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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Lydia Maria Child, Letters of Lydia Maria Child (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier, Wendell Phillips, Harriet Winslow Sewall). Search the whole document.
Found 17 total hits in 9 results.
Mexico (Mexico, Mexico) (search for this): chapter 30
Cuba (Cuba) (search for this): chapter 30
Europe (search for this): chapter 30
Northampton (Massachusetts, United States) (search for this): chapter 30
To Miss Henrietta Sargent. Northampton, 1838.
Why do you not write?
Are you ill?
Are you sorry with me, as the little French girl used to say; or what is the matter?
I really hunger and thirst to hear from you. . .
My husband and I are busy in that most odious of all tasks, that of getting signatures to petitions.
We are resolved that the business shall be done in this town more thoroughly than it has been heretofore.
But, Oh Lord, sir!
I have never been so discouraged about abolition as since we came into this iron-bound Valley of the Connecticut.
I have ceased to believe that public opinion will ever be sincerely reformed on the question till long after emancipation has taker place.
I mean that for generations to come there will be a very large minority hostile to the claims of colored people; and the majority will be largely composed of individuals who are found on that side from any and every motive rather than hearty sympathy with the down-trodden race.
Public
O'Connell (search for this): chapter 30
Stevenson (search for this): chapter 30
Mary Stuart (search for this): chapter 30
Henrietta Sargent (search for this): chapter 30
To Miss Henrietta Sargent. Northampton, 1838.
Why do you not write?
Are you ill?
Are you sorry with me, as the little French girl used to say; or what is the matter?
I really hunger and thirst to hear from you. . .
My husband and I are busy in that most odious of all tasks, that of getting signatures to petitions.
We are resolved that the business shall be done in this town more thoroughly than it has been heretofore.
But, Oh Lord, sir!
I have never been so discouraged about abolition as since we came into this iron-bound Valley of the Connecticut.
I have ceased to believe that public opinion will ever be sincerely reformed on the question till long after emancipation has taker place.
I mean that for generations to come there will be a very large minority hostile to the claims of colored people; and the majority will be largely composed of individuals who are found on that side from any and every motive rather than hearty sympathy with the down-trodden race.
Public
1838 AD (search for this): chapter 30
To Miss Henrietta Sargent. Northampton, 1838.
Why do you not write?
Are you ill?
Are you sorry with me, as the little French girl used to say; or what is the matter?
I really hunger and thirst to hear from you. . .
My husband and I are busy in that most odious of all tasks, that of getting signatures to petitions.
We are resolved that the business shall be done in this town more thoroughly than it has been heretofore.
But, Oh Lord, sir!
I have never been so discouraged about abolition as since we came into this iron-bound Valley of the Connecticut.
I have ceased to believe that public opinion will ever be sincerely reformed on the question till long after emancipation has taker place.
I mean that for generations to come there will be a very large minority hostile to the claims of colored people; and the majority will be largely composed of individuals who are found on that side from any and every motive rather than hearty sympathy with the down-trodden race.
Public