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Show Section Che Jnter- Mountain Republican Three SALT LAKE Pages 1 to 8. CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1907. of duty faithfully performed erary laurels honestly earned. these years he had written rion," "The Spanish Student," feline." "Kavanagch.' "The Legend" and litDuring "Hype"EyanGolden and."Hiawatha." He ad risen to be the first) of American poets, both in popular esteem and in foreign appreciation. \ Second Domestic Tragedy. But the year 1861 brought another great sorrow to the poet. had married a second time-Fanny Blizabeth Appleton, whom a friend of Kossuth's described as a lady of Junonian beauty and the kindest heart," praise contirmed by the memory of all who saw and knew her. Their marriage in 1843 was followed by nearly twenty years of serene happiness, mirrored in such poems as "The Children's Hour." I hear in the chamber above me The patter of little feet, The sound of a door that is opened And voices soft and sweet. From my study I see in the lamplight, Descending the broad hall stair, Grave Alice and laughing Allegra And Edith with golden hair. From this poem, with its picturesque adjectives, everybody knows the L fellow children. We. c mother, too, by the light of the poet's phrase about her "dee . unutterable eyes," and by the lines in his pathetic sonnet, "The Cross of Snow: American minister to Spain saw < him Soul "dance In the streets on holidays," so| Never his romantic buoyancy was no together crushed, although he' wrote|To its ome that "My poetic career Is finoe ished."' Iron ap ° Aessimism | 4 -it Rat note b t 22 he returned and became. of odern languages at doin, his alma mater. EEF ORE Henry Wadsworth born in ‘the viaianitedes Be this o the, i V Ceee raBeas . uana when he died, b eC; in 1 was at Portland, ¥ undergone ( ne 1882, a ntury LLL - See Taig, r Th American it LIT, FOU os poet was aw ee 2 --_--_-_-_-__--_-_--_--_---- consid- a ------ | MILL L aI peer i rue "4 er , a Ogee yr LG 2H , 7 re a 7 LLOULE iY populatt most lowed. peak, mat fessor iwain a ¥ KR J Tl 7 FP 7pf ern Lh kL LAL (hs ahd 2 | ‘A o D os TFID TiF2G de x Leen j (TY TRL aettty is TIAL 44Lx pendulum of opinion is tyt ny othe that thehe ma bout none 7 too gooe \ . to os z ae tha backward and ‘peopl ize, despite again, superciliou ritt . what Is Bente ' id ad ae : beige | SS EH A : : ; pe w g + By t ROT The, nit ue } ee Seer ef n) , bu } name All of ae u f I dh 1 ou HeToe was rude their conversior to speak of he in sanls} t - pb: Norsem o Christianit white Christ, ber soul him | as 1 . wonle I yl a will, veet i \¥ Iwae and i ‘ | remem-| sas tA] 1 had of nothing.to Jonn Alden as weno nt ae ve Courtship ors of grandfather may at whil ‘ fit : met i t oe I i ax vii i a 1a ( | Potter the wedding irrits ge rae one s ~ 1 3 ( Prosperity, | pakone indeo afellow : = bells Cn { man of mr 23 iat at aa led avuile ) im wind l ae through t men dre id. o'¢ ihe ‘ 3 i -y bia I into del din of the Qe Loop and "y <T loudly tall," . ti ® BreniienS the volee foueht ougi for 0 with a Wordsworth WHO ¢ { ic from an ancient nth ¢ Te Pa t il Onee _LelLonsa hz the fact. that he s distant the link English of ap- re- poet) Wa a1S0;-0K ended rkshire famill . no bette woof of : yoeti } tse po \ ai ‘ than ‘ ca ia in ) became | eet ind ; ey Victory's They a 1 A Tie = fhe snow up sonnet upon df her aid their: Pi ri 1 their at loud fe « ing ‘ , ee here Kg of 1 ib : u