Public Domain Poetry And Stories from Eugene Field.
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Eugene Field

September 2, 1850 - November 4, 1895


Stories and Essay Listing

See Eugene Field's Poetry Listing Here.

Please Note: This list is not comprehensive, but is an ongoing work of the love of poetry.

Within this area you will be able to read, and give your thoughts on the poetry listed.

Please, if you find an error, let me know.


Read More About Eugene Field below the list
TitlePeriod# Words# Reads
1: A Little Book of Western Verse 1889 3005299
2: A Marvellous Invention 1077650
3: Baked Beans And Culture 940619
4: Bill, The Lokil Editor 1888 1591632
5: Daniel And The Devil 2867608
6: Death And The Soldier 1650593
7: Die WalkÜre" Und Der Boomerangelungen 1361622
8: Dock Stebbins 1888 2077657
9: Ezra's Thanksgivin' Out West 3316653
10: Félice And Petit-Poulain 2166666
11: Fido's Little Friend 1885 2958650
12: Flail, Trask, And Bisland 1951684
13: Franz Abt 1081621
14: George's Birthday 2747694
15: Hawaiian Folk Tales I - The Eel-King 1412689
16: Hawaiian Folk Tales II - The Moon Lady 1408691
17: Humin Natur' On The Han'Bul 'Nd St. Jo 2025585
18: Joel's Talk With Santa Claus 2939645
19: Joel's Talk With Santa Claus 29761030
20: Learning And Literature 648620
21: Letter - Dearest Aunt: 1894 124712
22: Ludwig And Eloise 1885 1314656
23: Lute Baker And His Wife Em 2007687
24: Margaret: A Pearl 3301657
25: Methuselah 2775649
26: Mistress Merciless 3494619
27: Mlle. Prud'Homme's Book 826607
28: Mr. And Mrs. Blossom 1907655
29: Rodolph And His King 1885 1127632
30: Samuel Cowles And His Horse Royal 1987677
31: Songs and Other Verse 26605105
32: Sweet-One-Darling And The Dream-Fairies 1891606
33: Sweet-One-Darling And The Moon-Garden 2081586
34: The 'Jinin' Farms 2849614
35: The Angel And The Flowers 1005628
36: The Child's Letter 1157580
37: The Coming Of The Prince 3024669
38: The Cyclopeedy 1889 1948621
39: The Demand For Condensed Music 590552
40: The Divell's Chrystmass. 1888 1681592
41: The Fairies Of Pesth [1] 2812612
42: The First Christmas Tree 1670631
43: The Hampshire Hills 1885 1614607
44: The Holy Cross 4152611
45: The House An Episode in the Lives of Reuben Baker, Astronomer, and of His Wife, Alice 48776665
46: The Little Yaller Baby 1888 1964669
47: The Lonesome Little Shoe 4748660
48: The Love Affairs Of A Bibliomaniac 37615652
49: The Mother In Paradise 934597
50: The Mountain And The Sea 1886 979574
51: The Mouse And The Moonbeam 4148612
52: The Oak-Tree And The Ivy 1886 1376637
53: The Old Man 1889 1343652
54: The Pagan Seal-Wife[1] 6144623
55: The Platonic Bassoon 3380605
56: The River 724684
57: The Robin And The Violet 1884 1231616
58: The Rose And The Thrush 2461632
59: The Singer Mother 1551578
60: The Springtime 1885 1656595
61: The Story Of Xanthippe 1985645
62: The Symbol And The Saint 2666662
63: The Talisman 3143608
64: The Touch In The Heart 3230640
65: The Two Wives 572633
66: The Werewolf 2573668
67: The Wooing Of Miss Woppit 11556571
68: The Works Of Sappho 1960598




About:
Eugene Field, Sr. (September 2, 1850 – November 4, 1895) was an American writer, best known for his children's poetry and humorous essays.

Biography

Field was born in St. Louis, Missouri where today his boyhood home is open to the public as The Eugene Field House and St. Louis Toy Museum. After the death of his mother in 1856, he was raised by a cousin, Mary Field French, in Amherst, Massachusetts.

