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Amy Parkinson

Amy Parkinson (27 December 1855 – 13 February 1938) was a British-born Canadian poet, her work being chiefly devotional.[1] Parkinson's poems were distributed in leaflet form by her friends among the sick and the "shut-ins", having a wide ministry of comfort; it is this characteristic of her work that led to her being widely called "the Canadian Havergal".[2][3] Several poetry collections were published including, Love Through All (1893),[4] and In His Keeping.[5] Confined to her bed for more than 60 years, Parkinson died in 1938.[6]

Amy Parkinson
BornAmelia Jane Parkinson
27 December 1855
Liverpool, England
Died13 February 1938(1938-02-13) (aged 82)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
NicknameAmy
OccupationPoet
LanguageEnglish
NationalityCanadian
GenreDevotional/religious
Signature

Early life and education edit

Amelia (nickname, "Amy") Jane Parkinson was born in Liverpool, England, on 27 December 1855.[a][8] She was a daughter of Charles Pye Parkinson (1823–1910) and Lucy Anne Ireland (1830–1909). On her mother's side, she was English through a long direct line; on her father's, a few generations back, she claimed Highland Scots ancestry. She had a brother, William.[8] Amy lived in Newport, Wales, before emigrating to Toronto,[9] Ontario, Canada, with her parents in 1868,[8][2][5] where she lived the rest of her life.[1]

Parkinson's education, owing to her delicate health, was private and formally ceased after a nervous breakdown when she was 12 years of age.[2][6] Her health failed completely and though physicians held out hope of recovery for a while, finally, this was abandoned.[9] For most of her life thereafter, Parkinson remained in her bed, possibly due to epilepsy.[8]

Career edit

During the early years of her life, she gave little promise of poetic talent, and her parents never suspected that she had it. Apparently, her only training in verse-making was that of suffering. As she lay in her sick bed, there came to her an inspiration which resulted in the composition of a poem, entitled "A Song in the Night". This, her first effort, occurred about three months after she had taken to bed. It was followed by many other verses. She dictated her verses to her father as he knelt next to her bed. He was obliged to put his ear to her lips to catch her words, so weak was she while dictating to him.[9] Many of her verses —her "messages," as she called them— came to her when she was in a state of almost complete physical exhaustion.[2] Her mind was specially vigorous in composition as she passed into or recovered from the severe attacks which seized her, any one of which might have proved fatal.[5]

Her work was almost wholly of a deeply spiritual character, marked by beauty of thought and expression.[2]

Parkinson did not envision her poetry being shared beyond the circle of her own family, but a friend, having obtained possession of some of the manuscripts, showed them to the Rev. Dr. William Henry Withrow. His highly appreciative letter, requesting them for publication, convinced Parkinson that it was her duty to send them out. She thereafter became a regular contributor to the periodicals edited by Withrow, and to others, in the United States and Canada. Letters attesting their usefulness were received by Parkinson from others like herself, who had read them and derived great comfort from them. The idea then occurred to her that, sich as she was, God had a mission for her to discharge in endeavoring to give comfort to others. She determined to make a selection from her poems, and with appropriate passages of Scripture for each, she apportioned them among the days of one month. These formed a booklet which was restricted to private circulation. The reception of this work was so cordial that Parkinson reluctantly consented to its publication in the regular way. Unfortunately, nine-tenths of the edition was destroyed by The Globe fire of 1898, in the printing office of Brough & Caswell.[9]

Parkinson's works appeared in periodicals, such as the Methodist Magazine,[10][11][12][13][14][15] The Christian Workers Magazine,[16] The Western Christian Advocate,[17][18] and The Christian Advocate.[19][20]

No complete volume of her poems was published, but a number of small collections in booklet form were issued from time to time.[2] Parkinson's lyrics to "He Doeth All Things Well" were set to music by W. J. Hunter Emory, M.D. and published in Best (1902).[21] Earlier, Love through all, 1893; "In his keeping", 1897; and At Yuletide, 1901, were published.

Later life edit

After the death of her mother (1909) and father (1910), Parkinson left the family home and resided in a "Home for Incurables" and in a "Church Home" before she died in Toronto, on 13 February 1938.[8][6][2][5]

"A Song in the Night" edit

"Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for him."-Ps. xxxvii. 7.[14]

Rest thou in Him—no need for fear—
 Thou knowost not His plan for thee,
But well thou know'st that He is near,
 Then rest in Him, rest quietly.
Not much seems left of earthly joy—
 But oh, thy Father knoweth best!
Let this blesť word thy thought employ—
          And rest.
   
