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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 2. Search the whole document.
Found 49 total hits in 36 results.
N. P. Willis (search for this): chapter 6
William Whewell (search for this): chapter 6
Locke (search for this): chapter 6
Athenaeum Club, Dec. 28, 1838.
Again in town and in this glorious apartment, where I look upon the busts of Milton and Shakspeare, of Locke and Burke, of Bacon and Newton!
It was not long since I saw Bulwer writing here; and when he threw down the pen he had been using, the thought crossed my mind to appropriate it, and make my fortune by selling it to some of his absurd admirers in America.
But I let the goose-quill sleep.
What a different person I have just been conversing with for three hours or more!—Basil Montagu; one of the sweetest men, with honeyed discourse, that I ever met. His mind is running over with beautiful images and with boundless illustration and allusion.
He has known as bosom friends Mackintosh, Coleridge, Wordsworth, and Lord Eldon; and he pours out his heart, as I freely mention their names, like water.
He has just published a charming little book, entitled, Essays and Selections; and he has given me a copy, in which he has written my name, with the af
William Wordsworth (search for this): chapter 6
George S. Hillard (search for this): chapter 6
Albany W. Fonblanque (search for this): chapter 6
John Taylor Coleridge (search for this): chapter 6
Edward George Lytton Bulwer (search for this): chapter 6
Athenaeum Club, Dec. 28, 1838.
Again in town and in this glorious apartment, where I look upon the busts of Milton and Shakspeare, of Locke and Burke, of Bacon and Newton!
It was not long since I saw Bulwer writing here; and when he threw down the pen he had been using, the thought crossed my mind to appropriate it, and make my fortune by selling it to some of his absurd admirers in America.
But I let the goose-quill sleep.
What a different person I have just been conversing with for three hours or more!—Basil Montagu; one of the sweetest men, with honeyed discourse, that I ever met. His mind is running over with beautiful images and with boundless illustration and allusion.
He has known as bosom friends Mackintosh, Coleridge, Wordsworth, and Lord Eldon; and he pours out his heart, as I freely mention their names, like water.
He has just published a charming little book, entitled, Essays and Selections; and he has given me a copy, in which he has written my name, with the aff
Charles Sumner (search for this): chapter 6
Bacon (search for this): chapter 6
Athenaeum Club, Dec. 28, 1838.
Again in town and in this glorious apartment, where I look upon the busts of Milton and Shakspeare, of Locke and Burke, of Bacon and Newton!
It was not long since I saw Bulwer writing here; and when he threw down the pen he had been using, the thought crossed my mind to appropriate it, and make my fortune by selling it to some of his absurd admirers in America.
But I let the goose-quill sleep.
What a different person I have just been conversing with for three hours or more!—Basil Montagu; one of the sweetest men, with honeyed discourse, that I ever met. His mind is running over with beautiful images and with boundless illustration and allusion.
He has known as bosom friends Mackintosh, Coleridge, Wordsworth, and Lord Eldon; and he pours out his heart, as I freely mention their names, like water.
He has just published a charming little book, entitled, Essays and Selections; and he has given me a copy, in which he has written my name, with the af