James Russell Lowell
James Russell Lowell | |
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![]() James Russell Lowell, c. 1855 | |
Born | Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States | February 22, 1819
Died | August 12, 1891 Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States | (aged 72)
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Literary movement | Romanticism |
Spouse | |
Children | 4 |
Parents | United States Minister to Spain |
In office August 18, 1877 – March 2, 1880 | |
Preceded by | Caleb Cushing |
Succeeded by | Lucius Fairchild |
James Russell Lowell (/ˈloʊəl/; February 22, 1819 – August 12, 1891) was an American Romantic poet, critic, editor, and diplomat. He is associated with the fireside poets, a group of New England writers who were among the first American poets that rivaled the popularity of British poets. These writers usually used conventional forms and meters in their poetry, making them suitable for families entertaining at their fireside.
Lowell graduated from Harvard College in 1838, despite his reputation as a troublemaker, and went on to earn a law degree from Harvard Law School. He published his first collection of poetry in 1841 and married Maria White in 1844. The couple had several children, though only one survived past childhood.
He became involved in the movement to
Maria died in 1853, and Lowell accepted a professorship of languages at Harvard in 1854. He traveled to Europe before officially assuming his teaching duties in 1856, and married Frances Dunlap shortly thereafter in 1857. That year, Lowell also became editor of
He received his first political appointment, the
Lowell believed that the poet played an important role as a prophet and critic of society. He used poetry for reform, particularly in abolitionism. However, his commitment to the anti-slavery cause wavered over the years, as did his opinion on African-Americans. He attempted to emulate the true Yankee accent in the dialogue of his characters, particularly in The Biglow Papers. This depiction of the dialect, as well as his many satires, was an inspiration to writers such as Mark Twain and H. L. Mencken.
Biography
Early life
James Russell Lowell was born February 22, 1819.
Lowell attended Harvard College beginning at age 15 in 1834, though he was not a good student and often got into trouble.[8] In his sophomore year, he was absent from required chapel attendance 14 times and from classes 56 times.[9] In his last year there, he wrote, "During Freshman year, I did nothing, during Sophomore year I did nothing, during Junior year I did nothing, and during Senior year I have thus far done nothing in the way of college studies."[8] In his senior year, he became one of the editors of Harvardiana, a literary magazine, to which he contributed prose and poetry that he admitted was of low quality. As he said later, "I was as great an ass as ever brayed & thought it singing."[10] During his undergraduate years, Lowell was a member of Hasty Pudding and served both as secretary and poet. While at Harvard, he became lifelong friends with fellow troublemaker George W. Minns.[11]
Lowell was elected the poet of the class of 1838[12] and, as was tradition, was asked to recite an original poem on Class Day, the day before Commencement on July 17, 1838.[9] He was suspended, however, and not allowed to participate. Instead, his poem was printed and made available thanks to subscriptions paid by his classmates.[12] He had composed the poem in Concord,[13] where he had been exiled by the Harvard faculty to the care of the Rev. Barzallai Frost because of his neglect of his studies.[14] During his stay in Concord, he became friends with Ralph Waldo Emerson and got to know the other Transcendentalists. His Class Day poem satirized the social movements of the day; abolitionists, Thomas Carlyle, Emerson, and the Transcendentalists were treated.[13]
Lowell did not know what vocation to choose after graduating, and he vacillated among business, the ministry, medicine, and law. He ultimately enrolled at Harvard Law School in 1840 and was admitted to the bar two years later.[15] While studying law, however, he contributed poems and prose articles to various magazines. During this time, he was admittedly depressed and often had suicidal thoughts. He once confided to a friend that he held a cocked pistol to his forehead and considered killing himself at the age of 20.[16]
Marriage and family
