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قراءة كتاب Margaret Fuller (Marchesa Ossoli)
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Famous Women.
MARGARET FULLER.
The next volumes in the Famous Women Series will be:
- Maria Edgeworth. By Miss Zimmern.
- Sarah and Angelina Grimke. By Mrs. Birney.
- Anne Bradstreet. By Helen Campbell.
Already published:
- George Eliot. By Miss Blind.
- Emily Brontë. By Miss Robinson.
- George Sand. By Miss Thomas.
- Mary Lamb. By Mrs. Gilchrist.
- Margaret Fuller. By Julia Ward Howe.
MARGARET FULLER
(MARCHESA OSSOLI).
BY
JULIA WARD HOWE.
BOSTON:
ROBERTS BROTHERS.
1883.
Copyright, 1883,
By Roberts Brothers.
University Press:
John Wilson and Son, Cambridge.
PREFATORY NOTE.
The present volume bears the name of Margaret Fuller simply, because it is by this name that its subject is most widely known and best remembered. Another name, indeed, became hers by marriage; but this later style and title were borne by our friend for a short period only, and in a country remote from her own. It was as Margaret Fuller that she took her place among the leading spirits of her time, and made her brave crusade against its unworthier features. The record of her brief days of wifehood and of motherhood is tenderly cherished by her friends, but the story of her life-work is best inscribed with the [vi]name which was hers by birth and baptism, the name which, in her keeping, acquired a significance not to be lost nor altered. [vii]
CONTENTS.
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CHAPTER I. | |
Childhood and Early Youth.—School-days |
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CHAPTER II. | |
Life in Cambridge.—Friendship of Dr. Hedge and James Freeman Clarke |
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CHAPTER III. | |
Religious Beliefs.—Margaret's Early Critics.—First Acquaintance with Mr. Emerson |
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CHAPTER IV. | |
Art Studies.—Removal to Groton.—Meeting with Harriet Martineau.—Death of Mr. Fuller.—Devotion to her Family |
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CHAPTER V. | |
Winter in Boston.—A Season of Severe Labor.—Connection with Green-Street School, Providence, R. I.—Editorship of the "Dial."—Margaret's estimate of Allston's pictures |
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CHAPTER VI. | |
William Henry Channing's portrait of Margaret.—Transcendental Days.—Brook Farm.—Margaret's visits there |
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CHAPTER VII. | |
Margaret's love of children.—Visit to Concord after the death of Waldo Emerson.—Conversations in Boston.—Summer on the Lakes |
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CHAPTER VIII. | |
Farewell to Boston.—Engagement to write for the "New York Tribune."—Margaret in her new surroundings.—Mr. Greeley's opinion of Margaret's work.—Her estimate of George Sand |
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CHAPTER IX. | |
Margaret's residence at the Greeley mansion.—Appearance in New York society.—Visits to women imprisoned at Sing Sing and on Blackwell's Island.—Letters to her brothers.—"Woman in the Nineteenth Century."—Essay on American Literature.—View of contemporary Authors |
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CHAPTER X. | |
Ocean voyage.—Arrival at Liverpool.—The Lake Country.—Wordsworth.—Miss Martineau.—Edinburgh.—De Quincey.—Mary, Queen of Scots.—Night on Ben |