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Whittier at close range

Chapter 33: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

A close, personal portrait by a longtime neighbor and friend presents intimate glimpses of the poet's home life, friendships, and habits, concentrating on his Amesbury household, study and garden-room furnishings, and the artifacts and visitors that shaped his daily world. It traces themes in his verse—reverence for nature, sympathy with the lowly, and spiritual monotheism—links to the influence of Burns, and his commitment to abolition and human brotherhood. Anecdotes, descriptions of rooms and gifts, and recollections of visitors illuminate his character, poetic sensibility, and the domestic settings that inspired much of his work.

Transcriber’s Notes

Some minor punctuation errors and omissions were silently corrected.

Page 24: “Almesbury and its adjacent” changed to “Amesbury and its adjacent”

Page 123: “its wierdness” changed to “its weirdness”

Page 124: “paper of a wierd” changed to “paper of a weird”

Page 125: “Hugenot indignation” changed to “Huguenot indignation”

Page 126: “before sending to it the publishers” changed to “before sending it to the publishers”

Page 150: “of his sympanthy” changed to “of his sympathy”