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         Sigourney Lydia Huntley:     more books (18)
  1. Sketches, By Mrs. Sigourney by Lydia Huntley Sigourney, 1834
  2. The Christian's gift by Rufus W. 1813-1886 Clark, Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney, et all 2010-08-01
  3. Savings of the little ones, and poems of their mothers
  4. The RELIGIOUS SOUVENIR for Christian & New-Years Presents. by Lydia Huntley, editor. SIGOURNEY, 1840
  5. LYDIA HUNTLEY SIGOURNEY - Early 19th Century American Female Poet. (American Female Poets)
  6. "Lydia Huntley Sigourney": A Biographical Essay from Gale's "Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 239, American Women Prose Writers 1820-1870" (code 30)
  7. Letters to Mothers. By Mrs. L.H. Sigourney by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 2010
  8. Letters to Mothers. By Mrs. L.H. Sigourney by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 1854-01-01
  9. Poems for the sea
  10. [Pocahontas, and other poems.] by Lydia Howard Huntley Afterwards Sigourney, 2010-03-18
  11. Select poems;
  12. Letters to Mothers by Lydia Howard (Huntley) Sigourney, 2005-10-27
  13. Lucy Howard's Journal / By Mrs. L. H. Sigourney by Lydia Huntley Sigourney, 1858
  14. Lydia Huntley Sigourney in the Bacon Collection by Alice DeLana, 1986

61. Annie Finch
lydia huntley sigourney. New England Magazine 27 (1902) 1520. Conrad, Susan P. Perish the Thought Intellectual Women in Romantic America 1830-1860.
http://www.usm.maine.edu/~afinch/lydia.htm
An Unsung Singer THE SENTIMENTAL POETESS IN THE WORLD: METAPHOR AND SUBJECTIVITY IN LYDIA SIGOURNEY'S NATURE POETRY by Annie Finch Published in Legacy , Fall 1987 poetry has been more forbidden to women than prose in our tradition because it is far less "selfless":the Iyric poem acts as if it is an "effusion".... from a strong and assertive "I," a central self that is forcefully defined, whether real or imaginary. The novel, on the other hand, allows-even encourages-just the self-effacing withdrawal that society fosters in women. (Madwoman 547-48) The sentimental American nineteenth-century poetesses did not as a rule struggle with this model of poetic subjectivity. Their poetry rarely projects the self into metaphorical readings of the world; it does not effuse from a "poet" in the traditional sense of a seer or "priest" for whom nature is important only insofar as it reflects the individual poetic soul (Gilbert and Gubar, Madwoman 546). Instead, it is structured to allow the natural world an independent identity no less privileged than the poetic self.6 This lack of a privileged central self, in conjunction with the elevation of public, communally shared values such as religion and family love, is what gives their poetry that quality we have defined as "sentimental."

62. Edna Edith Sayers (Lois Bragg)
“lydia huntley sigourney and the Beginnings in American Deaf Education in Hartford It Takes a Village.” Forthcoming in Sign Language Studies.
http://www.eesayers.com/
Curriculum vitae of Edna Edith Sayers, f.k.a. Lois Bragg
Edna Edith Sayers Professor of English, Gallaudet University Washington, D.C. 20002 fax 202.651.5599; Edna.Sayers@Gallaudet.edu
William, Edna Edith, and Dorothy Sayers, Romulus, New York 2004
Work in Progress Gates, Diana, and Edna Edith Sayers. A book on Lydia Sigourney's poems and stories having to do with Deaf people. Publications Carty, Breda, Susannah Macready, and Edna Edith Sayers. "'A Grave and Gracious Woman': Deaf People in Colonial New England." Forthcoming in Sign Language Studies. Sayers, Edna Edith. Forthcoming in A World of Difference: Essays on Disability in the Middle Ages , ed. Joshua Eyler. Under review. Sayers, Edna Edith, and Diana Gates. Sign Language Studies , summer 2009. A study of the first successful teacher of a deaf child in America and her later career as a poet and essayist. Channon, Rachel, and Edna Edith Sayers. American Annals of the Deaf A study of how Deaf people write English, noting the lexical and grammatical patterns typical of Deaf writers. Sayers, Edna Edith.

