ugitive slave, 144; his ransom secured by Mrs. Child, 145, 189.
Slaves, cruelties to, 126-132.
Smith, Gerrit, makes an anti-slavery speech in Congress, 70; his regard for Mrs. Child, 166.
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 213.
Somerville, Mary, Life of, 222.
Spanish Gypsy, The, 197.
Sphinx, the Egyptian, 71.
Spirit-photography, 234.
Sprague, Charles, 235.
Standard, the National Anti-slavery, edited by Mrs. Child, XIII., 43; letter to, 163.
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, and Uncle Tom's Cabin, 69.
Suffrage for women, appeal to Mr. Sumner in behalf of, 207.
Sumner, Charles, speaks in Congress against Fugitive Slave Law, 69; influenced by Mrs. Child's Appeal, 77; the assault on, 78; calls on Mrs. Child, 88S; his position on the Mason and Slidell case, 163; Milmore's bust of, 187; letters to, 207.
Swedenborg and the New Church, 20(2.
Swedenborg's key of correspondences 75.
T.
Taine's (H. A.) papers on art 200.
Tappan, Arthur, thre
, and Church of the future, 184.
Colored people of Boston commemorate John Brown's death, 137.
Constantine, the Emperor, his conversion to Christianity, 187.
Constitution, U. S., passage of 13th Amendment to, 188.
Contrabands, anecdotes of the, 158: donations for, 165.
Conway, Martin F., of Kansas, 168.
Correggio's Diana, Toschi's engraving of, 70.
Countess of Rudolstaat, The, a novel, 62.
Crawford, Mr., of London, 12.
Cumaean Sibyl, by Domenichino, 57.
Curtis, George William, 79: oration of, 85 ; conducts Sunday services, 233; letter on caucus dictation, 252.
D.
Davis, Jeff., 152.
De Stael, Madame, 247.
Devens, Charles, redeems Thomas Sims from slavery, 189.
Domenichino's Cumaean Sibyl, 57.
Douglass, Frederick, 259.
Draft riots of 1863 in New York, 178.
Dresel, Mrs., Anna Loring, letter to, 191.
Dresser, Amos, publicly flogged at Nashville, Tenn., 184.
Dwight, John S., 29, 37, 50.
E.
Eclectic review, The, VIII.
Education
, 190; Ichabod, 259.
Weiss's (Rev. John) biography of Theodore Parker.
179.
Weld, Angelina Grimke, memorial of, 258.
Weld, Theodore D., letter to, 258.
Westminster Review, The, 202.
White, Maria, 50.
Whitney, Miss, Anne, letters to, 247, 256; her statue of Samuel Adams, 257.
Whittier, John G., biographical sketch of Mrs. Child, v.-xxv., 97; lines to Mrs. Child, on Ellis Gray Loring, 102; annoyed by curiosity-seekers, 142; letters to, 157, 159, 210, 215, 228, 235, 236; on the death of S. J. May, 212; his tribute to Colonel Shaw, 240; lines to Mrs. Child after her death, 269.
Wightman, James M., 149.
Wild, Judge, 20.
Willis, N. P., 58.
Wilson, Henry, 88.
Wise, Gov. Henry A., letter of Mrs. Child to, 103; his reply, 105; Mrs. Child's rejoinder to, 107; speech of, in Congress in 1842, 109.
Wright, Elizur, Jr., barricades his door against pro-slavery violence, 16.
Woman Question, the, 208, 243-245.
Woman suffrage, Mrs. Child:s letter to Mr. Sumner on, 207.
book, 201.
Andrews, William P., sonnet to Mrs. Child, XXIII.
An English governess at the Siame that Class of Americans called Africans, by Mrs. Child, IX., 48, 195.
Armstrong, General, and HaEdwin, 257.
Aspirations of the world, by Mrs, Child, XIX., 246.
Aurora Leigh, by Mrs. Browning,ooks, Governor, v.
Brown, John, letter of Mrs. Child to, 118; his reply, 119; martyrdom of, 137. Leigh, 87.
Bryant, William C., writes to Mrs. Child, 186.
Buckle's History of civilization, 9scusses the anti-slavery movement with Mrs.
Child, 24; letters of, to Mrs. Child, 44, 45; Mrs. CMrs. Child, 44, 45; Mrs. Child's reminiscences of, 48; influenced by Mrs. Child's Appeal, 77; her imagination of him in the spMrs. Child's Appeal, 77; her imagination of him in the spiritual world, 144.
Channing, William H., 188, 257.
Chicago Tribune has biographical sketch of MMrs. Child, 201.
Chapman, Maria Weston, 19, 147.
Child, letter to a, 36.
Child, David Lee, bioChild, letter to a, 36.
Child, David Lee, biographical sketch of, VIII.; first meet Miss Francis, 8; his marriage, 10: letters to, from his wife[5 more...]
