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00:01

No yeah for he's a jolly longfellow He heard it

00:06

all right Biography and long film in england Poetry's teo

00:11

teo polaroids right announcement's hiawatha atrophied transmitter Our analysis is

00:20

right Fireside poetry Transcendentalist all right here we go Welcome

00:32

I'm here to introduce you to a posse of legendary

00:34

american writers known as the fireside poets and their unofficial

00:38

leader henry longfellow Guy with santa claus beard Yeah Although

00:42

longfellow was poet and a mighty fine one it might

00:45

be more helpful to think of him as a rock

00:47

star He was as close as you could get in

00:50

those days Anyway so cuddle up grab a fire poker

00:53

now and snatch a bag of marshmallows because this fireside

00:56

is about to start cooking All right Our longfellow friend

01:00

was born in portland maine than massachusetts in eighteen o

01:03

seven hears his mother the daughter of a revolutionary war

01:07

hero in his pops a prominent lawyer and later a

01:10

member of congress As you can imagine young henry didn't

01:13

want for much He went to boden college and then

01:15

spent three years studying modern language in europe Or so

01:19

he says could've been three years of nonstop ragers who

01:22

knew whatever happened in europe longfellow then returned to boden

01:25

to teach Well in eighteen thirty one he married mary

01:28

storer potter who helped him published his first book putra

01:32

mayor it's a french for over the sea which documents

01:36

his travels in europe minus the keg stands assumedly tragedy

01:40

struck hard in eighteen thirty five when mary died while

01:43

having a miscarriage longfellow was devastated in eighteen thirty six

01:47

He started teaching modern language at harvard and then released

01:51

his first collection of poems and eighteen thirty nine entitled

01:54

voices of the night He was thirty two at this

01:56

point by the way which should make all of us

01:58

who aren't fourteen years prodigies feel a lot better His

02:02

second collection ballads and other poems came soon after In

02:05

eighteen forty one With both of these books longfellow became

02:09

a popular poet basically the jay z of his day

02:12

Soon after the publications of ballads longfellow married his new

02:15

boo frances appleton Well they had six children together and

02:19

generally lovely marriage Longfellow then released evangeline along forum poem

02:25

in eighteen forty seven and quit teaching to focus on

02:28

writing full time in eighteen fifty for well that same

02:31

year he published the song of hiawatha A poem will

02:34

be looking at soon Some big things were brewing in

02:37

the world however like you have a civil war with

02:40

this massive conflict On the horizon longfellow wrote paul revere's

02:44

ride in an attempt to unite the nation in patriotic

02:48

passion And then in eighteen sixty one longfellow's wife died

02:51

in one of the strangest ways ever She was melting

02:54

wax on a letter to seal it and her dress

02:57

caught on fire Really not making this up about longfellow

03:00

was devastated he wrote little in the following years he

03:04

would die a month after his seventy fifth birthday which

03:06

due to his massive popularity had been practically a national

03:09

holiday way doubt even jay z will be able to

03:11

say that well the first of longfellow's poems that we're

03:14

going to look at is the song of hiawatha don't

03:17

think this poem is a few stanzas and we're out

03:19

of here kind of deal now is a twenty two

03:21

part epic it's the odyssey with native american flair well

03:25

the poem begins with g ici mon ito master of

03:28

life announcing the birth of a new prophet hiawatha iowa

03:32

fa's mom is a normal lady and his dad is

03:34

a demi god no biggie articular hero does a bunch

03:37

of cool stuff like killing a giant fish god named

03:40

misha nama making the corn grow better and even inventing

03:45

reading and writing because why not All right well things

03:47

get dark in the second half of the poem when

03:49

two of hiawatha as friends die and his wife gets

03:52

ill during a particularly nasty winner and she dies a

03:55

cz well one night hiawatha has visions of white men

03:58

arriving in a giant boat and teaching his people a

04:00

new religion No no we're talking about christianity Sure enough

04:04

this vision comes true And hiawatha trust that his people

04:07

will be safe and the irony levels go off the

04:10