the, very) although. th of oune | his they were a noble ared "alesoe 4 of e high in 1863;a water and gracious Emerson his ripest soul Peni. and richric Wayasid. ayside ) a Christus, ee ono.porhaps <sutr ‘ a mark, in in" one apane apes on is BY ta 188 , was 1€ wrote life, so clean the sweetestat SW S reminded t the white Mr. this|Latin Longfellow by his .simple uffer imitation honnniatenaenword little v oe ee eg a ee e|0 | children to come | witness is needed her t dc ea Dur rie ide erg of German © Washington the ie of how oe unto me to reveal No other the beauty -e tree fT entiarinanale grea Z I i na tackthe poet was fashioned from its wood by the ubscriptions of school children, Longfellow > cave orders that any child with of vit Aas ‘ 7 vr 7? d LOkLL AL" Bre wow hiv T ‘ [Ee A477 ar baer Bree TDG. 4 DR F ih he nae PR Te t + Ar Se . Tae)a st impelled Longfellow. to the] lightly as and directed Sust before eventy autohis seventy- Craigie professor « mduer- through him room Barmecide the after words "You, His open fers hospitable te vi find (4, home was newcomer, him wishing, some always and at when particularly ee write going guest most engaged absorbing at last she room, overshe omitted} vork ‘Oo. for a good snowstorm to block the door!" And once when there Sena THOMA HAnvaArdlbetweanlatlc lithe negative and made the home-| |} seeker happy \ New England Weimar ° i| c el; ) y a ; This hous = th poet's home al] of his life, and became the | as nt s re dents and faculty one of the young l ernwlaanere said: "Get us go to Pro\fessor Longfellow He Ge éalways treats : 2SS 4 YS Ct love rer n.?? | us like gentlemen. A Truly\ National Poet. | } , Pulaskl's. banner "Voi of the Hoineh quare nd would| tained some ot bs ' ! le ery 1d ‘"‘martial| made his fame wo loat ds) d ;of Tife and : Midnight siclome tk I hett of Sir' William: Jones") Dying Yea Anothe ) I language but-is re-| "The es LB US membered, ehiet by th lassic of) from .Poe an ‘ \ ' the Phird Re Wh Constitutes] plagiarism hi ‘ ealed Sra hie i ¥ ( Seek! 5 fourth birthday a lady sent hima nington ) er!an 1 blank ecards, asking him to bedroom Vas hel sa are on each. as she was oceupie d by the poet to give a party and w ished each Curti has told most Punta, souvenir howing the headBoston; became Mrs. oune' mansion, of ‘ vbrida: itera sock a ee ' . n the literary capl-j Such was the man, lovable and rica obably no elty ever | large-souled eon creer eee : y illustrious literary |on the completion of a cen y since ¥ tine \ B et Harte said |his birth, honors as one of her reprene 1 #\ 4 5 rae ; ¥ . : m3 ell 10 moved there in 1266 sentative national poets, and a ae vou couldn't fire a revolver|to win for ppg ee Ag inal a oe : front door porch HERB aes ee pd A rving. es " > . F rics Ose +V down : two-volumer foreec or American POSEe. s uy z Oo 1e ich 1c each; received! Wh Dé United mostcollege sl |) imind h been. itt iting to. Hi t . ‘ ee = Stat i or leg r Ue j cf ; i ; Conn ' a .) 