Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, edited by James
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RICE, George Edward, poet, born in Boston, Massachusetts, 10 July, 1822; died in Roxbury, Massachusetts, 10 August, 1861. He was graduated at Harvard in 1842, studied in the Harvard law-school, was admitted to the bar, and practised his profession in Boston until, neat' the close of his life, he became insane. He contributed to the "North American Review" and other periodicals. Some of his poems, with others by John Howard Wainwright, were published anonymously in a volume called "Ephemera" (Boston, 1852). A fanciful adaptation of "Hamlet," under the title of "A New Play in an Old Garb," was published with illustrations (1852), and was acted with applause, as were two other plays that were published subsequently, entitled "Myrtilla," a fairy piece (1853), and "Blondel, a Historic Fancy" (1854). He was also the author of " Nugamenta," a book of poems (1859).
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