Dunbar, Paul Laurence (1872-1906) Poet
Paul Laurence Dunbar wrote the poem entitled "The Poet" three years before his death in 1906 at the age of 34. Its words may express his own regrets about the direction of his literary career. Dunbar was the most famous African American poet and one of the most famous American poets of his time. Although Dunbar felt his best work was his poetry in standard English, he was celebrated almost exclusively for his folk poetry about African Americans written in a dialect referred to as "jingle in a broken tongue."
His identification with dialect poetry disappointed him during his lifetime and alienated some later African American readers. But Dunbar's poetry has also been praised by fans like W.E.B. Du Bois and Nikki Giovanni, who recognized the challenges Dunbar faced as a turn-of-the-century black poet.
Dunbar's parents had both been slaves on plantations in Kentucky. Although Dunbar was born in Dayton, Ohio, during Reconstruction, his parents' stories about their lives as slaves were the basis for much of his folk poetry.
Dunbar took out a loan to publish his first book, “Oak and Ivy,” in 1893. Later that year, he read his poetry at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois, where he was praised by Frederick Douglass and other prominent African Americans.
Dunbar became a crossover literary sensation in 1896, when his second book, Majors and Minors, was noticed by well-known white critic and writer William Dean Howells. Howells arranged for an expanded version of the book, titled Lyrics of Lowly Life, to be published by the mainstream white firm of Dodd, Mead.
The national publication, and the speaking tour that followed, made Dunbar famous among black and white audiences.