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         Sigourney Lydia Huntley:     more books (18)
  1. Lydia Huntley Sigourney by Grace Lathrop Collin, 1902
  2. The Bell of St. Regis, by Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney, 1834
  3. Traits of the Aborigines of America. A poem. [By Lydia H. Huntley, afterwards Sigourney.] by Author Unknown, 2010-03-18
  4. Savings of the little ones, and poems of their mothers by Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney Mrs. 1791-1865. [from old catalog], 1855-12-31

21. Lydia Howard Sigourney
In 1819 Miss huntley became Mrs. Charles sigourney, an event that almost ended her however,and it became a matter of necessity for lydia sigourney to write.
http://www.ctheritage.org/encyclopedia/ct1818_1865/sigourney.htm
More Connecticut history, heritage, people, places and things...
Lydia Howard Sigourney
Born:  Norwich; September 1, 1791
Died:  Hartford; June 10, 1865 Entry by James P. Walsh The nineteenth century had an insatiable appetite for mawkish poetry, and this appetite was catered to in Connecticut by Lydia Sigourney, the "Sweet Singer of Hartford." The Romantic period was intoxicated with the power of verse, and even the best poets, like Shelley or Wordsworth, often approached the edge of bathos. Lesser poets, like Mrs. Sigourney, knew no limits. She was born Lydia Huntley, the only child of a handyman for a wealthy widow in Norwich. Her father's employer took a liking to young Lydia and treated her much like a daughter. It was through this connection that she became a frequent guest of the Wadsworth family in Hartford, and the Wadsworths did much to further her literary career. In 1815, Lydia Huntley published her first collection of poems, entitled Moral Pieces . The following lines, describing the Flood, were considered especially good:

22. Heath Anthology Of American Literature 4/e Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney - Aut
lydia Howard huntley sigourney (17911865) When Lafayette, the French hero ofthe American Revolutionary War, visited the United States in the 1820s, a
http://college.hmco.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/early_nine
Site Orientation Heath Orientation Timeline Access Author Profile Pages by: Table of Contents Authors by Name Authors by Year Internet Research Guide Textbook Site for: The Heath Anthology of American Literature , Fourth Edition
Paul Lauter, General Editor
Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney
When Lafayette, the French hero of the American Revolutionary War, visited the United States in the 1820s, a procession of schoolchildren with wreaths proclaiming “NOUS AIMONS LA FAYETTE” greeted him in the city of Hartford, Connecticut. The phrase was the refrain of a poem in his honor by Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney. This event characterizes Sigourney’s position as a writer. Her poetry, like her prose, was about public subjects—history, slavery, missionary work, as well as current events—or treated personal matters, especially loss and death, as experiences common to all. In contrast to a Dickinson or an Emerson, she wrote for popular consumption, her work expressed a communal ethic based on compassionate Christianity and on conservative republicanism.
Sigourney was enormously popular. In 1848 the respected publishers Cary and Hart issued her selected poems in their series of works by American poets, the preceding volumes having been devoted to three highly regarded male writers, Bryant, Longfellow, and N. P. Willis. She was also enormously productive: at her death in 1865 she had published over fifty books. Their range attests to the variety of forms in which antebellum writers could undertake to guide the public. She wrote communitarian narratives, educational volumes, advice manuals, travel literature, temperance pieces, meditative prose, and exemplary memoirs as well as a vast and varied quantity of poetry.