63. Emerson Chronology--General
lydia huntley sigourney dies Louisa May Alcott, Moods Henry David Thoreau, Cape Cod Mark Twain, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
http://www.cas.sc.edu/engl/emerson/chronology/generalchronologysublink.html
General Chronology
Thomas Jefferson is President First tax-supported public library founded in Salisbury, Conn.
Louisiana Purchase completed Monthly Anthology , and Boston Review founded
Lewis and Clark expedition begins
Alexander Hamilton killed
Nathaniel Hawthorne born
Jefferson's second inaugural
William Gilmore Simms born
Noah Webster, Compendious Dictionary of the English Language
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and John Greenleaf Whittier born
Joel Barlow, The Columbiad William Cullen Bryant, The Embargo James Madison inaugurated as president Oliver Wendell Holmes and Edgar Allan Poe born Philip Freneau, Collected Poems Washington Irving, A History of New York American population is 7,239,881 Charles Brockden Brown dies Isaiah Thomas, History of Printing in America Harriet Beecher Stowe and Sarah Payson Willis ("Fanny Fern") born War is declared on Britain Louisiana is made the eighteenth state American Antiquarian Society founded James Kirke Paulding

64. Edgar Allan Poe Society Of Baltimore - Works - Misc - Autography [part I]
Mrs. lydia huntley sigourney (17911865). Joseph B. Miller, Esq. Much pains seem to have been taken in the MS. of this epistle. Black lines have been used
http://www.eapoe.org/works/MISC/AUTOGB1.HTM
Last Update: Oct. 27, 2007 Navigation: Main Menu Poe's Works Poe's Misc.
Text: Edgar Allan Poe, "Autography [part I]" (txt-1), Southern Literary Messenger , February 1836, 2:205-212
[page 205:]
AUTOGRAPHY.
Our friend and particular acquaintance, Joseph Miller, Esq., (who, by the way, signs his name, we think, Joseph A. Miller, or Joseph B. Miller, or at least Joseph C. Miller) paid us a visit a few days ago. His behavior was excessively odd. Walking into our sanctum without saying a word, he seated himself with a dogged air in our own exclusive arm-chair, and surveyed us, for some minutes, in silence, and in a very suspicious manner, over the rim of his spectacles. There was evidently something in the wind. "What can the man want ?" thought we, without saying so. "I will tell you," said he, reading our thoughts. "Why, not "In Great Britain," we interposed, seeing him at a loss. "We have." "Very possible," we replied. "And, pray, sir, what do you think of it ?" "Think of what ?"

65. Lutz, Alma. Collection Of Documents By And About Abolitionists And Women's Right
Her book Story of a Pioneer, will donate copy to his college; sigourney, lydia huntley James Monroe Co. Feb. 3, 1842. Re publication of her volume of
http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00064
Harvard University Library
OASIS
: Online Archival Search Information System Frames Version
Questions or Comments
A-110/M-133
Lutz, Alma. Collection of documents by and about abolitionists and women's rights activists, 1775-1943: A Finding Aid
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
Radcliffe College
January 1986
REQUEST AS:
Call No.: A-110/M-133
Note: ORIGINALS CLOSED. USE MICROFILM. REQUEST AS: M-133.
Repository: Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute
Creator: ALMA LUTZ, 1890-1973
Title: Collection,1775-1943,n.y., n.d.
Quantity: 1 file box, 1 folio folder
Abstract: Correspondence of Alma Lutz, author and suffragist, and others involved in the abolitionist and suffrage movements.
Processing Information:
Reprocessed: January 1986 By: Bert Hartry
Acquisition Information:
Accession numbers: 55-82, 56-89, 370, 430, 1164, 70-12, 70-61 The papers in this collection were purchased by AlmaLutz and given to the Schlesinger Library in 1955, 1956, 1958, 1961, 1962, 1967, and 1970. The collection was reprocessed and microfilmed with the support of the Friends of the Schlesinger Library.
Access Restrictions:
Access. Unrestricted. Originals are closed; use microfilm M-133.

