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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Chapter 4: country life at Groton. (1833-1836.) (search)
It often happens that young people, when banished from society to what seems solitude, find compensation in being anew introduced to parents, brothers, and sisters. This was eminently true of Margaret Fuller. To be sure, her brother Eugene, who was her nearest companion, was now absent. Eugene and I, she writes in a later diary, were near of an age, and loved to wander out together, over the streams and through the woods, walking and talking or oftener silent. Ms. Diary, 1844. Eugene Fuller was not the most intellectual of her brothers, but the most winning and attractive; he had graduated at Harvard in 1834, and was at this time private tutor at the plantation of my uncle, Colonel Samuel Storrow, at Farley, Culpeper County, Virginia. This explains an allusion in the following letter, written by Margaret Fuller to her father during a temporary visit in Cambridge,--which I give to show how cordial a tie really united them, in spite of her criticisms. The dearest and most a
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Index. (search)
Eustis, Mary (Channing), 128. Everett, Edward, 33. F. Farrar, John, 41, 46, 52, 63, 182. Farrar, Mrs., John, 36, 36, 41, 46, 61, 52, 62, 63, 283. Fitton, Miss E., 275. Flowers, Mrs. Fuller's love of, 18. Follen, Charles, 33. Francis, Convers, 142, 144, 146. Friendship, letter on, 72. Frothingham, O. B., 313. Fuller, Abraham, 11, 54. Fuller, Arthur B., letters to, 59, 83; other references, 3, 22, 58, 105, 203. Fuller Edith, 248. Fuller, Ellen. See Channing. Fuller, Eugene, letters to, 202, 208; other references, 51, 52. Fuller, Hiram, 79, 80, 87. Fuller, Hon., Timothy, 12, 14, 16, 20, 22, 26, 28, 32, 48, addresses of, 18, 16; oration of, 15; letter to 51. Fuller, Margaret (Crane), 17, 20. Fuller, Rev., Timothy, 9, 10. Fuller, Richard F., letters to, 59, 106, 106, 273; other references, 17, 21, 220. Fuller, Thomas, poem by, 8. G. Garrison, W. L., 129. Gibbon, E., 45, 50. Giovanni, Ser, 256-258, 260, 264. Goethe, J. W. von, 45 47 63 6
ext week's Somerville Journal. With a part of the proceeds a gold-headed cane, fittingly inscribed, was presented to the pastor, Rev. C. A. Skinner, June 1, 1891, in recognition of his ten years pastorate and his forty-five years in the Christian ministry. Saturday, May 30, the second outing with ladies was made to the Lynn woods. The occasion was even more successful than the year before. In the fall of 1891 Arthur Ware was chosen editor, Mr. Safford corresponding secretary, and Eugene Fuller treasurer. The feasibility of the club's printing a fortnightly paper in the interests of the Cross-street Society was presented to the members by A. W. Glines at the meeting of November 4. Christmas eve, December 24, an entertainment was given in the vestry, the shadow pantomime of Puss in Boots, and tableau from Mother Goose, by the C. C. C. At the opening meeting for 1892, January 9, with nine members present, it was voted to discontinue the C. C. C. Journal with the present n
Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing), Appendix. (search)
thee; the hour has come; Take we our seats, and let the dirge begin. Of Eugene Fuller, the second child, the following notice taken from the annual obituary collr, M. D., published by the Boston Daily Advertiser, gives some account:— Eugene Fuller, the eldest son of Hon. Timothy and Margaret (Crane) Fuller, was born in CaFuller, was born in Cambridge, Mass., May 14, 1815. After leaving college in 1834, he studied law, partly at the Dane Law School in Cambridge, and partly in the office of George Frederick one day out, June 21, 1859, his attendant being prostrated with seasickness, Mr. Fuller was left alone, and was not afterwards seen He must have been lost overboard.e who wait the summons home, Hoping to meet her when their work is done! Eugene Fuller. [Lines suggested by the recent death by drowning of Eugene Fuller Esq.,Eugene Fuller Esq., brother of Margaret, Countess d'ossoli.] I knew him not; mine eye had never gazed Upon his thoughtful brow: His name, so musical, I scarce had heard To recognize t
to the Senate for action that shall be at once wise and brave, and comport with the dignity and the rights of the representatives of States. Death of a fighting Chaplain. Rev. Arthur B. Fuller, Chaplain of a Massachusetts regiment, who was killed at Fredericksburg, was buried at Boston on Christmas eve. The Boston Journal says: There has been a singular fatality attached to the family of the lamented Chaplain Fuller. Three of the family have perished by untimely deaths. Eugene Fuller, one of the sons, was drowned on the voyage from New York to New Orleans in 1859, the same year that the mother died. Margaret Fuller, Countess of Cossoll, perished by shipwreck, on Fire Island, near New York, in 1850. She was returning, from Italy to her native land, from which she had long been absent. Her husband and child were lost with her. And now Arthur B. Fuller has been killed in battle. In every instance the surviving members of the family received the sad tidings by telegr