Kálmán Kalocsay

Kalocsay studied medicine and later became a surgeon and the chief infectious disease specialist at a major Budapest hospital. He learned both Esperanto and its breakaway dialect Ido in his adolescence, but became more inclined towards Esperanto after he had seen its greater literary potential. In 1921 his first original collection of poems, ''Mondo kaj Koro'' (“World and heart”) was published. A further decade passed before the appearance of his collection ''Streĉita Kordo'' (“A taut string”), which many Esperantists consider one of the finest collections of original Esperanto poetry, and ''Rimportretoj'' (“Portraits in rhyme”), witty poems in rondel style about various people then prominent in the Esperanto movement. In 1932, under the pseudonym Peter Peneter, he published ''Sekretaj Sonetoj'' (“Secret sonnets”), a book of erotic verse.
In addition to being a prolific author of Esperanto works, Kalocsay guided the Esperanto literary world through a magazine and publishing house called ''Literatura Mondo'' (“Literary world”). A group of writers who coalesced around this magazine during the 1920s and 1930s were known as the "Budapest school" (''Budapeŝta skolo'').
Works of Kalocsay about literary and linguistic theory include the expansive ''Plena Gramatiko de Esperanto'' (“Complete grammar of Esperanto”) and ''Parnasa Gvidlibro'' (“Handbook of Parnassus”), a work on Esperanto poetics co-authored with Gaston Waringhien, and an academic style guide for Esperanto, ''Lingvo – Stilo – Formo'' (“Language, style and form”). Kalocsay also co-compiled the two-volume ''Enciklopedio de Esperanto'' (“Encyclopædia of Esperanto”).
Much was written about Kalocsay by his literary executor Ada Csiszár, after whose death the estate passed to the Esperanto Museum of the Austrian National Library. Provided by Wikipedia
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