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The Life and Genius of Nathaniel Hawthorne

Chapter 23: APPENDIX A
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About This Book

A combined biography and critical study traces the writer's New England family background and formative years, follows his college education and early literary struggles, surveys major creative periods and travels abroad during a period of residence overseas, and offers close readings of key works and recurring concerns such as moral symbolism, the Puritan inheritance, and artistic development. The author synthesizes letters, notebooks, and contemporary recollections, corrects earlier misconceptions about ancestry and incidents, and arranges the material chronologically, supplementing the narrative with appendices of documents and notes to support a comprehensive portrait of the author's life and literary evolution.

Peter Parley’s Universal History, Boston, 1837. The Gentle Boy: A
Thrice-Told Tale, Boston, 1839. Grandfather’s Chair: A History for
Youth, Boston, 1841. Famous Old People: or Grandfather’s Chair II,
Boston, 1841. Liberty Tree: The Last Words of Grandfather’s Chair,
Boston, 1841. Biographical Stories for Children, Boston, 1842.
Historical Tales for Youth, Boston, 1842. The Celestial Railroad,
Boston, 1843. Mosses from an Old Manse, New York, 1846, 1851. The
Scarlet Letter, Boston, 1850. True Stories from History and Biography,
Boston, 1851. The House of the Seven Gables, Boston, 1852. A Wonder-Book
for Girls and Boys, Boston, 1851.   Another edition, Boston, 1857.
The Snow-Image and Other Tales, Boston, 1852.   Another edition, Boston
The Blithedale Romance, Boston, 1852. Life of Franklin Pierce, Boston,
1852. Tanglewood Tales for Girls and Boys, Boston, 1853. Transformation,
or the Romance of Monte Beni, Smith & Elder, London, 1860. The Marble
Faun, or the Romance of Monte Beni, Boston, 1860. Our Old Home, Boston,
1863.

A complete list of Hawthorne’s contributions to American magazines will be found in the appendix to Conway’s “Life of Hawthorne.”

Mrs. Emerson and Mrs. Hawthorne {Footnote: Read at the Emerson Club, at Boston, January 2, 1906}

In 1892, when I was constructing the volume known as “Sketches from Concord and Appledore,” I said in comparing Emerson with Hawthorne that one was like day, and the other like night. I was not aware that four years earlier M. D. Conway had made a similar statement in his Life of Hawthorne, which was published in London. Miss Rebecca Manning, Hawthorne’s own cousin, still living at the age of eighty and an admirable old lady, distinctly confirms my statement, that “wherever Hawthorne went he carried twilight with him.” Emerson, on the contrary, was of a sanguine temperament and an essentially sunny nature. His writings are full of good cheer, and the opening of his Divinity School Address is as full of summer sunshine as the finest July day. It was only necessary to see him look at the sunshine from his own porch to recognize how it penetrated into the depths of his nature.

It would seem consistent with the rational order of things, that day should be supplemented by night, and night again by day; and here we are almost startled by the completeness of our allegory. We sometimes come across faces in the streets of a large city, which show by their expression that they are more accustomed to artificial light than to the light of the sun. Mrs. Emerson was one of these. She never seemed to be fully herself, until the lamps were lighted. Her pale face seemed to give forth moonlight, and its habitual expression was much like that of a Sister of Charity. It was said of her that she was the last in the house to retire at night, always reading or busying herself with household affairs, until twelve or one o’clock; but this mode of life would appear to have been suited to her organization, for in spite of her colorless look she lived to be over ninety.

So far I can tread upon firm earth, without drawing upon my imagination, but in regard to Mrs. Hawthorne I cannot speak with the same assurance, for I only became acquainted with her after her husband’s health had begun to fail, and the anxiety in her face was strongly marked; yet I have reason to believe that her temperament was originally sanguine and optimistic, and that she alternated from dreamy, pensive moods to bright vivacious ones. She certainly was very different from her husband. Her sister, Elizabeth Peabody, was the most sanguine person of her time, and her introduction of the kindergarten into America was accomplished through her unbounded hopefulness. The Wayside, where Mrs. Hawthorne lived, has an extended southern exposure. The house was always full of light, which is not often the case with New England country houses; and when she lived at Liverpool, where sunshine is a rare commodity, she became unwell, so that Mr. Hawthorne was obliged to send her to Madeira in order to avert a dangerous illness.

