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| | [No title] (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09) |
 | | The Taylor brothers were both fiddlers, and they campaigned together, criss-crossing the state, speaking at rallies and playing their fiddles, taking their meals together, and sharing the same beds in inns and hotels. |
 | | Robert Lowell, also destined to be a famous writer, was there, as was Jarrell, both having also followed Ransom, and a Massachusetts Lowell and Tennessee Taylor became life-long friends. |
 | | Taylor soon found he could not support himself and his family simply by writing and occasionally selling short stories, and reluctantly he became a college teaching, with stints at Greensboro, Kenyon, the University of Virginia, Harvard, Ohio State, and other places. |
| www.wofford.edu /southernSeen/printFriendlyContent.asp?id=193 (708 words) |
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