Stephen Longfellow Essays

  • Analysis Of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    1519 Words  | 4 Pages

    Mattessich 1 John M. Mattessich Mr. Gentry A.P. English Lit 7 April 2014 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow- A monumental cultural figure of America’s nineteenth century Through years of research and studies of various American literature and poetry only one name comes to mind. That of course, is Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, one of the most widely known and best-loved American poets of his time. Longfellow has not only influenced generations of readers, his writings have had a significant impact on my life

  • Works by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    1257 Words  | 3 Pages

    Teacher, Lover, Poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is not dead. Certainly, he comes alive in every one of his pieces. Longfellow was never just an average person. He appreciated the arts ever since a young age and continued to attract towards them. He definitely led most other writers in the Romanticism Era. His pieces were considered the best of that time. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, born in 1807, is one of the most renowned authors of the Romanticism Era, with one of his most famous works being “A

  • An Analysis Of The Indomitable Spirit Of Man In Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    1670 Words  | 4 Pages

    including Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. “One of the real American Poets of yesterday” (Montiero, Preface), Longfellow elaborates on man’s perpetual struggle with life and nature in his poetry. In “A Psalm of Life,” “The Village Blacksmith,” and “The Rainy Day,” Longfellow explores many facets of man’s unyielding will. Born into a prominent family on February 27, 1807, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow grew up in the bustling town of Portland, Maine. His parents Stephen and Zilpah Longfellow provided a strong, but

  • The Value of Roots

    1347 Words  | 3 Pages

    attempt was prominent in was literature. Two poets specifically sought to find a national mythology by examining what American's value and why it is necessary to pass it on through tradition. The poems by John Greenleaf Whittier and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow are a call for preserving the roots found in the land of America and in the heart of an American. Longfellow's "Hiawatha" presents the image of an Indian chant about the traditions, history and beauty inherent in nature. The narrator explains

  • Symbol and Allegory

    562 Words  | 2 Pages

    from his sermons and his mother’s encouragement for E.E. to keep a diary starting at age five started to shape his craft at an early age (Revisited 11). Rebecca aspired for her son to be the next Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (the Cummings family lived across the street from the Longfellow home before E.E. was born) (Dreams 19). Edward Estlin was also a cubist painter in addition to being a poet. During World War I, E.E. Cummings was an ambulance driver in France and was imprisoned under the pretense

  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Optimism in Poetry

    707 Words  | 2 Pages

    with a manly heart.” This is a saying Longfellow read in Germany where his wife died. The words gave him hope for the future. It inspired him to want to write a series of psalms. The first one, “A Psalm of Life” written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, is an uplifting poem that compels us to feel hope for the future. After reading it the first time it had a powerful effect on me. Surprisingly, he wrote this poem few months after his first wife died. Longfellow took his wife’s death and interpreted

  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Research Paper

    1139 Words  | 3 Pages

    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow As one of the Fireside Poets, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow experienced a busy and long life. He did not always just write poems, he was a teacher and even became a great influence to his students and poets in the future. He taught and wrote for many years until retiring and becoming a full time poet later on in his life. Longfellow was a father to six children and married twice throughout his life. While Longfellow was known for his poetry in the nineteenth century, he inspired

  • Biography of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    603 Words  | 2 Pages

    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was the most popular American Poet in the 19th Century and the best at writing books and famous for one of his poems that is named after him. Henry Longfellow was the best poet in the 19th Century for writing some of the best poems and books that was heard in almost every literate house in the United States. Henry wrote “Paul Revere’s Ride” that became a national favorite. When Henry was little and in school he attended a private school called Portland Academy. Henry graduated

  • The Fireside Poets: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Oliver Wendel Holmes

    1348 Words  | 3 Pages

    Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was born on February 27, 1807 in Portland, Maine to the mother Zilpah Wadsworth and the father Stephen Longfellow who was a politician and a lawyer. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was an influential American poet, translator (He was the first American poet to translate Dante Alighieri's epic poem The Divine Comedy) and a professor at the Harvard University. One of Longfellow's most pretentious work is Evangeline: A tale of Acadie, an epic poem which follows the Acadian girl

  • Essay on the Use of Chiaroscuro in The Scarlet Letter

    748 Words  | 2 Pages

    his talent, and they helped pay his way to Bowdoin College.  Hawthorne and his classmates became the most prominent people in America at that time.  He had many strong ties with important people from attending Bowdoin, such as:  Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Franklin Pierce.  In 1828, his first novel, Fanshawe was anonymously published at his own expense.  In 1842, he befriended Transcendentalists Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Bronson Alcott, and married Sophia Peabody, an active

  • Longfellow's Unique American Hero in Evangeline

    1537 Words  | 4 Pages

    contribution of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow is largely neglected. Longfellow's portrayal of the American Adam is set apart in that he does not praise this character as a role model for others. The concept of the American Adam is seen in a different light through the depiction of Basil in the narrative poem Evangeline. Evangeline is the tale of an Acadian woman's journey to find her lost lover after her people are exiled from their native Nova Scotia. Longfellow describes the state

