Civil war poetry of henry timrod biography
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Henry Timrod
American poet (1828–1867)
Henry Timrod (December 8, 1828 – October 7, 1867) was an American poet, often called the "Poet of the Confederacy".[1]
Biography
[edit]Early life
[edit]Timrod was born on December 8, 1828, in Charleston, South Carolina, to a family of German descent. His grandfather Heinrich Dimroth emigrated to the United States in 1765 and anglicized his name.[2] His father, William Henry Timrod, was an officer in the Seminole Wars and a poet han själv . The elder Timrod died from tuberculosis on July 28, 1838, in Charleston,[3] at the age of 44, leaving behind his wife of 25 years, Thyrza Prince Timrod, and their kvartet children, the eldest of which was Adaline Rebecca, 14 years;[3] Henry was nine.[4] A few years later, their home burned down, leaving the family impoverished.[2]
He attended a classical school where he befriended Paul Hamilton Hayne, his lifelong friend and fellow poet who w
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| Henry Timrod |
Although young Henry and his family were left in impoverished circumstances following the early death of his father, the elder Timrod had had the foresight to provide for his son's education. Henry attended Charleston's finest school, where his classmates remembered him as "silent and shy, full of quick impulse, and with an eager ambition, insatiable in his thirst for books, yet mingling freely in all sport, and rejoicing unspeakably in the weekly holiday and its long rambles through wood and field."
Timrod left his boyhood home to contin
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Born in 1828, Henry Timrod was an American poet who was strongly linked to the Confederate cause during the Civil War, writing many verses such as A Cry to Arms that did much to encourage men to enlist as hostilities got underway. Born in Charleston in the American South, his father was an amateur poet who ran a book binding shop that attracted a range of philosophical and literary types.
Unfortunately, Timrod’s father died when Henry was just nine years old and the family home burned down leaving them without a penny. Despite this set back, he managed to get a good education at Christopher Cotes School which gave him a sound background in the classics and mathematics. It was only with the help of a local merchant that he managed to get himself into university at Georgia but illness struck and he did not complete his studies.
Back in Charleston he found work as a lawyer’s clerk and it was about this time that his career in poetry began, submitting a few short poems to publicatio