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To Walt Whitman:
With Christmas Greetings, 1889.
"I travel on not knowing,1
I would not if I might;
I would rather walk with God in the dark,
Than go alone in the light;
I would rather walk with him by faith
Than pick my way by sight."
"After the dazzle of day is gone,2
Only the dark, dark night shows to my eyes the stars;
After the clangor of organ majestic, or chorus, or perfect band,
Silent, athwart my soul, moves the symphony true"
Thomas Hutchinson
Pegswood
Morpeth
ENGLAND.
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Correspondent:
Thomas Hutchinson (1856–1938)
was an English writer and educator, teaching at Northumbria University and the
Pegswood school. He published a book of verse, Ballades and
other Rhymes of a Country Bookworm (1888). He was also a collector of
first editions and publications by notable writers, and the items in the
collection that had not been sold previously at auction were later donated by
Hutchinson's descendants to Preston Park Museum and Grounds (Charlotte Barro,
"Man with Lifelong Love Affair with Literature," Morpeth
Herald, January 1, 2016).
Notes
- 1. These lines from the poem
"Not Knowing" have been attributed to Mary Gardiner Brainard (1837–1905),
a writer of religious poetry. Philip Paul Bliss set the lines to music as a hymn
in the 1870s. Whitman quoted parts of these lines in Specimen
Days and Collect, but offered no source. [back]
- 2. Hutchinson here quotes Whitman's "After the
Dazzle of Day," first published in the New York Herald
(February 3, 1888). See "After the Dazzle of Day". [back]