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 Cambridgeport (Massachusetts, United States) or search for Cambridgeport (Massachusetts, United States) in all documents.

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ing tour should be ended in time to allow her to go to her Florida home in December. This being acceded to, she set forth and gave her first reading in Bridgeport, Conn., on the evening of September 19, 1872. The following extracts from letters written to her husband while on this reading tour throw some interesting gleams of light on the scenes behind the curtain of the lecturer's platform. From Boston, October 3d, she writes: Have had a most successful but fatiguing week. Read in Cambridgeport to-night, and Newburyport to-morrow night. Two weeks later, upon receipt of a letter from her husband, in which he fears he has not long to live, she writes from Westfield, Mass:-- I have never had a greater trial than being forced to stay away from you now. I would not, but that my engagements have involved others in heavy expense, and should I fail to fulfill them, it would be doing a wrong. God has given me strength as I needed it, and I never read more to my own satisfactio
o, 313, 339; her confidences, 440; Mrs. Stowe's counsels to, 451. Byron, Lord, Mrs. Stowe on, 339; she suspects his insanity, 450; cheap edition of his works proposed, 453; Recollections of, by Countess Guiccioli, 446; his position as viewed by Dr. Holmes, 457; evidence of his poems for and against him, 457. C. Cabin, the, literary centre, 185. Cairnes, Prof., on the Fugitive slave Law, 146. Calhoun falsifies census, 509. Calvinism, J. R. Lowell's sympathy with, 335. Cambridgeport, H. B. S. reads in, 491. Carlisle, Lord, praises Uncle Tom's Cabin, 164; Mrs. Stowe's reply, 164; writes introduction to Uncle Tom, 192; H. B. S. dines with, 228; farewell to, 248; letter from H. B. S. to on moral effect of slavery, 164; letter to H. B. S. from, 218. Cary, Alice and Phosbe, 157. Casaubon and Dorothea, criticism by H. B. S. on, 471. Catechisms, Church and Assembly, H. B. S.'s early study of, 6,7. Chapman, Mrs., Margaret Weston, 310. Charpentier of Paris, p