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God's Scrivener : The Madness and Meaning of Jones Very.
De Gruyter University of Chicago Complete eBook-Package 2023 Available online
De Gruyter University of Chicago Complete eBook-Package 2023- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Davis, Clark.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Very, Jones, 1813-1880.
- Very, Jones.
- Genre:
- Biographies.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (378 pages)
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 2023.
- Summary:
- A biography of a long-forgotten but vital American Transcendentalist poet. In September of 1838, a few months after Ralph Waldo Emerson delivered his controversial Divinity School address, a twenty-five-year-old tutor and divinity student at Harvard named Jones Very stood before his beginning Greek class and proclaimed himself "the second coming." Over the next twenty months, despite a brief confinement in a mental hospital, he would write more than three hundred sonnets, many of them in the voice of a prophet such as John the Baptist or even of Christ himself-all, he was quick to claim, dictated to him by the Holy Spirit. Befriended by the major figures of the Transcendentalist movement, Very strove to convert, among others, Elizabeth and Sophia Peabody, Bronson Alcott, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and most significantly, Emerson himself. Though shocking to some, his message was simple: by renouncing the individual will, anyone can become a "son of God" and thereby usher in a millennialist heaven on earth. Clark Davis's masterful biography shows how Very came to embody both the full radicalism of Emersonian ideals and the trap of isolation and emptiness that lay in wait for those who sought complete transcendence. God's Scrivener tells the story of Very's life, work, and influence in depth, recovering the startling story of a forgotten American prophet, a "brave saint" whose life and work are central to the development of poetry and spirituality in America.
- Contents:
- Introduction
- Prologue
- I. "There is something very strange in it all". Cousins; Federal Street; Eldest son; Biography (I); Cornelia Africana; Biography (II); A student's notes, 1833-1834; A poet's notes, 1834; Early poems, 1833-1835; The uses of faith, 1835; "Change of heart"; Scrapbook, 1835-1836; Lamartine; Poems, 1835-1836; "the torn flower"; Spiritual freedom
- II. "Flee to the mountains!" "Part or particle of God," 1836; The messianic moment; Mr. Tutor Very; Temptation and peace; "My heart in life's winter"; The White Mountains, 1837; Arrival; "Beauty"; Concord; Miracles; "Newborn bard of the Holy Ghost"; "the end of all things"; Madness
- III. God's scrivener. Prince Hamlet; Asylum; "In obedience to the Spirit"; "Pierced through with many spears"; "Insane with God"; "Epistles to the unborn"; "Between Very & the Americans"; Essays and poems by Jones Very; Madness and meaning; "True relations...in a false age"
- IV. Man of peace. Nonresistance; "Heaven is a state and not a place"; War, slavery, and intemperance; "I war not, nor wrestle with the earthly man"; "But still the poet midst the tumult sings"; Knowledge and truth; "The presence of things invisible"; "The Book of LIfe".
- Notes:
- Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
- ISBN:
- 0-226-82869-7
- OCLC:
- 1401057978
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