These two estimable ladies were alike in the excellence of their housekeeping, the purity of their manners, their universal kindliness, and their devotion to the welfare of their husbands and children. It was a pleasure to pass them on the road-side; the fare at their tables was always of the nicest, even if it happened to be frugal; and people of all classes could have testified to their helpful liberality. In these respects they might almost have served as models, but otherwise they were as different as possible. Mrs. Emerson was of a tall, slender, and somewhat angular figure (like her husband), but she presided at table with a grace and dignity that quite justified his favorite epithet of “Queenie.” There was even more of the Puritan left in her than there was in him, and although she encouraged the liberal movements and tendencies of her time, one always felt in her mental attitude the inflexibility of the moral law. To her mind there was no shady border-land between right and wrong, but the two were separated by a sharply defined line, which was never to be crossed, and she lived up to this herself, and, in theory at least, she had but little mercy for sinners. On one occasion I was telling Mr. Emerson of a fraudulent manufacturing company, which had failed, as it deserved to, and which was found on investigation to have kept two sets of books, one for themselves, and another for their creditors. Mrs. Emerson listened to this narrative with evident impatience, and at the close of it she exclaimed, “This world has become so wicked that if I were the maker of it, I should blow it up at once.” Emerson himself did not like such stories; and although he once said that “all deaf children ought to be put in the water with their faces downward,” he was not always willing to accept human nature for what it really is.

Mrs. Emerson did not agree with her husband’s religious views; neither did she adopt the transcendental faith, that the idea of God is innate in the human mind, so that we cannot be dispossessed of it. She belonged to the conservative branch of the Unitarian Church, which was represented by Reverend James Freeman Clarke and Doctor Andrew P. Peabody. The subject was one which was permitted to remain in abeyance between them, but Mrs. Emerson was naturally suspicious of those reverend gentlemen who called upon her husband, and this may have been the reason why he did not encourage the visits of clergymen like Samuel Johnson, Samuel Longfellow, and Professor Hedge, whom he greatly respected, and who should have been by good rights his chosen companions. I suppose all husbands are obliged to make these domestic compromises.

Mrs. Emerson had also something of the spirit-militant in her. When David A. Wasson came to dine at Mr. Emerson’s invitation, she said to him, by way of grace before meat: “I see you have been carrying on a controversy with Reverend Mr. Sears, of Wayland, and you will excuse me for expressing my opinion that Mr. Sears had the best of it.” But after sounding this little nourish of trumpets, she was as kindly and hospitable as any one could desire. She was one of the earliest recruits to the anti-slavery cause,—not only a volunteer, but a recruiting officer as well,—and she made this decision entirely of her own mind, without any special encouragement from her husband or relatives. At the time of John Brown’s execution she wanted to have the bells tolled in Concord, and urged her husband energetically to see that it was done. Mrs. Emerson was always thoroughly herself. There never was the shadow of an affectation upon her; nor more than a shadow of self-consciousness—very rare among conscientious persons. One of her fine traits was her fondness for flowers, which she cultivated in the little garden between her house and the mill-brook, with a loving assiduity. She is supposed to have inspired Emerson’s poem, beginning:

                 “O fair and stately maid, whose eyes
                  Were kindled in the upper skies
                    At the same torch that lighted mine:
                  For so I must interpret still
                  Thy sweet dominion o’er my will,
                    A sympathy divine.”

There are other references to her in his published writings, which only those who were personally acquainted with her would recognize.






Mrs. Hawthorne belonged to the class of womankind which Shakespeare has typified in Ophelia, a tender-hearted, affectionate nature, too sensitive for the rough strains of life, and too innocent to recognize the guile in others. This was at once her strength and her weakness; but it was united, as often happens, with a fine artistic nature, and superior intelligence. Her face and manners both gave the impression of a wide and elevated culture. One could see that although she lived by the wayside, she had been accustomed to enter palaces. Her long residence in England, her Italian experience, her visit to the Court of Portugal, her enjoyment of fine pictures, poetry, and architecture, the acquaintance of distinguished men and women in different countries, had all left their impress upon her, combined in a quiet and lady-like harmony. Her conversation was cosmopolitan, and though she did not quite possess the narrative gift of her sister Elizabeth, it was often exceedingly interesting.

