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Mary Thacher Higginson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson: the story of his life, XVI: the crowning years (search)
yed through. I found reading to be far easier than speaking without notes (as I have done so long) and almost as effective; it seemed like beginning a new career and my voice served me well. Of the third course, in 1905, he wrote:— Feb. 28. First Lowell lecture (Wordsworth-shire). A great success—an unexpectedly fine voice. March 7. Second Lowell lecture. Carlyle, Ruskin, Froude, Hunt. March 28. Fifth Lowell lecture. Dickens, Thackeray and reading Tennyson's poems. April 4. Last Lowell lecture. Considered very successful and was pronounced by John Lowell the best he ever heard in that hall. In May, 1903, he spoke at the Concord Emerson celebration:— Meeting good and my address successful. After it, Senator Hoar turned to me and said, grasping my hand, What I have to say is pewter and tinsel compared to that. His position as chairman of the Harvard Visiting Committee on English Literature he resigned in 1903, having served on this and other Vi<
Mary Thacher Higginson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson: the story of his life, Bibliography (search)
Sisto. [Poem.] (In the Present, Dec. 15.) Def. VI. Same. (In Our Book. [A Salem Fair publication.] Sept., 1844.) Same. (In Longfellow. Estray. 1846.) 1845 (Cambridge) Lay of the Humble. [Poem.] (In New York Tribune, Oct. I.) Tyrtaeus. [Poem.] (In Harbinger, Nov. I.) Same. (In Liberator, Nov. 7.) Articles. (In Christian World, Jan., Feb.) Signed H. 1846 (Cambridge) Four hymns. (In Longfellow and Johnson. Book of Hymns.) The Railroad. [Poem.] (In Harbinger, April 4.) Holiness unto the Lord. [Sonnet.] (In Harbinger, June 20.) Hymn of Humanity. (In Harbinger, June 27.) Hebe. [Poem.] (In Harbinger, July 4.) A Word of Hope. [Poem.] (In National Anti-Slavery Standard, Sept. 3.) Sonnet to William Lloyd Garrison. (In Liberty Bell.) (Tr.) A Cradle Song, from the German of Ruckert. (In Harbinger, July 4.) Same, entitled Nature's Cradle Song. Def. VI. Two articles on licentiousness. (In Chronotype.) 1847 (Cambridge—Newburyport) <