Richard Realf

Richard Realf (14 June 1832, Framfield, East Sussex, England – 28 October 1878, Oakland, California) was a poet who lived in many places throughout the United States, and whose work was informed by these travels. An obituary called him "a singularly unhappy man".[1]
Early success
At the age of fifteen he began to write verses, and two years later he became amanuensis to a lady in Brighton. A traveling lecturer on phrenology recited some of young Realf's poems, as illustrations of ideality. Thereupon several literary people in Brighton sought him out and encouraged him, particularly Lady Byron, widow of these poet. Under their patronage a collection of his poems was published, entitled "Guesses at the Beautiful" (London, 1852). Realf spent a year in Leicestershire, studying scientific agriculture with a relative of Lady Byron, Charles Noel and in 1854 came to the United States after a doomed love affair with Joel's young daughter Alice. Upon this being discovered Lady Byron arranged for Realf to go to America and given a teaching post at a school, Five Points Mission.
Life in the U.S.
After arriving in the U.S., Realf explored the slums of
Early in 1862 he enlisted in the
In 1868 he established a school for
Suicide
After a failed attempt the previous evening, Realf killed himself by taking chloral hydrate and laudanum at the Windsor House in Oakland, California, on October 28, 1878. He committed suicide in consequence of an unfortunate marriage and an imperfect divorce. He appointed as his literary executor Colonel Richard J. Hinton, who, after an initial gathering of the poet's scattered fragments performed by Ina Coolbrith, completed the collection of Realf's poems for publication, together with a biographical sketch, in 1888. Realf is buried in Section OSA, Row 72, Grave #4 of the San Francisco National Cemetery located in the Presidio of San Francisco, California.
Sources
- ^ newspapers.com.
- New York Tribune.
- ^ Poems by Richard Realf. Poet, Soldier, Workman. With a Memoir by Richard J. Hinton. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. 1898.
- . (subscription required)
External links
- Johnson, Rossiter (1900). "Richard Realf". In Fiske, John; Wilson, James Grant (eds.). Appletons' Cyclopaedia of American Biography. New York: Appleton's. p. 202.
- The Californian (1893), "Books and Authors", p. 663.
- Richard Realf letters and poems at Newberry Library