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Nathaniel Parker Willis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nathaniel Parker Willis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nathaniel Parker Willis

Circa mid 1850s, portrait by Mathew Brady studios
Born January 20, 1806 (1806-01-20)
Portland, Maine
Died January 20, 1867 (aged 61)
Occupation Editor
Literary critic
Poet
Nationality American

Nathaniel Parker Willis, also known as N. P. Willis,[1] (January 20, 1806January 20, 1867) was an American author, poet and editor who worked with several notable American writers including Edgar Allan Poe and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. For a time, he was the employer of Harriet Jacobs. His brother was Richard Storr Willis and his sister wrote under the name Fanny Fern.

Born in Portland, Maine, Willis came from a family of publishers. His grandfather owned newspapers in Massachusetts and Virginia, and his father was the founder of Youth's Companion, the first newspaper specifically for children. Willis developed an interest in literature while attending Yale College and began publishing poetry. After graduation, he worked as an overseas correspondent for the New York Mirror. He eventually moved to New York and began to build his literary reputation. Working with multiple publications, he soon became the highest-paid magazine writer in America, earning about US$100 per article and between $5,000[2] and $10,000 per year.[3] In 1846, he started his own publication, the Home Journal, which is still published today as Town & Country. Shortly after, Willis moved to a home on the Hudson River where he lived a semi-retired life until his death in 1867.

Willis embedded his own personality into his writing and addressed his readers personally, specifically in his travel writings, so that his reputation was built in part because of his character. Critics, including his sister in her novel Ruth Hall, occasionally noted him for being effeminate and Europeanized. Willis also published several poems, tales, and a play. Despite his intense popularity for a time, at his death Willis was nearly forgotten.

Contents

[edit] Life and career

A young Nathaniel Parker Willis
A young Nathaniel Parker Willis

[edit] Early life and family

Nathaniel Parker Willis was born January 20, 1806 in Portland, Maine.[4] His father Nathaniel Willis was a newspaper proprietor there and his grandfather owned newspapers in Boston, Massachusetts and western Virginia.[5] A more distant ancestor, George Willis, was a Puritan who arrived in New England about 1630 and settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Willis's younger sister was Sara Willis Parton, who would later become a writer under the pseudonym Fanny Fern. His brother, Richard Storr Willis, became a musician and music journalist known for writing the melody for "It Came Upon the Midnight Clear".[6]

In 1816, the family moved to Boston, where Willis's father established the Boston Recorder and, nine years later, the Youth's Companion,[7] the world's first newspaper for children.[8] The elder Willis's emphasis on religious themes earned him the nickname "Deacon" Willis.[1] After attending Boston grammar school and Phillips Academy at Andover, Nathaniel Parker Willis entered Yale College in October 1823[9] where he roomed with Horace Bushnell.[10] Willis credited Bushnell with teaching him the proper technique for sharpening a razor by "drawing it from heel to point both ways ... the two cross frictions correct each other".[11] At Yale, he further developed an interest in literature, often neglecting his other studies.[7] He graduated in 1827[12] and began publishing poetry in his father's Boston Periodical, often using one of two literary personalities under the pen names "Roy" (for religious subjects) and "Cassius" (for more secular topics).[9] The same year, Willis published a volume of poetical Sketches.[4]

[edit] Literary career

American Scenery by N. P. Willis with illustration by William Henry Bartlett, 1840
American Scenery by N. P. Willis with illustration by William Henry Bartlett, 1840

Willis began contributing more frequently to magazines and periodicals. In 1829 he founded the American Monthly Magazine,[9] which was continued from April of that year to August 1831 when it was discontinued.[4] Dismayed by the "tight purses of Boston culture",[12] he went to Europe as foreign editor and correspondent of the New York Mirror.[4] Between 1832 and 1836, he contributed a series of letters for the Mirror, about half of which were later collected as Pencillings by the Way, printed in London in 1835.[13] The romantic descriptions of scenes and modes of life in Europe sold well despite the high price tag of $7 a copy. The work became popular and boosted Willis's literary reputation enough that an American edition was soon issued.[14]

Despite this popularity, he was censured by some critics for indiscretion in reporting private conversations. At one point he fought a bloodless duel with Captain Frederick Marryat, then editor of the Metropolitan Magazine, after Willis sent a private letter of Marryat's to George Pope Morris, who had it printed.[15] Still, in 1835 Willis was popular enough to introduce Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to important literary figures in England, including Ada Byron, daughter of Lord Byron.[16]

