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Amos Bronson Alcott

I lived from 1799-1888. I was from the USA, and am in the Americas category.

Born in 1799 to an illiterate flax farmer in Wolcott, Connecticut, Amos Bronson Alcott was singular among the Transcendentalists in his unassailable optimism and the extent of his self-education. With the encouragement of his spirited and resourceful mother, he taught himself to read and write by forming letters in charcoal on the kitchen floorboards. Profoundly influenced by John Bunyan's book, Pilgrim's Progress, Bronson left home at the age of seventeen to become a peddler in Virginia and the Carolinas. Through the sheer force of his personality, he charmed prosperous Southern families into opening their doors, and thus was introduced to an aesthetic and elegance that inspired him for the rest of his life. After five years, he returned to Connecticut, determined to become an educator. Attracted to Pestalozzi's innovative child-centered educational ideas, he soon began a long and varied career as a teacher.

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  • WHEN I remember with what buoyant heart,
    Midst war's alarms and woes of civil strife,
    13 lines
  • LONG left unwounded by the grisly foe,
    Who sometime pierces all with fatal shaft,
    14 lines
  • POET of the Pulpit, whose full-chorded lyre 
    Startles the churches from their slumbers late, 
    14 lines, 1 comment
  • WHO nearer Nature’s life would truly come 
    Must nearest come to him of whom I speak; 
    13 lines
  • FREEDOM’S first champion in our fettered land! 
    Nor politician nor base citizen 
    13 lines
  • MISFORTUNE to have lived not knowing thee! 
    ’T were not high living, nor to noblest end, 
    13 lines
  • THOU, Sibyl rapt! whose sympathetic soul 
    Infused the myst’ries thy tongue failed to tell; 
    14 lines
  • ROMANCER, far more coy than that coy sex! 
    Perchance some stroke of magic thee befell, 
    13 lines
  • CHANNING! my Mentor whilst my thought was young, 
    And I the votary of fair liberty,— 
    13 lines
  • PEOPLE’S ATTORNEY, servant of the Right! 
    Pleader for all shades of the solar ray, 
    13 lines

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