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James Russell Lowell [1819-1891] USA
Ranked #278 in the top 380 poets
Votes 68%: 163 up, 75 down

Linking religion, nature, and poetry, as well as social reform. Used poetry for reform, particularly in abolitionism. Spiritualism, Christianity, prophet. Writers have an inherent insight into the moral nature of humanity and have an obligation for literary action along with their aesthetic function. Called for a natural literature, regardless of country, caste, or race, and warned against provincialism which might "put farther off the hope of one great brotherhood."

Eye dialect: heavily ungrammatical phonetic spelling of the Yankee dialect. In using this vernacular, Lowell intended to get closer to the common man's experience and was rebelling against more formal and, as he thought, unnatural representations of Americans in literature.

Contemporary critic and editor Margaret Fuller wrote, "his verse is stereotyped; his thought sounds no depth, and posterity will not remember him." Duyckinck thought Lowell was too similar to other poets like William Shakespeare and John Milton. Ralph Waldo Emerson noted that, though Lowell had significant technical skill, his poetry "rather expresses his wish, his ambition, than the uncontrollable interior impulse which is the authentic mark of a new poem ... and which is felt in the pervading tone, rather than in brilliant parts or lines." Even his friend Richard Henry Dana Jr., questioned Lowell's abilities, calling him "very clever, entertaining & good humored ... but he is rather a trifler, after all." In the twentieth century, poet Richard Armour dismissed Lowell, writing: "As a Harvard graduate and an editor for the Atlantic Monthly, it must have been difficult for Lowell to write like an illiterate oaf, but he succeeded."

Walt Whitman said: "Lowell was not a grower—he was a builder. He built poems: he didn't put in the seed, and water the seed, and send down his sun—letting the rest take care of itself: he measured his poems—kept them within formula."

American poet, critic, and editor, James Russell Lowell was born in Cambridge, Mass. in 1819. He attended Harvard and earned a B.A. but gave up Law for Literature. In 1838 he married Maria White, an abolitionist and liberal, who encouraged him in his work. His poems `A Fable for Critics` (1848), `The Vision of Sir Launfal` (1848), and `The Bigelow Papers` (1848, written in Yankee dialect) brought him notoriety as a poet and critic. In 1855, Lowell became professor of modern languages at Harvard, a position he held until 1876. In addition to teaching, he served as first editor (1857–61) of the Atlantic Monthly and later (1864–72) of the North American Review. 

Bipolar disorder, Fireside poets, Romanticism, Slavery, Vernacular

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1564-1616
ENG
William Shakespeare
→ influenced James Russell Lowell
1608-1674
ENG
John Milton
→ influenced James Russell Lowell
1803-1882
USA
Ralph Waldo Emerson
→ (expresses his wish) disliked James Russell Lowell
1807-1892
USA
John Greenleaf Whittier
→ praised James Russell Lowell
1917-1977
USA
Robert Lowell
→ relative James Russell Lowell
1265-1321
ITA
Dante Alighieri
← translated by James Russell Lowell
1784-1859
ENG
James Henry Leigh Hunt
← friend of James Russell Lowell
1806-1861
ENG
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
← friend of James Russell Lowell
1807-1882
USA
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
← friend of James Russell Lowell
1809-1865
USA
Abraham Lincoln
← praised by James Russell Lowell
1812-1889
ENG
Robert Browning
← friend of James Russell Lowell


