Letters From an American Farmer by J. Hector St. John de Crevoecoeur

Hazlitt wrote that of the three notable writers whom the eighteenth century had produced, in the North American colonies, one was “the author (whoever he was) of the American Farmer’s Letters.” Crevecoeur was that unknown author; and Hazlitt said further of him that he rendered, in his own vividly characteristic manner, “not only the objects, but the feelings, of a new country.” Great is the essayist’s relish for passages descriptive of “a battle between two snakes,” of “the dazzling, almost invisible flutter of the humming- bird’s wing,” of the manners of “the Nantucket people, their frank simplicity, and festive rejoicings after the perils and hardships of the whale-fishing.” “The power to sympathise with nature, without thinking of ourselves or others, if it is not a definition of genius, comes very near to it,” writes Hazlitt of our author. And his references to Crevecoeur are closed with the remark: “We have said enough of this ILLUSTRIOUS OBSCURE; for it is the rule of criticism to praise none but the over-praised, and to offer fresh incense to the idol of the day.”

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