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THE COMMEMORATION ODE

James Russell Lowell

In April, 1865, the Civil War was ended and peace was declared. On

July 21 Harvard College held a solemn service in commemoration of her

ninety-three sons who had been killed in the war. Eight of these

fallen young heroes were of Lowell's own kindred. Personal grief thus

added intensity to the deep passion of his utterance upon this great

occasion. He was invited to give a poem, and the ode which he

presented proved to be the supreme event of the noble service. The

scene is thus described by Francis H. Underwood, who was in the

audience:

 

"The services took place in the open air, in the presence of a great

assembly. Prominent among the speakers were Major-General Meade, the

hero of Gettysburg, and Major-General Devens. The wounds of the war

were still fresh and bleeding, and the interest of the occasion was

deep and thrilling. The summer afternoon was drawing to its close when

the poet began the recital of the ode. No living audience could for

the first time follow with intelligent appreciation the delivery of

such a poem. To be sure, it had its obvious strong points and its

sonorous charms; but, like all the later poems of the author, it is

full of condensed thought and requires study. The reader to-day finds

many passages whose force and beauty escaped him during the recital,

but the effect of the poem at the time was overpowering. The face of

the poet, always singularly expressive, was on this occasion almost

transfigured--glowing, as if with an inward light. It was impossible

to look away from it. Our age has furnished many great historic

scenes, but this Commemoration combined the elements of grandeur and

pathos, and produced an impression as lasting as life."

 

Of the delivery and immediate effect of the poem Mr. Greenslet says:

"Some in the audience were thrilled and shaken by it, as Lowell

himself was shaken in its delivery, yet he seems to have felt with

some reason that it was not a complete and immediate success. Nor is

this cause for wonder. The passion of the poem was too ideal, its

woven harmonies too subtle to be readily communicated to so large an

audience, mastered and mellowed though it was by a single deep mood.

Nor was Lowell's elocution quite that of the deep-mouthed odist

capable of interpreting such organ tones of verse. But no sooner was

the poem published, with the matchless Lincoln strophe inserted, than

its greatness and nobility were manifest."

 

The circumstances connected with the writing of the ode have been

described by Lowell in his private letters. It appears that he was

reluctant to undertake the task, and for several weeks his mind

utterly refused to respond to the high duty put upon it. At last the

sublime thought came to him upon the swift wings of inspiration. "The

ode itself," he says, "was an improvisation. Two days before the

commemoration I had told my friend Child that it was impossible--that

I was dull as a door-mat. But the next day something gave me a jog,

and the whole thing came out of me with a rush. I sat up all night

writing it out clear, and took it on the morning of the day to Child."

In another letter he says: "The poem was written with a vehement

speed, which I thought I had lost in the skirts of my professor's

gown. Till within two days of the celebration I was hopelessly dumb,

and then it all came with a rush, literally making me lean (mi fece

magro), and so nervous that I was weeks in getting over it." In a note

in Scudder's biography of Lowell (Vol. II., p. 65), it is stated upon

the authority of Mrs. Lowell that the poem was begun at ten o'clock

the night before the commemoration day, and finished at four o'clock

in the morning. "She opened her eyes to see him standing haggard,

actually wasted by the stress of labor and the excitement which had

carried him through a poem full of passion and fire, of five hundred

and twenty-three lines, in the space of six hours."

 

Critical estimates are essentially in accord as to the deep

significance and permanent poetic worth of this poem. Greenslet, the

latest biographer of Lowell, says that the ode, "if not his most

perfect, is surely his noblest and most splendid work," and adds:

"Until the dream of human brotherhood is forgotten, the echo of its

large music will not wholly die away." Professor Beers declares it to

be, "although uneven, one of the finest occasional poems in the

language, and the most important contribution which our Civil War has

made to song." Of its exalted patriotism, George William Curtis says:

"The patriotic heart of America throbs forever in Lincoln's Gettysburg

address. But nowhere in literature is there a more magnificent and

majestic personification of a country whose name is sacred to its

children, nowhere a profounder passion of patriotic loyalty, than in

the closing lines of the Commemoration Ode. The American whose heart,

swayed by that lofty music, does not thrill and palpitate with solemn

joy and high resolve does not yet know what it is to be an American."

 

With the praise of a discriminating criticism Stedman discusses the

ode in his _Poets of America_: "Another poet would have composed a

less unequal ode; no American could have glorified it with braver

passages, with whiter heat, with language and imagery so befitting

impassioned thought. Tried by the rule that a true poet is at his best

with the greatest theme, Lowell's strength is indisputable. The ode is

no smooth-cut verse from Pentelicus, but a mass of rugged quartz,

beautiful with prismatic crystals, and deep veined here and there with

virgin gold. The early strophes, though opening with a fine abrupt

line, 'weak-winged is song,' are scarcely firm and incisive. Lowell

had to work up to his theme. In the third division, 'Many loved Truth,

and lavished life's best oil,' he struck upon a new and musical

intonation of the tenderest thoughts. The quaver of this melodious

interlude carries the ode along, until the great strophe is reached,--

 

Such was he, our Martyr-Chief,

 

in which the man, Abraham Lincoln, whose death had but just closed the

national tragedy, is delineated in a manner that gives this poet a

preeminence, among those who capture likeness in enduring verse, that

we award to Velasquez among those who fasten it upon the canvas. 'One

of Plutarch's men' is before us, face to face; an historic character

whom Lowell fully comprehended, and to whose height he reached in this

great strophe. Scarcely less fine is his tearful, yet transfiguring,

Avete to the sacred dead of the Commemoration. The weaker divisions of

the production furnish a background to these passages, and at the

close the poet rises with the invocation,--

 

'Bow down, dear Land, for thou hast found release!'

 

a strain which shows that when Lowell determinedly sets his mouth to

the trumpet, the blast is that of Roncesvalles."

 

W.C. Brownell, the latest critic of Lowell's poetry, says of this

poem: "The ode is too long, its evolution is defective, it contains

verbiage, it preaches. But passages of it--the most famous having

characteristically been interpolated after its delivery--are equal to

anything of the kind. The temptation to quote from it is hard to

withstand. It is the cap-sheaf of Lowell's achievement." In this ode

"he reaches, if he does not throughout maintain, his own

'clear-ethered height' and his verse has the elevation of ecstasy and

the splendor of the sublime."

 

The versification of this poem should be studied with some

particularity. Of the forms of lyric expression the ode is the most

elaborate and dignified. It is adapted only to lofty themes and

stately occasions. Great liberty is allowed in the choice and

arrangement of its meter, rhymes, and stanzaic forms, that its varied

form and movement may follow the changing phases of the sentiment and

passion called forth by the theme. Lowell has given us an account of

his own consideration of this matter. "My problem," he says, "was to

contrive a measure which should not be tedious by uniformity, which

should vary with varying moods, in which the transitions (including

those of the voice) should be managed without jar. I at first thought

of mixed rhymed and blank verses of unequal measures, like those in

the choruses of _Samson Agonistes_, which are in the main masterly. Of

course, Milton deliberately departed from that stricter form of Greek

chorus to which it was bound quite as much (I suspect) by the law of

its musical accompaniment as by any sense of symmetry. I wrote some

stanzas of the _Commemoration Ode_ on this theory at first, leaving

some verses without a rhyme to match. But my ear was better pleased

when the rhyme, coming at a longer interval, as a far-off echo rather

than instant reverberation, produced the same effect almost, and yet

was gratified by unexpectedly recalling an association and faint

reminiscence of consonance."