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Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4 20 0 Browse Search
Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing) 20 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli 14 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: May 11, 1864., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: January 24, 1863., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Chapter 1: Margaret Fuller Ossoli — Introductory. (search)
lan of the present series that I should dwell chiefly on her literary life, while knowing that this life was only preliminary, and that she would not have wished to be judged by it after she had once entered on the life of action. The following pages will, I hope, be a more adequate record than has before been given of what she did for our dawning literature; but they yet leave room for a book by some other hand that shall fully delineate the Margaret Fuller Ossoli who stood by the side of Mazzini in Italy, and whose hands the young patriots clasped in the hospital crying, Viva l'italia as they died. At the very moment when Lowell was satirizing her in his Fable for critics, she was leading such a life as no American woman had led in this century before. During our own civil war many women afterwards led it, and found out for themselves what it was; but by that time Margaret Fuller Ossoli had passed away. Still, as I said, I must now make that part of her record secondary and
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Chapter 14: European travel. (1846-1847.) (search)
ed, had gone to Italy. Her descriptions of Carlyle are almost as spicy as Carlyle's own letters, and she dismisses Lewes in almost as trenchant a manner as that in which Carlyle dismissed Heraud. Best of all for her, she made acquaintance with Mazzini, whom she was soon to meet again in Italy. She was very cordially received, her two volumes of Miscellanies having just been favorably reviewed by the English press; she was inundated with invitations and opportunities, and could only mourn, lng against Austria; the Austrian arms burned in the public square. She was herself poor, a stranger remote from home; but she was for a time better in health than since she was a child, and her whole heart was with the Italian revolution. When Mazzini returned from his seventeen years of exile, she was able to stand by his side. She saw the republic established; she saw it fall. In April, 1849, Rome was besieged by the French army. Yet already a deeper thread than even the welfare of Italy
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Chapter 15: marriage and motherhood. (1847-1850.) (search)
he their last moments. And I have heard many of those who recovered speak with all the passionate fervor of the Italian nature of her, whose sympathy and compassion throughout their long illness fulfilled all the offices of love and affection. Mazzini, the chief of the Triumvirate,--who, better than any man in Rome, knew her worth,--often expressed to me his admiration of her high character; and the Princess Belgiojoso, to whom was assigned the charge of the Papal Palace on the Quirinal, whicw ourselves, for we often went to his post and found him exhausted and faint for want of food and rest, but always firm and resolute to remain to the end. He was a captain of the Civic Guard, and in many respects conspicuous for his adherence to Mazzini's views, so that now they cannot remain in Rome, and were obliged to leave at once upon the entrance of the French. His family are distinguished for the same zeal on the other side, that of the Pope, and are in the Papal household, his two bro
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Chapter 18: literary traits. (search)
inson; but in Margaret Fuller's case, though there were many friendships, there was no personal and controlling ruler. Emerson came the nearest to this, and yet we see by her letters how frankly she could criticise even him. Her danger lay in the direction of originality, not of imitation ; of too much divergence, not too much concentration. Coming in contact, as she did, with some of the strongest men of her time; first the Boston Transcendentalists; then Horace Greeley in New York; then Mazzini in Italy: she was still her own mistress, still nullius addicta jurare in verba magistri. This showed not merely a strong nature — for strength alone does not secure independence — but a rich and wise one. In regard to unintelligibleness, she also shared the charge with others; and I do not know that she especially deserved it. She may be confused, rambling, sometimes high-flown, but she offers no paradoxes so startling as some of Emerson's, and is incomparably smoother and clearer than
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Index. (search)
