The Prophecy Fulfilled
True to the order of the prophecy, following the great
earthquake of 1755 in Europe, there came, in America, the
second sign of the approaching end, the wonderful darkening
of the sun, known in history as "The Dark Day."
This sign appeared at the time indicated in the prophecy,
"immediately after the tribulation of those days;" or as Mark
has it, "in those days, after that tribulation." On May 19,
1780, the sun was darkened, and the following night the moon
did not give her light. Whatever explanation men may have
to offer as to the cause of the phenomenon, the fact remains
that when the time of the prophecy came, the sign appeared.
The first volume of the "Memoirs of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences," published in Boston in 1785,
contains a paper entitled, "An Account of a Very Uncommon
Darkness in the States of New England, May 19, 1780. By
Samuel Williams, A.M., Hollis Professor of Mathematics
and Philosophy in the University at Cambridge [Massachusetts]."
Of the extent, duration, and degree of darkness on that
occasion, this scientific observer said:
Whittier has commemorated it in the poem, "Abraham
Davenport:"
The words of the poet are substantiated by the plain prose
of the dictionary maker. In the department explanatory of
"Noted Names," Webster's Unabridged Dictionary (edition
1883) says: