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\"Blind Men and an Elephant\" John Saxe Hand Written Letter For Sale


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\"Blind Men and an Elephant\" John Saxe Hand Written Letter:
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Up for sale\"Blind Men and an Elephant\" John Saxe Hand Written Letter Dated 1859.
ES-5851E
John Godfrey Saxe I (June 2, 1816 – March 31, 1887) was an American poet known for his re-telling of the Indian parable \"The Blind Men and the Elephant\", which introduced the story to a Western audience. He also said \"Laws, like sausages, cease to inspire respect in proportion as we know how they are made.\" Saxe was born in 1816 in Highgate, Vermont,[2] at Saxe\'s Mills, where his settler grandfather, John Saxe (Johannes Sachse), a German immigrant and Loyalist to the Crown, built the area\'s first gristmill in 1786. Saxe was the son of Peter Saxe, miller, judge and periodic member of the Vermont General Assembly; and Elizabeth Jewett of Weybridge, Vermont. The poet was named for two of his paternal uncles, John and Godfrey, who had died as young men before his birth. Raised in a strict Methodist home, Saxe was first sent, in 1835, to Wesleyan University which he left after a year, and then to Middlebury College, from which he graduated in 1839. In 1841 he married Sophia Newell Sollace, a sister of a Middlebury classmate, with whom he had a son, John Theodore Saxe. He was admitted to the Vermont bar in 1843 and tried to run a business with his dutiful and pious older brother, Charles Jewett Saxe. For some years he practised successfully in Franklin County. In 1850-51 he serves as state\'s attorney for Chittenden County. The words \"dutiful\" and \"pious\" never applied to the aspiring satirist. Bored by his legal work, Saxe began publishing poems for The Knickerbocker, of which \"The Rhyme of the Rail\" is his most famous early work. He soon caught the attention of the prominent Boston publishing house Ticknor and Fields. Though he received no royalties for his first volume, it ran to ten reprintings and eventually outsold works by Nathaniel Hawthorne and Alfred, Lord Tennyson.[ His poem \"The Puzzled Census-Taker\" amused many, and \"Rhyme of the Rail\" was possibly the most admired poem of the period about rail travel.[1] Saxe was editor of the Sentinel in Burlington, Vermont, from 1850 to 1856. In 1856, he served as attorney-general of Vermont. Saxe became a sought after speaker, toured frequently and stayed prolific throughout the 1850s. In 1859 he ran unsuccessfully for governor of Vermont.[3] As a northern Democrat, he advocated a non-interference policy on slavery and supported Illinois Senator Douglas\'s policy of \"popular sovereignty\", a position which rendered the poet extremely unpopular in Republican Vermont. After his second, and even more punishing electoral defeat, Saxe left his home state in 1860 for neighboring Albany, New York. Saxe spent his summers in Saratoga, contributed articles for the Albany Evening Journal and Albany Morning Argus, and published poems in Harper\'s, The Atlantic, and the Knickerbocker, and remained popular on the lecture circuit. \"The Proud Miss McBride\" and \"Song of Saratoga\" were some of famous works in this period. However, his attempts to re-enter politics remained unsuccessful. Always mercurial, Saxe became more erratic following the death of his oldest brother in 1867. He was not temperamentally suited to assume the role of head of the family. Instead the poet\'s son, John Theodore Saxe, took the reins of his brother\'s lumber firm and managed the family\'s finances. The 1870s, while living in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn, began a series of woes for Saxe. His youngest daughter died of tuberculosis. In 1875, he suffered head injuries in a rail accident near Wheeling, West Virginia, from which he never fully recovered, and then over the next several years his two oldest daughters, his eldest son, and daughter-in-law also died of tuberculosis. In 1879, his wife burst a blood vessel in her brain and collapsed and died. Including a young son who died in the 1840s, Mr. Saxe had buried five of his six children as well as his wife. Mr. Saxe sank deep into depression and was moved back to Albany to live with his last surviving child, Charles. His decline from the rollicking poet to grieving recluse earned the sympathy of the people of Albany, and when he died in 1887, the New York State Assembly ordered his likeness to be chiseled into the \"poet\'s corner\" of the Great Western Staircase in the New York State Capitol.



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