
Philip Freneau
Philip Morin Freneau
(January 2, 1752 – December 18, 1832) was a notable American
poet, nationalist, polemicist,
sea captain and newspaper editor sometimes called the "Poet of the
American Revolution".
Biography
Freneau
was born in New York
City
, the oldest of the five children of Huguenot wine merchant Pierre Fresneau and
his Scottish
wife.
Philip was
raised in Monmouth County, New Jersey
where he studied under William Tennent, Jr..
His father
died in 1767, and he entered the College of New Jersey, now
Princeton
University
, as a sophomore
in 1768 to study for the ministry.
Freneau's close friend at Princeton was
James Madison, a relationship that would later
contribute to his establishment as the editor of the National
Gazette. He graduated in 1771, having written the poetical
History of the Prophet Jonah, and, with
Hugh Henry Brackenridge, the prose
satire
Father
Bombo's Pilgrimage to Mecca.
Following his graduation from Princeton, Freneau tried his hand at
teaching, but quickly gave it up. He also pursued a further study
of theology, but gave this up as well after about two years. As the
Revolutionary War approached in 1775, Freneau wrote a number of
anti-British pieces. However, by 1776, Freneau left America for the
West Indies, where he would spend time writing about the beauty of
nature. In 1778, Freneau returned to America, and rejoined the
patriotic cause. Freneau eventually became a crew member on a
revolutionary privateer, and was captured in this capacity. He was
held on a British
prison ship for about
six weeks. This unpleasant experience (in which he almost died),
detailed in his work, "The British Prison Ship" would precipitate
many more patriotic and anti-British writings throughout the
revolution and after. For this, he was named "The Poet of the
American Revolution".
In 1790 Freneau married, and became an assistant editor of the
New York Daily Advertiser. Soon after, Madison and
Thomas Jefferson worked to get
Freneau to move to Philadelphia in order to edit a
partisan newspaper that would
counter the Federalist newspaper
The Gazette of the United
States. Jefferson, then head of the State Department,
offered Freneau a position in Philadelphia as a State Department
translator. Freneau accepted this undemanding position, which
allowed him enough free time to head up the Democratic-Republican
newspaper Jefferson and Madison envisioned.
This partisan newspaper,
The
National Gazette, provided a vehicle for Jefferson,
Madison, and others to promote criticism of the rival Federalists.
The Gazette took particular aim at the policies promoted by
Alexander Hamilton, and like
other papers of the day, would not hesitate to shade into personal
attacks. Owing to The Gazette's frequent attacks on his
administration, President
George
Washington took a particular dislike to Freneau.
Freneau later retired to a more rural life and wrote a mix of
political and nature works. The non-political works of Freneau are
a combination of neoclassicism and romanticism. His poem "The House
of Night" makes its mark as one of the first romantic poems written
and published in America. The gothic elements and dark imagery are
later seen in poetry by
Edgar Allan
Poe, who is well known for his gothic works of literature.
Freneau's nature poem, "The Wild Honey Suckle" (1786), is
considered an early seed to the later
Transcendentalist movement taken up by
William Cullen Bryant,
Ralph Waldo Emerson, and
Henry David Thoreau. Romantic primitivism is
also anticipated by his poems "The Indian Burying Ground," and
"Noble Savage."
Although he is not as well known as Ralph Waldo Emerson or James
Fenimore Cooper, Freneau introduced many of the themes and images
in his literature that later authors are famous for. Not to say
that they all based their work off of his own, but Freneau
definitely led the way into the era of romanticism in
America.
Freneau is buried in the Philip Morin Freneau Cemetery on Poet's
Drive in Matawan, New Jersey. His wife and mother are also buried
here. He died at 80 years old, frozen to death when trying to get
back home. He was drunk and he got lost into the forest, dying of
froze.
The Matawan Post Office on Main Street has a sculpture on the wall
of Freneau. It features him with black slaves as he was an
abolitionist later in life. It is believed to have been created
during the Depression by a WPA artist.
There is a Freneau fire company on Main Street/Route 79. Until a
name change in mid 2000's, there was a restaurant called the Poet's
Inn, where Freneau was supposed to have had many a rum. Legend has
it that he died walking home from the inn in bad weather,
intoxicated.
See also
References
- Mary Weatherspoon Bowden. Philip Freneau (Twayne's
United States authors series ; TUSAS 260) (1976)
- Jane Donahue Eberwein, ed. Early American Poetry:
Selections from Bradstreet, Taylor, Dwight, Freneau and Bryant
(1978)
- Elliott, Emory. Revolutionary Writers: Literature and
Authority in the New Republic, 1725-1810. Oxford U. Press,
1982. 324 pp.
- Lewis Gaston Leary. That rascal Freneau: A study in
literary failure (1971)
- Nickson, Richard. Philip Freneau: Poet of the
Revolution.
- Trenton: New Jersey Hist. Comm., 1981. 36 pp.
- Pasley, Jeffrey L. "The Two National Gazettes: Newspapers and
the Embodiment of American Political Parties." Early American
Literature 2000 35(1): 51-86. ISSN 0012-8163 Fulltext in
Swetswise and Ebsco
- Vitzthum, Richard C. Land and Sea: The Lyric Poetry of
Philip Freneau U. of Minnesota Press, 1978. 197 pp.
- Princeton Biography
- Virtual American Biographies
- Harper's Encyclopædia of United States History, Harper & Brothers, 1905
- Freneau's Poems
- Last Poems
Anthology of American Literature Ninth Edition Vol. 1,
Pearson Prentice Hall, 2007
External links