charts At the end of the poem hiawatha hopped in

04:12

a canoe and paddles away and that's it I'm sure

04:14

we'll get the rest of the story in the sequel

04:16

One of the first things you'll notice about hiawatha is

04:19

it's form and meter which basically referred to the rhythm

04:22

of the poem Traditional european literature uses something called i

04:26

am as the basic unit of structure Well our good

04:29

buddy shakespeare for example uses something called iambic pentameter that

04:34

is it uses i am sze which is the iambic

04:37

part and includes five of them per line which is

04:40

the penta part Pentameter in contrast longfellow uses a meter

04:44

known as tro cake tram matter This meter uses tro

04:48

keys instead of i am sze they're basically the opposite

04:51

A stressed syllable followed by an unstrapped won the word

04:54

tetra tells us that there are four tro keys per

04:58

line Well check out this line doesn't have a different

05:00

field and shakespearean death dead He lay there in the

05:04

forest Well longfellow use this unique meter throughout his career

05:08

but chose it here in particular because it matched his

05:11

stereotypical image of native american chance Longfellow got a lot

05:14

of flak for this creative decision which can be said

05:17

about many aspects of the poem Critics of his time

05:20

saw his portrayal of the native americans to be who

05:23

sympathetic which is hilarious because modern critics see that same

05:27

portrayal as too stereotypical and patronizing Well either way we

05:30

can see hiawatha as longfellow's attempt emphasis on tend to

05:35

set right the relationship between white americans and indigenous populations

05:39

Teo help everyone you know just be friends What one

05:42

smart thing longfellow did in this regard is making the

05:45

narrator of the poem a native american musician named now

05:48

wada which both separates himself an old white guy from

05:52

the poem subject matter and frames it as a sort

05:54

of aural tradition that longfellow just happened to set down

05:57

on paper making the poem feel all the more authentic

06:01

All right moving on Paul revere's ride was published a

06:04

few years after hiawatha and was written in part as

06:06

a response to the buildup for the american civil war

06:09

Paul revere was a revolutionary war hero famous for warning

06:13

new england that the british army was advancing on them

06:16

and that's exactly what the poem is about Paul revere's

06:19

ride begins with a titular character chatting with a friend

06:22

about the british plan of attack which he needs to

06:25

know before he can notify the people of the danger

06:28

So they set up a system If paul's friend puts

06:30

one lantern in the nearby church tower than the british

06:34

were coming by land but to if they're coming by

06:37

boat So falls pal does some snooping and learns that

06:40

the british are in fact coming by boat and puts

06:42

up two lamps accordingly Meanwhile paul is raring to go

06:46

he's like vin diesel before race in fast and furious

06:49

so off he goes hitting a new town every hour

06:52

and warning people in each place by midnight he's in

06:54

medford by one he's made it toe lexington and buy

06:57

two He arrives in concord Well from there the poem

07:00

gives us a basic overview of the battles that went

07:02

down the following day and closes by telling us that

07:05

paul revere's warning will echo through history whenever the country

07:09

is in trouble We can't possibly imagine what he's referring

07:13

tio well like hiawatha paul revere's ride uses a fairly

07:16

standard meter though it's a bit less strict Take a

07:19

look at the rhyme scheme for the first stanza for

07:21

example those letters marked the rhyme scheme of each line

07:24

by the way And as you can see it's a

07:27

sing song poem you know here revere five lines but

07:31

there's plenty of variation to is we see in the

07:33

following lines longfellow mostly uses two kinds of meter here

07:37

that i am which we mentioned before that's on an

07:40

unstrapped syllable followed by a stressed syllable toe dumb and

07:44

the anna past which is to unstrap syllables followed by

07:48

a stressed one Dad adam all right lookit line two

07:51

it's made up Of one and a pest followed by

07:53

three i am line three on the other hand has

07:55

four straight and a pest giving it a galloping feeling

07:59

you know kind of like a force Well the rest

08:02

of home is like that too varied but regular meter

08:05

