Joaquin Miller

Cincinnatus Heine Miller[1] (/ˌsɪnsɪˈntəs ˈhnə/; September 8, 1837 – February 17, 1913), better known by his pen name Joaquin Miller (/hwɑːˈkn/), was an American poet, author, and frontiersman. He is nicknamed the "Poet of the Sierras" after the Sierra Nevada, about which he wrote in his Songs of the Sierras (1871).

Joaquin Miller
Miller circa 1870-1880
Miller circa 1870-1880
BornCincinnatus Hiner Miller
(1837-09-08)September 8, 1837
Union County, Indiana, U.S.
DiedFebruary 17, 1913(1913-02-17) (aged 75)
Oakland, California, U.S.
Resting placeJoaquin Miller Park
OccupationPoet, author, frontiersman
SpouseMinnie Myrtle Miller (m. 1861; div. 1870),
Abigail Leland (m. 1879; death 1913)
Children4 or 5
Signature

Life

Early years and family

Joaquin Miller's parents were Hulings Miller and Margaret (née Witt), who married January 3, 1836, in Union County, Indiana.[2] Their second son, Cincinnatus Hiner Miller, was born in 1837 near Union County, Indiana.[3][4] For unknown reasons, Miller later claimed his birth date was November 10, 1841.[5] He said he was born in Millersville, Indiana, a town he claimed was founded by his father, while on a wagon heading west.[6] After leaving Union County, Miller's father then moved the family to Grant County, Indiana to a location near the Mississinewa River and near the Miami Indian Reservation.[7] Besides adopting the pen name "Joaquin", he later changed his middle name from Hiner to Heine to evoke the German poet Heinrich Heine.[8]

While Miller was a young boy, probably between 1850 and 1852,[9] his family moved to Oregon and settled in the Willamette Valley, establishing a farm in what would become Lane County.

As a young man, he moved to northern California during the California Gold Rush years, and had a variety of adventures, including spending a year living in a Native American village, and being wounded in a battle with Native Americans. A number of his popular works, Life Amongst the Modocs,[10] An Elk Hunt,[11] and [[Battle of Castle Crags|The Battle of Castle Crags, draw on these experiences. He was wounded in the cheek and neck with an arrow during this latter battle, recuperating at the Gold Rush-era mining town of Portuguese Flat.

Wanderings and early writings

He accompanied William Walker on the latter's 1855 filibustering expedition to Nicaragua.[12][13] In the spring of 1857, Miller took part in an expedition against the Pit River Tribe after they killed a white man on Pit River.[14] Years later, he claimed that he had sided with the Native Americans and was run out of town for it.[15] He was widely rumored to have married an Indian woman, possibly a Wintu princess who nursed him back to health after he was wounded by Modocs, and to have fathered with her a daughter named Cali-Shasta, or "Lily of the Shasta."[16] Although Miller soon left the area to pursue other adventures, in the 1870s he sought out Cali-Shasta, then in her teens, and took her to San Francisco to be educated by his friend Ina Coolbrith.[17] Contemporaries believed that Miller's "Indian wife" was the woman later kidnapped by Modocs and held in captivity for some years until rescued by a man named Jim Brock (whom she married), but when "Amanda Brock" died in 1909, Miller denied news reports describing his supposed romance with her. He credited her with saving his life, but said she had always been a platonic friend.[18][19]

Spending a short time in the mining camps of northern Idaho, Miller found his way to Canyon City, Oregon by 1864 where he was elected the third Judge of Grant County. His old cabin in Canyon City is still standing.

Miller's exploits included a variety of occupations: mining-camp cook (who came down with scurvy from only eating what he cooked), lawyer and a judge, newspaper writer, Pony Express rider, and horse thief. On July 10, 1859, Miller was caught stealing a horse gelding valued at $80, a saddle worth $15, and other items.[20] He was jailed briefly in Shasta County for the crime, and various accounts give other incidents of his repeating this crime in California and Oregon.

