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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 8 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 V. E. De Jouy or search for V. E. De Jouy in all documents.

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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 6: (search)
Chapter 6: Paris. Von Raumer. Fauriel. Duke and Duchess e Broglie. Guizot. Miss Clarke. Coquerel. Jouy. Confalonieri. Count Mole Augustin Thierry. Lamartine. Count Circourt. Mignet. Cesare Balbo. Mad. De Pastoret. Louis Philippe and his family. Journal. Paris, September 18. He had reached Paris September 11.—I was at Bossange's book-shop and two or three other similar establishments to-day. They are less ample and less well supplied with classicaginally Bonaparte's, and which I knew under Barbier as the library of Louis XVIII. It is an uncommonly comfortable and well-arranged establishment; better than any of the sort I know of, except the Grand Duke's at Florence, and larger than that. Jouy, the author of the Hermite de la Chaussee d'antin, is the head of it, a hale, hearty, white-headed old gentleman of about sixty-five. Like everybody else, now, he talked about politics and the elections, and rejoiced at the success of the Ministr
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 7: (search)
onally, five-and-twenty of the principal salons, and they were all infected with the different shades of the political parties that now divide France; a state of things much worse for society, as well as for the practical administration of government, than if there were but two great divisions running through the whole. . . . . Now here are five different sets, and though it was possible to escape from them all, and go to the literary and philosophical salons of Lamartine, De Gerando, Jomard, Jouy, and some others, yet it is a chance if you would not, after all, even there, fall into the midst of. political disputes between some of those who, even on this neutral ground, could not help the ascendancy of the partisanship that governs them everywhere else. The Diplomacy—except at Lord Granville's, which was always flooded with English, and at General Cass's, which was nothing but stupid-had no open salons this winter . . . . . The effect of the whole of this is, that the society of Pa
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
47, 280, II. 146, 147, 148, 150, 151, 154, 4 Jersey, Countess of, I. 138, 269, 296, 410, 11.466. Jewett, C. C., II. 304 note, 308, 810, 314. Johnson, Samuel, I. 53, 55; The Club II. 476, 478; life of, 492. Johnstone, Judge, I. 381. Joinville, Prince and Princess, H. 882. Jones, Commodore, I. 373. Jones, Mr., II. 65. Jordan, Baron von, I. 461, 478. Jomard, E. F., II. 117, 125, 133, 14L Jouberton, Anna, 1.183, H. 88. Jouffroy, II. 133. Jourdain, Camille, 1.255. Jouy, V. E. de, II. 108, 141. Julius. Dr., II. 260; letter to, 250. Jusuf, II. 133, 134, 137. K Kahlden, Baroness, I. 489. Kaltenbaeck, II. 2, 8. Kane, Mr., I 376. Kastner, Professor, I. 76, 77. Kean, Edmund, I. 67, 127. Keating, Dr., Oliver, 1.10. Keiblinger, librarian of Molk, II. 23. Kemble, Stephen, I. 291, 292. Kempt, Sir, James, II. 176. Kenney, Mr., I. 406. Kent, Duchess of, I. 435, 437. Kent, James, Chancellor, I. 338-340, II. 200, 226. Kenyon, Edward, II. 1.