5 OE quite frequently Long th much; immature verse the ippeared here; the tine fr the loravian| + > S 1 Hymn . ae } Nun which still stirs our pulses,' arx oe : Italianume Gram-jof| first a Margare dish,) he R neu Pf Biter : publi ‘ Mi q 1s appearer in ft felloy l pros vanagh 10 No yeati , [ yeat Hyperion ° pec t } ; | Z Wu OOK later SoA shows how nat n Among dj tees tne vineyal ae CHT poetic seet So 1 in Cambridge | choice of national subjects, by his un- 5 Washington's old council room|those who think the thoughts of the 1 he y} sf "DD : ‘hiziinderiwhosel ino wise and who speak the language of Nfe-how;met th ee. u { he simple," ) firation and with whose ald Longcen I » Wor b De vi = , SOs erie is version of "DiBesides teaching the world to look rival a me : \ ersion lon not way,y> he opened for us gates . of Tranceré vine eae Comedy," not 8¢ » high-y;our g f Pan is mata erities; but rising in|song throughout the world We made met a Rygroup fl, of village girls _ eS Lcel imed. by oP ab Americans familiar with Tegner and face? \ thought of! the unbiased 1 1der's en ‘ UWhland i Manrique and Jasmin and yproached the ce & : ' : . ‘tharles Eliot! and Miz que Jas é ( old mith id told one of th he compares it with i ey ao lnichael Aneelotne noeG fe was, perNI ose versio Nort ae 5 i* + & y ' hl ad flute in hi napsar yortor Dre V I ae : prominent haps, the most skillful translator of ule ( ind } ould ! ke what|damsel replied . t lance well id . what 2 dances i that she enough, to was "TY The " 1 should but had Vitih sure c { no/;bly sOWOl}, in the in the only WAS Dante 1S ae : 2 > that "nelis ‘r "e au 2g club, and {s proba-.| verac English literature has seen, 2 cept Howells | and he has been repaid in kind by survivor excep Polly « | be ing the most translated of all Amer- thanoth-!at | eee (he Cambridge : "7 ein =. a. L mgtel thought 3 |} Wrore : ar t 4OnB"Ie i but Seat stai 1 would drive me to! sweek cep Ka ne : poe ne villacc| ‘or he same| strike up at tn did.i y neleless, Ee th et L ee ; «s Goldsinith Neve ro published also a 1O1C ( l id orl 7 e J din acts As I cee age the border line between Inti jand = the prosaic f translations} a ; : ' of Manrique easily the vanderel me m ) v haave over the frontier into the of plas Fae! S Al of up from ri ugue i ; ( Out the : a llabus his: ven made 1nish Ilex OMe | Dani t Writings ] eh a And transiatlor 1 | arly was ver vas: from. tl Amorong his { ! tte vRe . His death engraven,o ambition aay. u puts rk seS hes irroundec In the. if'erhaps Longfellow 2 Share { xhibition day, in, a) sumed the character and) l , American! CO ul o.8 f x Bd it th their they b ae ime ire bright ere poet's Stat episod ' their!‘ Miata trump. I prociain 3young | ited ficant damp a glory lea nae thei hono because : € th creel whole Among those who live it nNDMes°| : > taste atid acholarehip, ‘by his Ds i led hi Cat ue or forelen tongue after he w 1s} criticl m it i were vell Avassi lr ishe ( hild, | erring eee i olse Re compelled ine eep t-night I : et {from Bowdoln, fourth in his His Travels in Kurope Dana on, the Jameses (father and eae as fot ese ard Aaa. he ‘ ak » Jater,, ng : ea There at : ew people are ae TON taat) | t son). alone " with many not for| work o rendell: look 1.0 has a d out, - he 7 ; : in. of j vare Tc. yrepare himself p for his poetic;)son S h others ae ' SSey ointed AD ul pf eat doin colleg Cl j ays ello tt printed yea mie A ae 1 Lonefello went abroad for| gotten Tiolmes often ran over from eae bn al : world oididefnt= |iesNatlt el iwthorne va - f Darenhisia reneh amma translater rom) Vocatior sOTN§ BONY J A Ree na a . ame |‘"‘comes very t : 2 1 y ne Fas in I at eee 7 ae 1 vear after leaving Bowdoin An} Boston Kemet n metime ; car ¢ tion of literary. greatness, which has issmates; another wa I k Pliers JHomond, and his fin original work} Irst European pilerim-!