Maud Miller, one of his daughters

Miller earned an estimated $3,000 working as a Pony Express rider, and used the money to move to Oregon. With the help of his friend, Senator Joseph Lane, he became editor of the Democratic Register in Eugene,[21] a role he held from March 15 to September 20, 1862.[22] Though no copies survive, it was known as sympathetic to the Confederacy until it was forced to shut down[23] because of its treasonable character.[12] That year, Miller married Theresa Dyer on September 12, 1862, in her home four days after meeting her[24] in Port Orford, Oregon. He had corresponded with her after exchanging poems with her for critique and chasing away a competing suitor.[25] She published poetry under the pen name "Minnie Myrtle" and later, as Minnie Myrtle Miller.[26] The couple had three children: Maud, George, and Henry, although Miller would later claim the baby Henry was not his own.

In 1868, Miller paid for the publication of 500 copies of his first book of poetry, Specimens.[27] It was unnoticed and Miller gave away more copies than he sold. Few have survived.[28] The author's despair and disappointment was reflected in his second book, Joaquin et al., the next year.[29]

Dyer filed for divorce on April 4, 1870, claiming they had a third child, Henry Mark, the year before and that Miller was "wholly" neglectful.[30] The court declared them divorced on April 19 and Dyer was granted custody of the baby while the two older children were left in the care of her mother. Miller was ordered to pay $200 per year in child support.[31] Miller believed the divorce prevented him from being nominated for a seat on the Oregon Supreme Court.[32] He never denied her charges that he was neglectful of her and their children and was rarely home.[33] He also may have had an affair with actress Adah Isaacs Menken shortly into the marriage.[34]

Travels

Joaquin Miller, 1903

Miller had sent a copy of Joaquin, et al. to Bret Harte, who offered advice that he avoid "faults of excess" and encouragingly wrote, "you are on your way to become a poet."[35] The next summer, July 1870, Miller traveled to San Francisco with borrowed money and there befriended Charles Warren Stoddard and Ina Coolbrith. Stoddard was the first to meet him at the dock and, as he recalled, Miller's first words to him were, "Well, let us go and talk with the poets."[36]

Miller went to England, where he was celebrated as a frontier oddity. There, in May 1871, Miller published Songs of the Sierras, the book which finalized his nickname as the "Poet of the Sierras".[37] It was well received by the British press and members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, particularly Dante Gabriel Rossetti and William Michael Rossetti.

While in England, he was one of the few Americans invited into the Savage Club along with Julian Hawthorne, son of Nathaniel Hawthorne. The younger Hawthorne referred to Miller as "a licensed libertine" but admitted to finding him "charming, amiable, and harmless".[38] Rather abruptly, Miller left England in September 1871 and landed in New York. At the encouragement of family, he made his way to Easton, Pennsylvania to visit his dying brother before returning to Oregon; his father died shortly thereafter. Miller eventually settled in California, where he grew fruit and published his poems and other works.

In 1877, Miller adapted his First Fam'lies of the Sierras into a play, The Danites, or, the Heart of the Sierras. It opened on August 22 in New York with McKee Rankin as the main character.[39] The anti-Mormon play, which featured Danites hunting the daughter of one of the murderers of Joseph Smith, became one of the most commercially successful in a series of anti-Mormon dramas at the time. The Spirit of the Times, however, attributed its success to curious audience members expecting a disastrous failure and instead discovering a good show: "The play proved to possess more than ordinary merit, and if it is not a great work, it is decidedly not a very bad one."[40] The Danites was extended from a run of only a few days to one of seven straight weeks before moving to another theatre and, ultimately, was performed to such a degree that it rivaled the popularity of Uncle Tom's Cabin.[41] It was published in book form later in 1877.[42] Miller later admitted that he regretted the anti-Mormon tone.[43]

Miller married for a third time on September 8, 1879 to Abigail Leland, in New York City.

