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William Cullen BryantCummington, Massachusetts 1794 - 1878, New York City

William Cullen Bryant, (born Nov. 3, 1794, Cummington, Mass., U.S.—died June 12, 1878, New York

City), poet of nature, best remembered for “Thanatopsis,” and editor for 50 years of the New York

Evening Post.

A descendant of early Puritan immigrants, Bryant at 16

entered the sophomore class of Williams College. Because of

nances

and in hopes of attending Yale, he withdrew without

graduating. Unable to enter Yale, he studied law under private

guidance at Worthington and at Bridgewater and at 21 was

admitted to the bar. He spent nearly 10 years in Plaineld

and

at Great Barrington as an attorney, a calling for which he held

a lifelong aversion. At 26 Bryant married Frances Fairchild,

with whom he was happy until her death nearly half a century

later. In 1825 he moved to New York City to become coeditor of

the New York Review. He became an editor of the Evening

Post in 1827; in 1829 he became editor in chief and part owner

and continued in this position until his death. His careful

investment of his income made Bryant wealthy. He was an

active patron of the arts and letters.

The religious conservatism imposed on Bryant in childhood

found expression in pious doggerel; the political conservatism of his father stimulated “The

Embargo” (1808), in which the 13-year-old poet demanded the resignation of President Jefferson.

But in “Thanatopsis” (from the Greek “a view of death”), which he wrote when he was 17 and which

made him famous when it was published in The North American Review in 1817, he rejected

Puritan dogma for Deism; thereafter he was a Unitarian. Turning also from Federalism, he joined

the Democratic party and made the Post an organ of free trade, workingmen’s rights, free speech,

and abolition. Bryant was for a time a Free-Soiler and later one of the founders of the Republican

party. As a man of letters, Bryant securely established himself at the age of 27 with Poems (1821). In

his later years he devoted considerable time to translations.

Bryant will be remembered longest as the poet of his native Berkshire hills and streams in such

poems as “Thanatopsis” and “To a Waterfowl.

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(c) 2017 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
William Cullen Bryant
17 February 1877
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