66. Long RiverWinding
sigourney, lydia huntley. Sims, Dr. Ethan Allen Hitchcock. Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God. Smith College. Smith, Abby Hadassah
http://longriverwinding.com/who's in it.htm
Long RiverWinding Life, Love, and Death along the Connecticut Published in April 2003 How to buy Who's in it? Here's a listing of just about everybody and everything mentioned in the bookeven if they were mentioned only briefly. A-B-C D-E-F G-H-I J-K-L ... V-W-X-Y-Z A-B-C Ackmann, Martha Adams, John Agawam, MA Alces alces americanus Allen, Ethan and Fanny Allen, Heman Allen, Lucy Caroline American Society of Dowsers American Turtle Amherst Academy Amherst College Amherst History Museum Amherst, MA Amor Caritas Angel of Handley Anthony, Susan B. Archy Arnold, Thankful Arosen, Francis Xavier Babcock, Dwight S. Bancroft, Dr. Edward Basketball Hall of Fame Beadle, William and Lydia Bellamy, Edward and Emma Bellows Falls Historical Society Bellows Falls, VT Bemis, Guy and Marion Bemis, Joseph Benet, Stephen Vincent Bennington, VT Birthplace, The Bissland, Annie Bissland, James H. 3 rd Bissland, John Knox Bissland, Robert and Mary Hope Block Island Block, Adriaen Blue-Backed Speller Bolivar, Simon Bontaites, Kristine Boteler, Sir John Boyden, Frank Learoyd Brookline, VT

67. Angielski - Wiersz - Lydia Huntley Sigourney-Columbus
Angielski Start Lektury Wiersze lydia huntley sigourney-Columbus. 18.01.2008. lydia huntley sigourney-Columbus
http://www.angielski.edu.pl/wiersze/lydia_huntley_sigourney-columbus_18437.html
Login Has³o Pamiêtaj Szukaj w Angielski.Edu.pl S³ownik angielski HaraldG: Forum Nauka Æwiczenia Gramatyka Czytelnia Egzaminy Specjalistyczne Rozrywka Szukaj Inne Rozmawiaj Forum jêzykowe Ogólne Egzaminy Praca domowa ... Wiersze Lydia Huntley Sigourney-Columbus
Lydia Huntley Sigourney-Columbus
Columbus
For there a robed and stately crowd
Pressed on in long array.
A mariner with simple chart 5
Confronts that conclave high,
While strong ambition stirs his heart,
And burning thoughts of wonder part
From lip and sparkling eye.
What hath he said? With frowning face, 10
In whispered tones they speak,
And lines upon their tablets trace, Which flush each ashen cheek; Sits on their brows severe, 15 And bursting forth in visioned gloom, Sad heresy from burning tomb Groans on the startled ear. Courage, thou Genoese! Old Time Thy splendid dream shall crown; 20 Yon Western Hemisphere sublime, Where unshorn forests frown, Bold streams untamed by helm or prow, 25 And rocks of gold and diamonds, thou

68. LYDIA H. SIGOURNEY (1791 – 1865)
As a child lydia sigourney attended the local schools near her family s Connecticut home and browsed through the libraries of the woman for whom her father
http://www.librarycompany.org/women/portraits/sigourney.htm
James B. Longacre and James Herring, eds. The National Portrait Gallery of Distinguished Americans , vol. 4 (1839), plate opposite entry; also 1840 ed.
LYDIA As a child Lydia Sigourney attended the local schools near her family's Connecticut home and browsed through the libraries of the woman for whom her father worked as a gardener and handyman. She and a friend founded a seminary for young women in Norwich Connecticut in 1811, and she administered and taught in girls' schools until she married merchant Charles Sigourney in 1819. During these years she also published her first book, Moral Pieces, in Prose and Verse She continued to write throughout her married life, at first donating the proceeds of her publications to various reform groups such as the temperance movement, peace societies, and missionary groups. When her husband's prosperity began to decline in the 1830s, she sold her stories and poems to periodicals and, abandoning anonymity, Lydia Sigourney embraced her rapidly growing literary celebrity. Her poems appeared in magazines and gift books as well as in her own collected volumes. She rarely departed from her trademark formula of pious and morbid themes tied together by catchy couplets. As a testament to her renown, Louis Godey paid her generously, not for editing his magazine, but rather for allowing her name to appear alongside the names of the actual editors. A shrewd businesswoman, she continued to publish at the rate of a book a year throughout the 1850s; she died in

69. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. - Rhetoric Review - 20(3&4):203 - Citation
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http://www.leaonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/S15327981RR2003&4_01
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Cultural Rhetorics of Women's Corsets Wendy Dasler Johnson Washington State University
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