Lillian Rozell Messenger

Lillian Rozell Messenger (pen name, Zena Clifton; 18431921) was an American poet from Kentucky. Among her first acknowledged poems were those brought out in a volume entitled, Threads of fate, 1872. Other volumes included Fragments from an old inn, 1885; The Vision of gold, 1886; and The Southern Cross, 1891. "Columbus" was read by Governor John Wesley Hoyt of Wyoming Territory during the patriotic celebration at the Woman's Building, World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, 1893. "In the heart of America," was read at the Cotton States and International Exposition, in Atlanta, 1895.[1] Messenger contributed many poems to the Louisville Journal, Memphis papers, and the New York Home Journal. Her most ambitious poems were lengthy, narrative ones, with themes such as "Charlotte Corday" and "Penelope, the Wife of Ulysses".[2]

Lillian Rozell Messenger
BornLillian T. Rozell
1843
Kentucky, U.S.
Died1921
Pen nameZena Clifton
OccupationPoet
LanguageEnglish
Alma materForest Hill Seminary
Partner
North Allen Messenger
(m. 1861)

Early years and education

Lillian T. Rozell was born in Kentucky (Milburn;[1] or Millersburg[3] or Ballard County[4] are recorded) in 1843,[5] 1844,[1] or 1853.[6] Her parents, Dr. Francis Overton and Caroline (Cole) Rozell,[1] were Virginians. The father was a physician who was fond of poetry and music.[3] Her paternal grandfather came from Nice, France, during the Napoleonic War and settled in Virginia. Her maternal ancestors were of English descent.[4] All of her family were of a melancholy, sensitive, musical temperament; and Messenger was often and suddenly the victim of depressing melancholy.[7] There was at least one sibling, a sister, Virginia.[8]

Messenger moved in early life to Arkansas[3] When she was a young child, she delighted in oratory, in climbing hills, and imitating speakers she had heard, in either prose or verse. When not roaming, she loved to fly a kite and to shoot a bow and arrow. From these early years, she was a poet.[7] From reading poetry, she began to write it herself at an early age.[4]

The study of astronomy and natural philosophy dispelled so many fond illusions concerning the mystery of the clouds, that she almost regretted knowledge.[7] Her early education was varied, and her country life made her familiar with nature. Her father died while she was in college.[4] Her education occurred at Forest Hill Seminary, near Memphis, Tennessee. It was here, after her father's death, that her poetry first attracted public attention.[3] Not returning to school after the father's death, that she started writing her first verses, the subject being "Night." She was sixteen years old when her first poem was published.[7]

Career

While still a school girl, she began her literary career, being encouraged and introduced by M. C. Galloway, Solon Borland, and Geo. D. Prentice. Colonel M. C. Gallaway was Messenger's "Fidus Achates."[7] Her maiden poetry appeared in the "Memphis Avalanche," under the nom de plume of "Zena Clifton,"[2][9] but gaining confidence, she began writing under her own signature.[1]

In 1861, in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, she married North Allen Messenger,[1] a native of Tuscumbia, Alabama, an editor. Their wedded life was brief, only lasting four years, when the husband died.[4] During the American Civil War, when the Federal troops plundered Tuscumbia, they took a journal of manuscripts, principally lyrics, belonging to Messenger. General Dodge tried to recover it, but did not succeed.[2]

For four years she resided at Tuscumbia, devoting her life to rearing her son, North Overton, and to an active literary career. She removed to Arkansas, 1868, and was the first woman elected to membership in the State press association. Later she removed to Washington, D. C., where for more than 30 years she was engaged in general literary work. She was one of the charter members of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and belonged to other patriotic and literary organizations.[1]

There were several principal works, including "Disappointment," "Importuning," "Halloween," and "The Southern Cross". "Fragments from an Old Inn" (New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons) was a collection of prose and poetry, supposed to embody the heart's history of a beautiful, sad woman whom the author met at an old inn. The prose consisted of short paragraphs, generally embracing a single thought; the poems were brief, with such titles as "Old loves. An old story newly told," " A picture," "Autumn," "Disappointment," and so forth.[10] The heroine of the Hudson (and other poems) (Richmond, Virginia, The Hermitage Press, 1906) was dedicated to the National society, Daughters of the American revolution.[11] Of "The Vision of Gold," it was said that there was difficulty in detecting the meaning of her rhapsodies, as they were tangled meshes of rhetorical extravagances.[12] "Columbus; or, It Was Morning" was first read on July 4, 1893, before the Woman's Building Congresses of the Columbian Exposition. Messenger was also a successful dramatic reader. She counted music and painting as favored recreations.[3]

Selected works

  • 1862, In Darkness
  • 1873, Threads of Fate[13]
  • 1885, Fragments from an Old Inn[14]
  • 1886, The Vision of Gold and Other Poems[15]
  • 1891, The Southern cross and other poems
  • 1896, In the heart of America
  • 1906, The Heroine of the Hudson: (and Other Poems)[16]
  • 1914, Martha Sawyer Gielow ... A brief resumé of her achievements as author, dramatic reader, and founder of the Southern Industrial Educational Association,

References

  1. Owen & Owen 1921, p. 1192.
  2. Tardy 1872, p. 262.
  3. Eagle 1895, p. 227.
  4. Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 501.
  5. "Messenger, Lillian Rozell, 1843–1921". VIAF. Retrieved 18 June 2017.
  6. American Publishers' Association 1914, p. 675.
  7. Tardy 1872, p. 261.
  8. "In Memorium". Little Rock, Arkansas: Daily Arkansas Gazette. 9 May 1897. p. 10. Retrieved 18 June 2017 via Newspapers.com.
  9. Cushing 1885, p. 500.
  10. Leypoldt 1885, p. 413.
  11. Swem & Hall 1916, p. 369.
  12. Crocker 1886, p. 269.
  13. Messenger 1873, p. 1.
  14. Messenger 1885, p. 1.
  15. Messenger 1886, p. 1.
  16. Messenger 1906, p. 1.

Bibliography

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