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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 22 0 Browse Search
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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Chapter 14: anti-slavery poems and second marriage (search)
foundation for the intimacy between Longfellow and Lowell. Lowell had been invited, on the publication of A Lowell had been invited, on the publication of A Year's Life, to write for an annual which was to appear in Boston and to be edited, in Lowell's own phrase, byLowell's own phrase, by Longfellow, Felton, Hillard and that set. Scudder's Lowell , i. 93. Lowell subsequently wrote in the PioneLowell , i. 93. Lowell subsequently wrote in the Pioneer kindly notices of Longfellow's Poems on Slavery, but there is no immediate evidence of any personal relatioLowell subsequently wrote in the Pioneer kindly notices of Longfellow's Poems on Slavery, but there is no immediate evidence of any personal relations between them at that time. In a letter to Poe, dated at Elmwood June 27, 1844, Lowell says of a recent artLowell says of a recent article in the Foreign Quaterly Review attributed to John Forster, Forster is a friend of some of the Longfellow riswold, p. 151. . . . It will be noticed that what Lowell had originally called a set has now become a cliquep seems to have begun with a visit by Longfellow to Lowell's study on October 29, 1846, when the conversation ume of poems, at the end of the following year, and Lowell spent an evening with Longfellow during March, 1848
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Chapter 16: literary life in Cambridge (search)
le authors, among whom Emerson stood last but one, while Longfellow was not included at all. He then appended a supplementary list of twenty-four minor authors, headed by Longfellow. Correspondence of R. W. Griswold, p. 162. We have already seen Lowell, from a younger point of view, describing Longfellow, at about this time, as the head of a clique, and we now find Andrews Norton, from an older point of view, assigning him only the first place among authors of the second grade. It is curious ce, than they And as heavy with shadows and night-dews, Hung the heart of the maiden. The calm and magical moonlight Seemed to inundate her soul. It is curious to notice that Chasles makes the same criticism on Evangeline that Holmes made on Lowell's Vision of Sir Launfal; namely, that there is in it a mixture of the artificial and the natural. The result is, we may infer, that on the whole one still thinks of it as a work of art and does not—as, for instance, with Tolstoi's Cossacks—think