Horatio Colony
Horatio Colony II (1900-1977) was an American poet, playwright and businessman.[1] He wrote a novel, Free Forester, as well as eleven books of poetry and two plays. His poetic works include Bacchus and Krishna, The Flying Ones, Young Malatesta, Antique Thorn: The Faun's Girl, Early Land: Two Narrative Poems, Some Phoenix Blood, Magic Child, and Flower Myth. He wrote the plays The Emperor and the Bee Boy and The Amazon's Hero.[2][3]
Colony was born in Keene, New Hampshire, and was the grandson of the city's first mayor.[1] His family were successful mill owners, a vocation which he inherited but had little passion for. He began writing at an early age and continued to do so until his death.[4]
Free Forester (1935) was the most successful of his works, receiving a positive review from The New York Times, which called him "a new name in literary circles" and the novel "sensitively and intelligently made and felt".[5]
At his death, Colony's house was transformed into the Horatio Colony House Museum at his bequest. A separate plot of land owned by his family was turned into the Horatio Colony Nature Preserve at this time as well. [1]
References
- "Family History – Horatio Colony Museum". Retrieved November 17, 2021.
- "Horatio Colony Papers: An inventory of his papers at Syracuse University". library.syr.edu. Retrieved October 2, 2021.
- "Horatio Colony: List of Books by Author Horatio Colony". www.paperbackswap.com. Retrieved October 2, 2021.
- Harris, Anna (March 10, 2002). "Horatio Colony Jr. and His Hilltop Writer's Retreat". The Keene Sentinel. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
- Young, Stanley (October 27, 1935). "An Unusual Novel of Pioneer Life; Horatio Colony's "Free Forester" Draws an Unconventional Picture of Colonial Kentucky Frontiersmen". The New York Times. Retrieved November 17, 2021.