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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 11 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard). You can also browse the collection for Frederigo Confalonieri or search for Frederigo Confalonieri in all documents.

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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 7: (search)
in the environs, that strangers are not generally permitted to see. This morning, therefore, we set off with a little party he had collected, consisting of Count Confalonieri, The name of this accomplished young nobleman afterwards became widely known, and acquired a melancholy interest from his long imprisonment in the fortress of Spielberg. a young man of much culture, who has travelled Europe quite over; Borgieri, one of a few literary hopes of Italy, who, as well as Confalonieri, has often been with us in our excursions before; and a Russian general. . . . . The whole drive was about thirty-five miles; we reached Milan at eight o'clock, and we allouse—with Dandolo and several other of the patricians, and a few men of letters—I have passed my evenings as pleasantly as I did at Milan, with De Breme and Count Confalonieri. October 20.—This morning, like Portia's messenger, we passed With imagined speed Unto the tranect, to the common ferry Which trades to Venice; embar<
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 13: (search)
two or three times witnessed singular contrasts on going from one to the other, just as the great question of the change of Ministry, which lasted above a fortnight, was in the agony of agitation. . . . . The Princess Aldobrandini Later, Princess Borghese. was at home every night. She is not as beautiful as she was when I knew her in Italy, but she has lost none of her vivacity, and talks still as fast as ever. A good many Italians came to her hotel, and among them my old friend, Count Confalonieri of Milan; but the old Duc de la Rochefoucauld, her grandfather, was the most amusing and interesting of all the persons I met there. It is the same who was in America, and he still retains the hardy, vigorous, independent mind that must always have distinguished one who has passed without loss of honor through so many revolutions, and is still as good-humored and kind as all his friends have uniformly found him. . . . . The Duchess de Grammont had a soiree for the Liberals every S
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 23: (search)
ter on Political Economy. and two other Italian exiles. They live, except in winter, at the Castle of Gaesbeck, about eight miles from Brussels, a fine, large old pile of building, connected in history with the troubles of Holland, and full of recollections of that disastrous period. It is pleasantly situated on the edge of a valley, upon which it looks down, and there they live as happily as exiles can. They were all implicated in the revolutionary movements in Italy, of which Pellico, Confalonieri, etc., were a part, and for the last twelve years Arconati and Arrivabene have been under sentence of death. They are all people of most agreeable intellectual culture, and Arrivabene, Berchet, and Salviati are authors of reputation; but the fortunes of all of them were confiscated or sequestered when sentence was issued against their persons. Arconati, however, had large estates and means beyond the reach of the Austrian power, as well as still larger ones within it. But though his
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 26 (search)
note, 482, 483, 485, 486. Clare, Lord, 422. Clay, Henry, 350, 381. Clemencin, Diego, 197. Clerk, John, 277, 280. Cloncurry, Lord, 422. Cogswell, Joseph Green, 116, 156, 173, 273, 278 note, 282, 284, 285, 316 note, 318 and note, 332, 336, 385. Coleridge, Mrs. S. T., 285, 286. Coleridge, Sara T. (Mrs. Henry N.), 285, 286. Coles, Miss, 29. Coles, Secretary, 29. Colloredo, Count, 484. Common School Journal of Connecticut, 2 note. Conde, Jose Antonio, 187, 197. Confalonieri, Count, Frederigo, 161 and note, 162, 164, 256, 450. Consalvi, Cardinal, 180. Constant, Benjamin, 131, 134, 138, 143, 145, 152. Contrabandists, journey with, from Seville to Lisbon, 241 et seq., 243 note. Cooke, G. F., 53 note, 127, 473. Copleston, Mr., 405. Cordova, visits, 224-228; cathedral-mosque of, 224, 225; hermits of, 226, 227; society in, 227, 228. Correa de Serra, Abbe, 16 and note. Cowper, Countess, 408, 409, 412. Cowper, Earl, 408. Crampton, (Sir) Philip, 420. Cr