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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1920)
PAGE 4 THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN W EBB BEAL DISCOVEBES under the elms that stood on its lawn he met Gen. Lafayette and conferred with him. Many ;pf thepoet’s famous works were written in this home, according to Hezekiah Butterworth, the Boston historian. The original of “ The Clock on the Stairs’ ’ ticked away the time and chimed the hours B he wrote. “ The Psalm of Life” was inspired by a summer morning in 1838 when Longfellow was still a young mam For a long time he kept the pòéfii in Eis diary ahdwould hot consent to have it published. When he finally surrendered it it quickly became a favorite everywhere. A friend of the poet traveling in Japan once found a few lines of the poem iiV Japanese inscribed on afán. The friend purchased the fam and sent it to Longfel- low as an evidence of how widely his “ Psalm of Life” was known and appreciated. r> In 1879 a storm of extraordinary violence swept the coast of New England. Being unable to sleep that night, Longfellow ■-arose from his bed and wrote the “ Wreck of the Hesperus,” putting on the finishing touches as the clock on the stairs chimed the hour of three. On one occasion when the poet went to call on a newly married couple he found them seated at a little tea table before the hearth. As, the young husband, like himself, was a poet, Longfellow suggested that É;e write a poem on the Acadian custom of hanging the cane. A decade later he met the husband again and when he found that he had not acted on his sug gestion and written the.poem, Longfellow set to work and wrote “ Thè Hanging of the Cane” himself. The story of Evangeline was told to Longfellow ,by Hawthorne who stated that he had been urged to write a romance based on it but that he considered it better suited for verse. The outline of “ Hiawatha” was obtained from a story Related t o / Schoolcraft by Abraham Le Fort, an Onondaga chief tian. An old colonial hostelry at Sudbury, Mass., w hich/is still in existence suggested the “ Tale of a Wayside Inp.” To Columbus is accorded the glory ofdiscovering America—which he did, as a fact—but there were un doubtedly other and prior 'discoverers of this great land in which we. live. For instance, thé Norsemen have quite well-authenticated'claims as discoverers. Tittle is known concerning these people prior to about the end of the 10th century except what, can be gathered from legends, mythology and history that is more or less doubtful. It is certain, however, that they were the most hardy and intrepid sailors of their day and that in the ninth and 10th centuries their ships were - common visitors jat practically all European ports. For three centuries they made piratical expeditions to the neighboring coastsof England and their fighting men could be hired by any ruler who had the money to pay them. They made Settlements in Greenland, Iceland and Normandy. Old records show that a Norseman named Herjulfson while on a yqyage from Iceland to Greenland in 986 A. D. was driven by winds far out of his reckonings to the west. A bold rugged coast, now believed to have been that of Labrador or ‘New foundland, was sighted several times but Herjulfson did not land. Lief Etiçsson. set out in the year 100Ô for the purpose of testing the truth of Herjulfson’s report and in the spring of the following year, it ap pears, landed at Labrador, which he found superior ..in many respects to Iceland. , One historian says that Ericsson and his followers traveled as far soùth as Massachusetts where they remained for more than a year. They also visited Rhode Island, he says, and even entered New York harbor. Other Norsemen came in the next few years and colonies were planted in Newfoundland and Nova Scotia but these settlements sqon died but and tlie Norsemen lost all interest in the newly discovered land—Vinland—which they believed to be a continu ation of the-Coast of Greenland; they never’ dreamed tha't they had really found a new continent. The ac count of the Norsemen’s explorations and settlements THE CHABM WORKED in America is borne out by the fact-that reasonably consistent records of Ericsson’svoyage- have .been A young woman who thought she was losing her made by Norse historians, also by the finding of Norse husband’s affection went to a seventh daughter of a remains at Newport, R. I., and other places in America. seventh daughter for a love-powder; The mystery- woman told-her: W BITING OE FAMOUS LONGFELLOW POEMS “ Get a raw piece of beef, cut flat, about an inch Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, when he became thick. Slice’an onion in two, and rub the meat on professor of modern languages and literature at Har both sides with-it. Put on pepper and salt, and toast vard university in 1835, went to live at what was it on, each side over red coal-fire. Drop on three lumps known as the old Vassal mansion, at one time the of butter and two sprigs of parsley, and get him to most pretentious home ip Cambridge. Gen. Wash ^at Kt-” ;. The young wife did. so, and her husband loved .her ington had his headquarters in house when he became head o f the colonial army in July, 1^75, and ever after.