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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 2. Search the whole document.
Found 14 total hits in 11 results.
Vienna (Wien, Austria) (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
John Kenyon (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
Milan (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
Morgan Lewis (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
Charles Vaughan (search for this): chapter 18
Southey (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
Americans (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
William Wordsworth (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
Walter Savage Landor (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,
John Taylor Coleridge (search for this): chapter 18
Vienna, Nov. 6.
No letter from you!
Have you forgotten me already, or has the post miscarried? . . . In my letter from Milan I announced to you the coming of two Americans—Preston and Lewis—to whom I wished you, for various reasons, to be kind; also of Sir Charles Vaughan.
Perhaps the recent death of Sir Charles's brother,
Mr. Justice Vaughan. may have prevented his reaching there.
If you see him there I wish you would remember me cordially to him, and if you can with propriety, say that I most sincerely sympathize with him in the affliction of his brother's death.
His brother was a very kind friend of mine, and a most distinguished man. I have another English friend who will arrive in Rome very soon,—Mr. Kenyon, the ancient friend of Coleridge, and now the bosom friend of Southey, Wordsworth, and Landor.
He is a cordial, hearty, accomplished, scholarly man. Rely upon his frankness and goodness.
Ever yours,