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Fireside poets

The fireside poets – also known as the schoolroom or household poets[1] – were a group of 19th-century American poets associated with New England. These poets were very popular among readers and critics both in the United States and overseas. Their domestic themes and messages of morality presented in conventional poetic forms deeply shaped their era until their decline in popularity at the beginning of the 20th century.

1913 image featuring portraits representing four of the fireside poets: Longfellow, Holmes, Lowell, and Whittier

Overview edit

The group is typically thought to include Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, William Cullen Bryant, John Greenleaf Whittier, James Russell Lowell, and Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.,[2] who were the first American poets whose popularity rivaled that of British poets, both at home and abroad. Ralph Waldo Emerson is occasionally included in the group as well. The name "fireside poets" is derived from that popularity; their writing was a source of entertainment for families gathered around the fire at home. The name was further inspired by Longfellow's 1850 poetry collection The Seaside and the Fireside.[3] Lowell published a book titled Fireside Travels in 1864 which helped solidify the title.[4]

In an era without radio, television, or Internet, these poets were able to garner a general public popularity that has no equivalent in the 21st century.[5] Their influence was furthered by their long lives, as well as their other high-profile activities, including serving as professors and academic chairs, editing popular newspapers, serving as foreign diplomats, giving popular speeches, and translating works by Dante and Homer.[6]

These poets' general adherence to poetic convention (standard forms, regular meter, and rhymed stanzas) made their body of work particularly suitable for memorization and recitation in school and at home. Only Emerson rejected the traditional European forms that his contemporaries often utilized and instead called for new American poetic models and emphasized content over form.[7] The poets' primary subjects were domestic life, mythology, and the politics of the United States, in which several of them were directly involved. The fireside poets did not write for the sake of other poets, for critics, or for posterity. Instead, they wrote for a contemporary audience of general readers. Emerson once wrote, "I embrace the common, I explore and sit at the feet of the familiar, the low."[8]

Most of the fireside poets lived long lives. A culminating event was the 70th birthday party of Whittier in 1877 organized by publisher Henry Oscar Houghton, editor of the Atlantic Monthly. The event was meant to serve as a symbol of the magazine's association with the poets. Most of them were present for the celebration,[9] though Lowell had recently moved to Spain.[10] Mark Twain gave an infamous after-dinner speech in which he satirized the poets as uncouth drunkards.[11] In his story, three impostors pretend to be Longfellow, Emerson, and Holmes, and forget which poet authored which poem. The speech was scandalous because it showed a lack of reverence and, in turn, Twain felt guilty for his transgression[12] and wrote notes to the poets apologizing for it.[13] Longfellow's 74th birthday in 1881 was honored nationwide with celebrations in schools throughout the United States.[14] Between 1884 and 1900, readers' polls consistently placed these poets as the nation's most important writers.[14]

Generally, these poets promoted nationalist values and, as such, were deemed especially appropriate for study among children. Horace Scudder in his 1888 book Literature in School emphasized this point:

They were born on American soil; they have breathed American air; they were nurtured on American ideas. They are Americans of Americans. They are as truly the issue of our national life as are the common schools in which we glory. During the fifty years in which our common-school system has been growing to maturity, these six have lived and sung; and I dare to say that the lives and songs of Bryant, Emerson, Longfellow, Whittier, Holmes, and Lowell have an imperishable value regarded as exponents of national life.[15]

Teachers through modern times have frequently emphasized the fireside poets in the classroom. According to scholar Kevin Stein, this emphasis reflects an expectation that poetry should have didactic messages and that poems can be used for moral betterment. Young readers, however, often turn away from this type of poetry because they dislike such sermonizing tones.[16]

Recognition and decline edit

 
The addition of Sidney Lanier, Walt Whitman, and Edgar Allan Poe to the frontispiece of Edmund Clarence Stedman's An American Anthology in 1900 indicated the beginning of a canonical shift away from the fireside poets.

