Reading some more about Emily Dickinson before giving today’s sermon on some of her poetry and its power, I came upon the description of her “earliest friend,” Benjamin Franklin Newton. He died young, but before he did, he had a great influence on her that she referred to throughout her life. Among other things, he introduced her to Emerson, whose poetry, she wrote in wonder, “has touched the secret Spring.” Hm, I thought. Wonder if he was a Unitarian. Sure enough, his minister was Edward Everett Hale.
Recent Posts
Recent comments
- Maddy on Clearing things out
- Maddy on Kaddish
- Amy Zucker Morgenstern on Remembering Dad
- Karen Skold on Remembering Dad
- David Zucker on Mendocino
Most-read Posts
Links I like
Art
Blogroll
My other blogs
Other
Religion blogs (non-UUs)
Religion blogs (UUs)
- A Full Day
- Búsqueda Unitaria
- Boston Unitarian
- Carrots and Ginger
- City of Refuge
- Everyday Unitarian
- I Am UU
- iMinister
- La Biblia de hojas cambliables
- Lake Chalice
- Liberal Religion Gets Loud
- Ministrare
- Missional Progressives
- Nagoonberry
- Philocrites
- Raising Faith
- The Colliery
- The Interdependent Web
- The Naked Theologian
- The UU Salon
- Theists & Atheists: Communication & Common Ground
- Throw Yourself Like Seed
- Yet Another Unitarian Universalist


1 comment
Comments feed for this article
April 15, 2013 at 6:19 pm
Karen
Amy, I thought the service on Emily Dickenson was just beautiful.
LikeLike