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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Charles Congdon, Tribune Essays: Leading Articles Contributing to the New York Tribune from 1857 to 1863. (ed. Horace Greeley). Search the whole document.
Found 49 total hits in 18 results.
Orleans, Ma. (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 52
Caesaraugusta (Spain) (search for this): chapter 52
Fair but Fierce.
in the name of Zenobia, Boadicea, Moll Flanders, Jean d'arc, and the Maid of Saragossa, we begin this article!
Now that Messrs. Mason and Slidell are given up, just, for all the world, like a pair of fugitive niggers, another vexatious question has arisen, viz: Did the lovely Miss Slidell, upon the deck of the Trent steamer, slap the face of the unfortunate Lieut Fairfax?
Commander Williams, that gallant tar, who suffered such agonies on the occasion, was the recipient of a dinner of the public variety on his arrival in England.
In his post-prandial speech, Commander Williams went at length into the above-mentioned question, and made one of those nice distinctions which would have been appreciated in a middle-age court of love and honor.
Some of the papers, said this briny Bayard, described her as having slapped Mr. Fairfax's face.
She did strike Mr. Fairfax-but she did not do it with the vulgarity of gesture which has been attributed to her. In her agon
England (United Kingdom) (search for this): chapter 52
Wilkes (search for this): chapter 52
Edward Cuttle (search for this): chapter 52
Bayard (search for this): chapter 52
Phillis (search for this): chapter 52
Zenobia (search for this): chapter 52
Fair but Fierce.
in the name of Zenobia, Boadicea, Moll Flanders, Jean d'arc, and the Maid of Saragossa, we begin this article!
Now that Messrs. Mason and Slidell are given up, just, for all the world, like a pair of fugitive niggers, another vexatious question has arisen, viz: Did the lovely Miss Slidell, upon the deck of the Trent steamer, slap the face of the unfortunate Lieut Fairfax?
Commander Williams, that gallant tar, who suffered such agonies on the occasion, was the recipient of a dinner of the public variety on his arrival in England.
In his post-prandial speech, Commander Williams went at length into the above-mentioned question, and made one of those nice distinctions which would have been appreciated in a middle-age court of love and honor.
Some of the papers, said this briny Bayard, described her as having slapped Mr. Fairfax's face.
She did strike Mr. Fairfax-but she did not do it with the vulgarity of gesture which has been attributed to her. In her agon
Slidell (search for this): chapter 52
Fairfax (search for this): chapter 52