In 1901, Emerson and Longfellow were inducted as inaugural members of the Hall of Fame for Great Americans, which added Lowell and Whittier in 1905 and Holmes and Bryant in 1910.[14] Longfellow was commemorated with a bust in Poet's Corner of Westminster Abbey in London; he was the first non-British writer honored this way and remains the only American poet represented with a bust.[17] Even before the end of the century, however, Lowell acknowledged a change in the poetic climate and feared the erasure of gentlemanly gentility in emerging poetry. He wrote to William Dean Howells: "The danger of our literature... seems to me to be lawlessness & want of scholarly refinement. This is the rock I see ahead just now, & I fear we may go to pieces on it if we don't look sharp."[18] Holmes died in 1894, the last of the fireside poets, and one literary magazine called it "the closing of an era in American literature".[12]

Critics, meanwhile, began re-examining the role of these poets in the canon and distinguishing between popularity and aesthetics.[19] As the twentieth century began, academics began to turn to poets such as Walt Whitman, Edwin Arlington Robinson, and Robert Frost.[20] Anthologist Edmund Clarence Stedman released his exhaustive An American Anthology, 1787–1900, and the frontispiece artwork featured the fireside poets sharing space with Whitman, Edgar Allan Poe, and Sidney Lanier, which visually emphasized the canonical shift.[14]

Fireside poets were soon regarded as old-fashioned. In 1904, for example, The Dial noted, "The message of our older poets, it is true, has lost something of its timeliness with the lapse of years, and they have not found the successors that we could have wished; but we doubt greatly if a new Longfellow or a new Lowell could now become a real force in our national life".[21] Professor Lawrence Buell wrote that modern scholars "value [them] less than the nineteenth century did but still regard [them] as the mainstream of nineteenth-century New England verse."[22] Their work was increasingly emphasized in the classroom, so many of these poets were dismissed merely as children's poets, as noted by a 20th-century scholar who asked, "Who, except wretched schoolchildren, now reads Longfellow?"[23] Longfellow was particularly criticized. Literary scholar Kermit Vanderbilt noted, "Increasingly rare is the scholar who braves ridicule to justify the art of Longfellow's popular rhymings."[24] Twentieth-century poet Lewis Turco called Longfellow a minor and derivative poet who was "nothing more than a hack imitator of the English Romantics."[25] Holmes, according to one modern scholar, is now the least likely of the Fireside Poets to be anthologized.[26]

Many of the new and emerging poets displayed resentment towards America's poetic past, including T. S. Eliot. An exception was Robert Frost, who named his first book A Boy's Will after a line by Longfellow. Wallace Stevens was a student at Harvard College when the fireside poets were at their height; he recalled that "it was commonplace to say that all the poetry had been written".[27] Whitman was a contemporary of the fireside poets who complained that they were too focused on reflecting English styles and themes in American poetry: "Thus far, impress'd by New England writers and schoolmasters, we tacitly abandon ourselves to the notion that our United States have been fashion'd from the British Islands only, and essentially form a second England only — which is a very great mistake".[28]

Longfellow, Lowell, and Holmes are featured in the bestselling novel The Dante Club by Matthew Pearl, published in 2003.