While abroad, Willis wrote to a friend, "I should like to marry in England."[17] He soon married Mary Stace, daughter of General William Stace of Woolwich, on October 1, 1835, after a month-long engagement.[18] The couple took a two-week honeymoon in Paris.[17] While in London in 1836, he met Charles Dickens, who was working for the Morning Chronicle at the time.[19]

In 1837, Willis and his wife returned to the United States[20] and settled at a small estate on Owego Creek in New York, just above its junction with the Susquehanna River. He named the home Glenmary and the rural setting inspired him to write Letters from under a Bridge.[21] On October 20, 1838, Willis began a series of articles called "A New Series of Letters from London", one of which suggested an illicit relationship between writer Letitia Elizabeth Landon and editor William Jordan. The article caused some scandal, for which Willis's publisher had to apologize.[22]

On June 20, 1839, Willis's play Tortesa, the Usurer premiered in Philadelphia at the Walnut Street Theatre.[23] Edgar Allan Poe called it "by far the best play from the pen of an American author."[24] During a short visit to England in 1839–1840 Willis published Two Ways of Dying for a Husband. His personal life was touched with grief when his first child was stillborn on December 4, 1840. He and Stace had a second daughter, Imogen, who was born June 20, 1842.[25] Shortly thereafter, he attended a ball in honor of Charles Dickens in New York. After dancing with Dickens's wife, Willis and Dickens went out for "rum toddy and broiled oysters".[19] His fame grew enough that he was often invited to lecture and recite poetry, including his presentation to the Linonian Society at Yale on August 17, 1841.[26] Willis was invited to submit a weekly column to the Brother Johnathan, a weekly publication from New York with 20,000 subscribers, which he did until September 1841.[27] By 1842, Willis was earning the unusually-high salary of $4,800 a year. As a later journalist remarked, this made Willis "the first magazine writer who was tolerably well paid."[28]

In 1842, Willis employed Harriet Jacobs, an escaped slave from North Carolina, as a house servant and nanny. When her owners sought to have her returned to their plantation, Willis bought her freedom.[29] Nearly two decades later, Jacobs would write in her fictionalized autobiography Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl that she "was convinced that ... Nathaniel Parker Willis was proslavery."[30] In the book, Willis is depicted as "Mr. Bruce", an unattractive Southern sympathizer.[31]

[edit] Evening Mirror

Returning to New York City, Willis reorganized, along with George Pope Morris, the weekly New York Mirror as the daily Evening Mirror[20] in 1844 with a weekly supplement called the Weekly Mirror, in part due to the rising cost of postage.[32] By this time, Willis was a popular writer (a joke was that Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was Germany's version of N. P. Willis) and one of the first commercially-successful magazine writers in America.[33] In the fall of that year, he also became the first editor of the annual gift book The Opal founded by Rufus Wilmot Griswold.[34] During this time, he became the highest-paid magazine writer in America, earning about $100 per article and $5,000 per year,[33] a number which would soon double. Even the popular poet Longfellow admitted his jealousy of Willis's salary.[3] As a critic, Willis did not believe in including discussions of personalities of writers when reviewing their works. He also believed that, though publications should discuss political topics, they should not express party opinions or choose sides.[35]

While Willis was editor of the Evening Mirror, it was the first to publish Poe's magnum opus poem "The Raven" in its January 29, 1845, issue. In his introduction, Willis called it "unsurpassed in English poetry for subtle conception, masterly ingenuity of versification, and consistent, sustaining of imaginative lift ... It will stick to the memory of everybody who reads it."[36] Willis and Poe were close friends, and Willis helped Poe financially after his wife Virginia became ill and Poe was suing Thomas Dunn English for libel.[37] Willis often tried to persuade Poe to be less destructive in his criticism and concentrate on his own poetry.[38] Even so, Willis published many pieces of what would later be referred to as "The Longfellow War", a literary battle between Poe and the supporters of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who Poe called overrated and guilty of plagiarism.[39] Willis also introduced Poe to Fanny Osgood; the two would later carry out a very public literary flirtation.[40]

