Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, edited by James
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HITCHCOCK, David, poet, born in Bethlehem, Litchfield County, Connecticut, in 1773; died after 1832. His father was a shoemaker, and his education was limited. After his father's death, David worked at farming with one of the selectmen of his town, and was then apprenticed to a shoemaker. At twenty-six years of age he married, settled at West Stockbridge, Massachusetts, and reported himself as " poor and laborious, but enjoying peace and contentment." The last accounts of him are that he was living in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, in 1832. His principal poem, " The Shade of Plato" (Boston, 1806), is written with ease and smoothness, and closes with expostulations on the revolutionary principles in vogue at the beginning of the century. His other writings are " The Social Monitor" (Stockbridge, 1812), and "Christ not the Minister of Sin," a controversy (Hartford, 1832).
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