{"id":11444,"date":"2016-06-28T20:11:42","date_gmt":"2016-06-28T20:11:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lichen.csd.sc.edu\/sce\/entries\/timrod-henry\/"},"modified":"2022-08-26T12:32:37","modified_gmt":"2022-08-26T12:32:37","slug":"timrod-henry","status":"publish","type":"entry","link":"https:\/\/www.scencyclopedia.org\/sce\/entries\/timrod-henry\/","title":{"rendered":"Timrod, Henry"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Poet, essayist. Timrod was born on December 8, 1828, in Charleston, South Carolina, the only son of a bookbinder, William Henry Timrod, and his wife, Thyrza Prince. Hedged by poverty, frail health, and the cataclysm of the Civil War, Timrod led a brief tubercular life that bore the stamp of the romantic tradition that he revered and defended among his neoclassical contemporaries in Charleston\u2019s antebellum literary circles.<\/p>\n<p>Timrod attended the prestigious Classical School, where he befriended his life- long ally and fellow poet Paul Hamilton Hayne. As a young man, Timrod enjoyed solitude, nature, and the contemplation of romantic love and death. William Gilmore Simms found Timrod \u201cmorbid,\u201d but the ever-loyal Hayne memorialized him as \u201cpassionate, impulsive, [and] eagerly ambitious.\u201d When scant resources precluded his graduation from the University of Georgia, Timrod returned to Charleston in 1846 to study law with James L. Petigru. However, as one contemporary put it, Timrod \u201cwas too wholly a poet\u201d to find the regimen compatible. Until the outbreak of the Civil War, he tutored the children of lowcountry planters while publishing his poetry and essays in <em>Russell\u2019s Magazine <\/em>(which he helped to found in 1857 with Hayne), the <em>Southern Literary Messenger, <\/em>and the Charleston newspapers. <em>Harper\u2019s <\/em>magazine hailed \u201cthe true poetical genius\u201d of Timrod\u2019s <em>Poems <\/em>(1860), the only col- lection published in his lifetime.<\/p>\n<p>Scholars generally concur that slavery and its ideological defense retarded the intellectual evolution of the antebellum South, particularly in the realm of letters. Timrod\u2019s 1859 essay \u201cLiterature in the South\u201d buttresses this point of view. Southern readers at best, he wrote, were indifferent to southern writers, but more often criticized them \u201cas not sufficiently Southern in spirit.\u201d According to Timrod, literature served merely as \u201cepicurean amusement\u201d for the South\u2019s \u201cprovincial\u201d people. Even among the most learned, said Timrod, the \u201cfossil theory of [classical] criticism\u201d remained de rigueur. A devotee of romanticism, Timrod argued that the embracement of new modes of expression was not inherently subversive. In his other notable essay, an exchange with William J. Grayson titled \u201cWhat Is Poetry?\u201d (1859), Timrod vehemently rebutted Grayson\u2019s defense of verse as simply \u201cform and order.\u201d Precisely for its disavowal and articulation of the modern sensibility in southern voices, the literary scholar Richard J. Calhoun has called this exchange \u201cone of the more interesting critical debates in antebellum literary history.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Although Timrod opposed secession, the opening of the Confederate Congress in February 1861 elicited from him the exultant \u201cEthnogenesis,\u201d which prophesied the world made over in the image of a utopian South free \u201cfrom want and crime.\u201d But as the war dragged on, Timrod\u2019s poems\u2013\u201cThe Cotton Boll\u201d (1861), \u201cCarolina\u201d (1862), \u201cCharleston\u201d (1862), \u201cChristmas\u201d (1862), \u201cThe Unknown Dead\u201d (1863), and the postwar \u201cOde\u201d (1866)\u2013turned from ardor to apprehension and gloom, earning for him the sobriquet \u201cPoet Laureate of the Confederacy.\u201d Lauding the \u201ccontrolled eloquence\u201d of his wartime compositions, Louis D. Rubin wrote, \u201cNothing in Timrod\u2019s pre-secession verse really prepares us for this sudden maturation as a poet. It is as if the advent of secession and the war had jarred him loose from his preoccupation with his own personality, the obsessive self-consciousness of his role as sensitive spokesman for aesthetic Ideality, into an abrupt confrontation with his identity as a member of the civil community.\u201d Even so harsh a critic as Ralph Waldo Emerson chose to read Timrod\u2019s war poetry to New England audiences after the Civil War, a tribute to his artistry and evocation of the sectional crisis.<\/p>\n<p>Timrod enlisted in the Confederate service several times, but his chronic tuberculosis led to repeated discharges. In the spring of 1862, as a war correspondent for the <em>Charleston Mercury, <\/em>Timrod witnessed the retreat of the Confederate army from Shiloh. Overwhelmed by the horror, he returned home and in January 1864 assumed the editorship of the <em>South Carolinian, <\/em>a daily newspaper published in Columbia. He married his long-betrothed Kate Goodwin, the English sister of his brother-in-law, and on Christmas Eve their son Willie was born. Timrod remained at his desk while Sherman\u2019s troops destroyed the capital city, issuing \u201cthumb- sheets\u201d until the occupation forced him into hiding. Facing ruin and starvation, Timrod futilely sought employment, depending on the charity of friends and the sale of his meager possessions for survival. The poet\u2019s bloodstained manuscripts still attest to his precipitous physical decline after the death of Willie, \u201cour little boy beneath the sod,\u201d in October 1865. Henry Timrod died from tubercular hemorrhages on October 7, 1867, and was buried in the cemetery at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral in Columbia. In 1911 the South Carolina General Assembly adopted Timrod\u2019s \u201cCarolina\u201d as the state song; he was inducted into the South Carolina Academy of Authors in 1992.<\/p>\n<p>Parks, Edd Winfield, ed. <em>The Essays of Henry Timrod. <\/em>Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1942.<\/p>\n<p>\u2013\u2013\u2013. <em>Henry Timrod. <\/em>New York: Twayne, 1964.<\/p>\n<p>Parks, Edd Winfield, and Aileen Wells Parks, eds. <em>The Collected Poems of Henry Timrod.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1965. Rubin, Louis D. <em>The Edge of the Swamp: A Study in the Literature and Society of the Old South<\/em>. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Poet, essayist. Timrod was born on December 8, 1828, in Charleston, South Carolina, the only son of a bookbinder, William Henry Timrod, and his wife, Thyrza Prince. Hedged by poverty, frail health, and the cataclysm of the Civil War, Timrod led a brief tubercular life that bore the stamp of the romantic tradition that he [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":-1,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","template":"","class_list":["post-11444","entry","type-entry","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","ecms-a-z","ecms-charleston-county","ecms-education","ecms-encyclopedia","ecms-literature","ecms-lowcountry","ecms-politics","ecms-reconstruction-1866-1877","ecms-t","ecms-the-antebellum-south-1816-1860","ecms-u-s-civil-war-1861-1865"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Timrod, Henry - South Carolina Encyclopedia<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.scencyclopedia.org\/sce\/entries\/timrod-henry\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Timrod, Henry - South Carolina Encyclopedia\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Poet, essayist. Timrod was born on December 8, 1828, in Charleston, South Carolina, the only son of a bookbinder, William Henry Timrod, and his wife, Thyrza Prince. 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Timrod was born on December 8, 1828, in Charleston, South Carolina, the only son of a bookbinder, William Henry Timrod, and his wife, Thyrza Prince. 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