Leonor Acevedo Suárez

Leonor Acevedo, circa 1900

Leonor Acevedo Suárez (1876–1975) was the mother of the Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges, and a major figure in his life and work.

Life

Leonor Acevedo was born in Uruguay, the daughter of Leonor Suárez de Acevedo (1837 – 1918) and Isidoro Acevedo Laprida. She married Jorge Guillermo Borges, a lawyer, professor and anarchist with literary aspirations, by whom she had two children: Jorge Luis in 1899 and Leonor Fanny in 1901. As her husband's sight deteriorated, she assisted him with his reading and dictation, services which she would later provide to her son as he succumbed to the same hereditary blindness.

Leonor produced several translations from English and French. Her output includes "The Woman Who Rode Away" by D. H. Lawrence, The Human Comedy by William Saroyan and Faulkner's If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem, among other works.[1]

Leonor was known for her forceful personality and vitality. Tomás Eloy Martínez writes that when Borges visited the University of Texas in Austin in 1961, his mother was eighty-five but appeared much younger; as she walked about on her son's arm, many of the students assumed that she was the author's wife.[2]

Leonor Acevedo died in 1975 at the age of ninety-nine. At her wake, a woman paid her respects and remarked, "Poor little Leonor, to die so soon before turning a hundred. If only she'd waited a little longer..." to which Borges replied, "I see, madam, that you're a devotee of the decimal system."[3]

Notes

  1. Borges & Ferrari (2005), 282–3
  2. Tomás Eloy Martínez (24 April 1999). "La Argentina en otra parte" (in Spanish). La Nación.
  3. Borges & Ferrari (2005)

References

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