قراءة كتاب Reminiscences, 1819-1899
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From a photograph.
From a painting in the possession of M. Anagnos.
From a photograph lent by Francis J. Garrison, Boston.
From a photograph by J. J. Hawes.
From a painting (1847) by Joseph Ames.
From a photograph by Black, about 1859.
From a photograph by the Notman Photographic Company.
From a photograph (about 1857) lent by Francis J. Garrison, Boston.
From a photograph by Black.
From a photograph by J. J. Hawes, about 1861.
From the original MS. in the possession of Mrs. E. P. Whipple, Boston.
From a photograph by Black.
From a photograph lent by his daughter, Charlotte A. Hedge.
From a photograph by A. Marshall (1870), in the possession of the Massachusetts Club.
From a photograph by the Notman Photographic Company.
From a photograph.
From a photograph by Briskham and Davidson.
From a photograph lent by Mrs. John Murray Forbes.
From a photograph.
REMINISCENCES
CHAPTER I
BIRTH, PARENTAGE, CHILDHOOD
I have been urgently asked to put together my reminiscences. I could wish that I had begun to do so at an earlier period of my life, because at this time of writing the lines of the past are somewhat confused in my memory. Yet, with God's help, I shall endeavor to do justice to the individuals whom I have known, and to the events of which I have had some personal knowledge.
Let me say at the very beginning that I esteem this century, now near its close, to have eminently deserved a record among those which have been great landmarks in human history. It has seen the culmination of prophecies, the birth of new hopes, and a marvelous multiplication both of the ideas which promote human happiness and of the resources which enable man to make himself master of the world. Napoleon is said to have forbidden his subordinates to tell him that any order of his was impossible of fulfillment. One might think that the genius of this age must have uttered a like injunction. To attain instantaneous communication with our friends across oceans and through every continent; to command locomotion whose swiftness changes the relations of space and time; to steal from Nature her deepest secrets, and to make disease itself the minister of cure; to compel the sun to keep for us the record of scenes and faces, of the great shows and pageants of time, of the perishable forms whose charm and beauty deserve to remain in the world's possession,—these are some of the achievements of our nineteenth century. Even more wonderful than these may we esteem the moral progress of the race; the decline of political and religious enmities,