Online Encyclopedia

EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN (1833–1908)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 861 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN (1833–1908)  ,
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American poet and critic, was born at
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Hartford,
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Connecticut, on the 8th of
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October 1833 . He studied two years at Yale; became a journalist in New York, especially on the staffs of the Tribune and
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World, which latter paper he served as field correspondent during the first years of the
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Civil War; and was a banker in Wall Street from 1869 to 1900 . His first
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book, Poems, Lyrical and Idyllic, appeared in 186o, followed by successive volumes of similar character, and by collected
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editions of his verse in 1873, 1884 and 1897 . His longer poems are Alice of Monmouth: an Idyl of the
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Great War (1864); The Blameless Prince (1869), an allegory of good deeds, supposed to have been remotely suggested by the
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life of Prince Albert; and an elaborate commemorative ode on Hawthorne, read before the Harvard Phi Beta Kappa Society in 1877 . A n idyllic atmosphere is the prevalent characteristic of his longer pieces, while the lyric tone is never absent from his songs,
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ballads and poems of reflection or fancy . As an editor he put forth a
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volume of Cameos from Landor (with T . B . Aldrich, 1874) ; a large Library of (selections from) American Literature (with Ellen M . Hutchinson, 11 vols., 1888–189o); a Victorian
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Anthology (1895); and an American Anthology, 1787–1899 (190o); the two last-named volumes being ancillary to a detailed and comprehensive critical study in
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prose of the whole
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body of
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English
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poetry from 1837, and of American poetry of the 19th century . This study appeared in
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separate chapters in Scribner's Monthly now the Century
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Magazine, and was reissued, with enlargements, in the volumes entitled Victorian Poets (1875; continued to the Jubilee
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year in the edition of 1887) and Poets of
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America (1885), the two
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works forming the most symmetrical body of
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literary criticism yet published in the
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United States . Their value is increased by the
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treatise on The Nature and Elements of Poetry (Boston, 1892)—a
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work of great critical insight as well as technical knowledge . He died in New York on the 18th of
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January 1908 .

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Stedman and G . M . Gould, The Life and Letters of Edmund Clarence Stedman (2 vols., N . Y., 191o) .

End of Article: EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN (1833–1908)
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