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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 14 0 Browse Search
HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF MEDFORD, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, FROM ITS FIRST SETTLEMENT, IN 1630, TO THE PRESENT TIME, 1855. (ed. Charles Brooks) 2 0 Browse Search
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onT. Magoun'sT. MagounT. Magoun & SonMedford509 212 ShipColchisS. Lapham'sS. LaphamS. Lapham 449 213 ShipBombaySprague & James'sSprague & JamesR. HooperBoston482 214 BrigTheodoreSprague & James'sSprague & JamesAugustus NealSalem156 215 ShipAdrianSprague & James'sSprague & JamesWilliam EagerBoston588 216 ShipCarolinaGeorge Fuller'sGeorge FullerA. C. LombardBoston396 217 ShipClaudiusT. Magoun'sP. & J. O. CurtisJohn Brown & Co.Boston527 218 ShipParthenonT. Magoun'sP. & J. O. CurtisS. & F. C. GrayBoston550 219 ShipEben PrebleT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellHenry OxnardBoston530 220 BrigAlfred TylerT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellHenry OxnordBoston240 221 BrigHollanderT. Magoun'sF. Waterman & H. EwellBates & Co.Boston270 222 BarkFrederick WarrenJ. Stetson'sJ. StetsonNathaniel GoddardBoston383 223 ShipRajahJ. Stetson'sJ. StetsonBenjamin Rich & SonBoston555 2241837ShipDalmatia Repaired, at an expense equal to the value of one hundred tons.Sprague & James'sSprague & Jam
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 10: (search)
is quaintly called the Rebellion of the Moors,—say 1570,—and of his finding in the Vermeja the bones of those that perished with Alonso; a passage you will enjoy the more if you will compare it with Tacitus' account of the finding, by Germanicus, of the bones of Varus' lost legion, which the old Spaniard has so exquisitely used, and stolen, as to make his very theft a merit and a grace. Do read it. It is in the fourth book of the proud old courtier, and fully confirms the ballad. . . . . Gray, Prescott, and the rest of tutta quella schiera,—as you call it, and you might have added benedetta,—are well. We dined together yesterday, and wanted you cinquieme, Sparks being the fourth. . . . . We are all well in my house, and enjoy a quiet winter and many most agreeable evenings. I am teaching five or six very nice girls, of sixteen to nineteen, who belong to my family, to understand and love Milton, and it is a great pleasure to find how they take to it. Yours always, G. T. T
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 11: (search)
when we came here, or rather to the other side of the river; Miss Wadsworth and Gray joining our party, and Sam Guild having preceded us by a couple of days, after h our usual quietness; seeing a good many people at home, and few anywhere else. Gray's pamphlet Prison Discipline in America, by F. C. Gray. Boston, 1847.—of whichwell received, or produce so considerable an effect. Mr. Norton ended a note to Gray by saying, One lays down your pamphlet without feeling the least curiosity aboud truly critical mode of proceeding of the author inspires much confidence. Mr. Gray's pamphlet on Prison Discipline, of which mention has already been made. Ive me about the question of prison reform are very interesting. I am sorry that Gray's book is so little known in Europe. I will endeavor to render it more public.ad Mrs. Norton and some of her children staying with us, and expect them again. Gray, too, has been here, the Everetts, Prescotts, and so on. We have not been alone