Walter Savage Landor
Walter Savage Landor was born in Warwick, England, United Kingdom on January 30th, 1775 and is the Poet. At the age of 89, Walter Savage Landor biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Walter Savage Landor (January 1775 – September 1864) was an English writer, poet, and activist.
His best known pieces were the prose Imaginary Conversations and the poem Rose Aylmer, but the critical acclaim he received from contemporary writers and writers was not matched by public recognition.
His career, as impressive as it was, was equalled by his rumbustious character and vivacious temperament.
Both his writing and political activism, as well as his support for Lajos Kossuth and Giuseppe Garibaldi, were imbued with his love for democratic and republican causes.
Charles Dickens and Robert Browning, among other literary reformers, were befriended and inspired by him.
Summary of his life
Landor's biography is based on a series of events and tragedies, some of which were self-inflicted but others were not of his own. His headstrong personality and fiery temperament, as well as complete disrespect for power, put him in a lot of trouble over the years. He was progressively kicked out of Rugby school, Oxford, and even away from the family's house for a succession of strange behaviours. He came into direct conflict with his political rivals, Lord Chancellors, Spanish police, Italian Grand Dukes, nuncio legatos, and other minor officials during his lifetime. He had the upper hand, albeit with a sarcastic response, followed by a biting epithet many years later.
Landor's writing often placed him on the wrong side of the libel case, and even his stay in Latin proved of no use in Italy. Many times, his families had to come to his rescue in smoothing the feathers of his rivals or encouraging him to moderate his behavior. His coworkers were also keen in the fight to get his work out, where he was insulted or cheated by a succession of publishers whose work was either unsellable or unpublishable. He had been embroiled in legal disputes with his neighbors, whether in England or Italy, and Dickens' portrayal of him in Bleak House revolves around a controversies concerning a gate between Boythorn and Sir Leicester Dedlock. Fate treated him unfairly as he tried to put into practice his bold and generous suggestions to increase the lot of man, or when he was mistaken for an Prince of Wales agent and then another for a tramp. His tumultuous marriage with his long-suffering wife resulted in a long separation, and then, when she finally took him back in a series of sad attempts to escape, she became angry.
And yet Landor was dubbed by Swinburne as "the kindest and gentlest of men." "His fidelity and liberality of heart were as inexhaustible as his wealth and mercy of hand," he wrote for the Encyclop "Manchester Swinburne says, "praise and praise, deserved or undeserved," he said. He was a fascinating company, according to a number of accounts, he dined out on his wit and wisdom for a large portion of his life. Landor's humour, expressed in his rousing laughter, was a contributor to and also helped sooth the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. "His sincere compassion, his resentment, and a ferocious concern for those wrongdoers suffered around the world," he found a tyrannicide champion in his lifelong struggle." His tender and ardent love of children, animals, and flowers makes his books and his personal life aessible.
Early life
Walter Savage Landor was born in Warwick, England, the eldest son of Dr Walter Landor (1733-1805), a surgeon, and Elizabeth (1743-1829), one of Charles Savage's four daughters and heiresses, is buried in Warwick, Warwickshire. The King's High School For Girls occupied Eastgate House, his birthplace. His father inherited estates in Rugeley, Staffordshire, and his mother, Ipsley Court and Bishop's Tachbrook, Warwickshire, was the subject of a divorce. Landor, the eldest son, was heir to these homes and looked forward to a life of prosperity. In reaction to George III and Pitt, the family's history was Whig, and although Landor's brother Robert was the only other male to achieve fame as a writer, there was a strong literary tradition in the family.
After attending a school in Knowle, he was sent to Rugby School under Dr. James, but the headmaster denied his work and was dismissed at Dr. James' request. Landor continued to talk about James in Latin in Simonidea years ago, offering a mix of praise and condemnation, and he was eventually reconciled with him. He later trained privately with Rev. David Smith. William Langley, vicar of Fenny Bentley and headmaster of Ashbourne Grammar School. In the Imaginary Conversations of Isaak Walton, Langley was later mentioned. Landor's temperament and virulent views caused embarrassment at home, and he was often asked to leave himself when visitors arrived. On one occasion, he netted and threw in the river a local farmer who had objected to his fishing on his property. He attended Trinity College, Oxford, where he displayed rebelliousness in his informal attire and was regarded as a "mad Jacobin" since being bombarded with French republicanism. Dr Benwell's tutorship was impressed by him, but unfortunately, his stay was short-lived. He shot a pistol at the windows of a Tory man whose late night revelers apprehended him and for whom he had an aversion. He had been immobilized for a year, and although the authorities were keen to excuse the offence, he refused to return. Landor's father was involved in a confrontation with his son, in which he expressed his displeasure with him.
Landor traveled to Tenby, Wales, where he had a love affair with Nancy Evans, for whom he wrote some of his oldest love poems referring to her as "ione." The father of a landor's disapproved and he was taken for a short time to London, where he lived near Portland Place. Ione had a child who died in infancy and Ione had a son who died in infancy. In 1795, Landor published a small amount of English and Latin verse in three books titled The Poems of Walter Savage Landor. Landor also created a pamphlet version of nineteen pages, respectfully dedicated to Earl Stanhope. It was a satire in heroic verse chastising Pitt for attempting to suppress liberal influences. "No poet at the age of 20 had more vigour and fluency of poetry than anyone else," Swinburne said, "no poet at the age of twenty had more vigour and fluency of verse; nor has anyone else in the United States had such command of epigram and satire, made vivid and vital by the purest excitement and most generous indignation."
Landor was reunited with his family through the efforts of his companion Dorothea Lyttelton. He told Forster that if he were financially stable, he might have married Dorothea. He did not enter the field; he did not want the law; and no one feared him; and the army does not want him. His father paid him £150 per year, and he could live at home or not as he pleased.