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Joaquin Miller

 
Biography: Joaquin Miller

American writer Joaquin Miller (1837-1913), a self-styledbuilt a temporary reputation on literary opportunism and a fortuitous London reception.

Joaquin Miller was born Cincinnatus Hiner Miller on a farm near Liberty, Ind., on Sept. 8, 1837. His parents set out for the West in 1852 and settled in the Willamette Valley, Ore. Within 2 years their restless son left for the California gold mines. For a time Miller lived with northern California Indians near Mt. Shasta. He was implicated in the massacre of the Pit River Indians, attended college briefly, and operated a pony-express service between the Idaho mines and the West Coast.

In 1862 Miller became editor of the Democratic Register in Eugene, Ore. Before the year was over he had married and had founded a new paper, the Eugene City Review. Later Miller settled in a mining camp in Canyon City, Ore. He practiced law, worked a claim of his own, fought Indian harassment, and was elected judge of Grant County in 1866 for a 4-year term. In 1869 the Millers were divorced.

For the next 10 years Miller pursued a literary career. His first book of verse was Specimens (1868). It was followed by Joaquin et al (1869), a collection of 11 poems signed Cincinnatus Hiner, mostly sentimental doggerel and bad imitations of Edgar Allan Poe. His work had little success in America, so he sailed for London, a "passionate pilgrim" determined to sell his verses of life in the Far West. He printed Pacific Poems (1871) privately. An English publisher brought out Songs of the Sierras (1871), which launched Miller socially and commercially as the Kit Carson of poetry. His fame, however, was short-lived and his talent essentially thin. Songs of the Sun-lands followed (1873), along with the partially autobiographic Life among the Modocs. A tour of Italy produced a curious novel, The One Fair Woman (1876), and Songs of Italy (1878).

By 1879 Miller was back in New York, married to Abigail Leland, a hotel heiress, and seeking a new career in the theater. Of the four plays he preserved, The Danites of the Sierras (1881), an obvious melodramatic story of the Mormons, was the most popular and made him a small fortune. In 1887, without his wife, he settled on 75 acres of barren hillside in Oakland, Calif., to write more poetry and finish his utoplan romance, The Building of the City Beautiful (1893). He died at his beloved "Hights" in February 1913.

Further Reading

The best collection of Miller's work is The Poetical Works of Joaquin Miller (1923), edited and with an informative introduction by Stuart P. Sherman. Two polar estimates of Miller's work are Martin Severin Peterson, Joaquin Miller: Literary Frontiersman (1937), a flattering analysis, and M. Marion Marberry, Splendid Poseur: Joaquin Miller, American Poet (1953), a devastating interpretation. O. W. Frost, Joaquin Miller (1967), seeks an objective view.

Additional Sources

Lawson, Benjamin S., Joaquin Miller, Boise, Idaho: Boise State University, 1980.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Joaquin Miller
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Miller, Joaquin (wäkēn'), pseud. of Cincinnatus Heine (or Hiner) Miller, 1839?-1913, American poet, b. Liberty, Ind. In 1852 his family moved to frontier Oregon. He lived in gold-mining camps, later with Native Americans, and was in turn an express rider, an editor, and an Oregon judge. His first two volumes of poems, Specimens (1868) and Joaquin et al. (1869), contained energetic, rhetorical celebrations of frontier life. They brought him only local acclaim, but in England, where he went next, his colorful personality, his dramatic Western costume, and his Songs of the Sierras (1871) made him famous as a frontier poet. See his autobiography (1898; ed. by S. G. Firman, 1930).
Works: Works by Joaquin Miller
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(Cincinnatus Hiner, c. 1841-1913)

1868Specimens. The western writer's first poetry collection, under the pen name "Joaquin Miller" (from the Mexican bandit Joaquin Murrieta, whom he had helped popularize in his earliest writings). It would be followed by Joaquin et al (1869), Pacific Poems (1870), and Songs of the Sierras (1871), which earned him the title of "the Byron of Oregon."
1870Pacific Poems. Miller's private printing of this collection and Songs of the Sierras (1871) in England earns him praise as the "Byron of Oregon," the embodiment of the frontier poet. Included is his best poem, "Kit Carson's Ride," a rousing narrative poem in which the scout rescues his Indian bride from pursuing tribesmen and a prairie fire.
1873Life Amongst the Modocs: Unwritten History. Miller's autobiographical narrative describes his relationship with Paquita, the Indian woman he married, who was fatally wounded and died in his arms. Later editions would be issued under the titles Unwritten History: Life Among the Modocs (1874), Paquita: The Indian Heroine (1881), My Own Story (1890), and Joaquin Miller's Romantic Life Amongst the Indians (1898). An additional volume of autobiographical reflections, Memorie and Rime, would appear in 1884.
1877The Danites in the Sierras. Miller's play, his best and one of the most popular frontier dramas, concerns a secret sect of Mormons seeking revenge on a young woman who, disguised as a man, seeks refuge in a cabin in the Sierras. The play would be published in 1882.

