George Cabot Lodge | |
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Born | October 10, 1873 Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | August 21, 1909 (age 36) Massachusetts, U.S. |
Education | Harvard University |
Occupation | Poet |
Spouse | Mathilda Frelinghuysen Davis (m. 1900) |
Children | Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (b. 1902) John Davis Lodge (b. 1903) |
Parents | Henry Cabot Lodge Anna Cabot Mills Davis Lodge |
George Cabot "Bay" Lodge (October 10, 1873 - August 21, 1909), was an American poet of the late 19th and early-20th century.
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Lodge was born in in Boston. His father was Henry Cabot Lodge, a politician. His mother was Anna Cabot Mills Davis Lodge. He was named after his great-great-grandfather, George Cabot.
Lodge began studies at Harvard, and continued them in France and Berlin into his mid-twenties.
In 1897, Lodge began work as a secretary to both his father and a U.S. Senate committee in Washington. He later served successfully in the Spanish-American War as a naval cadet. Lodge was a close friend of Theodore Roosevelt, who penned a fond introduction for the posthumous 1911 collection Poems and Dramas of George Cabot Lodge. He was best known for his delicate sonnets, such as the Song of the Wave, Essex, and Trumbull Stickney (Stickney was a friend and admirer), several of which were anthologized. His style and artistic outlook were deeply affected by the pessimism of Schopenhauer and Giacomo Leopardi, as well as French influences including Baudelaire and Leconte de Lisle.
In 1900, he married Mathilda Frelinghuysen Davis, with whom he had three children:[1] two being, politicians Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (b. 1902) and John Davis Lodge (b. 1903).[2]
He died near Nantucket in August 1909. A biography, The Life of George Cabot Lodge (1911), was written by his friend and confidant Henry Adams. His collected poems and dramas, in two volumes, were published in 1911 by Houghton Mifflin Company.