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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 2 1 1 Browse Search
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 26. 1 1 Browse Search
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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 2, chapter 30 (search)
er, on any occasion, to give alms to a chance beggar or a petitioner who calls at your door. Howe wrote me from Ireland that he had departed from his rule, never to give under these circumstances, in view of the keen misery which was before him; but that he afterwards repented that he did not persevere even there in his stern rule. I shall come round to see you some evening, very soon. Meanwhile, believe me Ever very sincerely yours, Charles Sumner. To Lord Morpeth he wrote, April 1, 1844:— I have been pained to hear of the illness of Lord Carlisle. I trust that this note will find him again restored to health, with all your anxieties at rest. . . . I have been through the debate on Irish affairs. Peel shows great address, and seems to be many-sided. The argument and tone of the discussion are admirably chosen by him, but they are not illumined by a ray of genius or any felicity of expression; for even the peroration, though in higher ether than Peel usually ente
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 26., History of the Medford High School. (search)
iated him:— He kept the custom of the bygone days (Short shrift was his for childhood's naughtier ways!) And gave us all he had with purpose true, His zeal, his learning, and his muscle too; But when. self-spent, the sudden tempest past, What genial sunshine poured on us at last! Mr. Forbes resigned on account of ill-health and afterward accepted the mastership in a Charlestown grammar school. Mr. Isaac Ames (Dartmouth, 1839) took the position March 16, 1841, and held it till April 1, 1844. His absence of four weeks in 1841 was supplied by Mr. A. K. Hathaway, who afterwards became principal of the Centre Grammar School and still later the head of a successful private school on Ashland Street. Mr. Ames became a lawyer in Boston and was Judge of Probate for Suffolk County for nineteen years, till his death in 1877, at the age of fifty-seven years. Mr. M. T. Gardner resigned his mastership in the East Grammar School, April 14, 1844, to take that of the High School til