hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 90 results in 34 document sections:

Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Index (search)
all, Emily, 19. Marshall, Chief Justice, John, 6. Massachusetts, 186; Legislature, 11. Mather, Cotton, 138,239; his Magnalia, mentioned, 149. Matsys, Quintin, 161. Mayence, 162. Mayflower (ship), 13. Medici, Cosmo de, 164. Mellen, Mr., 140. Mellen, Judge, 17. Mellen, Frederic, 17. Mellen, Grenville, 23. Menzel, Charles Adolphus, his History of German Literature, mentioned, 112. Mexico, 263. Middleton, Thomas, 188. Milton, John, 268. Mittermaier, Karl J. A., 112. Moliere, Jean B. P. de, 121,176. Montalvan, John P. de, 188. Monti, Prof., Luigi, 215. Moore, Thomas, 8, 62. More, Hannah, 15, 121. Morris, William, 6. Morton, Eng., 219. Motley, John L., 287. Mt. Vernon, position similar to Craigie House, 116. Mullins, Priscilla, 146. Mussey, Dr., 83. Nahant, Mass., 187, 205, 244. Naples, 53, 223. New England, 14, 36, 47, 78, 116, 131, 199; Longfellow's plan of sketches about, 51; traditions of, 130; fugitive slave agitation in, 186. New En
hing stroke to his great work, "The History of Julius Cæsar," which has been so long announced, he desires to have some local information from Asia Minor, and has selected a young architect of Valenciennes, M. Edmond Guillaume, a laureate of the school of fine arts, and a first Roman pikeman, to go out for him to that country to make inquiries. We are next told of his purchasing, for 25,000½, one of the last paintings executed by M. Ingres. It represents the scene of Louis XIV. receiving Moliere at his table in presence of all the gentlemen of the court. Again, some of the Paris journals state that, by order of the Emperor, the Chinese curiosities sent by the army in China to his Majesty, are to be exhibited during ten days in the Pavillion Marsan, of the palace of the Tuilleries, and the public are to be admitted without cards. His Majesty has, besides, directed that a catalogue of the articles shall be drawn up. Among the articles sent are said to be seventy-five splendid piece
The Daily Dispatch: March 15, 1861., [Electronic resource], The evacuation of Sumter at Charleston. (search)
es she kept up a standing army of 100,000 men, and sent 100 ships of the line to sea. He added Franche Compete, Roussillon, and Flanders, to the Empire. His arms were victorious over the half of Western Europe. His Generals were the most renowned since the days of Julius Caesar. Turenne and Conde were considered as models, even by the great Napoleon. Literature and the arts flourished as they had never flourished before. Bossurt and Massillon thundered in the pulpit, while Corneille and Moliere convulsed the theatre, alternately, with grief and laughter. Even the very war which, but for the obstinacy of their Allies, would have brought Eugene and Marlborough to Paris terminated in securing the throne of Spain to the grandson of the great French monarch.--And of all the thrones which belonged to his descendants, this is the last that is left.--France and Naples are gone from the Bourbons forever. How long Spain will stay behind it is impossible to foresee. The others, fifty-five
ked yesterday, the idea of water quarters is obsolete, even in less favored climates than ours. There has been scarcely any such thing since the days of of Marcial who sent for Players from Paris. when he went into them. and made other preparations to pass the season comfortably.-- Frederick knocked that sort of sport in the head. He was almost as sad an innovator as Napoleon himself, and paid no respect to ancient military traditions. A strict disciplination, he by no means resembled Moliere's physician, who thought it better for a man to be killed according to rule than to be cured in collation of it. He did not scorn success obtained in the most irregular manner. He made break neck marches through the show, and fought battles when the thermometer was below zero Washington had winter quarters, such as they were, because Howe and Clinian had New York and Philadelphia, and he was obliged to watch them and keep them in check. Had he possessed the means of attacking them. he wo