Online Encyclopedia

HALLECK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 854 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HALLECK  , FITZ-

GREENE (1790-1867),
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American poet, was born at Guilford,
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Connecticut, on the 8th of
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July 1790 . By his
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mother he was descended from John Eliot, the " Apostle to the Indians." At an early age he became clerk in a store at Guilford, and in 1811 he entered a banking-house in New York . Raving made the acquaintance of Joseph Rodman Drake, in 1819 he assisted him under the signature of "Croaker junior" in contributing to the New York Evening
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Post the humorous series of " Croaker Papers." In 1821 he published his longest poem, Fanny, a satire on
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local politics and fashions in the measure of Byron's Don Juan . He visited
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Europe in 1822-1823, and after his return published anonymously in 1827
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Alnwick Castle, with other Poems . From 1832 to 1841 he was confidential agent of John Jacob Astor, who named him one of the trustees of the Astor library . In 1864 he published in the New York Ledger a poem of 300 lines entitled " Young
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America." He died at Guilford, on the 19th of November 1867 . The poems of Halleck are written with
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great care and finish, and manifest the possession of a
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fine sense of harmony and of genial and elevated sentiments . His
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Life and Letters, by James Grant Wilson, appeared in 1869 . His Poetical Writings, together with extracts from those of Joseph Rodman Drake, were edited by Wilson in the same
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year .

End of Article: HALLECK
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SIR CHARLES HALLE (originally KARL HALLE) (1819-189...
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HENRY WAGER HALLECK (1815-1872)

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