  • Nathaniel Hawthorn

    1070 Words  | 3 Pages

    his widowed mother Elizabeth - and for the rest of her life they relied on each other for emotional solace. Later he wrote to his friend Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: "I have locked myself in a dungeon and I can't find the key to get out." Hawthorne was educated at the Bowdoin College in Maine (1821-24). In the school among his friends were Longfellow and Franklin Pierce, who became the 14th president of the U.S. Between the years 1825 and 1836 Hawthorne worked as a writer and contributor to periodicals

  • Cinematic Appropriations of The Great Gatsby

    2017 Words  | 5 Pages

    Montgomery in 1955 and the other with Robert Ryan in 1958.  The controversial 1974 adaptation rings in at number five.  The sixth version of Gatsby is slated to run on the A&E cable network early next year - Mira Sorvino will play Daisy and Toby Stephens will star as Gatsby.  Six!  All lacking.  All critical failures. [1]   So why do they do it?  What is it about the novel that tempts Hollywood producers, directors, and the occasional ingenue? Hollywood screenwriter DeWitt Bodeen wrote in

  • Much of Christina Rossetti’s poetry has a very depressing and rather

    837 Words  | 2 Pages

    to produce works based on real landscapes and real models, and paid intense attention to accuracy of detail and color William Holman Hunt, D.G. Rossetti, John Everett Millais, William Michael Rossetti, James Collinson, Thomas Woolner and F.G. Stephens founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood (PRB) in 1849. In some ways it was an impulsive venture, the PRB aimed to produce works that were innovative in style and substance, and expressive of direct, sincere feeling. And behind this lay the persistent

  • Making History By Stephen Fry

    1547 Words  | 4 Pages

    Making History by Stephen Fry Making History is a novel by Stephen Fry, who was born in Hampstead, London on Saturday, August 24, 1957 as the son of Alan and Marianne Fry. Except other books such as The Hippopotamus Fry also wrote some plays(e.g. Latin! in 1979) and films and the musical Me & My Girl. He also worked as an actor in the famous BBC series Blackadder. Making History was first published in the United Kingdom in 1996 by Hutchinson. The book tells a fantasy-science fiction-time travelling

  • The Power of Images

    987 Words  | 2 Pages

    Analytical Essay – The Power of Images I believe that pictures are able to capture a single moment, highlighting the important meaning behind every action presented. According to Mitchell Stephens’ “By Means of the Visible: A Picture’s Worth,” images possess “great power - religious, tribal, romantic, pedagogic” (479). Similarly, in Kenneth Brower’s “Photography in the Age of Falsification,” a picture of earthrise is described as having “poetic power, evoking sentiment” (564). When looking

  • Death Penalty is Another Name for Revenge

    1929 Words  | 4 Pages

    requires repeated attempts be humane? On December 12th, 1984 Alpha Otis Stephens was electrocuted.  The first jolt of electricity, which lasted for two minutes, did not kill him. Officials waited for six minutes to allow Stephens' body to cool, so physicians could examine him.  Upon examination, it was declared that a second jolt was needed.  During the six minute interval, it was reported that Stephens took 23 breaths. -http://www.abolition-now.com/ Donald Eugene Harding

  • Essay on Stephen’s Heroic Quest in Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

    2928 Words  | 6 Pages

    Stephen’s Heroic Quest in Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man ...His mother said: -O, Stephen will apologise. Dante said: -O, if not, the eagles will come and pull out his eyes. This utterance, which comes at the climax of the short first passage that Joyce presents to us, defines the heroic quest that Stephen (and/or his latent identity as mythic Daedalus) must undertake. He is, in this instance, bound by a strict commandment from "above" (from the towering grown-ups above

  • Stephen J. Hawking By Rachel Finck

    1574 Words  | 4 Pages

    Stephen J. Hawking by Rachel Finck Stephen Hawking was born in January of 1942 in Oxford, England. He grew up near London and was educated at Oxford, from which he received his BA in 1962, and Cambridge, where he received his doctorate in theoretical physics. Stephen Hawking is a brilliant and highly productive researcher, and, since 1979, he has held the Lucasian professorship in mathematics at Cambridge, the very chair once held by Isaac Newton. Although still relatively young, Hawking is already

  • Psychoanalysis of The Sweet Hereafter by Russell Banks

    1132 Words  | 3 Pages

    grief in his own life. The film also depicts the grieving subjects susceptibility to convert grief and guilt into both blame and monetary gain and the transformation this small community faces after such a devastating event. The motives of Mitchell Stephens, the lawyer trying to file a class-action lawsuit, and of the townspeople are questionable throughout the film. Some in the community feel that attempting to win money in a court case is unnecessary and in fact will tear the town farther apart. Nicole’s