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NATHANIEL See also: American writer, son of Nathaniel Hathorne (1776-1808), was See also: born at See also: Salem, Massachusetts, on the 4th of See also: July 1804
.
The See also: head of the American branch of the See also: family, See also: William Hathorne of
See also: Wilton, See also: Wiltshire, See also: England, emigrated with See also: Winthrop and his See also: company, and arrived at Salem See also: Bay, Mass., on the 12th of See also: June 163o
.
He had grants of See also: land at Dorchester, where he resided for upwards of six years, when he was persuaded to remove to Salem by the See also: tender of further grants of land there, it being considered a public benefit that he should become an inhabitant of that See also: town
.
He represented his See also: fellow-townsmen in the legislature, and served them in a military capacity as a captain in the first See also: regular troop organized in Salem, which he led to victory through an See also: Indian See also: campaign in Maine
.
Originally a determined " Separatist," and opposed to compulsion for See also: conscience, he signalized himself when a magistrate by the active See also: part which he took in the Quaker persecutions of the See also: time (1657-1662), going so far on one occasion as to See also: order the See also: whipping of See also: Anne Coleman and four other See also: Friends through Salem, See also: Boston and See also: Dedham
.
He died, an old See also: man, in the odour of sanctity, and See also: left a See also: good See also: property to his son See also: John, who inherited his
See also: father's capacity and intolerance, and was in turn a legislator, a magistrate, a soldier and a bitter persecutor of witches
.
Before the See also: death of See also: Justice Hathorne in 1717, thedestiny of the family suffered a See also: sea-change, and they began to be noted as mariners
.
One of these seafaring Hathornes figured in the Revolution as a See also: privateer, who had the good See also: fortune to escape from a See also: British prison-See also: ship; and another, Captain Daniel Hathorne, has left his mark on early American ballad-See also: lore
.
He too was a privateer, See also: commander of the brig " See also: Fair American," which, cruising off the See also: coast of See also: Portugal, See also: fell in with a British scow laden with troops for General See also: Howe, which scow the bold Hathorne and his valiant See also: crew at once engaged and fought for over an See also: hour, until the vanquished enemy was glad to cut the See also: Yankee grapplings and quickly bear away
.
The last of the Hathornes with whom we are concerned was a son of this sturdy old privateer, Nathaniel Hathorne
.
He was born in 1776, and about the beginning of the 19th century married See also: Miss See also: Elizabeth
See also: Clarke
See also: Manning, a daughter of See also: Richard Manning of Salem, whose ancestors emigrated to See also: America about fifty years after the arrival of William Hathorne
.
See also: Young Nathaniel took his hereditary place before the See also: mast, passed from the forecastle to the See also: cabin, made voyages to the See also: East and West Indies, See also: Brazil and See also: Africa, and finally died of fever at Surinam, in the spring of 18o8
.
He was the father of three See also: children, the second of whom was the subject of this article
.
The See also: form of the family name was changed by the latter to " See also: Hawthorne " in his early manhood
.
After the death of her See also: husband Mrs Hawthorne removed to the See also: house of her father with her little family of children
.
Of the boyhood of Nathaniel no particulars have reached us, except that he was fond of taking long walks alone, and that he used to declare to his See also: mother that he would go to sea some time and would never return
.
Among the books that he is known to have read as a See also: child were See also: Shakespeare, See also: Milton, See also: Pope and See also: Thomson, The See also: Castle of Indolence being an especial favourite
.
In the autumn of 1818 his mother removed to See also: Raymond, a town in See also: Cumberland county, Maine, where his See also: uncle, Richard Manning, had built a large and ambitious dwelling
.
Here the lad resumed his solitary walks, exchanging the narrow streets of Salem for the boundless, primeval See also: wilderness, and its sluggish harbour for the fresh bright See also: waters of Sebago lake
.
He roamed the woods by See also: day, with his See also: gun and See also: rod, and in the moonlight nights of winter skated upon the lake alone till midnight
.
