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Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 1. (ed. Frank Moore) 2 0 Browse Search
Rebellion Record: Introduction., Volume 1. (ed. Frank Moore) 2 0 Browse Search
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Cambridge History of American Literature: volume 3 (ed. Trent, William Peterfield, 1862-1939., Erskine, John, 1879-1951., Sherman, Stuart Pratt, 1881-1926., Van Doren, Carl, 1885-1950.), Index (search)
64 Lane Theological Seminary, 70, 205 Lang, Andrew, 17, 310, 312, 316, 490 Langdon, Olivia, 5 Langdon, W. C., 297 Langer als ein Menschenleben in Missouri, 587 Langley, Alexander, 438 Language and the study of language, 464, 469 Lanier, Sidney, 269 Lanman, C. R., 87, 169, 464, 468, 468 n. La Nouvelle Atala, 595 Lanusse, Armand, 596 La Presse des Deux-Mondes, 594 La Prise du Morne du Baton-rouge par Monseigneur de Galvez, 591 Laramie Boomerang (Wyoming), 27 Larcom, Lucy, 38 La Renaissance, 591 La Revue Louisianaise, 592, 593, 594 La Salle, 592 La Salle and the discovery of the great West, 190 Last of the Foresters, the, 67 Last Rambles amongst the Indians of the Rocky Mountains and the Andes, 149 Last Taschastas, the, 55 Latakia, 37 Lateiner, J., 607, 608 Lathbury, Mary A., 500 Lathrop, George P., 274 Latin grammar (Allen and Greenough) 463, 464 Latin grammar (Gildersleeve), 466 Latin grammar (Lewis, C. T.), 463 Lat
Sketch of his career; obituary notices and burial. Boston Evening Journal, March 4, 1862, p. 4, col. 2; March 5, p. 4, col. 4; March 6, p. 2, col. 1; March 7, p. 2, col. 2; March 8, p. 2, col. 6, p. 4, col. 2; March 10, p. 4, cols. 3, 4. Larcom, Lucy. Re-enlisted, verses. Atlantic, vol. 13, p. 629. Last rally, poem. J. T. Trowbridge. Atlantic, vol. 14, p. 589. Latest views of Mr. Biglow, poem. J. R. Lowell. Atlantic, vol. 11, p. 260. Lathrop, G. P. Keenan's charge, — Record of Boston soldiers. Geo. H. Childs, rev. of; with some data from book. Army and Navy Journal, vol. 2, p. 302. — Reduction of army. Army and Navy Journal, vol. 2, pp. 657, 706, 737, 753, 769, 785, 817. — Re-enlisted, poem. Lucy Larcom. Atlantic, vol. 13, p. 629. — Regulations for removals from government cemeteries. Army and Navy Journal, vol. 3, p. 126. — Reptiles and venomous insects. Banks expedition, Teche, April, 1863. Bivouac, vol. 3, p. 209. — Sanit
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, Index of names of persons. (search)
75 Lander, H. F., 308 Lander, W. W., 427, 538 Landers, J. B., 472 Lane, Everett, 219 Lane, H. F., 394 Lane, S. C., 88 Lane, T. J., 308 Lane, W. N., 88 Lane, Webster, 88 Lang, Anthony, 308 Lang, C. H., 308 Langdon, W. C., 583 Langdon, William, 88 Langford, E. L., 308 Langford, J. H., 308 Langley, A. B., 308 Langley, Freeman, 88 Langley, J. W., 88 Langley, T. J., 308 Langmald, Samuel, 308 Langstaff, James, 88 Lapham, H. K., 88 Lapoint, Alfred, 88 Larabee, G. H., 384 Larcom, Lucy, 675 Larned, B. F., 427 Larned, D. W., 308 Larned, W. L., 472 Larry, J. H., 308 Latchford, Thomas, 427, 472, 491 Latham, G. W., 88 Lathrop, G. P., 675 Lathrop, J. H., 308 Lathrop, J. M., 308 Lathrop, John, 308 Lathrop, T. J., 308 Lathrop, W. H., 384 Laugel, Auguste, 675 Lauriat, G. W., 219, 308, 538 Lavery, Richard, 88 Lavery, T. J., 88 Law, E. M., 675 Lawler, A. J., 219 Lawrence, Alvin, 88 Lawrence, Center H., 427, 472, 538 Lawrence, Charles H., 88 Lawrence, Edward,
Margaret Fuller, Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli (ed. W. H. Channing), chapter 12 (search)
it that needed to be said, and had not been said before, in any writing that had come under our observation, so well as she has expressed it here. From the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette. Sold everywhere. Mailed, postpaid, by the Publishers, Roberts Brothers, Boston. The life and letters of Madame Swetchine. By Count De Falloux 1 vol. 16mo. Price $1 50. The writings of Madame Swetchine. Edited by Count De Falloux. 1 vol. 16mo. Price $1.25. Madame Swetchine. by Lucy Larcom. A well-written history of an excellent and gifted woman, like the Life and Letters of Madame Swetchine, by Count de Falloux, will naturally meet with a welcome among people of the truest culture. Madame Swetchine was not a woman who courted publicity; but the thread of her life was so interwoven with the political and religious movements of her time, it was impossible for her to escape notice. And it brightens that dark period of strife between France and Russia, with which the pres
