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Longfellow

Page 35

by Charles C. Calhoun


  “Castle Craigie.” See Craigie House

  Catholicism: and Longfellow in Italy, 56–57; and Longfellow’s account of Spain, 89

  Catlin, George, 207

  Cervantes, Miguel de, 132, 179

  Chamberlain, Joshua, 241

  Channing, William Ellery, 17, 156

  Chantrey, Sir Francis, 102

  Chase, Salmon, 17

  Chaucer, Geoffrey: and Tales of a Wayside Inn, 230–35

  Cheever, George Barrell, 38, 79

  “Children’s Hour, The,” x, 215, 252

  Children’s poet: Longfellow seen as, 246

  Christ, Carol, 253–54

  Christus: A Mystery, 235

  Cilley, Jonathan, 36

  Civil War: and Longfellow’s work, 221, 229; Charles Longfellow’s experiences in, 222–26, 228–29; and Tales of a Wayside Inn, 231; and vision of America, 246

  Clark, Willis Gaylord, 98

  Cleaveland, Parker, 33–34, 35, 41, 43, 73, 108, 109, 242

  Clemm, Maria, 162

  Cleveland, Henry, 135

  Cogswell, Joseph G., 49

  Cole, Thomas, 203

  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 104, 134

  Coleridge-Taylor, Samuel, 252

  Colman, George, 86

  Colman, Samuel, 74

  Colonial Revivalism, xi, xiv-xv, 198, 231, 233, 245–46, 258

  Columbiad (Barlow), 180

  Comparative literature: and Longfellow, xiv, 81, 82, 131, 179, 242

  Conolly, Horace, 180

  Constitution, U.S.S., 21, 82

  Cooper, James Fenimore, 52

  Copenhagen: Longfellow in, 106–7, 111–14

  Couper, William, 251

  Course of Empire, The (Cole), 203

  Courtship of Miles Standish, The, 198

  Craigie, Andrew, 126

  Craigie, Elizabeth (Widow), 124, 126, 134

  Craigie House, ix, xiv, I; Longfellow in, ix, xiv, 1, 126–27; and aestheticism, 2; distinguished British visitors in, 2; history of, 124–26; view from window of, 149; and meadow to Charles River, 167, 199, 216, 240; Longfellow and Fanny in, 167–69, 198, 199; visitors to, 199, 245; replicas of as homes, 245; first-floor plan of, 257; as tourist attraction, 260

  “Cross of Snow, The,” 230

  Crowninshield, Clara, 95–97, 101, 108, 109, 111, 112, 114–15, 116, 117, 120, 121

  Crowninshield, George, 96

  Cushman, Bezaleel, 22

  Cushman, Charlotte, 197, 238

  Dana, Richard Henry, 79

  Dana, Richard Henry III, 217, 218, 248

  Dante Alighieri, xiii; Longfellow as translator of, xi, 55, 229, 236, 237; Longfellow’s interest in, xi, 236; in Longfellow’s lectures, 132; and Fanny as Beatrice, 164; Longfellow sonnet to, 176; and “The Bridge,” 177; and Longfellow’s “Cross of Snow,” 230; and Eliot, 254

  Dante Club, xiii, 236, 237

  Dante Club, The (Pearl), 258

  Dante Society of America, 237

  Davie, Miss (governess), 238

  “Day Is Done, The,” x

  “Death of the Old Year, The” (Tennyson), 158–59

  Deering, Ellen, 68

  Deering, Nathaniel, 28

  Defence of Poesy (Sidney), 81, 202

  Democracy: and HWL’s father, 17;

  Jacksonian, 28, 78, 127

  Denmark: Longfellow in, 106–7, 111–14

  de Vere, Aubrey, 238

  Dickens, Charles, 2, 85, 150–51, 155, 190, 198, 246, 262

  Didacticism: and Poe on Longfellow, 159; of “The Arsenal at Springfield,” 175; and Pound-Longfellow similarity, 254