In late 1839, Lowell met Maria White through her brother William, a classmate at Harvard,[17] and the two became engaged in the autumn of 1840. Maria's father Abijah White, a wealthy merchant from Watertown, insisted that their wedding be postponed until Lowell had gainful employment.[18] They were finally married on December 26, 1844,[19] shortly after the groom published Conversations on Some of the Old Poets, a collection of his previously published essays.[20] A friend described their relationship as "the very picture of a True Marriage".[21] Lowell himself believed that she was made up "half of earth and more than half of Heaven".[18] She, too, wrote poetry, and the next twelve years of Lowell's life were deeply affected by her influence. He said that his first book of poetry A Year's Life (1841) "owes all its beauty to her", though it only sold 300 copies.[18]
Maria's character and beliefs led her to become involved in the movements directed against intemperance and slavery. She was a member of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society and persuaded her husband to become an abolitionist.[22] James had previously expressed antislavery sentiments, but Maria urged him towards more active expression and involvement.[23] His second volume of poems Miscellaneous Poems expressed these antislavery thoughts, and its 1,500 copies sold well.[24]
Maria was in poor health, and the couple moved to Philadelphia shortly after their marriage, thinking that her lungs could heal there.[25] In Philadelphia, he became a contributing editor for the Pennsylvania Freeman, an abolitionist newspaper.[26] In the spring of 1845, the Lowells returned to Cambridge to make their home at Elmwood. They had four children, though only one (Mabel, born 1847) survived past infancy. Blanche was born December 31, 1845, but lived only fifteen months; Rose, born in 1849, survived only a few months as well; their only son Walter was born in 1850 but died in 1852.[27] Lowell was very affected by the loss of almost all of his children. His grief over the death of his first daughter in particular was expressed in his poem "The First Snowfall" (1847).[28] He again considered suicide, writing to a friend that he thought "of my razors and my throat and that I am a fool and a coward not to end it all at once".[27]
Literary career
Lowell's earliest poems were published without remuneration in the Southern Literary Messenger in 1840.[29] He was inspired to new efforts towards self-support and joined with his friend Robert Carter in founding the literary journal The Pioneer.[21] The periodical was distinguished by the fact that most of its content was new rather than material that had been previously published elsewhere, and by the inclusion of very serious criticism, which covered not only literature but also art and music.[30] Lowell wrote that it would "furnish the intelligent and reflecting portion of the Reading Public with a rational substitute for the enormous quantity of thrice-diluted trash, in the shape of namby-pamby love tales and sketches, which is monthly poured out to them by many of our popular Magazines."[21] William Wetmore Story noted the journal's higher taste, writing that "it took some stand & appealled to a higher intellectual Standard than our puerile milk or watery namby-pamby Mags with which we are overrun".[31] The first issue of the journal included the first appearance of "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe.[32] Lowell was treated for an eye disease in New York shortly after the first issue, and in his absence Carter did a poor job of managing the journal.[24] The magazine ceased publication after three monthly numbers beginning in January 1843, leaving Lowell $1,800 (~$60,744 in 2024) in debt.[32] Poe mourned the journal's demise, calling it "a most severe blow to the cause—the cause of a Pure Taste".[31]
Despite the failure of The Pioneer, Lowell continued his interest in the literary world. He contributed a poem to The Token and Atlantic Souvenir annual gift book in 1842[33] and a series on "Anti-Slavery in the United States" for the Daily News, though his series was discontinued by the editors after four articles in May 1846.[34] He had published these articles anonymously, believing that they would have more impact if they were not known to be the work of a committed abolitionist.[35] In the spring of 1848, he formed a connection with the National Anti-Slavery Standard of New York, agreeing to contribute weekly either a poem or a prose article. After only one year, he was asked to contribute half as often to the Standard to make room for contributions from Edmund Quincy, another writer and reformer.[36]

