John Greenleaf Whittier: His Life, Genius, and Writings
INTRODUCTION BY REV. S. F. SMITH, D.D. Author of Hymn America
Such music as the woods and streams Sang in his ear, he sang aloud
The Tent on the Beach
For all his quiet life flowed on, As meadow streamlets flow, Where fresher green reveals alo The noiseless ways they go
The Friend's Burial
CHICAGO NEW YORK THE WERNER COMPANY
COPYRIGHT 1892 By D. LOTHROP COMPANY
COPYRIGHT 1895 By THE WERNER COMPANY
John Greenleaf Whittier
Who does not admire and love John Greenleaf Whittier? And who does not delight to do him honor? He was a man raised up by Providence to meet an exigency in human history, and an exigency in the experiences of the United States. And he met the exigency with distinguished success. He was a true exponent of New England life and the New England spirit. He drew his inspiration from the soil where he was born, from the necessities of the times, from the demands of human rights, from the love of God and of man. He was a unique man. We knew not his like before him. We shall see no other like him after him. He was the product of his age; and the age in which he lived belonged to him, and he to and in it. He was a unique literary man. He was so meek and retiring; he was so keenly sensitive to the wrongs done by man to man; he was so devoid of self-seeking; so pure and exalted in motive, and so sturdy a defender of the rights of the oppressed; he was so full of trust in God that we seem never to have seen his equal among men. His beautiful gentleness of character and his inflexible and fearless advocacy of the cause of righteousness—even when such advocacy involved persecution and personal harm and loss, a rare combination of qualities—remind us of the sentiment of Oliver Wendell Holmes,
The gentle are the strong.
William Sloane Kennedy
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John Greenleaf Whittier
His Life, Genius, and Writings
INTRODUCTION.
CONTENTS.
Part I.—Life.
Part II.—Analysis of His Genius and Writings.
Part III.—Twilight and Evening Bell.
APPENDIX.
Part I.
LIFE.
ANCESTRY.
THE VALLEY OF THE MERRIMACK.
BOYHOOD.
WHITTIER'S BIRTHPLACE, NEAR HAVERHILL, MASS.
KITCHEN IN THE WHITTIER HOMESTEAD, HAVERHILL.
THE OLD SCHOOLHOUSE, HAVERHILL, MASS.
EDITOR AND AUTHOR: FIRST VENTURES.
WHITTIER THE REFORMER.
JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER AT MIDDLE LIFE.
AMESBURY.
THE WHITTIER HOUSE, AMESBURY, MASS.
LATER DAYS.
VIEW FROM THE PORCH AT OAK KNOLL, DANVERS, MASS.
PERSONAL.
Part II.
ANALYSIS OF HIS GENIUS AND WRITINGS.
THE MAN.
Handwriting: John G. Whittier
THE ARTIST.
POEMS SERIATIM.
THE KING'S MISSIVE.
POEMS BY GROUPS.
PROSE WRITINGS.
Part III.
TWILIGHT AND EVENING BELL.
TWILIGHT AND EVENING BELL.
THE GOVE HOUSE, HAMPTON FALLS, N. H., IN WHICH WHITTIER DIED.
(handwritten note)