| Columbia Encyclopedia: Bayard Taylor |
| Works: Works by Bayard Taylor |
| 1846 | Views A-foot; or, Europe Seen with Knapsack and Staff. An account of the Pennsylvania poet and novelist's two-year walking tour of Europe, which he managed on an extremely limited budget. Written on his return to the United States, the book becomes immediately popular, passing through six printings in one year and acclaimed by the New England literati, including Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and John Greenleaf Whittier. |
| 1850 | Eldorado; or, Adventures in the Path of Empire: Comprising a Voyage to California, via Panama; Life in San Francisco and Monterey; Pictures of the Gold Region, and Experiences of Mexican Travel. A vibrant account of the gold rush and the establishment of government in California as Taylor observed it when sent west as a reporter for Horace Greeley's Tribune. Considered his best travel book, it would be reprinted in 1949 for the centennial of the gold rush. |
| 1854 | A Journey to Central Africa; or, Life and Landscapes from Egypt to the Negro Kingdoms of the White Nile. An account of Taylor's travels to exotic areas seldom traversed by Americans or Europeans. It wins wide commendation; Putnam's calls him "clearly the traveller of the nineteenth century." His other books include The Lands of the Saracen (1855) and A Visit to India, China, and Japan, in the Year 1853 (1855). |
| 1855 | Poems of the Orient. Considered the author's finest and most characteristic book of verse, it contains his most famous poem, "The Bedouin Song," which would be set to music at least six times. |
| 1862 | The Poet's Journal. A collection of verse containing popular poems previously contributed to journals. The North American Review deems it "his best" volume of poetry. |
| 1863 | Hannah Thurston. Taylor's first novel deals with women's rights in the United States. Although popular and described by the Atlantic Monthly as an "able pioneer" on the topic, bringing "an appreciable degree of sense, justice, and dignity" to the "Women's Rights question," the novel is now considered, with Taylor's others, to lack distinction. It would be followed by John Godfrey's Fortune (1864), depicting New York's contemporary literary scene. |
| 1866 | The Story of Kennett. Regarded as Taylor's best fiction, this novel depicts the life and inhabitants of a Pennsylvania town in the eighteenth century. |
| 1872 | Beauty and the Beast and Tales of Home. Taylor's volume of short stories mainly concerns his home county of Chester, Pennsylvania. Included as well are romantic views of Russia and satires on various contemporary reforms. |
| 1876 | The Echo Club and Other Literary Diversions. The "poet laureate of the Gilded Age" assesses the competition in a series of parodies of the works of Whitman and other contemporary poets. |
| Quotes By: Bayard Taylor |
Quotes:
"From the desert I come to thee, On a stallion shod with fire; And the winds are left behind In the speed of my desire."
"The loving are the daring."
"Fame is what you have taken, character is what you give. When to this truth you awaken, then you begin to live."
"The bravest are the most tender; the loving are the daring."
| Wikipedia: Bayard Taylor |
| Bayard Taylor | |
| Born | January 11, 1825 Chester County, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
|---|---|
| Died | December 19, 1878 (aged 53) Germany |
Bayard Taylor (James) (January 11, 1825 – December 19, 1878) was an American poet, literary critic, translator, and travel author.
Contents |
Taylor was born on January 11, 1825,[1] in Kennett Square in Chester County, Pennsylvania. He was the fourth son, first to live to maturity, of Joseph and Rebecca (nee Way) Taylor.[2] His father was a well-to-do farmer and young Bayard received his early instruction in an academy at West Chester, and later at Unionville. At the age of seventeen he was apprenticed to a printer in West Chester. His interest in poetry was coached by influential critic and editor Rufus Wilmot Griswold, who encouraged him to produce a volume of poetry. Published at Philadelphia in 1844 under the title Ximena, or the Battle of the Sierra Morena, and other Poems was dedicated to Griswold,[3] though it brought its author little profit; and indirectly it did him better service as the means of his introduction to The New York Tribune.
