What "The Works of John Greenleaf Whittier, Vol. VI" does is collect all the first-rate poetry that the famous American Quaker creator John Greenleaf Whittier wrote. Whittier changed into born in 1807, and his many works on a huge range of topics made a large effect on American literature and social alternate in the 1800s. Volume VI collects all of Whittier's exclusive varieties of poetry, which cover a wide variety of topics such as nature, religion, abolitionism, and social justice. Whittier became a sturdy opponent of slavery, and he wrote effective poems that spoke to the moral framework of his time about what become proper and wrong. He wrote poetry that both referred to as attention to movement and showed how strongly he felt about human rights. This collection famous Whittier's deep knowledge of human beings's conditions and captures the spirit of his time. The poet's verses are marked through a strong hyperlink to nature, a robust experience of proper and incorrect, and a fashion of writing that is both easy and powerful. John Greenleaf Whittier's legacy lives on through his essential poetry. Volume VI is like a literary treasure trove, letting readers immerse themselves in the words of a poet who no longer most effective contributed to the subculture of his time but additionally left an indelible mark on American literature as a whole.
John Greenleaf Whittier was an American Quaker author who lived from December 17, 1807, to September 7, 1892. He fought to end slavery in the United States. He was inspired by the Scottish poet Robert Burns and is often called one of the fireside poets. Whittier is best known for his works against slavery and his book Snow-Bound, which came out in 1866. John Whittier and Abigail (née Hussey) Whittier had a child on December 17, 1807, on their farm in Haverhill, Massachusetts. The word for his given name, feuillevert, comes from the Huguenots who came before him. The farm was where he grew up. He lived with his parents, his brother and two sisters, an aunt and uncle from his mother's side, and many guests and farm workers. As a child, Whittier was color-blind because he couldn't tell the difference between cherries that were ripe and ones that weren't. It wasn't making much money on the farm, and there was just enough to get by. Whittier himself wasn't cut out for hard farm work, and he had bad health and was weak his whole life.