23. DINO - Language: Englisch - Arts - Literature - Authors - S - Sigourney, Lydia H
sigourney, lydia huntley sigourney, lydia huntley, Sprache/Language.
http://www.dino-online.de/dino_page_46d31e325d2338306b449ace1c16ede7.html
Suche Profi-Suche Katalog Video ... Produkte Suchen: Web-Seiten Video Audio Bilder Produkte Schon gewusst? Hier suchen Sie in 2 Milliarden Webseiten. Live-Suche: Was suchen andere Dino-Besucher?
You are here: DINO Language Englisch Arts ... S Sigourney, Lydia Huntley Sigourney, Lydia Huntley Sprache/Language
Related Categories DINO - Language: Englisch - Arts - Literature - Poetry
Websites Internet Links for Lydia H. Sigourney
http://www.sigourney.com/links.html
[Verwandte Websites] Lydia H. Sigourney and George Griffin: Papers - Provides a background description of author's life and a bibliographic index of the author's papers.
http://www.clements.umich.edu/Webguides/S/Sigourney.html
[Verwandte Websites] Lydia Huntley Sigourney - A short biography from the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame.
http://www.cwhf.org/browse/sigourney.htm
[Verwandte Websites]
This site is based on the Open Directory Project (ODP)
Last update: 25. Nov. 2002, 02:19:36 o'clock
This categorie needs an Editor.

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24. Arts/Literature/Authors/S/Sigourney,_Lydia_Huntley
the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature./ Arts / Literature / Authors / S / sigourney, lydia huntley.
http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/S/Sigourney
Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Literature Authors S Sigourney, Lydia Huntley George Griffin-Lydia H. Sigourney Papers
URL:
http://www.clements.umich.edu/Webguides/S/Sigourney.html
Internet Links for Lydia H. Sigourney

URL:
http://www.sigourney.com/links.html
Lydia Huntley Sigourney

URL:
http://www.ctforum.org/cwhf/sigourney.htm

25. Arts/Literature/Authors/S
Shaw, George Bernard, Shelley, Percy Bysshe, Sherman, David. Shiki, Shute, Nevil,sigourney, lydia huntley. Silliman, Ron, Silvis, Randall, Simenon, Georges.
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26. Biographical Sketch Of Lydia Sigourney
Diss. University of Athens, 2001. Ann Arbor UMI, 2001. 3015876. sigourney, LydiaHoward huntley. Letters of Life. New York, 1867. Teed, Melissa Ladd.
http://65.107.211.206/authors/sigourney/bio.html
A Short Consideration of the Life of Lydia Sigourney
Matthew Koyle
[Although Lydia Sigourney is obviously an American author, and the Victorian Web concentrates on nineteenth-century British culture and history, she appears here for several reasons: She represents an important part of the long-forgotten Anglo-American tradition of women's writing, her works resonate with works of writers like Christina Rossetti and may have influenced them, and her work is so little known one is unlikely to encounter many mentions of it elsewhere. GPL Lydia Howard Huntley was born in Norwich, Connecticut on September 1, 1791 to Ezekiel Huntley and Zerviah Wentworth . Their only child, she was named after her father's first wife, Lydia Howard, a woman he had married soon after participating in the Revolutionary war. Lydia Howard died soon after her marriage to Ezekiel, and he later married Zerviah. Lydia had many fond memories of her father and mother whom she esteemed a great deal. When she began to be successful as an author, she determined to take care of them, refraining from marriage. In her words: "I had . . . reason for avoiding serious advances. My mind was made up never to leave my parents. I felt that their absorbing love could never be repaid be the longest life-service, and that the responsibility of an only child, their sole prop and solace, would be strictly regarded by Him who readeth the heart. I had seen aged people surrounded by indifferent persons, who considered their care a burden, and could not endure the thought that my tender parents, who were without near relatives, should be thrown upon the fluctuating kindness of hirelings and strangers. To me, my father already seemed aged, though scarcely sixty; and I said, in my musing hours, Shall he, who never denied me aught, or spoke to me otherwise than in love-tones, stretch forth his hands in their weakness, "and find none to gird him"? (241).

27. Works By Lydia Sigourney
The following list includes all the works of Mrs. sigourney thatwere published as books under her supervision. huntley, lydia.
http://65.107.211.206/authors/sigourney/works.html
Works by Lydia H. Sigourney
Gordon S. Haight
Source: Gordon S. Haight, Mrs. Sigourney: The Sweet Singer of Hartford. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1930.
Reformatted as HTML in MLA style by Matthew Koyle "The following list includes all the works of Mrs. Sigourney that were published as books under her supervision. No effort has been made to collect her contributions to periodicals which would number many thousands; and, similarly, single poems reprinted for distribution at funerals or for other occasions have been excluded. Where the same work reappeared under a new title, the second title is listed with a reference to the earlier one. The dates in all cases are taken from the title pages, though many of the books were published late in the preceding years to catch the holiday trade." Gordon S. Haight Huntley, Lydia. Moral Pieces, in Prose and Verse. Hartford, 1815. [Anonymous.] The Writings of Nancy Maria Hyde, of Norwich, Conn. Connected with a Sketch of Her Life. Norwich, 1816. [An Anonymous pamphlet.] The Square Table.

28. Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley
sigourney, lydia Howard huntley. lydia Howard huntley sigourney. Libraryof Congress, Washington, DC; neg. no. LC BH82 5220. (17911865), poet
http://search.eb.com/women/articles/Sigourney_Lydia_Howard_Huntley.html
Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley
Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.; neg. no. LC BH82 5220 (1791-1865), poet Born in Norwich, Connecticut, on September 1, 1791, Lydia Huntley worked as a schoolteacher and published her first work, Moral Pieces in Prose and Verse, in 1815, in part for the use of her pupils. After her marriage in 1819 to Charles Sigourney, a merchant, she devoted her life to writing. She wrote some 67 books and more than a thousand articles during her career; many were widely read in Europe as well as in the United States. Such editors as Louis Godey of the Lady's Book (later Godey's Lady's Book ) and Edgar Allan Poe of Graham's Magazine vied for contributions from "the sweet singer of Hartford." Sigourney's writing relied on sentimental conventions of moral and religious themes; death and piety were her most popular subjects. Her best-known prose work was Letters to Young Ladies (1833); her Illustrated Poems (1849) was published in a series that included the poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. She died in Hartford, Connecticut, on June 10, 1865. Her autobiography, Letters of Life

29. Connecticut
Porter, Sarah. Russell, Rosalind. sigourney, lydia Howard huntley. Smith, Abby Hadassahand Julia Evelina. Stephens, Ann Sophia. Stowe, Harriet Elizabeth Beecher.
http://search.eb.com/women/articles/ctbirth.html
Connecticut
Calkins, Mary Whiton Cleveland, Emeline Horton Cooke, Rose Terry Dodge, Josephine Marshall Jewell ... Woolley, Mary Emma

30. Sigourney, Iowa
lydia huntley sigourney “Another Look” The times that lydia huntley sigourneylived in had much to do with the success she achieved as a writer.
http://www.sigourney.com/lhs.html
LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY: “Another Look” Early Life Lydia Huntley Sigourney was born in 1791 in Norwich, Connecticut, the only child of Zerviah (Sophia) and Ezekial Huntley. She grew up in privileged surroundings on the Daniel Lathrop estate, where her father was the custodian and gardener. Under the supervision of Daniel Lathrop’s widow, who was the daughter of the former governor of Connecticut, Lydia received an education that was both traditional and non-traditional for a young woman of her day. In addition to the usual instruction in needlework, painting, music, and penmanship, Lydia was also required to master weightier courses in composition, math, Greek, philosophy, and other subjects normally offered only to young men. Lydia’ formal education continued until Mrs. Lathrop died, when Lydia was 14. To recover from the loss of Mrs. Lathrop, Lydia was sent to live with relatives of the Lathrops in Hartford. There she was given access to an extensive library; she had frequent exposure to cultural events; and she learned how to run a noble household. She also devoted much of her time to writing prose, poetry, and prose meditations, which she patterned after traditional sermons. In 1811, at the age of 20, Lydia and a friend established a select school for ladies in Norwich, Connecticut. The following year, after moving the school to more spacious quarters in the business sector of Norwich, Lydia stepped far ahead of her historical period by holding free classes twice weekly for poor children, who, at that time, were generally not even permitted to attend school. In 1814, Lydia opened a select seminary for young ladies. Believing women to be the main source of moral strength in American households, she gave strong emphasis in her curriculum to Biblical and religious studies. In 1815 marked the publication of Lydia’s first work, “Moral Pieces in Prose and Verse.” With it, she launched a career that culminated in her becoming one of America’s most popular authors.