  Divine Comedy, The (Dante), xiii, 221

  Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, The (1867), 237

  Divine Tragedy, The, 235

  “Divinia Commedia” (sonnet collection), 243

  Doane, Nancy, 13

  Doré, Gustave, 236

  Dresden: visit to, 59–60

  Dvorák, Antonin, x, 252

  Dwight, Timothy, 9–10, 11, 19

  Edrehi, Isaac, 232–33

  Edwards, Jonathan, 234

  Eliot, Charles William, 71, 129

  Eliot, T. S., 177, 251, 254

  “Elizabeth,” 187

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo: and Carlyle, 100, 104; and Nietzsche on Harvard, 129; and post-Kantian idealism, 132; and male friendships, 136; on Hiawatha, 204–5; at Longfellow memorial service, 249

  England: Longfellow’s visits to, 66, 97–106, 238

  Estray, The, 184

  Ethnic cleansing: and Acadian deportation, 182

  Euro-American style, 134; and James on

  Longfellow, 244

  Evangeline (silent film), xiii

  Evangeline (story and character), xi, 57

  Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie, 175, 184–89; Longfellow introduced to story of, 180, 181; and Hawthorne, 180–81; and history of Acadian deportation, 181–82, 184; illustration for, 183; editing of by friends, 189; publication of, 189; popularity of, 189–91; earnings from (1857), 199; historical impact of, 259–60

  Everett, Alexander H., 51, 80

  Everett, Edward, 126

  “Excelsior,” 140–42; illustration for, 141; musical rendition of, 251

  Faculty psychology, 130

  “Falcon of Ser Federigo,” 233

  Fanshawe (Hawthorne), 32

  Faust (Goethe), 100, 131, 133, 255

  Fay, William, 222, 223

  Federalist Party and Federalism, 17; and Hartford Convention, 19–20, 264; and Bowdoin College, 36, 72

  Felton, Cornelius Conway, 124, 135; as Harvard president, 135, 222; Longfellow’s trip facilitated by, 150; at breakfast with Dickens, 151; introductions for anthology by, 179; and Evangeline, 180, 189; on Fanny’s accident and death, 216, 218, 218–19; death of, 222

  Fessenden, William Pitt, 67, 171, 229

  Fields, Annie, 197, 247

  Fields, James T., 197, 246

  Finland: and Kalevala, 205

  Finnish language: Longfellow’s study of, 108

  “Fire of Drift-Wood, The,” 195, 256

  “Five of Clubs,” 135

  Fletcher, Angus, 212

  “Footprints on the sands of time,” xi, 137, 259

  Ford, Henry, 233

  Forster, John, 155

  France: Longfellow in, 39–40, 42–47, 50

  Freiligrath, Ferdinand, 155

  Fremont, John C., 226

  Frith, Francis, 144

  Frost, Robert, 254

  Fugitive Slave Act, 195, 213

  Fuller, Margaret, 132, 161–62, 253

  Fuller, Melville, 251

  Gardner, Alexander, 229

  Gardner, Isabella Stewart, xiii

  Garfield, James: assassination of, 242

  Gartner, Matthew, 231, 258

  Gender relations: and “Wreck of the Hesperus,” 139; and Evangeline, 188

  General Joshua L. Chamberlain House, 91

  Germany: critical scholarship in, 49; Longfellow in, 59–66, 118, 120, 121, 150, 151, 152–55

  Gerome, Jean-Léon, 241

  “Giles Corey of the Salem Farms,” 235

  Gioia, Dana, x–xi, 256, 259

  Gladstone, William, 238, 251

  Goddard, Mary, 95–96, 97, 108, 109, 111, 112–13

  Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 103, 131–33, 145, 172, 185, 254

  Gold, Martha, 165

  Golden Legend, The (Longfellow), 57, 199, 235, 255

  Goldsmith, Oiver, 85

  Gonzalez, Florencia, 53

  Goodwin, Emma, 190

  Göttingen, Germany, 49, 50, 60–61, 62–63, 69, 70, 71, 137

  Graham’s Magazine, 159, 175

  Gray and Bowen, 74

  Greeley, Horace, 75

  Greene, George Washington, 55–56, 247–48; Longfellow letters to, 75, 109, 126; job inquiries for, 78–79; and review of Outre-Mer, 87; and Craigie House, 167; in Dante Club, 237