Wait thou for Him-take what He sends,
 Sure that His every thought for thee
In naught but love begins and ends ;
 Then wait for Him, ""wait patiently."
For tbee may rise-thou canst not tell—
 New joys, e'en this side heaven's gate;
If not—He always chooseth well,—
          Just wait.

Selected works edit

Poetry books edit

  • Love through all : a voice from a sick room : thoughts for each day, 1893
  • "In his keeping" : words of sustaining from the source of all strength ; with kindred thoughts in verse, 1897
  • At Yuletide, 1901
  • Best : the story of the messenger hours with some of the thoughts they have brought to Amy Parkinson., 1902

Poems edit

  • "A Song in the Night"
  • "Westward", 1893
  • "Comfort", 1895
  • "Compensation", 1895
  • "Worship", 1895
  • "The Twenty-Third Psalm", 1900
  • "Enoch", 1901
  • "God Shall Supply All Your Needs"
  • "His Great Love""Enoch", 1901
  • "A Hymn for Christmas-Day", 1902
  • "Heights and Depths", 1902
  • "In the Valley", 1903
  • "Acquiescence", 1904
  • "Anticipation", 1904
  • "At Summer's Close", 1904
  • "First Christmas Night", 1904
  • "In Silence", 1904
  • "He Will Not Suffer Thy Foot to Be Moved", 1911
  • "Thanksgiving", 1918

Hymns edit

  • "He Doeth All Things Well", 1902 (music by W. J. Hunter Emory)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Wallace (1926) records Parkinson's year of birth as, "about 1859".[7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b O'Hagan, Thomas (1901). Canadian Essays: Critical and Historical. Toronto: William Briggs. p. 96. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Caswell, Edward Samuel (1925). Canadian Singers and Their Songs: A Collection of Portraits, Autograph Poems and Brief Biographies. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. pp. 255–56. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
  3. ^ Leonard, John W. (1914). Woman's Who's who of America. Vol. 1. American Commonwealth Company. p. 622. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  4. ^ National Council of Women of Canada (1900). Women of Canada; Their Life and Work. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d Rand, Theodore Harding (1900). A Treasury of Canadian Verse: With Brief Biographical Notes. Dutton. p. 399. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  6. ^ a b c "BED-RIDDEN 65 YEARS CANADIAN POETESS DEAD". The Ottawa Journal. 14 February 1938. p. 11. Retrieved 16 February 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^ Wallace, William Stewart (1926). The Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Macmillan Company of Canada limited. p. 514. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Amy Parkinson". cwrc.ca. Canada's Early Women Writers. 18 May 2018. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d "TRUTH THROUGH SUFFERING". The Western Christian Advocate. 66–67. C. Holliday and J.F. Wright: 1353. 1900. Retrieved 16 February 2022 – via Toronto Globe.
  10. ^ "CONTENTS". Methodist Magazine. 34. Toronto: W. Briggs.: iv 1891. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  11. ^ "WESTWARD". Methodist Magazine. 37. W. Briggs.: 299 1893. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  12. ^ Withrow, William Henry (1895). "CONTENTS". Methodist Magazine and Review: Devoted to Religion, Literature and Social Progress ... 41. W. Briggs: iv. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  13. ^ "The Twenty-Third Psalm". Methodist Magazine and Review. 52. W. Briggs.: 240 1900. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  14. ^ a b "CONTENTS". Methodist Magazine and Review. 54. W. Briggs.: iv 1901. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  15. ^ "CONTENTS". Methodist Magazine and Review. 60. W. Briggs.: iv 1904. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  16. ^ ""Thanksgiving"". The Christian Workers Magazine. 19. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago: 925. 1918. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  17. ^ "OUR CONTRIBUTORS". The Western Christian Advocate. 68. C. Holliday and J.F. Wright: 9, 13. 1902. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  18. ^ "IN SILENCE". The Western Christian Advocate. Cincinnati, Ohio: C. Holliday and J.F. Wright: 12. 1904. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  19. ^ "In the Valley". The Christian Advocate. 78. New York: T. Carlton & J. Porter: 18. 1903. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  20. ^ "CONTRIBUTORS". The Christian Advocate. 86. T. Carlton & J. Porter: 9. 1911. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  21. ^ Parkinson, Amy (1902). Best : the story of the messenger hours with some of the thoughts they have brought to Amy Parkinson. Toronto : W. Briggs. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-665-72949-2. Retrieved 16 February 2022.

