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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 10 2 Browse Search
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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 23: (search)
Lithuania. She was a Countess Lowenstein, and at St. Petersburg, in 1810-11,. . . . knew Alexander Everett and Frank Gray very well, and seemed to remember them very distinctly. She talks French and English very well, is an agreeable person, and certainly has a good deal of talent. that being half an hour later than the King's dinner-hour. Everything was in the German style; five or six courses, but not long continued. The gentlemen rose with the ladies. We had Lohrmann, the astronomer, Carus, the King's physician,—a very pleasant man, whom I knew before,—and a Swiss baron. The conversation was chiefly in French. We reached home about half past 4. The truth is, the Germans, and especially the Saxons, know nothing about giving dinners, and give them rarely. Their amusements and intercourse all come in the evening. Another day we dined with Mr. Forbes very pleasantly; the dinner between five and six o'clock, quite in French style, but nobody at table except his secretary, Mr.
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 24: (search)
time. . . . January 31.—This evening Prince John invited four of us— Professor Forster, the translator of Petrarca, Dr. Carus, Count Baudissin, and myself — to hear Tieck read a part of the unpublished translation of the Purgatorio. By Princepointed out fairly and honestly; and once or twice, where there was a difference of opinion between the Prince and Carus, Carus adhered, even with pertinacity, to his own, which, in one case, I thought was wrong. The translation, however, was as clg at Tieck's, but we were both summoned to Prince John's, where, to the same party that was there before,—viz. Forster, Carus, and Baudissin,—Tieck read five more cantos of the Prince's translation of the Purgatorio, XXIV.— XXIX. Everything went nal. Vogel is rich, and his dinner was abundant and good, and his company excellent; consisting of Falkenstein, Forster, Carus, Dahl, Lohrmann, Haase, etc. But Mad. Vogel was only the upper servant; sitting, to be sure, sometimes at the head o
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 26 (search)
60, 62, 63, 64, 66-68; anecdote of, 110, 114, 165, 166, 411, 446. C Caballero Fern an, pseud., 236 note. Cabot, George, 12, 13, 14, 396. Cadaval, Duchess de, 249. Cadiz, 193; visits, 236. Calasanzios Convent, 195. Calhoun, John C., 349, 381. Cambridge, England, visits, 270, 271. Camoens, 244, 252. Campagna of Rome, 168. Campbell, Sir, John, 245, 246. Campbell, Thomas, 62, 63, 65, 282, 410. Canova, Antonio, 172. Carroll, Archbishop, 41. Carroll, Charles, 41. Carus, Dr., 459, 473, 475, 482. Cassel, visits, 121. Castel Branco, Baron. See Lacerda. Castro, Don Joao de, 246. Chalmers, Rev. Dr., 405. Chaloner, Mr., 443. Channing, Edward T., 9, 12, 26; letters to,. 30, 42, 83, 89, 96, 107, 118, 183. Channing, Dr., Walter, 148, 391; letters to, 94, 149. Channing, Mrs., Walter, letters to, 148, 188. Channing, Rev. William E., 17, 84, 96, 178, 316, 327, 382, 391, 405, 479. Chapman, Dr., 16. Charlottesville, visits, 34, 348. Chastellux,
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 24: (search)
h version, is a revival of the recollection of those charming evenings in your palace, above thirty years ago, when, with Carus and Forster, I listened to Tieck as he read, at each session, a canto of the Commedia, just as it had come fresh and warmed away, and with it Tieck and Forster,—a fact not so remarkable, certainly, as that the three others still survive. But Carus must be very old. Does he still preserve the faculties which so long distinguished him? Is he well? This seems an appanslation. I went to only two or three of them, in the winter of 1835-36, and never met anybody at them, except Tieck, Dr. Carus, and Karl Forster, though I believe other persons were occasionally there, especially the Mit-Regent, afterwards King Fcept on these occasions. Forster was an excellent Italian scholar, and translated, as early as 1807, from Dante. So was Carus, who made a plan of the Divina Commedia, of which he gave me a copy still to be found in my large paper Landino. Tieck
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
, Antonio, I. 172. Capponi, Marchese Gaetano, II. 52, 53. Capponi, Marchese Gino, II. 56, 77, 315, 339. Capuccini, Monsignor, II. 85. Cardwell, Edward (Lord), II. 323, 384, 397, 398, 399. Cardwell, Mrs. E., II. 384, 397. Cardwell, Mrs., II. 397. Carlisle, Seventh Earl of, II 271, 425; letter to, 450; letter from, 451. See Morpeth. Carlyle, Dr., II. 59. Carlyle, Thomas, II. 180. Carmignani, II. 92, 93, 94. Carroll, Archbishop, I. 41. Carroll, Charles, I. 41. Carus, Dr., I. 459, 473, 475, 482, II. 480 and note. Cass, General, Lewis, II. 113, 141. Cassell, visits, I. 121. Castel-Branco, Baron. See Lacerda. Castiglione, Madame de, II. 370, 372. Castro, Don Adolfo de, II. 259. Castro, Don Joao de, I. 246. Cavour, Count Camillo di, II. 352, 353, 431. Chadwick, Edwin, II. 147. Chalmers, Rev. Dr., I. 405. Chaloner, Mr., I. 443. Channing, Dr., Walter, I 148, 391; letters to, 94, 149. Channing, Edward T., I. 9, 12, 26; letters to,