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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: April 11, 1864., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe, Chapter 15: the third trip to Europe, 1859. (search)
ot be for long. Hungary is only waiting, and even in the ashes of Poland there are flickering sparks. Is it the beginning of the restitution of all things? Here in Rome there are fewer English than usual, and more empty houses. There is a new story every morning, and nobody to cut off the head of the Scheherazade. Yesterday the Pope was going to Venice directly, and, the day before, fixed the hour for Victor Emmanuel's coming, and the day before that brought a letter from Cavour to Antonelli about sweeping the streets clean for the feet of the king. The poor Romans live on these stories, while the Holy Father and king of Naples meet holding one another's hands, and cannot speak for sobs. The little queen, however, is a heroine in her way and from her point of view, and when she drives about in a common fiacre, looking very pretty under her only crown left of golden hair, one must feel sorry that she was not born and married nearer to holy ground. My husband prays you to rem
that a satisfactory arrangement has been made with the National Government. Negroes are not to be enlisted in the State of Kentucky, provided that the State shall furnish fifteen thousand troops. Governor Bramlette promises that the troops shall be furnished. The United States Minister at Rome, Gen'l King, writes that the Americans in Rome have made liberal contributions to the Metropolitan Fair for the Sanitary commission about to be held in New York, and that the Pope and cardinal Antonelli have joined in the contributions. Dispatches from Cincinnati state that General Buell is to command the Department of the Ohio, in place of Gen. Schofield, and that Major Generals Negley, McCook, Crittenden, Newton, and Sykes, together with ten Brigadiers, have been ordered to report to General Sherman. By order of Gov. Morton the entire Indiana Legion is ordered to hold itself in readiness to take the field at any moment to repel invasion. A grand review of the whole legion, nu