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Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing) 2 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Irene E. Jerome., In a fair country 2 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: December 25, 1865., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing), VI. Jamaica Plain. (search)
gain, For we are conscious, thoughtful, striving men Yet be we faithful to this present trust, Clasp to a heart resigned this faithful Must; Though deepest dark our efforts should enfold, Unwearied mine to find the vein of gold; Forget not oft to waft the prayer on high;— The rosy dawn again shall fill the sky. And by that lovely light all truth revealed,— The cherished forms, which sad distrust concealed, Transfigured, yet the same, will round us stand, The kindred angels of a faithful band; Ruby and ebon cross then cast aside, No lamp more needed, for the night has died. ‘Be to the best thou knowest ever true,’ Is all the creed. Then be thy talisman of rosy hue, Or fenced with thorns, that wearing, thou must bleed Or, gentle pledge of loves prophetic view, The faithful steps it will securely lead. Happy are all who reach that distant shore, And bathe in heavenly day; Happiest are those who high the banner bore, To marshal others on the way, Or waited for them, fainting and way-worn
Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Additional Sketches Illustrating the services of officers and Privates and patriotic citizens of South Carolina. (search)
or ten years at Lake City, and after that period conducted a grist-milling business for six years. He was assistant postmaster at Lake City from 1892 to 1897, and at the latter date he retired from active business and public affairs. He was married in 1873 to Mrs. Laws, nee McKenzie, of Williamsburg county, and they have eight children: Robert J., telegraph operator at Florence; Hester Erwin, also an operator at Lanes; Harriet Susanna, Cecil Elizabeth, Martin Luther, Lena Willard, Murry, and Ruby. Robert W. Shand, a prominent attorney of Columbia, judge advocate-general on the staff of Maj.-Gen. C. I. Walker, commanding the South Carolina division, United Confederate Veterans, was born at Columbia, February 27, 1840. He was graduated at the South Carolina college in 1859, read law in the office of Gen. Maxcy Gregg, and was admitted to practice in May, 1861. In April, 1861, he was in the State service near Charleston during and subsequent to the bombardment and surrender of Fort S
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 15. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Paroles of the Army of Northern Virginia. (search)
Arnold, D. H., Burnett, J. C., Burnett, Rufus, Bridges, Marion, Bussell, G. W., Bell, C. B., Bodell, Jas. L., Cooker, W. A., Crabell, S., Clewe, W. S., Dingledine, Peter, Elliott, R. A., East, Wm., Estep, P., Evans, A. W., Fansler, D. C., Frederick, P., Gaderony, W. L., McNeal,J. B., Nash, Jos. R., Owalk, Jno., Philips, Geo. W., Philips, M., Philips, Jno. H., Perkins, A. M., Pearson, W. A., Richardson, Geo. W., Ruby, R. C., Reedy, Philip, Samuel, Thos., Saaler, Thos. A., Shellun, Geo. T., Smith, Henry, Spitza, Henry, Simmons, Jas., Tany, Jos. M., Thees, Christian, Golloray, Peyton, Guend, Samuel, Gum, Amos, Hanks, Guaer, Jenkins, S. G., Jenkins, H., Lengue, J. W., McDowell, W. H., McDowell, Jas. M., Mills, W. D., Mills, Jno. D., Mills, Moses T., Minnis, Wm. H., McDaniel, Samuel L., McDaniel, Samuel, McDaniel, Hamilton, Vin, D
The writings of John Greenleaf Whittier, Volume 1. (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier), Narrative and legendary poems (search)
ken By many a steepled town, By many a white-walled farm-house, And many a garner brown. Turning a score of mill-wheels, The stream no more ran free; White sails on the winding river, White sails on the far-off sea. Below in the noisy village The flags were floating gay, And shone on a thousand faces The light of a holiday. Swiftly the rival ploughmen Turned the brown earth from their shares; Here were the farmer's treasures, There were the craftsman's wares. Golden the goodwife's butter, Ruby her currant-wine; Grand were the strutting turkeys, Fat were the beeves and swine. Yellow and red were the apples, And the ripe pears russet-brown, And the peaches had stolen blushes From the girls who shook them down. And with blooms of hill and wildwood, That shame the toil of art, Mingled the gorgeous blossoms Of the garden's tropic heart. ‘What is it I see?’ said Keezar: “Am I here, or am I there? Is it a fete at Bingen? Do I look on Frankfort fair? But where are the clowns and pupp<
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Chapter 12: voices of the night (search)
ow see that he represented, in this respect, a dangerous tendency, and Poe's followers and admirers exemplified it in its most perilous form. Take, for instance, such an example as that of Dr. Thomas Holley Chivers of Georgia, author of Eonchs of Ruby, a man of whom Bayard Taylor wrote in 1871, speaking of that period thirty years earlier, that something wonderful would come out of Chivers. Passages from the Correspondence of Rufus W. Griswold, p. 46. It is certain that things wonderful cameon of the Divine Idea. One cannot turn a page of Chivers without recognizing that he at his best was very closely allied to Poe at his worst. Such a verse as the following was not an imitation, but a twin blossom:— On the beryl-rimmed rebecs of Ruby Brought fresh from the hyaline streams, She played on the banks of the Yuba Such songs as she heard in her dreams, Like the heavens when the stars from their eyries Look down through the ebon night air, Where the groves by the Ouphantic Fairies Li
