William Cullen Bryant

1794-1878 

 

Life

Family Occupations Chronology

Issues and Themes

Throughout Bryant's life and still today he was well known for his poems about nature and politics.  Many of Bryant's poems are about the seasons and the earth. He also wrote of the places he traveled and things that were important to the times.  For example, Bryant wrote many articles and poems on the rights of slaves and the death of President Lincoln. Many of his writings were about the places he traveled to and things that happened to him along the way.

Bryant's life was spent for many years with the people he loved.  Bryant strived for success, and he achieved that, but he also yearned to be close to his family.  Somehow Bryant was able to live his life surrounded by great achievement and the love of a wife and two daughters, not to mention his brothers and parents.  The death of Bryant's father was very hard for him because he and his father were very close (Johnson 36).   Bryant and his father both shared a great love for poetry, and his father expressed great interest in his son's talents (Johnson 59).

Work

"To a Waterfowl"

One of Bryant's more well-known poems is "To a Waterfowl."  The rhyme scheme is abab cdcd efef.....opop.  Albert McLean, author of William Cullen Bryant, notes that throughout this poem Bryant's faith is very apparent and real (32).   In the last paragraph of the poem Bryant seems to be comparing our life with God to that of a Waterfowl.  He says: "He who from zone to zone, / Guides through the boundless sky thy certain flight, / In the long way that I must tread alone, / Will lead my steps aright."  He is saying that throughout our life wherever we go God is going to be with us guiding us down the right path.  And in times when we think we must go alone, he too will be with us then. He never leaves us long enough for us to fall, just long enough for us to learn from what we do.     

Curtiss S. Johnson, author of Politics and a Belly-full, notes that the reason that Bryant chooses a waterfowl of all animals to write about is because of a special encounter he had on the way to a new job one day.  It seems that Bryant was walking along and noticed that the waterfowl was flying around overhead and that he too seemed to be on a journey alone; then Bryant began to think that he himself was not alone. He realized that the waterfowl seemed alone also, but he too was being guided by some higher being and they both would find their way.(24)
 


Bibliography

Written by Emily Evans, student, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Edited by Mark Canada, Ph.D.