[59]
to obscure his future prospects.
Still, there was a hard road before him. It is very pleasant to travel rapidly through foreign countries, seeing the best that is in them and to return home with a multitude of fresh impressions; but living and working a long time in another country seems too much like exile.
The loneliness of the situation becomes a weary burden, and it is dangerous from its very loneliness.
Many have died or lost their health under such conditions (in fact Longfellow came near losing his life from Roman fever), and he wrote from Paris: “Here one can keep evil at a distance as well as elsewhere, though, to be sure, temptations are multiplied a thousand-fold if he is willing to enter into them.”
A young man's first experience in London or Paris is a dangerous sense of freedom; for all the customary restraints of his daily life have been removed.
Mrs. Stowe says of her beautiful character, “Eva St. Clair,” that all bad influences rolled off from her like dew from a cabbage leaf, and it was the same with Longfellow throughout.
He lived in France, Spain, Italy, and Germany, and then returned to Portland, the same true American as when he left there, without foreign ways or modes of thinking, and with no more than the slight aroma of a foreign air upon him. Longfellow and his whole family were
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