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See also: American poet, was See also: born in See also: Greenfield, See also: Indiana, in 1853
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He spent several years as an itinerant sign-painter, actor and musician
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During this vagabond experience he had opportunities to revise plays and compose songs, and was brought into close touch with the rural folk of Indiana, becoming See also: familiar with their See also: life and speech
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About 1873 he first contributed verses, especially in the Hoosier dialect, to the papers, and he soon became See also: local editor of the See also: Anderson (Ind.) Democrat
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In
See also: August 1877, over the initials " E.A.P.," he printed in the See also: Kokomo (Indiana) See also: Dispatch a poem, Leonainie, in the manner of See also: Poe.' The See also: press throughout the country copied the poem, and many critics of acknowledged authority believed it to have been actually written by Poe, until the hoax was explained by the paper in which it first appeared
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To the See also: Indianapolis Daily Journal See also: Riley contributed many poems, the best known being a series in dialect which purported to have been written by one " Benjamin F
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See also: Johnson, of
See also: Boone," a See also: farmer
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These he published in See also: book See also: form, under the same See also: pen-name, as The Old Swimmin' Hole and 'Leven More Poems (1883)
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He wrote. See also: short stories and sketches, some of unusual merit, but is known almost exclusively as a poet
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Of his poems some are in conventional See also: English, many others in the Hoosier dialect of the See also: Middle-West
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His materials are the homely incidents and aspects of See also: village and country life,
' The poem was accompanied by a statement from the editor of the paper that it was " from the gifted pen of the erratic poet, Edgar Allan Poe," and by a circumstantial See also: story to the effect that the poem had been found written on the fly-leaf of an old Latin-English See also: dictionary then owned by " an uneducated and illiterate See also: man " in Kokomo, who had received it from his grandfather, in whose See also: tavern, near See also: Richmond, Va., it had been See also: left by " a See also: young man who showed plainly the marks of dissipation."especially of Indiana, and his manner is marked by delicate See also: imagination and naive See also: humour and tenderness
.
The bulk of his See also: work appeared in The See also: Boss Girl and Other Sketches (1886), republished in 1891 as Sketches in See also: Prose; Afterwhiles (1887); Pipes o' See also: Pan at Zekesbury (1888) ; Rhymes of Childhood (189o) ; Neighborly Poems (1891); The Flying Islands of the See also: Night (1891), a fantastic See also: blank verse drama; See also: Green See also: Fields and See also: Running Brooks (1892) ; Poems Here at Home (1893) ; Armazindy (1894), which contains the poem " Leonainie•"; A See also: Child-See also: World (1896), reminiscent of his own boyhood; The Rubdiydt of Doc Sifers (1897) ; Home Folks (1900) ; The Book of Joyous See also: Children (1902) ; His Pa's See also: Romance (1903) ; A Defective See also: Santa Claus (1904) ; and in several books of selections, such as Old Fashioned See also: Roses (1889), published in See also: England ; Child Rhymes (1898); Love Lyrics (1899); The See also: Golden See also: Year 1899), published in England; See also: Farm Rhymes (1901); An Old Sweetheart of Mine (1902) ; Out to Old Aunt Mary's (1904) ; Songs o' Cheer (1905); See also: Morning (1907); and Songs of Summer (1908)
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