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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 12 0 Browse Search
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 2 8 0 Browse Search
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3 6 2 Browse Search
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 1 2 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard). You can also browse the collection for Edward Ellice or search for Edward Ellice in all documents.

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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 8: (search)
e and pleasant person, talking English almost perfectly well,—and Murray, formerly secretary to Lord Lyndhurst, and now the Secretary of the great Ecclesiastical Commission, —a very good scholar and a very thorough Tory, who talks with some brilliancy and effect. In the evening I had an engagement to go to Lord Holland's, who is now passing a few days at his luxurious establishment in South Street. I found there Lord Albemarle, Pozzo di Borgo, Lord Melbourne, the Sardinian Minister, Young Ellice and his beautiful. highbred wife, Allen, and some others. Pozzo di Borgo was brilliant, and Lady Holland disagreeable. Lord Holland talked about Prescott's Ferdinand and Isabella, as did John Allen, and gave it high praise; Allen pronouncing the chapters on the Constitutions of Castile and Arragon—particularly the last—to be better than the corresponding discussions in Hallam's Middle Ages. This I regard as decisive. No man alive is better authority on such a point than Allen, Southey
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 9: (search)
ily agreeable, and made us stay unreasonably late. We then made some visits P. P. C., and on coming home received many, which we were sorry to receive, because they were intimations that our expected departure would hardly permit us to see these kind friends again . . . . . As soon as they were gone I hurried out to dine at Holland House. It was a larger party than is quite common at that very agreeable round table . . . . . We dined, of course, in the grand Gilt Room, and had at table Mr. Ellice, one of Lord Melbourne's first cabinet, and brother-in-law of Lord Grey; Lady Cowper and her daughter, Lady Fanny,—mater pulchra, filia pulchrior; Lord John Russell, the Atlas of this unhappy administration; . . . . . Lord and Lady Morley; Stanley, of the Treasury; Gayangos,—the Spaniard I was desirous to see, because he is to review Prescott's book; and Sir Francis Head . . . . . It was certainly as agreeable as a party well could be. I took pains to get between Head and Gayangos at dinn
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 18: (search)
o has written a book about the South of France, and collects a certain portion of fashionable and literary society at her house to hear music and eat ices, drink tea, and talk, from four to six or seven. . . . . Harness was there, Harriet Hosmer, Sir Gardiner Wilkinson, Faust Hayward, Barlow, Lady Becher, etc. But I went late and came away early. . . . . My dinner was at Lord Wensleydale's, where we had Murchison, Lord Caernarvon, the Bishop of London,—very agreeable,—the Laboucheres, Edward Ellice, Lord Brougham, Lady Ebrington, etc. I talked before dinner with Lord Brougham, who seems to grow old as fast as anybody I meet, and who is said to have shown symptoms of age in a speech to-day. . . . . It was so pleasant that I forgot myself and stayed too late, so that I did not arrive at Senior's, to a musical party, till considerably after eleven o'clock. There I talked a long time with Lord Hatherton, who has just had a day or two from Tocqueville, and who—as well as Lady Hathert<
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
Eliot, Samuel, founder of Greek Professorship at Harvard College, I. 385 and note. Eliot, Samuel, II. 420. Ellesmere, Earl and Countess of, II. 822. Ellice, Colonel, I. 279. Ellice, Edward, II. 371. Ellice, Mr., II. 181. Ellice, Young, II. 149. Elliot, Author of Corn Law Rhymes, I. 441. Elmsley, Peter, I. 58 Ellice, Edward, II. 371. Ellice, Mr., II. 181. Ellice, Young, II. 149. Elliot, Author of Corn Law Rhymes, I. 441. Elmsley, Peter, I. 58 and note. Elphinstone, Right Hon. Mount-Stuart, II. 68, 70, 72, 154. Elwin, Rev. W., II. 865, 867, 369. Emmet, Thomas Addis, I. 39, 40, 41 note. Empson, William, II. 152, 154, 155. Encke, J. F., II. 332. England, visits, I. 49-68, 251, 268-272, 28-298, 404-449, II. 144-159, 166-183, 311, 317, 322-327, 357-400. Ellice, Mr., II. 181. Ellice, Young, II. 149. Elliot, Author of Corn Law Rhymes, I. 441. Elmsley, Peter, I. 58 and note. Elphinstone, Right Hon. Mount-Stuart, II. 68, 70, 72, 154. Elwin, Rev. W., II. 865, 867, 369. Emmet, Thomas Addis, I. 39, 40, 41 note. Empson, William, II. 152, 154, 155. Encke, J. F., II. 332. England, visits, I. 49-68, 251, 268-272, 28-298, 404-449, II. 144-159, 166-183, 311, 317, 322-327, 357-400. Eppes, Mr., I. 31. Ercolani, Prince, II. 88. Ersch, Professor, I. 111, 112 Erving, George W., I. 186, 187, 188, 212. Escoiquiz, Don Juan, I. 219. Escorial, I. 195, 197, 214-216. Eskeles, Baron, II. 10. Essex Street, Boston, G. T.'s first home in, I. 3 note, 4. Europe, visits, I. 49-299, 402-511, II. 1-183, 821-400.