The Mirror flourished at a time when many publications were discontinuing. Its success was due to the shrewd management of Willis and Morris and the two demonstrated that the American public could support literary endeavors.[41] Willis was becoming an expert in American literature and so, in 1845, Willis and Morris issued an anthology, The Prose and Poetry of America.[42] Willis's wife Mary Stace died in childbirth on March 25, 1845. Their daughter, Blanche, died as well and Willis wrote in his notebook that she was "an angel without fault or foible".[43] In October 1846, he married Cornelia Grinnell, a wealthy Quaker from New Bedford[44] and the adopted daughter of a local Congressman.[45]

[edit] Home Journal

In 1846, Willis and Morris left the Evening Mirror and attempted to edit a new weekly, the National Press, which was renamed to the Home Journal after eight months.[46] Their prospectus for the new publication, published November 21, 1846, announced their intentions to create a magazine "to circle around the family table".[47] Willis intended the magazine for middle and lower classes and had the message of upward social mobility, using himself as an example, often describing in detail his personal possessions.[48] When discussing his own social climbing, however, he emphasized his frustrations rather than his successes, endearing him to his audience.[49] He edited the Home Journal until his death in 1867. It was renamed Town & Country in 1901, and it is still published today. During Willis's time at the journal, he especially promoted women poets, including Frances Sargent Osgood, Anne Lynch Botta, Grace Greenwood, Julia Ward Howe and others.[50] Willis and his editors favorably reviewed many works now considered important today, including Henry David Thoreau's Walden and Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Blithedale Romance.[51]

Daguerreotype of Willis, circa 1857
Daguerreotype of Willis, circa 1857

[edit] Idlewild

In 1846, Willis settled near the banks of Canterbury Creek near the Hudson River in New York and named his new home Idlewild.[52] When Willis first visited the property, the owners said it had little value and that it was "an idle wild of which nothing could ever be made".[53] Because of failing health he spent the remainder of his life chiefly in retirement. His wife Cornelia was also recovering from a difficult illness after the birth of their first child together,[44] a son named Grinnell, who was born April 28, 1848. They had four other children: Lilian (born April 27, 1850),[54] Edith (born September 28, 1853), Bailey (born May 31, 1857), and a daughter that died only a few minutes after her birth on October 31, 1860.[55]

During these last years at Idlewild, Willis continued contributing a weekly letter to the Home Journal.[55] In 1850 he assisted Rufus Wilmot Griswold in preparing an anthology of the works of Poe, who had died mysteriously the year before. Griswold also wrote the first biography of Poe in which he purposely set out to ruin the dead author's reputation. Willis was one of the most vocal of Poe's defenders, writing at one point: "The indictment (for it deserves no other name) is not true. It is full of cruel misrepresentations. It deepens the shadows unto unnatural darkness, and shuts out the rays of sunshines that ought to relieve them."[56]

Willis was involved in the 1850 divorce suit between the actor Edwin Forrest and his wife Catherine.[51] In January 1849, Forrest had found a love letter to his wife from fellow actor George W. Jamieson.[57] As a result, he and Catherine separated in April 1849. He moved to Philadelphia and filed for divorce in February 1850 though the Pennsylvania legislature denied his application.[58] Catharine went to live with the family of Parke Godwin and the separation became a public affair, with newspapers throughout New York reporting on supposed infidelities and other gossip.[59]

Willis defended Catharine, who maintained her innocence, in the Home Journal and suggested that Forrest was merely jealous of her intellectual superiority.[60] On June 17, 1850, shortly after Forrest had filed for divorce in the New York Supreme Court,[61] Forrest beat Willis with a gutta-percha whip in New York's Washington Square, shouting "this man is the seducer of my wife".[62] Willis, who was recovering from a rheumatic fever at the time, was unable to fight back. He later sued Forrest for assault and, by March 1852, was awarded $2,500 plus court costs.[63]

[edit] Ruth Hall

Willis arbitrarily refused to print the work of his sister Sara Willis ("Fanny Fern") after 1854.[50] Acknowledging her restlessness, he once made her the subject of his poem "To My Wild Sis".[64] As Fanny Fern, she had published Fern Leaves, which sold over 100,000 copies the year before.[65] Willis, however, was not encouraging of his sister's writings. "You overstrain the pathetic, and your humor runs into dreadful vulgarity sometimes ... I am sorry that any editor knows that a sister of mine wrote some of these which you sent me", he wrote.[66] In 1854 she published Ruth Hall, a Domestic Tale of the Present Time,[67] a barely concealed semi-autobiographical account of her own difficulties in the literary world. Nathaniel Willis was represented as "Hyacinth Ellet", an effeminate, self-serving editor who schemes to ruin his sister's prospects as a writer.[68] Willis did not publicly protest but in private he asserted that, despite his fictitious equivalent, he had done his best to support his sister during her difficult times, especially after the death of her first husband.[69]