  Greene, Nathaniel, 125

  Greenleaf, James, 196

  Greenleaf, Mary Longfellow. S
ee Longfellow, Mary

  Greenleaf, Patrick, 46

  Griffin, Joseph, 73, 74, 88

  Grisi, Carlotta, 209

  Gruesz, Kirsten Silva, 258

  Gulotta, Victor, 256–57

  Hale, Edward Everett, 133

  Haliburton, T.C., 181

  Hancock, John, 168

  “Hanging of the Crane, The,” 242, 246

  Haralson, Eric, 258

  Hartford Convention, 19–20, 264

  Harvard College and University: Stephen Longfellow at, 16; and HWL’s college aspirations, 29; religious liberalism of, 41; in job hopes, 42, 78; becomes research university, 71; Ticknor at, 81, 94; HWL as professor at, 95, 100, 124, 127–28, 129–34, 150, 179, 184, 198, 208, 236, 242; two-hundredth birthday celebration of, 128; Henry Adams on, 128–29; and modern languages, 129, 130; Felton as president of, 135, 222; HWL honorary degree from, 198; memorial service at, 249; memorial tributes from, 251; HWL collection sold to, 257–58;

  Hawthorne, Nathaniel, xii, 32, 35; at Bowdoin, 32, 35, 36–37; fictional college account by, 32–33; and Evangeline, 180–81, 189–90; and New England Tragedies, 235; tribute to, 242; death of, 246

  Heade, Martin Johnson, xv

  Healy, G.P.A., 238

  Heckewelder, John G., 207, 208

  Heidelberg, 120, 121

  Herder, Johann Gottfried von, 203

  Hermann und Dorothea (Goethe), 185

  Hiawatha, xi, 25

  Hiawatha. See Song of Hiawatha, The

  Hiawatha (film), 259

  “Hiawatha’s Photographing” (Carroll), 211

  “Hiawatha’s Wedding Feast” (musical performance), 252

  Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 133

  Hilen, Andrew, xii

  Hillard, George, 126, 135, 158, 180, 189, 219

  Hilliard, Gray & Co., 88

  Historical preservationists, Longfellow and Fanny as, xv, 168

  History, Manners, and Customs of the Indian Nations (Heckewelder), 207

  “History of the Italian Languages and Dialects,” 80

  History of Nova Scotia (Haliburton), 181

  Hoffman, E.T.A., 145

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 198

  Homer, Winslow, 173

  Homes of American Statesmen (Whipple), 169

  Hosmer, Harriet, 238

  Howe, Lyman, 233

  Howe, Samuel Gridley, 190

  Howells, William Dean, 236–37

  Hugo, Victor, 235

  Hunt, Leigh, 103, 104

  “Hymn to the Night,” 137, 158

  Hyperion, 134, 143–49, 150; Poe’s review of, 158; earnings from (1857), 199; and Hiawatha reception, 211

  “In the Churchyard at Cambridge,” 199

  “Indian Hunter, The,” 37–38

  Indians, American: and Acadians, 182; Longfellow themes from, 202–3; whites’ view of, 203; and Longfellow’s “Revenge of Rain-in-the-Face,” 242–43

  Infant mortality, 193

  Ingraham, Joseph Holt, 28

  In the Harbor, 242

  Inventing the American Primitive (Carr), 204

  Irmscher, Christoph, 258

  Irving, Peter, 51, 52

  Irving, Washington, 52, 84–85; and

  Longfellow, 23; and Le Havre scene, 39; in Spain, 51; letters of introduction from, 59; and Spanish version of “Rip Van Winkle,” 73; and Allston, 134; on author-public relation, 250