Hawthorne has been looked upon as the necrologist of the Puritans, and yet a certain coloring of Puritanism adhered to him to the last. It was his wife who had entirely escaped from the old New England conventicle. Severity was at the opposite pole from her moral nature. Tolerant and charitable to the faults of others, her only fault was the lack of severity. She believed in the law of love, and when kind words did not serve her purpose she let matters take what course they would, trusting that good might fall, “At last far off at last to all.”

I suspect her pathway was by no means a flowery one. Mrs. Emerson’s life had to be as stoical as her husband’s, and Mrs. Hawthorne’s, previous to the Liverpool consulate,—the consulship of Hawthorne,—was even more difficult. No one knew better than she the meaning of that heroism which each day requires. A writer in the Atlantic Monthly, reviewing Julian Hawthorne’s biography of his father, emphasizes, “the dual selfishness of Mr. and Mrs. Hawthorne.” Insensate words! There was no room for selfishness in the lives they led. In a certain sense they lived almost wholly for one another and for their children; but Hawthorne himself lived for all time and for all mankind, and his wife lived through him to the same purpose. The especial form of their material life was as essential to its spiritual outgrowth as the rose-bush is to the rose; and it would be a cankered selfishness to complain of them for it.








APPENDICES








APPENDIX A

There is at least one error in the Symmes diary, which is however explainable, and need not vitiate the whole of it. It has been ascertained that the drowning of Henry Jackson in Songo River by being kicked in the mouth by another boy while swimming, took place in 1828, so that the statement to that effect in the diary, must have been interpolated. As it happened, however, another Henry Jackson was drowned in the Songo River, so Mr. Pickard says, more than twenty years before that, and it is quite possible that young Hawthorne overheard some talk about that catastrophe, and mistook it for a recent event; and that Symmes afterwards confounding the two Jacksons and the difference in time, amended Hawthorne’s statement as we now have it. Mr. Pickard says in a recent letter:

“This item alone led me to doubt. But I cannot doubt, the more I reflect upon it, that H. himself had a hand in most, if not all, the other items. Who but his uncle could have written that inscription? The negro Symmes could not have composed that—only a man of culture.”... “The sketch of the sail on Sebago Lake surely was written by some one who was in that party. Symmes might have been there, but he was a genius deserving the fame of a Chatterton if he really did this. Three of that party I personally knew—one (Sawyer) was a cousin of my grandfather. His sleight of hand, his skill with rifle, his being a ‘votary of chance,’ are traditions in my family.”

This does not differ essentially from the opinion I have already expressed in Chapter II. F. B. Sanborn, who is one of the best-informed of living men in regard to Hawthorne, takes a similar view.








APPENDIX B

In February, 1883, a review of “Nathaniel Hawthorne and his Wife” was published in the Atlantic Monthly, evidently written by a person with no good-will toward the family. Editors ought to beware of such reviews, for their character is easily recognized, and the effect they produce often reacts upon the publication that contains them. In the present instance, the ill-humor of the writer had evidently been bottled up for many years.

To place typographical errors to the debit of an author’s account—not very numerous for a work of eight hundred pages—suggests either an inexperienced or a strongly prejudiced critic. This is what the Atlantic writer begins with, and he (or she) next proceeds to complain that the book does not contain a complete bibliography of Hawthorne’s works; although many excellent biographies have been published without this, and it is quite possible that Hawthorne’s son preferred not to insert it. No notice is taken of the many fine passages in the book, like the apostrophe upon Hawthorne’s marriage, {Footnote: J. Hawthorne, i. 242,} and that excellent description of the performances of a trance medium at Florence, but continues in an ascending climax of fault-finding until he (or she) reaches the passage from Hawthorne’s Roman diary concerning Margaret Fuller. {Footnote: J. Hawthorne, i. 30-35.}

If public opinion has any value, this passage concerning Margaret Fuller’s marriage ought not to have been published; but what can Margaret Fuller’s friends and admirers expect? Do they think that a young American woman can go to a foreign country, and live with a foreign gentleman, in defiance of the customs of modern society, without subjecting herself to the severest criticism? It is true that she married Count d’Ossoli before her child was born, and her friends, who were certainly an enlightened class, always believed that she acted throughout from the most honorable motives (my own opinion is, that she acted in imitation of Goethe), but how can they expect the great mass of mankind to think so? Hawthorne had a right to his opinion, as well as Emerson and Channing, and although it was certainly not a very charitable opinion, we cannot doubt that it was an honest one. In regard to the marriage tie, Hawthorne was always strict and conservative.

