On Fellow Ous Ulletin

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

On Fellow Ous Ulletin on fellow ous ulletin Volume No. A Newsletter of the Friends of the Longfellow House and the National Park Service December New Research on “Paul Revere’s Ride” Marks the Poem’s 150th Anniversary ust in time for the sesquicentennial of the event, a reprinting of his letter to JHenry W. Longfellow’s “Paul Revere’s the Massachusetts Historical Society, in an Ride,” Boston historian Charles Bahne has issue of New England Magazine . When uncovered several lost stanzas of the classic Longfellow was a twenty-five-year-old pro - poem and makes a solid case that the poet fessor of modern languages at Bowdoin had read Revere’s actual account of the College, Part V of his serialized essay enti - events prior to composing his epic verse. tled “The Schoolmaster” appeared in that In a paper entitled “Paul Revere’s Ride same October issue. In his later years, Revisited,” Bahne carefully reconstructs the Longfellow in two separate letters referred history of Longfellow’s idea to write the to Revere’s account in New England Magazine poetic saga, the process of composing the as his inspiration for the poem. piece, and the variations in the text when it But it was almost three decades later, as was printed in a number of nineteenth-cen - the country headed towards civil war, that tury publications and books. Bahne con - Longfellow began his own version of the ducted extensive research using the Long- historic day Revere described, and set about fellow House archives, Harvard University’s Print produced for the Revere Copper Co., creating his mythic Revolutionary hero. An Houghton Library, and Boston city direc - Bahne concluded that Longfellow had ardent abolitionist, Longfellow put pencil tories in the Boston Public Library plus learned of the true story of Paul Revere’s to paper for “Paul Revere’s Ride” in April many other sources and collections. ride from reading Revere’s own report of (continued on page ) Longfellow House Remembers Senator Edward Kennedy n August , , the Longfellow Revere’.... She felt, and how right she was, nedy, passed away, members of the family ONational Historic Site lost one of its that Longfellow’s poem was a wonderful way paid a visit to the House because of its dearest friends and most ardent support - for her children to learn about poetry and importance to her. At other times Ted ers. From childhood through his later years, history at the same time. That early expo - Kennedy stopped by the House with his Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy appreciated sure to our nation’s history and literature nephews, nieces, and various relatives. Longfellow’s poetry and cherished the his - had ... an immeasurable impact on my life....” In the U.S. Senate, Kennedy played a key toric house in which the poet had lived. When his mother, Rose Fitzgerald Ken- role in placing the House under the auspices As a child, Kennedy learned to of the National Park Service. In recite Longfellow’s poems by heart. the Longfellow House Trust “I remember my mother and her donated the House with all its insatiable interest in history, litera - furnishings, objects, library, and ture, and the arts,” he said in family papers to the NPS. Senator at the thirtieth anniversary celebra - Kennedy along with U.S. Repre - tion of the National Park Service’s sentativeThomas P. (Tip) O’Neill stewardship of the House. “And introduced the legislation to es- she took advantage of every oppor - tablish the Longfellow National tunity imaginable to teach and then Historic Site as part of the NPS. to quiz each of her nine children Kennedy understood the sig - about the things that she thought nificance of the House: “In so important. And one of my earliest many ways, this magnificent and memories was being required by treasured place that we call Long- my mother to memorize the poem, fellow House, is a window into ‘The Midnight Ride of Paul Senator Kennedy with NPS’s Jim Shea and Myra Harrison, (continued on page ) ᳚ ሖሗመ Friends of the Longfellow House Board of Directors Heather S. Moulton, President Barclay Henderson, Clerk Robert C. Mitchell, Treasurer Hope Cushing Diana Der-Hovanessian Edward Guleserian Sarah B. Jolliffe Linda Almgren Kime Laura Nash Elizabeth F. Potter Lynne Spencer Advisory Board Ruth Butler LeRoy Cragwell Diana Korzenik Richard Nylander Stephen D. Pratt Marilyn Richardson Marc Shell Charles Sullivan Lowell A. Warren Jr. Administrator J.L. Bell Newsletter Committee Glenna Lang, Editor, Writer & Designer James M. Shea ᇶᇷᇸ National Park Service Myra Harrison, Superintendent James M. Shea, Museum Manager Lauren Downing , Administrative Officer Nancy Jones, Education andVisitor Services