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
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 1,456 results in 134 document sections:

George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 20: (search)
is book is no indication of his position in Mr. Ticknor's esteem. Judge Curtis was regarded by hisrt of the United States, in 1851, gratified Mr. Ticknor in an extreme degree, while he felt that it . I had an excellent passage home, the one Mrs. Ticknor ought to have had; for she had a very bad o in which your monetary crisis had affected Mrs. Ticknor's family, and we were, I need not tell you, all safe and in good condition. Lent by Mr. Ticknor to Mr. Gardiner. It is a remarkable book, ahe original here, which will be followed by Mr. Ticknor's answer, or so much of it as has been founVera Cruz, in the spring of 1804. (Note by Mr. Ticknor to the translation published June 9, 1858.)en the first of living sculptors. (Note by Mr. Ticknor.) L'universalite deseconnaissances zoologiqelligence of Mr. Dowse had always attracted Mr. Ticknor, and he often quoted the autobiographical uears means anything, is the death of civilization . . . . Yours very faithfully, Geo. Ticknor. [14 more...]
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 21: (search)
dear Lady Lyell. . . . . Yours always, Geo. Ticknor. In 1867 Mr. Ticknor, as one of the TrMr. Ticknor, as one of the Trustees of the Zoological Museum, made some extemporaneous remarks before a committee of the Legislandest regards. . . . . Yours sincerely, Geo. Ticknor. To Sir Edmund Head. Boston, March 26I will not disguise from you, however, that Mrs. Ticknor and Anna, without whom, and their influenceround by Boston, and reached me here, where Mrs. Ticknor and I are making a visit to our old friends for humanity. Yours always faithfully, Geo. Ticknor. To Mr. Charles S. Daveis. Boston, Octroof-tree in February. Faithfully yours, G. Ticknor. From Sir E. Head. ATHENAeUM, [London, since their arrival. Yours faithfully, Geo. Ticknor. In a letter to Sir Edmund Head Mr. TicknoHead Mr. Ticknor says:— With Dr. Acland I had a charming day, driving about in Cambridge, Charlestown, and Bost We mean, on all accounts, to fight it out, once for all. . . . . Yours truly, Geo. Ticknor. [1 more...]
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 22: (search)
a strain utterly unknown in peaceful days. Mr. Ticknor's letters during the spring of 1861 have alletter is printed from a draft, or copy, in Mr. Ticknor's writing, found among his papers.:— fter. Your friend and servant, G. T. Mr. Ticknor contributed freely to the regular and the cat five or half after. From General Thayer Mr. Ticknor received exact and keen-sighted explanationtional period. During these years one of Mr. Ticknor's few positive recreations was that of dini P. Sturgis. Mr. Ticknor joined it in 1861. Mr. Ticknor continued a member of this club until 1868,and was seized with avidity by the public. Mr. Ticknor gave away an unusual number of copies, and,sle, believe me, Yours very faithfully, Geo. Ticknor. In answer to this Lord Carlisle writeroft. New York, Sunday Evening. my dear Mr. Ticknor,—Your splendid New Years gift reached me last regards from all of us to all of your house, I remain, Very faithfully yours, Geo. Ticknor. [18 more...]<
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 23: (search)
well as pleasure. . . . . Yours always, Geo. Ticknor. To George T. Curtis. Boston, March 3inburgh review. In answer to this, again, Mr. Ticknor writes: I have not seen the July number of lways faithfully and affectionately yours, Geo. Ticknor. To Robert H. Gardiner, Esq., Gardiner.ion can impair. With tender regards from Mrs. Ticknor and myself to Mrs. Gardiner, and to all whor, now and always Your sincere friend, George Ticknor. To B. B. Wiffen. Boston, U. S. A., Msent obligation. Yours very faithfully, Geo. Ticknor. To Sir Edmund Head. Boston, April 20 General or no General, but old classmate, Geo. Ticknor. When Mr. Ticknor made, on his seventyMr. Ticknor made, on his seventy-sixth birthday, the list of his early friends,—from whom only death was to part him, See Vol. umes. On the day of Mr. Everett's death Mr. Ticknor wrote to Mr. G. T. Curtis:— Boston,statements of fact. . . . . Yours ever, Geo. Ticknor. To Lady Cranworth. Boston, U. S. A., [5 more...]<
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 24: (search)
of us. Tell me about them. Yours ever, Geo. Ticknor. Thinking over the matter of the moren Among the changes of life, be assured that Mrs. Ticknor and myself do not fail to hear with grievedely, Your Majesty's friend and servant, Geo. Ticknor. To Sir Edmund Head, London. Boston, Jn a Pan-Athenaic vase. Yours sincerely, Geo. Ticknor. In 1869 Mr. George Ticknor Curtis had in press his Life of Webster, and Mr. Ticknor gave careful perusal to both manuscript and proof-sh anybody will desire. Yours faithfully, Geo. Ticknor. To J. G. Cogswell, Esq. Brookline, Sw more than she and you do. Yours ever, Geo. Ticknor. To General S. Thayer Boston, January ese letters closed this correspondence, and Mr. Ticknor's is the last, from his hand, that has comehich have been duly observed. A year after Mr. Ticknor's death, Mr. Charles Eliot Norton was receiement,—in order to show him an engraving of Mr. Ticknor hung there, desiring him to tell Mrs. Tickn[10 more...]
