September, 1818

Apart from a report of a mysterious sea-serpent, September’s entries are typical of Gallison’s later writing.  He had begun his journal in 1807 as a commonplace book.   Even after he began to add accounts of daily life, in Volume B, he continued to devote a substantial fraction of his entries to self-improvement.  Thoughts on religion came to displace readings in the classics, but served much the same purpose.

This month contains several reports of Sunday sermons– Channing’s, in particular.  If Gallison was a little too distracted to keep perfect notes on all of them, his candid disclosure of that makes its own contribution to his quest for personal growth.