Later years and death

Miller circa 1905

In 1886, Miller published The Destruction of Gotham, a book which was one of the earliest to depict a prostitute as a heroine.[6] That year, he moved to Oakland, California, and built a home for himself he nicknamed "The Abbey" on property he called "The Hights" [sic]. He remained there until his death in 1913.[44]

Japanese poet Yone Noguchi came to The Hights in 1894 and spent the next four years there as an unpaid laborer in exchange for room and board. While living there, he published his first book, Seen or Unseen; or, Monologues of a Homeless Snail (1897). Though he referred to Miller as "the most natural man", Noguchi reflected on those years as his most difficult in the United States and later fictionalized his experience in The American Diary of a Japanese Girl.[45]

In 1897, Miller traveled to the Yukon as a newspaper correspondent.[46] He saw Alaska for the first time on July 30.[47] His dispatches, many of which were written before reaching Alaska, incorrectly implied an easy and inexpensive trip. Miller himself nearly froze to death; two toes were lost to frostbite.[48]

Miller died on February 17, 1913, surrounded by friends and family. His last words were recorded as "Take me away; take me away!"[42] The poet had asked to be cremated by friends in the funeral pyre he built at The Hights with no religious ceremony and without being embalmed. His wishes were mostly ignored and the funeral on February 19 drew thousands of curious onlookers.[49] The preacher who spoke referred to Miller as "the last of America's great poets."[50] On May 23, members of the Bohemian Club of San Francisco and the Press Club returned to Miller's funeral pyre to burn the urn which contained his ashes, allowing them to scatter. He had left no will and his estate — estimated at $100,000 — was divided between his wife, Abigail and daughter, Juanita.[51]

Critical response and reputation

Miller in later years

Miller was championed, although not enthusiastically, by Bret Harte and Ambrose Bierce. In his time, Miller was known for his dishonesty and womanizing. Bierce, his friend and contemporary, said of him, "In impugning Mr. Miller's veracity, or rather, in plainly declaring that he has none, I should be sorry to be understood as attributing a graver moral delinquency than he really has. He cannot, or will not, tell the truth, but he never tells a malicious or thrifty falsehood."[52] Miller's response was, "I always wondered why God made Bierce."

Called the "Poet of the Sierras" and the "Byron of the Rockies", he may have been more of a celebrity in England than in his native U.S. Much of his reputation, however, came not from his poetry but from the image he created for himself by capitalizing on the stereotypical image of Western frontiersmen.[53] As poet Bayard Taylor bitterly noted in 1876, British audiences "place the simulated savagery of Joaquin Miller beside the pure and serene muse of Longfellow."[54] Critics made much of Miller's poor spelling and rhymes; he once rhymed "Goethe" and "teeth". Henry Cuyler Bunner satirized the error in a poem titled "Shake, Mulleary, and Go-ethe".[55] Miller himself once admitted, "I'm damned if I could tell the difference between a hexameter and a pentameter to save my scalp."[56]

The Westminster Review referred to Miller's poetry as "Whitman without the coarseness".[57] For a time, Miller's poem "Columbus" was one of the most widely known American poems, memorized and recited by legions of schoolchildren. Miller is remembered today, among other reasons, for lines from his poem in honor of "Burns and Byron":

In men whom men condemn as ill
I find so much of goodness still.
In men whom men pronounce divine
I find so much of sin and blot
I do not dare to draw a line
Between the two, where God has not.

Legacy

A statue dedicated to Joaquin Miller in Hoo Hoo Park in McCloud, California

A historical marker for his birthplace was unveiled October 10, 1915, on U.S. 27 north of Liberty in Union County, Indiana.[58] Joaquin Miller Cabin is located in Washington, DC. The Hights, the Oakland home Miller built at the end of his life, was purchased by the city of Oakland in 1919, and is known as the Joaquin Miller House, located in Joaquin Miller Park.[44] It is a designated California Historical Landmark. He planted the surrounding trees and he personally built, on the eminence to the north, his own funeral pyre and monuments dedicated to Moses, General John C. Frémont, and the poets Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Several schools in California are named for him, including Miller Middle School in San Jose, Joaquin Miller Elementary School in Oakland, and Joaquin Miller Elementary School in Burbank.

