William Cullen Bryant investigates nature William Cullen Bryant is easy to contact with transcendentalists. Most of the theme of his work includes the nature of life and the nature of nature. "Yellow purple" is an example of a poem about the essence of life. On the other hand, "Savanna" is an example of the essence of nature. Bryant's two poems are about the beautiful world of trees, flowers, and fields, but they take different views towards nature itself.
William Cullen Bryant was born in 1794 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Bryant and his father, Peter Bryant, grew up in a Puritan house. William Karen Bryant's early education came from his father. In his early days, Bryant spent a lot of time in his New England house forest and read the broad personal library his father had. Bryant's first poetry is a satirical piece about "Embargo Act" in 1807 of Thomas Jefferson, "The Embargo; or Sketch of the Times". It was published in the Boston newspaper in 1808. In 1810, Bryant was obliged to leave Williams University's money. Instead of receiving formal education, he began studying the law, he learned various poems such as Isaac Watts and Henry Kirke White, and poetry by William Cowper's "The Task" and Edmund Spenser's "The Faerie Queene" started.
William Cullen Bryant was born on November 3, 1794, is a natural poet and journalist in America. He wrote poems, essays and articles supporting the rights of workers and immigrants. In 1829, Bryant became the editor in chief of the New York Evening News which continued until 1878. His influence helped to establish important New York City civic facilities such as Central Park and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In 1884, New York City Reservoir Square at the intersection of 42th Street and 6th Avenue was renamed Brian Park with his name.