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         Mrs Follen:     more books (27)
  1. Selections from the writings of Fenelon: With a memoir of his life by Mrs. Follen by Francois de Salignac de La Mothe- Fenelon, 1851
  2. True stories about dogs & cats (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1856
  3. Piccolissima: Mrs. Follen's Twilight Stories by E.L. Follen, 1889-01-01
  4. The old garret: Part second (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1855
  5. The Peddler of Dust Sticks (Twilight Stories by Mrs. Follen) by Mrs. Follen, 1889
  6. The old garret (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1873
  7. True Stories AboutDogs And Cats - Mrs. Follen by Mrs. Follen, 2010-04-13
  8. Two Festivals by Mrs. Follen, 1889
  9. Little Songs "Twilight Stories" #12 in Series. Includes; Old Nursey; Sun is Up; Annie's Garden; Lullaby; New Moon; Dog & Cat by Mrs Follen, 1856-01-01
  10. Little Songs by Mrs Follen, 1856-01-01
  11. Made-up stories (Mrs. Follen's Twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1889
  12. What the animals do and say (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1868
  13. True stories about dogs and cats (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1875
  14. The New Moon. [Unison song.] Poem by Mrs. Follen (J. Williams' New Series of Songs, Duets & Trios. Unison Songs) by Felix Harold White, 1924

41. Authors M-O
Mrs. Follen AKA Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot, 17871860 Muhlbach, L. (Luise), 1814-1873AKA Mühlbach, L. (Luise), 1814-1873 Muir, John, 1838-1914
http://www.worldwide-library.co.uk/Authors/m-o.htm
Home Author Title Topic ... Book Club The Worldwide Library making e-books available to everyone worldwide without charge now. WWL Author Index Start A B C ... Z
M
Maag, Carl
MacCaffrey, James, 1875-1935
MacClintock, William Darnall, 1858-1936
MacClure, Victor, 1887-
MacDonald, George, 1824-1905
MacGrath, Harold, 1871-1932
MacKay, Charles, 1814-1889
Macaulay, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Baron, 1800-1859
Machen, Arthur, 1863-1947
Machiavelli, Niccolò, 1469-1527
Mackenzie, Alexander, 1833-1898 Maclaren, Ian [pseud.] AKA: Watson, John, 1850-1907 Macy, Jesse, 1842-1919 Maeterlinck, Maurice, 1862-1949 Malory, Thomas, d. 1471 Malot, Hector, 1830-1907 Mandeville, John, Sir Manners, J. Hartley Mansfield, Katherine, 1888-1923 Marbot, Jean-Baptiste-Antoine-Marcelin, Baron de, 1782-1854 Marcus Annaeus Lucanus, 39-65 AD AKA: Lucan Marcus Aurelius, Emperor of Rome, 121-180 Marguerite, Queen, consort of Henry IV, King of France, 1553-1615 Marion, F. (Fulgence) Marlowe, Christopher, 1564-1593 Marquis, Don, 1878-1937