When he found himself away from home, and wearied with his exercise, he took See also: refuge in a log cabin where See also: half a See also: tree would be burning upon the hearth
.
He had by this time acquired a taste for writing, that showed itself in a little See also: blank-See also: book, in which he jotted down his woodland adventures and feelings, and which was remarkable for minute observation and See also: nice perception of nature
.
After a See also: year's residence at Raymond, Nathaniel returned to Salem in order to prepare for See also: college
.
He amused himself by See also: publishing a See also: manuscript periodical, which he called the Spectator, and which displayed considerable vivacity and talent
.
He speculated upon the profession that he would follow, with a sort of prophetic insight into his future . " I do not want to be a See also: doctor and live by men's diseases," he wrote to his mother, " nor a See also: minister to live by their sins, nor a lawyer and live by their quarrels
.
So I See also: don't see that there is anything left for me but to be an author
.
How would you like some day to see a whole shelf full of books, written by your son, with ` Hawthorne's See also: Works' printed on their backs?"
Nathaniel entered See also: Bowdoin College, See also: Brunswick, Maine, in the autumn of 1821, where he became acquainted with two students who were destined to distinction—Henry W
.
Longfellow and See also: Franklin See also: Pierce
.
He was an excellent classical See also: scholar, his Latin compositions, even in his freshman year, being remark-able for their elegance, while his See also: Greek (which was less) was good
.
He made graceful See also: translations from the See also: Roman poets, and wrote several See also: English poems which were creditable to him
.
After See also: graduation three years later (1825) he returned to Salem, and to a See also: life of See also: isolation
.
He devoted his mornings to study, his afternoons to writing, and his evenings to long walks along the rocky coast
.
He was scarcely known by sight to his towns-men, and he held so little communication with the members of his own family that his meals were frequently left at his
locked door
.
He wrote largely, but destroyed many of his See also: manuscripts, his taste was so difficult to please
.
He thought well enough, however, of one of his compositions to See also: print it anonymously in 1828
.
A crude melodramatic See also: story, entitled See also: Fanshawe, it was unworthy even of his immature See also: powers, and should never have been rescued from the oblivion which speedily overtook it
.
The name of Nathaniel Hawthorne finally became known to his countrymen as a writer in The Token, a See also: holiday See also: annual which was commenced in 1828 by Mr S
.
G
.
Goodrich (better known as "See also: Peter Parley "), by whom it was conducted for fourteen years
.
This forgotten publication numbered among its contributors most of the prominent American writers of the time, none of whom appear to have added to their reputation in its pages, except the least popular of all—Hawthorne, who was for years the obscurest man of letters in America, though he gradually made admirers in a quiet way
.
His first public recognition came from England, where his See also: genius was discovered in 1835 by See also: Henry F
.
Chorley, one of the editors of the
See also: Athenaeum, in which he copied three of Hawthorne's most characteristic papers from The Token
.
He had but little encouragement to continue in literature, for Mr Goodrich was so much more a publisher than an author that he paid him wretchedly for his contributions, and still more wretchedly for his See also: work upon an American See also: Magazine of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge, which he persuaded him to edit
.
This author-publisher consented, however, at a later See also: period (1837) to bring out a collection of Hawthorne's writings under the title of Twice-told Tales
.
A moderate edition was got rid of, but the See also: great See also: body of the See also: reading public ignored the book altogether
.
It was generously reviewed in the See also: North American Review by his college friend Longfellow, who said it came from the See also: hand of a man of genius, and praised it for the exceeding beauty of its See also: style, which was as clear as See also: running waters
.
The want of pecuniary success which had so far attended his authorship led Hawthorne to accept a situation which was tendered him by See also: George See also: Bancroft, the historian, See also: collector of the See also: port of Boston under the Democratic See also: rule of President See also: Van Buren
.
