Poems. - A poem, in four books._cTo which
Augusta Cooper Bristol
Adams (1868)
In Collection
#1664
0*
Poet
Woman
Hardcover 9780938572329
e
Augusta Cooper Bristol's poetry expressed a love ofGod, family, and nature. Her love of her country, and the Union North were evident in the Civil War poetry published in this book. The famous "The Crime of the Ages", was the Civil War, and she expressed her sadness, remorse, and gratefulness to the cause. In the "To the Nation Over the Sea", her sympathy to the African peoples was evident. I also found a poem titled "Lincoln--1865", which was a very moving piece about the life and death of Abraham Lincoln. From the USGenWeb Archives by MLM:"AUGUSTA COOPER BRISTOL, poet and lecturer, the youngest of ten children of Col. Otis and Hannah (Powers) Cooper, was born Croydon April 17, 1835. Her poetical taste was manifest in childhood, her first verses being written when she was eight years of age. She excelled in mathematics and early manifested an aptitude for logical and philosophical reasoning. Educated in the public schools and Canaan and Kimball Union Academies, she began teaching at fifteen, and was thus employed until her marriage at twenty-two, with G. F. Kimball, from whom she was divorced five years later. In 1866 she married Louis Bristol, a lawyer of New Haven, Conn., removing to Illinois. In 1869 she published a volume of poems, and, the same year, gave her first public lecture, which circumstance seems to have changed the course of her intellectual career. In 1872 she removed to Vineland, N. J., her present home, whence she has been frequently called before the public as a speaker. She was four years president of the Ladies' Social Science class in Vineland. In 1880 she gave a course of lectures before the New York Positivist Society on "The Evolution of Character," and another before the Woman's Social Science Club. In June following, she went to Europe and Spent several months studying the equitable association of labor and capital at the Familistere, founded by M. Godin in France, also representing the New York Positivist Society in an international convention of liberal thinkers in Brussels, before which body she gave a lecture upon the "Scientific Basis of Morality." Returning home she published the "Rules and Statutes" of the association in Guise. In 1881she was chosen lecturer of the New Jersey State Grange and was employed on a national lecture bureau of the Patrons of Husbandry. Since her husband's death in 1882, she has seldom appeared on the platform, but was one of the speakers in the Congress of Representative Women at the World's Fair in Chicago"
Product Details
LoC Classification PS1123.B5P6 1868
Nationality American
Pub Place Boston
No. of Pages 190
Height x Width 7.5  inch
Personal Details
Read It Yes
User Defined
Conflict Amer Civil War
Notes
RISTOL, Augusta Cooper, educator, born in Croydon, New Hampshire, 17 April, 1835. She was the youngest of ten children, and early developed a fondness for poetry, music, and mathematics. At nine years of age she began writing poetry, and at fourteen studied from the same mathematical textbooks used by her brothers at Dartmouth. Her education was acquired at Kimball Union Academy, and in 1850 she became a teacher. In 1866 she married Louis Bristol, and meanwhile she had gained some reputation as a writer of poetry. Later her articles and lectures on moral and social topics attracted attention, and during the summer of 1880 she was sent to study the Equitable Association of Labor and Capital at Guise, in France. For three months she resided in the "Social Palace," and very thoroughly investigated the subject. In September, 1880, she was delegated to represent the constructive liberal thought of America at an International Convention of Freethinkers held in Brussels. On her return to the United States she was elected state lecturer by the order of the Patrons of Husbandry in New Jersey. This office she filled until 1884, when, the work having become national, she was sent by a bureau to visit Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New Hampshire, and Ohio. Besides a volume of "Poems" (Boston, 1868), she has published "The Relation of the Maternal Function to the Woman's Intellect" (Washington, 1876); "The Philosophy of Art" (New York, 1878); "Science and its Relations to Human Character" (1878; translated into French, Antwerp, 1881); and "The Present Phase of Woman's Advancement" (1880); and also edited and assisted in the translation of the "Laws and Regulations of the Mutual Assurance of the Institution at Guise" (1881).