THANKS TO DICK AND PETER
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Broadside publication of
Whittier's Our Countrymen in Chains, One of his many abolitionist poems. |
Mona and Walter have been reading poems written by John Greenleaf Whittier from a booklet given to them years ago by Sybil. Mona writes of her pleasure in finding words to a hymn with which she was familiar, embedded in a longer poem. The hymn Dear Lord and Father of Mankind is included in Worship in Song on page 139. I am particularly fond of it because it is a plea for forgiveness.
Mona wrote:
John Greenleaf Whittier
In a small edition of “Selections from the Religious Poems of John Greenleaf Whittier” authored by the Track Association of Friends (1838), it was written “Reading Whittier's religious poems is like swimming in a deep lake, one may pick at the words like stones, or recall phrases from childhood memory…..As one goes further beneath the cadence of words, one discovers eternal truths”.James Russell Lowell |
The hymn Once to Every Soul and Nation can be found on page 273 of Worship in Song: A Friends Hymnal. It was written by the nineteenth century poet James Russell Lowell in response to a request from his friend and fellow abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier who wrote to him: "Give me one that shall be to our cause what the song of Rouget de Lisle was to the French Republicans." Lowell wrote an eighteen verse poem with the title The Present Crisis.
Although Lowell's words were not destined to have as great an
influence as "La Marsellaise" had for France, it contributed
significantly to the antislavery movement when it was written, and to
the civil rights movement a hundred years later. It's original goal was
to oppose the annexation of Texas as a state allowing slavery. Lowell
believed that through his poetry he could play a role as a
prophet and critic of society. In the twentieth century the poem
become a source for quotations in the speeches and sermons of Martin
Luther King, Jr.