Nathaniel Hawthorne and his interest in history, morality and religion

The Scarlet Letter (1850), also carried over into his poetic output

Nathaniel Hawthorne

Nathaniel Hawthorne

It is the same infrequent star,?

The all-mysterious light,

That like a watcher, gazing on

The changes of the night,

Toward the hill of Bethlehem took

Its solitary flight.

It is the same infrequent star;

Its sameness startleth me,

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Although the disk is red as blood,

And downward silently

It looketh on another hill,?

The hill of Calvary!

Nor noon, nor night; for to the west

The heavy sun doth glow;

And, like a ship, the lazy mist

Is sailing on below,?

Between the broad sun and the earth

It tacketh to and fro.

There is no living wind astir;

The bat’s unholy wing

Threads through the noiseless olive trees,

Like some unquiet thing

Which playeth in the darkness, when

The leaves are whispering.

Mount Calvary! Mount Calvary!

All sorrowfully still,

That mournful tread, it rends the heart

With an unwelcome thrill,?

The mournful tread of them that crowd

Thy melancholy hill!....

To God! to God! how eloquent

The cry, as if it grew,

By those cold lips unuttered, yet

All heartfelt rising through,?

“Father in heaven! forgive them, for

They know not what they do!”

  • From “The Star of Calvary” by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) was an American writer better known for his fiction than his poetry. Yet his interest in history, morality and religion, which became trademarks of his fiction, including his most famous work, The Scarlet Letter (1850), also carried over into his poetic output. His youngest child, Rose Hawthorne, who followed her father’s footsteps, also became a writer with a concern for religious matters, so much so that she converted to Catholicism and after entering religious life, she founded the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne in 1900. The members of this celebrated community continue to this day to devote their lives to caring for those suffering from incurable cancer.

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