Anita Israel, Archives Specialist David Daly, Collections Manager Lauren Malcolm, MuseumTechnician Flo Smith, Management Assistant Liza Stearns, Education Specialist Scott Fletcher , Facility Manager Printed by Newprint Offset, Waltham, Mass. ማሜምሞ All images are from the Longfellow National Historic Site collections, unless noted otherwise. The poet’s grandson Harry Dana wrote this poem in and had a hundred copies printed as a Christmas card with an engraving by Reverend Samuel Miller. Dana submitted the poem to the NewYorker for publication, but they rejected it. ᳚ Interview with a Friend …Meet Charles Bahne, Public Historian For thirty years Charles Bahne has re- living, working, shopping, traveling through, Park Service – who felt you should tell the searched and conducted historic tours usu - and there are sights like the scene of the truth. If there is a myth, try to dissuade ally related to the American Revolution. He Boston Massacre or Paul Revere’s House. people. The costumed storytellers – actors has worked for a variety of organizations Places that I heard about a thousand miles in many cases – often lead tours that go in the Boston area and has written a popu - away in eighth grade are still here.You come with the myth and milk it for all they can lar guidebook, The Complete Guide to Boston's across them by accident as opposed to hav - make of it. They are becoming a greater Freedom Trail . Out of enthusiasm and with a ing to make a pilgrimage. Longfellow’s and greater share of the market. concern for accuracy, he conveys history to House is similar. It’s in a neighborhood. LH: What are the advantages of work - tourists and the general public. People live across the street and next door. ing as a tour guide? Longfellow House: How did you LH: What in particular led you to study CB: I enjoy working with people, the become interested in leading historic tours? Longfellow and “Paul Revere’s Ride?” people contact, and the direct interpreta - Charles Bahne: My college training was CB: I had worked with the Paul Revere tion. Every opportunity for advancement in urban studies and planning at MIT in the House and the Old North Church. Old involved getting away from that. I didn’t early s. At that time in Boston there was want to become a supervisor. And I get to a lot of work in planning for the huge crowds be in beautiful areas of our country, out - of tourists that were going to come for the doors much of the time, with beautiful Bicentennial in ’ and ’ . I started working weather, meeting constant groups of peo - in planning for tourism – writing guide - ple. You always get the person who has a books and working in museums. By the time new question: “When I was over in Eng - I graduated, there were no jobs in planning. land I went to General Gage’s house, and I was idealistic. I drove a cab, and then I they told a different story than what we’re started volunteering in various socially wor - hearing here in Boston.” How do I recon - thy projects, a couple of nonprofits, child - cile what this person has told me with what care, things like that. I really had become the history books say? interested in history doing a class project LH: How do you try to reach kids? about Paul Revere and his view of the CB: I try to talk about what it was like Boston Massacre. A few years later, I saw an to be in school back then. The fact that the ad for volunteers for Boston By Foot, a students on the morning of April th, walking tour group. Then I worked for a some of them had to cross the line where while at the Museum of Transportation, the British soldiers were lined up ready to the Old State House, and the National march to Lexington.They had to go around Park Service in Boston. That got me inter - North approached me to do a booklet them. Or the incident when the soldiers ested in Boston’s role in the American Rev - (which didn’t happen), but one of the were camped on the Boston Common and olution. I wrote a book on the Freedom things I wanted to do for it was reprint the wouldn’t let children sled on their favorite Trail and worked as a free-lance tour guide. poem. I had noticed in publications of the sledding hill. They protested and went to I started working with Elderhostel, now poem that there were slight variations, so I General Gage or one of the other junior called Exploritas, doing programs on the thought I should get the official version. officers and got the policy reversed. The American Revolution, which I still do. Between the Web and various libraries, I general said the soldiers had to move their LH: When did you first become ac- started comparing the text of the poems camps so the kids could keep going sled - quainted with historic Boston? and noticed many differences.
