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  1. William Cullen Bryant (November 3, 1794 – June 12, 1878) was an American romantic poet, journalist, and long-time editor of the New York Evening Post. Born in Massachusetts, he started his career as a lawyer but showed an interest in poetry early in his life.

  2. Jun 8, 2024 · William Cullen Bryant (born Nov. 3, 1794, Cummington, Mass., U.S.—died June 12, 1878, New York City) was a poet of nature, best remembered for “Thanatopsis,” and editor for 50 years of the New York Evening Post.

  3. Poet and editor William Cullen Bryant stood among the most celebrated figures in the frieze of 19th-century America. The fame he won as a poet while in his youth remained with him as he entered his 80s; only Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Ralph Waldo Emerson were his rivals in popularity over the course of his life.

  4. William Cullen Bryant, author of "Thanatopsis," was born in Cummington, Massachusetts on November 3, 1794. He is considered an American nature poet and journalist, who wrote poems, essays, and articles that championed the rights of workers and immigrants.

  5. www.encyclopedia.com › american-literature-biographies › william-cullen-bryantWilliam Cullen Bryant | Encyclopedia.com

    May 21, 2018 · William Cullen Bryant enjoyed one of the longest and most influential careers in American journalism, but the New York Evening Post editor was really a poet at heart and achieved literary fame while still in his 20s.

  6. Feb 25, 2023 · William Cullen lived and wrote at the cusp of the Romantic era; indeed, he’s credited with giving an American slant to the English Romantic poetry heralded by William Wordsworth (1770– 1850) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s (1772–1834) Lyrical Ballads (1799).

  7. William Cullen Bryant (November 3, 1794 - June 12, 1878) was an American poet and newspaper editor who achieved literary fame at age 17, after writing the poem, "Thanatopsis." He went on to become one of the most influential journalists of the nineteenth century as editor-in-chief of the New York Evening Post, a career that spanned fifty years.

  8. William Cullen Bryant wrote a substantial body of prose: tales, editorials, reviews, letters, appreciations, sketches or impressions, and critical essays. In 1850, he published Letters of a...

  9. Feb 17, 2021 · One of the most admired American poets of the nineteenth century, and best known for “Thanatopsis,” Bryant struggled out from under his grandfather’s rigid Calvinism and eventually joined the much more liberal Unitarians, some of whom joined the Transcendentalist movement.

  10. William Cullen Bryant was our " first American writer of verse to win international acclaim." (Tomlinson, 30) Bryant was considered a child-prodigy, publishing his first poem at age ten and his first book when he was thirteen, a political satire of an embargo policy of Thomas Jefferson.