et of the Mind; Moral Triangulation, or the Third Party; Duality of Character; The Fact Accomplished.
My audience consisted largely of my society friends, but was by no means limited to them.
The elder Agassiz, Dr. Lothrop, E. P Whipple, James Freeman Clarke, and William R. Alger attended all my readings.
After the first one, Mr. Clarke said to me, You have touched too many chords.
After hearing my thesis on Duality of Character, he took my hand in his, and said, Oh!
you sweet soul!
Mr. Mr. Clarke said to me, You have touched too many chords.
After hearing my thesis on Duality of Character, he took my hand in his, and said, Oh!
you sweet soul!
Mr. Emerson was not among my hearers, but expressed some interest in my undertaking, and especially in my lecture on The Third Party.
Meeting me one day, he said, You have in this a mathematical idea.
This was in my opinion the most important lecture of my course.
It really treated of a third element in all twofold relations, —between married people, the bond to which both alike owed allegiance; between States, the compact which originally bound them together.
The civil war was then in its firs
Mrs. Howe's views on, 207, 208; attitude of the Boston Radical Club towards, 286.
Civil War, the, 257, 258, 265; condition of Washington during, 270.
Clarke, James Freeman, his meetings at Williams Hall, 245; goes abroad, 246; at Indiana Place Chapel, 247; his marriage, 249; always supported by Gov. Andrew, 261; goes to Washi tone of that organization, 286; his tribute to Margaret Fuller, 301; attends Mrs. Howe's parlor lectures, 306; in the woman suffrage movement, 375, 382.
Clarke, Mrs. J. F., her character, 250.
Clarke, Sarah, 202; at the coronation of King Umberto at Rome, 424.
Clarke, William, 202.
Claudius, Matthias, works of, 59; his ut the Cuban trip, 236; writes for the New York Tribune, 236, 237; requested by Booth to write a play, 237; disappointed at its nonappearance, 240; attends James Freeman Clarke's meetings, 245; helps Dr. Howe edit The Commonwealth, 253; sees John Brown, 254; goes on some trips with Gov. and Mrs. Andrew, 266; visits Washington in 1