Quotes By: Joaquin Miller
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Quotes:

"All honor to him who shall win the prize. The world has cried for a thousand years. But to him who tries and fails and dies, I give great honor and glory and tears."

"Death is delightful. Death is dawn, the waking from a weary night of fevers unto truth and light."

Wikipedia: Joaquin Miller
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Joaquin Miller
Joaquin miller.jpg

Joaquin Miller was the pen name of the colorful American poet, essayist and fabulist Cincinnatus Heine (or Hiner) Miller (March 10, 1841, or alternatively September 8, 1837, or November 10, 1841 - February 17, 1913[1]).

Contents

Biography

His parents were Hulen (sometimes “Hulings”) Miller and Margaret Witt who married January 3, 1836 in Union County, Indiana. Most family researchers give his birth date as September 8, 1837 and his birthplace as Liberty, Union County, Indiana. The Miller family was probably of German extraction, and may have attended the Four Mile German Baptist, or Dunkard, Church in Union County, IN, where people named Miller, Witt, Fahl, and Petry (family names) were founding members. While a young boy, the Miller family moved to Oregon and settled in the Willamette Valley, establishing a farm in what would become Lane County. Accounts differ, giving the family’s move to Oregon as early as 1842, but it was probably between 1850 and 1852.

Miller's exploits included a variety of occupations, including mining-camp cook (who came down with scurvy from only eating what he cooked), lawyer and a judge, newspaper writer, Pony Express rider, and horse thief. As a young man, he moved to northern California during the California Gold Rush years, and had a variety of adventures, including spending a year living in a Native American village, and being wounded in a battle with Native Americans. A number of his popular works, Life Amongst the Modocs, An Elk Hunt, and The Battle of Castle Crags, draw on these experiences. He was wounded in the cheek and neck with an arrow during this latter battle, recuperating at the Gold Rush-era mining town of Portuguese Flat.

About 1857, Miller supposedly married an Indian woman named Paquita (she may have been a Modoc Indian, and the relationship was probably that of a "country wife") and lived in the McCloud River area of northern California; the couple had two children born in California or Oregon. Miller married Theresa Dyer (alias Minnie Myrtle) September 12, 1862 at Port Orford, Oregon and had three children with her. The couple divorced in 1869. Miller married third, September 8, 1879, Abigail Leland, in New York, New York.

He was jailed briefly in Shasta County for stealing a horse, and various accounts give other incidents of his repeating this crime in California and Oregon. Spending a short time in the mining camps of northern Idaho, Miller found his way to Canyon City, Oregon by 1864 where he was elected the third Judge of Grant County. His old cabin in Canyon City is still standing. He later removed to Eugene, Oregon.

Miller circa 1905

After losing his bid for a seat on the Oregon Supreme Court, and a failed marriage, he left the Pacific Northwest and spent some years traveling, living in and visiting (among other places) England, New York, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and Brazil. He eventually returned to settle in California, where he grew fruit and published his poems and other works. He was championed, although not enthusiastically, by Bret Harte and Ambrose Bierce. Bierce, who once called Miller "the greatest-hearted man I ever knew" also is quoted as saying that he was "the greatest liar this country ever produced. He cannot, or will not, tell the truth." Miller's response was, "I always wondered why God made Bierce."

Called the "Poet of the Sierras" and the "Byron of the Rockies," he may have been more of a celebrity in England than in his native U.S.

Joaquin Miller Cabin in Washington, D.C.'s Rock Creek Park

From 1886 to his death 1913, Miller resided on a hill in Oakland, in a home he called "The Hights" [sic] but which is currently known as the Joaquin Miller House. He planted the surrounding trees and he personally built, on the eminence to the north, his own funeral pyre and monuments dedicated to Moses, General John C. Frémont, and Robert Browning. The Japanese poet Yone Noguchi began his literary career while living in the cabin adjoining Millers' during the latter half of the 1890s. The Hights was purchased by the city of Oakland in 1919 and can be found in Joaquin Miller Park.[2] It is now a designated California Historical Landmark.

Miller's poem "Columbus" was once one of the most widely known American poems, memorized and recited by legions of schoolchildren. Miller is remembered today, among other reasons, for one of his poems:

“In men whom men condemn as ill
I find so much of goodness still.
In men whom men pronounce divine
I find so much of sin and blot
I do not dare to draw a line
Between the two, where God has not.”

His poems include "Songs of the Sierras", "Songs of the Sun-Lands",and "The Ship in the Desert".

See also

References

  1. ^ Who's Who 1914, p. xxiii, gives the date of death as February 18
  2. ^ "Alameda California Historical Landmarks". Office of Historic Preservation. http://ohp.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=21388. Retrieved November 2 2005. 

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