Among his later works were Hurry-Graphs (1851), Outdoors at Idlewild (1854), and Ragbag (1855). Willis had complained that his magazine writing prevented him from writing a longer work. He finally had the time in 1856, and he wrote his novel Paul Fane which was published a year later.[70] His final work was The Convalescent (1859), which included a chapter on his time spent with Washington Irving at Sunnyside.[71]

[edit] Final years and death

Grave of Nathaniel Parker Willis
Grave of Nathaniel Parker Willis

In July 1860, Willis took his last major trip. Along with his wife, he stopped in Chicago and Yellow Springs, Ohio, as far west as Madison, Wisconsin, and also took a steamboat down the Mississippi River to St. Louis, Missouri, and returned through Cincinnati, Ohio and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[72] In 1851, Willis allowed the Home Journal to break its pledge to avoid taking sides in political discussions when the Confederate States of America was established, calling the move a purposeful act to bring on war.[73] On May 28, 1861, Willis was part of a committee of literary figures—including William Cullen Bryant, Charles Anderson Dana, and Horace Greeley—to invite Edward Everett to speak in New York on behalf of maintaining the Union.[74] The Home Journal lost many subscribers during the American Civil War, Morris died in 1864, and the Willis family had to take in boarders and for a time turned Idlewild into a girls' school for income.[75]

Willis died on his sixty-first birthday, January 20, 1867, and was buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[76] Four days later, the day of his funeral, all bookstores in the city were closed as a token of respect.[76] His pallbearers included Longfellow, James Russell Lowell, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Samuel Gridley Howe, and James Thomas Fields.[77]

[edit] Reputation

Willis was well-liked and known for his good nature amongst friends. Well-traveled and clever, he had a striking appearance at six feet tall and was typically dressed elegantly. Many, however, remarked that Willis was effeminate, Europeanized, and guilty of "Miss Nancyism." One editor called him "an impersonal passive verb—a pronoun of the feminine gender."[78] A contemporary caricature depicted him wearing a fashionable beaver hat and tightly closed coat and carrying a cane, reflecting Willis's wide reputation as a "dandy".[79] As Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. once said, Willis was "something between a remembrance of Count D'Orsay and an anticipation of Oscar Wilde".[80] Publisher Charles Frederick Briggs once wrote that "Willis was too Willisy".[81] He described his writings as the "novelty and gossip of the hour" and was not necessarily concerned about facts but with the "material of conversation and speculation, which may be mere rumor, may be the truth".[82]

Willis built up his reputation in the public at a time when readers were interested in the personal lives of writers.[83] In his writings, he described the "high life" of the "Upper Ten Thousand", a phrase he coined.[80] His travel writings in particular were popular for this reason[84] as Willis was actually living the life he was describing and recommending to readers.[85] Even so, he manufactured a humble and modest persona, who questioned his own literary merit, and purposely used titles, such as Pencillings by the Way and Dashes at Life With Free Pencil, which downplayed their own quality.[49] His informally-toned editorials, which covered a variety of topics, were also very successful.[84] In these he addressed his readers personally, as if having a private conversation with them. As he once wrote: "We would have you ... indulge us in our innocent egotism as if it were all whispered in your private ear and over our iced Margaux".[86]

In the publishing world, Willis was known as a shrewd magazinist and an innovator who focused on appealing to readers' special interest while still recognizing new talent.[87] In fact, Willis became the standard by which other magazinists were judged. According to writer George William Curtis, "His gayety [sic] and his graceful fluency made him the first of our proper 'magazinists'".[88] For a time, it was said that Willis was the "most-talked-about author" in the United States.[31] Poe questioned Willis's fame, however. "Willis is no genius–a graceful trifler–no more", he wrote in a letter to James Russell Lowell. "In me, at least, he never excites an emotion."[89] Minor Southern writer Joseph Beckham Cobb wrote: "No sane person, we are persuaded, can read his poetry".[90] Future senator Charles Sumner reported: "I find Willis is much laughed at for his sketches".[91] Even so, most contemporaries recognized how prolific he was as a writer and how much time he put into all of his writings. James Parton said of him:

