Epes Sargent: Difference between revisions

From Theosophy Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:
== Personal life ==
== Personal life ==


Epes Sargent was born September 27, 1813 as the son of a Gloucester, Massachusetts sea captain.
Epes Sargent was born [[September 27]], 1813 as the son of a Gloucester, Massachusetts sea captain.
 
He died on [[December 30]], 1880.


== Literary career ==
== Literary career ==
Line 24: Line 26:


In letters to Professor Corson, HPB referred to Sargent as an "earnest, honest" spiritualist, and to several instances when she used Sargent as a messenger to [[Elbridge Gerry Brown]].<ref>Blavatsky letter to Corson #6 in [https://www.theosociety.org/pasadena/corson/cors-lt1.htm ''Some Unpublished Letters of H. P. Blavatsky''] by comp. E. R. Corson. Made available by Theosophical University Press.</ref>
In letters to Professor Corson, HPB referred to Sargent as an "earnest, honest" spiritualist, and to several instances when she used Sargent as a messenger to [[Elbridge Gerry Brown]].<ref>Blavatsky letter to Corson #6 in [https://www.theosociety.org/pasadena/corson/cors-lt1.htm ''Some Unpublished Letters of H. P. Blavatsky''] by comp. E. R. Corson. Made available by Theosophical University Press.</ref>
== Additional resources ==
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epes_Sargent_(poet) Epes Sargent (poet)] in Wikipedia.


== Writings ==
== Writings ==
Line 65: Line 64:


== Additional resources ==
== Additional resources ==
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epes_Sargent_(poet) Epes Sargent (poet)] in Wikipedia.


* [http://www.iapsop.com/archive/materials/spiritualist/spiritualist_v14_n19_may_9_1879.pdf "A Biographical Sketch of Mr. Epes Sargent"], ''The Spiritualist'' 14.19 (May 9, 1879), 217.
* [http://www.iapsop.com/archive/materials/spiritualist/spiritualist_v14_n19_may_9_1879.pdf "A Biographical Sketch of Mr. Epes Sargent"], ''The Spiritualist'' 14.19 (May 9, 1879), 217.

Revision as of 21:06, 9 May 2020

ARTICLE UNDER CONSTRUCTION
ARTICLE UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Epes Sargent

Epes Sargent (September 27, 1813– December 30, 1880) of Boston was an American editor, poet and playwright. He was very interested in spiritualism and was acquainted with Helena Petrovna Blavatsky.

Personal life

Epes Sargent was born September 27, 1813 as the son of a Gloucester, Massachusetts sea captain.

He died on December 30, 1880.

Literary career

Sargent worked as a newspaperman and editor. He also wrote plays, poems, lyrics, and other works.

Epes Sargent is best remembered as the author of the lyrics of one of the best-known nautical songs of the nineteenth century. In addition to American Adventures by Land and Sea (1841) and other works meant for a schoolhouse audience, Sargent was the author of several historical romances, a few comic pieces, two books on spiritualism, and a number of poems and sonnets. But his fame rests on the single poem, “A Life on the Ocean Wave,” which was set to music by Henry Russell and published about 1838. The song was an instant hit, not only among the public ashore who were inspired by its romantic imagery of the jaunty sailor class but by seafarers, who longed to live the life it described. The poem later appeared in Sargent’s anthology Songs of the Sea with Other Poems (1847), but it was as song lyrics that it continued to be reprinted into the twentieth century. by Mary Malloy (2000)[1]

Photo of Madame Blavatsky inscribed to Epes Sargent

Involvement with Madame Blavatsky

Around 1875, Madame Blavatsky (HPB) read Sargent's Proof Palpable of Immortality, and wrote of it to F. J. Lippett on March 7, 1875.[2] She devoted a long paragraph to Sargent in Isis Unveiled, Volume I:

Perhaps, among the whole body of spiritualist writers of our day, not one is held in higher esteem for character, education, sincerity, and ability, than Epes Sargent, of Boston, Massachusetts. His monograph entitled The Proof Palpable of Immortality, deservedly occupies a high rank among works upon the subject. With every disposition to be charitable and apologetic for mediums and their phenomena, Mr. Sargent is still compelled to use the following language: "The power of spirits to reproduce simulacra of persons who have passed from the earth-life, suggests the question — How far can we be assured of the identity of any spirit, let the tests be what they may? We have not yet arrived at that stage of enlightenment that would enable us to reply confidently to this inquiry. . . . There is much that is yet a puzzle in the language and action of this class of materialized spirits." As to the intellectual calibre of most of the spirits which lurk behind the physical phenomena, Mr. Sargent will unquestionably be accepted as a most competent judge, and he says, "the great majority, as in this world, are of the unintellectual sort." If it is a fair question, we would like to ask why they should be so lacking in intelligence, if they are human spirits? Either intelligent human spirits cannot materialize, or, the spirits that do materialize have not human intelligence, and, therefore, by Mr. Sargent's own showing, they may just as well be "elementary" spirits, who have ceased to be human altogether, or those demons, which, according to the Persian Magi and Plato, hold a middle rank between gods and disembodied men.[3]

In letters to Professor Corson, HPB referred to Sargent as an "earnest, honest" spiritualist, and to several instances when she used Sargent as a messenger to Elbridge Gerry Brown.[4]

Writings

Spiritualist and occult works

  • Planchette, or the Despair of Science. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1869. Available at Internet Archive.
  • Peculiar: A Tale of the Great Transition. New York: Carleton, 1889. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Scientific Basis of Spiritualism. 1881, 1887. [His final work.]

Other works

These are a few of the books Sargent wrote in the areas of biography, poetry, drama, instruction, and popular nonfiction:

  • Velasco: a Tragedy in Five Act. New York: Harper & Bros., 1839. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Life and Public Services of Henry Clay. New York: Greeley & McElrath, 1844. Available at Internet Archive.
  • Song of the Sea and Other Poems. Boston: James Munroe & Co., 1847. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Standard Speaker: Exercises in Prose and Poetry. Philadelphia: Thomas, Cowperthwaite & Co., 1852. Exercises in elocution and declamation. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Intermediate Standard Speaker. Philadelphia: Charles deSilver, 1857. Available to Internet Archive.
  • The Woman Who Dared. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1870. Available at Internet Archive.
  • A Pronouncing Spelling-Book for Beginners. Boston: John L. Shorey, 1874. Available at Internet Archive.
  • Harper's Cyclopædia of British and American Poetry. New York: Harper & Bros., 1881. Available at Internet Archive.
  • The Testimony of the Poets. Boston: Benjamin B. Mussey & Co., 1884. Available at Internet Archives.
  • Arctic Adventure by Land and Sea. Boston: Phillips, Sampson, and Company, 1887. Available at Internet Archive.

Additional resources

Notes

  1. Anonymous, "Sargent, Epes" in Williams College website. Accessed 28 March 2019.
  2. Blavatsky, H. P., The Letters of H. P. Blavatsky: Volume 1 1861-1879. John Algeo, editor. (Wheaton, Ill: Theosophical Publishing House, 2003), 124-125.
  3. H. P. Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled Volume I, page 220.
  4. Blavatsky letter to Corson #6 in Some Unpublished Letters of H. P. Blavatsky by comp. E. R. Corson. Made available by Theosophical University Press.