Joaquin Miller is portrayed by Sean McClory in the Death Valley Days 13th season episode "Magic Locket", which portrays Ina Coolbrith and the love of her life. [59] Actor George Paulsin portrayed a youthful Joaquin Miller in the Death Valley Days episode "Early Candle Lighten", hosted by Dale Robertson. The episode, which aired April 24, 1970, marked Paulsin's first screen appearance and the last of the series' 452 episodes. In the story line, a cook at a gold camp in the Arizona Territory faces hanging for stealing nuggets from the miners. His assistant, "Nat Miller", played by Paulsin, thinks he can save his life by bringing the cook's sister from Tucson. It was at this gold camp that Miller perfected his penchant for western poetry.[60]

In the 1978 British miniseries Lillie, actor Bruce Boa as Miller startles guests when Lillie Langtry arrives at a ball by scattering rose petals in her path.[61]

In 2012, artist Mark Oliver created a large statue called "Joaquin's Book" in Hoo Hoo Park in McCloud, California. The location is near where Miller lived with the Wintus.[62]

List of works

Life Amongst the Modocs (1873)
  • Specimens (1868)[42]
  • Joaquin et al. (1869)[42]
  • Pacific Poems (1871)
  • Songs of the Sierras (1871)[63]
  • Songs of the Sun-Lands (1873)[64]
  • Life Amongst the Modocs (1873)[64]
  • Arizonian (1874)[42]
  • First Fam'lies of the Sierras (1875–76)[42]
  • The One Fair Woman (1876)[42]
  • The Baroness of New York (1877)[42]
  • The Danites (1878)[42]
  • Songs of Italy (1878)[42]
  • Shadows of Shasta (1881)
  • How to Win in Wall Street (1881) pseud. "A Successful Operator"
  • Memorie and rime (1884)
  • The Destruction of Gotham (1886)
  • Songs of the Soul (1896)[65]
  • True Bear Stories (1900)[66]
  • Chants for the Boer (1900)[66]
  • The Complete Poetical Works of Joaquin Miller (1902)[66]
  • As It Was in the Beginning (1903)[66]
  • The Building of the City Beautiful (1905)[66]
  • Light: A Narrative Poem (1907)[66]
  • Joaquin Miller's Poems, with an introduction and autobiography (6 vols., San Francisco, 1909–1910)[12][66]
  • The Danites in the Sierras (1910)[66]
  • 49: The Gold-Seekers of the Sierras (1910)[66]
  • An Elk Hunt
  • The Battle of Castle Crags

