Everything about George Sterling totally explained
George Sterling (
1 December 1869 -
17 November 1926) was an
American poet based in
California who, during his time, was celebrated as one of the greatest American poets, although he never gained much fame in the rest of the country.
Sterling was born in
Sag Harbor,
Long Island,
New York, the eldest of nine children. His father was Dr. George A. Sterling, a physician who determined to make a priest of one of his sons, and George was selected to attend, for three years,
Saint Charles College in
Maryland. He was instructed in English by
John Bannister Tabb, an unpublished poet. His mother Mary was a member of the Havens family, prominent in Sag Harbor and the
Shelter Island area. Her brother,
Frank C. Havens, Sterling's uncle, went to
San Francisco in the late 19th century and established himself as a prominent lawyer and real estate developer. Sterling eventually followed him to the Bay Area in 1890 and worked for eighteen years as a
real estate broker.
A poet who called his works "pomes", Sterling became a significant figure in
Bohemian literary circles in northern California in the first quarter of the 20th century, and in the development of the artists' colony in
Carmel, he was mentored by a much older
Ambrose Bierce, and became close friends with
Jack London, and
Clark Ashton Smith, and later mentor to
Robinson Jeffers. His association with
Charles Rollo Peters may have led to his move to Carmel. The hamlet had been discovered by
Charles Warren Stoddard and others, but Sterling made the place world famous. His aunt Missus Havens purchased a home for him in Carmel Pines where he lived for six years.
Kevin Starr (1973) wrote:
» "The uncrowned King of Bohemia (so his friends called him), Sterling had been at the center of every artistic circle in the Bay Area. Celebrated as the embodiment of the local artistic scene, though forgotten today, Sterling had in his lifetime been linked with the immortals, his name carved on the walls of the
Panama-Pacific International Exposition next to the great poets of the past."
Joseph Noel (1940) says that Sterling's poem,
A Wine of Wizardry,(External Link
) has "been classed by many authorities as the greatest poem ever written by an American author."
According to Noel, Sterling sent the final draft of
A Wine of Wizardry to the normally acerbic and critical
Ambrose Bierce. Bierce said "If I could find a flaw in it, I should quickly call your attention to it... It takes the breath away."
Bierce, who acclaimed Sterling's first poem,
The Testimony of the Sun, in his "Prattle" column in
William Randolph Hearst's
San Francisco Examiner, arranged for the publication of
A Wine of Wizardry in the September
1907 number of
Cosmopolitan, which afforded Sterling some national notice. In an introduction to the poem, Bierce wrote "Whatever length of days may be according to this magazine, it isn't likely to do anything more notable in literature than it accomplished in this issue by the publication of Mr. George Sterling's poem, 'A Wine of Wizardry.'" Bierce wrote to Sterling, "I hardly know how to speak of it. No poem in English of equal length has so bewildering a wealth of imagination. Not Spencer himself has flung such a profusion of jewels into so small a casket".
Sterling fell into drinking and his wife departed. Noel, a personal acquaintance, says that when he began the poem, Sterling "was persuaded that there was another world than that we know. He repeated this to me so frequently that it became a trifle tiresome. Of the means he employed to get a glimpse of that other world, I'm not so sure." He observes that "many before Sterling had used narcotics to this end;" that "George, a doctor's son, had always had access to whatever drugs he fancied;" says that Sterling's wife said "that George had purloined a great quantity of opium from his brother Wickham," and speaks of "internal evidence in the poem" in which "Sterling writes his Fancy awakened with a 'brow caressed by poppybloom.'" Despite all this, Noel makes a point of saying "there is no direct evidence that Sterling used narcotics."
Sterling also wrote for children,
The Saga of the Pony Express.
Despite such famous mentors as Bierce and
Ina Coolbrith, and his long association with London, Sterling himself never became well known outside California.
Sterling's poetry is both visionary and mystical, but he also wrote ribald quatrains that were often unprintable and left unpublished. His style reflects the Romantic charm of such poets as
Shelley,
Keats and
Poe, and he provided guidance and encouragement to the similarly-inclined Clark Ashton Smith at the beginning of Smith's own career.
In November of 1926, Sterling committed suicide by swallowing cyanide at his residence at the San Francisco
Bohemian Club. Kevin Starr wrote that "When George Sterling's corpse was discovered in his room at the Bohemian Club... the golden age of San Francisco's bohemia had definitely come to a miserable end."
Sterling's most famous line was delivered to the city of San Francisco, "the cool grey city of love!".
(External Link
)
Trivia
- Sterling Road in Berkeley is named for George Sterling.
- A stone bench was dedicated to Sterling on June 25th, 1926 at the crest of Hyde Street on Russian Hill.
Further Information
Get more info on 'George Sterling'.
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