Thomas William Parsons
Thomas William Parsons (August 18, 1819, Boston – September 3, 1892, Scituate, Massachusetts[1]) was an American dentist and poet.
Parsons was educated at the Boston Latin School, and visited Italy to study Italian literature in 1836-7.[2] His translation of Dante's Divine Comedy, which eventually comprised all the Inferno, two-thirds of the Purgatorio and fragments of the Paradiso,[3] began to appear in 1843.[2] After practicing dentistry in Boston, he lived for several years in England before returning to Boston in 1872.[4] He was a contributor to The Galaxy and The Atlantic Monthly.[2] In 1857 he married Anna (or Hannah) M. Allen (1821-1881).
Works
- The First Ten Cantos of the Inferno of Dante, 1843
- Poems, 1854
- (ed. C. E. Norton), The Divine Comedy of Dante Aligheri, 1893
References
- Underwood, F. H., Builders of American literature, 1893
- Drake, F. S., Dictionary of American biography, 1870
- Hart, J. D., Oxford companion to American literature, 1941
- Appleton's cyclopaedia of American biography, 6 vols, 1888
External links
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- Works by or about Thomas William Parsons at Internet Archive
- Works by Thomas William Parsons at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
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