A Fable for Critics was one of Lowell's most popular works, published anonymously in 1848. It proved a popular satire, and the first 3,000 copies sold out quickly.[37] In it, he took good-natured jabs at his contemporary poets and critics—but not all the subjects were pleased. Edgar Allan Poe was referred to as part genius and "two-fifths sheer fudge"; he reviewed the work in the Southern Literary Messenger and called it "'loose'—ill-conceived and feebly executed, as well in detail as in general ... we confess some surprise at his putting forth so unpolished a performance."[38] Lowell offered his New York friend Charles Frederick Briggs all the profits from the book's success (which proved relatively small), despite his own financial needs.[37]
In 1848, Lowell also published The Biglow Papers, later named by the Grolier Club as the most influential book of 1848.[39] The first 1,500 copies sold out within a week and a second edition was soon issued—though Lowell made no profit, as he had to absorb the cost of stereotyping the book himself.[40] The book presented three main characters, each representing different aspects of American life and using authentic American dialects in their dialogue.[41] Under the surface, The Biglow Papers was also a denunciation of the Mexican–American War and war in general.[25]
First trip to Europe
In 1850, Lowell's mother died unexpectedly, as did his third daughter, Rose. Her death left Lowell depressed and reclusive for six months, despite the birth of his son Walter by the end of the year. He wrote to a friend that death "is a private tutor. We have no fellow-scholars, and must lay our lessons to heart alone."[42] These personal troubles as well as the Compromise of 1850 inspired Lowell to accept an offer from William Wetmore Story to spend a winter in Italy.[43] To pay for the trip, Lowell sold land around Elmwood, intending to sell off further acres of the estate over time to supplement his income, ultimately selling off 25 of the original 30 acres (120,000 m2).[44] Walter died suddenly in Rome of cholera, and Lowell and his wife, with their daughter Mabel, returned to the United States in October 1852.[45] Lowell published recollections of his journey in several magazines, many of which would be collected years later as Fireside Travels (1867). He also edited volumes with biographical sketches for a series on British Poets.[46]
His wife Maria, who had been suffering from poor health for many years, became very ill in the spring of 1853 and died on October 27[47] of tuberculosis.[27] Just before her burial, her coffin was opened so that her daughter Mabel could see her face while Lowell "leaned for a long while against a tree weeping", according to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and his wife, who were in attendance.[48] In 1855, Lowell oversaw the publication of a memorial volume of his wife's poetry, with only fifty copies for private circulation.[46] Despite his self-described "naturally joyous" nature,[49] life for Lowell at Elmwood was further complicated by his father becoming deaf in his old age, and the deteriorating mental state of his sister Rebecca, who sometimes went a week without speaking.[50] He again cut himself off from others, becoming reclusive at Elmwood, and his private diaries from this time period are riddled with the initials of his wife.[51] On March 10, 1854, for example, he wrote: "Dark without & within. M.L. M.L. M.L."[52] Longfellow, a friend and neighbor, referred to Lowell as "lonely and desolate".[53]
Professorship and second marriage
At the invitation of his cousin
He returned to the United States in the summer of 1856 and began his college duties.[61] Towards the end of his professorship, then-president of Harvard Charles William Eliot noted that Lowell seemed to have "no natural inclination" to teach; Lowell agreed, but retained his position for twenty years.[62] He focused on teaching literature, rather than etymology, hoping that his students would learn to enjoy the sound, rhythm, and flow of poetry rather than the technique of words.[63] He summed up his method: "True scholarship consists in knowing not what things exists, but what they mean; it is not memory but judgment."[64] Still grieving the loss of his wife, during this time Lowell avoided Elmwood and instead lived on Kirkland Street in Cambridge, an area known as Professors' Row. He stayed there, along with his daughter Mabel and her governess Frances Dunlap, until January 1861.[65]
