James Russell Lowell Biography and Selections

James Russell Lowell Biography and Selections

LOW ELL J A MES RUSSELL , — 1819 1891 . J A M ES R U S S E LL LOW E LL . It may justlybe said of Lowell that he always . is remained a boy It true that the years came , UBRARY U . O'I - . 'Ram m flama —380 his hair turned gray , and his step grew less sprightly , but he kept always the heart of youth and foun d it easy to see things from the point of view of the boy . He n ever lost his interest f s in the af air of everyday life , and there was always something new for him to see and to n enjoy . It was this quality of youthful ess of spirit that with others made him inte resting as a boy and charming as a man . to The ancestors of Lowell had been Neyv j n g landers for alm ost two centuries before he was v born . The first one of his relati es who cam e to this country was Percival Lowell , a merchant inR oxbur from Bristol , England , who settled yh 16 9 ’ 8 . Massachusetts , in The Lowell s became known at once for their intelligence , for their l n interest in education , and for their activity i1 i n all d ect o s. They trained their sons rigidly to labor , and when they were old enough they sent them to Harvard College from whence they entered the professions of the ministry or of the law . John Lowell , the grandfather of James Rus a offi sell , was graduate of Harvard College , an cer of the m ili tia at the time of the Revolution ary War , and a delegate to the convention that framed the constitution of Massachusetts . It was he who suggested the phrase “ all men are born free and equal ” which he hoped would be instrumental in doing away with slavery in the 1789 state . He was , in , made United States - 381 s Judge of the District of Mas achusetts , yet with all his legal duties he found time to give his aid in the founding of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences , and occasionally to write a r poem o to give a public address . All of his sons graduated from Harvard C ollegef John became a writer of some note ; Francis was a successful merchant who founded , and for ’ M W O O D O W S H O M . EL , L ELL E whom was named , the city of Lowell , Massa chusetts ; Charles , the father of James Russell , after his graduation , travelled for some time and then was settled over the West Unitarian w Church of Boston , here he remained as pastor until his death as a very old man . ’ Lowell s genius , however , cannot be wholly —382 attri buted to the fact that he had a good anoes ’ on . m try his father s side His other , too , came ” t from good s ock , and was a sister of Robert 1s Traill Spence of the United States Navy . It from her that her son is said to have inherited his v iyid imagination and his strong sense of humor . Not many men are so fortunate in their ancestors as was Lowell . ”fl 22d Lowell was born on the of February , 1819 w , a day of the month which another ell kno wn and celebrated American claimed as his birthday . The house in which Lowell first saw the light was a large frame structure standing n then on the outskirts of Cambridge and know , Elm the as wood . then and now , h It was in ‘ midst of a large cultivated field , at that time , an d un i s was overh g by huge elm trees , as it - to day . Nearly half a m ile away was Fresh l Pond , a small lake on which as a boy Lowe l W o on e skated in inter , and beyond the h use h could catc a view of the Charles River . Just \ on the edge of the village and some distance S away the Craigie House could be een , famous in the Revolutionary War as the headquarters as of Washington , and famous later the home B ut of the poet Longfellow . the village has t o come out meet the house long since , and the meadows in which Lowell played as a boy have been cut up into building lots and are dotted b e with houses . The old mansion , built long of fore Lowell was born , looks sadly out date —383 n ow , in comparison with its more modern neigh b s the ors , and the visitor who see it for first time wonders question in glyw hy it is not kept in better repair , as it should be , being the birth place of so great a man . Lowell w as t he youngest of afam ily of seven ‘ children and was naturally petted a great deal . He did n ot develop mentally with any unusual d rapidity , but he was an attractive , han some s n boy , whose alertness and ympathetic ature won for him the love of everyone . He was a u w as . real boy , too , for tho gh he quick to learn , yet he liked to play out of doors rather than be s . shut up in the house to tudy Like Holmes , he e n joyed as a boy the long drives which he often took with his father when the elder Low ell wen t into some of the surrounding village s un to exchange S day services with other pastors . an d u The little boy was a keen observer , no do bt the impression s he received of the plain country folk who came out to hear his father preach helped him in later years when he characterized so well the dwellers in New England . w Lo ell had always been fond of reading , and w the Rev . Charles Lo ell had a good many books in his library , some of which his son learned to read very early . He was a wide reader always , and this habit is perhaps responsible for much v o f his ease and vi acity in conversation . Some of the first money which he earned he spent fo r books . —384 m d At an early age Lowell , like most Ca bri ge ’ boys , was sent to a dame s school . He did not was stay here long , however , for when he h eig t or nine years of age , he entered a board ing school kept by a Mr . Wells , who lived near Elmwood . Mr . Wells was an educated Englishman who thought that it did boys n o harm to teach them to obey and who was not T H H O U I N H I H I D H I A T H R R E S E W C LO W ELL L V E W LE A V A D . averse to using the rod , if necessary , to bring a about this end . After he h d taught his boys to obey, he taught them Latin , and Lowell profited by both lessons . The letters which he wrote to his brother soon after entering this school are very much like those we should ex ect p a boy to write , for they showed a great deal of carelessness both in pun ctuation and h spelling , and they revealed the fact t at he —385 thought much more of play than of study , as perhaps a healthy boy should do . ’ t o W hen Lowell was fifteen years old he was able to pass the freshman examinations for entrance to Harvard College . He was a bashful be boy , but he formed friends easily and soon came well known in college . There were few students then to know , however , for the total n ot enrollment did exceed two hundred . There n ot a i were m ny nstructors either , but some of them were men of great ability . Two years after Lowell entered college Lon gfellow became professor of modern languages . Lowell en j oyed the life which he lived at col e l ge ; he was not a close student , but he liked to a d read , n he enjoyed spending his money for , books . Poetry attracted him perhaps more than other things , and he says of himself that he was fondest of the poetry of Spenser . He began to show some poetic ability soon after he entered college ; among the first things he did ' l m was to tran s ate so e odes of Horace . Occa sion all y he wrote for the college paper , but he did little really worthy of publication until after hi his graduation . At the beginning of s junior year he was elected a member of the Hasty n Pudding Club , a society still existi g at Har vard University which young men feel proud to become members of , and he at once was made secretary of the society . He said this honor m ca e to him because he could write poetry , and - 386 had the records of the society to be kept in verse . He made up his mind while in college to study law and said j okingly that if he did he should be chief justice of the United States . He was i H arv ardian a elected one of the ed tors of the , the college magazine at that tim e , a fact which he said flattered his v apgty sm ce he was one of the youngest men in his class .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    33 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us