WorkLangRating
The First Snowfall
eng
45
Death Of Queen Mercedes
eng
11
Auspex
eng
9
The Fountain
eng
9
She Came And Went
eng
4
Are Ye Truly Free?
eng
2
Prison Of Cervantes
eng
2
The Pregnant Comment
eng
2
Flowers
eng
1
Jeffries Wyman Died September 4, 1874.
eng
1
May Is A Pious Fraud
eng
1
To His Countrymen / On Himself (From “A Fable for Critics”)
eng
1
To Mr. John Bartlett
eng
1
A Chippewa Legend
eng
0
A Christmas Carol
eng
0
A Contrast
eng
0
A Fable
eng
0
A Fable For Critics
eng
0
A Familiar Epistle To A Friend
eng
0
A Glance Behind The Curtain
eng
0
A Legend Of Brittany - Part First
eng
0
A Legend Of Brittany - Part Second
eng
0
A Letter
eng
0
A Letter from a Candidate for the Presidency
eng
0
A Message Of Jeff Davis In Secret Session
eng
0
A Mood
eng
0
A New Year`s Greeting
eng
0
A Parable
eng
0
A Parable - II
eng
0
A Parable - III
eng
0
A Prayer
eng
0
A Requiem
eng
0
A Revolutionar
eng
0
A Second Letter From B. Sawin, Esq.
eng
0
A Stanza on Freedom
eng
0
A Third Letter From B. Sawin, Esq.
eng
0
A Valentine
eng
0
A Winter-Evening Hymn To My Fire
eng
0
A Youthful Experiment In English Hexameters
eng
0
Above And Below
eng
0
Abraham Lincoln
eng
0
Absence
eng
0
After The Burial
eng
0
Agro-Dolce
eng
0
Al Fresco
eng
0
Aladdin
eng
0
All-Saints
eng
0
Allegra
eng
0
Ambrose
eng
0
An April Birthday--At Sea
eng
0
An Autograph
eng
0
An Ember Picture
eng
0
An Epistle To George William Curtis
eng
0
An Incident In A Railroad Car
eng
0
An Incident Of The Fire At Hamburg
eng
0
An Indian-Summe
eng
0
An Interview With Miles Standish
eng
0
An Invitation
eng
0
An Ode For The Fourth Of July
eng
0
An Ode Of Thanks For Certain Cigars
eng
0
An Oriental Apologue
eng
0
Anti-Apis
eng
0
Arcadia Rediviva
eng
0
At The Burns Centennial
eng
0
At The Commencement Dinner
eng
0
Auf Weidersehen
eng
0
Bankside: (Home Of Edmund Quincy Dedham)
eng
0
Beaver Brook
eng
0
Bibliolatres
eng
0
Birdofredum Sawin, Esq., To Mr. Hosea Biglow
eng
0
Birdofredum Sawin; Esq., To Mr. Hosea Biglow
eng
0
Birthday Verses
eng
0
Bon Voyage
eng
0
Bravery
eng
0
Casa Sin Alma
spa
0
Columbus
eng
0
Commemoration Ode
eng
0
Credidimus Jovem Regnare
eng
0
Dara
eng
0
Das Ewig-Weibliche
eng
0
E.G. De R.
eng
0
Eleanor Makes Macaroons
eng
0
Elegy On The Death Of Dr. Channing
eng
0
Endymion: A Mystical Comment On Titian`s `Sacred And Profane Love`
eng
0
Estrangement
eng
0
Eurydice
eng
0
Extreme Unction
eng
0
Fact Or Fancy?
eng
0
Fancy`s Casuistry
eng
0
Festina Lente
eng
0
Fitz Adam`s Story
eng
0
For An Autograph
eng
0
Fragments Of An Unfinished Poem
eng
0
Franciscus De Verulamio Sic Cogitavit
eng
0
Freedom
eng
0
George Washington
eng
0
Godminister Chimes
eng
0
Gold Egg: A Dream-Fantasy
eng
0
Hakon`s Lay
eng
0
Heartsease And Rue: Friendship
eng
0
Hebe
eng
0
High-Worthy Mister!
eng
0
How I Consulted The Oracle Of The Goldfishes
