Edward Saxton Payson

When he was eighty-seven years old, he wrote an Esperanto novel set in Venice, Juneco kaj Amo (Youth and Love).

His other original writing La fantoma edzino (The Phantom Wife) is a sentimental tale of a man who yearns for his deceased wife so much, that she seems to return.

His translations from English include some works of Mabel Wagnalls, and a novel by Henry Rider Haggard.

He lived in Lexington, Massachusetts for many years at the end of his life, and died there in 1932.

(He enjoyed keeping blooded horses, and had a large farm in Lexington with about twenty of them.)

Edward Saxton Payson