Sinclair Harry Lewis (1885 - 1951) was born in Sauk Center, Minnesota. Son of a country doctor, Edwin J Lewis, he had a very rigorous childhood. It was dominated, firstly by his elder brother, Claude and later by some literary and rebellious influences. He was very proud of the medical tradition of his family. Besides his father, three of his relatives, including his own brother were practicing doctors. At Yale, though academically bright, he was a non-conformist at the core. He edited a literary magazine and wrote long medieval poems, "(O God!) lady's (sic) clad in white Samite, mystic, won-der-ful." In another poem, he wrote about "The Little Ones and the gas-stove that was really a beastie." He had even planned a great four-generation novel, "The Children's Children", though he could not ultimately write it. He made a trip to England in a cattle boat and in steerage to Panama. He also roamed around in the United States extensively. He had the ...
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