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ase took me in his carriage to his house, where his daughter had a party for Teresa Carreño. Here I was introduced to Lord Lyons, British minister, and to Judge Harris.
Spoke with Bertinatti, the Italian minister.
Mr. Chase took me in to supper.
Mr. Channing brought me into the room, which was well filled.
People were also standing in the entry and on the stairs.
I read my lecture on The Third Party.
The audience proved very attentive, and included many people of intelligence.
George W. Julian and wife, Solomon Whiting, Admiral Davis, Dr. Peter Parker, our former minister to China, Hon. Thomas Eliot, Governor Boutwell, Mrs. Southworth, Professor Bache,—all these, and many more, were present.
They shook hands with me, very cordially, after the lecture.
I had announced Practical Ethics as the theme of my lectures, and had honestly written them out of my sense of the lapses everywhere discernible in the working of society.
Having accomplished so much, or so little, I desir
Clarke; Mrs. Howe's grandmother, her costume at her daughter Louisa's wedding, 34; her beauty and charm, 35; describes the dress of her younger days, 35, 36.
Cutler, Eliza. See Francis, Mrs. John W.
Cutler, Louisa Corde. See McAllister, Mrs. Julian.
Daggett, Mrs., Kate Newell, third president of the Association for the Advancement of Women, 393.
Dana, Richard H., the elder, a visitor at the Ward home, 79; a kind of transcendentalist, 428.
Danforth, Elizabeth, describes Louisa Cu and Mrs. Howe in Boston, 299.
Janin, Jules, French critic, friend of Mrs. Howe's brother Samuel, 68.
Johnson, Samuel, joint editor of Hymns of the Spirit, 293.
Johnston, William P., president of Tulane University, 399.
Julian, George W., attends Mrs. Howe's lecture in Washington, 309.
Kant, Immanuel, his transcendental philosophy, 146; his Critique of Pure Reason, 212; influence on Mrs. Howe, 310.
Kemble, Fanny, story of, 131, 132. Kenilworth, Scott's novel of, play founded on