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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe 2 0 Browse Search
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 2 2 Browse Search
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prayer, and work, and when urged to defend himself said God would do it in his time. God was the best judge how much reputation he needed to serve Him with. In your portrait of Deronda, you speak of him as one of those rare natures in whom a private wrong bred no bitterness. The sense of injury breeds, not the will to inflict injuries, but a hatred of all injury; and I must say, through all this conflict my brother has been always in the spirit of Him who touched and healed the ear of Malchus when he himself was attacked. His friends and lawyers have sometimes been aroused and sometimes indignant with his habitual caring for others, and his habit of vindicating and extending even to his enemies every scrap and shred of justice that might belong to them. From first to last of this trial, he has never for a day intermitted his regular work. Preaching to crowded houses, preaching even in his short vacations at watering places, carrying on his missions which have regenerated two
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 5: (search)
variety of persons found there than is found elsewhere. . . . . In all these families intercourse was simple, according to the German notions of simplicity; but in all of them—except Ullmann's— the ladies of the family seemed to have a good deal of the household work to perform. At Mittermaier's, in particular, it was curious to see the daughters bring in the evening lights, and set and serve two rather large supper-tables, assisted by a single waiting-girl. We knew, too, the old Baron Malchus and his daughter. The old gentleman was Minister of Finance to Jerome Bonaparte when he was King of Westphalia, and afterwards to the King of Wurtemberg; and he used to make us rather long visits, and talk, much at large, of the days of his power and dignity. I have seldom found a person who had such an immense mass of statistical details in his head, and as he has kept up a good deal of intimacy and influence, with not only the Bonapartes, but the Wurtembergers, since his abdication
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
I. 12, 13. McNeill, Mrs., I. 417, II. 164. Madison. J., President of the United States, I. 29, 30, 34, 53, 110, 346, 347, 409. Madison, Mrs., I. 29, 30, 346, 347. Madraso, Jose de, I. 186 and note. Madrid, visits, I. 185, 186-220; described, 190-214. Mahon, Viscount, I. 258 and note, 292. See Stanhope, Earl. Mai, Monsignor, II. 81 and note, 82, 83. Maidstone, Viscount. II. 80. Maison, Marshal, II. 130, 136. Malaga, I. 233, 234. Malaga, Bishop, I. 234, 235. Malchus, Baron, II. 100. Malibran, Madame, I. 407, 413. Mallett, J. L., II. 274. Maltby, Bishop of Durham, II. 178 Maltby, Mr., I. 58, 413. Malthus, T. R., I. 290. Manchester, Mass., 11. 239 and note, 268. Manchester, (Seventh) Duke and Duchess of, II. 381. Manning, Mr., I. 61. Manzoni, Alessandro, II. 44, 45, 95, 96, 97. Manzoni, Madame, II. 44. Marchetti, Count and Countess, I. 166. Mareuil, Baron de, I. 350. Marialva, Marques de, I 180, 246, 263. Marie Amelie, Queen o