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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard) 78 0 Browse Search
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George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 9: (search)
W. R. Greg, whose acquaintance they had made in Rome, Mr. and Mrs. Ticknor went on to Oxford. May 15.—We wMrs. Ticknor went on to Oxford. May 15.—We walked about in a beautiful morning among the exquisite gardens and the grand old colleges with which the town but death. On this Sunday passed at Althorp, Mr. Ticknor wrote the following letter:— To Miss Marrope. But of late we have changed our purpose. Mrs. Ticknor, for whose health I came abroad, has long been q. Ticknor Reaching London on the 22d of May, Mr. Ticknor was again plunged, for two weeks, into the exciteome we had visits from the Misses Luxmoore To whom Mr. and Mrs. Ticknor had made a visit in Wales in 1835. aMrs. Ticknor had made a visit in Wales in 1835. and their brother, the Dean of St. Asaph, . . . . who have taken a house for a few weeks to enjoy London, and to utter. Leaving London on the 6th of June, Mr. Ticknor and his family embarked at Portsmouth on the 10thgland to the United States that spring; but, when Mr. Ticknor was obliged to decide on the mode of his return, <
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 10: (search)
, Mr. Prescott, Mr. Kenyon, and others. death of Mr. Legare. Mr. Ticknor's second return from Europe resembled the first in the happinessired some renovation and change. During the succeeding years, Mr. Ticknor's correspondence with friends, both in America and in Europe, beeignty of law and justice. When a young law student, 1813-15, Mr. Ticknor belonged to the Federalist party, and he always adhered to its c resided in the neighborhood, was not intimately acquainted with Mr. Ticknor, and who did not know that he was my kinsman. In the course of the evening he spoke with some asperity of Mr. Ticknor, as a man who never voted at elections. I told him he was entirely mistaken; that Mr.Mr. Ticknor had always voted at elections, when he was at home; that I had very often gone with him to the polls, and when I had not done so, I g those who heard it, and who had been in the habit of regarding Mr. Ticknor as a man who held himself entirely aloof from all sympathy in th
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 12: (search)
o lend me; Mr. Gayangos generously lent Mr. Ticknor many volumes from his own library, which wee interior of Pennsylvania and New York for Mrs. Ticknor's health, which, I am happy to add, is wholr. Everett, Mr. Bancroft, Mr. Prescott, and Mr. Ticknor,—an accession of talent and high character Lord Mahon had opened a correspondence with Mr. Ticknor, whom he had not previously known. Lord Maours, Henry Hallam. A few months later Mr. Ticknor writes as follows:— To Don P. De Gatory of Spanish literature, by an American, Mr. Ticknor of Boston. From Ludwig Tieck Potsdam, Jivate criticisms as seemed to him of value, Mr. Ticknor brought out a third edition of the book, conges he saw fit to make. In this Preface Mr. Ticknor states that 3,500 copies of his work have b will see how carefully and conscientiously Mr. Ticknor labored, to the day of his death, to secureHillard, appeared a year after the death of Mr. Ticknor, who left a special request that his friend[1 more...]<
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 13: (search)
opyright. In the spring of the year 1850 Mr. Ticknor went to Washington for the first time sincer; so was Mr. Clay, who occupied rooms near Mr. Ticknor's in the hotel, and frequently came in as atrian Charge d'affaires, recollected seeing Mr. Ticknor once in the riding-school in Gottingen, thieme Court, were interesting. Unfortunately Mr. Ticknor was not well during this visit, and unfort be applied with equal truth to the welcome Mr. Ticknor himself received. This visit to Washingn Boston Mr. Webster one day sent a note to Mr. Ticknor asking him to come to his hotel in the aftepublic dinner in his (Mr. Webster's) honor, Mr. Ticknor was induced to sit down with them. When thbegan, one of the guests suddenly called on Mr. Ticknor, whom, he said, in all his large experience without a moment's chance for preparation, Mr. Ticknor responded with what a person present assert he had ever heard. This was the only time Mr. Ticknor was ever entrapped into such a performance;
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 21: (search)
f us to dear Lady Head, and C. and A. I shall look to hear from you very soon, and to have you all again under my roof-tree in February. Faithfully yours, G. Ticknor. From Sir E. Head. ATHENAeUM, [London, ] November 23, 1860. My dear Ticknor,—I owe you another letter, were it only to thank you for your kindness in writing again so soon. I am able to say that everybody in this country sets the highest value on the courtesy and friendly bearing towards the Prince, shown in the Unitedcold, but otherwise well. Hogarth will resuscitate your print, and I have told him to frame it plainly. There is, I think, a considerable theological movement, since I was last in England, in a rationalistic direction. Kind regards to Mrs. Ticknor and Anna. Yours truly, Edmund Head. To Sir Charles Lyell, Bart. Boston, November 27, 1860. My dear Lyell,—You will be glad, I think, to hear something about the state of affairs in the United States, from somebody with whom you are