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EDUCATION.

James Russell Lowell

His acquaintance with books and his schooling began early. He learned

his letters at a dame school. Mr. William Wells, an Englishman, opened

a classical school in one of the spacious Tory Row houses near

Elmwood, and, bringing with him English public school thoroughness and

severity, gave the boy a drilling in Latin, which he must have made

almost a native speech to judge by the ease with which he handled it

afterward in mock heroics. Of course he went to Harvard College. He

lived at his father's house, more than a mile away from the college

yard; but this could have been no great privation to him, for he had

the freedom of his friends' rooms, and he loved the open air. The Rev.

Edward Everett Hale has given a sketch of their common life in

college. "He was a little older than I," he says, "and was one class

in advance of me. My older brother, with whom I lived in college, and

he were most intimate friends. He had no room within the college

walls, and was a great deal with us. The fashion of Cambridge was then

literary. Now the fashion of Cambridge runs to social problems, but

then we were interested in literature. We read Byron and Shelley and

Keats, and we began to read Tennyson and Browning. I first heard of

Tennyson from Lowell, who had borrowed from Mr. Emerson the little

first volume of Tennyson. We actually passed about Tennyson's poems in

manuscript. Carlyle's essays were being printed at the time, and his

_French Revolution_. In such a community--not two hundred and fifty

students all told,--literary effort was, as I say, the fashion, and

literary men, among whom Lowell was recognized from the very first,

were special favorites. Indeed, there was that in him which made him a

favorite everywhere."

 

Lowell was but fifteen years old when he entered college in the class

which graduated in 1838. He was a reader, as so many of his fellows

were, and the letters which he wrote shortly after leaving college

show how intent he had been on making acquaintance with the best

things in literature. He began also to scribble verse, and he wrote

both poems and essays for college magazines. His class chose him

their poet for Class Day, and he wrote his poem; but he was careless

about conforming to college regulations respecting attendance at

morning prayers; and for this was suspended from college the last term

of his last year, and not allowed to come back to read his poem. "I

have heard in later years," says Dr. Hale, "what I did not know then,

that he rode down from Concord in a canvas-covered wagon, and peeped

out through the chinks of the wagon to see the dancing around the

tree. I fancy he received one or two visits from his friends in the

wagon; but in those times it would have been treason to speak of

this." He was sent to Concord for his rustication, and so passed a few

weeks of his youth amongst scenes dear to every lover of American

letters.