Recommended publications
  • As One Who from a Volume Reads: a Study of the Long Narrative Poem in Nineteenth-Century America Sean Leahy University of Vermont
    University of Vermont ScholarWorks @ UVM Graduate College Dissertations and Theses Dissertations and Theses 2019 As One Who From a Volume Reads: A Study of the Long Narrative Poem in Nineteenth-Century America Sean Leahy University of Vermont Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis Recommended Citation Leahy, Sean, "As One Who From a Volume Reads: A Study of the Long Narrative Poem in Nineteenth-Century America" (2019). Graduate College Dissertations and Theses. 1065. https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/1065 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Dissertations and Theses at ScholarWorks @ UVM. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate College Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ UVM. For more information, please contact [email protected]. AS ONE WHO FROM A VOLUME READS: A STUDY OF THE LONG NARRATIVE POEM IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICA A Thesis Presented by Sean Leahy to The Faculty of the Graduate College of The University of Vermont In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Specializing in English May, 2019 Defense Date: March 20, 2019 Thesis Examination Committee: Mary Lou Kete, Ph.D., Advisor Dona Brown, Ph.D., Chairperson Eric Lindstrom, Ph.D. Cynthia J. Forehand, Ph.D., Dean of the Graduate College ABSTRACT Though overlooked and largely unread today, the long narrative poem was a distinct genre available to nineteenth-century American poets. Thematically and formally diverse, the long narrative poem represents a form that poets experimented with and modified, and it accounted for some of the most successful poetry publications in the nineteenth-century United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Longfellow House Ulletin B
    on fellow ous L g ulletinH e Volume 12 No. 1 A Newsletter of the Friends of the Longfellow House and the National Park Service June 2008 A Paul Revere House Centennial andB the Longfellow Contribution n April 18 the Paul Revere Memorial the process of crafting OAssociation celebrated the one-hun- these iconic characters, dredth anniversary of the restoration of Longfellow heightened Paul Revere’s house and its opening as a the awareness and appre- museum. As part of the event, schoolchild- ciation of antiquarian ren recited the stirring words of Paul Revere’s relics in his native region Ride, Henry Longfellow’s poem that ele- and the nation as a evere Memorial Association vated Paul Revere to mythic status. Longfel- whole, and he popular- low, poet-chronicler of American history, ized historic places asso- would have been proud to know that his ciated with these figures. 1860 classic was in large part responsible for On North Square in the preservation of the memory and arti- Boston’s North End, the facts of this Revolutionary War patriot. wooden building now The Paul Revere House as it was restored in 1908 and remains today Through his narrative poems, Longfel- known as the Paul Revere Photo courtesy of the Paul R low created national myths, among them House has survived numerous transforma- adapted to the less-sloping Georgian style, the story of the Boston silversmith who tions. Between 1676 and 1681, a wealthy mer- and a third story was added. “spread the alarm through every Middle- chant built it as a two-story colonial resi- In 1770 at the age of thirty-five, Paul sex village and farm” that the British army dence with a second-floor overhang.
    [Show full text]
  • Poetry in English Language Literature
    UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL DO PIAUÍ - UESPI CENTRO DE CIÊNCIAS HUMANAS E LETRAS – CCHL CURSO: LICENCIATURA PLENA EM LETRAS INGLÊS POETRY IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE LITERATURE Part three PROFA. DRA. MARIA DO SOCORRO BAPTISTA BARBOSA JANUARY 2013 Were I called on to define, very briefly, the term Art, I should call it 'the reproduction of what the Senses perceive in Nature through the veil of the soul.' The mere imitation, however accurate, of what is in Nature, entitles no man to the sacred name of 'Artist.' Edgar Allan Poe TABLE OF CONTENTS UNIT II: The poetry of the USA ……………………………………………………….. 3 1. American Puritanism ………………………………………………………………. 3 Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor – Francis Murphy ……………………………. 3 The Puritan Literary Attitude – Kenneth B. Murdock ……………………………….. 4 1.1. Anne Bradstreet ………………………………………………………………….. 18 1.2. Edward Taylor ……………………………………………………………………. 20 2. Enlightenment in American Poetry ………………………………………………. 22 American Enlightenment Thought – Shane J. Ralston …………………………….. 22 2.1 Philip Freneau ……………………………………………………………………… 30 2.2 Phillis Wheatley ……………………………………………………………………. 33 3. American Romanticism and Transcendentalism ……………………………….. 35 American Romanticism – Maria do Socorro Baptista Barbosa .............................. 35 The American Transcendentalist Poets – Lawrence Buell ………………………… 38 3.1 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow …………………………………………………... 39 3.2 Ralph Waldo Emerson …………………………………………………………... 44 3.3 Edgar Allan Poe ………………………………………………………………….. 48 4. American Civil War ………………………………………………………………….. 52 The War between
