The tombstones (which the fathers of that ancient town should shame to have recorded) have been battered and broken for relics, till much of the inscription is gone already, and the footstone entirely removed.
But I have noted that Elizabeth Whitman was of superior merit, and had been recognized as a child of genius in its most earnest sense. From her earliest childhood she had been remarkable for a deeply poetic temperament, and it appears she was recognized as a poet of no common order by the most distinguished writers of the day—Barlow, Trumbull, and others. Why her name and writings have not been handed down to us by those who have essayed to make careful compilations of the literature of the past century, I am unable to divine. She was a relative as well of the last-named poet, Trumbull, on the side of his mother, who was Sarah Whitman, a sister of Rev. Elnathan Whitman, the father of Elizabeth.
I find in the journals of that time the following poem, which, though not the best of her productions, certainly gives evidence of much poetic power:—
To Mr. Barlow.
By his Friend Elizabeth Whitman, on New Year’s Day, 1783.
Should every wish the heart of friendship
knows
Be to your ear conveyed in rustic prose,
Lost in the wonders of your Eastern clime,
Or rapt in vision to some unborn time,
Th’ unartful tale might no attention
gain;
For Friendship knows not, like the Muse,
to feign.
Forgive her, then, if in this weak essay
She tries to emulate thy daring lay,
And give to truth and warm affection’s
glow
The charms that from the tuneful sisters
flow.
On this blest morning’s most auspicious
rise,
Which finds thee circled with domestic
joys,
May thy glad heart its grateful tribute
pay
To Him who shaped thy course and smoothed
thy way—
That guardian Power, who, to thy merit
kind,
Bestowed the bliss most suited to thy
mind—
Retirement, friendship, leisure, learned
ease,
All that the philosophic mind can please;
All that the Muses love, th’ harmonious
nine,
Inspire thy lays, and aid the great design.
But more than all the world could else
bestow,
All pleasures that from fame or fortune
flow,
To fix secure in bliss thy future life,
Heaven crowned thy blessings with a lovely
wife—
Wise, gentle, good, with every grace combined
That charms the sense or captivates the
mind;
Skilled every soft emotion to improve,
The joy of friendship, and the wish of
love;
To soothe the heart which pale Misfortune’s
train
Invades with grief or agonizing pain;
To point through devious paths the narrow
road
That leads the soul to virtue or to God.


