DINING WITH DICKENS
... full biography of her yet. want know what time she got in the morning, and what sort of shoes and stockings she wore.’ —Grace Greenwood, ...
... full biography of her yet. want know what time she got in the morning, and what sort of shoes and stockings she wore.’ —Grace Greenwood, ...
... a nev series of popular letters on thoe. subject of agri- cultural chemistry. They nrc addressedo to Alderman Mechi. Grace Greenwood, thoe well-known American autho- Iess, lectured at Tremiont Tomple, hil Boston, Noveni- ber 15, to an immense audienec ...
... contents are of the light and agreeable kind which one would expect from the pens of such writers as Shirley Brooks, Grace Greenwood, Dr. Doran, Crawford Wilson, and Alfred Cole-the eon- stant and ever-velcome conteibutors to this favourite periodical ...
... luxuries of life. Whittier is the only poet with whom 1 am acquainted who lives in perfect simplicity and retirement. —Grace Greenwood. ...
... Loves Provocations, by Vvrdant Gretm. Boya and Ibeir Rulers, or Whet do School. Wild Tribea Ix>ndon. Forest Tragedy, Grace Greenwood. Christmas Day, and how it was Spent. Reveries of a Bachelor. Heir of Dutiapringmore. Maria MacOowan. Tales of the Coast ...
... kindness and esteem. Philosophical travellers, like Mr. Emerson and Mr. Charles Sumner, or sentimental Unitarian/, like Grace Greenwood and that host of entertaining writers of the same rose-pink school, who come over here every Summer, and keep up a pleasant ...
... Sir Charles Napier, ihius_ trative of a brief, butsuir~cient memoir of the old hero, graces ttlis number. The lively Grace Greenwood aorrates the haps and mishaps of her European tonr with increased spirit, and le-ads us after her, with no reluctant ...
... be increased to nine inm-cerouiissioued officers and 100 gunners and drivers. Ib,d. A Pautt at Mr. Dickens's. —.Miss Grace Greenwood, who is writing series of letters from Loudon to the National Era, abolitionist paper, published at Washington, gives ...
... to show them (as we term it) the British public, a book. Mr. James has visited Washington Irving, at Sunny Side. Miss Grace Greenwood, a popular writer the American magazine, contributing Sketches of Eminent Pohliciam, after the following fashion, to the ...
... present season. Among the late arrivals are Mrs. Edwin Forrest. Cushman, Mrs Abbott, Mrs M*Kenna, Mrs Silshee, .Miss Grace Greenwood, the authoress; Mr Buchanan, the tragedian; Owens, the lessee of the Baltimore Museum ; Howard Paul, the dramatist ; I ...
... be drunk on the premises), 3,378,165 bushels; not to be drunk the premises, 391,457 bushels. A Picture of Home.—Miss Grace Greenwood, an American authoress, writing from Home to The National Era (Washington, I S.), says: “With soldiers and Priests Rome ...
... Sarah Apple, but could see no impropriety in the making of two apples into one pair.” Romans of rank and fortune,” says Grace Greenwood, 1 “are singularly handsome; you see little m their dress to distinguish them from the English or French resident here ...