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ "A Brief Guide to the Fireside Poets" 2014-01-16 at the Wayback Machine at Poets.org. Accessed 03-22-2009
  2. ^ Heymann, C. David. American Aristocracy: The Lives and Times of James Russell, Amy, and Robert Lowell. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1980: 91. ISBN 0-396-07608-4
  3. ^ Bertens, Hans and Theo D'haen. American Literature: A History. London: Routledge, 2014: 62. ISBN 978-0-415-56998-9
  4. ^ Bertens, Hans and Theo D'haen. American Literature: A History. London: Routledge, 2014: 64. ISBN 978-0-415-56997-2
  5. ^ Stein, Kevin. Poetry's Afterlife: Verse in the Digital Age. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2010: 8. ISBN 9780472070992
  6. ^ Lentricchia, Frank. Modernist Quartet. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994: 2. ISBN 0-521-47004-8
  7. ^ Burns, Allan. Thematic Guide to American Poetry. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002: 145. ISBN 0-313-31462-4
  8. ^ Lentricchia, Frank. Modernist Quartet. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994: 233. ISBN 0-521-47004-8
  9. ^ Rubin, Joan Shelley. Songs of Ourselves: The Uses of Poetry in America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007: 25. ISBN 978-0-674-02436-6
  10. ^ Duberman, Martin. James Russell Lowell. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1966: 282–283.
  11. ^ Rubin, Joan Shelley. Songs of Ourselves: The Uses of Poetry in America. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007: 26. ISBN 978-0-674-02436-6
  12. ^ a b Newcomb, John Timberman. Would Poetry Disappear?: American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2004: 107. ISBN 0-8142-0958-0
  13. ^ Gale, Robert L. A Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Companion, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2003: 288. ISBN 0-313-32350-X
  14. ^ a b c d Newcomb, John Timberman. Would Poetry Disappear?: American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2004: 106. ISBN 0-8142-0958-0
  15. ^ Gailey, Amanda. Proofs of Genius: Collected Editions from the American Revolution to the Digital Age. University of Michigan Press, 2015: 73. ISBN 9780472052752
  16. ^ Stein, Kevin. Poetry's Afterlife: Verse in the Digital Age. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2010: 198. ISBN 9780472070992
  17. ^ Williams, Cecil B. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc., 1964: 21.
  18. ^ Stokes, Claudia. Writers in Retrospect: The Rise of American Literary History, 1875–1910. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2006: 97. ISBN 978-0-8078-3040-6
  19. ^ Newcomb, John Timberman. Would Poetry Disappear?: American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2004: 107–108. ISBN 0-8142-0958-0
  20. ^ Williams, Cecil B. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. New York: Twayne Publishers, Inc., 1964: 23.
  21. ^ Newcomb, John Timberman. Would Poetry Disappear?: American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2004: 110. ISBN 0-8142-0958-0
  22. ^ Buell, Lawrence. New England Literary Culture: From Revolution Through Renaissance. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986: 43. ISBN 0-521-37801-X
  23. ^ Arvin, Newton. Longfellow: His Life and Work. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1963: 321.
  24. ^ Gioia, Dana. "Longfellow in the Aftermath of Modernism" in The Columbia History of American Poetry, edited by Jay Parini. Columbia University Press, 1993: 68. ISBN 0-231-07836-6.
  25. ^ Turco, Lewis Putnam. Visions and Revisions of American Poetry. Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press, 1986: 33. ISBN 0-938626-49-3
  26. ^ Knight, Denise D. "Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809–1894)", Writers of the American Renaissance: An A-to-Z Guide. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2003. ISBN 0-313-32140-X.
  27. ^ Lentricchia, Frank. Modernist Quartet. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994: 3–4. ISBN 0-521-47004-8
  28. ^ Sollors, Werner. Ethnic Modernism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008: 13. ISBN 978-0-674-03091-6

External links edit

  • Yale Book of American Verse at Bartleby.com
  • An American Anthology, 1787–1900 at Bartleby.com
  • from the Academy of American Poets
  • PowerPoint presentation on the fireside poets from HuffEnglish.com
  • "Sassing such famous littery people": Mark Twain's speech at the Whittier birthday dinner

