Long before I began the papers which
make up this volume, I had meant to write of literary
history in New England as I had known it in the lives
of its great exemplars during the twenty-five years
I lived near them. In fact, I had meant to do
this from the time I came among them; but I let the
days in which I almost constantly saw them go by without
record save such as I carried in a memory retentive,
indeed, beyond the common, but not so full as I could
have wished when I began to invoke it for my work.
Still, upon insistent appeal, it responded in sufficient
abundance; and, though I now wish I could have remembered
more instances, I think my impressions were accurate
enough. I am sure of having tried honestly to
impart them in the ten years or more when I was desultorily
endeavoring to share them with the reader.
The papers were written pretty much
in the order they have here, beginning with My First
Visit to New England, which dates from the earliest
eighteen-nineties, if I may trust my recollection of
reading it from the manuscript to the editor of Harper’s
Magazine, where we lay under the willows of Magnolia
one pleasant summer morning in the first years of
that decade. It was printed no great while after
in that periodical; but I was so long in finishing
the study of Lowell that it had been anticipated in
Harper’s by other reminiscences of him, and it
was therefore first printed in Scribner’s Magazine.
It was the paper with which I took the most pains,
and when it was completed I still felt it so incomplete
that I referred it to his closest and my best friend,
the late Charles Eliot Norton, for his criticism.
He thought it wanting in unity; it was a group of
studies instead of one study, he said; I must do something
to draw the different sketches together in a single
effect of portraiture; and this I did my best to do.
It was the latest written of the three
articles which give the volume substance, and it represents
mare finally and fully than the others my sense of
the literary importance of the men whose like we shall
not look upon again. Longfellow was easily the
greatest poet of the three, Holmes often the most
brilliant and felicitous, but Lowell, in spite of his
forays in politics, was the finest scholar and the
most profoundly literary, as he was above the others
most deeply and thoroughly New England in quality.
While I was doing these sketches,
sometimes slighter and sometimes less slight, of all
those poets and essayists and novelists I had known
in Cambridge and Boston and Concord and New York,
I was doing many other things: half a dozen novels,
as many more novelettes and shorter stories, with
essays and criticisms and verses; so that in January,
1900, I had not yet done the paper on Lowell, which,
with another, was to complete my reminiscences of
American literary life as I had witnessed it.
When they were all done at last they were republished
in a volume which found instant favor beyond my deserts
if not its own.
There was a good deal of trouble with
the name, but Literary Friends and Acquaintance was
an endeavor for modest accuracy with which I remained
satisfied until I thought, long too late, of Literary
Friends and Neighbors. Then I perceived that
this would have been still more accurate and quite
as modest, and I gladly give any reader leave to call
the book by that name who likes.
Since the collection was first made,
I have written little else quite of the kind, except
the paper on Bret Harte, which was first printed shortly
after his death; and the study of Mark Twain, which
I had been preparing to make for forty years and more,
and wrote in two weeks of the spring of 1910.
Others of my time and place have now passed whither
there is neither time nor place, and there are moments
when I feel that I must try to call them back and
pay them such honor as my sense of their worth may
give; but the impulse has as yet failed to effect itself,
and I do not know how long I shall spare myself the
supreme pleasure-pain, the “höchst angenehmer
Schmerz,” of seeking to live here with those
who live here no more.
W. D. H.