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Index (search)
enter, Prof. George R., 127; his Longfellow, cited, 127 note, 166 note. Carter, Mr. (Longfellow's teacher), 15,17. Carter, James G., 23. Cervantes, Miguel de, 188. Chamberlain Collection of Autographs, 139 note. Channing, W. Ellery, 271. Channing, Rev. William E., 11, 164. Chantrey, Sir, Francis, 90. Charles River, 116, 118. Chasles, Prof., Philarete, 195; describes Longfellow, 196,197. Chaucer, Geoffrey, 249. Chelsea, Eng., 90. Chivers, Dr. Thomas H., 145; his Eonchs of Ruby, mentioned, 143; quoted, 144. Christian Examiner, the, 112,113 note. Christiana, 103. Christus, Longfellow begins, 236; appeared, 242. Civil War, the, 65. Clark, Mr., 221. Clemens, Samuel L., 198. Cleveland, Henry R., 139, 284. Cogswell, Joseph G., 71, 81, 82. Coleridge, Samuel T., 262, 291; his Ancient Mariner, mentioned, 149. Coleridge, Sara, 141. Colman, Samuel, Longfellow's letter to, 139, 140. Cologne, 8. Columbian Muse, the, a collection of poems, 23. Com
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book III:—the Third winter. (search)
day the work thus accomplished; but, in order not to betray it, it was necessary to throw dry sand upon that which had been freshly turned up, and the color of which was altered by the dampness. When it was necessary to cut through a tree, instead of felling it they set it up as near as possible to the spot where it formerly stood. The better to lull the enemy, the Federals allowed him to break up under their eyes, a few hundred yards from their batteries, the hulk of a blockade-runner, the Ruby, which had grounded a short time before at the entrance of Lighthouse Inlet. In fine, they affected to labor actively at the works constructed on the south end of Folly Island. Beauregard suspected, it is true, that his adversary meditated a dash on Morris Island. As early as the 25th of June he had given warning of it to his government that was asking him for more troops, believing the Federals to be on the defensive. But he lacked the means to prepare an effectual resistance. Being ob
by force, but to evade it by vessels of unusual speed. With this view they have bought and are fitting out steamers at Glasgow, which port seems to share with Liverpool the honor of being a rendezvous for pirates. There is great activity in all the yards, especially in that of Messrs. George and James Thompson, above mentioned, in which six iron — but not ironclad — vessels are on the ways for construction or repair, all owned by rebels, or in rebel interest.--The Lona, Pearl, Eagle, and Ruby were selected especially for the work of carrying arms and ammunition into blockaded rebel ports. The lona was the first to attempt the voyage, and was sunk by collision six weeks ago. The other three, like the Iona, are long, narrow, swift, smooth-water, side-wheel steamers, built to run fifteen miles an hour on the Clyde, and from 150 to 200 tons Burden. The Pearl was lying at Queenstown, taking in powder, when the City of Baltimore, on her last voyage out, touched at that port. It is pr
co on the 3d ultimo, and General Forey took possession on the 10th. Juarez had retired to San Luis Potosi, and a French Division had been sent against that place. Forey was received with great enthusiasm. A French Marquis, who was wounded at Paebl, goes to Paris with the keys of the City of Mexico. Thirteen hundred prisoners, mostly Mexican officers, are about to be sent to France. Commodore Wlikes arrived per Roanoke. Com Lardmer has arrived at St. Thomas The West India q is reported in a crippled condition, owing to defective boilers, etc. The steamers Charleston, Sirus, Banshee, Lizzie, and Fannie, had arrived at Nassau from Wilmington. The Flora, Calypso, and Ruby, are reported captured. The steamers Danube and Hebe are at Nassau, bound to a Southern port. From Vicksburg. The American has Vicksburg advices to July 2d. The condition of affairs was unchanged, but Gen. Johnston was reported to be seriously threatening the enemy's rear.
Fashion. For the benefit of our lady friends, we give a little gossip about the fashions for January in New York and Philadelphia: A favorite dinner dress is of violet Irish poplin, trimmed with blase bands of white poplin, arranged to simulate an overskirt. The coiffure is of point applique lace and violet velvet. The hair is rolled from the face and caught up in a waterfall at the back. This is an admired home dress: Ruby reps, trimmed with velvet buttons and ruby silk cord. The hair is crimped and arranged in a loose coil at the back. The coiffure consists of a band of ruby velvet studded with jet beads, and tied at the back with a ruby chenille cord. Also an evening dress, rather flashy than elegant, of white crepe puffed over silk. The cuffs are confined by bands of scarlet velvet edged with black lace. The overskirt of crepe is bordered by scarlet velvet and black lace, and festooned up very high on the left side by a bunch of white flowers and loo