The poet may not be talking about himself, but Henry Wadsworth Long Fellow has certainly become one of "great men". Ultimately it will move "civil war". In his famous poem "The Psalms of Life" he says "The lives of the great people remind us that we can make our lives noble ...". One of the popular poets has been admired by such people. As Charles Dickens and Walt Whitman.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow used a ductic hexameter (which is arranged in succession to six Daktil) on the long and first line of his poem "Evangelin". "This is the primitive man of the forest" Pine and Tuga (Long Fellow is also an example of the last Daktil with syllable shortness and the other is Catatrexis) "Five Ducklings play Beyond the top of a mountain ", it is in stark contrast to the internal rhyme where words in the middle of a line rhyme with another word at the end of the line or elsewhere in the poem. As often used in Shelly's "clouds", "I am a girl on the earth and water ... / I will walk the pores on the sea and the coast. When the first sound is repeated," The ship is ashamed of the coast ), Sometimes called rhyme or first rhyme
In recent days, I have read some Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882). Long Fellow is a lyric poet who tried his hand in a free poem. I wrote the long fellow in detail. I admit that I can not turn myself "Evangeline" and "The Song of Hiawatha". I understand that this fashionable poetry was written and appreciated before the continuous emergence of radio, TV, Sony Walkman and the Internet. I would like to read about the poetry of the 19th century for about an hour.
Hiawatha's song is one of the few long poetry of Long Fellows. Longfellow broke half of the women in Ojibwe with the eyes of Henry Law Schoolcraft (1793 - 1864), ethnologist, explorer, and Indian agent. Long Fellow weakens the character's heroic status by expressing it as "childish and immature" rather than a universal human being, combining myths and history. Sometimes he may look different from human needs naturally, sometimes as sympathy (Wagenknecht, pp. 102 and 96).