Longfellow: A Rediscovered LifeBeacon Press, 28 Jun 2016 - 332 halaman Charles C. Calhoun's Longfellow gives life, at last, to the most popular American poet who ever lived, a nineteenth-century cultural institution of extraordinary influence and the"one poet average, nonbookish Americans still know by heart" (Dana Gioia). Calhoun's Longfellow emerges as one of America's first powerful cultural makers: a poet and teacher who helped define Victorian culture; a major conduit for European culture coming into America; a catalyst for the Colonial Revival movement in architecture and interior design; and a critic of both Puritanism and the American obsession with material success. Longfellow is also a portrait of a man in advance of his time in championing multiculturalism: He popularized Native American folklore; revived the Evangeline story (the foundational myth of modern Acadian and Cajun identity in the U.S. and Canada); wrote powerful poems against slavery; and introduced Americans to the languages and literatures of other lands. Calhoun's portrait of post-Revolutionary Portland, Maine, where Longfellow was born, and of his time at Bowdoin and Harvard Colleges, show a deep and imaginative grasp of New England cultural history. Longfellow's tragic romantic life-his first wife dies tragically early, after a miscarriage, and his second wife, Fannie Appleton, dies after accidentally setting herself on fire-is illuminated, and his intense friendship with abolitionist and U.S. senator Charles Sumner is given as a striking example of mid-nineteenth-century romantic friendship between men. Finally, Calhoun paints in vivid detail Longfellow's family life at Craigie House, including stories of the poet's friends-Hawthorne, Emerson, Dickens, Fanny Kemble, Julia Ward Howe, and Oscar Wilde among them. |
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... Fanny Longfellow's determination in the 1840s to maintain the house as a shrine to George Washington—who had lived there for nine months during the Siege of Boston and who had perfected his own notion of a separate American republic in ...
... Fanny Longfellow's determination in the 1840s to maintain the house as a shrine to George Washington—who had lived there for nine months during the Siege of Boston and who had perfected his own notion of a separate American republic in ...
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... Fanny Kemble. Aside from Sam Ward, the two had at least one other thing in common: Longfellow had corresponded with Wilde's mother, Lady Wilde, herself a poet of repute back in Dublin. For her son, the Craigie House breakfast was a ...
... Fanny Kemble. Aside from Sam Ward, the two had at least one other thing in common: Longfellow had corresponded with Wilde's mother, Lady Wilde, herself a poet of repute back in Dublin. For her son, the Craigie House breakfast was a ...
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Acadian amid Appleton beautiful Boston Bowdoin College British brother Brunswick Cambridge career Carlyle century Charles Charley Civil Clara Craigie House Crowninshield culture Dana Dante Dante Club early Edward Preble England European Evangeline family’s famous Fanny Fanny’s father Felton French George Washington Greene German Göttingen Harvard Hawthorne Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Henry’s Hiawatha Hilen Houghton Hyperion Indian James John Journal Julia Margaret Cameron Kalevala languages later lectures letter Library Library of America literary live LNHS Maine Historical Society Mary Massachusetts Mifflin & Company modern night nineteenthcentury North OutreMer Poe’s poem poet poet’s poetic poetry political Portland Preble professor published readers Samuel seemed sketch Song of Hiawatha Spain Spanish Stephen Longfellow story Street Sumner survives thought Ticknor took town translation University Press Victorian village Washington William writing wrote York young Zilpah