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Title: Gifts of Genius 
A Miscellany of Prose and Poetry by American Authors 
Author: Various 
Release Date: February 27, 2006 [EBook #17872] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
0. START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GIFTS OF 
GENIUS *** 
Produced by Curtis Weyant, Sankar Viswanathan, and the
Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
 (This file was 
produced from images produced by the Wright
American Fiction 
Project.) 
GIFTS OF GENIUS: 
A Miscellany 
OF 
PROSE AND POETRY, 
BY
AMERICAN AUTHORS. 
                               NEW  YORK: 
                      PRINTED  FOR  C.A.  DAVENPORT. 
  
Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1859, by 
C.A. DAVENPORT,
in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the 
United States for the 
Southern District of New York. 
CONTENTS. 
INTRODUCTORY, 
OUT AT ELBOWS.--THE STORY OF ST. GEORGE CLEAVE. 
BY JOHN ESTEN COOKE, 
MY SECRET. (From the French.) BY HENRY WADSWORTH 
LONGFELLOW, 
A LEAF FROM MY PARIS NOTE-BOOK. BY H.T. 
TUCKERMAN, 
ON POPULAR KNOWLEDGE. BY GEORGE S. HILLARD, 
ON RECEIVING A PRIVATELY PRINTED VOLUME OF 
POEMS FROM A FRIEND. BY THOMAS BUCHANAN READ, 
THE PRINCE AT LAND'S END. BY CAROLINE CHESEBRO, 
SEA-WEED. BY JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, 
TREFOIL. BY EVERT A. DUYCKINCK, 
MISERERE DOMINE. BY WILLIAM H. BURLEIGH, 
THE KINGDOMS OF NATURE PRAISING GOD.--A SHORT
ESSAY ON THE 148th PSALM. BY C.A. BARTOL, 
TRANSLATIONS. BY THE REV. CHARLES T. BROOKS, 
RECOLLECTIONS OF NEANDER, THE CHURCH 
HISTORIAN.
BY THE REV. ROSWELL D. HITCHCOCK, 
D.D., 
POEMS. BY JULIA WARD HOWE, 
EARTH'S WITNESS. BY ALICE B. HAVEN, 
THE NEW ENGLAND THANKSGIVING. BY THE REV. 
HENRY W. BELLOWS, D.D., 
SONG OF THE ARCHANGELS. (From Goethe's Faust.) BY 
GEORGE P. MARSH, 
A NIGHT AND DAY AT VALPARAISO. BY ROBERT TOMES, 
TRANSLATIONS. BY THE REV. THEODORE PARKER, 
PAID FOR BY THE PAGE. BY EDWARD S. GOULD, 
WORDS FOR MUSIC. BY GEORGE P. MORRIS, 
"THE CHRISTIAN GREATNESS." (Passages from a Manuscript 
Sermon.) BY THE REV. ORVILLE DEWEY, D.D., 
THE BABY AND THE BOY MUSICIAN. BY LYDIA HUNTLEY 
SIGOURNEY, 
THE ERL-KING. (From the German of Goethe.) BY MRS. E.F. 
ELLET, 
THOUGHTS UPON FENELON. BY THE REV. SAMUEL 
OSGOOD, D.D., 
POEMS. BY MRS. GEORGE P. MARSH,
A STORY OF VENICE. BY GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS, 
THE TORTURE CHAMBER. BY WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER, 
THE HOME OF CHARLOTTE BRONTË. BY FRANCIS 
WILLIAMS, 
THORWALDSEN'S CHRIST. BY REV. E.A. WASHBURN, 
JUNE TWENTY-NINTH, EIGHTEEN FIFTY-NINE. BY 
CAROLINE M. KIRKLAND, 
NO SONGS IN WINTER. BY T.B. ALDRICH, 
BENI-ISRAEL. BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, 
BOCAGE'S PENITENTIAL SONNET. BY WILLIAM CULLEN 
BRYANT, 
TO THE PUBLIC. 
At the desire of MISS DAVENPORT, for whose benefit this collection 
of original Miscellanies by American authors has been made, I write 
this brief Preface, without having had time to read the contributions 
which it is designed to introduce. The names of the writers, however, 
many of which are among the most distinguished in our literature, and 
are honored wherever our language is spoken, will suffice to 
recommend the volume to the attention of the reading world. 
If this were not enough, an inducement of another kind is to be found in 
the circumstances of the lady in whose behalf the contents of this 
volume have been so freely contributed. A few years since, she was a 
teacher in our schools, active, useful, and esteemed for her skillful 
communication of knowledge. At that time it was one of her favorite 
occupations to make sketches and drawings from nature, an art in 
which she instructed her pupils. A severe illness interrupted her duties, 
during which her sight became impaired, and finally lost. A kind of 
twilight came over it, which gradually darkened into utter night,
shutting out the face of nature in which she had so much delighted, and 
leaving her, without occupation, in ill health. In this condition she has 
already remained for five years. 
To this statement of her misfortunes, which I trust will commend her to 
the sympathies of all who are made acquainted with them, as one who 
was useful to society while Providence permitted, I have only to add 
the expression of her warmest thanks to those who have generously 
furnished the contents of the volume she now lays before the public. 
W.C. BRYANT. 
NEW YORK, June,    
    
		
	
	
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