He was appointed a weigher in the See also: custom-house at a See also: salary of about $1200 a year, and entered upon the duties of his office, which consisted for the most part in measuring See also: coal, See also: salt and other bulky commodities on See also: foreign vessels
.
It was irksome employment, but faithfully performed for two years, when he was superseded through a change in the See also: national administration
.
Master of himself once more, he returned to Salem, where he remained until the spring of 1841, when he wrote a collection of children's stories entitled Grandfather's Chair, and joined an See also: industrial association at West See also: Roxbury, Mass
.
See also: Brook See also: Farm, as it was called, was a social See also: Utopia, composed of a number of advanced thinkers, whose See also: object was so to distribute See also: manual labour as to give its members time for intellectual culture
.
The scheme worked admirably—on paper; but it was suited neither to the temperament nor the taste of Hawthorne, and after trying it patiently for nearly a year he returned to the everyday life of mankind
.
One of Hawthorne's earliest admirers was Miss See also: Sophia See also: Peabody, a lady of Salem, whom he married in the summer of 1842
.
He made himself a new home in an old manse, at Concord, Mass., situated on historic ground, in sight of an old revolutionary battlefield, and devoted himself diligently to literature
.
He was known to the few by his Twice-told Tales, and to the many by his papers in the Democratic Review
.
He published in 1842 a further portion of Grandfather's Chair, and also a second See also: volume of Twice-told Tales
.
He also edited, (luring 1845, the See also: African See also: Journals of Horatio See also: Bridge, an officer of the See also: navy, who had been at college with him; and in the following year he published in two volumes a collection of his later writings, under the title of Mosses from an Old Manse
.
After a residence of nearly four years at Concord, Hawthorne returned to Salem, having been appointed surveyor of the custom-house of that port by a new Democratic administration
.
He filled the duties of this position until the incoming of the Whig administration again led to his retirement
.
Ile seems tohave written little during his officialSee also: term, but, as he had leisure enough and to spare, he read much, and pondered over subjects for future stories
.
His next work, The See also: Scarlet Letter, which was begun after his removal from the custom-house, was published in 185o
.
If there had been any doubt of his genius before, it was settled for ever by this powerful See also: romance
.
Shortly after the publication of The Scarlet Letter Hawthorne removed from Salem to See also: Lenox, See also: Berkshire, Mass., where he wrote The House of the Seven Gables (1851) and The Wonder-Book (1851)
.
From Lenox he removed to West See also: Newton, near Boston, Mass., where he wrote The Blithedale Romance (1852) and The Snow Image and other Twice-told Tales (1852)
.
In the spring of 1852 he removed back to Concord, where he See also: purchased an old house which he called The Wayside, and where he wrote a Life of Franklin Pierce (1852) and Tanglewood Tales (1853)
.
Mr Pierce was the Democratic See also: candidate for the See also: presidency, and it was only at his urgent solicitation that Hawthorne consented to become his biographer
.
He declared that he would accept no office in See also: case he were elected, lest it might compromise him; but his friends gave him such weighty reasons for reconsidering his decision that he accepted the consulate at Liverpool, which was understood to be one of the best gifts at the disposal of the president
.
Hawthorne departed for See also: Europe in the summer of 1853, and returned to the See also: United States in the summer of 186o
.
Of the seven years which he passed in Europe five were spent in attending to the duties of his consulate at Liverpool, and in little journeys to Scotland, the Lakes and elsewhere, and the remaining two in See also: France and See also: Italy
.
They were quiet and uneventful, coloured by observation and reflection, as his note-books show, but productive of only one elaborate work, Transformation, or The Marble Faun, which he sketched out during his residence in Italy, and prepared for the See also: press at See also: Leamington, England, whence it was despatched to America and published in 186o
.
Hawthorne took up his abode at The Wayside, not much richer than when he left it, and sat down at his desk once more with a heavy See also: heart
.