    [Show full text]
  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Is Considered the Most Popular American Poet of the 19Th Century. He Was Born in 1807, the Same Year
    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is considered the most popular American poet of the 19th century. He was born in 1807, the same year as another famous poet, John Greenleaf Whittier. As a boy, he loved to read and studied many of the English poets, though according to The Book of Knowledge published by the Grolier Society in 1911, his favorite book was Washington Irving’s “Sketch Book.” By the time he had graduated from Portland Academy, he had become known as a fluent translator and was offered a job as a professor of modern languages. He traveled abroad in Europe for several years as he prepared to take the job. His first published work, a collection of travel sketches from his time in Europe, did not succeed. But in 1839, he published a collection of poems called Voices of the Night. This collection became wildly popular, and he followed it by publishing a romantic novel called Hyperion. Two years later, in 1841, he published a second collection of poems called Ballads and Other Poems. It is in this collection that you will find his incredibly popular poems “The Wreck of the Hesperus” and “The Village Blacksmith.” In 1842, he spoke out against slavery in Poems on Slavery, and in 1847, he published the poem Evangeline, the romantic story of a man and woman separated by the expulsion of the Acadians from Nova Scotia. Henry served as professor of Harvard’s modern language program for eighteen years until 1854. After retiring from that position, he went on to write The Song of Hiawatha, The Courtship of Miles Standish, and Tales of a Wayside Inn.
    [Show full text]
  • Longfellow's Wayside
    Longfellow’s Wayside Inn Abstracted from article in American Road Magazine, Summer 2010, by Alice Ridge photos courtesy Wayside Inn Archives; Ted Fitzgerald. Much of what appears in the Arrow newsletter is news and history from the Yellowstone Trail west of Chicago because western states were far more aware of the Trail than eastern states. This article, however, describes a famous eastern Inn today which stands about 50 feet from the Yellowstone Trail. Stand anywhere on the lovely 125 acres surrounding the Wayside Inn, near Sudbury, Massachusetts, and you might hear its 300 year history passing by. Jangling horse-drawn carriages still appear occasionally on the grounds, redolent of the Inn’s beginnings. Antique cars rattle in for rendezvous, mirroring 100 years ago. Now it’s hybrids that quietly glide into the future. The Wayside Inn has seen it all. The road running in front of the Inn has also evolved. The (Upper) Boston Post Road, one of the first mail routes in the nation, operating since 1673, almost skimmed the front door of the Inn. A 100-yard section is preserved. It was this road and its promise for progress and profit that caused Samuel Howe to build “a haus of entertainment,” as an extension of his home, in 1716. And business thrived. About 50 feet south of that original Boston Post Road is the present Wayside Inn Road, called the Yellowstone Trail from 1919 to 1930 and, around 1927, when US road numbers were assigned, called US 20. A new, straighter road was built about 320 feet south and now carries both the US 20 designation and the name Boston Post Road.
    [Show full text]
  • On Fellow Ous Ulletin
    on fellow ous L g ulletinH e Volume No. A Newsletter of the Friends of the Longfellow House and the National Park Service June A Paul Revere House Centennial andB the Longfellow Contribution n o n April the Paul Revere Memorial the process of crafting i t a i Association celebrated the one-hun- these iconic characters, c o O s s dredth anniversary of the restoration of Longfellow heightened A l a i Paul Revere’s house and its opening as a the awareness and appre- r o m museum. As part of the event, schoolchild- ciation of antiquarian e M ren recited the stirring words of Paul Revere’s relics in his native region e r e v Ride, Henry Longfellow’s poem that ele- and the nation as a e R l vated Paul Revere to mythic status. Longfel- whole, and he popular- u a P low, poet-chronicler of American history, ized historic places asso- e h t would have been proud to know that his ciated with these figures. f o y s classic was in large part responsible for On North Square in e t r u the preservation of the memory and arti- Boston’s North End, the o c o facts of this Revolutionary War patriot. wooden building now t o The Paul Revere House as it was restored in and remains today h Through his narrative poems, Longfel- known as the Paul Revere P low created national myths, among them House has survived numerous transforma- adapted to the less-sloping Georgian style, the story of the Boston silversmith who tions.