Lowell had intended never to remarry after the death of his wife Maria White. However, in 1857, surprising his friends, he became engaged to Frances Dunlap, whom many described as simple and unattractive.[66] Dunlap, niece of the former governor of Maine Robert P. Dunlap,[67] was a friend of Lowell's first wife and formerly wealthy, though she and her family had fallen into reduced circumstances.[58] Lowell and Dunlap married on September 16, 1857, in a ceremony performed by his brother.[68] Lowell wrote, "My second marriage was the wisest act of my life, & as long as I am sure of it, I can afford to wait till my friends agree with me."[61]
War years and beyond
In the autumn of 1857,
As early as 1845, Lowell had predicted the debate over slavery would lead to war[76] and, as the Civil War broke out in the 1860s, Lowell used his role at the Review to praise Abraham Lincoln and his attempts to maintain the Union.[72] Lowell lost three nephews during the war, including Charles Russell Lowell Jr., who became a brigadier general and fell at the Battle of Cedar Creek. Lowell himself was generally a pacifist. Even so, he wrote, "If the destruction of slavery is to be a consequence of the war, shall we regret it? If it be needful to the successful prosecution of the war, shall anyone oppose it?"[77] His interest in the Civil War inspired him to write a second series of The Biglow Papers,[70] including one specifically dedicated to the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation called "Sunthin' in the Pastoral Line" in 1862.[78]
Shortly after
In the 1860s, Lowell's friend Longfellow spent several years translating Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy and regularly invited others to help him on Wednesday evenings.[83] Lowell was one of the main members of the so-called "Dante Club", along with William Dean Howells, Charles Eliot Norton and other occasional guests.[84] Shortly after serving as a pallbearer at the funeral of friend and publisher Nathaniel Parker Willis on January 24, 1867,[85] Lowell decided to produce another collection of his poetry. Under the Willows and Other Poems was released in 1869,[73] though Lowell originally wanted to title it The Voyage to the Vinland and Other Poems. The book, dedicated to Norton, collected poems Lowell had written within the previous twenty years and was his first poetry collection since 1848.[86]
Lowell intended to take another trip to Europe. To finance it, he sold off more of Elmwood's acres and rented the house to
Political appointments

Lowell resigned from his Harvard professorship in 1874, though he was persuaded to continue teaching through 1877.

In January 1880, Lowell was informed of his appointment as
His second wife, Frances, died on February 19, 1885, while still in England.[101]
Later years and death

He returned to the United States by June 1885, living with his daughter and her husband in Southboro, Massachusetts.[102] He then spent time in Boston with his sister before returning to Elmwood in November 1889.[103] By this time, most of his friends were dead, including Quincy, Longfellow, Dana, and Emerson, leaving him depressed and contemplating suicide again.[104] Lowell spent part of the 1880s delivering various speeches,[105] and his last published works were mostly collections of essays, including Political Essays, and a collection of his poems Heartsease and Rue in 1888.[103] His last few years he traveled back to England periodically[106] and when he returned to the United States in the fall of 1889, he moved back to Elmwood[107] with Mabel, while her husband worked for clients in New York and New Jersey.[108] That year, Lowell gave an address at the centenary of George Washington's inauguration. Also that year, the Boston Critic dedicated a special issue to Lowell on his seventieth birthday to recollections and reminiscences by his friends, including former presidents Hayes and Benjamin Harrison and British Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone as well as Alfred, Lord Tennyson and Francis Parkman.[107]
In the last few months of his life, Lowell struggled with
Writing style and literary theory

Early in his career, James Russell Lowell's writing was influenced by
I believe that no poet in this age can write much that is good unless he gives himself up to [the radical] tendency ... The proof of poetry is, in my mind, that it reduces to the essence of a single line the vague philosophy which is floating in all men's minds, and so render it portable and useful, and ready to the hand ... At least, no poem ever makes me respect its author which does not in some way convey a truth of philosophy.[116]
