After a period in Cambridge, Massachusetts, he spent two years at the University of Cambridge in England.[2] In 1888 he became an Associate Professor of English at Hamilton College, where he remained until 1896. He built the house at 70 College St. in Clinton.[4]
Except for a further year in the English Department at Hamilton College in 1911, he devoted the rest of his life to creative writing.[5] Hamilton granted him an honorary L.H.D. in 1906.[6]
On July 3, 1890 Scollard married Georgia Brown of Jackson, Michigan; they had one daughter Elizabeth Scollard Parlon, but they divorced in early 1924.[1] "On March 20, 1924, Scollard married fellow poet Jessie Belle Rittenhouse in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California."[9][10] They had no children.[5]
Scollard has been characterized as a minor poet but a fine technician:[5]
He knew himself to be a fine craftsman, able to fashion delicate lyrics that forbear contemplative weight for perfection in form. His verse delights in the natural world, in small incidents that are honed to perfection. It is easy to view him as a Frost without the philosophy.
Principal works of verse
Pictures in Song (1884)
With Reed and Lyre (1886)
Old and New World Lyrics (1888)
Songs of Sunrise Lands (1982)
Under Summer Skies (1892)
On Sunny Shores (1893)
The Hills of Song (1895)
The Lutes of Morn (1901)
Lyrics of the Dawn (1902)
The Lyric Bough (1904)
A Southern Flight (1906) (with Frank Dempster Sherman)
Blank Verse Pastels (1907)
Chords of the Zither (1910)
Poems (1914)
Sprays of Shamrock (1914)
Italy in Arms, and Other Poems (1915)
Vale of Shadows and Other Verses of the Great War (1915)
Ballads, Patriotic and Romantic (1916)
The Poems of Frank Dempster Sherman, Ed. Clinton Scollard (1917)
^National Cyclopaedia of American Biography (Vol. 23). 1933. p. 160.
^"Martha Foot Crowe Papers". Syracuse University Library Finding Aids. Syracuse University. 2007. Retrieved December 19, 2010.
^Stewart-Green, Miriam (1980). Women composers: A checklist of works for the solo voice. A reference publication in women's studies. Boston, Mass: Hall. p. 62. ISBN978-0-8161-8498-9.
^Daisy F. Bostick (March 29, 1924). "Gay Carmel to Act Up in Own Theater". San Francisco Bulletin. San Francisco, California. p. 23. Retrieved April 18, 2024.