Field's father, attorney Roswell Martin Field, was famous for his representation of Dred Scott, the slave who sued for his freedom. Field filed the complaint in the Dred Scott v. Sandford case (sometimes referred to as "the lawsuit that started the Civil War") on behalf of Scott in the federal court in St. Louis, Missouri, from whence it progressed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Field attended Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. His father died when Eugene turned 19, and he subsequently dropped out of Williams after eight months. He then went to Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, but dropped out after a year, followed by the University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri, where his brother Roswell was also attending. He tried acting, studied law with little success, and also wrote for the student newspaper. He then set off for a trip through Europe but returned to the United States six months later, penniless. Field then set to work as a journalist for the St. Joseph Gazette in Saint Joseph, Missouri, in 1875. That same year he married Julia Comstock, with whom he had eight children. For the rest of his life he arranged for all the money he earned to be sent to his wife, saying that he had no head for money himself.

Field soon rose to become city editor of the Gazette.

He became known for his light, humorous articles written in a gossipy style, some of which were reprinted by other newspapers around the country. It was during this time that he wrote the famous poem Lovers Lane about a street in St. Joseph, Missouri.

From 1876 through 1880 Field lived in St. Louis, first as an editorial writer for the Morning Journal and subsequently for the Times-Journal. After a brief stint as managing editor of the Kansas City Times, he worked for two years as editor of the Denver Tribune.

In 1883 Field moved to Chicago where he wrote a humorous newspaper column called Sharps and Flats for the Chicago Daily News. His home in Chicago was near the intersection of N. Clarendon and W. Hutchinson in the neighborhood now known as Buena Park.

He first started publishing poetry in 1879, when his poem "Christmas Treasures" appeared in A Little Book of Western Verse. Over a dozen volumes of poetry followed and he became well known for his light-hearted poems for children, perhaps the most famous of which is "Wynken, Blynken, and Nod." Field also published a number of short stories, including "The Holy Cross" and "Daniel and the Devil."

Field died in Chicago of a heart attack at the age of 45. He is buried at the Church of the Holy Comforter in Kenilworth, Illinois. His 1901 biography by S. Thompson states that he was originally buried in Graceland Cemetery in Chicago, but his son-in-law, Senior Warden of the Church of the Holy Comforter, had him reinterred on March 7, 1926.
[edit] Legacy

Several of his poems were set to music with commercial success. Many of his works were accompanied by paintings from Maxfield Parrish. His former home in St. Louis is now a museum. A memorial to him, a statue of the "Dream Lady" from his poem "Rock-a-by-Lady", was erected in 1922 at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago. There is also a park and fieldhouse named in his honor in Chicago's Albany Park neighborhood. A statue of Wynken, Blynken and Nod adorns Washington Park, near Field's Denver home. In nearby Oak Park, Illinois, another park is named in his honor.

Field has his own star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.[11] Numerous elementary schools throughout the Midwest are named for him, e.g. Eugene Field Elementary School in Wheeling, Illinois,(Rock Island, Illinois) Park Ridge, Illinois, St. Joseph, Missouri, Hannibal, Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, Mexico, Missouri, Neosho, Missouri, Poplar Bluff, Missouri, Webb City, Missouri, Manhattan, Kansas, Ottawa, Kansas, Sioux Falls, South Dakota and Beaumont, Texas. There is also a Eugene Field Elementary School in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Silverton, Oregon, Littleton, Colorado, Tulsa, Oklahoma, Chicago, Illinois, Altus, Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Hugo, Oklahoma and San Diego, California. One of the branches of the Denver Public Library is named after Field. A dormitory in the Orchard Hill residential area at the University of Massachusetts Amherst also bears Field's name.

Reviewing an actor named Creston Clarke in the title role of King Lear, Field commented that, "Mr. Clarke played the King all evening as though under constant fear that someone else was about to play the Ace."

There is also an apartment building in Denver, Colorado's Poet's Row named after him.


Source:- Wikipedia.


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