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Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877, with a genealogical register 2 2 Browse Search
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 1 1 Browse Search
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y William, and Sarah, were all bap. 18 July 1824. 35. Thomas, s. of Joseph (22), m. Elizabeth Rand 8 Ap. 1762, and had Sarah, b. 16 Jan. 1763; Joseph, b. 11 Sept. 1766. Thomas the f. resided in Chs., was a chaise maker, and d. 7 Ap. 1773, a. about 33; his w. Elizabeth d. 1815, at a good old age. 36. Joseph, s. of Thomas (35), m. Comfort Quiner 11 Ap. 1794, and had Eliza, b. 14 Sept. 1794, d. 7 Dec. 1795; Eliza, b. 12 Feb. 1796, m. Barnabas Edmands of Charlestown 8 Aug. 1824, and d. 5 June 1852; Joseph, b. 12 Dec. 1797, a merchant in Fredericksburg, Va., m. Narcissa Perry, and d. 22 July 1831; Thomas, b. 1 Jan. 1800, a clergyman in Cambridge, and Pres. of Camb. Bank, and of the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad, Editor of the Trumpet, and author of several valuable books, m. Lovice Corbett of Milford 17 Sept. 1821, res. in Cambridgeport, and d. 21 Mar. 1861; Sarah Rand, b. 18 Mar. 1802, m. John Ferguson 1818, and was bur. 10 Aug. 1833; Benjamin Bruce, b. 5 Nov. 1805, a merch
y William, and Sarah, were all bap. 18 July 1824. 35. Thomas, s. of Joseph (22), m. Elizabeth Rand 8 Ap. 1762, and had Sarah, b. 16 Jan. 1763; Joseph, b. 11 Sept. 1766. Thomas the f. resided in Chs., was a chaise maker, and d. 7 Ap. 1773, a. about 33; his w. Elizabeth d. 1815, at a good old age. 36. Joseph, s. of Thomas (35), m. Comfort Quiner 11 Ap. 1794, and had Eliza, b. 14 Sept. 1794, d. 7 Dec. 1795; Eliza, b. 12 Feb. 1796, m. Barnabas Edmands of Charlestown 8 Aug. 1824, and d. 5 June 1852; Joseph, b. 12 Dec. 1797, a merchant in Fredericksburg, Va., m. Narcissa Perry, and d. 22 July 1831; Thomas, b. 1 Jan. 1800, a clergyman in Cambridge, and Pres. of Camb. Bank, and of the Vermont and Massachusetts Railroad, Editor of the Trumpet, and author of several valuable books, m. Lovice Corbett of Milford 17 Sept. 1821, res. in Cambridgeport, and d. 21 Mar. 1861; Sarah Rand, b. 18 Mar. 1802, m. John Ferguson 1818, and was bur. 10 Aug. 1833; Benjamin Bruce, b. 5 Nov. 1805, a merch
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 13: (search)
d soon see the German volumes, in which my name will have the honor of being associated with yours. Very faithfully your friend and servant, Geo. Ticknor. To Sir Edmund Head. Boston, June 14, 1852. my dear Sir Edmund,—I begin with business, for I observe that you are very accurate in such matters, and I mean to be, though I fail sometimes . . . . Thank you for the reference to the passage copied by Southey, from Zabaleta, about las ambas silas. Sir E. Head to Mr. Ticknor, June 5, 1852: Have you got the first volume of Southey's Commonplace book ? If so, you will see, at page 62, a passage illustrating the use of the phrase las dos sillas. It appears there to mean the seat of war and the seat of peace; of the manage and the road. It seems, there, to be used in its primitive and literal sense, though I do not quite make out what are the two particular sills referred to. As a proverbial expression, sometimes ambas sillas, referring to the silla a la quieta and the albard