Notes

  1. His middle name is also spelled Hiner /ˈhnər/.
  2. Dodd, Jordan. "Indiana Marriages to 1850". Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  3. "1840 U.S. Census Search: (Hulings Miller Fulton County Indiana)". Ancestry.com. Retrieved April 7, 2018.closed access
  4. Frost, 11
  5. Marberry, 1–3
  6. Hapke, Laura. Girls Who Went Wrong: Prostitutes in American Fiction, 1885-1917. Popular Press, 1989: 21. ISBN 0-87972-474-9
  7. Bureau of Land Management, “Land Patent Search,” digital images, General Land Office Records (http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/PatentSearch Archived 2022-10-08 at the Wayback Machine : accessed 14 October 2019), Hulings Miller (Grant County, Indiana), patent no. 423.
  8. "Joaquin Miller". Oakland Wiki. Local Wiki. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
  9. "Joaquin Miller Timeline". Margaret Guilford-Kardell's Bibliography on the Life, Times, and Exploits of Cincinnatus Hiner Miller.
  10. Miller, Joaquin (1874). Unwritten History: Life Amongst the Modocs - Joaquin Miller - Google Boeken. ISBN 9780598284372. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  11. "California Reader - Joaquin Miller". Notfrisco.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-17. Retrieved 2012-08-19.
  12. Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Miller, Cincinnatus Heine" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  13. Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Miller, Cincinnatus Heine" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  14. Peterson, 37
  15. Marberry, 23
  16. Miller, Joaquin (1996). Life Amongst the Modocs. Heyday Press. pp. 404–406. ISBN 978-0-930588-79-3. Archived from the original on 22 September 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  17. Guilford-Kardell, Margaret; McKeown, Scott (August 2008). "Readers' Updates of the Joaquin Miller Timeline" (PDF). Margaret Guilford-Kardell's Bibliography on the Life, Times, and Exploits of Cincinnatus Hiner Miller. JoaquinMiller.com. Retrieved March 2, 2010.
  18. "Poet Denies Indian Wife". Oakland Tribune. June 10, 1909. p. 4. Retrieved April 7, 2018.closed access
  19. "Miller's Indian Wife is Dead". Oakland Tribune. June 9, 1909. p. 7. Retrieved April 7, 2018.closed access
  20. Peterson, 40
  21. Marberry, 44
  22. Peterson, 50
  23. Marberry, 45
  24. Frost, 36
  25. Marberry, 45–46
  26. Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Miller, Cincinnatus Heine" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  27. Marberry, 55
  28. Frost, 55
  29. Lewis, Nathaniel. Unsettling the Literary West: Authenticity and Authorship. University of Nebraska Press, 2003: 98. ISBN 0-8032-2938-0
  30. Frost, 44
  31. Frost, 46
  32. Peterson, 58
  33. Marberry, 58–59
  34. Marberry, 47–48
  35. Nissen, Axel. Bret Harte: Prince and Pauper. University of Mississippi Press, 2000: 93–94. ISBN 978-1-57806-253-9
  36. Marberry, 64
  37. Marberry, 93–94
  38. Marberry, 85–86
  39. Marberry, 158–159
  40. Jones, Megan Sanborn. Performing American Identity in Anti-Mormon Melodrama. Taylor & Francis, 2009: 103. ISBN 978-0-415-80059-4
  41. Marberry, 159–160
  42. Peterson, 179
  43. Marberry, 160
  44. "Joaquin Miller Home". Office of Historic Preservation, California State Parks. Retrieved 2012-03-30.
  45. Wyatt, David. Five Fires: Race, Catastrophe, and the Shaping of California. Oxford University Press, 1999: 188. ISBN 0-19-512741-2
  46. Marberry, 237
  47. Frost, 110
  48. Marberry, 238–242
  49. Marberry, 280–281
  50. Frost, 112
  51. Marberry, 282–283
  52. Gale, Robert L. (2001). An Ambrose Bierce Companion. USA: Greenwood Press. p. 187. ISBN 9780313311307.
  53. Lewis, Nathaniel. Unsettling the Literary West: Authenticity and Authorship. University of Nebraska Press, 2003: 78. ISBN 0-8032-2938-0
  54. Loving, Jerome. Mark Twain: The Adventures of Samuel L. Clemens. University of California Press, 2010: 234. ISBN 978-0-520-25257-8
  55. Untermeyer, Louis. Modern American Poetry. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1921: 64.
  56. Marberry, 90
  57. Peterson, 66
  58. Commission, Indiana Historical (1922). Historical Markers in Indiana, Issue 14. p. Section 3, page 52. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  59. "Magic Locket". Death Valley Days (Television production). Retrieved 2023-03-11.
  60. "George Paulsin". IMDb. Retrieved August 7, 2018.
  61. "Lillie (TV Mini-Series 1978)". IMDb.
  62. Holt, Tim. "Artist creates tribute to Joaquin Miller in McCloud". The Record Searchlight. August 14, 2012.
  63. Peterson, 135
  64. Marberry, 119
  65. Peterson, 137
  66. Peterson, 181

References

  • Frost, Orcutt William. Joaquin Miller. Twayne Publishers, 1967.
  • Marberry, M. M. Splendid Poseur: Joaquin Miller—American Poet. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1953.
  • Peterson, Martin Severin. Joaquin Miller: Literary Frontiersman. Stanford University Press, 1937.
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