    [Show full text]
  • Tales of a Wayside Inn Online
    ygcXL (Read now) Tales of a Wayside Inn Online [ygcXL.ebook] Tales of a Wayside Inn Pdf Free Henry Wadsworth Longfellow audiobook | *ebooks | Download PDF | ePub | DOC #838576 in Books 2016-03-31Original language:English 9.00 x .25 x 6.00l, #File Name: 1530831016108 pages | File size: 43.Mb Henry Wadsworth Longfellow : Tales of a Wayside Inn before purchasing it in order to gage whether or not it would be worth my time, and all praised Tales of a Wayside Inn: 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A wonderful addition to my library!By Lady AnkhThis product came in very good condition, and was delivered super quick, I was pleasantly surprised to find this waiting for me a bit early! It had been recommended to me to read this volume, and though at times parts of the writing are a bit too dryly written for my taste, it is still a wonderful volume to have and to learn from. A wonderful addition for my library, and completely worth the price for such quality as comes from this seller. I highly recommend this book!0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. I grew up under the "shadow" of Minnehaha Falls and ...By Susan HankinI grew up under the "shadow" of Minnehaha Falls and have been steeped in Longfellow's poetry all my life. Other than "Paul Revere's Ride," which we students learned and memorized in grade school, however, I had never read the other Tales of a Wayside Inn. I thought a few of them were too long and not very interesting.
    [Show full text]
  • Longfellow's Life and Legacy
    Longfellow’s Life & Legacy Longfellow House- Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site 105 Brattle Street Cambridge, MA 02138 www.nps.gov/long Biographical Information 1 * Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1807 - 1882 Feb. 27, 1807 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow born in Portland, Maine 1820 Longfellow publishes his first poem, “The Battle of Lovell’s Pond” from Voices of the Night 1825 Longfellow graduates from Bowdoin College 1826 - 1829 Longfellow travels to Europe to study language and literature 1831 Longfellow marries Mary Storer Potter 1835 - 1836 Longfellow travels to Europe 1835 Mary Potter Longfellow dies 1836 Longfellow begins teaching at Harvard as Smith Professor of Modern Languages 1837 Longfellow moves into Craigie House, 105 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1839 The Village Blacksmith 1842 “The Slave in the Dismal Swamp” from Poems on Slavery July 13, 1843 Longfellow marries Fanny Appleton - her father, textile manufacturer Nathan Appleton, purchases Craigie House as a wedding gift 1844 Charles Appleton Longfellow is born 1845 Ernest Wadsworth Longfellow is born 1846 “The Builders” from The Seaside and the Fireside 1847 Fanny Longfellow, Henry and Fanny’s first daughter is * Poems are listed according to the year in which they were composed and finished. Collections in which the poems appear may have been published at a later date. 2 born 1847 Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie 1848 Daughter Fanny Longfellow dies 1850 Alice Mary Longfellow is born 1853 Edith Longfellow is born 1854 Longfellow resigns from position at Harvard
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form
    Form No. 10-300 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATHS DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOWTO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS ____________TYPE ALL ENTRIES - COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS______ | NAME HISTORIC Wadsworth-Longfellow House_____________________ __________ AND/OR COMMON Wadsworth-Longfellow House LOCATION STREET & NUMBER 487 Congress Street -NOT FOR PUBLICATION CITY, TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Portland __ VICINITY OF 1st STATE CODE COUNTY CODE Maine 023 Cumberland 005 CLASSIFICATION CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE _DISTRICT —PUBLIC XXoCCUPIED —AGRICULTURE ^MUSEUM X_BUILDING(S) X_PRIVATE —UNOCCUPIED —COMMERCIAL —PARK _ STRUCTURE —BOTH _ WORK IN PROGRESS —EDUCATIONAL .