... II: 59, 61m Marsh, James, I:227n Marshall, Almira, I: 168, 169n Marshall, Josiah, I: 93n Marshall, Marian, I: 92, 93n, 168, 169n, 274n; VI: 1 lo, 11 in, 162,239, 240n Marshall, Priscilla Waterman, I: 93n Marston, Eleanor Jane Potts, ...
Elizabeth Barrett secretly married Robert Browning on 12 September 1846 and left for Italy on 19 September (Gardner B. Taplin, The Life of Elizabeth Barrett Browning [London, 1957], p. 178). Her father, Edward Barrett Moulton-Barrett ...
He writes and speaks for effect” (Carlson, “Alcott's Journal,” p. 278). 143. To Elizabeth P. Peabody Groton 26th May—1837. I thought this advertisement might be of some interest to you— I took it from the National Intelligencer.
Their bloodiest resistance occurred in 1832, when Chief Black Hawk tried to stop the white encroachment into the Indian land (William T. Hagan, The Sac and Fox Indians [Norman, Okla., 1958]).
The fifth volume of the collected letters of Margaret Fuller traces a period of great emotional turbulence, reflecting the personal struggles she faced in motherhood and the external strife of revolutionary Europe in 1848.
The Letters of Margaret Fuller: 1839-41
This second volume publishes all of Margaret Fuller's letters written from 1839 to 1841—the years in which she first began to achieve fame as a writer and an editor.
The Letters of Margaret Fuller: 1842-44
The fifth volume of the collected letters of Margaret Fuller traces a period of great emotional turbulence, reflecting the personal struggles she faced in motherhood and the external strife of...
Correspondence by the American critic, journalist and feminist traces her intellectual development from age seven to twenty-eight.
From 1844 to 1847 Margaret Fuller served as review editor for Horace Greeley's New-York Herald Tribune--and herself reviewed books by Edgar Allan Poe and Herman Melville among others--and published Papers...
The first letters in Volume I are those of a seven-year-old child; the last were written by an uncommonly well-educated woman ready for a larger challenge than schoolteaching could offer...