Thomas Buchanan Read

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas Buchanan Read at age 28

Thomas Buchanan Read (March 12, 1822 May 11, 1872), was an American poet and portrait painter.

Biography

Read was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania on March 12, 1822.

Read wrote a prose romance, The Pilgrims of the Great St. Bernard, and several books of poetry, including The New Pastoral, The House by the Sea, Sylvia, and A Summer Story. Some of the shorter pieces included in these, e.g., "Sheridan's Ride," "Drifting,""The Angler", "The Oath," and "The Closing Scene," have great merit. Read was briefly associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. His greatest artistic popularity took place in Florence. Among portraits he painted were Abraham Lincoln, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Alfred Tennyson, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Robert Browning and William Henry Harrison. Read died from injuries sustained in a carriage accident, which weakened him and led him to contract pneumonia while on shipboard returning to America.

Literary works

Sheridan's Ride, Thomas Buchanan Read, 1871
  • Poems. 1847
  • The Female Poets of America With Portraits, Biographical Notices, and Specimens of Their Writings. 1849
  • Lays and Ballads 1849
  • Thoraren the Skald. 1850
  • The Stolen Child. 1850
  • Edward A. Brackett's Marble Group of the Shipwrecked Mother and Child. 1852
  • The Pilgrims of the Great St. Bernard. 1853
  • The New Pastoral. 1855
  • The House by the Sea. A Poem. 1855
  • Sylvia, or, The Last Shepherd An Eclogue, and Other Poems. 1857
  • Rural Poems. 1857
  • James L. Claghorn, Esq. 1860
  • Sheridan's Ride. 1864
  • The Descent of the Eagle. 1865
  • The Soldier's Friend. 1865
  • The Eagle and the Vulture. 1866
  • The Poetical Works of Thomas Buchanan Read: Complete in Three Volumes. 1867
Self-portrait by Reed, c. 1860.

References

  • "Read, Thomas Buchanan." American Authors 1600–1900. H. W. Wilson Company, NY 1938.
  • Dickason, David Howard. The Daring Young Men; The Story of the American Pre-Raphaelites. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1953. (pp. 26–32) googlebooks Retrieved September 7, 2008
  • worldcat Accessed September 7, 2008

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cousin, John William (1910). A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London: J. M. Dent & Sons. Wikisource

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.