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Historic leaves, volume 2, April, 1903 - January, 1904 1 1 Browse Search
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Historic leaves, volume 2, April, 1903 - January, 1904, Literary men and women of Somerville. (search)
l board, Hang up the mistletoe. Unveil thy blushing face! Awake, glad Easter day! An angel from the sepulchre Hath rolled the stone away. Ye bells, thy silver tongues These tidings sweetly tell, And from the wind-harp's throbbing strings Doth joy's glad anthem swell. It is clear that Mrs. Libby had a feeling for metrical language, and also, in her best work, a measure of that essential impulse which makes poetry what it is. A still more recent loss is that of Mrs. Lowe, who died May 9, 1902. Mrs. Martha Perry Lowe for many years was known as one of the most public-spirited women in this city, active in all good wcrk. Her literary productions include a ‘Memoir’ of her husband, Rev. Charles Lowe, who from 1859 to 1865 was pastor of the First Unitarian church here, and afterward Secretary of the American Unitarian Society. It is said that, in the midst of her numerous deeds of practical beneficence, Mrs. Lowe yet cherished the name of poet above all others. She has left four