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), Chapter 25: (search)
Chapter 25: Conclusion. On the 1st of August, 1870, Mr. Ticknor entered his eightieth year. He was feeble, but free fro and, putting his hand on a volume of the Life of Scott, Mr. Ticknor said he was reading that for the fourth time; and then wf Mackintosh, This memoir had a particular charm for Mr. Ticknor in the last months of his life, and he often said, as hetic of the honest exactness in matters of fact for which Mr. Ticknor was always marked. He desired Mr. Curtis to turn to a pavoid too much eulogy. Taking up the consideration of Mr. Ticknor's character at the period of his first return from Europrson receiving it had any further opportunity of testing Mr. Ticknor's character and bearing. His special mental gifts, a want of scholarship to place it well before the world. Mr. Ticknor felt this want; but before he sought to supply it abroad who, like his parents and grandparents, was familiar in Mr. Ticknor's house, showed his father a passage in Cicero's De Sene
George Ticknor, Life, letters and journals of George Ticknor (ed. George Hillard), chapter 30 (search)
, 349-404. 1857-70. In Boston, 404-498. 1859-64. Life of Prescott, 436-440, 444, 449-456. 1861-65. Civil war, 433-435, 440-444, 446-449, 458-461. 1866-70. Summers at Brookline, 457, 485, 488. 1871. January 26, his death in Boston, 494. Ticknor, George, early advantages, I. 1; examined in Cicero's Orations and the Greek Testament, and admitted to Dartmouth College at 10 years old, 6; life at College from 14 to 16 years old pleasant and safe, but not laborious, 7; during eight succeeding ye correspondence, 457-491; last days, 492-494; his special mental gifts, 495; combination of an efficient intellect, high moral purpose, and a vigorous will, 495-497. Ticknor, George Haven, son of G T , birth and death of, T 397, 398 Ticknor, Mrs., George, T 335, 336, 345, 346, 350, 379, 384, 386, 3R8, 396, 397. 399, 401, 404, 410 and note, 411, 412, 418, 432 note, 456 note, II 27, 28, 91, 141, 167, 174, 202, 203, 204, 208, 222, 226, 227, 233, 261, 270, 322, 329, 330, 346, 354, 356, 406, 4
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, XIV. Massachusetts women in the civil war. (search)
L. Holmes, wife of the poet and essayist, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes; Miss Hannah E. Stevenson; Miss Isa E. Loring; Mrs. George H. Shaw; Mrs. Martin Brimmer; Mrs. George Ticknor and Mrs. William B. Rogers; Miss Mary Felton of Cambridge, Mass., who served in the same hospital for a long time with her friend, Miss Lowell. Mrs. TicknoMrs. Ticknor was president of the Boston sewing circle, which raised nearly $22,000 in money for material for hospital clothing, and manufactured from it over 21,000 garments, mostly flannel, for the sick and wounded. Mrs. Ticknor was also president of an organization formed for the relief of the Second Regiment of Massachusetts Infantry, aMrs. Ticknor was also president of an organization formed for the relief of the Second Regiment of Massachusetts Infantry, and which afterward included other soldiers. This society raised nearly $4,000 in money, and sent to the men 4,969 articles of clothing, one-third of which were flannel. Miss Dorothea L. Dix was a native of Worcester, Mass. In early life she became very much interested in prison reform, at a time when the inmates of penal insti
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, Index of names of persons. (search)
S. I., 361 Thompson, T. S., 142 Thompson, W. G., 361 Thompson, W. L., 361 Thompson, Warren, 361 Thomson, G. A., 142 Thorndike, Albert, 361 Thorndike, G. L., 449 Thorndike, J. E., 449, 560 Thorndike, J. P., 584 Thorndike, William, 390 Thorne, William, 361 Thornton, A. B., 144 Thornton, G. E., 144 Thorpe, Lewis, 584 Thorpe, Walter, 584 Thurber, F. H., 144 Thurber, J. D., 230, 361, 560 Thurston, C. S., 144 Tibbetts, P. H., 361 Tibbetts, W. H., 361 Ticknor, B. H., 361 Ticknor, George, Mrs., 594 Tidd, J. E., 361 Tidd, L. R., 361 Tifft, L. A., 361 Tilden, Albert, 361 Tilden, C. L., 361 Tilden, Joseph, 361 Tileston, C. E., 361 Tileston, G. F., 230 Tillson, A. A., 361 Tillson, H. O., 361 Tillson, M. W., 144 Tilton, W. H., 144 Tilton, W. S., 197, 230, 449, 561 Tilton, W. W., 361 Tinkham, B. C., 362 Tinkham, H. E., 144 Tirrell, A. H., 1st Batt. Mass. Fron. Cav., 362, 481 Tirrell, A. H., 33d U. S. Colored Inf., 496 Tirrell, A. W., 362 Tirrell, E. F.,
Elizabeth Cary Agassiz, Louis Agassiz: his life and correspondence, third edition, Chapter 15: 1847-1850: Aet. 40-43. (search)
Nautical Almanac, since the kindly presence of the former was constantly invoked as friend and counselor in the scientific departments, while the latter had his residence in Cambridge, and was as intimately associated with the interests of Harvard as if he had been officially connected with the university. A more agreeable set of men, or one more united by personal relations and intellectual aims, it would have been difficult to find. In connection with these names, those of Prescott, Ticknor, Motley, and Holmes also arise most naturally, for the literary men and scholars of Cambridge and Boston were closely united; and if Emerson, in his country home at Concord, was a little more withdrawn, his influence was powerful in the intellectual life of the whole community, and acquaintance readily grew to friendship between him and Agassiz. Such was the pleasant and cultivated circle into which Agassiz was welcomed in the two cities, which became almost equally his home, and where the