Tis_Bearself
Patron
Hi all, I have a question perhaps for someone who is familiar with early American Calvinism/ Puritanism or otherwise familiar with this author.
Recently I remembered an old poem called The Day of Doom by a clergyman named Wigglesworth. Wikipedia calls it “a doggerel epitome of Calvinistic theology.” A full transcript of the poem is here:
https://www.bartleby.com/400/poem/171.html
I am aware of this poem via another author called Grace Nies Fletcher who was the daughter of a well-known Methodist minister in New England and wrote a book about her childhood called “Preacher’s Kids” that was a bestseller and that I happened to read as a young teen. In the book, young Grace happens to read this Wigglesworth poem which is in her dad’s library and becomes horrified by a really graphic verse about babies who die unbaptized through no fault of their own being sent to Hell (the “Plea of the Infants” section in the poem) and becomes so upset she throws Wigglesworth’s book in the trash and has to have a heart-to-heart with her dad. I’ll admit I had much the same reaction to reading that part of the poem.
“The Day of Doom” has been called “America’s First Bestseller” and a lot of people even learned it by heart. It reportedly scared a lot of people into going back to church (I can see why). The author, Wigglesworth, was reportedly not a gloomy person, but instead was a nice cheerful guy who helped the poor and was well-liked in the community.
I am a bit baffled as to how people thought this “Day of Doom” poem was so great, particularly the part about unbaptized babies being sent to Hell, although Christ allows them to occupy “the easiest room in Hell” so maybe it’s supposed to be more like the old Catholic concept of limbo of the infants. Are there any scholars of poetry, history or theology who can explain to me the colonial popular appeal of a poem like this?
Recently I remembered an old poem called The Day of Doom by a clergyman named Wigglesworth. Wikipedia calls it “a doggerel epitome of Calvinistic theology.” A full transcript of the poem is here:
https://www.bartleby.com/400/poem/171.html
I am aware of this poem via another author called Grace Nies Fletcher who was the daughter of a well-known Methodist minister in New England and wrote a book about her childhood called “Preacher’s Kids” that was a bestseller and that I happened to read as a young teen. In the book, young Grace happens to read this Wigglesworth poem which is in her dad’s library and becomes horrified by a really graphic verse about babies who die unbaptized through no fault of their own being sent to Hell (the “Plea of the Infants” section in the poem) and becomes so upset she throws Wigglesworth’s book in the trash and has to have a heart-to-heart with her dad. I’ll admit I had much the same reaction to reading that part of the poem.
“The Day of Doom” has been called “America’s First Bestseller” and a lot of people even learned it by heart. It reportedly scared a lot of people into going back to church (I can see why). The author, Wigglesworth, was reportedly not a gloomy person, but instead was a nice cheerful guy who helped the poor and was well-liked in the community.
I am a bit baffled as to how people thought this “Day of Doom” poem was so great, particularly the part about unbaptized babies being sent to Hell, although Christ allows them to occupy “the easiest room in Hell” so maybe it’s supposed to be more like the old Catholic concept of limbo of the infants. Are there any scholars of poetry, history or theology who can explain to me the colonial popular appeal of a poem like this?
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