}from Concord, and Whittier from ; lesti become president of the|lto be printed Ls ritten in French,| episode =~of his first & J : \ mest nase ometimes been Y held the of : ie a row re as ‘ h os virtue thet t th es if Loa the i first himself ir Lecomp do} father to hor E h ta of fl ‘ le} J upon) p I Did t} pie tod paper? the nost 4 Uh he add-| , mm ibl mol el j Lil) ( 1 i "a blow d =< tumult 4 ‘ 1 now . that iat ord \ Peer eru das print v frie he men rio. Warrio \ battle, Si es of - ai rior N | ‘ ng) along.the he var-clarion aT heard noi mstign reve - Th RE T ors ite tebe, ‘ > FT Pe ZY 7 Ce CLLILLOW - sbi ob doth el silence b y Se a rude 1 cane been during | can't "have that,"" until leame to the W ashineton looking the river when x POND s var ed. old published in when he L It runs as Tol‘ publish, | sweetness, | |room, is th north iest ‘Nt ; He < ‘s fast if cross The full worthy of Some of |i tribute a y self f ; amusingly oe ple LOVELL'S to idear}°S! naj)| year ane calm | P $900 takin hi , \fter they hac | the 1 n that | study u to ind Washinetor ipartment first Geore iliam { put it ey OF The ; beside nt eeDps moa ) at fe bi of all 1 i u eh eb HH id nh per fi th Merstorn ter cold ta tive‘is And oO. literature BO er aes aa tas a si lshould be allowed to see the chair at | one who Americans ele wh > openc open g for i e es cone |20¥ time, and Mr. : Higginson records | rich treasure house of German NE lint "the ti ump of dirty little feet | t is land thought his | through the hall was. 7 for . many y ien he returned to take up hi months the despair of housemaids." vork at Harvard he found residence Another evidence of his unfailing {in the Craigie House Les sree | kindness was his attitude toward the which re seve! es Sp ot de lautograph fiend Once he records ao America's literat shrin On- iF eo dinue that antercicy wrote, , , to t poem a*.Ga tt¢ than 1 gts BATTLE The his breast."= ever rang. with storms Longfellow felt his grief hore it bravel Going to he plunged into the study \‘ston"-had | quarter » Ath nsibl« mtl mor Sighs i "wearing ig oS sort eat | Childhood. 5 i gd; Ossi { ad te S - . OF h it urn | hither ind thither for ix month jof his spirit When the "spreading lm eting the Carylyes and other celeb-} WEBERUE Tree was felled which shad. wh died at Rotter a eal awed horitic Mt Lonefellow the village ‘ smithy inBrattle eritical a i ing 1 ( i an I ‘ tain miss-!- by Tragedy. , ith the Longfellows. Fo was : el crowned 1 ui escrn 40 } permission } with him f I : pety a eae a . count bled H unk: 1 1 ind I t *YISCIUIA «4 elles ve RS Her peat mortalized in Phy earth is thelr bed pie 'f ish."' His | No' stone tells -thry yhene Mile Sete ; a fi ah r athe anotheHi cl. a t repose, ofsain Wadsworththatfrst the Wordsworth ? been CY m aa nd r es I aa ne: @ Ankenami tatty 4 Peg ne awothers choser neo 1 1 lore Cold, T} wide at Poet's: 1 Xs aie ane surname : . have lationship later Storer Lonefel ba i lows . THE eee was aeee "Willage ee ares Rlac smith BUREN Sree e eons : | The name of Longfellow was orig-) {nally written Langfellay, 19 the ma-| ernie ternal peared hi oun ly : hspane at genius; these men might hay zreatel poets had th ived and orderly live lik Word j ngand Tennyson and out ood. Ne bards No wonder that Longfell i WW-w L was one of nature obleme! ' he 2 ied from the stern old TPildescen¢ ther' & Slide ide from! ry = On) S oth ir ,our Mayflower Brin eee f iat « iricluding that : I} Mullii t the ia ~ rere ‘dorsHer *» Descended From Pilgrim Fathers, : \ ‘ he : BO ‘ene vt iae 1eAN Oo" eR walt i re mh igh ero that genius must ic rat! ths