31. Chronological Bibliography
sigourney, lydia Howard huntley. Traits of the Aborigines of America. Redwood.sigourney, lydia Howard huntley. Sketch of Connecticut, Forty Years Since.
http://www.albany.edu/~jf/chron20.html
Chronological listing of bibliography entries:
Brooks, Maria Gowen.
Judith, Esther, and Other Poems.
Cheney, Harriet Vaughan Foster The Sunday School, or Village Sketches.
Huntington, Susan Mansfield Little Lucy, or, The Careless Child Reformed.
Robbins, Eliza American Popular Lessons.
Savage, Sarah Filial Affection, orThe Clergyman's granddaughter.
Savage, Sarah James Talbot.
Thayer, Caroline Matilda Warren Letter to Members of the Methodist Episcipal Church of the City of New York
Willard, Emma Hart and William C. Woodbridge Rudiments of Geography, on a new plan.
Rowson, Susanna Haswell Biblical Dialogues Between a Father and His Family.
Sedgwick, Catherine Maria Mary Hollis. A New England Tale. Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley Traits of the Aborigines of America. Willard, Emma Hart and William C. Woodbridge Ancient Geography. Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell The Genius of Oblivion and Other Original Poems. Morton, Sarah Wentworth Apthorp My Mind and Its Thoughts in Sketches, Fragments, and Essays. Rowson, Susanna Haswell "America and Liberty"

32. Chronological Bibliography
_. A love token for children. sigourney, lydia Howard huntley. A book for girls,in prose and poetry. sigourney, lydia Howard huntley. Letters to mothers.
http://www.albany.edu/~jf/chron30b.html
Chronological listing of bibliography entries:
Beecher, Catharine Esther
Letters on the difficulty of religion.
Brown, Phoebe Hinsdale The tree and its fruits; or, Narratives from Real Life
The village school, to which is added Jenny; or The conversion of a child, a narrative

Chandler, Elizabeth Margaret Essays, philanthropic and moral, principally relating to the abolition of slavery in America
The poetical works of Elizabeth Margaret Chandler.
Chapman, Maria Weston Songs of the free and hymns of Christian freedom
Child, Lydia Maria Anti-slavery catechism
The evils of slavery, and the cure of slavery.
Philothea; a romance
Griffith, Mary Camperdown; or, News from our Neighborhood Three hundred years hence Discoveries in light and vision: with a short memoir containing Discoveries in the mental faculties. . A ppeal to the Christian women of the South Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell The Book of Flowers Hall, Louisa Jane Park Alfred [and the Better part]. Larned, Mrs. L The American Nun; or, The Effect of Romance. Lee, Jarena

33. Connecticut Women's Hall Of Fame
lydia huntley sigourney, 1791 1865. The Sweet Singer of Hartford for whom sigourney Street was named, one of the first American
http://www.richardstevens3.com/cwhf/browse/sigourney.htm
LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY, 1791 - 1865
The "Sweet Singer of Hartford" for whom Sigourney Street was named, one of the first American women to succeed at a literary career. A teacher, born in Norwich, Lydia Huntley moved to Hartford at the invitation of Daniel Wadsworth to open a school for the daughters of his friends. With her marriage to Charles Sigourney in 1819 came financial stability, allowing her to give up teaching and devote herself full time to writing and publishing anonymously. Lydia used proceeds from her writing to contribute to charitable causes including the temperance movement, peace societies, Greek war relief, and the work of missionaries at home and abroad. In Traits of the Aborigines of America (1822) she turned Indian tales into blank verse urging conversion of Native Americans to Christianity. When her husband's business began to fail, she sold poems and sketches to magazines. After the success of Letters to Young Ladies (1833), her most popular prose work, she abandoned anonymity despite her husband's objections. Within a year she had published eight other volumes including Poems (1834), a collection of her verse that was reprinted three times. Her popularity was so great that rival publishers competed for her work. Death and piety were her favorite subjects; her rhyming of pious truisms had a wide appeal. Lydia went abroad in 1840 where she was received by Wordsworth, had tea with Carlyle and was presented at the court of Louis Philippe. Between 1840 and 1850 Mrs. Sigourney published fourteen collections of her poetry. Her celebrity reached its height with the 1849 publication of her

34. Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865)
lydia Howard huntley sigourney (17911865). Contributing Editor SandraA. Zagarell. Classroom Issues and Strategies. Among the biggest
http://www.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/sigourney.html
Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865)
Contributing Editor: Sandra A. Zagarell
Classroom Issues and Strategies
Major Themes, Historical Perspectives, and Personal Issues
Significant Form, Style, or Artistic Conventions
Sigourney was a prolific and varied writer. I would draw attention to the adroitness with which her work exhibits the stylistic versatility of public verse. Among the forms her poems take are the ode, the nonsubjective lyric, elegy, and narrative and descriptive verse. She wrote in a variety of meters and verse patterns. Her poetry is situated in a sentimental tradition that contrasts with the Romantic one more familiar to, and more highly valued by, readers in the academy. The striking absence of the subjective consciousness of an organizing persona is a feature I would stress. As Annie Finch has observed, Sigourney's poetry gives religious, moral, and emotional truths what seems an independent or nonpersonal voice, or appears to represent nature or natural states without a mediating subjectivity. I also call attention to the wit Sigourney's poems can display: "To a Shred of Linen" elicits an earlier agrarian New England while reflecting wryly on continuing societal ambivalence about women's creativity in a sphere other than the domestic.

35. Teoma Search: Lydia Huntley Sigourney
Columbus by lydia huntley sigourney. More results from www.photoaspects.com =sigourney, lydia huntley =- (Arts, Literature, Authors, S) Surfer.ch Internet
http://s.teoma.com/search?q=Lydia Huntley Sigourney

36. Autumn Leaves: Lydia Huntley Sigourney
lydia huntley sigourney. lydia huntley sigourney wrote a poem called Indian Names, in which she implied we all are dead, and only some of our words remain,.
http://www.sondra.net/al/vol2/24lydia.htm
Autumn Leaves
volume 2 number 4
Lydia Huntley Sigourney
by Sondra Ball
Lydia Huntley Sigourney
wrote a poem called "Indian Names,"
in which she implied we all are dead,
and only some of our words remain, like Ontario and Wachusett,
Missouri and Rappahannock:
Indian words still being used
along with the proud Monadnock. Lydia Huntley Sigourney,
here's some news on Indian names:
I, and thousands others like me,
in human form down here remain.
when folks like you decide I'm dead. I rather like the thought I keep: that I'm still here, and I'm still red.
Sondra Ball, Autumn Leaves book reviews links ... concerns

37. Sigourney
Opened for settlement in 1843, sigourney, Iowa, was named after the distinguishedpoetess lydia huntley sigourney. The town's Neoclassical
http://www.mainstreetiowa.org/towns/sigourney.html
A Main Street Iowa community. Population: 2,111 This is an official State of Iowa Web site representing the Iowa Department of Economic Development's Main Street Iowa program. Annual Events Programs/Property Economic Statistics Local Links ... Main Street Iowa Home Opened for settlement in 1843, Sigourney, Iowa, was named after the distinguished poetess Lydia Huntley Sigourney. The town's Neoclassical courthouse, built in 1909, with the historic Lewis Memorial Fountain gracing its picturesque lawn serves as the central focal point of the community. Known as "The Fountain of Opportunity," Sigourney is undergoing a metamorphosis of sorts, both physically and mentally. Since Main Street Sigourney was founded in 1990 to assist with the revitalization of downtown, a majority of this southeast Iowa community's commercial and public buildings surrounding the courthouse have undergone exterior renovation projects of varying degrees. Nearly $1.5 million has been invested in interior and exterior improvement projects and over 25,000 volunteer hours contributed for the betterment of downtown since 1990. As a result, in 1997, Sigourney was named a finalist for the National Main Street Center's Great American Main Street Award, and ,in 1995, Sigourney was the first community to ever receive Main Street Iowa's Spirit of Main Street award. Visit Sigourney! Main Street Sigourney
112 East Washington
Sigourney, Iowa 52591

