were published (Jan-Feb-Mar and Apr-May-Jun, 1915). The third issue of
Orpheu, already in printing proof, was lost for many years and until it was recovered and published in 1984. ==After
Orpheu==