hide
Named Entity Searches
hide
Sorting
You can sort these results in two ways:
- By entity
- Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
- By position (current method)
- As the entities appear in the document.
You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.
hide
Most Frequent Entities
The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.
Entity | Max. Freq | Min. Freq | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Charles Sumner | 1,048 | 4 | Browse | Search |
George S. Hillard | 300 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Henry W. Longfellow | 214 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Fletcher Webster | 210 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Thomas Crawford | 176 | 4 | Browse | Search |
United States (United States) | 174 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Francis Lieber | 164 | 20 | Browse | Search |
William W. Story | 160 | 0 | Browse | Search |
Samuel G. Howe | 145 | 11 | Browse | Search |
William H. Prescott | 144 | 0 | Browse | Search |
View all entities in this document... |
Browsing named entities in a specific section of Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 2. Search the whole document.
Found 16 total hits in 12 results.
Ilva (Italy) (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
Department de Ville de Paris (France) (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
P. S. Felton (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
John G. Palfrey (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
William H. Gardiner (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
William H. Prescott (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
George S. Hillard (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
George Ticknor (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
Henry W. Longfellow (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle
Jared Sparks (search for this): chapter 23
April 29.
Your letter to Mary, with its pleasant sketch of Elba, has come . . . . Sparks has just returned, laden with the fruits of his researches in the public archives of London and Paris.
I dined in company with him yesterday at Prescott's. There were Ticknor, William H. Gardiner, Samuel A. Eliot, Palfrey, Longfellow, Felton, and Hillard,—a goodly fellowship.
The conversation was agreeable.
I envy you six months in Germany.
I was not there long enough to learn the language as I wished.
Another six months would make me master of it and of its literature . . . .
Ever affectionately yours, Charle