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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: July 22, 1864., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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pirits, a very wise one. Do write some more, dear doctor. You are too well off in your palace down there on the new land. Your Centennial Ballad was a charming little peep; now give us a full-fledged story. Mr. Stowe sends his best regards, and wishes you would read Goerres. 1 It is in French also, and he thinks the French translation better than the German. Yours ever truly, H. B. Stowe. Writing in the autumn of 1876 to her son Charles, who was at that time abroad, studying at Bonn, Mrs. Stowe describes a most tempestuous passage between 1 Die Christliche Mystik, by Johann Joseph Gorres, Regensburg, 1836-42. New York and Charleston, during which she and her husband and daughters suffered so much that they were ready to forswear the sea forever. The great waves as they rushed, boiling and seething, past would peer in at the little bull's-eye window of the state-room, as if eager to swallow up ship and passengers. From Charleston, however, they had a most delightful
le, 366; on her reading tour, 491; on his health and her enforced absence from him, 492; on reading, at Chelsea, 492; at Bangor and Portland, 493; at South Framingham and Haverhill, 495; Peabody, 496; fatigue at New London reading, 496; letters from to H. B. S. on visit to his relatives and description of home life, 440; to mother on reasons for leaving the West, 128; to George Eliot, 420; to son Charles, 345. Stowe, Charles E., seventh child of H. B. S., birth of, 139; at Harvard, 406; at Bonn, 412; letter from Calvin E. Stowe to, 345; letter from H. B. S. to, on her school life, 29; on Poganuc people, 413; on her readings in the West, 497; on selection of papers and letters for her biography, 507; on interest of herself and Prof. Stowe in life and anti-slavery career of John Quincy Adams, 509. Stowe, Eliza Tyler (Mrs. C. E.), draft of, 75: twin daughter of H. B. S., 88. Stowe, Frederick William, second son of H. B. S., 101; enlists in First Massachusetts, 364; made lieutenan
The Daily Dispatch: July 22, 1864., [Electronic resource], Death of an American student in Germany. (search)
ently quite helpless, but the force of the current was so great that though the bathing master at once plunged in after him it was impossible to reach him, and he was carried in a few moments out of sight. No trace of the body was discovered for several days, and it was not until the following Monday morning that a telegram was received announcing its recovery. It had been found on the previous evening, four days after the accident, several miles below Dusseldorf and nearly sixty miles from Bonn. As soon as the body was received here it was treated with unusual marks of attention by the personal friends of Mr. Byrne, by the students of the University, and by the Roman Catholic Church, to which communion he belonged. On Monday, June 18th, in the parish church of St. Martin, "a solemn soul service," as it was called in the printed notice, was held "for the lost student of philosophy" In the Bonn Zeitung, of Wednesday, the 15th inst, appeared the announcement of another requiem on