Thoughtful, meditative, makes but slight appeal to the mass of readers.
Tender and graceful, pervaded by a contemplative melancholy, and a love of solitude and the silence of the woods.
Poet, journalist, editor of New York Evening Post.
Republican, progressive though not quite populist.
A poet of great technical sophistication who was a progenitor of Walt Whitman, to whom he was a mentor.
Rhythmical flow is voluptuous and melodious. Pleasurable sadness.
Though he was brought up to admire Pope, and in his early youth imitated him, he was one of the first American poets to throw off his influence. Bryant had an interest in science and in geology especially.
High sense of duty, was a prominent and patriotic citizen, and enjoyed the esteem and even the reverence of his fellow-countrymen.
American poet and newspaper editor, born in Cummington, Massachusetts. The son of a learned and highly respected physician, Bryant was exposed to English poetry in his father`s vast library. As a boy he became devoted to the New England countryside and was a keen observer of nature. In his early poems such as Thanatopsis, To a Waterfowl, Inscription for the Entrance to a Wood, and The Yellow Violet, all written before he was 21, he celebrated the majesty of nature in a style that was influenced by the English romantics but also reflected a personal simplicity and dignity. Admitted to the bar in 1815 after a year at Williams and private study, Bryant practiced law in Great Barrington, Mass., until 1825, when he went to New York City. By that time he was already known as a poet and critic.
He became associate editor of the New York Evening Post in 1826, and from 1829 to his death he was part owner and editor in chief. An industrious and forthright editor of a highly literate paper, he was a defender of human rights and an advocate of free trade, abolition of slavery, and other reforms. He also holds an important place in literature as the earliest American theorist of poetry. In his Lectures on Poetry (delivered 1825; published 1884) and other critical essays he stressed the values of simplicity, original imagination, and morality.
During his later career Bryant traveled widely, made many public speeches, and continued to write a few poems (e.g., The Death of the Flowers, To the Fringed Gentian, and The Battle-Field). His blank verse translation of the Iliad appeared in 1870, that of the Odyssey in 1872. Â