and errat Ch ree of) Robbi: Burns, thei Jiaisor Lord!) , ' u = a t Byron: € ] cn i eine cintion of o t 1 little and Biornson, in a letter t in Amerl-) can ‘friend, "wrote of; the vhite Mi Longfellow." Though. literary eritics| ants: "forge 1 iame th great e American Re te "3 er n me Pats: ing {15 qd.) ss was cole tik Wan in the form of an | Hanging of the ¢ rane lappointment at Harvard, to succeed Bells of San Blas," in De a Mntehen are wounded yeh cir-|last important poem he j re earne ; ; ee . | Rut was not his whole cle domestic felicity Che appoint! Fa, endei ane 1 Sssunn y, ment at' Harvard carried with it per: One : 7 aise WHroadi? on ill7 ve his hanpos mission. of ef a I l a ae of Biornson phrast t he ine + \i#ory Tr METI Phe Shit Longfello re Fol simple tribute. beautiful soul after used $e oe "il 1 I Beet lica I L. something Ad) grea Vy gC! man) to ay but ne Li} sul rE. 2% ‘ 1 to recal he sald just bes beautifu t re : yO APOE ee tt gazed upon Lonefellow sleep} comed t ) be literary i Kea ; ymmé 7 ni Tefelics i DY a * 7: : imor was the fi Serie" ‘ son had come ft beside the ble the white face eae Ine lay Simerson memory i was Bow-| dam ) oO ‘ nobb« in| a fire he home. without daring to tod "delicatetor-nublicatton although she was an-.old schooli The modest young poct-pro\ Noble and Gractous Soul. z | got his sister to introduce him| So he went en the close of his to the fair on and @® year OV/ life {mn 1882, undiminished ‘in poetic a pvronie for which: umns s ofYOGI eulogy3 Bet liness of the m was at Longfello his ¢ a Sa poetr Ww. € hi wai y I ta ‘ rahi nanny af ‘ Phere a ee low. told "by Willi Literary Friends atruggling little later we have sweet and dnehis: o en etlHit + ove ra P Severed Mivwontrwell tg * ered an irreparable national calampite of chi rather. ludicrou name ‘ty: today literary moguls exalt Waitum like Shakespeare and Spencei jan and. Poe and sneer" that--Long-| haves a. fine' Mlourisi id dignity. .to ar ; la tie } 1 ) uld~ be inelined fellow is good enoughwith for which children But the enthusiasm prep-| to ver)laugh.eek ifif 1 poet ob 5 th name rf{ iach ave beer ae < elebrat« h th put in a bid for fame Chere arations have ot f n ee tp A re a ; ek 2] 1 it c ' Lowell one and CODED: Cambridge, z but at places ion as ‘¢ "aic seem ~'« to. indl nae ' Mary te: TF Os LCAL 7 Me har] ' Retin Eis aT . ONE rambling ~ house sea has during Spee r. hunsines unee Longfelloy large, overlooking the n The poet's; fame ~ of 5, fa.4n le forcien pilgrimage ne slum |goatn was never shown to the. WoFld, aa this.month a 1 1 ave I VaASSE a a can nefellow unown portfollo hisdeath in reposed '|/and home One Is reminded of : Dante's ft a fter< his cose wis tone first eee of oe eg ee of those poems of which he told Wilakd how he "never tok his love saway "se ems Q a wereoe for tha teatiitanh tint Longfellow Ham W ' inte oeEe tone a Rotter dt chiveh' Gna: fol. himself alone iat he should not ce ry teeo 7 ‘A IT. ; > LONGCFELLOW © t FFT OOT, yy LIOTCLRE( TAAL TTY DITCLLLL m7 e HIS DEATTZ the 27th of Wwwill W ye "ars ;' while martyrdom repose. wees shocking accident. For a pro-~}second time the poet's fe was desolated, and Fa mmr gS is | in faith and fortitude, f ru fessor On lred> dred > more through Se celebration tees thle F heanni | eos elghteen years Longfellow was| Harvard, Ss or 3 at a x , eighteen © .years | poets. Some interesting facts are cted" with pk ivanclatinne 2 » , Gaon (Continued on Page Seven.) - |