hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Margaret Fuller Ossoli 481 1 Browse Search
Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing) 69 5 Browse Search
Jula Ward Howe, Reminiscences: 1819-1899 41 1 Browse Search
James Parton, Horace Greeley, T. W. Higginson, J. S. C. Abbott, E. M. Hoppin, William Winter, Theodore Tilton, Fanny Fern, Grace Greenwood, Mrs. E. C. Stanton, Women of the age; being natives of the lives and deeds of the most prominent women of the present gentlemen 38 0 Browse Search
James Parton, The life of Horace Greeley 30 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Olde Cambridge 29 1 Browse Search
Laura E. Richards, Maud Howe, Florence Howe Hall, Julia Ward Howe, 1819-1910, in two volumes, with portraits and other illustrations: volume 1 28 0 Browse Search
Cambridge History of American Literature: volume 1, Colonial and Revolutionary Literature: Early National Literature: Part I (ed. Trent, William Peterfield, 1862-1939., Erskine, John, 1879-1951., Sherman, Stuart Pratt, 1881-1926., Van Doren, Carl, 1885-1950.) 28 0 Browse Search
Frank Preston Stearns, Cambridge Sketches 22 0 Browse Search
William Alexander Linn, Horace Greeley Founder and Editor of The New York Tribune 22 0 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Browsing named entities in Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Letters and Journals of Thomas Wentworth Higginson. You can also browse the collection for Margaret Fuller or search for Margaret Fuller in all documents.

Your search returned 3 results in 1 document section:

Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Letters and Journals of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Chapter 1: Cambridge and Newburyport (search)
relaxed his hold on the associative principles and spoke with great emphasis on that — he is not going into business. ... He may be going to take Miss [Margaret] Fuller's place in the Tribune ; he has certainly been wonderfully successful as an editor. Sundry letters to an old friend of the Divinity School days, Sam Johnson, his mother, Mr. Higginson reported some of Hurlbut's experiences abroad: He not only was blessed by the Pope, but by the society of the Countess Ossoli [Margaret Fuller] whom he admires very much. Why she wedded her undeveloped and uninteresting Italian does not appear; Hurlbut says, however, she probably married him as a re of sinking into a mere dilettante, though in Paris he had been something more. Hurlbut had an interleaved copy of Jameson's Italian painters, with notes by Margaret Fuller. ... In this volume there was an account of Correggio, describing his earnestness of purpose in becoming not merely a self-indulgent dabbler in art, but a reg