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PUBLIC LIFE.

James Russell Lowell

It was at the close of this period, when he had done incalculable

service to the Republic, that Lowell was called on to represent the

country, first in Madrid, where he was sent in 1877, and then in

London, to which he was transferred in 1880. Eight years were thus

spent by him in the foreign service of the country. He had a good

knowledge of the Spanish language and literature when he went to

Spain; but he at once took pains to make his knowledge fuller and his

accent more perfect, so that he could have intimate relations with the

best Spanish men of the time. In England he was at once a most welcome

guest, and was in great demand as a public speaker. No one can read

his dispatches from Madrid and London without being struck by his

sagacity, his readiness in emergencies, his interest in and quick

perception of the political situation in the country where he was

resident, and his unerring knowledge as a man of the world. Above all,

he was through and through an American, true to the principles which

underlie American institutions. His address on _Democracy_, which he

delivered in England, is one of the great statements of human liberty.

A few years later, after his return to America, he gave another

address to his own countrymen on _The Place of the Independent in

Politics_. It was a noble defense of his own position, not without a

trace of discouragement at the apparently sluggish movement in

American self-government of recent years, but with that faith in the

substance of his countrymen which gave him the right to use words of

honest warning.

 

The public life of Mr. Lowell made him more of a figure before the

world. He received honors from societies and universities; he was

decorated by the highest honors which Harvard could pay officially;

and Oxford and Cambridge, St. Andrews and Edinburgh and Bologna, gave

gowns. He established warm personal relations with Englishmen, and,

after his release from public office, he made several visits to

England. There, too, was buried his wife, who died in 1885. The

closing years of his life in his own country, though touched with

domestic loneliness and diminished by growing physical infirmities

that predicted his death, were rich also with the continued expression

of his large personality. He delivered the public address in

commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the founding of Harvard

University; he gave a course of lectures on the Old English Dramatists

before the Lowell Institute; he collected a volume of his poems; he

wrote and spoke on public affairs; and, the year before his death,

revised, rearranged, and carefully edited a definitive series of his

writings in ten volumes. He died at Elmwood, August 12, 1891. Since

his death three small volumes have been added to his collected

writings, and Mr. Norton has published _Letters of James Russell

Lowell_, in two volumes.