He was surrounded by the throes of a great See also: civil war, and the See also: political party with which he had always acted was under a cloud
.
His friend ex-President Pierce was stigmatized as a traitor, and when Hawthorne dedicated his next book to him—a volume of English impressions entitled Our Old Home (1863)—it was at the See also: risk of his own popularity
.
His See also: pen was soon to be laid aside for ever; for, with the exception of the unfinished story of Septimius Felton, which was published after his death by his daughter Una (1872), and the fragment! of The Dolliver Romance, the beginning of which was published in the See also: Atlantic Monthly in July 1864, he wrote no more
.
His See also: health gradually declined, his hair See also: grew See also: white as snow, and the once stalwart figure that in early manhood flashed along the
See also: airy cliffs and glittering sands sauntered idly on the little See also: hill behind his house
.
In the beginning of
See also: April 1864 he made a See also: short See also: southern tour with his publisher Mr William D.See also: Ticknor, and was benefited by the change of scene until he reached See also: Philadelphia, where he was shocked by the sudden death of Mr Ticknor
.
He returned to The Wayside, and after a short season of rest joined his friend ex-President Pierce
.
He died at See also: Plymouth, New Hampshire, on the loth of May 1864, and five days later was buried at Sleepy Hollow, a beautiful cemetery at Concord, where he used to walk under the pines when he was living at the Old Manse, and where his ashes moulder under a See also: simple See also: stone, inscribed with the single word " Hawthorne."
The writings of Hawthorne are marked by subtle
See also: imagination, curious power of analysis and exquisite purity of diction
.
He studied exceptional developments of character, and was fond of exploring secret crypts of emotion
.
His shorter stories are remarkable for originality and suggestiveness, and his larger ones are as absolute creations as See also: Hamlet or Undine
.
Lacking the accomplishment of verse, he was in the highest sense a poet
.
His work is pervaded by a manly See also: personality, and by an almost feminine delicacy and gentleness
.
He inherited the gravity of his Puritan ancestors without their superstition, and learned in his solitary meditations a knowledge of the See also: night-See also: side of life
which would have filled them with suspicion
.
A profound anatomist of the heart, he was singularly See also: free from morbidness, and in his darkest speculations concerning evil was robustly right-minded
.
He worshipped conscience with his intellectual as well as his moral nature; it is supreme in all he wrote
.
Besides these See also: mental traits, he possessed the See also: literary quality of style—a See also: grace, a charm, a perfection of language which no other American writer ever possessed in the same degree, and which places him among the great masters of English See also: prose
.
His See also: Complete Writings (22 vols., Boston, 1901) were edited, with introduction, including a bibliography, by H
.
S
.
Scudder
.
The See also: standard authority for Hawthorne's biography is Nathaniel Hawthorne and his Wife (2 vols., Boston, 1884), by his son Julian Hawthorne (b
.
1846), himself a novelist and critic of distinction
.
See also Henry See also: James, Hawthorne (
See also: London, 1879), in the " English Men of Letters " series; Julian Hawthorne, Hawthorne and his Circle (New See also: York, 1903); a paper in R
.
H
.
Hutton's Essays Theological and Literary (London, 1871); George B
.
See also: Smith, Poets and Novelists (London, 1875); Moncure D
.
See also: Conway, Life of Nathaniel Hawthorne (London, 189o, in the " Great Writers " series); Horatio Bridge, See also: Personal Recollections of Nathaniel Hawthorne (New York, 1893); See also: Rose Hawthorne See also: Lathrop, Memories of Hawthorne (Boston, 1897); W
.
C
.
Lawton, The New England Poets (New York, 1898) ; See also: Sir L
.
See also: Stephen, See also: Hours in a Library (1874); Annie See also: Fields, Nathaniel Hawthorne (Boston, 1899) ; G
.
E
.
Woodberry, Life of Hawthorne (1902) ; and bibliography by N
.
E
.
See also: Browne (1905)
.
(R
.
H
.
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