Of all the literary men whom I have ever known, N. P. Willis was the one who took the most pains with his work. It was no very uncommon thing for him to toil over a sentence for an hour; and I knew him one evening to write and rewrite a sentence for two hours before he had got it to his mind.[92]

By 1850, with the publication of Hurry-Graphs, Willis was becoming a forgotten celebrity. In August 1853, future President James A. Garfield discussed Willis's declining popularity in his diary: "Willis is said to be a licentious man, although an unrivaled poet. How strange that such men should go to ruin, when they might soar perpetually in the heaven of heavens."[93] After Willis's death, obituaries reported that he had outlived his fame.[94] One remarked, "the man who withdraws from the whirling currents of active life is speedily forgotten."[75] This obituary also stated that Americans "will ever remember and cherish Nathaniel P. Willis as one worthy to stand with Fenimore Cooper and Washington Irving".[95] In 1946, the centennial issue of Town & Country reported that Willis "led a generation of Americans through a gate where weeds gave way to horticulture".[80] More modern scholars have dismissed Willis's work as "sentimental prattle" or refer to him only as an obstacle in the progress of his more talented sister as well as Harriet Jacobs.[96] As biographer Thomas N. Baker wrote, Willis is today only referred to as a footnote in relation to other authors.[31]

[edit] List of works

Prose

  • Sketches (1827)[97]
  • Pencillings by the Way (1835)[98]
  • Inklings of Adventure (1836)[98]
  • À l'Abri; or, The Tent Pitched (1839)[98]
  • Loiterings of Travel (1840)[98]
  • Dashes at Life with a Free Pencil (1845)[99]
  • Rural Letters and Other Records of Thoughts at Leisure (1849)[99]
  • People I Have Met (1850)[99]
  • Life Here and There (1850)[99]
  • Hurry-Graphs (1851)[99]
  • Summer Cruise in the Mediterranean (1853)[99]
  • Fun Jottings; or, Laughs I have taken a Pen to (1853)[99]
  • Health Trip to the Tropics (1854)[99]
  • Ephemera (1854)[99]
  • Famous Persons and Places (1854)[99]
  • Out Doors at Idlewild; or, The Shaping of a Home on the Banks of the Hudson (1855)[99]
  • The Rag Bag. A Collection of Ephemera (1855)[99]
  • Paul Fane; or, Parts of a Life Else Untold. A Novel (1857)[99]
  • The Convalescent (1859)[100]

Plays

  • Bianca Visconti; or, The Heart Overtasked. A Tragedy in Five Acts (1839)[98]
  • Tortesa; or, The Userer Matched (1839)[98]