42. Nineteenth Century In Print, Periodicals: Volume List
Mrs. Follen s Home Dramas for Young People, 286287. Display Options View pageimages View text View bibliographic information
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpcoop/moahtml/title/lists/nora_V90I186.html
The Nineteenth Century in Print: Periodicals Browse items in The North American review. Volume 90 , Issue 186, January 1860
Previous issue
Next issue Notes: Page images are mounted at Cornell University Library.
The text viewable for this collection was generated from the page images by optical character recognition (OCR). No corrections have been applied. [ More about text
  • The North American review. / Volume 90, Issue 186, miscellaneous front pages, i-iv.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • Tennyson, 1-21.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • The Assyrian Empire, 21-39.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • The Commerce and Currency of the United States, 39-57.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • The Condition and Needs of the Indian Tribes, 57-76.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • George Canning, 76-125.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • The China Question, 125-181.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • Wesleyan Methodism, 181-206.
  • 43. Nineteenth Century In Print, Periodicals: Volume List
    The Fortunes of Miss Follen. Mrs. GoodwinTalcott, 595-597. Display Options Viewpage images View text View bibliographic information
    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpcoop/moahtml/title/lists/nwng_V35I136.html
    The Nineteenth Century in Print: Periodicals Browse items in New Englander and Yale review. Volume 35 , Issue 136, July 1876
    Previous issue
    Next issue Notes: Page images are mounted at Cornell University Library.
    The text viewable for this collection was generated from the page images by optical character recognition (OCR). No corrections have been applied. [ More about text
  • The Educational Force of Mathematics, 421-431.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • European Writers on India, 431-440.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • Condillac and the Principle of Identity, 440-467.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • The Eleusinian Mysteries, 467-490.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • A Record of "The Old Dominion", 490-516.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • Logos and Cosmos: Nature as related to Language, 516-537.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • The Unity of the Professions, 537-548.
    Display Options: View page images View text View bibliographic information
  • College Athletics, 548-561.
  • 44. Robert Merry S Museum Title Index
    Eberstein /i (Mrs. Follen), 68.2.500502. Eccentric Characters /i, 43.2.51-53; /i,43.2.71-72; /i, 43.2.111-114. Eccentric Old Maid (Ipswich Express),
    http://www.merrycoz.org/museum/index/E.HTM
    TITLE INDEX TO ROBERT MERRY'S MUSEUM : E
    Alphabetized by title of piece. Author listed in parentheses as credited; for real name of pseudonymous authors, see " By author ". Numbers include year.volume number.page numbers, thus 55.2.123 = 1855, volume 2, page 123. The Museum included two volumes per year: volume 1 included January-June; volume 2 included July-December. KEY: /i = illustrated; /p = piece is a poem; /s = piece is a song, with music
    A
    B C D ... X-Z
    "Eagle, The", 59.1.137; /i, 62.1.147-148 "Eagle and Her Young, The" /i, 59.2.175 "Eagle and the Child, The" /i, 50.1.53-54 "Eagle Caught", 52.1.102 "Eagles, and Some Other Matters", 42.1.117-120 "Early Associations", 45.1.150 "Early Dead, The", 61.1.134 "Early Impressions" (C. G.), 43.1.180-181 "Early in the Morning" /i (Madge), 65.2.13-14 "Early Rising", 43.2.107-108; 51.2.31 "Earth and Air" /p, 56.2.120 "Earthen Pot and the Iron Pot, The" (La Fontaine), 46.1.188 "Eastern Allegory, An", 60.2.82 "Eastern Mode of Measureing Time", 54.2.205 "Eastern Offering, An", 43.1.112 "Eastern Sepulchres", 52.1.124

    45. Robert Merry S Museum Author Index
    Mrs. Eliza Lee Cabot Follen (17871860) as Mrs. Follen, EL Follen, Eberstein /i68; Lucy s Story /i 70. James Forbes (1749-1819) from Forbes s Oriental
    http://www.merrycoz.org/museum/index/AUTHOR.HTM
    AUTHOR INDEX TO ROBERT MERRY'S MUSEUM
    The Museum featured works by almost every nineteenth-century writer for children, from Jacob Abbott to Sophie May; it also excerpted works for adults, among them Herman Melville. Especially during 1857-1867, the magazine printed pieces written by its subscribers: some adults, many not. Alphabetized by author's real name (where known); use control-F to search for pseudonym. Except for Melville, ONLY SIGNED PIECES ARE LISTED HERE. Author's birth/death dates appear after the name; pseudonyms are listed just before titles, which are in alphabetical order. Number after each title is the year the piece was printed. Authors who were subscribers are marked with an asterisk (*). For page numbers, see " By title ". Some works are transcribed at this site KEY: /i = illustrated piece; /p = piece is a poem; /s = piece is a song, with music
    B
    C D E ... X-Y A. A. , "Squirrel at Home, The" 50 Jacob Abbott (1803-1897) "Pistols and Bravery" 61 Mrs. Abbott , "Courtship of the Stork-Calif" 57 Rev. E. E. Adams

    46. A Child's Anti-Slavery Book By Various Authors
    Had he been a poet he might have put his wishes into verses like the following,in which Mrs. Follen has given beautiful expression to the wishes of such a
    http://manybooks.net/titles/various10461046410464.html
    @import "/resources/2005.css";
    Search - advanced search
    Title Author
    A Child's Anti-Slavery Book
    Subtitle Containing a Few Words About American Slave Children and Stories of Slave-Life. Author Various Authors Categories Children's History Poetry Language English Excerpt your religion." And now she, too, was gone. She had been gone more than a year. It was said that she was hired out to work in another family; but it wasn't so. They only told her that story to get her away from the children peaceably. She was sold quite a distance away to a very bad man, who used her cruelly. Ned, who was some two years younger than Lewis, and the only brother he had left, was a wild, careless boy, who raced about among the other children, and did not seem to think much about anything. Lewis often wished he could have somebody to talk with, and he wondered if his mother would ever come back again. Had he been a poet he might have put his wishes into verses like the following, in which Mrs. Follen has given beautiful expression to the wishes of such a slave boy as Lewis: THE SLAVE BOY'S WISH.