eng
0
Hunger And Cold
eng
0
Impartiality
eng
0
In A Copy Of Omar Khayyam
eng
0
In An Album
eng
0
In The Half-Way House
eng
0
In The Twilight
eng
0
Inscriptions
eng
0
International Copyright
eng
0
Invita Minerva
eng
0
Irene
eng
0
Jonathan to John
eng
0
Joseph Winlock
eng
0
Kettelopotomachia
lat
0
Kossuth
eng
0
Latest Views Of Mr. Biglow
eng
0
Leaving the Matter Open: A Tale By Homer Wilbur, A.M.
eng
0
Letter From Boston
eng
0
Lines Suggested By The Graves Of Two English Soldiers On The Concord Battle-Ground
eng
0
Longing
eng
0
Love
eng
0
Love and Sorrow
eng
0
Love And Thought
eng
0
Love`s Clock
eng
0
L`Envoi
eng
0
Mahmood The Image-Breaker
eng
0
Masaccio
eng
0
Mason And Slidell: A Yankee Idyll
eng
0
Memoriae Positum: R G Shaw
eng
0
Midnight
eng
0
Monna Lisa
eng
0
Mr. Hosea Biglow To The Editor Of The Atlantic Monthly
eng
0
Mr. Hosea Biglow`s Speech In March Meeting
eng
0
My Love
eng
0
My Portrait Gallery
eng
0
New-Year`s Eve, 1850
eng
0
Night Watches
eng
0
Ode
eng
0
Ode Read At The One Hundreth Anniversary Of The Fight At Concord Bridge
eng
0
Ode Recited At The Harvard Commemoratio
eng
0
Ode To France
eng
0
Ode To Happiness
eng
0
Ode Written For The Celebration Of The Cochituate Water Into The City Of Boston
eng
0
Of The Dawn Of Freedom
eng
0
On A Bust Of General Grant
eng
0
On A Portrait Of Dante By Giotto
eng
0
On An Autumn Sketch Of H.G. Wild
eng
0
On Board The `76
eng
0
On Burning Some Old Letters
eng
0
On Hearing A Sonata Of Beethoven`s Played In The Next Room
eng
0
On Planting A Tree At Inveraray
eng
0
On Receiving A Copy Of Mr. Austin`s `Old World Idylls`
eng
0
On The Capture Of Fugitive Slaves Near Washington
eng
0
On The Death Of A Friend`s Child
eng
0
On The Death Of Charles Turner Torrey
eng
0
Palinode - Autumn
eng
0
Palinode-December
eng
0
Paolo To Francesca
eng
0
Pessimoptimism
eng
0
Phoebe
eng
0
Pictures From Appledore
eng
0
Prometheus
eng
0
Remarks Of Increase D. O`phace, Esquire
eng
0
Remembered Music
eng
0
Rhoecus
eng
0
Rosaline
eng
0
Sayings
eng
0
Scherzo
eng
0
Science And Poetry
eng
0
Seaweed
eng
0
Self-Study
eng
0
Serenade
eng
0
Si Descendero In Infernum, Ades
eng
0
Song
eng
0
Song I
eng
0
Song II
eng
0
Sonnet - On Being Asked For An Autograph In Venice
eng
0
Sonnet - Scottish Border
eng
0
Sonnet To Fanny Alexander
eng
0
Sonnett - I
eng
0
Sonnett - II
eng
0
Sonnett - III
eng
0
Sonnett - IV
eng
0
Sonnett - IX
eng
0
Sonnett - V
eng
0
Sonnett - VI
eng
0
Sonnett - VII
eng
0
Sonnett - VIII
eng
0
Sonnett - X
eng
0
Sonnett - XI
eng
0
Sonnett - XII
eng
0
Sonnett - XIII
eng
0
Sonnett - XIV
eng
0
Sonnett - XIX
eng
0
Sonnett - XV
eng
0
Sonnett - XVII
eng
0
Sonnett - XVIII
eng
0
Sonnett - XX
eng
0
Sonnett - XXII
eng
0
Sonnett - XXIII
eng
0
Sonnett - XXV
eng
0
Sonnett - XXVI
eng
0
Sonnett - XXVII
eng
0
Sonnett - XVI
eng
0
Speech Of Honourable Preserved Doe In Secret Caucus
