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Lydia Maria Child, Isaac T. Hopper: a true life 4 0 Browse Search
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Lydia Maria Child, Isaac T. Hopper: a true life, The two young offenders. (search)
beautiful countenance lose its brightness in my memory. Dear old friend! We cannot emulate your ceaseless good works; but we can follow, and we can love and remember. Mrs. Mary E. Stearns, of Medford, Massachusetts, wrote as follows to Rosalie Hopper: The Telegraph has announced that the precious life you were all so anxiously watching has passed on, and that mysterious change we call death has taken it from your midst forever. It is such a beautiful day! The air is so soft, the grass senly than myself. James H. Titus, of New-York, thus expresses himself in a letter to James S. Gibbons: I have ever considered it one of the happiest and most fortunate events of my life, to have had the privilege of an acquaintance with Friend Hopper. I shall always recur to his memory with pleasure, and I trust with that moral advantage, which the recollection of his Christian virtues is so eminently calculated to produce. How insignificant the reputation of riches, how unsatisfactory the