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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 37 3 Browse Search
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 14 2 Browse Search
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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 20: (search)
Chapter 20: Letters, 1857-59, to Judge Curtis, Sir Edmund Head, Sir C. Lyell, Mr. R. H. Gardiner. letter from Baron Humboldt. letters to Mr. Everett, Hon. E. Twisleton, Sir W. C. Trevelyan. The following letter-which, being chiefly ot. He who stands in the centre is the only person who can see truly all the relations of the circumference. To Robert H. Gardiner, Esq. Boston, In another letter, of nearly the same date, he says: I shall be in town a great deal, and do my work there rather than in the country. June 25, 1858. dear Mr. Gardiner,—I received with much pleasure your kind letter of the 17th, and the copy of Buckle, all safe and in good condition. Lent by Mr. Ticknor to Mr. Gardiner. It is a remarkable bMr. Gardiner. It is a remarkable book, as you say, and shows an astonishing amount of knowledge for a man of his years, and a power of generalization remarkable at any age. His views of what is connected with our spiritual nature are, no doubt, unsound, and his radicalism is always o
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 22: (search)
or postponed was being rendered inevitable, can fail to perceive how deeply he would share the excitement of the time. He was in his seventieth year when war became an actual fact. The Constitution of the United States, which had been the object of his pride and admiration from his youth, the best form of government that ever was made, See letter to Mr. Daveis, ante, p. 195. he saw often disregarded, heard often spoken of as if it were effete. After a visit in Maine he wrote to Mr. R. H. Gardiner, in September, 1861: I recollect that the acute lawyer who was at your house one evening with the mayor of your city Gardiner, Maine. did not hesitate to say that we have no longer any Constitution, and that very little of it had been in existence for some years. I could not gainsay him. The Union, to him a reality such as it could only be to those who had loved the country while it was small, and had seen it grow and flourish, was threatened and misrepresented by men who, he f
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 23: (search)
o G. T. Curtis, Sir C. Lyell, Sir E. Head, R. H. Gardiner, friend B. B. Wiffen, General Thayer, C. F lay heavy on her heart. . . . . To Robert H. Gardiner, Esq., Gardiner. Newport, R. I., AugustGardiner. Newport, R. I., August 29, 1863. When I first wrote to you that I did not like to venture a journey in very hot weatherd as any I have heard of. . . . . To Robert H. Gardiner, Gardiner. Boston, November 11, 1863. my dear Mr. Gardiner,—I cannot tell you how much I was touched by your letter, which came yesterdaday to Frederic, as he had already done. Mr. Gardiner had become aware that he had a fatal diseasfectionately yours, Geo. Ticknor. To Robert H. Gardiner, Esq., Gardiner. Boston, January 14, 1864. my dear Mr. Gardiner,—We receive constantly the most gratifying accounts of your condition, ier regards from Mrs. Ticknor and myself to Mrs. Gardiner, and to all whom love and duty alike gather round you, believe me, my dear Mr. Gardiner, now and always Your sincere friend, George Tickno[2 more...]<
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
. 81 and note, 82. Gans, Professor, I. 494, II. 105. Garay, Don M. de, I. 191, 192, 196, 212. Gardiner, Maine, visits, I. 337, 385, II. 425, 440. Gardiner, Mrs. R. H., i. 425, 465; letter to, I. 395. Gardiner, Rev. Frederic T., II. 463. Gardiner, Rev. J. S. J., I. 8, 11. Gardiner, R. H., I. 316 note, 337, I. 425, Gardiner, R. H., I. 316 note, 337, I. 425, 440; letters to, 410, 463, 464. Gardiner, William H., II. 449, 485. Garnett, Mrs., II. 122. Gaskell, Mr. and Mrs., I. 439. Gaskell, Mrs. E. C., II. 347. Gasparin, Count, II. 131. Gaston, William, I. 31. Gauss, Professor, I. 70. Gayangos, Don Pascual de, II. 162 and note, 181, 182, 245, 246, 255; letters to, 246,1803-5. Studying French and Spanish with Mr. Sales and Greek with Mr. E. Webster, 7. 1805-7. At Dartmouth College, 7. 1807-10. Studying Greek and Latin with Dr. Gardiner, 8, 9. 1810-13. Studying law with Mr. W. Sullivan, 9; admitted to the bar, practises one year, 9-11. 1814-15. Abandons the law and prepares, by study and tra