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Laura E. Richards, Maud Howe, Florence Howe Hall, Julia Ward Howe, 1819-1910, in two volumes, with portraits and other illustrations: volume 1, Chapter 12: Stepping westward 1901-1902; aet. 82-83 (search)
Chapter 12: Stepping westward 1901-1902; aet. 82-83 But here the device of the spiral can save us. We must make the round, but we may make it with an upward inclination. Let there be light! is sometimes said in accents so emphatic, that the universe remembers and cannot forget it. We carry our problems slowly forward. With all the ups and downs of every age, humanity constantly rises. Individuals may preserve all its early delusions, commit all its primitive crimes; but to the body och of the society of children and grandchildren. Of these last, two are happily married, i.e., in great affection. My dear Maud and her husband have been with me constantly, and I have had little or no sense of loneliness ... The beginning of 1902 found her in better health than the previous year. She records a luncheon with a distinguished company, at which all agreed that the Atlantic to-day would not accept Milton's L'allegro, nor would any other magazine. At the Symphony Concert t