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Birth date
06/20/1874
Death date
10/11/1904
Country
Geneva
Poems by this Poet
Displaying 51 - 60 of 137
Title Post date Rating Comments
Tho' lack of laurels and of wreaths not one
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If, in the night and madness of thy mind
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Listen! As though from other times and days
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A Letter
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You are to me the full vermilion rose
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You'll say when here again after it all
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A Glad little rift, so shy
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Fragment of an Ode for Greek Liberty
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Dear and rich as a dawn of summer
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And I stood ringed about with marble dreams
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Joseph Trumbull Stickney was born in Geneva on June 20, 1874, and grew up in many cities and countries as his parents travelled widely ... Wiesbaden, Florence, Nice, London, and New York.

He was educated by his father, Austin at home in both Latin and Greek, and then entered Harvard University in 1891. He graduated magna cum laude in June 1895. The following eight years were spent studying for the degree of Doctorat ès Lettres at the Sorbonne in Paris. For this he wrote two theses, one on the letters of Ermolao Barbaro, a 15th-century ambassador to Rome, and the other on aphorisms in Greek verse. His Dramatic Verses was published in Boston in 1902, dedicated from Paris to his friend "Bay" (George) Lodge, who would co-edit Stickney's collected poems in 1905.

In 1903 his second thesis was published as Les Sentences dans la Poésie Grècque this won him the first Sorbonne Doctorat awarded to an American. Stickney then took on a position as instructor in Greek at Harvard in 1903 and travelled abroad in Greece from April to June that year. A brain tumor caused headaches and partial blindness from early in 1904 and led to his death in Boston on October 11th 1904.