consisting mostly of volumes and anna pests as faras the

08:08

content goes it's pretty clear that paul revere's ride was

08:11

written about the build up to the civil war A

08:13

national conflict would certainly tone is one of those hours

08:16

of darkness and peril and need right well that's one

08:19

big similarity weekend draw between paul revere and hiawatha Both

08:23

take retellings of american history and in the latter case

08:27

american mythology and used them to comment on contemporary issues

08:31

of longfellow's day Well as you can see longfellow wasn't

08:34

writing super arty pretentious poetry he was writing for the

08:38

masses Think of it is the difference between some super

08:41

underground musician you can only hear on soundcloud and a

08:45

top forty rapper who's selling out stadiums Longfellow is actually

08:49

part of a whole movement of mega popular american poets

08:51

known as the fireside poets and that's why we did

08:54

this video that way well these guys were basically a

08:57

supergroup You've got william cullen bryant john greenleaf whittier james

09:02

russell lowell oliver wendell holmes senior and of course henry

09:07

longfellow Well these guys were known as the fireside poets

09:10

on because they were pyromaniacs or anything but because they

09:14

wrote poems for everyone phones everyone could enjoy poems for

09:18

hanging out with family and friends in front of the

09:19

fireplace Help some common elements of the fireside poets included

09:23

the use of narrative conventional form rhyme structure and meter

09:28

themes of americana commentary on contemporary issues and a general

09:33

tone of sentimentality in you know mushiness all of which

09:37

are present in hye wa thin paul revere In fact

09:39

longfellow might have been the most popular his admittedly popular

09:43

bunch so consider him to beyonce to their destiny's child

09:46

One big influence on the fireside poets in general and

09:49

longfellow in particular is transcendentalism who sounds trippy So what

09:54

is that A bizarre new age religion form of interdimensional

09:57

time travel some hip new genre that only the coolest

10:00

cool know about No transcendentalism was a literary political and

10:04

spiritual movement that got its start in massachusetts in the

10:07

eighteen thirties when a bunch of people basically took a

10:09

look at nature and went meet these folks were writers

10:13

religious readers social reformers all with common belief that we

10:16

need to reconnect our lives with god and nature So

10:18

yeah basically hippies Well the first step according to them

10:21

is to develop a sense of individuality to free ourselves

10:24

from society's rules far out man another big part of

10:28

it is living with nature transcendental folks saw that is

10:32

the best way to experience god Key figures of this

10:35

movement include walt whitman margaret fuller henry david thoreau and

10:39

ralph waldo emerson Although henry longfellow isn't exactly considered a

10:43

transcendentalist writer he seems to have been heavily influenced by

10:47

that movement in his personal life We can definitely see

10:50

its influence in hiawatha for example in its adoration of

10:53

nature revere ing native american society and transcendentalism still influences

10:57

american society Without it we wouldn't have hippies hipsters and

11:01

pretty much anywhere that begins with hip Basically i'm trying

11:04

to say that transcendentalism is a deeply indistinctly american philosophy

11:09

one that shapes american culture to this day All right

11:11

So what do we learn Well for one we were

11:13

introduced to henry Longfellow who wasn't just follow it but

11:15

a legitimate pop culture icon in his day his poems

11:19

like song of hiawatha and paul revere's ride show us

11:22

why this is true Longfellow focused on pleasing the masses

11:26

rather than pleasing insular bitter angry dark critics Weaken see

11:30

it's mentality mirrored by longfellow's rat pack of poetic compatriots

11:35

fireside poets basically the supergroup of their day Finally we

11:38

have to look at transcendentalism to fully understand longfellow which

11:41

doesn't hurt because transcendentalism remains hugely influential on american society

11:45

To this day Which brings us to a close hope

11:48

you've enjoyed yourselves and remember all you eligible bachelors and

11:51

bachelorettes out there There's A reason they call him longfellow 00:11:57.275 --> [endTime] Ah

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