A scholar of
Ef you take a sword an' dror it,
An go stick a feller thru,
Guv'ment aint to answer to it,
God'll send the bill to you.[123]
Lowell is considered one of the fireside poets, a group of writers from New England in the 1840s who all had a substantial national following and whose work was often read aloud by the family fireplace. Besides Lowell, the main figures from this group were Longfellow, Holmes, John Greenleaf Whittier, and William Cullen Bryant.[124]
Beliefs
Lowell was an abolitionist, but his opinions wavered concerning African-Americans. He advocated suffrage for blacks, yet he noted that their ability to vote could be troublesome. Even so, he wrote, "We believe the white race, by their intellectual and traditional superiority, will retain sufficient ascendancy to prevent any serious mischief from the new order of things."[125] Freed slaves, he wrote, were "dirty, lazy & lying".[126] Even before his marriage to abolitionist Maria White, Lowell wrote: "The abolitionists are the only ones with whom I sympathize of the present extant parties."[127] After his marriage, Lowell at first did not share his wife's enthusiasm for the cause, but he was eventually pulled in.[128] The couple often gave money to fugitive slaves, even when their own financial situation was not strong, especially if they were asked to free a spouse or child.[129] Even so, he did not always fully agree with the followers of the movement. The majority of these people, he said, "treat ideas as ignorant persons do cherries. They think them unwholesome unless they are swallowed, stones and all."[28] Lowell depicted Southerners very unfavorably in his second collection of The Biglow Papers but, by 1865, admitted that Southerners were "guilty only of weakness" and, by 1868, said that he sympathized with Southerners and their viewpoint on slavery.[130] Enemies and friends of Lowell alike questioned his vacillating interest in the question of slavery. Abolitionist Samuel Joseph May accused him of trying to quit the movement because of his association with Harvard and the Boston Brahmin culture: "Having got into the smooth, dignified, self-complacent, and change-hating society of the college and its Boston circles, Lowell has gone over to the world, and to 'respectability'."[131]
Lowell was also involved in other reform movements. He urged better conditions for factory workers, opposed
Criticism and legacy
In 1849, Lowell said of himself, "I am the first poet who has endeavored to express the American Idea, and I shall be popular by and by."[134] Poet Walt Whitman said: "Lowell was not a grower—he was a builder. He built poems: he didn't put in the seed, and water the seed, and send down his sun—letting the rest take care of itself: he measured his poems—kept them within formula."[135] Fellow fireside poet John Greenleaf Whittier praised Lowell by writing two poems in his honor and calling him "our new Theocritus" and "one of the strongest and manliest of our writers–a republican poet who dares to speak brave words of unpopular truth".[136] British author Thomas Hughes referred to Lowell as one of the most important writers in the United States: "Greece had her Aristophanes; Rome her Juvenal; Spain has had her Cervantes; France her Rabelais, her Molière, her Voltaire; Germany her Jean Paul, her Heine; England her Swift, her Thackeray; and America has her Lowell."[124] Lowell's satires and use of dialect were an inspiration for writers like Mark Twain, William Dean Howells, H. L. Mencken, and Ring Lardner.[137]
Contemporary critic and editor
Lowell's poem "
List of selected works
Poetry collections
- A Year's Life (1841)[18]
- Poems (1844; revised edition 1849)[24]
- The Biglow Papers (1848)[25]
- A Fable for Critics (1848)[25]
- Poems (1848)[25]
- The Vision of Sir Launfal (1848)[25]
- Under the Willows (1869)[73]
- The Cathedral (1870)[149]
- Heartsease and Rue (1888)[103]
Essay collections
- Conversations on Some of the Old Poets (1844)[20]
- Fireside Travels (1864)[149]
- Among My Books (1870)[149]
- My Study Windows (1871)[149]
- Among My Books (second collection, 1876)[149]
- Democracy and Other Addresses (1886)[103]
- Political Essays (1888)[103]
See also
- Il pesceballo
- Dante Society of America
- James Russell Lowell School (Philadelphia)
- Lowell High School (San Francisco)
- The Knickerbocker
- Robert Lowell
Notes
- ^ Nelson, 39
- ^ Lowell, Delmar R. The Historic Genealogy of the Lowells of America from 1639 to 1899. Rutland, VT: The Tuttle Company, 1899: 121–122.
