Horacio A. Rega Molina

[1] The works of his youth produced between 1919 and 1925, show an evident influence of the style of Leopoldo Lugones who sponsors him.

Rega Molina was born in 1899 in San Nicolás de los Arroyos, Argentina.

He died in Buenos Aires on October 24, 1957, alone because of the political passions of the time[clarification needed].

Rega Molina was influenced by the writer Leopoldo Lugones and was a friend of Roberto Mariani[who?]

His most important works include "The Happy Hour" (1919), "The Poem of the Rain " (1922), "The fragrant tree" (1923), "On the Eve of Good Love" (1925), "drawn from a Window Sunday" (1928), "Blue Map " (1931), "Provincial Oda" (1940), "Sentenced to Death Sonnets" (1940), "Root and Crown" (1943), "Homeland of the Field" (1946), "Sonnets My Blood "(1951), "Collection of Poems" (1954).