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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Letters and Journals of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Chapter 7: Cambridge in later life (search)
him, and he was so simple, and unconcerned about that, it made it seem the only fit way for a man to speak — looking round occasionally at the prompter and saying quietly, What next? Some of the best things were inserted offhand and were not in the printed notes; e.g., his saying, Remember that this is our university; it was John Harvard's, but now it is what we make it. There was a poetic and ideal atmosphere about it which I feel keenly and I was very proud of being Henry's cousin. Dublin, N. H., June 20, 1890 We . . . are right among the pine trees with the pretty lake in sight and mountains farther off .... Then close behind us are the children of Thayer, the New York artist, wild, very picturesque little creatures . ... There is a perpetual Pumpelly circus [children of Raphael Pumpelly]. .. . They keep seven ponies and are always riding about the country, bare-backed and astride, boys and girls alike. One boy, Raphael, ... is always galloping about with long curls over hi
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Letters and Journals of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Index. (search)
Worcester for, 154, 155; Bull Run, 156; Manassas, 157; Fort Donelson, 165, 166; Union sentiment at South, 166; anxiety, 166; effects of, 322, 323. Clarke, James Freeman, 162. Clemens, Samuel L., 234, 235; at home of, 270; fame of, 300; at Dublin, N. H., 330. Cleveland, Grover, political campaign, 324, 325. Colfax, Schuyler, Speaker, 250, 253. Collyer, Robert, 329. Conway, Moncure D., 279, 280, 286, 287. Cox, Hannah, 76. Crosby, Prof., Alpheus, 40, 41. Curson, Mrs., 6. Curtis, Geol, 316-18; in English Lake region, 319, 320; returns to Cambridge to live, 321; effects of Civil War, 322, 323; and Matthew Arnold, 323, 324; and Cleveland campaign, 324, 325; at home of ancestors, 326, 327; and Henry Higginson, 327, 328; at Dublin, N. H., 328-30; and Stedman, 333-36; his Monarch of Dreams, 335, 336; account of a New Hampshire summer, 336-45; on Southern educational trip, 345, 346; musings of, 347-51; on literary fame, 351. Higginson sisters, letters to, 151, 221 ff., 225 f