- ^ Sullivan, 204
- ^ a b Sullivan, 205
- ^ Heymann, 55
- ^ Wagenknecht, 11
- ^ Duberman, 14–15
- ^ a b Duberman, 17
- ^ a b Sullivan, 208
- ^ Duberman, 20
- )
- ^ a b Duberman, 26
- ^ a b Warner, Charles Dudley (1900). . In Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J. (eds.). Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
- ^ M.A. De Wolfe Howe (1933). "Lowell, James Russell". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
- ^ Sullivan, 209
- ^ Wagenknecht, 50
- ^ Wagenknecht, 135
- ^ a b c d Sullivan, 210
- ^ Wagenknecht, 136
- ^ a b Heymann, 73
- ^ a b c Sullivan, 211
- ISBN 0-19-512414-6
- ^ Duberman, 71
- ^ a b c d Sullivan, 212
- ^ a b c d e f Wagenknecht, 16
- ^ Heymann, 72
- ^ a b c d Sullivan, 213
- ^ a b Heymann, 77
- ^ Hubbell, Jay B. The South in American Literature: 1607–1900. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 1954: 373–374.
- ^ a b Duberman, 47
- ^ a b Duberman, 53
- ^ ISBN 0-06-092331-8
- OCLC 1436167.
- ^ Duberman, 410
- ^ Heymann, 76
- ^ Duberman, 113
- ^ a b Duberman, 101
- ISBN 0-8160-4161-X.
- ^ Nelson, 19
- ^ Duberman, 112
- ^ Heymann, 85
- ^ Duberman, 116
- ^ Duberman, 117
- ^ Wagenknecht, 36
- ^ Heymann, 98
- ^ a b Duberman, 139
- ^ Duberman, 134
- ^ Wagenknecht, 139
- ^ Heymann, 101
- ^ Duberman, 136
- ^ Heymann, 101–102
- ^ Duberman, 138
- ^ Heymann, 102
- ^ a b Duberman, 133
- ^ Heymann, 103
- ^ a b Duberman, 140
- ^ Heymann, 104–105
- ^ a b c Sullivan, 215
- ^ Duberman, 141
- ^ a b Heymann, 105
- ^ a b Sullivan, 216
- ^ a b Wagenknecht, 74
- ^ Heymann, 107
- ^ Duberman, 161
- ^ Heymann, 106
- ^ Duberman, 155
- ^ Duberman, 154
- ^ Duberman, 154–155
- ^ Heymann, 108
- ^ a b c Heymann, 119
- ^ Duberman, 180
- ^ a b Sullivan, 218
- ^ a b c Heymann, 132
- ^ Lowell, James Russell. "Letters to Various Persons", in The North American Review, Vol.CI, No.209, pp.597-608 (October 1865).]
- ^ Pattee, Fred Lewis. A History of American Literature Since 1870, Ch.VII, pp.138-139 (Appleton: New York, London, 1915).]
- ^ Wagenknecht, 183
- ^ Wagenknecht, 186
- ^ Heymann, 121
- ^ Duberman, 224
- ^ a b Heymann, 123
- ^ Sullivan, 201
- ^ Duberman, 224–225
- ^ Arvin, Newton. Longfellow: His Life and Work. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1963: 140.
- ISBN 0-8070-7026-2
- ISBN 0-19-512073-6
- ^ Duberman, 243
- ^ a b Heymann, 134
- ^ Duberman, 258
- ^ Heymann, 136
- ^ a b Duberman, 282
- ^ Duberman, 282–283
- ^ Heymann, 137
- ^ Heymann, 136–138
- ^ Duberman, 294
- ^ Duberman, 298–299
- ^ Wagenknecht, 168
- ^ a b Sullivan, 219
- ^ Duberman, 447
- ^ Sullivan, 218–219
- ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved May 19, 2021.
- ^ Heymann, 143
- ^ Heymann, 145
- ^ a b c d e Wagenknecht, 18
- ^ Duberman, 339
- ^ Duberman, 352
- ^ Duberman, 351
- ^ a b Heymann, 150
- ^ Duberman, 364–365
- ^ Duberman, 370
- ^ Duberman, 371
- ^ "The Last Tribute Paid. James Russell Lowell Laid At Rest. Buried Under Hornbeam Trees In The Spot He Had Himself Selected And Near The Grave Of Longfellow At Mount Auburn". The New York Times. August 15, 1891. Retrieved March 23, 2010.
