In 1841, he moved to New York City, where he practiced law, and at the same time engaged in literary pursuits.[2] "Perdita", a poem, was his first work. Published in the Union Magazine, it attracted favorable criticism and was followed by "Alban" (1848), a poetical romance, and "Meditations in America" (1851). Other poems that attained popularity include "The Sword of Bunker Hill" (1861), a national hymn; "Keep Step with the Music of the Union" (1861); "The Liberty Bell" (1862); and his most famous poem, "The Hand That Rocks The Cradle Is The Hand That Rules The World" (1865), a poem praising motherhood.[2][3] He contributed to Godey's Lady's Book, Harper's Magazine, Harper's Weekly, the New York Ledger, and the Louisville Daily Journal.[3]William Cullen Bryant said of his writings: "They are marked by a splendor of imagination and an affluence of diction which show him the born poet."[2]Edgar Allan Poe, a friend of Wallace, referred to him as "one of the very noblest of American poets".[4] Wallace died at his home in New York City on May 5, 1881, a week after suffering a stroke.[5] He was working on a book to be titled Pleasures of the Beautiful at the time of his death.[5]
Personal life
Wallace married his second wife Ann Polhemus Riker, the daughter of Daniel Riker (1771–1828) and Helen Polhemus (1783–?), in October 1856. They had two daughters and a son.[6]
Books by Wallace
The Battle of Tippecanoe, Triumphs of Science, and Other Poems (1837)
Wordsworth: A Poem (1846)
Alban the Pirate: A Romaunt of the Metropolis (1848)
Meditations in America, and Other Poems (1851)
Prattsville, an American Poem (1852)
The Loved and the Lost (1856)
Progress of the United States: Henry Clay, an Ode "Of Thine Own Country Sing" (1856)
Patriotic and Heroic Eloquence: A Book for the Patriot, Statesman and Student (1861)
The Liberty Bell (1862)
Notes
^Wallace's obituary in The New York Times lists his place of birth as Paris, Kentucky. Most sources state he was born in Lexington, however.