WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
A History of American Literature cover

A History of American Literature

Chapter 79: Transcriber’s Note
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The book offers a chronological survey of American literature from colonial beginnings through nineteenth-century poetry, fiction, and drama, tracing major movements and authors while emphasizing representative works that illustrate the nation's evolving intellectual and patriotic self-awareness. Each chapter treats influential writers or groups, provides focused readings of one or two key works, and supplies study topics, bibliographies, and suggested editions for students. Supplemental materials include maps, chronological charts, an appendix summarizing important magazines, and indexes to aid classroom use and further reading.

Footnotes

[1] Rev. ii, 17.

[2] This same discipline was enjoyed—among later American authors—by Mark Twain, Bret Harte, William Dean Howells, and Walt Whitman, all of whom were scrupulously careful writers.

[3] Also in Representative American Plays (edited by A. H. Quinn). 1917.

[4] Lines addressed to Messrs. Dwight and Barlow.

[5] Fitzgreene Halleck, “Fanny,” stanza lviii.

[6] Mason and Slidell, ll. 155–165.

[7] “Fanny,” stanzas cxxi, cxxii.

[8] “Wyoming,” stanza iv.

[9] “Among the Hills” (Prelude, 71 ff.).

[10] Lowell, “Fable for Critics.”

[11] An interesting tribute is paid this poem by Ezra Pound in a footnote to “L’Homme Moyen Sensuel,” in “Pavannes and Divisions,” p. 33. “I would give these rhymes now with dedication ‘To the Anonymous Compatriot Who Produced the Poem “Fanny” Somewhere About 1820,’ if this form of centennial homage be permitted me. It was no small thing to have written, in America, at that distant date, a poem of over forty pages which one can still read without labor.”

[12] It was reserved for Poe to write a genuinely critical estimate of it. See The Southern Literary Messenger, Vol. II, pp. 326 ff. Reprinted in “The Literati,” p. 374.

[13] Found in the volume “Nature, Addresses and Lectures.”

[14] “Self-Reliance” Essays, First Series.

[15] Such abstruse poems as the following are really expounded in corresponding essays: “Written in Naples” and “Written in Rome”—the essay on “History”; “Each and All”—the essay on “Compensation”; “The Problem”—the essays on “Art” and “Compensation”; “Merlin”—the essay on “The Poet”; “The World-Soul”—the essays on “Nominalist and Realist” and “The Over-Soul”; “Hamatreya”—the essay on “Compensation”; “Musketaquid”—the essay on “Nature”; “Étienne de la Boéce”—the essay on “Friendship”; “Brahma”—the essays on “Circles” and “The Over-Soul.”

[16] See his own acknowledgment in the “Proem” to the poems of 1842.

[17] See the first chapter of Holmes’s “Elsie Venner” for a discussion of this New England aristocracy of birth and learning rather than of wealth.

[18] A short list of the chief titles will include Longfellow’s “Hyperion” (1839), Willis’s “Loiterings of Travel” (1840), Taylor’s “Views Afoot” (1846), Curtis’s “Nile Notes of a Howadji” (1851), Mrs. Stowe’s “Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands” (1854), Emerson’s “English Traits” (1856), Bryant’s “Letters from Spain and Other Countries” (1859), Norton’s “Notes of Travel and Study in Italy” (1859), Hawthorne’s “Our Old Home” (1863), Howells’s “Venetian Life” (1866), Mark Twain’s “Innocents Abroad” (1869), and so on down to and beyond Holmes’s “Our Hundred Days in Europe” (1887).

[19] See pages 2–7 in T. W. Higginson’s “Longfellow,” American Men of Letters Series.

[20] See Bliss Perry’s “Park Street Papers,” “The Editor who Never was Editor,” pp. 205–277.

[21] W. C. Brownell, “American Prose Masters,” pp. 271, 272.

[22] W. D. Howells, “My Mark Twain,” p. 46.

[23] In view of the lack of any copyright protection it is interesting to record that three of the London publishers offered Mrs. Stowe an interest in the sales of their editions.

[24] See “Theological Tea,” chap. iv.

[25] New York Tribune, June 13, 1859.

[26] This distinction is valid even though the Oldtown folks belonged to Mrs. Stowe’s childhood. The Andover of her later years was Oldtown in all essential respects.

[27] “Elsie Venner,” chap. i, “The Brahmin Caste of New England.”

[28] Meeting of the American Medical Association, May, 1853. The response was a poem.

[29] For a direct statement on the resumption of the old attempt, see “The Autocrat’s Autobiography” printed as a foreword to the volume. For an indirect account, see the passages on Byles Gridley and his “Thoughts on the Universe” in Holmes’s “The Guardian Angel.”