This is the climax of the Atlantic critique, and its anti-climax is an excoriation of Hawthorne’s son for neglecting to do equal and exact justice to James T. Fields. This truly is a grievous accusation. Fields was Hawthorne’s publisher and would seem to have taken a personal and friendly interest in him besides, but we cannot look on it as a wholly unselfish interest. It was not like Hillard’s, Pierce’s, and Bridge’s interest in Hawthorne. If Fields had not been his publisher, it is not probable that Hawthorne would have made his acquaintance; and if his son has not enlarged on Fields’s good offices in bringing “The Scarlet Letter” before the public, there is an excellent reason for it, in the fact that Fields had already done so for himself in his “Yesterdays with Authors.” That Fields’s name should have been omitted in the index to “Nathaniel Hawthorne and his Wife,” may have been an oversight; but, at all events, it is too microscopic a matter to deserve consideration in a first-class review.

Are we become such babies, that it is no longer possible for a writer to tell the plain, ostensible truth concerning human nature, without having a storm raised about his head for it? George P. Bradford and Martin F. Tupper are similar instances, and like Boswell have suffered the penalty which accrues to men of small stature for associating with giants.








APPENDIX C

The great poets and other writers of all nations whom I conceive to be superior to Hawthorne, may be found in the following list: Homer, Æschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Pindar, Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, Demosthenes, Theocritus, Plutarch; Horace, Virgil, Cicero, Tacitus; Dante, Tasso, Petrarch; Cervantes, Calderon, Camoens; Molière, Racine, Descartes, Voltaire; Lessing, Goethe, Schiller, Kant; Swedenborg; Chaucer, Shakespeare, Bacon, Milton, and perhaps Burns and Byron; Alexander Hamilton, Napoleon.

These also may be placed more on an equality with Hawthorne, although there will of course always be wide differences of opinion on that point: Hesiod, Herodotus, Menander, Aristophases; Livy, Cæsar, Lucretius, Juvenal; Ariosto, Macchiavelli, Manzoni, Lope de Vega, Buthas Pato; Corneille, Pascal, Rousseau; Wieland, Klopstock, Heine, Auerbach; Spenser, Ben Jonson, Fletcher, Fielding, Pope, Scott, Wordsworth, Shelley, Carlyle, Browning, Tennyson, Froude; Webster, Emerson, Wasson. Sappho, Bion, Moschus, and Cleanthes were certainly poets of a high order, but only some fragments of their poetry have survived. Gottfried of Strassburg, the Minnesinger, might be included, and some of the finest English poetry was written by unknown geniuses of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Ballads like “Chevy Chace” and the “Child of Elle” deserve a high place in the rank of poetry; and the German “Reineke Fuchs” is in its way without a rival. There may be other French, German, and Spanish writers of exceptional excellence with whom I am unacquainted, but I do not feel that any French or German novelists of the last century ought to be placed on a level with Hawthorne—only excepting Auerbach. Victor Hugo is grandiloquent, and the others all have some serious fault or limitation. I suppose that not one in ten of Emerson’s readers has ever heard of Wasson, but he was the better prose writer of the two, and little inferior as a poet. More elevated he could not be, but more profound, just, logical and humane—that is, more like Hawthorne. Emerson could not have filled his place on the Atlantic Monthly and the North American Review.








Index

   Adams, John Quincy
   After-dinner speeches
   Alcott, A. Bronson
   “Ambitious Guest, The,”
    “Ancestral Footstep, The,”
    Antinous of the villa Ludovisi
   “Arabella,” the ship
   Arnold, Matthew
   “Artist of the Beautiful, The,”
    Athenæan Society
   Atlantic Club
   Aurelius, Marcus

   Bacon’s, Miss, volume published
   Balzac
   Bancroft, George
   Beethoven
   Bennoch, Francis
   “Blithedale Romance”
    Blodgett’s boarding-house
   “Bloody Footstep”
    “Birth Mark, The,”
    “Bosom Serpent, The,”
    Bradford, George P
   Brandes, Danish critic
   Bridge, Horatio,
   Bright, Henry A.
   Brook Farm
   Brown, John
   Browning and Carlyle
   Browning, Mrs. Elizabeth Barrett
   Browning, Robert
   Buchanan, President

