Longfellow's friend and fellow writer
Nathaniel Hawthorne was particularly pleased by "The Saga of King Olaf". He wrote to him specifically of the segment of "The Building of the Long Serpent": "By some inscrutable magic you contrive to suggest a parallel picture of a modern frigate." The work was the favorite poem of
American President Theodore Roosevelt. He compared the inspirational nature of the poem to "
The Battle Hymn of the Republic" by
Julia Ward Howe. As he wrote to literary critic
Martha Baker Dunn, "if a boy or girl likes [the
Saga] well enough to learn most of it by heart and feel the spirit of it, just as they ought to like Julia Ward Howe's battle hymn, they will always have in them something to which an appeal for brave action can be made."
Musical adaptations Composer
Dudley Buck created two musical adaptations of portions of the poem, the cantatas
The Nun of Nidaros in 1879 and ''King Olaf's Christmas'' in 1891. Longfellow unsuccessfully sought the assistance of
John Sullivan Dwight in getting the former performed. ==References==