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Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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Poe vs. Himself: On the Writer’s One-Sided War with Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The story of the Little Longfellow War.
by
Anne Whitehouse
via
Literary Hub
on
July 24, 2023
As Far From Heaven as Possible
How Henry Wadsworth Longfellow interpreted Reconstruction by translating Dante.
by
Ed Simon
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
October 4, 2021
What Is There to Love About Longfellow?
He was the most revered poet of his day. It’s worth trying to figure out why.
by
James Marcus
via
The New Yorker
on
June 1, 2020
A Beautiful Ending
On dying and heaven in the time of Longfellow.
by
Nicholas A. Basbanes
via
Humanities
on
June 15, 2020
“A Nation of Lunatics.” What Oscar Wilde Thought About America
On the Irish writer’s grand tour of the Gilded Age United States.
by
Rob Marland
via
Literary Hub
on
March 11, 2024
original
A Tour of Mount Auburn Cemetery
Two centuries of New England intellectual history through the lives and ideas of people who are memorialized there.
by
Kathryn Ostrofsky
on
September 7, 2022
The Man Who Built Forward Better
Frederick Law Olmsted’s landscape creations, especially his urban parks, remain a vital part of our present.
by
Witold Rybczynski
via
The Hedgehog Review
on
March 1, 2022
Only Dead Metaphors Can Be Resurrected
Historical narratives of the United States have never not been shaped by an anxiety about the end of it all. Are we a new Rome or a new Zion?
by
George Blaustein
via
European Journal Of American Studies
on
June 30, 2020
partner
The Media Revolution that Guided Paul Revere’s Ride
An anti-imperialist network made his warning possible.
by
Joseph M. Adelman
via
Made By History
on
April 19, 2019
In the Dismal Swamp
Though Donald Trump has made it into a catchphrase, he didn’t come up with the metaphor “drain the swamp.”
by
Sam Worley
via
Popula
on
September 20, 2018
Edgar Allan Poe’s Hatchet Jobs
The great short story writer and poet wrote many a book review.
by
Mark Athitakis
via
Humanities
on
October 20, 2017
American History: Fake News That Never Goes Away — and Empowered the Trumpian Insurrection
Only if we face the painful lies we tell ourselves about the past can we hope to overcome what's happening now.
by
Nancy Isenberg
,
Andrew Burstein
via
Salon
on
February 25, 2017
Henry Ford, the Wayside Inn, and the Problem of 'History Is Bunk'
Debunking the quotation that inspired our name.
by
Roger Butterfield
via
Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society
on
June 1, 1965