   Carlyle and Hawthorne
   Castor and Pollux, statues of
   “Celestial Railroad, The”
    Cenci, Beatrice, portrait of
   Channing, Ellery
   Channing, William H.
   Cilley and Graves duel
   Cilley, Jonathan
     description of
   Clarke, Edward H.
   Clarke, Rev. Dr. James F.
   “Code of Honor,” the
   College skepticism
   Columbia, statue of
   Concord River
   Conway, Rev. M. D.
   Crab spider, the
   Crawford, sculptor
   “Critique of Pure Reason, The”
    Curtis, George William

   Dallas, George M.
   Dante’s Inferno   Dickens
   “Doctor Grimshawe’s Secret”
    Dolliver, Dr.
   “Dolliver Romance, The”
    Donatello’s crime
   Dwight, John S., musical critic

   Elgin marbles
   Eliot, George
   Emerson
     essays
   Emerson, Mrs. R. W.
     her figure
     religious views
   English lakes
   “English Note-book”
    English scenery
   Essex County people
   Evans, Marian

   “Fancy’s Show Box”
    “Fanshawe”
    “Faun of Praxiteles”
    “Felton, Septimius,”
    Fielding
   Fields, James T
   Florentine art
   Fourier
   Fuller, Margaret
     as Zenobia
     her marriage

   Gardner, E. A., Prof
   Genius, its growth
   “Gentle Boy, The,”
    Ghosts
   Gibson, sculptor
     his tinted Eves and Venuses
   Gladstone, William E., on transcendentalism
   Godkin, E. L.
   Goethe
   Golden Age, A
   Goodrich, S. G., editor
   “Great Carbuncle, The,”
    “Great Stone Face, The,”
    Guilty glimpses at hired models
   Gurney, Prof. E. W.

   “Hall of Fantasy, The,”
    Harris, Dr. William T.
   Harvard Law School
   Hathorne, Daniel
   Hathorne, John
     witches’ judge
     his last will
     his gravestone
   Hathorne, Joseph
   Hathorne, Nathaniel
   Hathorne, William
     Letter to British Ministry
   Hawthorne, Elizabeth
   Hawthorne, Julian
   Hawthorne, Louisa
     her death
   Hawthorne, Mrs. Sophia Peabody
     becomes engaged to Hawthorne
     writes to her mother
     encourages her husband
     praises her husband
     is out of health
     goes to Madeira
     is presented at court
     the original of Hilda
     at Concord
     her opinions
     character and style
   Hawthorne, Nathaniel,
     his English ancestors
     family name
     birthplace
     his lameness
     early poetry
     life at Sebago
     his first diary
     the budding of his genius
     fits for college
     “Pin Society”
      religious instruction
     decides on his vocation
     has the measles
     his life at Bowdoin
     outdoor sports
     is fined for gambling
     graduates at Bowdoin
     decides his profession
     publishes “Fanshawe”
      changes his name
     despondency
     goes to Lake Champlain
     wins his bet with Cilley
     commences his diary
     his supposed challenge
     thanks Longfellow
     goes to Berkshire Hills
     character of his diary
     his engagement
     enters Custom House
     goes to Brook Farm
     his marriage
     his true Arcadia
     his skating
     opinion of Emerson
     birth of a daughter
     his indolence
     style as an author
     returns to Robert Manning’s house
     is appointed Surveyor of the Port
     son Julian is born
     occupies house on Mall street
     is removed from office
     publishes “Scarlet Letter”
      method of development
     sits for his portrait; goes to Lenox
     publishes “House of Seven Gables”
      birth of his daughter Rose
     leaves Lenox for Newton
     returns to Concord
     writes the “Life of Pierce”
      the Liverpool consulate
     sails for England
     as an office-holder
     his life in England
     makes a speech
     kindness to Delia Bacon
     resigns the Consulate
     as a law writer
     goes to Paris
     arrives at Rome
     journeys to Florence
     goes to the Vatican
     on modern sculpture
     returns to Rome
     visits Geneva
     summer at Redcar
     publishes the “Marble Faun
     Hawthorne the famous
     begins to dislike writing
     returns to Concord
     method of writing
     patriotism
     proposes to arm negroes
     preparatory sketches
     sojourns at Beverly Farms
     last entry in his journal
     dedicates book to President Pierce
     at home
     personal appearance
     seriously ill
     Hawthorne’s philosophy
     his death
     his funeral
     religious convictions
     his position in literature
   Hawthorne, Rose, her birth
     her memoirs
   Hawthorne’s mother
     her character
     her death
   Hawthorne, Una, her birth
     severe illness of
   Hilda, character of
     her tower
   Hillard, George S.
   Hoar, Miss Elizabeth
   Holiday epauletes
   Holmes, Oliver Wendell
   Hosmer, Harriet
   Houghton, Lord
   “House of the Seven Gables, The”
    Howe, Dr. Samuel G.
   Hunt, suicide of Miss

