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Edwin Percy Whipple

Edwin Percy Whipple (March 8, 1819 - June 16, 1886)[1] was an American essayist and critic.

Contents

Biography

He was born in Gloucester, Massachusetts in 1819. For a time, he was the main literary critic for Philadelphia-based Graham's Magazine.[2] Later, in 1848, he became the Boston correspondent to the Literary World under Evert Augustus Duyckinck and George Long Duyckinck.[3] Historian Perry Miller called Whipple "Boston's most popular critic".[4]

Whipple was a close friend of Nathaniel Hawthorne. After Hawthorne's death in 1864, Whipple served as a pallbearer for his funeral alongside Bronson Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson, James Thomas Fields, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.[5] Whipple's close relationship with other Boston-area authors occasionally tinted his reviews. Edward Emerson later noted, "No other member of the Saturday Club has ever been more loyally felicitous in characterizing the literary work of his associates."[6]

Whipple died in 1886 and was interred at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Selected list of works

Family headstone for Edwin Percy Whipple at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts

His first book was Essays and Reviews (two volumes, 1849), which was followed by:

  • Character and Characteristic Men (1866)
  • Literature of the Age of Elizabeth (1876)
  • Recollections of Eminent Men (1887)
  • American Literature and Other Papers (1887)
  • Outlooks on Society (1888)
  • Success and its Conditions
  • Literature and Politics

An edition of his Charles Dickens (two volumes, Boston), with an introduction by Arlo Bates, appeared in 1912.

References

  1. ^ Whipple, Blaine (2007). 15 Generations of Whipples: Descendants of Matthew Whipple of Ipswich, Massachusetts. Baltimore, Maryland: Gateway Press, Inc.. p. G395. ISBN 987-0-9801022-4-6. 
  2. ^ Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxson. The Literary History of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs & Co., 1906: 283. ISBN 1932109455
  3. ^ Miller, Perry. The Raven and the Whale: Poe, Melville, and the New York Literary Scene. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997 (first printed 1956): 239. ISBN 0-8018-5750-3
  4. ^ Miller, Perry. The Raven and the Whale: Poe, Melville, and the New York Literary Scene. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997 (first printed 1956): 75. ISBN 0-8018-5750-3
  5. ^ Baker, Carlos. Emerson Among the Eccentrics: A Group Portrait. New York: Viking Press, 1996: 448. ISBN 0-670-86675-X.
  6. ^ Buell, Lawrence. New England Literary Culture: From Revolution Through Renaissance. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986: 44. ISBN 0-521-37801-X

Sources

External links


Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

Edwin Percy Whipple (March 8, 1819June 16, 1886) was a literary critic and essayist from Massachusetts.

Sourced

  • Irony is an insult conveyed in the form of a compliment.
    • In Lectures on Subjects Connected with Literature and Life (1859), Lecture III : Wit and Humor, p. 102
  • From the hour of the invention of printing, books, and not kings, were to rule the world. Weapons forged in the mind, keen-edged, and brighter than a sunbeam, were to supplant the sword and battle-axe. Books! lighthouses built on the sea of time! Books! by whose sorcery the whole pageantry of the world's history moves in solemn procession before our eyes. From their pages great souls look down in all their grandeur, undimmed by the faults and follies of earthly existence, consecrated by time.
    • Reported in Josiah Hotchkiss Gilbert, Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), p. 386.

Unsourced

  • Honesty is the moral conscience of the great.
    • From Success and Its Conditions

External links

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