External links edit

parkinson, december, 1855, february, 1938, british, born, canadian, poet, work, being, chiefly, devotional, parkinson, poems, were, distributed, leaflet, form, friends, among, sick, shut, having, wide, ministry, comfort, this, characteristic, work, that, being. Amy Parkinson 27 December 1855 13 February 1938 was a British born Canadian poet her work being chiefly devotional 1 Parkinson s poems were distributed in leaflet form by her friends among the sick and the shut ins having a wide ministry of comfort it is this characteristic of her work that led to her being widely called the Canadian Havergal 2 3 Several poetry collections were published including Love Through All 1893 4 and In His Keeping 5 Confined to her bed for more than 60 years Parkinson died in 1938 6 Amy ParkinsonBornAmelia Jane Parkinson27 December 1855Liverpool EnglandDied13 February 1938 1938 02 13 aged 82 Toronto Ontario CanadaNicknameAmyOccupationPoetLanguageEnglishNationalityCanadianGenreDevotional religiousSignature Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Later life 4 A Song in the Night 5 Selected works 5 1 Poetry books 5 2 Poems 5 3 Hymns 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education editAmelia nickname Amy Jane Parkinson was born in Liverpool England on 27 December 1855 a 8 She was a daughter of Charles Pye Parkinson 1823 1910 and Lucy Anne Ireland 1830 1909 On her mother s side she was English through a long direct line on her father s a few generations back she claimed Highland Scots ancestry She had a brother William 8 Amy lived in Newport Wales before emigrating to Toronto 9 Ontario Canada with her parents in 1868 8 2 5 where she lived the rest of her life 1 Parkinson s education owing to her delicate health was private and formally ceased after a nervous breakdown when she was 12 years of age 2 6 Her health failed completely and though physicians held out hope of recovery for a while finally this was abandoned 9 For most of her life thereafter Parkinson remained in her bed possibly due to epilepsy 8 Career editDuring the early years of her life she gave little promise of poetic talent and her parents never suspected that she had it Apparently her only training in verse making was that of suffering As she lay in her sick bed there came to her an inspiration which resulted in the composition of a poem entitled A Song in the Night This her first effort occurred about three months after she had taken to bed It was followed by many other verses She dictated her verses to her father as he knelt next to her bed He was obliged to put his ear to her lips to catch her words so weak was she while dictating to him 9 Many of her verses her messages as she called them came to her when she was in a state of almost complete physical exhaustion 2 Her mind was specially vigorous in composition as she passed into or recovered from the severe attacks which seized her any one of which might have proved fatal 5 Her work was almost wholly of a deeply spiritual character marked by beauty of thought and expression 2 Parkinson did not envision her poetry being shared beyond the circle of her own family but a friend having obtained possession of some of the manuscripts showed them to the Rev Dr William Henry Withrow His highly appreciative letter requesting them for publication convinced Parkinson that it was her duty to send them out She thereafter became a regular contributor to the periodicals edited by Withrow and to others in the United States and Canada Letters attesting their usefulness were received by Parkinson from others like herself who had read them and derived great comfort from them The idea then occurred to her that sich as she was God had a mission for her to discharge in endeavoring to give comfort to others She determined to make a selection from her poems and with appropriate passages of Scripture for each she apportioned them among the days of one month These formed a booklet which was restricted to private circulation The reception of this work was so cordial that Parkinson reluctantly consented to its publication in the regular way Unfortunately nine tenths of the edition was destroyed by The Globe fire of 1898 in the printing office of Brough amp Caswell 9 Parkinson s works appeared in periodicals such as the Methodist Magazine 10 11 12 13 14 15 The Christian Workers Magazine 16 The Western Christian Advocate 17 18 and The Christian Advocate 19 20 No complete volume of her poems was published but a number of small collections in booklet form were issued from time to time 2 Parkinson s lyrics to He Doeth All Things Well were set to music by W J Hunter Emory M D and published in Best 1902 21 Earlier Love through all 1893 In