Gleanings by the Way
Let me now go to the field and glean ears of corn. Ruth, ii. 2.
PHILADELPHIA: W. J. & J. K. SIMON. NEW YORK: ROBERT CARTER. 1842. Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1842, by John A. Clark, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. PRINTED BY KING AND BAIRD.
When it was not so common, as now, to issue publications from the press, a book of any kind seldom made its appearance, without a preface, to give the reader some idea of its contents, and the history of its elaboration from the author's mind. But at the present day, when authorship is no longer the prerogative of the few, and the press teems with every species of literature, preface writing has quite fallen into desuetude; not improbably for the very solid and satisfactory reason that it would be a most difficult, perplexing, and onerous business, to their several authors, to assign any plausible grounds for the publication of one half of the volumes that come forth in such immense shoals from the press.
We are certainly attached to the good old custom of having a preface, although we are aware that many authors who omit this appendage, assign as a reason, that the preface is the only part of a book that is never read. This we think, in many instances, is not exactly true. There are those in the present day, who like to know why a book was written, and what it contains, before they begin to read it. By such knowledge—and this is precisely the information a preface ought to convey—they avoid the trouble of reading many a volume, which had the author been of the same mind, he might have escaped the trouble of writing. To this class of readers the preface is an important part of the book: while to those who eschew every thing of this sort, it will give but little trouble, to turn over a leaf or two to the commencement of the first chapter.
We did not mean, when we began, to write a defence of prefaces—but to write a preface to our own work.
John A. Clark
GLEANINGS BY THE WAY;
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
GLEANINGS BY THE WAY.
CHAPTER I.
THE THREE GLEANERS.
CHAPTER II.
VIEWS OF PENNSYLVANIA.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER III.
GLIMPSES OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA.
CHAPTER IV.
PITTSBURG AND ITS ENVIRONS.
CHAPTER V.
VOYAGE ON THE OHIO.
CHAPTER VI.
A GLIMPSE OF KENTUCKY.
CHAPTER VII.
THE OHIO NEAR ITS MOUTH.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE MISSISSIPPI AND SOME OF ITS TRIBUTARIES.
CHAPTER IX.
FURTHER VIEWS ON THE MISSISSIPPI.
CHAPTER X.
ILLINOIS AND THE LAKES.
CHAPTER XI.
MICHIGAN.
CHAPTER XII.
TOUR FROM THE WEST.
CHAPTER XIII.
WESTERN NEW YORK.
CHAPTER XIV.
A JAUNT FROM PHILADELPHIA TO ALBANY.
CHAPTER XV.
THE IRISH COUPLE.
CHAPTER XVI.
WESTERN NEW YORK.
CHAPTER XVII.
A SUMMER TOUR.
CHAPTER XVIII.
GREEN WOOD CEMETERY.
CHAPTER XIX.
RHODE ISLAND.
CHAPTER XX.
THE SUDDEN STORM.
CHAPTER XXI.
REMINISCENCES OF THE PAST.
CHAPTER XXII.
THE ORIGIN OF THE MORMON DELUSION.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXIII.
A LETTER WRITTEN BY PROFESSOR ANTHON.
CHAPTER XXIV.
THE MORMON, OR GOLDEN BIBLE.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXV.
MORMON JESUITISM.
CHAPTER XXVI.
ANALYSIS OF THE BOOK OF MORMON.
CHAPTER XXVII.
ANALYSIS OF THE BOOK OF MORMON CONTINUED.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
FARTHER DEVELOPMENTS IN RELATION TO THE MORMON IMPOSTURE.
CHAPTER XXIX.
ORGANIZATION OF THE MORMONS, AND THEIR REMOVAL TO OHIO.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXX.
MORMON EMIGRATION TO MISSOURI.
CHAPTER XXXI.
MORMON BANKING.
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XXXII.
THE MORMON PROPHET AND HIS THREE WITNESSES.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
CONCLUDING SKETCH IN RELATION TO MORMONISM.