  Isle of Wight, 97, 238

  Italy: Longfellow in, 55–57

  Ives, Charles, x

  James, Henry, 3, 32, 34, 46, 235, 244

  Jefferson, Thomas, 27, 69–70, 78

  Jewett, Isaac Appleton, 119

  Jewett, Sarah Orne, 197

  “Jewish Cemetery at Newport, The,” 199–200

  “John Endicott,” 235

  Johnson, Andrew, 68

  Johnson, Eastman, xv

  Kalevala (Finnish epic), 205, 211

  Kavanagh, 189, 196–97, 199, 252

  Kellogg, Elijah, 22

  Kemble, Fanny, 2, 194, 200

  Keramos, 242, 255

  Kete, Mary Louise, 258

  “Killed at the Ford,” 221

  “King Christian” (Danish ballad, translated), 116

  King Philip (Indian chief), 203

  Knickerbocker Magazine, 137

  “Knight and the Friar, The” (Colman), 86

  Knox, Henry, 125

  “Lady Wentworth,” 233

  LaFayette, Marquis de. 20, 47, 68

  Lane, Fitz Hugh, 173

  Lawrence, Charles, 181–82

  Leaves of Grass (Whitman), 204

  “Legend of Sleepy Hollow” (Irving), 85

  Lesbian relationship: in Kavanagh, 197

  Lewis, Edmonia, 238

  Lewisohn, Ludwig, 254–55

  Liberty Party, 157

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

  Life of Schiller, The (Carlyle), 101

  “Lighthouse, The,” 173

  Lighthouses: Longfellow’s visits to, 172–73

  Lilly, Wait, and Co., 88

  Lincoln, Abraham: and male friendships, 136; as president, 201

  Lind, Jenny, 198

  Liszt, Franz, 238

  Little Big Horn massacre, 242

  “Little Merrythought. An Autobiography with a Portrait,” 227–28

  Lives of the Poets (Schmidt), 204

  Locke, John, 64–65

  Lockhart, J. G., 100

  London: Longfellow passes through, 66; Longfellow’s group in, 97–106; Dickens-escorted trip through East End of, 155

  Longfellow, Alexander Wadsworth, 15, 26, 30

  Longfellow, Alice Mary, 127, 170, 218, 220, 248

  Longfellow, Anne (sister), 15, 27, 67, 68, 165, 170, 220, 226

  Longfellow, Anne Allegra (daughter), 170, 217, 218, 220, 248

  Longfellow, Anne Sewall, 15

  Longfellow, Charles Appleton (Charley), 2, 170, 171, 192, 220, 222, 228, 238, 248; Civil War experiences of, 222–26, 228–29

  Longfellow, Edith, 170, 217, 218, 220, 248

  Longfellow, Elizabeth, 15, 33, 66, 67–68

  Longfellow, Ellen, 15

  Longfellow, Ernest Wadsworth, 170, 216, 220, 228, 238, 248

  Longfellow, Frances (daughter), 170, 189, 191–92, 215

  Longfellow, Frances (Fanny; formerly Frances Appleton); and Craigie House, xv, 167–68; Longfellow’s first meetings with, 119, 120–22; Longfellow’s pursuit of, 122–23, 142–43; and Hyperion, 143–46; engaged to Longfellow, 163–65; married to Longfellow, 165–66; children of, 169–70; on Hiawatha, 209; death of, 215–20, 224, 236; sonnet in memory of, 230

  Longfellow, Hattie, 238

  Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth (HWL), x–xii; and Craigie House, ix, xiv, 1, 126–27 (see also Craigie House); as cultural force, xiii–xvi; as multiculturalist, xiv, 233, 242; linguistic abilities of, xiv, 40, 42; as nation builder, xiv, 262 (see also National identity or character); and Wilde, 1–3; birth and childhood of, 5, 7, 15, 18, 20, 21–22, 28; nationalist stance of, 20; education of, 22–23, 29, 32, 33–34, 35, 36–38 (see also Bowdoin College); Europe trip of (first), 2, 39–57, 59–66, 68, 95 (see also France; Göttingen; Italy; Spain); briefly reads law, 42; as Bowdoin professor, 68–69, 72–79; Europe trip of (second), 89, 93–94, 95–122 (see also England; Netherlands; Sweden; Switzerland); first marriage of, 90–92, 93–94, 95, 114–18 (see also Longfellow, Mary Potter); water cure of, 150, 151, 152–55, 184; and Dickens, 150–51, 262; post-1861 life and appearance of, 221–22, 224, 245; portraits and photographs of, 222, 238–39; Europe trip of (third), 237–38; death of, 248–49; in Westminster Abbey, 250–51; commemorations of, 251–52; material and memorabilia on, 252–53, 258; critics on, 253–58; and extraliterary public, 258–62

