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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3, Chapter 41: search for health.—journey to Europe.—continued disability.—1857-1858. (search)
visit a colored print of Edmund Burke as a youth,—a copy of a picture by Sir Joshua Reynolds. It is now in the Art Museum of Boston. October 27. Left Brougham Hall at eight o'clock by train to visit W. E. Forster at Wharfeside, Buriey, near Leeds; reached him in the afternoon. His wife is the eldest daughter of Dr. Arnold. In the evening at dinner was Mr. Edward Baines 1800-1890. of the Leeds Mercury. October 28. At breakfast several guests. Left Wharfeside at eleven o'clock, accompanied by Mr. Forster, to Leeds, where Mr. Baines met me and showed me about the town; then train to York, where I visited the Minster; then train to Malton, whence by fly went seven miles to Castle Howard. My friend Lord Carlisle had gone to meet me in his carriage at another station. On his return we met for the first time after an interval of fifteen years. At dinner there were Lady Caroline Lascelles 1800-1890. and her daughters, Miss Mary and Emma Married to Lord Edward Cavendish
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3, chapter 14 (search)
ught God's battles here have been so taught to know where the strength is which is to win the fight? God bless you through it all, dear Mr. Sumner! He knows how hard it is for you,—harder for your friends, perhaps,—that you should stand and wait, and suffer, alas too. The Earl of Carlisle wrote, Feb. 8, 1859:— My dearest friend,—I received with delight your kind words on their errand of friendship and sympathy. When I made the speech Address before the Antislavery Society at Leeds. to which you refer you were certainly very prominently before my mind, and I think I must have had some unconscious instinct that you might see what I had said. I was very much pleased on the same occasion to make my first acquaintance with your friend Mr. Forster, for whose roof, I believe, you left Mine, or vice versa, when you were last in England. I was much struck with his straightforward grasp of mind. I went to see Harriet Martineau in the autumn, chiefly because you told me to d