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Home  »  library  »  BIOS  »  Joaquin (Cincinnatus Hiner) Miller (1837–1913)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Joaquin (Cincinnatus Hiner) Miller (1837–1913)

Miller, Cincinnatus Heine, better known as Joaquin Miller. An American poet; born in Wabash district, IN, 1837; died on Feb. 17, 1913. He was variously a California gold-miner, editor of an Oregon newspaper, an Oregon lawyer and judge, a social lion in London, journalist at Washington, DC, etc. The name of “Joaquin” he took from Joaquin Murietta, a Mexican brigand, whom he had once legally defended. His ‘Collected Poems’ appeared in 1882 (revised 1902). Following these he published ‘Songs of Mexican Seas’ (1887); and ‘Songs of the Soul’ (1896). He wrote also in prose ‘The Baroness of New York’ (1877); ‘’49, or The Gold Seekers of the Sierras’ (1884); ‘The Danites’ (1881); ‘The Silent Man’; etc. (See Critical and Biographical Introduction).