fireside, poets, fireside, poets, also, known, schoolroom, household, poets, were, group, 19th, century, american, poets, associated, with, england, these, poets, were, very, popular, among, readers, critics, both, united, states, overseas, their, domestic, th. The fireside poets also known as the schoolroom or household poets 1 were a group of 19th century American poets associated with New England These poets were very popular among readers and critics both in the United States and overseas Their domestic themes and messages of morality presented in conventional poetic forms deeply shaped their era until their decline in popularity at the beginning of the 20th century 1913 image featuring portraits representing four of the fireside poets Longfellow Holmes Lowell and Whittier Contents 1 Overview 2 Recognition and decline 3 Gallery 4 References 5 External linksOverview editThe group is typically thought to include Henry Wadsworth Longfellow William Cullen Bryant John Greenleaf Whittier James Russell Lowell and Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr 2 who were the first American poets whose popularity rivaled that of British poets both at home and abroad Ralph Waldo Emerson is occasionally included in the group as well The name fireside poets is derived from that popularity their writing was a source of entertainment for families gathered around the fire at home The name was further inspired by Longfellow s 1850 poetry collection The Seaside and the Fireside 3 Lowell published a book titled Fireside Travels in 1864 which helped solidify the title 4 In an era without radio television or Internet these poets were able to garner a general public popularity that has no equivalent in the 21st century 5 Their influence was furthered by their long lives as well as their other high profile activities including serving as professors and academic chairs editing popular newspapers serving as foreign diplomats giving popular speeches and translating works by Dante and Homer 6 These poets general adherence to poetic convention standard forms regular meter and rhymed stanzas made their body of work particularly suitable for memorization and recitation in school and at home Only Emerson rejected the traditional European forms that his contemporaries often utilized and instead called for new American poetic models and emphasized content over form 7 The poets primary subjects were domestic life mythology and the politics of the United States in which several of them were directly involved The fireside poets did not write for the sake of other poets for critics or for posterity Instead they wrote for a contemporary audience of general readers Emerson once wrote I embrace the common I explore and sit at the feet of the familiar the low 8 Most of the fireside poets lived long lives A culminating event was the 70th birthday party of Whittier in 1877 organized by publisher Henry Oscar Houghton editor of the Atlantic Monthly The event was meant to serve as a symbol of the magazine s association with the poets Most of them were present for the celebration 9 though Lowell had recently moved to Spain 10 Mark Twain gave an infamous after dinner speech in which he satirized the poets as uncouth drunkards 11 In his story three impostors pretend to be Longfellow Emerson and Holmes and forget which poet authored which poem The speech was scandalous because it showed a lack of reverence and in turn Twain felt guilty for his transgression 12 and wrote notes to the poets apologizing for it 13 Longfellow s 74th birthday in 1881 was honored nationwide with celebrations in schools throughout the United States 14 Between 1884 and 1900 readers polls consistently placed these poets as the nation s most important writers 14 Generally these poets promoted nationalist values and as such were deemed especially appropriate for study among children Horace Scudder in his 1888 book Literature in School emphasized this point They were born on American soil they have breathed American air they were nurtured on American ideas They are Americans of Americans They are as truly the issue of our national life as are the common schools in which we glory During the fifty years in which our common school system has been growing to maturity these six have lived and sung and I dare to say that the lives and songs of Bryant Emerson Longfellow Whittier Holmes and Lowell have an imperishable value regarded as exponents of national life 15 Teachers through modern times have frequently emphasized the fireside poets in the classroom According to scholar Kevin Stein this emphasis reflects an expectation that poetry should have didactic messages and that poems can be used for moral betterment Young readers however often turn away from this type of poetry because they dislike such sermonizing tones 16 Recognition and decline edit nbsp The addition of Sidney Lanier Walt Whitman and Edgar Allan Poe to the frontispiece of Edmund Clarence Stedman s An American Anthology in 1900 indicated the beginning of a canonical shift away from the fireside poets In 1901 Emerson and Longfellow were inducted as inaugural members of the Hall of Fame for Great Americans which added Lowell and Whittier in 1905 and Holmes and Bryant in 1910 14 Longfellow was commemorated with a bust in Poet s Corner of Westminster Abbey in London he was the first non British writer honored this way and remains the only American poet represented with a bust 17 Even before the end of the century however Lowell acknowledged a change in the poetic climate and feared the erasure of gentlemanly gentility in emerging poetry He wrote to William Dean Howells The danger of our literature seems to me to be lawlessness amp want of scholarly refinement This is the rock I see ahead just now amp I fear we may go to pieces on it if we don t look sharp 18 Holmes died in 1894 the last of the fireside poets and one literary magazine called it the closing of an era in American literature 12 Critics meanwhile began re examining the role of these poets in the canon and distinguishing between popularity and aesthetics 19 As the twentieth century began academics began to turn to poets such as Walt Whitman Edwin Arlington Robinson and Robert Frost 20 Anthologist Edmund Clarence Stedman released his exhaustive An American Anthology 1787 1900 and the frontispiece artwork featured the fireside poets sharing space with Whitman Edgar Allan Poe and Sidney Lanier which visually emphasized the