Árpád Tóth

19th-20th century music teacher
The basics

Quick Facts

Intro19th-20th century music teacher
PlacesHungary
wasMusic educator Teacher
Work fieldAcademia Music
Gender
Male
Birth26 May 1872, Buda, Budapest, Hungary
Death13 January 1932Budapest, Hungary (aged 59 years)
Star signGemini
The details

Biography

Árpád Tóth (14 April 1886 in Arad – 7 November 1928 in Budapest) was a Hungarian poet and translator.
Tóth went to Gymnasium (high school) in Debrecen and then studied German and Hungarian at the University of Budapest. In 1907, his poems began to appear in the papers A Hét and Vasárnapi Újság and after 1908 in Nyugat. In 1911, he became a theater critic for the paper Debreceni Nagy Újság.
In 1913, he became a tutor to a wealthy family and received a little income from writing but still lived in poverty. Tuberculosis led him to rest at the Svedlér Sanitorium in the Tatra Mountains.
During the period of the revolutionary government after World War I, he became secretary of the Vörösmarty Academy, but lost the position and couldn't find new work after the government's fall. He remained poor and sick with tuberculosis for the rest of his life, succumbing to the disease in Budapest in 1928. His prolonged suffering led him to consider suicide at one point – although he did join the staff of Az Est in 1921.
In Debrecen, a gymnasium named of after him. In April 2011, the Hungarian National Bank issued a commemorative silver coin celebrating the 125th anniversary of the poet's birth.

Works

He was a major lyric poet and contributed to the Nyugat School. His core themes focused on fleeting happiness and resignation.

He translated Milton, Oscar Wilde, Shelley, Keats, Baudelaire, Flaubert, Gautier, Maupassant, and Chekhov.

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