Book Read Free

Longfellow

Page 36

by Charles C. Calhoun


  Longfellow, Stephen (grandfather), 16, 29

  Longfellow, Stephen (great-grandfather), 15–16

  Longfellow, Stephen (great-great-grandfather), 15, 140

  Longfellow, William, 15

  Longfellow, Zilpah (mother), 11–15; in Portland house, 5–6; on HWL as child, 7, 20; and story of Peleg Wadsworth’s escape, 10; Guadeloupe as dream of, 26; on woods excursion, 27; on smallpox epidemic, 30; on son Stephen, 30, 31; and husband Stephen, 31; and HWL’s journey through Europe, 44, 60; on Elizabeth’s death, 68; on HWL’s marriage, 91, 92; on black servant, 92; and sacralization of Washington, 127; Fanny Appleton’s note to, 165

  “Longfellow in the Aftermath of Modernism” (Gioia), 256

  Longfellow: His Life and Work (Arvin), xii, 255–56

  Longfellow Institute, xiv

  “Longfellow: The Man Who Invented America” (exhibition), xiv

  Longfellow Memorial Association, 251

  Longfellow National Historic Site, ix, xiv–xv, 257

  Longfellow’s Dream (commemorative production), 252

  Longfellow Square(s), 251

  “Longfellow War, The,” 158, 160, 162

  Lönnrot, Elias, 205

  Lowell, James Russell, 236, 250–51

  Lowell, Sarah, 126

  Mackintosh, Robert, 164

  Mackintosh, Sir James, 164

  Maine: industry and trade of, 26, 27; and Bowdoin, 33, 72; and Longfellow abroad, 50; and Swedish landscape, 108–9; as new vacationland, 171

  Maine Historical Society, xiv, 19, 127, 251, 253, 258

  Marienberg: Longfellow at, 152–55

  “Martin Franc and the Monk of Saint Anthony,” 86

  Masque of Pandora, The, 242

  McClatchy, J. D., 256

  McClellan, Isaac, 28

  McKean v. Allen, 72

  Means, Russell, 259

  Medieval Revivalism, xi, 254

  Mellen, Frederic, 24, 28

  Mellen, Judge, 24

  Mellen, Prentice, 28

  Melville, Herman, 171

  “Mezzo Cammin,” 154

  Michael Angelo: A Fragment, 242

  Michelangelo, 55, 244

  “Midnight Mass for the Dying Year,” 158

  “Midnight Ride of Paul Revere, The.” See “Paul Revere’s Ride”

  Mill, John Stuart, 101

  Miriam (Craigie House servant), 126

  Miscellaneous Poems Selected from the United States Literary Gazette, 37, 38

  Modernism, x, 253–54, 256

  Monhegan Island, battle off, 21

  Monti, Luigi, 232

  “Morituri Salutamus,” 241

  Mount Vernon, historical preservation of, 168

  Mullins, Priscilla, 246

  Multiculturalism: and Longfellow, xiv, 233, 242

  My Book and Friend (Longfellow sketch), 61

  “My Lost Youth,” 21, 23, 172, 199, 209

  Nahant, as summer residence, 170, 199, 208, 218, 219, 226, 237

  National identity or character: Longfellow’s role in, xv; and Longfellow on poetry, 81, 83; and Kalevala, 205; and Tales of a Wayside Inn, 232

  Nationalism: in Longfellow’s poetry, 20, 203

  National literature: Longfellow on, 197

  Native Americans. See Indians, American

  Neal, John, 28, 172

  Nemerov, Howard, 256

  Netherlands: Longfellow in, 114–18

  New Criticism, xii, 256

  New England: cultural hegemony of, xi; civilizing mission of, 27; village blacksmith as myth of, 140; in Longfellow’s vision of America, 246; Frost as icon of, 254

  New England Literary Culture (Buell), 256

  New England Magazine, 88

  New England Tragedies, 93, 235, 256

  Newman, Samuel, 73

  Newport, Rhode Island, 199–200, 210

  New York Weekly Mirror, 159–60

  Nicander, Karl August, 106, 108

  Nichols, Benjamin Ropes, 96

  Nichols, Ichabod, 1, 68, 96, 172

  Nietzsche, Friedrich, 129

  Norse sagas, 95

  North American Review, 38, 79–80, 81, 88–89, 160, 202

  Norton, Andrews, 151

  Norton, Catherine Eliot, 153

  Norton, Charles Eliot, xiii, 236, 237, 254

  Novalis, 79, 120

  Old Cambridge (Higginson), 133

  “Old Clock on the Stairs, The,” 170, 246

  Old Dominion Zeitung, 61, 63–65

  Omoo (Melville), 171

  “On Mrs. Kemble’s Readings from Shakespeare,” 194

  Opera-going by Longfellow, 46, 109, 209

  “Origin and Progress of the French Language,” 80

  Orr, Benjamin, 40, 41

  Outre-Mer, A Pilgrimage Beyond the Sea, 53, 83–89, 104–5; British edition of, 112; Woodside on, 113–14; Fanny Appleton on, 120; and Widow Craigie, 124; earnings from (1857), 199

