hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Louis Agassiz 40 4 Browse Search
George Washington 34 0 Browse Search
Radcliffe (Kentucky, United States) 30 0 Browse Search
Radcliffe 28 0 Browse Search
George B. Clark 28 0 Browse Search
Asa Gray 21 1 Browse Search
Francis Foxcroft 20 0 Browse Search
Greenough 19 13 Browse Search
John Eliot 16 0 Browse Search
Henry Dunster 16 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Cambridge sketches (ed. Estelle M. H. Merrill). Search the whole document.

Found 6 total hits in 4 results.

Time (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): chapter 12
ched by innovating hands; Nor has Art stinted Nature,--here she lies In ancient ampleness to bless the eyes. Beyond are spread the open meadow-lands That stretch away to catch the river's smile. From massive clumps of lofty lilac trees Pours forth the searching fragrance of the spring, Greeting the sense, while yet unseen the source; And when the summer's glow hath spent its force, And birds no more in elms and lindens sing, Millions of winy leaves inflame the breeze. And winter holds here an unwonted sway; The towering trees with honors long since dead, And charged with snows, still leave the fancy warm To feel that Time's or Nature's chilling storm By Fame eternal shall be buffeted, Nor vital greatness suffer cold decay. But let the pilgrim come what time he will, Here is evoked Thought's majesty of mood; Here she moves on with slow, imperial gait, Since two such Presences upon her wait. Lo! Past and Present mix,--a mighty flood Beside whose stately flow the lips grow still.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (search for this): chapter 12
The Craigie house: Washington's headquarters and Longfellow's home. Revised slightly from its original, in Risk and other poems, 1879. Charlotte Fiske Bates. Behold! a double glory resteth here, Wherein was housed in Revolution's time A man who while a king refused a throne, Save in his country's grateful heart alone; And who by singleness of soul sublime Has made his name to every people dear. And he who wore the poet's anadem Kept the old relics in their primal place, Reviving yet the age of Washington: Poet and statesman-how their fate is one In greatness, goodness, and a world's embrace, Though time and genius widely parted them. A reverent love has kept the olden pile Almost untouched by innovating hands; Nor has Art stinted Nature,--here she lies In ancient ampleness to bless the eyes. Beyond are spread the open meadow-lands That stretch away to catch the river's smile. From massive clumps of lofty lilac trees Pours forth the searching fragrance of the spring, Greeting th
Charlotte Fiske Bates (search for this): chapter 12
The Craigie house: Washington's headquarters and Longfellow's home. Revised slightly from its original, in Risk and other poems, 1879. Charlotte Fiske Bates. Behold! a double glory resteth here, Wherein was housed in Revolution's time A man who while a king refused a throne, Save in his country's grateful heart alone; And who by singleness of soul sublime Has made his name to every people dear. And he who wore the poet's anadem Kept the old relics in their primal place, Reviving yet the age of Washington: Poet and statesman-how their fate is one In greatness, goodness, and a world's embrace, Though time and genius widely parted them. A reverent love has kept the olden pile Almost untouched by innovating hands; Nor has Art stinted Nature,--here she lies In ancient ampleness to bless the eyes. Beyond are spread the open meadow-lands That stretch away to catch the river's smile. From massive clumps of lofty lilac trees Pours forth the searching fragrance of the spring, Greeting th
The Craigie house: Washington's headquarters and Longfellow's home. Revised slightly from its original, in Risk and other poems, 1879. Charlotte Fiske Bates. Behold! a double glory resteth here, Wherein was housed in Revolution's time A man who while a king refused a throne, Save in his country's grateful heart alone; And who by singleness of soul sublime Has made his name to every people dear. And he who wore the poet's anadem Kept the old relics in their primal place, Reviving yet the age of Washington: Poet and statesman-how their fate is one In greatness, goodness, and a world's embrace, Though time and genius widely parted them. A reverent love has kept the olden pile Almost untouched by innovating hands; Nor has Art stinted Nature,--here she lies In ancient ampleness to bless the eyes. Beyond are spread the open meadow-lands That stretch away to catch the river's smile. From massive clumps of lofty lilac trees Pours forth the searching fragrance of the spring, Greeting th