With the money thus obtained, and with an advance made to him on account of some journalistic work to be done in Europe, JB Taylor (as he had up to this time signed himself, though he bore no other Christian name than Bayard) set sail for the East. The young poet spent a happy time in roaming through certain districts of England, France, Germany and Italy; that he was a born traveler is evident from the fact that this pedestrian tour of almost two years cost him only £100. The graphic accounts which he sent from Europe to The New York Tribune, The Saturday Evening Post, and The United States Gazette were so highly appreciated that on Taylor's return to America he was advised to throw his articles into book form.
In 1846, accordingly, appeared his Views Afoot, or Europe seen with Knapsack and Staff (2 vols, New York). This pleasant book had considerable popularity, and its author now found himself a recognized man of letters. He was asked to serve as an editorial assistant for Graham's Magazine for a few months in 1848.[4] That same year, Horace Greeley, then editor of the Tribune, placed Taylor on the Tribune staff thus securing Taylor a certain if a moderate income. His next journey, made when the gold-fever was at its height, was to California, as correspondent for the Tribune. From this expedition he returned by way of Mexico, and, seeing his opportunity, published (2 vols, New York, 1850) a highly successful book of travels, entitled El Dorado; or, Adventures in the Path of Empire. Ten thousand copies were said to have been sold in America, and thirty thousand in Great Britain, within a fortnight from the date of issue.
Bayard Taylor always considered himself native to the East, and it was with great delight that in 1851 he found himself on the banks of the Nile, He ascended as far as 12' 30° N, and stored his memory with countless sights and delights, to many of which he afterwards gave expression in metrical form. From England, towards the end of 1852, he sailed for Calcutta, proceeding thence to China, where he joined the expedition of Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry to Japan.
The results of these journeys (besides his poetical memorials) were A Journey to Central Africa; or, Life and Landscapes from Egypt to the Negro Kingdoms of the White Nile (New York, 1854); The Lands of the Saracen; or, Pictures of Palestine, Asia Minor, Sicily and Spain (1854); and A Visit to India, China and Japan in the Year 1853 (1855).
On his return (December 20, 1853) from these various journeyings he entered, with marked success, upon the career of a public lecturer, delivering addresses in every town of importance from Maine to Wisconsin. After two years experience of this lucrative profession, he again started on his travels, on this occasion for northern Europe, his special object being the study of Swedish life, language and literature. The most noteworthy result was the long narrative poem Lars, but his Swedish Letters to the Tribune were also republished, under the title Northern Travel: Summer and Winter Pictures (London, 1857).
His first wife, May Agnew, died (1850) within a year of her marriage, and in October 1857 he married Maria Hansen, the daughter of Peter Hansen, the German astronomer. The ensuing winter was spent in Greece. In 1859 Taylor once more traversed the whole extent of the western American gold region, the primary cause of the journey lying in an invitation to lecture at San Francisco. About three years later he entered the diplomatic service as secretary of legation at St. Petersburg, and the following year (1863) became chargé d'affaires at the Russian capital.
In 1864 he returned to the United States and resumed his active literary labors, and it was at this period that Hannah Thurston (New York, 1863), the first of his four novels, was published. This book had a moderate success, but neither in it nor in its successors did Bayard Taylor betray any special talent as a novelist. His late novel, Joseph and His Friend: A Story of Pennsylvania (New York, 1870), recounts an intimate friendship between two men and has been called America's first gay novel.[5][6] In 1874 he went to Iceland, to report for the Tribune the one thousandth anniversary of the first settlement there.
In June 1878 he was accredited United States minister at Berlin. Notwithstanding the resistless passion for travel which had always possessed him, Bayard Taylor was (when not actually en route) sedentary in his habits, especially in the later years of his life. Only a few months after arriving in Berlin, Taylor died on December 19, 1878; his body was buried in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania.[7] Shortly after his death, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote a memorial poem to Taylor under the urging of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
Cedarcroft, his home from 1859 to 1874, which he built himself near Kennett Square, is preserved as a National Historic Landmark.
According to the 1911 edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica:
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