The White Mr. Longfellow 
by William Dean Howells 
 
We had expected to stay in Boston only until we could find a house in 
Old Cambridge. This was not so simple a matter as it might seem; for 
the ancient town had not yet quickened its scholarly pace to the modern 
step. Indeed, in the spring of 1866 the impulse of expansion was not yet 
visibly felt anywhere; the enormous material growth that followed the 
civil war had not yet begun. In Cambridge the houses to be let were few, 
and such as there were fell either below our pride or rose above our 
purse. I wish I might tell how at last we bought a house; we had no 
money, but we were rich in friends, who are still alive to shrink from 
the story of their constant faith in a financial future which we 
sometimes doubted, and who backed their credulity with their credit. It 
is sufficient for the present record, which professes to be strictly 
literary, to notify the fact that on the first day of May, 1866, we went 
out to Cambridge and began to live in a house which we owned in fee 
if not in deed, and which was none the less valuable for being covered 
with mortgages. Physically, it was a carpenter's box, of a sort which is 
readily imagined by the Anglo-American genius for ugliness, but which 
it is not so easy to impart a just conception of. A trim hedge of arbor- 
vita; tried to hide it from the world in front, and a tall board fence 
behind; the little lot was well planted (perhaps too well planted) with 
pears, grapes, and currants, and there was a small open space which I 
lost no time in digging up for a kitchen-garden. On one side of us were 
the open fields; on the other a brief line of neighbor-houses; across the 
street before us was a grove of stately oaks, which I never could 
persuade Aldrich had painted leaves on them in the fall. We were really 
in a poor suburb of a suburb; but such is the fascination of ownership, 
even the ownership of a fully mortgaged property, that we calculated
the latitude and longitude of the whole earth from the spot we called 
ours. In our walks about Cambridge we saw other places where we 
might have been willing to live; only, we said, they were too far off: 
We even prized the architecture of our little box, though we had but so 
lately lived in a Gothic palace on the Grand Canal in Venice, and were 
not uncritical of beauty in the possessions of others. Positive beauty we 
could not have honestly said we thought our cottage had as a whole, 
though we might have held out for something of the kind in the 
brackets of turned wood under its eaves. But we were richly content 
with it; and with life in Cambridge, as it began to open itself to us, we 
were infinitely more than content. This life, so refined, so intelligent, so 
gracefully simple, I do not suppose has anywhere else had its parallel. 
 
I. 
It was the moment before the old American customs had been changed 
by European influences among people of easier circumstances; and in 
Cambridge society kept what was best of its village traditions, and 
chose to keep them in the full knowledge of different things. Nearly 
every one had been abroad; and nearly every one had acquired the taste 
for olives without losing a relish for native sauces; through the 
intellectual life there was an entire democracy, and I do not believe that 
since the capitalistic era began there was ever a community in which 
money counted for less. There was little show of what money could 
buy; I remember but one private carriage (naturally, a publisher's); and 
there was not one livery, except a livery in the larger sense kept by the 
stableman Pike, who made us pay now a quarter and now a half dollar 
for a seat in his carriages, according as he lost or gathered courage for 
the charge. We thought him extortionate, and we mostly walked 
through snow and mud of amazing depth and thickness. 
The reader will imagine how acceptable this circumstance was to a 
young literary man beginning life with a fully mortgaged house and a 
salary of untried elasticity. If there were distinctions made in 
Cambridge they were not against literature, and we found ourselves in 
the midst of a charming society, indifferent, apparently, to all questions
but those of the higher education which comes so largely by nature. 
That is to say, in the Cambridge of that day (and, I dare say, of this) a 
mind cultivated in some sort was essential, and after that    
    
		
	
	
	Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
	 	
	
	
	    Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the 
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.