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Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing) 16 0 Browse Search
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Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing), V. Conversations in Boston. (search)
ion is for purposes of display. It is to supply this defect, Miss Fuller said, that these conversations have been planned. She was not comes from making a simple and earnest effort for expression. Miss Fuller had proposed the Grecian Mythology as the subject of the first cimes, by Christian ladies, that heathen Greeks should be envied,—Miss Fuller declared, that she had no desire to go back, and believed we hav begin to learn. The reporter closes her account by saying:— Miss Fuller's thoughts were much illustrated, and all was said with the most to her friend in New Haven:— Christmas made a holiday for Miss Fuller's class, but it met on Saturday, at noon. As I sat there, my heanctive. An episode to dancing, which the conversation took, led Miss Fuller to give the thought that lies at the bottom of different dances.teal some of my time. Conversations on the fine arts. Miss Fuller's fifth conversation was pretty much a monologue of her own. The<
Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing), Appendix. (search)
Appendix. A. Thomas Fuller and his descendants. [From the New England Historical and Genealogical Register for October, 1859.] In 1638 Thomas Fuller came over from England to America, upon a tour of observation, intending, after he should have gratified his curiosity by a survey of the wilderness world, to return. While in Massachusetts, he listened to the preaching of Rev. Thomas Shepard, of Cambridge, who was then in the midst of a splendid career of religious eloquence and effort, the echo of which, after the lapse of two centuries, has scarcely died away. Through his influence, Mr. Fuller was led to take such an interest in the religion of the Puritan school, that the land of liturgies and religious formulas, which he had left behind, became less attractive to him than the forest aisles of America, where God might be freely worshipped. He has himself left on record a metrical statement of the change in his views which induced him to resolve to make his home in Massac