Nívea’s husband and Clara and Rosa’s father. Severo is an atheist and a mason, and he completely supports his suffragette wife and her fight for women’s rights. Like Nívea, Severo is an aspiring politician, and even though he is a member of the upper class, he joins the Liberal Party. He runs in the Congressional election, representing a southern province he has never been to, but he drops out of the race after Rosa is killed by poisoned brandy intended for him. The brandy, which is thought to be a gift from the southern voters, is a clear assassination attempt. Rumor spreads that the brandy was sent by the Conservative Party as revenge for Severo’s decision to join the Liberal Party despite his class, but this is never confirmed. When Severo drops out of the Congressional race, he hopes none of his descendants will ever enter politics, which he claims is “a trade for butchers and bandits.” Severo’s experience reflects the corrupt nature of politics and government within Allende’s novel, and it further underscores the resistance that liberalism and other left-wing ideologies are met with by the Conservative Party.