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The writings of John Greenleaf Whittier, Volume 7. (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier), Zzz Missing head (search)
the Lord God might dwell among them. Charles Sumner and the state Department. [1868.] the siness of all times except their own. But Charles Sumner, the scholar, loving the still air of delistion that so far as they are entrusted to Senator Sumner's hands, the interest, honor, and dignity cutive Council board, or not. Personally, Charles Sumner would gain nothing by a transfer from the iven you by such friends of your people as Charles Sumner on one hand, and William L. Garrison and W towards your benefactors. The censure of Sumner. A letter to the Boston Daily Advertiser inhe rescinding of the resolutions censuring Senator Sumner for his motion to erase from the United Stiers of the Union, and that not to censure Charles Sumner is to censure the volunteers of Massachuse honor as a soldier needed this censure of Charles Sumner. I have before me letters from men, ranki of the camp. I am no blind partisan of Charles Sumner. I have often differed from him in opinio[7 more...]
The writings of John Greenleaf Whittier, Volume 7. (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier), Criticism (search)
d-their-noblesin-fet-ters-of-iron. His verse smacks of the old Puritan flavor. Holmes has a gentler mission. His careless, genial humor reminds us of James Smith in his Rejected Addresses and of Horace in London. Long may he live to make broader the face of our care-ridden generation, and to realize for himself the truth of the wise man's declaration that a merry heart is a continual feast. Fame and glory Notice of an Address before the Literary Society of Amherst College, by Charles Sumner. the learned and eloquent author of the pamphlet lying before us with the above title belongs to a class, happily on the increase in our country, who venture to do homage to unpopular truths in defiance of the social and political tyranny of opinion which has made so many of our statesmen, orators, and divines the mere playthings and shuttlecocks of popular impulses for evil far oftener than for good. His first production, the True Grandeur of Nations, written for the anniversary of
The writings of John Greenleaf Whittier, Volume 7. (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier), Index of titles of prose writings (search)
36. Border War of 1708, The, VI. 368. Boy Captives, The, VI. 395. Bunyan, John, VI. 9. Carlyle, Thomas, on the Slave-Question, VII. 133. Censure of Sumner, The, VII. 167. Channing, William Ellery, VI. 283. Chapter of History, A, VII. 120. Charms and Fairy Faith, v. 385. Child, Lydia Maria, VI. 286. Ci Sewall, Samuel E., Letter to, VII. 87. Singletary, Dr., My Summer with, v. 197. Society of Friends, Tile, VII. 305. Suffrage for Women, VII. 247. Sumner, Charles, and the State Department, VII. 155. Sumner, The Censure of, VII. 167. Swedenborg, VII. 274. Taking Comfort, v. 381. Tappan, Lewis, VI. 278. TaSumner, The Censure of, VII. 167. Swedenborg, VII. 274. Taking Comfort, v. 381. Tappan, Lewis, VI. 278. Taylor, Bayard, VI. 281. Torrey, The Funeral of, VI. 271. Training, The, v. 345. Two Processions, The, VII. 115. Utopian Schemes and Political Theorists, VII. 199. What is Slavery? VII. 100. Whipple, Edwin Percy, VI. 318. Winthrop, John, VI. 436. Woman Suffrage, VII. 227. Women, Suffrage for, VII. 247.