Rufus Wilmot Griswold
Rufus Wilmot Griswold
Rufus Wilmot Griswold (born 1815, died 1857) is an American journalist, publisher, anthologist, literary critic and poet. He was born on February 15, 1815 in Benson, Vermont. He traveled a lot in his youth. He practiced in editorial magazines. For a time he was a Baptist clergyman. He later worked as a publisher. He was part of the editorial teams of The Brother Jonathan, The New World (1839-40), The New Yorker (1840), Graham's Magazine (1841-43) and International Magazine (1850-52), who in 1852 merged with Harper's Magazine. In Graham's Magazine he collaborated with Edgar Allan Poe. The mutual relations of the two writers were streaked with mistrust and even reluctance. He nevertheless became the executor of his literary testament. He edited his writings, not without errors or overinterpretations. The most important work of Griswold is The Republican Court, or American Society in the Days of Washington (1855). The author died on August 27, 1857 in New York. Bibliography
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