41.
Arnold, Edwin, 257.
Aspirations of the world, by Mrs, Child, XIX., 246.
Aurora Leigh, by Mrs. Browning, 87, 197.
Autobiography of a female slave, 90, 132.
B.
Banneker, Benjamin, 184.
Beecher, Henry Ward, magnetic power of, 193; defends the Chinese, 251.
Beethoven's music contrasted with Mendelssohn's, 76.
Benson, Edmund, 89.
Berrien, John McP., U. S. Senator, anecdote of, 179.
Bettine and Goethe, 50, 51.
Bible, anti-slavery texts from, 123-125.
Bishop, Madame Anna, 140.
Bleby, Rev., Henry, 134.
Boston Athenaeum, privileges of, given to, and withdrawn from, Mrs. Child, 195, 264.
Boutwell, George S , speech of, 168.
Bremer, Fredrika, meets Mrs. Child, 65; relates anecdote of Jenny Lind, 66; her estimation of Lowell and Emerson, 66.
Brisbane, Mr., 51.
Broken Lights, by Miss Cobbe, 184.
Brooks, Governor, v.
Brown, John, letter of Mrs. Child to, 118; his reply, 119; martyrdom of, 137.
Browning's (Mrs.) Aurora Leigh, 87.
Bryant
Index.
A.
Abdy, Edward S., Mrs. Child's letters to, VIII.
Adams, John Quincy, indebted to Mr. Child for facts on the Texas question, VIII.; maintains the right to proclaim emancipation in war time, 151.
Adams, Samuel, Miss Whitney's statue of, 257.
Advertisements of fugitive slaves, 128, 129.
Alcott, A. Bronson, and family, 239.
Allen, Mr., of Alabama, testifies to horrors of slavery, 131.
Allyn, Rev. Dr., letter to, 9.
American Anti-Slavery Society, formation of, V 207.
Swedenborg and the New Church, 20(2.
Swedenborg's key of correspondences 75.
T.
Taine's (H. A.) papers on art 200.
Tappan, Arthur, threatened with assassination, 15.
Taylor, Father, anecdote of, 213.
Texas question, J. Q. Adams's speeches on, VIII.
The rebels; a Tale of the Revolution, VII.
The right way the Safe way, by Mrs. Child, 192.
The world that I am passing through, by Mrs. Child, x.
Thirteenth Amendment to U. S. Constitution, passage of, 188.
tes anecdote of Jenny Lind, 66; her estimation of Lowell and Emerson, 66.
Brisbane, Mr., 51.
Broken Lights, by Miss Cobbe, 184.
Brooks, Governor, v.
Brown, John, letter of Mrs. Child to, 118; his reply, 119; martyrdom of, 137.
Browning's (Mrs.) Aurora Leigh, 87.
Bryant, William C., writes to Mrs. Child, 186.
Buckle's History of civilization, 99.
Buddha, 257.
Burns, Anthony, returned to slavery from Boston, 72.
C.
Carpenter, E., letters to, 19, 22, 26.
Carpenter, Joseph, letters to, 41, 68.
Cassimir, a nephew of Kossuth, 162.
Chadwick, John W., 242.
Channing, William Ellery, discusses the anti-slavery movement with Mrs.
Child, 24; letters of, to Mrs. Child, 44, 45; Mrs. Child's reminiscences of, 48; influenced by Mrs. Child's Appeal, 77; her imagination of him in the spiritual world, 144.
Channing, William H., 188, 257.
Chicago Tribune has biographical sketch of Mrs. Child, 201.
Chapman, Maria Weston, 19, 147.
Child, letter to a, 36.
ts Sunday services, 233; letter on caucus dictation, 252.
D.
Davis, Jeff., 152.
De Stael, Madame, 247.
Devens, Charles, redeems Thomas Sims from slavery, 189.
Domenichino's Cumaean Sibyl, 57.
Douglass, Frederick, 259.
Draft riots of 1863 in New York, 178.
Dresel, Mrs., Anna Loring, letter to, 191.
Dresser, Amos, publicly flogged at Nashville, Tenn., 184.
Dwight, John S., 29, 37, 50.
E.
Eclectic review, The, VIII.
Education of women in Egypt and India, the, 212, 2ces, in the Atlantic monthly, 202.
New Church doctrines, Mrs. Child's interest in, 43.
New England Anti-Slavery Society, formation of the, VIII.
Newman's (Francis W.) works on The soul, and Phases of faith, 139.
New York draft riots of 1863, 178.
North American Review praises Mrs Child, VII.
Novels and Sermons, comparative value of, 192.
O.
Old Testament, the, injurious influence of parts of, 218.
Oriental Religions, by Samuel Johnson, 214.
Osceola, the Seminole
, 190; Ichabod, 259.
Weiss's (Rev. John) biography of Theodore Parker.
179.
Weld, Angelina Grimke, memorial of, 258.
Weld, Theodore D., letter to, 258.
Westminster Review, The, 202.
White, Maria, 50.
Whitney, Miss, Anne, letters to, 247, 256; her statue of Samuel Adams, 257.
Whittier, John G., biographical sketch of Mrs. Child, v.-xxv., 97; lines to Mrs. Child, on Ellis Gray Loring, 102; annoyed by curiosity-seekers, 142; letters to, 157, 159, 210, 215, 228, 235, 236; on the death of S. J. May, 212; his tribute to Colonel Shaw, 240; lines to Mrs. Child after her death, 269.
Wightman, James M., 149.
Wild, Judge, 20.
Willis, N. P., 58.
Wilson, Henry, 88.
Wise, Gov. Henry A., letter of Mrs. Child to, 103; his reply, 105; Mrs. Child's rejoinder to, 107; speech of, in Congress in 1842, 109.
Wright, Elizur, Jr., barricades his door against pro-slavery violence, 16.
Woman Question, the, 208, 243-245.
Woman suffrage, Mrs. Child:s letter to Mr. Sumner on, 207.
, 190; Ichabod, 259.
Weiss's (Rev. John) biography of Theodore Parker.
179.
Weld, Angelina Grimke, memorial of, 258.
Weld, Theodore D., letter to, 258.
Westminster Review, The, 202.
White, Maria, 50.
Whitney, Miss, Anne, letters to, 247, 256; her statue of Samuel Adams, 257.
Whittier, John G., biographical sketch of Mrs. Child, v.-xxv., 97; lines to Mrs. Child, on Ellis Gray Loring, 102; annoyed by curiosity-seekers, 142; letters to, 157, 159, 210, 215, 228, 235, 236; on the death of S. J. May, 212; his tribute to Colonel Shaw, 240; lines to Mrs. Child after her death, 269.
Wightman, James M., 149.
Wild, Judge, 20.
Willis, N. P., 58.
Wilson, Henry, 88.
Wise, Gov. Henry A., letter of Mrs. Child to, 103; his reply, 105; Mrs. Child's rejoinder to, 107; speech of, in Congress in 1842, 109.
Wright, Elizur, Jr., barricades his door against pro-slavery violence, 16.
Woman Question, the, 208, 243-245.
Woman suffrage, Mrs. Child:s letter to Mr. Sumner on, 207.