—PRIVATE RESIDENCE _SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS _ OBJECT _IN PROCESS -XYES: RESTRICTED —GOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC _BEING CONSIDERED __YES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION _NO —MILITARY —OTHER: OWNER OF PROPERTY NAME Maine Historical Society STREET & NUMBER 485 Congress Street CITY, TOWN STATE Portland — VICINITY OF Maine LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS,ETC. Cumberland County Registry of Deeds STREETS NUMBER CITY, TOWN STATE Portland Maine REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS TITLE Historic American Buildings Survey (ME-2) DATE 1936 4_FEDERAL -STATE -COUNTY —LOCAL DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS Library of Congress, Division of Prints and Photographs CITY, TOWN "~"" STATE Washington____________ D. C. DESCRIPTION CONDITION CHECK ONE CHECK ONE ^EXCELLENT _DETERIORATED _UNALTERED ^ORIGINAL SITE _G0 OD _RUINS ^ALTERED _MOVED DATE——————— _FAIR __UNEXPOSED DESCRIBETHE PRESENT AND ORIGINAL (IF KNOWN) PHYSICAL APPEARANCE The Wadsworth-Longfellow House is located on a small, almost rectangular lot on the northern side of Congress Street (number 483-487) in Portland, Maine. When completed, the building offered a nearly unrestricted view of Portland Harbor to the southeast and Back Cove to the north.
    [Show full text]
  • Longfellow's Florence
    LONGFELLOW’S FLORENCE Christian Y. Dupont1 Abstract: Now remembered chiefly as the first American to translate the whole Dante’s Commedia, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow had a lifelong fascination with Italy that was not incidental to his popularity as a poet and international renown during the nineteenth century. The essay considers Longfellow’s regard for Florence, where he sojourned unhappily as a student and more happily in later life with his family, in relation to other Italian cities. After considering Longfellow’s descriptions of Florence in his travel letters and poetry, focusing in particular on his sonnet, “The Old Bridge at Florence,” it turns to examine a late, unfinished work, a dramatic poem on the life of Michelangelo and the ambivalent feelings they shared toward Florence and Rome. Key words: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Florence, Arno River, Dante Alighieri, Michelangelo Buonarotti, American poetry, travel literature, transatlantic literature, translation studies. Introduction These days we tend to remember Henry Wadsworth Longfellow—to the extent we consider him at all—as the first American to have completed a translation of Dante’s Commedia thanks to the help of those fabled Wednesday evening gatherings of friends that have since become still more famous than his translation: the so-called Dante Club, which has gained international renown through the debut historical novel of the same name by Matthew Pearl, which itself has been translated into more than thirty languages and achieved sales of around a million copies.2 Because Longfellow was known as a translator of Dante, and before that as an interpreter of his epic poem during his years as a pioneering professor of modern languages at Harvard University, we might imagine that he reflected at 2015 , 1 Boston College, Boston, MA, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • Paul Revere's Ride
    on fellow ous ulletin Volume No. A Newsletter of the Friends of the Longfellow House and the National Park Service December New Research on “Paul Revere’s Ride” Marks the Poem’s 15 th Anniversary ust in time for the sesquicentennial of the event, a reprinting of his letter to JHenry W. Longfellow’s “Paul Revere’s the Massachusetts Historical Society, in an Ride,” Boston historian Charles Bahne has issue of New England Magazine. When uncovered several lost stanzas of the classic Longfellow was a twenty-five-year-old pro- poem and makes a solid case that the poet fessor of modern languages at Bowdoin had read Revere’s actual account of the College, Part V of his serialized essay enti- events prior to composing his epic verse. tled “The Schoolmaster” appeared in that In a paper entitled “Paul Revere’s Ride same October issue. In his later years, Revisited,” Bahne carefully reconstructs the Longfellow in two separate letters referred history of Longfellow’s idea to write the to Revere’s account in New England Magazine poetic saga, the process of composing the as his inspiration for the poem. piece, and the variations in the text when it But it was almost three decades later, as was printed in a number of nineteenth-cen- the country headed towards civil war, that tury publications and books. Bahne con- Longfellow began his own version of the ducted extensive research using the Long- historic day Revere described, and set about fellow House archives, Harvard University’s Print produced for the Revere Copper Co., creating his mythic Revolutionary hero.
    [Show full text]