Ernest Luxembourg Wright

Ernest Luxembourg Wright by the title E. L. Wright (September 26, 1892 – February 18, 1939), was a poet and writer born in southern Massachusetts as the son of Bartholomew and Yura Wright. He did not attend school beyond secondary school, but instead devoted himself to the pursuits of the mind with the desire to better himself as a human being. Little is known about the man beyond the two books he wrote and his journals, and few strive to keep his memory alive.

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Books

He is most well known for his book "What Light May Bring" during his lifetime, but passed into obscurity following his death. Wright was known for his pursuits into the metaphysical through introspection, many of his writings come in the form of what he referred to as "a given truth". It is said he often wrote that the epiphanies he came across were simply things that logically agreed with the nature of the universe. He believed that the words themselves were not true, but that truth could be drawn from them by the readers own interpretation and understanding of his writings. His book was primarily composed of these short epiphanies. Not necessarily wrote in any poetic form, but instead with the focus on rhetorical eloquence. He believed in using powerful words with beautiful speech to keep his readers captivated. "What Light May Bring" is coupled with the explanation of his own personal progress as he escaped the darkness and terrors of his life into new light. It is his revelations that came forth during his transformation written into this book.