Famous Once Again
Longfellow reaches his bicentennial; here's why his poems became perennial
- By Nicholas A. Basbanes
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Longfellow and Dickens met again the following year, in England, where the American's whirlwind itinerary included stops at Oxford and Cambridge universities to receive honorary degrees, a stay at the home of Alfred Tennyson, breakfast with Prime Minister William Gladstone and tea at Windsor Castle with Queen Victoria.
"I noticed an unusual interest among the attendants and servants," Victoria later confided to her husband's biographer Theodore Martin. "When [Longfellow] took leave, they concealed themselves in places from which they could get a good look at him as he passed. I have since inquired among them, and am surprised...to find that many of his poems are familiar to them. No other distinguished person has come here that has excited so peculiar an interest."
After his death on March 24, 1882, at 75, dozens of memorials were erected throughout the United States. A national campaign was launched to fund a statue to be unveiled in Washington, D.C. In England, Longfellow became the first American to be honored with a marble bust in Poet's Corner at Westminster Abbey. "Never had a poet been so widely loved," Charles Eliot Norton declared in an essay that commemorated the centennial of Longfellow's birth, "never was the death of a poet so widely mourned."
Widely, but not forever. Longfellow seems to have understood the vicissitudes of fame as well as anyone. His first book of consequence, the travelogue Outre-Mer: A Pilgrimage Beyond the Seas, concluded with a prophetic riff: "Dost thou covet fame?" he asked. "This little book is but a bubble on the stream; and although it may catch the sunshine for a moment, yet it will soon float down the swift-rushing current, and be seen no more!"
Still, Longfellow did what he could to hold the sunshine as long as possible. When he died, he even left behind a collection of pencil stubs wrapped in pieces of paper identifying, in his handwriting, the works that he had composed with each one.
"Above all, Longfellow wrote poems that were meant to be enjoyed," says Christoph Irmscher. "Storytelling, unfortunately, goes against the modernist belief that in order to be any good a poem has to be concise and compressed, and difficult to figure out."
Perhaps Longfellow provided his own best summary in "A Psalm of Life":
Lives of great men all remind us
We can make our lives sublime,
And, departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time.
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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