7.
Aspirations of the world, by Mrs, Child, XIX., 246.
Aurora Leigh, by Mrs. Browning, 87, 197.
Autobiography of a female slave, 90, 132.
B.
Banneker, Benjamin, 184.
Beecher, Henry Ward, magnetic power of, 193; defends the Chinese, 251.
Beethoven's music contrasted with Mendelssohn's, 76.
Benson, Edmund, 89.
Berrien, John McP., U. S. Senator, anecdote of, 179.
Bettine and Goethe, 50, 51.
Bible, anti-slavery texts from, 123-125.
Bishop, Madame Anna, 140.
Bleby, Rev., Henry, 134.
Boston Athenaeum, privileges of, given to, and withdrawn from, Mrs. Child, 195, 264.
Boutwell, George S , speech of, 168.
Bremer, Fredrika, meets Mrs. Child, 65; relates anecdote of Jenny Lind, 66; her estimation of Lowell and Emerson, 66.
Brisbane, Mr., 51.
Broken Lights, by Miss Cobbe, 184.
Brooks, Governor, v.
Brown, John, letter of Mrs. Child to, 118; his reply, 119; martyrdom of, 137.
Browning's (Mrs.) Aurora Leigh, 87.
Bryant, William C., writes to M
150; anecdote of, 173.
R.
Randolph, John, on the insecurity of slave-holders, 133.
Raphael and Michael Angelo, 76.
Rejected Stone, The, by M. D. Conway, 160.
Renan's Life of Jesus, 245.
Richmond Enquirer, the, on the subserviency of the North, 73.
Ripley, George, 22.
Romance of the Republic, A, by Mrs. Child, XIX.
Rothschilds, the, compel the Emperor of Austria to repeal oppressive laws against the Jews, 141.
Russell, Mrs. S. S., letters to, 246, 262.
S.
Sand, George, 205.
Sargent, Miss, Henrietta, letters to, 24, 31, 54, 153, 156, 168, 206.
Savage, Rev. Minot J., 245.
Scudder, Miss, Eliza, letters to, 174, 180, 182, 183, 196; her verses to Mrs. Child, 175.
Sears, Rev. E. H., 92.
Searle, Miss, Lucy, letters to, 152, 155, 166, 167, 170.
Seminole war, origin of the, 218.
Sewall, Samuel E., letters to, 143, 232; Mrs. Child visits, 156.
Sewall, Mrs. S. E., letters to, 197,234, 254, 257.
Sex in education, by Dr. E. H Clarke, 229.
k, 223.
Progress of Religious Ideas, The, by Mrs. Child, XII., 65, 77, 265.
Progressive friends, meeting of the, 81.
Prohibitory law, aim and effect of the, 222.
Protestant reformation, the, helped on by base agents, 187.
Protestant reformation in England, the, 32.
Q.
Quincy, Edmund, presides at an anti-slavery meeting, 150; anecdote of, 173.
R.
Randolph, John, on the insecurity of slave-holders, 133.
Raphael and Michael Angelo, 76.
Rejected Stone, The, by M. D. Conway, 160.
Renan's Life of Jesus, 245.
Richmond Enquirer, the, on the subserviency of the North, 73.
Ripley, George, 22.
Romance of the Republic, A, by Mrs. Child, XIX.
Rothschilds, the, compel the Emperor of Austria to repeal oppressive laws against the Jews, 141.
Russell, Mrs. S. S., letters to, 246, 262.
S.
Sand, George, 205.
Sargent, Miss, Henrietta, letters to, 24, 31, 54, 153, 156, 168, 206.
Savage, Rev. Minot J., 245.
Scudder, Miss, Eliza, letters to, 174, 1
er reminiscences of George Thompson, 248; her views on the Chinese question, 251; speculations on a future life, 252; on the death of Mr. Garrison, 2,54, 255; reads The light of Asia, 257; reminiscences of anti-slavery days, 258; her interest in Garfield's election, 260; her last days, 261; reminiscences of, XXI. ; Mr. Phillips's remarks at her funeral, 263; Whittier's poem to her memory, 269.
Chinese in America, agitation against the, 251.
Choate, Rufus, employed to defend the slave childf, 22, 28.
Frothingham, Rev. O. B., 232.
Frugal Housewife, The, VII.
Fugitive slaves, advertisements of, 128, 129; returned by U. S. troops, 149,150,
Furness, Rev. William It., 81.
Future life, speculations on the, 252
G.
Garfield, James A., 260.
Garrison, William Lloyd, interests Mr. and Mrs. Child in the slavery question, VIII, 23; favors the dissolution of the Anti-Slavery Society, 190; his first interview with Mrs. Child, 195; mobbed in Boston streets, 235; letter to J. F