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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: April 7, 1864., [Electronic resource].

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Kensal Green (search for this): article 8
y third year — so young a man that the mother who blessed him in his first sleep blessed him in his last. Twenty years before he had written, after being in a white squall-- "And when its force expended, The harmless storm was ended, And, as the sunrise splendid Came blushing o'er the sea; I thought, as day was breaking, My little girls were waking, And smiling, and making, A prayer at home for me." Those little girls had grown to be women when the mournful day broke that saw their father lying dead. In those twenty years of companionship with him they had learned much from him, and one has a literary course before her worthy of her famous name. On the bright wintry day, the last but one of the old year, he was said in his grave at Kensal Green, there to mingle the dust which the mortal part of him had returned, with that of a third child, lost in her infancy, years ago. The heads of a great concourse of his fellow-workers in the arts were bowed around the tomb.
Eton (Missouri, United States) (search for this): article 8
nd make a speech, and tell them who he was, for he doubted whether more than two of the electors had ever heard of him, and he thought there might be as many as six or eight who had heard of me." He introduced the lecture just mentioned with a reference to his late electioneering failure, which was full of good sense, good spirits, and good humor. He had a particular delight in boys and an excellent way with them. I remember his once asking me with fantastic gravity, when he had been at Eton, where my oldest boy then was, whether I felt as he did in regard of never seeing a boy with out wanting instantly to give him a sovereign. I thought of this when I looked down into his grave, after he was laid there, for I looked down into it over the shoulder of a boy to whom he had been kind. These are slight remembrances; but it is to little familiar things, suggestive of the voice, look, manner never, never more to be encountered on this earth, that the mind first turns in a bereav
A Scrap from history. --We find the following in the Albany (N. Y.) Argus: "Just after Pope's rout in front of Washington, the high officers of the Government were seized with such a terrible panic that they gave up all hope of saving the capital. In the wild despair of the moment, orders were actually given to blow up and destroy the Washington Arsenal and the millions upon millions of dollars' worth of war material to prevent them from falling into the hands of the rebels." The Rochester Daily Union, which publishes the above, claims to have such authority for the statement as to preclude all doubts of its correctness, and to warrant the presumption that it will not be disputed by the only parties who are competent to give testimony on the subject — to wit, the high officials of the Government. We have no doubt of its truth or that it could be established by evidence. If the committees of Congress had not proved to be combinations for the suppressant of truth, the
A Scrap from history. --We find the following in the Albany (N. Y.) Argus: "Just after Pope's rout in front of Washington, the high officers of the Government were seized with such a terrible panic that they gave up all hope of saving the capital. In the wild despair of the moment, orders were actually given to blow up and destroy the Washington Arsenal and the millions upon millions of dollars' worth of war material to prevent them from falling into the hands of the rebels." The Rochester Daily Union, which publishes the above, claims to have such authority for the statement as to preclude all doubts of its correctness, and to warrant the presumption that it will not be disputed by the only parties who are competent to give testimony on the subject — to wit, the high officials of the Government. We have no doubt of its truth or that it could be established by evidence. If the committees of Congress had not proved to be combinations for the suppressant of truth, the
Albany (New York, United States) (search for this): article 9
A Scrap from history. --We find the following in the Albany (N. Y.) Argus: "Just after Pope's rout in front of Washington, the high officers of the Government were seized with such a terrible panic that they gave up all hope of saving the capital. In the wild despair of the moment, orders were actually given to blow up and destroy the Washington Arsenal and the millions upon millions of dollars' worth of war material to prevent them from falling into the hands of the rebels." The Rochester Daily Union, which publishes the above, claims to have such authority for the statement as to preclude all doubts of its correctness, and to warrant the presumption that it will not be disputed by the only parties who are competent to give testimony on the subject — to wit, the high officials of the Government. We have no doubt of its truth or that it could be established by evidence. If the committees of Congress had not proved to be combinations for the suppressant of truth, the
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