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Edgar A. Guest
Edgar Guest 1935
Guest on his radio program, 1935.
Born Edgar Albert Guest
(1881-08-20)20 August 1881
Birmingham, England
Died 5 August 1959(1959-08-05) (aged 77)
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
Resting place Woodlawn Cemetery
Pen name Eddie Guest
Occupation Poet
Nationality American

Edgar Albert Guest (20 August 1881 – 5 August 1959) was a British-born American poet who became known as the People's Poet. His poems often had an inspirational and optimistic view of everyday life.

Early life

Guest was born in Birmingham, England in 1881. In 1891, his family moved from England to Detroit, Michigan, where Guest lived until he died.

Career

After he began at the Detroit Free Press as a copy boy and then a reporter, his first poem appeared on 11 December 1898. He became a naturalized citizen in 1902. For 40 years, Guest was widely read throughout North America, and his sentimental, optimistic poems were in the same vein as the light verse of Nick Kenny, who wrote syndicated columns during the same decades.

From his first published work in the Detroit Free Press until his death in 1959, Guest penned some 11,000 poems which were syndicated in some 300 newspapers and collected in more than 20 books, including A Heap o' Livin' (1916) and Just Folks (1923–1957). Guest was made Poet Laureate of Michigan, the only poet to have been awarded the title.

His popularity led to a weekly Detroit radio show which he hosted from 1931 until 1942, followed by a 1951 NBC television series, A Guest in Your House. He also had a thrice-weekly transcribed radio program that began January 15, 1941, and was sponsored by Land O'Lakes Creameries. The program featured singer Eddy Howard.

Guest was made a Freemason in Detroit, where he was a lifetime member of Ashlar Lodge No. 91. In honor of Guest's devotion to the Craft, community, and humanity in general, the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Michigan established the Edgar A. Guest Award for lodges to present to non-Masons within the community who have demonstrated distinguished service to the community and their fellow man.

Guest was also a member of The Tin Whistles.

When Guest died in 1959, he was buried in Detroit's Woodlawn Cemetery.

His grandniece Judith Guest is a novelist best known for Ordinary People (1976).

Reputation

Guest's work still occasionally appears in periodicals such as Reader's Digest, and some favorites, such as "Myself" and "Thanksgiving," are still studied today. However, in one of the most quoted appraisals of his work, Dorothy Parker reputedly said: "I'd rather flunk my Wassermann test than read a poem by Edgar Guest."

Works

  • Home Rhymes, from Breakfast Table Chat (1909)
  • The Panama Canal (1915)
  • A Heap o' Livin' (1916)
  • Just Glad Things (1916)
  • Just Folks (1917)
  • Over Here (1918)
  • Poems of Patriotism (1918)
  • The Path to Home (1919)
  • A Dozen New Poems (1920)
  • Sunny Songs (1920)
  • Keep Going (Don't Quit) (1921)
  • When Day Is Done (1921)
  • Don't Quit (3 March 1921)
  • All That Matters (1922)
  • Making The House A Home (1922)
  • The Passing Throng (1923)
  • Rhymes of Childhood (1924)
  • Mother (1925)
  • The Light of Faith (1926)
  • The Secret of The Ages (1926)
  • You (1927)
  • Harbor Lights of Home (1928)
  • You Can't Live Your Own Life (1929)
  • Poems for the Home Folks (1930)
  • The Friendly Way (1931)
  • Faith (1932)
  • Life's Highway (1933)
  • Collected Verse of Edgar Guest (1934)
  • All in a Lifetime (1938)
  • Between You and Me: My Philosophy of Life (1938)
  • Today and Tomorrow (1942)
  • Living the Years (1949)
  • Sermons We See
  • Courage
  • The Proof of Worth
  • See It Through
  • Life's Slacker
  • Team Work
  • Can't
  • At Christmas
  • Things Work Out
  • Have you Earned your Tomorrow
  • Girl I Hope You Understand'
  • A Child of Mine'
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