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Encyclopedia > John Neal

John Neal (1793 - 1876), novelist and poet, born at Portland, Maine, was self-educated, kept a dry goods store, and was afterwards a lawyer. He wrote several novels, which show considerable native power, but little art, and are now almost forgotten. Among those which show the influence of Byron and Godwin are Keep Cool (1818), Logan (1822), and Seventy-six (1823). His poems have the same features of vigour and want of finish. In 1823 he visited England, and became known to Jeremy Bentham. He contributed some articles on American subjects to Blackwood's Magazine.

This article is originally from A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Player Bio: John Neal :: Football (282 words)
John Neal is in his eighth season as an assistant coach at UAB, working with the defensive secondary.
Neal was the junior varsity coach while serving as a graduate assistant at the University of New Mexico in the fall of 1980.
Neal was an All-Western Athletic Conference selection as a senior; he earned his undergraduate degree from BYU in 1980 and had additional graduate study at New Mexico.
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