   Italian Note-book

   Jackson, Andrew
   James, Henry, Jr.
   James, Henry, Sr.
   Jameson, Mrs. Anna
   Jerrold, Douglas

   Kansas-Nebraska Bill
   Kant, Immanuel
   Kemble, Frances
   Kitridge, Doctor

   “Lady Eleanor’s Mantle”
    Laocoön   Lathrop, George P.
   Leamington
   Lincoln, President
   Liverpool Consulate
   Longfellow, Henry W.
     reviews Hawthorne
   Loring, Frederick W.
   Loring, Dr. George B.
   Lowell, James Russell

   Mann, Horace
   Mann, Mrs. Horace
   Manning family
   Manning, Rebecca
   Manning, Richard
   Manning, Robert
   “Marble Faun, The,” English reviews of
     analysis of
     its original
   McClellan, General George B.
   McMichael, Morton
   Melville, Hermann
   Mexican War
   Michel Angelo
     his Last Judgment and Moses   “Miroir, Monsieur du”
    “Mosses from an Old Manse”
    Motley’s opinions
   “Mrs. Bullfrog”

   Niagara Falls, visit to
   North American Review   Nurse, Rebecca, a witch

   Offensive partisanship
   “Old Manse,” the
   “Ontario Steamboat, The”
    O’Sullivan, an editor
   “Our Old Home”

   Parker, Theodore
   Peabody, Elizabeth
   Peabody, Sophia Amelia
   Philadelphia Hock Club
   Pickard, Samuel T.
   Pierce, Franklin
     elected Senator
     goes to the war
     nominated for President
     his father
     various
   Pike, William B.
   Poetic mind, the
   Politicians, opinion of
   Portraits of Hawthorne by Osgood, Healy, Rowse, and
     others
   Positivists
   Powers, Hiram
     his America   Prescott, George L
   Prince of Wales
   Pyncheon, Clifford

   Quakers, persecution of

   Raphael’s Transfiguration   “Rappacini’s Daughter”
    Reform Club of London
   Ripley, George
   Rock Ferry
   Roman Carnival
   Runnel, Mary, sweetheart of Daniel Hathorne
   Ruskin

   Sailors maltreated
   Salem architecture
   Salem, situation of
   Salem society
   Salem’s sea-captains
   Sanborn, Frank B., attempt to kidnap
   “Scarlet Letter, The,”
    Schönbach, A. E., German critic
   “Select Party, The,”
    Shakespeare, authorship of
     Epitaph
   Shaw, Chief Justice
   Shelley
   Sheridan’s Ride
   “Sights from a Steeple”
    Silsbee, Edward
   Sistine Chapel
   Skepticism of evil
   Slavery Question
   “Snow Image”
    Spartan discipline
   Story, William W.
   St. Petersburg Venus   Sumner and Motley
   Sumner, Charles
   Swartwout’s defalcation
   Symms, William, a mulatto

   “Tanglewood Tales”
    Taylor, President
   Thoreau
     of marriage
   Ticknor, W. D., death of
   Tituba, the Aztec
   Tragedy, character of
   Trance medium, a
   Transcendentalism
     essence of
   Tupper, Martin Farquhar
   Turner, J. M. W.
   “Twice Told Tales”

   “Unpardonable Sin, The,”
    Upham, the historian

   Vanity of Women
   Vasari
   Venus dé Medici   “Vicar of Wakefield”
    Victor Hugo
   Villa Manteüto
   “Virtuoso’s Collection, The,”
    “Vision at the Fountain, The,”

   Ward’s Tavern
   Warwick Castle
   Wasson, David A
   Waters, Henry F., researches of
   Wayside, The
   Webster, Daniel
   West Roxbury commune
   Whittier, the poet
   Wig Castle in Wigton
   Witchcraft persecution
   Wood, Warrington
   Worcester, Doctor, the lexicographer

   “Young Goodman Brown”