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An exhibition in Granada showcases the list of works the poet had planned to write, some already begun and others of which only the titles remain.
A bust of the poet Federico Garcia Lorca, displayed in the exhibition of his unpublished documents.
Lorca and the Archive: Memory in Motion, the exhibition that will be open until May 11th at the center dedicated to Federico García Lorca in Granada's Plaza de la Romanilla, includes a document that few people knew: the list of works the poet had planned to write. He had the titles and certainly also the plots for each of them. But he lacked the time his murderers stole from him.
He had barely begun to write works like Maternity House and The Dark Stone; he had only managed to complete the first acts of Dreams of My Cousin Aurelia and The Dream of Life. There was only one title for Blood Has No Voice, The Poem of the Singing Café, and Cain and Abel. Looking at the list of works Federico had planned to write, two feelings come over us: what literary beauty we have yet to experience, and what profound sorrow at a life so unjustly cut short.