  Oxford University, degree from, 238

  Oxnard, Thomas, 48

  Packard, Alpheus, 241

  Paine, Thomas, 65

  Paris: Longfellow’s visit to, 40, 42–43, 46, 54; in Longfellow’s travel sketches, 88

  Parkman, Francis, 214

  Parody: of “Excelsior,” 142; of Hiawatha, 211

  Parsons, Thomas W., 232

  Pasta, Giuditta, 46

  Paul, Jean, 79, 120, 145, 197

  “Paul Revere’s Ride,” 221, 230–31; and Kennedy children, ix

  Pearl, Matthew, 258

  Pedro (emperor of Brazil), 245

  “Pegasus in Pound,” 184

  Penobscot Expedition, 7–8, 231

  Perfect Storm (Junger): “Wreck of the Hesperus” compared with, 139

  “Peter Quince” drawings, 227

  Peucinian Society, 37

  Pierce, Anne Longfellow, 165, 220, 253

  Pierce, Franklin, 36, 37

  Pierce, George Washington, 78

  Pinsky, Robert, ix–x, xi

  Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 170, 171, 189, 246

  Plagiarism: Longfellow charged with, 86, 158–59, 159–60, 161; and Poe, 160

  Poe, Edgar Allan, 150, 157–60, 161, 162

  Poems (1845), 161, 175

  Poems of Henry W. Longfellow, The (1846), 138

  Poems of Places, 242

  Poems on Slavery, 156–58

  Poets’ Corner, Westminster Abbey, 99, 250–51

  Poets and Poetry of Europe, The (anthology), 179

  Politics: Longfellow’s avoidance of, 157, 196; and Longfellow before Civil War, 200; and Longfellow’s vision of America, 246. See also Federalist Party and Federalism; Jacksonian democracy

  “Politics and Poetry of New England, The” (photograph of Longfellow and Sumner), 229

  Portland, Maine, 13, 17–18, 26–29; Longfellow’s boyhood home in, xii–xiii; Longfellow’s childhood in, 5–6; British shelling of, 16; house of Longfellow’s birth in, 18; Longfellow and Fanny’s visits to, 170; Longfellow Square in, 251; as tourist attraction, 260

  Portland Gazette: Longfellow’s childhood poem in, 24

  Potter, Barrett, 19, 90

  Potter, Mary Storer. See Longfellow, Mary Potter

  Pound, Ezra, 254

  Preble (Commodore), 62

  Preble, Barrett (Judge), 19, 90

  Preble, Edward Deering, 11, 49, 58, 61–63, 65, 137

  Preble, Marianne, 90, 91

  Preble, William Pitt, 59, 90

  Prince of Wales, 251

  “Psalm of Life, A,” ix, 137, 259

  Public speaking: Longfellow’s avoidance of, 196, 240–41

  Pushmataha (Choctaw chief), 202–3

  “Quadroon Girl, The,” 156, 158

  Quentin Durward (Scott), 47

  Radcliffe College: Alice Longfellow in founding of, 248

  “Rainy Day, The,” 138, 255

  Rand, George, 224

  “Raven, The” (Poe), 160

  Reeve, Tapping, 71

  Religion: and Longfellow’s father, 17; and Bowdoin Colleg
e, 35–36, 41, 59; and examination of Biblical texts at Göttingen, 60; and Fanny Appleton, 164–65; and anesthesia in childbirth, 189; and Longfellow’s view on death, 192, 193; and “The Birds of Killingworth,” 233; in Longfellow’s vision of America, 246. See also Catholicism

  “Resignation,” 192

  “Revenge of Rain-in-the-Face,” 242–43

  Revere, Paul, xi, 8, 231, 261. See also “Paul Revere’s Ride”

  Reynal, Abbé de, 181

  Rich, Obadiah, 51, 104–5

  “Rip Van Winkle” (Irving), 73, 85

  Rohl, Maria Christina, 109

  Romanticism, 79; Longfellow as conduit for, xi; and Göttingen, 60; and Longfellow’s vision of university, 70; and Carlyle’s Life of Schiller, 102; Longfellow’s fascination with, 120; and originality, 159; on native languages, 203