Poetry

  • Fugitive Poetry (1829)[97]
  • Melanie and Other Poems (1831)[101]
  • The Sacred Poems of N. P. Willis (1843)[101]
  • Poems of Passion (1843)[101]
  • Lady Jane and Humorous Poems (1844)[99]
  • The Poems, Sacred, Passionate, and Humorous (1868)[101]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Baker, 3
  2. ^ Beers, 262
  3. ^ a b Baker, 88
  4. ^ a b c d "Old New Haven", Juliet Lapidos, The Advocate, March 17, 2005. Accessed June 5, 2008
  5. ^ Auser, 19
  6. ^ Baker, 160
  7. ^ a b Auser, 20
  8. ^ Phillips, 909
  9. ^ a b c Auser, 21
  10. ^ Pattee, 500
  11. ^ Lewis, R. W. B. The American Adam: Innocence, Tragedy, and Tradition in the Nineteenth Century. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1955: 68.
  12. ^ a b Phillips, 910
  13. ^ Pattee, 515
  14. ^ Baker, 84
  15. ^ Auser, 46
  16. ^ Calhoun, Charles C. Longfellow: A Rediscovered Life. Boston: Beacon Press, 2004. ISBN 0807070262. p. 98
  17. ^ a b Baker, 76
  18. ^ Beers, 170–171
  19. ^ a b Beers, 264
  20. ^ a b Phillips, 911
  21. ^ Baker, 86
  22. ^ Auser, 47–48
  23. ^ Quinn, 284
  24. ^ Meyers, 152
  25. ^ Beers, 263–264
  26. ^ Beers, 271
  27. ^ Beers, 259–260
  28. ^ Beers, 260–261
  29. ^ Beers, 284–285
  30. ^ Introduction, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Harvard University Press, 1987) xvii.
  31. ^ a b c Baker, 4
  32. ^ Quinn, 434
  33. ^ a b Silverman, 223
  34. ^ Bayless, 83
  35. ^ Auser, 23
  36. ^ Silverman, 237
  37. ^ Meyers, 202
  38. ^ Meyers, 184
  39. ^ Silverman, 234–235
  40. ^ Meyers, 174
  41. ^ Auser, 51–52
  42. ^ Auser, 118
  43. ^ Beers, 276
  44. ^ a b Baker, 122
  45. ^ Beers, 287
  46. ^ Auser, 125
  47. ^ Auser, 125–126
  48. ^ Tomc, 785–786
  49. ^ a b Tomc, 794
  50. ^ a b Auser, 130
  51. ^ a b Auser, 132
  52. ^ Auser, 142
  53. ^ Beers, 328
  54. ^ Beers, 294
  55. ^ a b Beers, 329
  56. ^ Quinn, 666–667
  57. ^ Baker, 116
  58. ^ Beers, 309
  59. ^ Baker, 117
  60. ^ Beers, 311
  61. ^ Beers, 312
  62. ^ Baker, 115
  63. ^ Beers, 313
  64. ^ Baker, 161
  65. ^ Baker, 164
  66. ^ Baker, 163
  67. ^ Auser, 334
  68. ^ Baker, 170
  69. ^ Auser, 336–337
  70. ^ Auser, 101
  71. ^ Beers, 332–333
  72. ^ Beers, 340–341
  73. ^ Auser, 128
  74. ^ Auser, 128–129
  75. ^ a b Baker, 188
  76. ^ a b Beers, 350
  77. ^ Baker, 187
  78. ^ Silverman, 223
  79. ^ Reilly, John E. "Poe in Pillory: An Early Version of a Satire by A. J. H. Duganne", Poe Studies, vol. VI, no. 1, June 1973. p. 10. Accessed June 5, 2008
  80. ^ a b c Tomc, 783
  81. ^ Thomas, Dwight and David K. Jackson. The Poe Log: A Documentary Life of Edgar Allan Poe 1809–1849. New York: G. K. Hall & Co., 1987: p. 514. ISBN 0783814011
  82. ^ Baker, 87
  83. ^ Baker, 6
  84. ^ a b Auser, 54
  85. ^ Tomc, 786
  86. ^ Tomc, 784
  87. ^ Auser, 146
  88. ^ Pattee, 499
  89. ^ Quinn, 389
  90. ^ Hubbell, Jay B. The South in American Literature: 1607-1900. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 1954: 638.
  91. ^ Baker, 100
  92. ^ Tomc, 795–796
  93. ^ Baker, 158
  94. ^ Beers, 351
  95. ^ "Obituary. Nathaniel Parker Willis", The New York Times. January 22, 1867. Accessed May 11, 2008
  96. ^ Tomc, 799–800
  97. ^ a b Beers, 353
  98. ^ a b c d e f Beers, 354
  99. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Beers, 355
  100. ^ Beers, 356
  101. ^ a b c d Auser, 165

[edit] Sources

  • Auser, Courtland P. Nathaniel P. Willis. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc., 1969.
  • Baker, Thomas N. Nathaniel Parker Willis and the Trials of Literary Fame. New York, Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-19-512073-6
  • Bayless, Joy. Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943.
  • Beers, Henry A. Nathaniel Parker Willis. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1913.
  • Meyers, Jeffrey. Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Legacy. New York: Cooper Square Press, 1992. ISBN 0815410387
  • Pattee, Fred Lewis. The First Century of American Literature: 1770–1870. New York: Cooper Square Publishers, 1966.
  • Phillips, Mary E. Edgar Allan Poe: The Man. Volume II. Chicago: The John C. Winston Co., 1926.
  • Quinn, Arthur Hobson. Edgar Allan Poe: A Critical Biography. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc., 1941. ISBN 0801857309
  • Silverman, Kenneth. Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991. ISBN 0060923318
  • Tomc, Sandra. "An Idle Industry: Nathaniel Parker Willis and the Workings of Literary Leisure", American Quarterly. Vol. 49, Issue 4, December 1997.

[edit] External links

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Persondata
NAME Nathaniel Parker Willis
ALTERNATIVE NAMES N. P. Willis
SHORT DESCRIPTION American magazine writer, editor, and publisher
DATE OF BIRTH January 20, 1806
PLACE OF BIRTH Portland, Maine
DATE OF DEATH January 20, 1867
PLACE OF DEATH
Languages


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