Browsing named entities in Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe. You can also browse the collection for Park or search for Park in all documents.

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men are so gentlemanly and so agreeable, as well as Christian in spirit. Mr. Dexter, his wife, and sister are delightful. Last evening a party of us went to ride on horseback down to Pomp's Pond. What a beautiful place it is! There is everything here that there is at Brunswick except the sea,--a great exception. Yesterday I was out all the forenoon sketching elms. There is no end to the beauty of these trees. I shall fill my book with them before I get through. We had a levee at Professor Park's last week,--quite a brilliant affair. To-day there is to be a fishing party to go to Salem beach and have a chowder. It seems almost too good to be true that we are going to have such a house in such a beautiful place, and to live here among all these agreeable people, where everybody seems to love you so much and to think so much of you. I am almost afraid to accept it, and should not, did I not see the Hand that gives it all and know that it is both firm and true. He knows if i
t to England. a glimpse at the queen. the Duke of Argyll and inverary. early correspondence with Lady Byron. Dunrobin Castle and its inmates. a visit to Stoke Park. Lord Dufferin. Charles Kingsley at home. Paris revisited. Madame Mohl's receptions. After reaching England, about the middle of August, 1856, Mrs. Stowe anbin; so I, of all the party, have a dress that can be worn. We go out and buy collars and handkerchiefs, and two o'clock beholds us at the station house. Stoke Park. I arrived here alone, the baggage not having yet been heard from. Mr. G., being found in London, confessed that he delayed sending it by the proper train. In shvorable spirit. Generally speaking, French critics seem to have a finer appreciation of my subtle shades of meaning than English. I am curious to hear what Professor Park has to say about it. There has been another review in La Presse equally favorable. All seem to see the truth about American slavery much plainer than people
e, 444; date of, 490; Whittier's praise of, vigorous pencil-strokes in poem on seventieth birthday, 503. Orthodoxy, 335. Our Charley, date of, 490. Owen, Robert Dale, his Footfalls on the Boundary of another world and The Debatable land between this world and the next, 464; H. B. S. wishes George Eliot to meet, 464. P. Palmerston, Lord, meeting with, 232. Palmetto leaves published, 405; date , 491. Papacy, The, 358. Paris, first visit to, 241; second visit, 286. Park, Professor Edwards A., 186. Parker, Theodore, on the Bible and Jesus, 264. Paton, Bailie, host of Mrs. Stowe, 211. Peabody, pleasant reading in, 496; Queen Victoria's picture at, 496. Pearl of Orr's Island, the, 186, 187; first published, 327; Whittier's favorite, 327; date of, 490. Pebbles from the shores of a past life, a review of her life proposed to be written by H. B. S. with aid of son Charles, 512. Phantoms seen by Professor Stowe, 425. Phelps, Elizabeth Stuart, w