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 251

  “Ropewalk, The,” 199

  Russell, Lord John, 238

  “Saga of King Olaf, The,” 233

  Saintsbury, George, 253

  Salem witch scare, 93, 235

  Sartor Resartus (Carlyle), 144

  Saturday Club, 198, 261

  Scherb (friend), 209, 235

  Schiller, Johann von, 103, 196, 255

  Schmidt, Michael, 204

  Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe, 206–7

  Schoolmaster, The (Longfellow sketches), 88

  Scott, Sir Walter, 47

  Sealfield, 185

  Seaside and the Fireside, The, 162, 192, 194, 195, 199

  “Seaweed,” 195

  Segretain Moine, Le (Norman fabliau), 86

  Sentimentality: in Longfellow’s poetry, 192–93; Victorian appeal to, 253; new

  scholarship on, 258

  Sewall family, 15

  Shakespeare, William, in Poets’ Corner, 250

  “Ships that pass in the night,” xi, 187, 259

  Shipton, Clifford, 16

  Shirley, William, 181

  Sidney, Sir Philip, 81, 202

  Silverman, Kenneth, 160

  Simms, William Gilmore, 161

  “Skeleton in Armor, The,” 112, 139, 200

  Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent., The (Irving), 52, 84–85

  Skinner, Mary, 99

  “Slave in the Dismal Swamp, The,” 156, 158

  Slavery: colonizationists vs. abolitionists on, 92; and Sumner, 135; and Dickens, 155; and Longfellow, 155–58, 175, 201, 213, 255; and Acadians, 182

  “Slave’s Dream, The,” 156

  “Slave Singing at Midnight, The,” 156–57

  Slidell, Alexander, 51–54, 55, 56, 73, 85

  Smith, Elizabeth Oakes, 28

  Smith, John Adams, 51

  Smith, Seba, 28, 76

  “Snow-Flakes,” 199

  “Song of the Bell” (Lied von der Glocke) (Schiller), 195, 255

  Song of Hiawatha, The, 202, 212–14; and Dvorák’s Ninth (From the New World), x, 252; and Longfellow’s maturing, 83; and Finnish language, 108; and Poe, 161; earnings from (1857), 199; controversies over, 203–5; Longfellow’s sources for, 205–8; illustration for, 206; writing of, 208–11; popular success of, 211; open-endedness of, 233

  Sontag, Henrietta, 46

  Southern Literary Messenger, 162

  Southey, Robert, 179

  Spain: Longfellow in, 50–55

  “Spanish Devotional and Moral Poetry,” 80

  Spanish Student, The, 160, 179, 184, 199

  Sparks, Jared, 126

  Staël, Madame de, 47

  Standish, Miles, xi, 198, 246

  Stearns, Professor, 124

  Stephens, Ann, 28

  Stephenson, Samuel and Abigail, 6

  Sterne, Lawrence, 65

  Stevens, Wallace, 254

  Storer, Ebenezer, 43

  Story, Joseph, 17, 49

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 241

  Stuart, Lady Dudley, 99

  Studies in Poetry, 38

  Sumner, Charles, 104, 135–36, 200–201; Longfellow letters to, 134, 152, 153; as Dickens’ guide, 151; urges Longfellow to write on slavery, 155; and Poe’s criticism, 158; on Longfellows’ wedding journey, 175; and Evangeline, 189; and Appletons’ slavery connections, 196; as abolitionist, 200, 213; Hiawatha reading by, 211; and accounts of Fanny’s fatal accident, 216, 218, 219; as Civil War news source, 221; and Charley in army, 225, 226; and Longfellow in Washington, 229; in portrait with Longfellow, 229; death of, 246; in Longfellow’s extended family, 247; and Dickens at Copps Hill, 262

  Sumner, Harriet Coffin, 164

  Sweden, Longfellow’s visit to, 106, 107–11

  Switzerland: Longfellow in, 119, 120–22

  Symonds, Franklin, 251

  “Tailor’s Drawer,” 87–88

  Tales of a Traveller by Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. (Irving), 85

  Tales of a Wayside Inn, 221, 230–35; and Poe, 161; “ships that pass in the night” from, 187, 259; second series of, 242

  Tate, Alan, 254

  Taylor, Edward, 151

  Tegnér, Bishop, 108

  Tennyson, Alfred Lord, 2, 97, 158–59, 210, 238, 254

  Thackeray, William Makepeace, 2

  Thoreau, Henry David, 132–33

  Thorp, Erica, 251

  Thorp, Mrs. Joseph (Annie Longfellow), 217

  “The thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts,” 209

  Three Books of Song, 242

  Thurber, James, 142

  Ticknor, George, 49, 81, 94, 95, 124, 129, 130

  Ticknor, William D. & Co., 189

  Ticknor & Fields, 210, 211, 247

  “Tide Rises, the Tide Falls, The,” xiv, 174

  “Torquemada,” 233

  Toussaint L’Ouverture, 93

  Trachtenberg, Alan, 204

  Translation by Longfellow: of Dante, xi, 55, 229, 236, 237; in verse anthologies, 179, 242

