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the lead of all American literary journals up to that time.
The very beginning of Charles Norton's career would seem at first sight singularly in contrast with his later pursuits, and yet doubtless had formed, in some respects, an excellent preparation for them.
Graduating at Harvard in 1846, and taking a fair rank at graduation, he was soon after sent into a Boston counting-house to gain a knowledge of the East India trade.
In 1849 he went as supercargo on a merchant ship bound for India, in which country he traveled extensively, and returned home through Europe in 1851.
There are few more interesting studies in the development of literary individuality than are to be found in the successive works bearing Norton's name, as one looks through the list of them in the Harvard Library.
The youth who entered upon literature anonymously, at the age of twenty-five, as a compiler of hymns under the title of “Five Christmas hymns” in 1852, and followed this by “A book of hymns for young persons” in 1854, did not even flinch from printing the tragically Calvinistic verse which closes Addison's famous hymn, beginning “The Lord my pasture shall prepare,” with a conclusion so formidable as death's “gloomy horrors” and “dreadful shade.”
In 1855 he edited, with Dr.
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