Simple but impressive funeral services over the body of the late James Russell Lowell were held in Appleton Chapel, Cambridge, at noon to-day. ...
- ^ Heymann, 152
- ^ a b Duberman, 62
- ^ Wagenknecht, 105–106
- ^ a b Duberman, 50
- ^ Duberman, 50–51
- ^ Wagenknecht, 70
- ^ Grandgent, Charles H. (1899). "From Franklin to Lowell." PMLA 14.2, p. 209: "As the Papers on based on the poet's recollection of the rustic speech he heard during his boyhood, we may infer that they represent the country usage of eastern Massachusetts from 1825 to 1835".
- .
- doi:10.2307/452335.
- ^ Heymann, 86
- ^ Wagenknecht, 71
- ^ Heymann, 87
- ^ a b Heymann, 91
- ^ Wagenknecht, 175
- ^ Duberman, 229
- ^ Heymann, 63
- ^ Heymann, 64
- ^ Duberman, 112–113
- ^ Wagenknecht, 187
- ^ Heymann, 122
- ^ Wagenknecht, 29
- ^ Heymann, 117
- ^ Sullivan, 203
- ^ Nelson, 171
- ^ Wagenknecht, Edward. John Greenleaf Whittier: A Portrait in Paradox. New York: Oxford University Press, 1967: 113.
- ^ Heymann, 90
- ISBN 0-201-10458-X
- ^ Duberman, 55
- ^ a b Sullivan, 220
- ^ Sullivan, 219–220
- ^ Nelson, 146
- ISBN 978-0-292-76450-7
- ^ Quoted in Lupack and Lupack, 10
- ^ "James Russell Lowell Prize". Modern Language Association. Retrieved on October 1, 2008.
- ^ The Papers of Martin Luther King Jr., by Martin Luther King, Clayborne Carson, Peter Holloran, Ralph Luker, Penny A. Russell, vol. 1 at 417 n.2
- ISBN 978-1-4143-0933-0
- ^ roelofson, emily bruce. "Arthur P. Schmidt Archives". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved May 13, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Wagenknecht, 17
Sources
- Duberman, Martin. James Russell Lowell. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1966.
- Heymann, C. David. American Aristocracy: The Lives and Times of James Russell, Amy, and Robert Lowell. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1980. ISBN 0-396-07608-4
- Lupack, Alan and Barbara Tepa Lupack. King Arthur in America. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1999. ISBN 9780859915434
- Nelson, Randy F. The Almanac of American Letters. Los Altos, California: William Kaufmann, Inc., 1981. ISBN 0-86576-008-X
- Sullivan, Wilson. New England Men of Letters. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1972. ISBN 0-02-788680-8
- Wagenknecht, Edward. James Russell Lowell: Portrait of a Many-Sided Man. New York: Oxford University Press, 1971.
Further reading
- Greenslet, Ferris. James Russell Lowell, His Life and Work. Boston: 1905.
- Hale, Edward Everett. James Russell Lowell and His Friends. Boston: 1899.
- Scudder, Horace Elisha. James Russell Lowell: A Biography. Volume 1, Volume 2. Published 1901.
External links
- Works by James Russell Lowell at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about James Russell Lowell at the Internet Archive
- Works by James Russell Lowell at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Full View Books with PDF downloads at Google Books
- The Complete Writings of James Russell Lowell, edited by Charles Eliot Norton
- The Oliver Wendell Holmes Library at the Library of Congress has noteworthy representation volumes inscribed by James Russell Lowell.
- Papers of James Russell Lowell at Harvard University Archives
- James Russell Lowell Miscellaneous Correspondence (MS Am 1191) at Houghton Library, Harvard University