canonical shift 14 Fireside poets were soon regarded as old fashioned In 1904 for example The Dial noted The message of our older poets it is true has lost something of its timeliness with the lapse of years and they have not found the successors that we could have wished but we doubt greatly if a new Longfellow or a new Lowell could now become a real force in our national life 21 Professor Lawrence Buell wrote that modern scholars value them less than the nineteenth century did but still regard them as the mainstream of nineteenth century New England verse 22 Their work was increasingly emphasized in the classroom so many of these poets were dismissed merely as children s poets as noted by a 20th century scholar who asked Who except wretched schoolchildren now reads Longfellow 23 Longfellow was particularly criticized Literary scholar Kermit Vanderbilt noted Increasingly rare is the scholar who braves ridicule to justify the art of Longfellow s popular rhymings 24 Twentieth century poet Lewis Turco called Longfellow a minor and derivative poet who was nothing more than a hack imitator of the English Romantics 25 Holmes according to one modern scholar is now the least likely of the Fireside Poets to be anthologized 26 Many of the new and emerging poets displayed resentment towards America s poetic past including T S Eliot An exception was Robert Frost who named his first book A Boy s Will after a line by Longfellow Wallace Stevens was a student at Harvard College when the fireside poets were at their height he recalled that it was commonplace to say that all the poetry had been written 27 Whitman was a contemporary of the fireside poets who complained that they were too focused on reflecting English styles and themes in American poetry Thus far impress d by New England writers and schoolmasters we tacitly abandon ourselves to the notion that our United States have been fashion d from the British Islands only and essentially form a second England only which is a very great mistake 28 Longfellow Lowell and Holmes are featured in the bestselling novel The Dante Club by Matthew Pearl published in 2003 Gallery edit nbsp Bryant nbsp Holmes nbsp Longfellow nbsp Lowell nbsp WhittierReferences edit A Brief Guide to the Fireside Poets Archived 2014 01 16 at the Wayback Machine at Poets org Accessed 03 22 2009 Heymann C David American Aristocracy The Lives and Times of James Russell Amy and Robert Lowell New York Dodd Mead amp Company 1980 91 ISBN 0 396 07608 4 Bertens Hans and Theo D haen American Literature A History London Routledge 2014 62 ISBN 978 0 415 56998 9 Bertens Hans and Theo D haen American Literature A History London Routledge 2014 64 ISBN 978 0 415 56997 2 Stein Kevin Poetry s Afterlife Verse in the Digital Age Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press 2010 8 ISBN 9780472070992 Lentricchia Frank Modernist Quartet New York Cambridge University Press 1994 2 ISBN 0 521 47004 8 Burns Allan Thematic Guide to American Poetry Westport CT Greenwood Press 2002 145 ISBN 0 313 31462 4 Lentricchia Frank Modernist Quartet New York Cambridge University Press 1994 233 ISBN 0 521 47004 8 Rubin Joan Shelley Songs of Ourselves The Uses of Poetry in America Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2007 25 ISBN 978 0 674 02436 6 Duberman Martin James Russell Lowell Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 1966 282 283 Rubin Joan Shelley Songs of Ourselves The Uses of Poetry in America Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2007 26 ISBN 978 0 674 02436 6 a b Newcomb John Timberman Would Poetry Disappear American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity Columbus The Ohio State University Press 2004 107 ISBN 0 8142 0958 0 Gale Robert L A Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Companion Westport CT Greenwood Press 2003 288 ISBN 0 313 32350 X a b c d Newcomb John Timberman Would Poetry Disappear American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity Columbus The Ohio State University Press 2004 106 ISBN 0 8142 0958 0 Gailey Amanda Proofs of Genius Collected Editions from the American Revolution to the Digital Age University of Michigan Press 2015 73 ISBN 9780472052752 Stein Kevin Poetry s Afterlife Verse in the Digital Age Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press 2010 198 ISBN 9780472070992 Williams Cecil B Henry Wadsworth Longfellow New York Twayne Publishers Inc 1964 21 Stokes Claudia Writers in Retrospect The Rise of American Literary History 1875 1910 Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press 2006 97 ISBN 978 0 8078 3040 6 Newcomb John Timberman Would Poetry Disappear American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity Columbus The Ohio State University Press 2004 107 108 ISBN 0 8142 0958 0 Williams Cecil B Henry Wadsworth Longfellow New York Twayne Publishers Inc 1964 23 Newcomb John Timberman Would Poetry Disappear American Verse and the Crisis of Modernity Columbus The Ohio State University Press 2004 110 ISBN 0 8142 0958 0 Buell Lawrence New England Literary Culture From Revolution Through Renaissance New York Cambridge University Press 1986 43 ISBN 0 521 37801 X Arvin Newton Longfellow His Life and Work Boston Little Brown and Company 1963 321 Gioia Dana Longfellow in the Aftermath of Modernism in The Columbia History of American Poetry edited by Jay Parini Columbia University Press 1993 68 ISBN 0 231 07836 6 Turco Lewis Putnam Visions and Revisions of American Poetry Fayetteville AR University of Arkansas Press 1986 33 ISBN 0 938626 49 3 Knight Denise D Oliver Wendell Holmes 1809 1894 Writers of the American Renaissance An A to Z Guide Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group 2003 ISBN 0 313 32140 X Lentricchia Frank Modernist Quartet New York Cambridge University Press 1994 3 4 ISBN 0 521 47004 8 Sollors Werner Ethnic Modernism Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2008 13 ISBN 978 0 674 03091 6External links editYale Book of American Verse at Bartleby com An American Anthology 1787 1900 at Bartleby com Information on the fireside poets from the Academy of American Poets PowerPoint presentation on the fireside poets from HuffEnglish com Sassing such famous littery people Mark Twain s speech at the Whittier birthday dinner Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fireside poets amp oldid 1105034122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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