  Trap (Longfellow’s terrier), 237

  Traveller, The (Goldsmith), 85

  Treadwell, Daniel, 232

  Trollope, Anthony, 245

  Trumball, John, 125

  Uhland, Johann, 120

  Ultima Thule, 242

  Ulysses: and Evangeline, 187

  United States Literary Gazette, The, 37, 79

  University(ies): Longfellow’s ideas about, 69–72; classical languages as orthodoxy of, 130

  University of Virginia, 78

  Upham, Thomas C., 24, 25, 73–74

  Vassall, John, 124–25

  Verandah Hotel, 170–74, 189

  Vergil, and Evangeline, 185

  Vico, Giambattista, 203

  Victoria (queen of England), 3, 252

  Victorian American culture, xi

  Victorianism, 253–54, 256

  “Village Blacksmith, The,” xi, 15, 138, 140, 259

  Vita Nuova (Dante), 237 in Longfellow’s

  journal on Fanny’s acceptance, 164

  Vogelweide, Walther von der, 175

  Voices of the Night, 133, 137, 150; Poe’s review of, 158; earnings from (1857), 199

  Wadsworth (wife of Peleg and mother of Zilpah), 10, 11, 12

  Wadsworth, Alexander Scammell, 21

  Wadsworth, Betsy, 12, 13–14

  Wadsworth, Charles, 7, 8, 12

  Wadsworth, Eliza, 127

  Wadsworth, George Alexander, 12

  Wadsworth, Henry (Harry), 11, 12, 26

  Wadsworth, John, 12

  Wadsworth, Lucia, 12, 14–15, 20, 28, 29, 57–58, 67

  Wadsworth, Peleg, 6–10, 231; and Lafayette, 47

  Wadsworth, Peleg (younger), 12, 27

  Wadsworth, Sam, 12

  Wadsworth, S. L. and Son, 26

  Wadsworth Hall, 6, 9

  Wadsworth-Longfellow House, 28

  Wagenknecht, Edward, xii

  Waif, The (anthology), 159, 179

  Walden (Thoreau), 208

  Wales, Henry Ware, 232

  Ward, Sam, 1, 2, 242

  War of 1812, 19, 20–21

  “Warning, The,” 156, 157, 255

  Washington, George: and Cr
aigie House, ix, xv, 125, 127, 167, 168, 169; sacralization of, 127

  Washington, Martha, 125, 127

  Waste Land, The (Eliot), 177

  Waterville College (now Colby), 70, 79

  Webster, Daniel: and male friendships, 136; and Fugitive Slave Act, 195; and “Building of the Ship,” 255

  Welles, Samuel, 48

  Wesselhoeft, Robert, 170

  Westminster Abbey, Poets’ Corner in, 99, 250–51

  Whigs and Whig Party: and Bowdoin, 72; and Longfellow, 157, 196, 200; in Longfellow’s vision of America, 246

  Whipple, John Adams, 169

  Whitman, Walt, 204, 229

  Whittier, John Greenleaf, 157, 190, 196

  Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, 255

  Wilde, Oscar, 1–3

  Wilhelm Meister (Goethe), 172

  Williams, Reuel, 59

  William Wetmore Story and His Friends (James), 244

  Willis, Nathaniel Parker, 28, 83, 84, 98, 99, 103, 138, 159, 160

  Willis, William, 17

  “Witnesses, The,” 157

  “Wondrous Tale of a Little Man in Gosling Green,” 75, 93

  Woodside, Jonathan, 113

  “Woods in Winter,” 37–38

  Worcester, Joseph E., 167

  Wordsworth, William, 64

  “Wreck of the Hesperus, The,” xi, 138, 139, 259; illustration for, 138

  Year in Spain, by a Young American, A (Slidell), 53, 85

  “Young Italian, The” (Irving), 73

  Young Longfellow (Thompson), xii

  Beacon Press

  Boston, Massachusetts

  www.beacon.org

  Beacon Press books

  are published under the auspices of

  the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations.

  © 2004 by Charles C. Calhoun

  All rights reserved

  Frontispiece: M. August Edouart, silhouette of Henry

  Wadsworth Longfellow, 1841. Courtesy National Park

  Service, Longfellow National Historic Site.

  Grateful acknowledgment for production assistance to Furthermore: a program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund.

  Composition by Wilsted & Taylor Publishing Services

  Text design by Dean Bornstein

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Calhoun, Charles C.

  Longfellow : a rediscovered life / Charles C. Calhoun.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references (p.) and index.

  eISBN 978-0-8070-7041-3

  ISBN 0-8070-7026-2 (cloth)

  ISBN 0-8070-7039-4 (pbk.)

  1. Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 1807–1882.

 

‹ Prev