  Personal characteristics of: clothing tastes, 43–44; opera-lover, 46, 109, 209; and sexual adventure, 54; sensual inclinations, 54; eye for female beauty, 54, 136, 245; caricaturist, 64, 227; illnesses and bad health, 127, 142, 150, 170, 199, 211, 246, 248; aversion
to public speaking, 196, 240–41

  Literary career of: first versification, 23–25; student writings, 37–38; and Bowdoin position, 41; and Romanticism, 79, 120 (see also Romanticism); and Harvard position, 128, 184; first major poetry, 137–42, 150; and Poe, 150, 157–60, 161, 162; “Mezzo Cammin,” 154; sonnets, 154, 176, 230, 243, 256; Poems on Slavery, 156–58; The Belfry at Bruges and Other Poems, 170, 175–78, 199; poetry from New England coast, 173–74; Evangeline, 175, 180–91, 199, 259–60; and poetic production in late 1840s, 179; as most famous American writer, 190; works of 1850s, 194–98, 199–200; earnings from (1857), 198–99; Song of Hiawatha, 202, 203–14; in Civil War period, 221; and everyday events, 227; translation of Dante, 229, 236–37; Tales of a Wayside Inn, 230–35; and The New England Tragedies, 235–36; in last years, 240, 242–44; and vision of America, 246.

  See also particular works

  As Harvard professor, 127–28, 129–34; lodgings found at Craigie House, 124, 126–27; male companionship, 134–37; unhappiness of, 142; leave of absence, 150–55; comparative literature classes, 179, 242; frustrations with, 184; end of teaching, 198, 208; Dante as focus in, 236. See also Harvard College and University

  Marriage to Fanny: first meeting, 119; companionship in Switzerland, 120–122; as frustrated suitor, 122–23, 142–46, 150; engagement, 163–65; wedding, 165–66; Craigie House as home of, 167–69, 198, 199; children of, 169–70 (see also individual children); summer retreats of, 170–74 (see also Nahant); and “The Arsenal at Springfield,” 175; Fanny’s death, 215–20. See also Appleton, Frances Last years of: at Bowdoin reunion, 240–42; literary works, 242–44; celebrity role of, 245–46; and vision of America, 246–47; family and friends in, 247–48

  Longfellow, Mary (sister), 15, 165–66, 196

  Longfellow, Mary Potter (wife), 90, 91, 93–94; European trip of, 95, 96–97, 102, 108, 109, 112–13, 114; and Clara Crowninshield, 96; pregnancy and miscarriage of, 111, 114–15; final illness and death of, 117–18, 137, 169; Longfellow’s guilt over, 142; and Hyperion, 147; memory of as barrier for Fanny Appleton, 163

  Longfellow, Samuel, xii, 15, 22, 24, 30, 133, 165, 226, 238, 249

  Longfellow, Stephen (brother), 29–31; in childhood, 5, 15, 20; at Bowdoin, 30, 32, 33, 37; HWL’s letters to, 39, 43–44, 45–46; and law career, 41; and small-town atmosphere, 54; marriage of, 90, 91; spa for alcoholism of, 170; house of, lost to fire, 172

  Longfellow, Stephen (father), 12–13, 16–20, 27, 31; Portland house of, 5–6; marriage of, 14, 15; on Bowdoin boards, 19; and Lafayette, 20, 47; and HWL at Bowdoin, 29; and HWL’s career, 40; and HWL’s journeys through Europe, 41–42, 44, 45, 47–49, 50, 58, 66, 94; and HWL’s job at Bowdoin, 41–42, 68–69; and Ned Preble, 62; on death in family, 68; and HWL’s ideas on universities, 70, 71; as lawyer for Bowdoin, 72; and NYU job prospect, 78; on HWL’s descriptions of Europe, 84; and sons’ marriages, 90; and sacralization of Washington, 127; as Maine vacation guest, 171

 

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