Samuel Kettell, ed. Specimens of American Poetry. 1829.
By Critical and Biographical NoticeMichael Wigglesworth (16311705)
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When the weakness of his lungs disqualified him for preaching, he would strive, with his pen, to render truth attractive by investing her with the garb of poesy. Let not the modern reader turn with disgust from the perusal of his moral sentiments. Repugnant as they may be to our tastes, and grotesque as they appear in an age of refinement, they contributed nevertheless, mainly to the formation of that character for unbending integrity, and firmness of resolve, for which we almost venerate the old men who laid the foundations of our republic. Neither let the lover of the sacred nine despise the muse of our author. Homely and coarse of speech as she is, her voice probably sunk into the hearts of those who listened to her rude melody, leaving there an impression, deeper than any which the numbers of a Byron, a Southey, or a Moore may ever produce.
“The Day of Doom,” is the title of Mr Wigglesworth’s largest poem. It went through six editions in this country, and was republished in London. It comprises a version, after the manner of Sternhold and Hopkins, of all the scripture texts relative to the final judgment of man, and contains two hundred and twenty-four stanzas of eight lines each. Our selections from his writings are principally from this curious specimen of the antique.
Mr Wigglesworth died in 1705, at the age of seventy-four years. Cotton Mather wrote his funeral sermon and epitaph.