Charles Timothy Brooks


Charles Timothy Brooks was a noted American translator of German works, a poet, a transcendentalist and a Unitarian pastor.

Biography

Charles Timothy Brooks was born in Salem, Massachusetts on June 20, 1813. He graduated at Harvard in 1832, then studied theology and in 1835 began to preach in Nahant, Massachusetts.
He married Harriet Lyman Hazard in October 1837, and they had four children.
He served as a preacher in various New England towns until he became pastor of the Unitarian church in Newport, Rhode Island on June 4, 1837, where he remained until his death on June 14, 1883.
In addition to his translations, he published theological writings, contributed to The Dial, a transcendentalist publication, and wrote a biography of William Ellery Channing, another Unitarian minister in Newport, Rhode Island.

Works

German translations into English

Schiller's William Tell Songs and Ballads from the German, forming one volume of George Ripley's Specimens of Foreign Standard Literature

Poetry

Aquidneck, a poem delivered at the 100th anniversary of the Redwood library Songs of Field and Flood, a volume of poems

Other works

  • "The Controversy touching the Old Stone Mill," opposing the theory that it was built by the Northmen ; William Ellery Channing, A Centennial Memory
  • a volume of sermons
According to Appleton's Encyclopedia, several of Brooks' works were unpublished years after his death: