1902 Encyclopedia > Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
American poet
(1807-82)




HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW, (1807-1882), the best known of American poets, was born on the 27th February 1807, at Portland, the metropolis of the State of Maine, to which his ancestor, William Longfellow, immigrated, in 1678, from English Hampshire. His father was Stephen Longfellow, a lawyer and United States congressman, and his mother, Zilpha Wadsworth, a descendant of John Alden and of " Priscilla, the Puritan maiden."

Longfellow's external life presents little that is of stirring interest. It is the life of a modest, deep-hearted gentleman, whose highest ambition was to be a perfect man, and, through sympathy and love, to help others to be the same. His boyhood was spent mostly in his native town, which he never ceased to love, and whose beautiful surroundings and quiet, pure life he has described in his poem " My Lost Youth." Here he grew up in the midst of majestic peace, which was but once broken, and that by an event which made a deep impression on him—the war of 1812. He never forgot "the sea-fight far away, How it thundered o'er the tide, And the dead captains as they lay In their graves o'erlooking the tranquil bay, Where they in battle died."

The "tranquil bay" is Casco Bay, one of the most beautiful in the world, studded with bold, green islands, well fitted to be the Hesperides of a poet's boyish dreams. At the early age of fourteen Longfellow entered Bowdoin College at Brunswick; a town situated near the romantic falls of the Androscoggin river, about 25 miles from Portland, and in a region full of Indian scenery and legend. Here he had among his classfellows Nathaniel Hawthorne, George B. Cheever, and J. S. C. Abbott. During the latter years of his college life he contributed to the United States Literary Gazette some half-dozen poems, which are interesting for two reasons—(1) as showing the poet's early, book-mediated sympathy with nature and legendary heroisms, and (2) as being almost entirely free from that supernatural view of nature which his subsequent residence in Europe imparted to him. He graduated in 1825, at the age of eighteen, with honours, among others that of writing the " class poem,"—taking the fourth place in a class of thirty-eight. He then entered his father's law office, without intending, however, it would appear, to devote himself to the study of the law. For this profession he was, both by capacity and tastes, utterly unfitted, and it was fortunate that, shortly after his graduation, he received an offer of a professorship of modern languages in his alma mater. In order the better to qualify himself for this appointment, he came to Europe and spent three years and a half travelling in France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Holland, and England, learning languages, for which he had unusual talent, and drinking in the spirit of the history and life of these countries. For an American, while still in a plastic state, to spend much time in Europe is a doubtful and, not unfrequently, a disastrous experiment, unfitting him for a useful, contented life in his own country. The effect of Longfellow's visit was twofold. On the one hand, it widened his sympathies, gave him confidence in himself, and supplied him with many poetical themes; on the other, it traditionalized his mind, coloured for him the pure light of nature, and rendered him in some measure unfit to feel or express the spirit of American nature and life. His sojourn in Europe fell exactly in the time when, in England, the reaction against the sentimental atheism of Shelley, the pagan sensitivity of Keats, and the sublime, Satanic outcastness of Byron was at its height; when, in the Catholic countries, the negative exaggerations of the French Revolution were inducing a counter current of. positive faith, which threw men into the arms of a half-sentimental half-resthetic mediajvalism; and when, in Germany, the aristocratic paganism of Goethe was being swept aside by that tide of dutiful, romantic patriotism which flooded the country, as soon as it began to feel that it still existed after being run over by Napoleon's war-chariot. When, in 1829, he returned to assume his duties at Bowdoin College, he saw the world and man no longer in the clear effulgence of nature, but in the subdued and tinted light that comes through painted cathedral windows, or in the reflected rays that fall from somnambulous moons. He remained six years at Bowdoin College. In his twenty-fourth year (1831) he married Miss Mary S. Potter, one of his " early loves," and in 1833 published, first, a small volume of translations from the Spanish, with an introductory essay on the moral and devotional poetry of Spain, and then part of Outre-Mer, a youthfully ebullient work, for which a fitting title would have been "Poetry and Truth from my Travels." The latter contained some translations from the French, and was completed in 1835.

In 1835 Longfellow was chosen to succeed George Ticknor as professor of modern languages and belles-lettres in Harvard College, Cambridge, Mass., the oldest and most illustrious institution of higher learning in the country. On receiving this appointment, he paid a second visit of some fifteen months to Europe, this time devoting special attention to the Scandinavian countries and Switzerland. During this visit he lost his wife, who died at Rotterdam, November 29, 1835. The poet speaks of her in " Footsteps of Angels " as 'the Being Beauteous Who unto my youth was given, More than all things else to love me, And is now a saint in heaven."

On his return to America in 1836, Longfellow took up his residence in Cambridge, and began to lecture and write. In his new home he found himself amid surroundings entirely congenial to him. Indeed, there are few places in the world which a man of learning, refinement, sociability, and liberal views would rather choose for a residence than Cambridge. Its spaciousness and free rural aspect, its old graveyards and towering elms, its great university, its cultivated society, for admission to which unabsorbed wealth is a positive disqualification, and its vicinity to humane, substantial, busy Boston, are all attractions for such a man. In 1837-38 several essays of Longfellow's appeared in the North American Review, and in 1839 he published Hyperion, and his first volume of original poetry, entitled Voices of the Night. The former, a poetical account of his travels, had, at the time of its publication, an immense popularity, due mainly to its sentimental romanticism. At present few persons beyond their teens would care to read it through, so unnatural and stilted is its language, so thin its material, and so consciously mediated its sentiment. Nevertheless it has a certain historical importance, for two reasons—(1) because it marks that period in Longfellow's career when, though he had left nature, he had not yet found art, and (2) because it opened the sluices through which the flood of German sentimental poetry flowed into the United States —a flood whose waters, after forty years, are not yet assuaged. The Voices of the Night contains some of his best minor poems, e.g., "The Psalm of Life" and " Footsteps of Angels." In 1841 Longfellow published a small volume of Ballads and other Poems, containing some of his most popular pieces, e.g., "The Skeleton in Armour," "The Wreck of the Hesperus," "The Village Blacksmith," "To a Child," "The Bridge," "Excelsior." In 1842 he paid a third brief visit to Europe, spending the summer on the Rhine. During his return-passage across the Atlantic he wrote his Poems on Slavery, which he published the same year, with a dedication to Channing. These poems went far to wake in the youth of New England a sense of the great national wrong, and to prepare them for that bitter struggle in which it was wiped out at the expense of the lives of so many of them. In 1843 he married again, choosing this time Miss Frances E. Appleton of Boston, a daughter of Hon. Nathan Appleton, one of the founders of Lowell, and a sister of Thomas G. Appleton, himself no mean poet.

About the same time he bought, and fixed his residence in, the house in which he had formerly only been a lodger, an old " revolutionary house," built about the beginning of last century, and occupied by General Washington at the time when he took command of the United States army in 1776. This quaint old wooden house, which stands in the midst of a large garden full of splendid elms, continued to be his chief residence till the day of his death. Of the lectures on Dante which he delivered about this time, James Russell Lowell says :— "These lectures, illustrated by admirable translations, are remembered with grateful pleasure by many who were thus led to learn the full significance of the great Christian poet." Indeed, as a professor, Longfellow was eminently successful. Shortly after the Poems on Slavery, there appeared in 1843 a more ambitious work, The Spanish Student, a kind of sentimental " Morality," without any special merit but good intention. If published nowadays it would hardly attract notice; but in those gushing, emotion-craving times it had considerable popularity, and helped to increase the poet's now rapidly widening fame. A huge collection of translations of foreign poetry edited by him, and entitled The Poets of Europe, appeared in 1845, and, about the same time, a few minor poems—songs and sonnets—under the title The Belfry of Bruges. In 1847 he gave to the world the greatest of all his works, and the one which will carry his name down to posterity— Evangeline, a Tale of Acadie. It was, in some degree, an imitation of Goethe's Hermann and Dorothea, and its plot, which was derived from Hawthorne's American Note-Books, is even simpler than that of the German poem, not to say much more touching. At the violent removal by the British Government of a colony of French settlers from Acadie (Nova Scotia) in 1755, a young couple, on the very day of their wedding, got separated and carried in different directions, so that they lost all trace of each other. The poem describes the wanderings of the bride in search of her lover, and her final discovery of him as an old man on his death-bed, in a public hospital which she had entered as a nurse. Slight as the story is, it is worked out into one of the most affecting poems in the language, and gives to literature one of its most perfect types of womanhood and of "affection that hopes and endures and is patient." Though written in a metre deemed foreign to English ears, the poem immediately attained a wide popularity, which it has never lost, and secured to the dactylic hexameter a recognized place among English metres.





In 1849 Longfellow published a novel of no great merit, Kavanagh, and also a volume of poems entitled The Seaside and the Fireside, a title which has reference to his two homes, the seaside one on the charming peninsula of Nahant, the fireside one in Cambridge. One of the poems in this collection, "Resignation," has taken a permanent place in literature; another, " Hymn for my Brother's Ordination," shows plainly the nature of the poet's Christianity. His brother, the Rev. Samuel Longfellow, is a minister of the Unitarian Church.

Longfellow's genius, in its choice of subjects, always oscillated between America and Europe, between the colonial period of American history and the Middle and Romantic Ages of European feeling. When tired of the broad daylight of American activity, he sought refuge and rest in the dim twilight of mediaeval legend and German sentiment. In 1851 appeared The Golden Legend, a long lyric drama based upon Hartmann von Aue's beautiful story of self-sacrifice, Der arme Heinrich. Next to Evangeline, this is at once the best and the most popular of the poet's longer works, and contains many passages of great beauty. Bringing his imagination back to America, he next applied himself to the elaboration of an Indian legend. In 1854 he resigned his professorship. In the following year he gave to the world the Indian Edda, The. Song of Hiawatha, a conscious imitation, both in subject and metre, of the Finnish epic, the Kalevala, with which he had become acquainted during his second visit to Europe. The metre is monotonous and easily ridiculed, but it suits the subject, and the poem is very popular. In 1858 appeared The Courtship of Miles Standish, based on a charming incident in the early history of the Plymouth colony, and, along with it, a number of minor poems, included under the modest title, Birds of Passage. One of these is " My Lost Youth."

Two events now occurred which served to cast a gloom over the poet's life and to interrupt his activity,—the outbreak of the civil war, and the tragic fate of his wife, who, having accidentally allowed her dress to catch fire, was burnt to death in her own house in 1861. It was long before he recovered from the shock caused by this terrible event, and in his subsequent published poems he never ventured even to allude to it. When he did in some measure find himself again, he gave to the world his charming Tales of a Wayside Inn (1863), and then a " second flight" of his Birds of Passage. Among the latter is a poem entitled " The Children's Hour," which affords a glance into the home life of the widowed poet, who had been left with five children—two sons, Ernest and Charles, and three daughters, "Grave Alice, and laughing Allegra, And Edith with golden hair."

The Birds of Passage was succeeded by a small volume entitled Flower de Luce (1866), which contains, among other fine things, the beautiful " threnos" on the burial of Hawthorne, and " The Bells of Lynn." Once more the poet sought refuge in mediaeval life by completing his translation of the Divina Commedia, parts of which he had rendered into English as much as thirty years before. This work appeared in 1867, and gave a great impulse to the study of Dante in America. It is a masterpiece of literal translation. Next came the New England Tragedies (1868), and The Divine Tragedy (1871), which found no large public. In 1868-69 the poet visited Europe, and was everywhere received with the greatest honour. In 1872 appeared Three Boohs of Song, containing translated as well as original pieces, in 1873 Aftermath, in 1874 The Hanging of the Crane, and in 1875 The Mask of Pandora, and other Poems. Among these "other poems" were "The Hanging of the Crane," " Morituri Salutamus," and " A Book of Sonnets." The Mask of Pandora is a proof of that growing appreciation of pagan naturalism which marked the poet's later years. Though not a great poem, it is full of beautiful passages, many of which point to the riddle of life as yet unsolved, a conviction which grew ever more and more upon the poet, as the ebulliency of romanticism gave way to the calm of classic feeling. In the " Book of Sonnets" are some of the finest things he ever wrote, especially the five sonnets entitled " Three Friends of Mine." These "three friends" were Cornelius Felton, Louis Agassiz, and Charles Sumner, whom he calls 'The noble three, Who half my life were more than friends to me." The loss of Agassiz was a blow from which he never entirely recovered; and, when Sumner also left him, he wrote—

"Thou hast but taken thy lamp and gone to bed;
I stay a little longer, as one stays
To cover up the embers that still burn."

He did stay a little longer; but the embers that still burnt in him refused to be covered up. He would fain have ceased writing, and used to say, " It's a great thing to know when to stop" ; but he could not stop, and did not stop, till the last. He continued to publish from time to time, in the magazines, poems which showed a clearness of vision and a perfection of workmanship such as he 'never had equalled at any period of his life. Indeed it may be said that his finest poems were his last. Of these a small collection appeared under the title of Keramos, and other Poems (1878). Besides these, in the years 1875-78 he edited a collection of Poems of Places in thirty-one small volumes. In 1880 appeared Ultima Thule, meant to be his last work, and it was nearly so. In October 1881 he wrote a touching sonnet on the death of President Garfield, and in January 1882, when the hand of death was already upon him, his poem, Hermes Trismegistus, in which he gives utterance, in language as rich as that of the early gods, to that strange feeling of awe without fear, and hope without form, with which every man of spotless life and upright intellect withdraws from the phenomena of time to the realities of eternity.

In the last years of his life he suffered a great deal from rheumatism, and was, as he sometimes cheerfully said, "never free from pain." Still he remained as sunny and genial as ever, looking from his Cambridge study windows across the Brighton meadows to the Brookline hills, or enjoying the " free wild winds of the Atlantic," and listening to " The Bells of Lynn " in his Nahant home. He still continued to receive all visitors, and to take occasional runs up to Castine and Portland, the homes of his family. About the beginning of 1882, however, a serious change took place in his condition, and he was obliged to withdraw from the public gaze. Dizziness and want of strength confined him to his room for some time, and, although after some weeks he partially recovered, his elasticity and powers were gone. He now acknowledged the receipt of letters with a printed form. At last the end came. On the 19th March he was seized with what proved to be peritonitis, with violent paroxysms of vomiting and pain, which continued until the 22nd. The 23rd was passed in a torpid condition, which, though it vanished on the morning of the 24th, returned in the course of the day, and passed, by insensible degrees, into the profound sleep of death.





The poet was buried on the 26th, near his " three friends," in Mount Auburn cemetery. The regret for his loss was universal; for no modern man was ever better loved or better deserved to be loved.

Longfellow was made an LL.D. of Bowdoin College in 1828, at the age of twenty-one, of Harvard in 1859, and of Cambridge (England) in 1868, and D.C.L. of Oxford in 1869. In 1873 he was elected a member of the Russian Academy of Science, and in 1877 of the Spanish Academy.

In person, Longfellow was rather below middle height, broad-shouldered, and well built. His head and face were extremely handsome, his forehead broad and high, his eyes full of clear, warming fire, his nose straight and graceful, his chin and lips rich and full of feeling as those of the Praxitelean Hermes, and his voice low, melodious, and full of tender cadences. His hair, originally dark, became, in his later years, silvery white, and its wavy locks combined with those of his flowing beard to give him that leonine appearance so familiar through his later portraits. Charles Kingsley said of Longfellow's face that it was the most beautiful human face he had ever seen. And many agreed with him.

In trying to form an estimate of Longfellow, we are not obliged, as in the case of so many other poets, to distinguish the poet from the man, or to degrade the nature of the former by making it an excuse for the foibles of the latter. In Longfellow, the poet was the flower and fruit of the man. His nature was essentially poetic, and his life incomparably the greatest of his poems. Those who knew only the poems he wrote could form but a faint notion of the harmony, the sweetness, the manliness, and the tenderness of that which lie lived.

Of the two orders of poets distinguished by Aristotle—that of the inspired or plastic, and that of the versatile or observant—Longfellow belonged distinctly to the latter. Nature did not come to him as! to a l'ythia seated on a tripod, and fill him with passion expressible only in rhythmic prophecy ; she did not even call him as a privata secretary, and dictate to him her secret messages of love and tenderness, justice and watchfulness, freedom and immortality. He went to nature, sometimes as the Angel of the Annunciation, revealing to her that she was pregnant with divinity, sometimes aa a priest pronouncing a benediction over her. What he would have been as a poet, if, instead of visiting Europe in early life and drinking in the spirit of the Middle Age under the shadows of cathedral towers, that point upwards to a world above nature, and backwards to a time when that world darkened the face of nature, he had, like Whittier, grown old amid the uncathedralled paganisms of American scenery and life, we can only guess from his earlier poems, which are as naturalistic, fresh, and unmystical as could be desired ; but certain it is that, from his long familiarity with the media'val view of nature, and its semi-pagan offspring, the romantic view, he was brought, for the greater part of his life, to look upon the world of men and things either as the middle scene of a miracle play, with a heaven of rewarding happiness above and a purgatory of purifying pain below, or else as a garment concealing, while it revealed, spiritual forms of unfathomed mystery. During this time he could hear " the trailing garments of the night sweep through her marble halls," and see "the stars come out to listen to the music of the seas." Later on, as he approached his second youth (he was spared a second childhood), he tended to a more pagan viewr. About the time when he was writing The Mask of Pandora, he could see " in the sunset Jason's fleece of gold," and hear "the waves of the distracted sea piteously calling and lamenting " his lost friend. But through all the periods of his life his view of the world was essentially religious and subjective, and, consequently, his manner of dealing with it hymnal or lyric. This fact, even more than his merits as an artist, serves to account for his immense popularity. Too well-informed, too appreciative, and too modest to deem himself the peer of the "grand old masters," or one of "those far stars that come in sight once in a century," he made it his aim to write something that should "make a purer faith and manhood shine in the untutored heart," and to do this in the way that should best reach that heart. This aim determined at once his choice of subjects and his mode of treating them.

\The subjects of Longfellow's poetry are, for the most part, aspects of nature as influencing human feeling, either directly or through historical association, the tender or pathetic sides and incidents of life, or heroic deeds preserved in legend or history. He had a special fondness for records of human devotion and self-sacrifice, whether they were monkish legends, Indian tales, Norse drápas, or bits of American history. His mode of treatment is subjective and lyric. No matter what form his works assume, whether the epic, as in "Evangeline," "The Courtship of Miles Standish," and "Hiawatha," the dramatic, as in "The Spanish Student," "The Golden Legend," and "The Mask of Faiidora," or the didactic, as in "The Psalm of Life" and many of the minor poems; they are all subjective. This is not the highest praise that can be given to works of art; but it implies less dispraise in Longfellow's case than in almost any other, by reason of his noble subjectivity.

If we look in Longfellow's poetry for originality of thought, profound psychological analysis, or now insights into' nature, we shall be disappointed. Though very far from being hampered by any dogmatic philosophical or religious system of the past, his mind, until near the end, found sufficient satisfaction in the Christian view of life to make it indifferent to the restless, inquiring spirit of the present, and disinclined to play with any more recent solution of life's problems. He had no sympathy with either scepticism or formal dogmatism, and no need to hazard rash guesses respecting man's destiny. He was willing to say—

"I do not know; nor will I vainly question
Those pages of the mystic book which hold
The story still untold,
But without rash conjecture or suggestion
Turn its last leaves in reverence and good heed,
Until 'The End' I read."

He disliked the present psychological school of art, believing it to be essentially morbid and unhealthy, He had no sympathy with the teridency fe'presenfed by George Eliot, or with any attempt to be analytic in art. He held art to be essentially synthetic, creative, and manifesting, not analytic,- destructive,- or questioning. Hence he never strove to draw from nature some new secret, or to show in her relations never discovered before. His aim was to impress upon her familiar facts and aspects the seal of his own gracious nature. And in this no one ever succeeded better. "The light of the life of him is on all past things." For this reason, while his poems' never reveal to us a new meaning in nature or show us a new spring of hope in man, they make us love both better than we did before. Though he never raised the curtain that hides the stage upon which the physical and moral powers of nature rehearse the drama of human life, yet he opens our ears to the notes of the orchestra that Bits before the stage and plays the overture ; and, as we listen to these notes, there rise before us touching pictures of love, and faith, and devotion, until we find ourselves melted down and simplified into little children, whereof is the kingdom of heaven.

We have said that Longfellow's protracted residence in Europe in Some degree unfitted him for expressing the new life of the American republic ; and this is true. He was essentially a poet of the past, not, like Lowell, a grasper and moulder of the present, or like Whitman, a John the Baptist of the future. But, just as Dante summed up the ages of faith, and Shakespeare the ages of feudalism, so Longfellow has summed up the period of transition from these to the ages of truth and liberty—a period in which the killing letter of Christian womanliness and pagan manliness has slowly been yielding to their vivifying spirit, and preparing the way for that simple humanity of which he was the earnest and the type.

As a man, Longfellow was almost perfect, as much so as it is ever given to human nature to be. A man in intellect and courage, yet without conceit or bravado; a woman in sensibility and tenderness, yet without shrinking or weakness ; a saint in purity of life and devotion of heart, yet without ascetism or religiosity ; a knight-errant in hatred of wrong and contempt of baseness, yet without self-righteousness or cynicism ; a prince in dignity and courtesy, yet without formality or condescension ; a poet in thought and feeling, yet without jealousy or affectation ; a scholar in tastes and habits, yet without aloofness or bookishness ; a dutiful son, a loving husband, a judicious father, a trusty friend, a useful citizen, and an enthusiastic patriot,—he united in his strong, transparent humanity almost every virtue under heaven. A thoroughly healthy, well-balanced, harmonious nature, accepting life as it came, with all its joys and sorrows, and living it beautifully and hopefully, without canker and without uncharity. No man ever lived more completely in the light than Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Perhaps the most remarkable traits in Longfellow's character were his accessibility and his charity. Though a great worker, he seemed always to have time for anything he was asked to do. Pie was never too busy to see a caller, to answer a letter, or to assist, by word or deed, any one that needed assistance. His courtesy to all visitors, even to strangers and children who called to look at him, or wdio, not venturing to call, hung about his garden-gate in order to catch a glimpse of him, was almost a marvel. He always took it for granted that they had come to see Washington's study, and, accordingly, took the greatest interest in showing them that. He never, as long as he could write, was known to refuse his autograph, and so far was he from trying to protect himself from intruders that he rarely drew the blinds of his study windows at night, though that study was on the ground floor and faced the street. His acts of charity, though performed in secret, were neither few nor small. Of him it may be said with perfect truth, "He went about doing good": apd, not with, bis money merely, but also with his presence and his encouragement. To how many sad hearts did he come like an angel,- with the rich tones of his voice waking harmonics of hope, where before there had been despair and silence. How many young literary people, disappointed at the unsuccess of their first attempts, did he comfort and spur on to renewed and higher efforts ! How careful he was to quench no smoking flax ! How utterly free he was from jealousy or revengefulness ! While poor morbid Edgar Allan Poe was writing violent and scurrilous articles upon him, accusing him of plagiarism and other literary misdemeanours, he was delivering enthusiastic lectures to his classes on Poe's poetry. His charity was unbounded. Once when the present writer proposed to the president of the Harvard University Visiting Committee that Longfellow should be placed on that committee, the president replied: "What would be the use? Longfellow could never be brought to find fault with anybody or anything." And it was true. His whole life was bathed in that sympathy, that love which suffers long and envies not, which forgives unto seventy times seven times, and as many more if need! be. Even in his last years, when loss of friends and continual physical pain made life somewhat "cold, and dark, and dreary" for him, he never complained, lamented, or blamed the arrangements of nature, and the only way in which it was possible to know that he suffered was through his ever increasing delight in the health and strength of younger men. His whole nature was summed up in the lines of his favourite poet [Footnote DPW-1]:

"Luce intellettual, piena d'amove,
Amor di vero ben, pien di letizia,
Letizia che trascende ogni dolzore " (T. DA.)


Footnotes

DPW-1. Dante, Paradiso, canto 30.

English translation (G.L. Bickersteth, tr.):
"Intellectual light full of love,
Love of the true good, full of happiness,
Happiness which goes beyond all sweetnesses."





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