LAST TRIP TO EUROPE
On May 27, 1868, Longfellow sailed
from New York for Liverpool in the steamer Russia,
with a large family party, including his son and his
son’s bride, his three young daughters, his brother
and two sisters, with also a brother-in-law, the brilliant
Thomas G. Appleton. On arrival they went at once
to the English lakes, visiting Furness Abbey, Corby
Castle, and Eden Hall, where he saw still unimpaired
the traditional goblet which Uhland’s ballad
had vainly attempted to shatter. At Morton, near
Carlisle, while staying with a friend he received a
public address, to which he thus replied, in one of
the few speeches of his life:-
“MR. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN,-Being
more accustomed to speak with the pen than with the
tongue, it is somewhat difficult for me to find appropriate
words now to thank you for the honor you have done
me, and the very kind expressions you have used.
Coming here as a stranger, this welcome makes me feel
that I am not a stranger; for how can a man be a stranger
in a country where he finds all doors and all hearts
open to him? Besides, I myself am a Cumberland
man,-I was born in the County of Cumberland,
in the State of Maine, three thousand miles from here,-and
you all know that the familiar name of a town or country
has a homelike sound to our ears.... You can
think then how very grateful it is to me-how
very pleasant-to find my name has a place
in your memories and your affections. For this
kindness I most heartily thank you, and I reciprocate
all the good wishes which you have expressed for perpetual
peace and amity between our two nations."
He received the honorary degree of
Doctor of Laws at Cambridge, and the scene was thus
described by a London reporter:-
“Amid a score or so of Heads
of Houses and other Academic dignitaries conspicuous
by their scarlet robes, the one on whom all eyes were
turned was Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The face
was one which would have caught the spectator’s
glance, even if not called to it by the cheers which
greeted his appearance in the red robes of an LL.
D. Long, white, silken hair and a beard of patriarchal
whiteness enclosed a fresh-colored countenance, with
fine-cut features and deep-sunken eyes, overshadowed
by massive eyebrows. In a few well-rounded Latin
sentences, Mr. Clark, the Public Orator, recited the
claims of the distinguished visitor to the privilege
of an honorary degree. The names of Hiawatha and
Evangeline sounded strangely amid the sonorous periods."
Another journalist wrote that the
orator “drew a picture of the function of poetry
to solace the ills of life and draw men from its low
cares ad excelsiora. This point was caught
at once by the undergraduates and drew forth hearty
cheering. The degree was then conferred."
Arriving in London he received a deluge
of cards and invitations; visited Windsor by invitation
of the Queen, and was received in one of the galleries
of the castle; called by request upon the Prince of
Wales; and was entertained at dinner by Mr. Bierstadt,
the landscape painter, who had several hundred people
to meet him. Mr. Longfellow had stipulated that
there should be no speeches, but after dinner there
were loud calls for Mr. Gladstone, who said in reply,
according to the reporters, that “they must
be permitted to break through the restrictions which
the authority of their respected host had imposed
upon them, and to give expression to the feelings which
one and all entertained on this occasion. After
all, it was simply impossible to sit at the social
board with a man of Mr. Longfellow’s world-wide
fame, without offering him some tribute of their admiration.
There was perhaps no class of persons less fitted
to do justice to an occasion of this character than
those who were destined to tread the toilsome and dusty
road of politics. Nevertheless, he was glad to
render his tribute of hearty admiration to one whom
they were glad to welcome not only as a poet but as
a citizen of America."
Mr. Longfellow replied that “they
had taken him by surprise, a traveller just landed
and with Bradshaw still undigested upon his brain,
and they would not expect him to make a speech.
There were times, indeed, when it was easier to speak
than to act; but it was not so with him, now.
He would, however, be strangely constituted if he
did not in his heart respond to their kind and generous
welcome. In the longest speech he could make,
he could but say in many phrases what he now said in
a few sincere words,-that he was deeply
grateful for the kindness which had been shown him."
After visiting the House of Lords
with Mr. R. C. Winthrop, on one occasion, he was accosted
by a laboring man in the street, who asked permission
to speak with him, and recited a verse of “Excelsior,”
before which the poet promptly retreated. Passing
to the continent, the party visited Switzerland, crossed
by the St. Gothard Pass to Italy, and reached Cadenabbia,
on the Lake of Como. They returned to Paris in
the autumn; then went to Italy again, staying at Florence
and Rome, where they saw the Abbe Liszt and obtained
that charming sketch of him by Healy, in which the
great musician is seen opening the inner door and
bearing a candle in his hand. In the spring they
visited Naples, Venice, and Innsbruck, returning then
to England, where Longfellow received the degree of
D. C. L. at Oxford; and they then visited Devonshire,
Edinburgh, and the Scottish lakes. He again received
numberless invitations in London, and wrote to Lowell,
“It is only by dint of great resolution that
I escaped a dozen public and semi-public dinners.”
At the very last moment before sailing, he received
a note from Mr. E. J. Reed, the chief constructor
to the British Navy, who pronounced his poem “The
Building of the Ship” to be the finest poem on
shipbuilding that ever was or ever would be written.
He reached home September 1, 1869. In his letters
during this period, one sees the serene head of a family,
the absolutely unspoiled recipient of praise, but not
now the eager and enthusiastic young pilgrim of romance.
Yet he writes to his friend Ferguson that if he “said
his say” about York Cathedral, his friends would
think him sixteen instead of sixty; and again tells
his publisher Fields that he enjoys Lugano-never
before visited-to the utmost, but that
“the old familiar place saddened” him.
Many a traveller has had in later life the same experience.