his keeping 1897 and At Yuletide 1901 were published Later life editAfter the death of her mother 1909 and father 1910 Parkinson left the family home and resided in a Home for Incurables and in a Church Home before she died in Toronto on 13 February 1938 8 6 2 5 A Song in the Night edit Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for him Ps xxxvii 7 14 Rest thou in Him no need for fear Thou knowost not His plan for thee But well thou know st that He is near Then rest in Him rest quietly Not much seems left of earthly joy But oh thy Father knoweth best Let this blest word thy thought employ And rest Wait thou for Him take what He sends Sure that His every thought for thee In naught but love begins and ends Then wait for Him wait patiently For tbee may rise thou canst not tell New joys e en this side heaven s gate If not He always chooseth well Just wait Selected works editPoetry books edit Love through all a voice from a sick room thoughts for each day 1893 In his keeping words of sustaining from the source of all strength with kindred thoughts in verse 1897 At Yuletide 1901 Best the story of the messenger hours with some of the thoughts they have brought to Amy Parkinson 1902 Poems edit A Song in the Night Westward 1893 Comfort 1895 Compensation 1895 Worship 1895 The Twenty Third Psalm 1900 Enoch 1901 God Shall Supply All Your Needs His Great Love Enoch 1901 A Hymn for Christmas Day 1902 Heights and Depths 1902 In the Valley 1903 Acquiescence 1904 Anticipation 1904 At Summer s Close 1904 First Christmas Night 1904 In Silence 1904 He Will Not Suffer Thy Foot to Be Moved 1911 Thanksgiving 1918 Hymns edit He Doeth All Things Well 1902 music by W J Hunter Emory Notes edit Wallace 1926 records Parkinson s year of birth as about 1859 7 References edit a b O Hagan Thomas 1901 Canadian Essays Critical and Historical Toronto William Briggs p 96 Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b c d e f g Caswell Edward Samuel 1925 Canadian Singers and Their Songs A Collection of Portraits Autograph Poems and Brief Biographies Toronto McClelland amp Stewart pp 255 56 Retrieved 13 February 2022 Leonard John W 1914 Woman s Who s who of America Vol 1 American Commonwealth Company p 622 Retrieved 16 February 2022 National Council of Women of Canada 1900 Women of Canada Their Life and Work Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b c d Rand Theodore Harding 1900 A Treasury of Canadian Verse With Brief Biographical Notes Dutton p 399 Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b c BED RIDDEN 65 YEARS CANADIAN POETESS DEAD The Ottawa Journal 14 February 1938 p 11 Retrieved 16 February 2022 via Newspapers com Wallace William Stewart 1926 The Dictionary of Canadian Biography Macmillan Company of Canada limited p 514 Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b c d e Amy Parkinson cwrc ca Canada s Early Women Writers 18 May 2018 Retrieved 15 February 2022 a b c d TRUTH THROUGH SUFFERING The Western Christian Advocate 66 67 C Holliday and J F Wright 1353 1900 Retrieved 16 February 2022 via Toronto Globe CONTENTS Methodist Magazine 34 Toronto W Briggs iv 1891 Retrieved 16 February 2022 WESTWARD Methodist Magazine 37 W Briggs 299 1893 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Withrow William Henry 1895 CONTENTS Methodist Magazine and Review Devoted to Religion Literature and Social Progress 41 W Briggs iv Retrieved 16 February 2022 The Twenty Third Psalm Methodist Magazine and Review 52 W Briggs 240 1900 Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b CONTENTS Methodist Magazine and Review 54 W Briggs iv 1901 Retrieved 16 February 2022 CONTENTS Methodist Magazine and Review 60 W Briggs iv 1904 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Thanksgiving The Christian Workers Magazine 19 Moody Bible Institute of Chicago 925 1918 Retrieved 16 February 2022 OUR CONTRIBUTORS The Western Christian Advocate 68 C Holliday and J F Wright 9 13 1902 Retrieved 16 February 2022 IN SILENCE The Western Christian Advocate Cincinnati Ohio C Holliday and J F Wright 12 1904 Retrieved 16 February 2022 In the Valley The Christian Advocate 78 New York T Carlton amp J Porter 18 1903 Retrieved 16 February 2022 CONTRIBUTORS The Christian Advocate 86 T Carlton amp J Porter 9 1911 Retrieved 16 February 2022 Parkinson Amy 1902 Best the story of the messenger hours with some of the thoughts they have brought to Amy Parkinson Toronto W Briggs p 50 ISBN 978 0 665 72949 2 Retrieved 16 February 2022 External links editWorks by or about Amy Parkinson at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amy Parkinson amp oldid 1207397599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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