Victorino Abente y Lago (June 2, 1846 in Muxía, Spain – December 22, 1935 in Asunción, Paraguay) was a Paraguayan poet.
In spite of being Galician, his life and work identifies the Paraguay since the very moment of his arrival in March 1869, when the Brazilian and Argentine troops occupied the country.
He was related to the second stage of Paraguayan romanticism that began after the War Against the Triple Alliance, and even with post-romanticism.
His poems, spread in many journals and magazines of his time, were recompiled and published after his decease in Asunción by his grandson Cándido Samaniego Abente in a book entitled Poetic Anthology: 1867-1926, in 1984.
About his work, Ignacio A. Pane wrote: "He sang the most beautiful, passionate, enthusiastic and poetic song in just one word that until now writers and teachers have been directing the Paraguay... Taken by the wings of his own inspiration he made that the 'Paraguayan Sibyl' stood firm and tended the pointer finger of the prophet to show him the Promised Land..." Married with Isabel Miskowsky, Victorino Juan Ramón Abente y Lago deceased in Asunción, December 22, 1935.