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Melville Henry Cane

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Name
  
Melville Cane

Role
  
Poet


Died
  
March 10, 1980

Awards
  
Robert Frost Medal

Melville Henry Cane mywebwvnetedujelkinslp2001imagescane2jpg

Born
  
April 15, 1879 (
1879-04-15
)

Books
  
Eloquent April, All and sundry

Education
  
Columbia Law School (1903), Columbia University (1900)

Melville Henry Cane (April 15, 1879 – March 10, 1980) was an American poet and lawyer. He studied at Columbia University, and was the author of the influential book, Making a Poem (1953).

Contents

Early life and education

As a Columbia University student in 1900, Cane worked as a reporter at the New York Evening Post and also wrote poetry. He also co-wrote the 1900 Varsity Show at Columbia, writing lyrics for libretto The Governor's Vrouw (1900), a two-act comic opera he co-wrote with Henry Sydnor Harrison, while John Erskine write the music. Cane earned his law degree in 1905 and later specialized in copyright law.

Career

Cane was a legal counsel to notable writers like Sinclair Lewis, Upton Sinclair, Ayn Rand, William Saroyan, and Thomas Wolfe and also served on the board of directors for Harcourt Brace Jovanovich Inc. Cane was also awarded the Frost Medal by the Poetry Society of America in 1971 for lifetime achievement.

Some of Cane's works are: January Garden (1926), Behind Dark Places' (1930), And Pastures New (1956) and Snow Towards Evening (1974).

References

Melville Henry Cane Wikipedia