[30] For varying sentiments about “Bohemia” see the following passages: Ferris Greenslet, “Life of Thomas Bailey Aldrich,” pp. 37–47; W. D. Howells, “Literary Friends and Acquaintances,” pp. 68–76; Stedman and Gould, “Life of Edmund Clarence Stedman,” pp. 208, 209; William Winter, “Old Friends,” pp. 291–297.

[31] In reply to this and like passages William Winter wrote: “No literary circle comparable with the Bohemian group of that period, in ardor of genius, variety of character, and singularity of achievement, has since existed in New York, nor has any group of writers anywhere existent in our country been so ignorantly and grossly misrepresented and maligned” (“Old Friends,” p. 138).

[32] A corresponding danger on the other hand is that a people who abjure all such phrases will abjure also the things for which they stand, until they become irredeemably prosaic and matter of fact.

[33] This was the second time that President Gilman had placed a poet in the position of teacher, for he had already done this with Edward Rowland Sill at the University of California (see p. 397).

[34] “Mark Twain, a Biography,” by Albert Bigelow Paine. 3 vols. 1912.

[35] See his essay “How to Tell a Story” in “The Man that Corrupted Hadleyburg,” pp. 225–230.

[36] James Russell Lowell, “Ode on Agassiz.”

[37] See chap. ii, “His Life at College,” in W. B. Parker’s Life.

[38] See “American Neglect of American Literature” by Percy H. Boynton. Nation (1916), Vol. CII, pp. 478–480.

[39] In the “Sketch Book” Washington Irving concludes “Rural Life in England” with a poem by the Reverend Rann Kennedy, A.M., a great-uncle of the dramatist.

Transcriber’s Note

Corrections have been made where it is obvious a printer’s error. For instance, on p. 3, the reference to the execution of “Charles II” in 1649 is an error (it was Charles I), but it is not at all clearly a printer’s fault, and is merely noted here.

The following issues and their resolutions are noted here:

p. 3Charles IIsic. Charles I.
p. 34D[ai/ia]ryTransposed.
p. 58(especially chap. )sic. Missing.
p. 231have all [be enhoused/been housed]Corrected.
p. 233“The Music Grinders,[”] “The Comet,”Added.
p. 264philos[o]phicalAdded.
p. 296Heart[s]ease and RueAdded.
p. 308Calv[a/i]nismCorrected.
p. 331often [“/‘]Destiny,[”/’]Corrected
p. 439Augustus Thomas (1859- [)]Added.
p. 453personal a[c]quaintanceAdded.
p. 460to any woman in [in] any of Moody’s poemsRemoved.
p. 472U[n]usuallyAdded.
p. 492the organ of ‘japonicadom,[”/’]Corrected.

Chronological Chart Transcriptions

Any dates have been derived from the graphs themselves.


CHRONOLOGICAL CHART I. AMERICAN LITERATURE,
1600–1800

(Back to Chart)

Thomas Morton(1575?-1646)
Nathaniel Ward(1578-1652?)
Roger Williams(1604-1683)
Michael Wigglesworth(1631-1705)
Anne Bradstreet(1612-1672)
Increase Mather(1639-1723)
Cotton Mather(1663-1728)
Samuel Sewall(1652-1730)
Sarah Kemble Knight(1666-1727)
Jonathan Edwards(1703-1758)
Benjamin Franklin(1706-1790)
Michel de Crèvecoeur(1731-1813)
Francis Hopkinson(1737-1791)
John Trumbull(1750-1831)
Philip Freneau(1752-1832)
Timothy Dwight(1752-1817)
Joel Barlow(1754-1812)
Brockden Brown(1771-1810)
Washington Irving(1783-1859)
Fitz-Greene Halleck(1790-1867)
Joseph Rodman Drake(1795-1820)
J. Fenimore Cooper(1789-1851)
Wm. Cullen Bryant(1794-1878)

