Famous Once Again
Longfellow reaches his bicentennial; here's why his poems became perennial
- By Nicholas A. Basbanes
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2007, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
As he had been at Bowdoin, Longfellow was a popular teacher and energetic scholar, introducing his students to the European forms he had mastered while honing his own literary skills. In 1839, he published Hyperion: A Romance and Voices of the Night, his first collection of poetry, followed in 1841 by Ballads and Other Poems. And he married Frances "Fanny" Appleton. Her father, Boston industrialist Nathan Appleton, bought the house on Brattle Street for them as a wedding present.
In 1847, Longfellow published Evangeline, the story in verse of an Acadian woman's heartbreaking separation from her bridegroom on their wedding day. It generated six printings in six months. Other successful works followed—Kavanagh, a short novel; The Seaside and the Fireside, another collection of poetry; and The Golden Legend, a medieval tale in verse. By the mid-1850s, he was financially secure enough to leave Harvard and concentrate on writing. In 1857, The Song of Hiawatha, arguably Longfellow's best-known poem, sold 50,000 copies, blockbuster numbers for its time. A year after that, The Courtship of Miles Standish, a story based loosely on his own Pilgrim ancestors, sold 25,000 copies in the United States within two months—and 10,000 copies in London in a single day. But his sales figures only begin to suggest the impact Longfellow had on 19th-century thought; his books remained in print year after year, and many were translated into no fewer than ten foreign languages.
In Evangeline, Longfellow created a character whose experiences were based on the expulsion of French-speaking Acadians from modern-day Nova Scotia by the British in 1755; inspired by the wanderings of Homer's Odysseus and Virgil's Aeneas, he gave an epic structure to a local theme. Similarly, Miles Standish and Hiawatha brought a human dimension to the lives of the continent's European settlers and its indigenous people—and let Longfellow achieve his goal of explaining America to Americans through poetry.
Moreover, he proved to be a shrewd manager of his literary properties. He insisted that inexpensive paperbacks be made readily available and that his poems be widely reproduced in newspapers and on posters. His image appeared on cigar boxes, beer bottle labels, inkwells, bookends, lithographic engravings, even fine china. His house became a tourist magnet; he kept a stack of autographed cards handy to distribute to the hundreds who came to call. "There is never an hour in the day, when someone is not pounding at the brass knocker of my door," he wrote in a letter to the poet Paul Hamilton Hayne, "never a moment when some unanswered letter is not beckoning to me with its pallid finger."
That grumbling notwithstanding, Longfellow scrupulously answered his mail, sometimes writing up to 20 responses a day. (More than 5,000 were gathered in six volumes published between 1966 and 1982.) He also knew the value of a fascinating new medium, photography: 12,000 images, including many of him and his family, are among the some 800,000 documents, household items, artworks and furnishings maintained by the National Park Service, custodian of his home, called Craigie House, since 1972, when his descendants turned it over to the nation.
Among luminaries to drop by over the years were Mark Twain, Julia Ward Howe, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Anthony Trollope, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oscar Wilde and singer Jenny Lind; even Dom Pedro II, the emperor of Brazil, came calling. In 1867, Charles Dickens, the most famous novelist on either side of the Atlantic, spent Thanksgiving Day with Longfellow, renewing a friendship they had established 25 years earlier, when Dickens first visited the United States.
Dickens wrote in a letter to his son that Longfellow "is now white-haired and white-bearded, but remarkably handsome. He still lives in his old house, where his beautiful wife was burnt to death. I dined with him the other day, and could not get the terrific scene out of my imagination."
Dickens was referring to Fanny Longfellow's shocking death six years earlier, apparently after her dress was ignited by candle wax as she was sealing an envelope containing a snippet of hair from one of her six children. Longfellow's white beard hid scars from wounds he suffered while trying to smother the flames.
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Comments (2)
i have one of those stamps but its marked how much do you think its worth.
Posted by leonard kritzberger on February 28,2010 | 12:48 AM
It's good to see this modest Longfellow revival now happening. Old enough to have memorized his lines as a schoolboy, I have watched as his reputation continued to decline during as modernist taste reached an apex during the twentieth century, but without surrendering my appreciation of him as I made my way to a literature Ph.D. and became an English professor. As the years passed and I watched literary taste give way to what Walter Ong called secondary orality as electronic technology began to eclipse the printed page, I began to believe that Longfellow was due to make a comeback. For all the change that I have witnessed across the twentieth century, especially in the way the United States has lost its youthful innocence as a nation, I believe that something quintessentially American remains and awaits a reawakening. Better than any American writer I can think of, including the great Walt Whitman, Longfellow exhibits that essence. For that reason he deserves to rediscovered and to reclaim his old visibility. Who knows, his work might even revive an old enthusiasm for poetry as a popular cultural medium, so that he sits side by side with Oprah and American Idol for sheer visibility and at the same time reminds us all of something that still defines us at our very best--something expressed not only in the quiet majesty of his stories and plays (yes, plays!) but in the magic of his language, which begs to be transmitted by the sound of a reader's voice. (Find someone who will listen and try reading him aloud.) These are things I hope to explore as I begin assembling a book about his work with the perspective of someone who has known and admired it for a long, long time.
Posted by Paul Zolbrod on May 2,2008 | 03:01 AM