Authors > Fiction > Harvard Classics > Edward Everett Hale
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To look up and not down, / To look forward and not back, / To look out and not in, and / To lend a hand.
Rule of the Harry Wadsworth Club
Edward Everett
Hale
Edward Everett Hale
 
1822–1909, American author and Unitarian clergyman, b. Boston, grad. Harvard, 1839. He was the nephew of Edward Everett. The pastor of a church in Worcester, Mass. (1842–56), and of one in Boston (1856–1903), Hale was widely influential as a reformer and a prolific writer of magazine articles. From 1903 until his death he was chaplain of the U.S. Senate. His famous short novel, The Man without a Country, was published anonymously in the Atlantic Monthly in 1863.—continue at Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Columbia University Press. (See also: Biographical Note from Harvard Classics.)
 
Pronunciation:   from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
 
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WORK
 
The Man without a Country
From the Harvard Classics Shelf of Fiction, Vol. X, Part 6.
 
 
WRITINGS ABOUT HALE
 
Hale” and “Edward Everett Hale; The Man Without a Country
Sections from the Cambridge History of American Literature.



 
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