38. Sigourney Family History In America
lydia huntley sigourney,. lydia sigourney was born in 1791 in Norwich,Connecticut, the only child of Zerviah and Ezekial huntley.
http://www.rickmansworthherts.freeserve.co.uk/webpage9.htm
Sigourney in America
Published by Norman Lucey
I have an extensive family tree for the Sigournay and Sigourney family, dating from the early 17th century to the present day. Please contact me if you are searching for particular individuals or if I can assist in your geneological research.
SIGOURNAY HISTORY

RETURN TO HOME PAGE

Please contact me with any queries you may have: -
SIGOURNAY HISTORY
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The Sigourneys are of French Huguenot descent,
Lydia Huntley Sigourney,
had a life of interesting contrasts and startling contradictions. She was one of America's most popular authors in the 19th century. She married to ensure financial security for herself and her parents. After her marriage, it was the income from her writing that provided the bulk of the farnily's support. She wrote annual gift books and collections of inspirational prose and poetry at the rate of one every eight months for almost 50 years. Today her work is almost unknown, however in the mid-19th century she was more prestigious than Edgar Allen Poe.
Lydia Sigourney was born in 1791 in Norwich, Connecticut, the only child of Zerviah and Ezekial Huntley. She grew up in privileged surroundings. At 28 she married Charles Sigourney, a wealthy widower with three children. Publishers at this time were "hungery" for novels and shorter pieces that were commercially marketable to the vast numbers of women at home. Poetry was popular, particularly when it would appeal to women. Lydia Sigourney was so successful that she became a household name. She died on June 10, 1865, twenty one years after being selected by an Iowa doctor as the name of a small community located in the centre of Keokuk County, Iowa, USA.

39. L'Histoire De Famille De Sigournay
Translate this page lydia huntley sigourney, a eu une vie d'intéresser de constrastes etles contradictions surprenantes. Elle celui était d'Amérique
http://www.rickmansworthherts.freeserve.co.uk/webpage16.htm
L'Histoire de Famille de Sigournay
SIGOURNEY DANS LE RETOUR D'AMERIQUE
A LA PAGE D'ACCUEIL

DEMANDER PLUSIEURS RENSEIGNEMENTS

SIGOURNEY DANS LE RETOUR D'AMERIQUE
...
A LA PAGE D'ACCUEIL
J.Sigournay advertisment L'Hopital francais, Londres
68, Hill Rise, Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom
Tel: UK 01923 775025
e-mail: norman@lucey.net

40. Poem Book Index Page
A Butterfly on a Child's Grave. by lydia huntley sigourney. Indian Names,by lydia huntley sigourney. The Cherokee Mother, by lydia huntley sigourney.
http://silverstone.fortunecity.com/gordon/587/
web hosting domain names email addresses related sites Discover forgotten poems of yesterday A Butterfly on a Child's Grave by Lydia Huntley Sigourney Indian Names by Lydia Huntley Sigourney The Cherokee Mother by Lydia Huntley Sigourney The Thanksgiving Translated by Harriet Maxwell Converse The City by Richard Burton A Little Story by Anne Reeve Aldrich 'This But A Little Faded Flower by Ellen Clemintine Hawarth The Old Beau by Edgar Fawcett The Tea-Gown by Eugene Field "One, Two, Three!" by H. C. Bunner Speak Gently by David Bates Little Boy Blue by Eugene Field Solitude by Ella Wheeler Wilcox Acquainted With The Night by Robert Frost Resignation by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow The Tortoise Shell Comb by E. F. Ellet (1836) Not Lost by Thomas S. Collier Remember by Christina Rossetti Remembrance by Emily Jane Bronte A Reminiscence by Anne Bronte She Was A Phantom of Delight by William Wordsworth Ode To A Nightingale by John Keats Your Letter, Lady, Came Too Late by Colonel William S. Hawkins
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