J. R., criticisms on, 217, 296; retaliation by, 5, 298 ; other references, 128,164, 176, 208, 216, 217, 298, 296-298. Lowell, Maria (White), 128, 272; letter from, 244. Lyric Glimpses, 286, 288. M. McDowell, Mrs., 211. Mackie, J. M., 168. Mackintosh, Sir, James, 187, 287, 288. Mann, Horace, 11, 12. Mariana, story of, 28. Marston, J. Westland, 146, 160. Martineau, Harriet, 86, 46, 68, 122-129, 222, 223, 283, 284. Martineau, James, 221. Mary Queen of Scots, 226. Mazzini, Joseph, 5, 229, 231, 236, 244, 284. Middleton, Conyers, 50. Mill, John Stuart 146. Milman, H. H., 228. Milnes, R. M. See Houghton. Milton, John, 69. Morris, G. P., 80. Mozier, Mrs., 276. N. Neal, John, 299. Newton, Stuart, 82. Novalis (F. von Hardenburg), 46,146. Nuttall, Thomas, 88. O. Ossoli, A. P. E., birth of, 258 ; descriptions of, 269, 268, 270, 271; death of, 279. Ossoli, G. A., descriptions of, 248, 244, 247; letters from, 249. Ossoli, Sarah Margaret
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 4, Chapter 8: to England and the Continent.—1867. (search)
renewed with delight his acquaintance with Joseph Mazzini. Of course, he afterwards wrote, century Introduction to Life and Writings of Mazzini, 1872. makes perceptible changes in us all—chking by a separation for so long a term. But Mazzini's altered appearance affected me sadly. Ther They again passed a delightful evening with Mazzini at Aug. 3. the house of Mrs. Stansfeld's broter there came this note from him: Joseph Mazzini to W. L. Garrison. Aug. 3, 18 Fulham Road those you love! Ever faithfully yours, Jos. Mazzini. How deeply the apostle of Italian libply to the above; and five years later, after Mazzini's death, it was his privilege to do so more fh he then prepared for an American edition of Mazzini's writings. Joseph Mazzini: His Life, WriJoseph Mazzini: His Life, Writings, and Political Principles. With an Introduction by William Lloyd Garrison. New York: Hurd & r. Garrison's tribute were warmly attested by Mazzini's most intimate friends, Madam Emilie Ashurst
Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing), chapter 11 (search)
r the most beauteous person I have seen is Joseph Mazzini. If you ever see Saunders' People's Journy came to pass an evening with us. Unluckily, Mazzini was with—us, whose society, when he was thereecilities. We all felt distant from him, and Mazzini, after some vain efforts to remonstrate, became, These are but opinions to Carlyle; but to Mazzini, who has given his all, and helped bring his rm zeal, is most certain. Margaret had known Mazzini in London, had partaken of his schemes for thWhile she was the friend and correspondent of Mazzini, and knew the springs of action of his party;e new measures. During the spring of 1849, Mazzini came to Rome. He went at once to see Margare rooms met Ossoli. After this interview with Mazzini, it was quite evident that they had lost somey with which they had regarded the issue, for Mazzini had discovered the want of singleness of purpof Margaret you know,—it is always the same. Mazzini is immortally dear to me --a thousand times
ubject of Tennyson's "In Memoriam," is published by Murray. In politics, international law, and political economy, have appeared John Stuart Mills's work on "Representative Government," which is anti slavery in sentiment; Mr. Spence's admirable essay on the American Question; a work on International Law, by Travers Twiss, D. C. L., said to be the best since Wheaton; "Jefferson and the American Democracy, a Study translated from the Dutch of Cornelius De Witt; "The Duties of Man," by Joseph Mazzini, the crazy Italian reformer, and something from John Raskin, the Arts Critic, entitled "Unto This Last," four essays on the first principles of economy. "The Roundabout Papers" is a series of essays by Thackeray, republished from the Cornhill Magazine. A readable trifle is "A Book about Doctors," by J. C. Jefferson, who gives all the gossip and scandal about the fraternity. A learned controversy upon the proper style of translating Homer is raging between Matthew Arnold, Profe
The Daily Dispatch: May 11, 1864., [Electronic resource], A Yankee description of Garibaldi in London. (search)
planted the tree (Wellingtonla gigantea) at the Laureate's "castle," Faringford. But about that part of his visit I will tell you what you will get from no London paper; and that is, that the first man he was closeted with on his arrival was Joseph Mazzini, and the next were P A Taylor, M P, (sometime President of Garibaldi Committee years ago,) and Kari Blind. All of which gave a very plain assertion of what perhaps most people (certainly all in France, Austria, and Italy,) knew before, that autiful bequest in its hand Garibaldi took the child in his arms, kissed it, patted its curts, and took the bequest in his hand. Then, when the workingmen childress was read, it contained, contrary to all advice, a glowing eulogium on that very Mazzini for being whose friend Mr. Stansfeld had been hounded out of the Government; nay, more, when that passage was read (O, what will Louis N. say') the building rang with plaudits for five or ten minutes. And to cap the climax, when this address wa