eng
0
St. Michael The Weigher
eng
0
Stanzas On Freedom
eng
0
Studies For Two Heads
eng
0
Summer Storm
eng
0
Sunthin` In The Pastoral Line
eng
0
Telepathy
eng
0
Tempura Mutantur
eng
0
The Beggar
eng
0
The Biglow Papers
eng
0
The Birch-Tree
eng
0
The Black Preacher: A Breton Legend
eng
0
The Brakes
eng
0
The Broken Tryst
eng
0
The Candidate`s Creed
eng
0
The Captive
eng
0
The Cathedral
eng
0
The Changeling
eng
0
The Courtin`
eng
0
The Dancing Bear
eng
0
The Darkened Mind
eng
0
The Dead House
eng
0
The Debate In The Sennit
eng
0
The Discovery
eng
0
The Eye`s Treasury
eng
0
The Falcon
eng
0
The Fatherland
eng
0
The Finding Of The Lyre
eng
0
The Flying Dutchman
eng
0
The Foot-Path
eng
0
The Forlorn
eng
0
The Fountain Of Youth
eng
0
The Ghost-Seer
eng
0
The Growth Of A Legend
eng
0
The Heritage
eng
0
The Landlord
eng
0
The Lesson
eng
0
The Maple
eng
0
The Miner
eng
0
The Moon
eng
0
The Nest
eng
0
The Nightingale In The Study
eng
0
The Nobler Lover
eng
0
The Nobly Born
eng
0
The Nomades
eng
0
The Oak
eng
0
The Optimist
eng
0
The Origin Of Didactic Poetry
eng
0
The Parting Of The Ways
eng
0
The Petition
eng
0
The Pioneer
eng
0
The Pious Editor`s Creed
eng
0
The Present Crisis
eng
0
The Protest
eng
0
The Recall
eng
0
The Rose: A Ballad
eng
0
The Search
eng
0
The Secret
eng
0
The Shepherd Of King Admetus
eng
0
The Singing Leaves
eng
0
The Sirens
eng
0
The Sower
eng
0
The Street
eng
0
The Token
eng
0
The Unhappy Lot Of Mr. Knott
eng
0
The Vision Of Sir Launfal
eng
0
The Voyage To Vinland: Bioern`s Beckoners
eng
0
The Washers of the Shroud
eng
0
The Wind-Harp
eng
0
Three Memorial Poems
eng
0
Threnodia
eng
0
To a Friend Who gave me a group of weeds and grasses, after a drawing of Dürer.
eng
0
To A Lady Playing The Cithern
eng
0
To A Pine-Tree
eng
0
To C.F. Bradford
eng
0
To Charles Eliot Norton
eng
0
To H.W.L.
eng
0
To Holmes: On His Seventy-Fifth Birthday
eng
0
To John Gorham Palfrey
eng
0
To Lamartine
eng
0
To Miss D. T. On her giving me a drawing of little street arabs.
eng
0
To Perdita, Singing
eng
0
To The Dandelion
eng
0
To The Future
eng
0
To The Memory Of Hood
eng
0
To The Past
eng
0
To W.L. Garrison
eng
0
To Whittier: On HIs Seventy-Fifth Birthday
eng
0
To----
eng
0
Trial
eng
0
Truth And Falsehood
eng
0
Turner`s Old Temeraire
eng
0
Two Scenes From The Life Of Blondel
eng
0
Under The October Maples
eng
0
Under The Old Elm
eng
0
Under The Willows
eng
0
Verses:Intended To Go With A Posset Dish To My Dear Little Goddaughter
eng
0
Villa Franca
eng
0
What Mr. Robinson Thinks
eng
0
What Rabbi Jehosha Said
eng
0
Winter Evening Hymn To My Fire
eng
0
With A Copy Of Aucassin And Nicolete
eng
0
With A Pressed Flower
eng
0
With A Seashell
eng
0
With An Armchair
eng
0
Without And Withiin
eng
0
Yussouf
eng
0

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