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Browsing named entities in Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli. You can also browse the collection for Milan, Sullivan County, Missouri (Missouri, United States) or search for Milan, Sullivan County, Missouri (Missouri, United States) in all documents.

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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Chapter 15: marriage and motherhood. (1847-1850.) (search)
r residence in Rome. In the month of April, 1849, Rome, as you are no doubt aware, was placed in a state of siege by the approach of the French army. It was filled at that time with exiles and fugitives who had been contending for years, from Milan, in the North, to Palermo, in the South, for the Republican cause: and when the gates were closed, it was computed that there were, of Italians alone, thirteen thousand refugees within the walls of the city, all of whom had been expelled from adjtwo after this, she observed the same young man walking before the house, as if meditating entrance; and they finally met once or twice before she left Rome for the summer. She was absent from June to October, visiting Florence, Bologna, Venice, Milan, the Italian lakes, and Switzerland. In October she established herself again in Rome, having an t apartment in the Corso, and trying to live for six months on four hundred dollars. She wrote to her mother that she had not been so well since sh
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Chapter 16: letters between husband and wife. (search)
e acts as I thought he would, and I am now very glad that you did not actually enter the service yet. In a short time our affairs will be more settled, and you can decide more advantageously than now. Try if you can hear any particulars from Milan; would it not be possible in the Caffe degli Belli Arti? I am much troubled by the fate of those dear friends; how much they must suffer now. I still think so much of you. I hope that you are less tormented. If we were together, it would beseems very long to me, which must yet be passed. Meanwhile give him a kiss and a tender embrace from me. From Madame Ossoli. Friday, 15th September, 1848] Mio Caro,--I received this morning your dear letters, and the papers. The news from Milan seems to be too good to be true, but I wait with anxiety to hear more. When you do not hear from me do not be anxious; you know I must necessarily be very weak for some time yet; I am not always able to write, or to rise, and Ser Giovanni is