im to higher standards, has joined the choir invisible. Continuing, he said: I am not going to speak of his forty or more books, or the work that he did on the St. Nicholas or the Wide Awake, but of him as an inspirer of young life,—of a man, himself inspired, who was the cause of inspiration in others. Mr. Butterworth told how William Lloyd Garrison had touched John G. Whittier, then a young man, on the shoulder, and said, You are a poet, and how Whittier, in turn, said the same to Lucy Larcom in her early life, and the results which followed from the words of encouragement. N. Parker Willis and James T. Fields were others who inspired young writers. In the same way, he said, Mr. Brooks had words of encouragement for young authors, and helped them along the difficult pathway to success. Among the cases he cited without giving names was one whose works have outsold nearly all others in the last ten or twenty years, and who had been told by Mr. Brooks what to do, and how
ues & Stanley, IV.—14. Jerusalem Plank Road, II.—38. Johnson Family, The, II.—26. Kenneson, Albert, II.—19. Kenneson, Albert, home of, III.—20. Kidd, Captain, IV.—18. Kidder, Arthur T., I.—11. Kidder, Tollkeeper Medford Turnpike, II.—14. Kingfield, Me., II.—26. Kinsley, Calvin, II.—20. Kinsley, Captain Fred R., IV.—25. Kinsley, Silas, II.—16. Kinsley, Willard C., IV.—25. Kittery, Me., I.—7, 8. Lafayette, General, IV.—15. Lancers, The, I.—39. Larcom, Lucy, I.—18. Lawler, Major, I.—38. Lawrence, Daniel, II.—13. Lee, General F., I.—38. Lee, General, Charles, Headquarters of. II.—23, 24. Lee, Robert E., army of, III.—24; IV.—25. Leland, Caleb, House, II.—23, 26. Lexington, battle of, II.—28, 29. Lidgett, Charles, IV.—10. Lidgett, Lieutenant Colonel, IV.—10. Lidgett, Elizabeth, IV.—10. Lincoln, President, death of, II.—16. Littlefield, Samuel, II.—19. L
The writings of John Greenleaf Whittier, Volume 4. (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier), Appendix (search)
strong martyrs, And crown thy saints with gold, But let the mother welcome Her lost one to thy fold! Letter to Lucy Larcom. 25th 3d mo., 1866. Believe me, Lucy Larcom, it gives me real sorrow That I cannot take my carpet-bag and go to towne sees The prairie ripple in the breeze; For one like her to lisp thy name Is better than the voice of fame. to Lucy Larcom. 3d mo., 1870. Pray give the ‘Atlantic’ A brief unpedantic Review of Miss Phelps' book, Which teaches and helps Our Master. Abraham Davenport. Lines on a Fly Leaf. The Maids of Attitash. The Dead Ship of Harpswell. Letter to Lucy Larcom. 1867George L. Stearns. The Worship of Nature. Freedom in Brazil. The Palatine. The Tent on the Beach. 1868The Hia Maria Child. My Triumph. Nauhaught, the Deacon. The Prayer-Seeker. The Laurels. A Spiritual Manifestation. To Lucy Larcom. 1871The Sisters. Marguerite. The Robin. The Singer. Disarmament. How Mary Grew. Chicago. My Birthday. 1872Th
The writings of John Greenleaf Whittier, Volume 4. (ed. John Greenleaf Whittier), Index of Titles (search)
Knight of St. John, The, i. 62. Kossuth, IV. 72. Lady Franklin, IV. 327. Lakeside, The, II. 18. Lament, A, IV. 9. Landmarks, The, IV. 210. Larcom, Lucy, To, IV. 408. Larcom, Lucy, Letter to, IV. 405. Last Eve of Summer, The, IV. 314. Last Walk in Autumn, The, II. 37. Laurels, The, IV. 180. Laus Larcom, Lucy, Letter to, IV. 405. Last Eve of Summer, The, IV. 314. Last Walk in Autumn, The, II. 37. Laurels, The, IV. 180. Laus I)eo, III. 254. Lay of Old Time, A, IV. 158. Legacy, A, II. 186. Legend of St. Mark, The, i. 117. Legend of the Lake, A, IV. 402. Leggett's Monument, IV. 22. Letter from a Missionary of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, in Kansas, to a Distinguished Politician, III. 178. Letter, A, supposed to be written by the Chairman of the Central Clique, at Concord, N. H., III. 117. Letter to Lucy Larcom, IV. 405. Lexington, IV. 201. Library, The, IV. 203. Light that is felt, The, II. 337. Lines from a Letter to a Young Clerical Friend, III. 122. Lines on a Fly-Leaf, IV. 114. Lines on leaving Appledore, IV. 406. Lilies o
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 16., Distinguished guests and residents of Medford. (search)
ad passed, and was revived again at the time of the centennial celebrations of the stirring events of the Revolution, and made the subject of a pleasing poem by Lucy Larcom. Stories told in rhyme deviate from facts and are not always plain, unvarnished tales, but the poetic license accorded to and used by poets only adds to the charm of the story, and knowing this we can take without harm our dose of poetry and fiction. I imagine Miss Larcom's poem, A Gambrel Roof, differs but little from the true facts of the case, and though perhaps a digression from our subject, the following concerning Dill, whom Miss Larcom introduced in her story, may not be amiss.Miss Larcom introduced in her story, may not be amiss. One authority says the child was bought April 19, 1766, and died about the middle of the nineteenth century, a nonagenarian. The item to which I especially refer was made public by the Boston Herald, November 8, 1908, and was a receipt, given in connection with a sale of slaves, found in a garret of a house in North Adams, and r
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