Reigns of English Monarchs

JAMES I1603-1625
CHARLES I1625-1649
PROTECTORATE1649-1660
CHARLES II1660-1685
JAMES II1685-1689
WM.-MARY1689-1702
ANNE1702-1714
GEORGE I1714-1727
GEORGE II1727-1760
GEORGE III1760-1820
American Revolution1775-1780
James I
Charles I
Protect-
orate
Charles II
Jas.
II
Wm.-
Mary
Anne
George I
George II
George III
1600
1610
1620
1630
1640
1650
1660
1670
1680
1690
1700
1710
1720
1730
1740
1750
1760
1770
1780
1790
Thomas Morton (1575?–1646)
Nathaniel Ward (1578–1652?)
Roger Williams (1604–1683)
Michael Wigglesworth (1631–1705)
Anne Bradstreet (1612–1672)
Increase Mather (1639–1723)
Cotton Mather (1663–1728)
Samuel Sewall (1652–1730)
Sarah Kemble Knight (1666–1727)
Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790)
Michel de Crèvecœur (1731–1813)
Francis Hopkinson (1737–1791)
John Trumbull (1750–1831)
Philip Freneau (1752–1832)
Timothy Dwight (1752–1817)
Joel Barlow (1754–1812)
Washington Irving (1783–1859)
Fitz-Greene Halleck (1790–1867)
Joseph Rodman Drake (1795–1820)
J. Fenimore Cooper (1789–1851)
Wm. Cullen Bryant (1794–1878)

Dates for the English Reigns

 Reign
James I(1603–1625)
Charles I(1625–1649)
Protectorate(1649–1660)
Charles II(1660–1685)
Jas. II(1685–1689)
Wm.-Mary(1689–1702)
Anne(1702–1714)
George I(1714–1727)
George II(1727–1760)
George III(1760–1820)
American Revolution(1775-1780)

CHRONOLOGICAL CHART II, American Literature in the Nineteenth Century

(Back to Chart)

The dates in the table below are derived from the printed chart and are limited to the period defined there.

 Life Span Active
Authorship
Most
Important
Period
Brockden Brown 1771–1810–1810–1801
Washington Irving 1783–18591807-18581819-1832
Fitz-Greene Halleck1790–18671819-18661819-1831
Joseph Rodman Drake1795–18201816-18201816-1820
J. Fenimore Cooper 1789–18511820-18501821-1831
Wm. Cullen Bryant 1794–18781811-18781831-1843
Edgar Allan Poe 1808–18491827–18491836–1849
Ralph Waldo Emerson1803–18821835–18701835–1848
Henry David Thoreau1817–18621839–1862 1849–1862
Nathaniel Hawthorne1804–18641829–1864 1850–1860
John G. Whittier 1807–18921829–1892 1849–1866
Henry W. Longfellow1807–18821824–1882 1847–1862
James R. Lowell 1819–18911838–1888 1848–1866
Harriet B. Stowe 1811–18961842–1881 1852–1861
Oliver W. Holmes 1809–18941836–1891 1859–1872
Richard H. Stoddard1825–19031849–1890 1851–1862
Thomas B. Aldrich 1836–19071855–1896 1861–1873
Edmund C. Stedman 1833–1908 1860–1862–1875
Henry Timrod 1829–18671857–1867 1858–1867
Paul Hamilton Hayne 1830–18861855–1880 1856–1872
Sidney Lanier 1842–18811869–1881 1869–1881
Walt Whitman 1819–18921855–1890 1855–1871
Bret Harte 1839–1902 1867– 1870–1880
Mark Twain 1835–1910 1867– 1869–1884
Edward Rowland Sill 1841–18871868–1888 1878–1883
“Joaquin” Miller 1841–1913 1869– 1881–1892
Richard Watson Gilder1844–1909 1875– 1889–1892
Wm. Dean Howells 1837–  1849– 1883–1895
Wm. Vaughn Moody 1869–1910 1891– 1899–
1800
1810
1820
1830
1840
1850
1860
1870
1880
1890
Brockden Brown (1771–1810)
Washington Irving (1783–1859)
Fitz-Greene Halleck (1790–1867)
Joseph Rodman Drake (1795–1820)
J. Fenimore Cooper (1789–1851)
Wm. Cullen Bryant (1794–1878)
Edgar Allan Poe (1808–1849)
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)
Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804–1864)
John G. Whittier (1807–1892)
Henry W. Longfellow (1807–1882)
James R. Lowell (1819–1891)
Harriet B. Stowe (1811–1896)
Oliver W. Holmes (1809–1894)
Richard H. Stoddard (1825–1903)
Thomas B. Aldrich (1836–1907)
Edmund C. Stedman (1833–1908)
Henry Timrod (1829–1867)
Paul Hamilton Hayne (1830–1886)
Sidney Lanier (1842–1881)
Walt Whitman (1819–1892)
Bret Harte (1839–1902)
Mark Twain (1835–1910)
Edward Rowland Sill (1841–1887)
“Joaquin” Miller (1841–1913)
Richard Watson Gilder (1844–1909)
Wm. Dean Howells (1837–   )
Wm. Vaughn Moody (1869–1910)