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Browsing named entities in a specific section of 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. Search the whole document.
Found 233 total hits in 68 results.
Lucretia Mott (search for this): chapter 16
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Emily Winslow (search for this): chapter 16
Anne Greene Phillips (search for this): chapter 16
James Brooks (search for this): chapter 16
Beman (search for this): chapter 16
Theodore Tilton (search for this): chapter 16
Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Theodore Tilton.
I once watched an artist while he tried to transfer to his canvas the lustre of a precious stone.
His picture, after his utmost skill, was dull.
A radiant and sparkling woman, full of wit, reason, and fancy, is a whole crown of jewels.
A poor, opaque copy of her is the most that one can render in a biographical sketch.
Elizabeth Cady, daughter of Judge Daniel Cady and Margaret Livingston, was born November 12th, 1816, in Johnstown, New York,--forty miles north of Albany.
Birthplace is a secondary parentage, and transmits character.
Elizabeth's birthplace was more famous half a century ago than since; for then, though small, it was a marked intellectual centre; and now, though large, it is an unmarked manufacturing town.
Before her birth, it was the vice-ducal seat of Sir William Johnson, the famous English negotiator with the Indians.
During her girlhood, it was an arena for the intellectual wrestlings of Kent, Tompkins,
Abraham Vechten (search for this): chapter 16
Margaret Livingston (search for this): chapter 16
Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Theodore Tilton.
I once watched an artist while he tried to transfer to his canvas the lustre of a precious stone.
His picture, after his utmost skill, was dull.
A radiant and sparkling woman, full of wit, reason, and fancy, is a whole crown of jewels.
A poor, opaque copy of her is the most that one can render in a biographical sketch.
Elizabeth Cady, daughter of Judge Daniel Cady and Margaret Livingston, was born November 12th, 1816, in Johnstown, New York,--forty miles north of Albany.
Birthplace is a secondary parentage, and transmits character.
Elizabeth's birthplace was more famous half a century ago than since; for then, though small, it was a marked intellectual centre; and now, though large, it is an unmarked manufacturing town.
Before her birth, it was the vice-ducal seat of Sir William Johnson, the famous English negotiator with the Indians.
During her girlhood, it was an arena for the intellectual wrestlings of Kent, Tompkins
John Brown (search for this): chapter 16
Elizabeth (search for this): chapter 16