    47. Piccolissima By Eliza Lee Follen
    Piccolissima by Eliza Lee Follen a free ebook from manybooks.net. e historyof Mr. and Mrs. Tom Thumb to disgrace their illustrious parentage,
    http://manybooks.net/titles/folleneletext03pccls10.html
    @import "/resources/2005.css";
    Search - advanced search
    Title Author
    Piccolissima
    Author Eliza Lee Follen Category Children's Language English Published Notes This little story I have translated from the French of Mademoiselle Montgolfier. If children enjoy it as much as I have, and think it as pretty, they will not regret that I have preferred it to any thing I could write for them. Excerpt e history of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Thumb to disgrace their illustrious parentage, and they were considered none the less good citizens because they were rather smaller than other people. In the mean while, however, our humble couple became suddenly celebrated by the birth of our heroine; this small creature was so delicate, so exquisite, so pretty, and so lively and full of spirit, that from the age of two years she became the object of general admiration. She was not more than one inch in height, and her mother, who had prepared the cradle and baby linen for a child of the usual size, was puzzled to know what to do. Finally, the half of a cocoanut shell, lined, and furnished with soft cushions of thistle down, made a good bed for the little wonder; and the nursery maid, wife of a neighboring clockmaker, and a person of ingenuity, conceived the admirable idea of suspending the cocoanut cradle from the pendulum of a great clock, in order that the infant might be rocked all the time. Madam Tom Thumb was enchanted
    Reviews Be the first to review this title!

    48. Chronological Bibliography
    Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot. Little Songs for little boys and girls. Hall, SarahEwing Selections from the writings of Mrs. Sarah Hall, author of Conversations
    http://www.albany.edu/~jf/chron30a.html
    Chronological listing of bibliography entries:
    Bullard, Anne Tuttle Jones
    The Stanwood Family; or, The History of the American Tract Society Farrar, Eliza Ware Rotch The Children's Robinson Crusoe.
    Gould, Hannah Flagg Mary Dow, and the Little Beggar Girl.
    Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell Conversations on the Burman Mission
    Poems for our children: designed for families, Sabbath schools, and infant schools. Part I.

    Hinckley, Mary The Seymour Family; or, Domestic Scenes
    Sequel to the Seymour Family; or, Domestic Scenes

    Larned, Mrs L. The Sanfords; or, Home Scenes
    Grace Seymour

    Robbins, Eliza Elements of mythology.
    Royall, Anne Newport Letters from Alabama, 1817-1822 Mrs Royall's Southern Tour; or, Second Series of The Black Book . 3 vols. Sedgwick, Catharine Maria Clarence; or, A tale of our own times Sedgwick, Elizabeth Buckminster Dwight A Spanish Conquest of America. Designed for the use of children . Boston: Leonard C.Bowles, 1830. Sedgwick, Susan Ann Livingston Ridley The children's week The young emigrants: A tale designed for young persons. Talbot, Mary Elizabeth

    49. NBC15 | The 2005 Crystal Apple Awards
    Travis Follen, West Middleton Elementary Mrs Yankee, Yahara Elementary School.Mrs Weiss, Madison Baptist Academy. Trygve Fritz, Mineral Point High
    http://nbc15.madison.com/crystalapple
    var js="0.0"; js="1.0"; js="1.1"; js="1.2"; js="1.3"; js="1.4"; js="1.5"; document.write(''); document.write(''); Featured Sections: School Closings/Delays Recipes Entertainment Contests ... Jobs@WMTV Search All of NBC15 Community Entertainment Home Jobs @ NBC15 Lottery News Obituaries Recipes Restaurants Schools Sports Station Info Weather
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    Your Money HDTV Feedback ... The Health Professional document.write(''); document.write(''); document.write(''); The 2005 Crystal Apple Awards NBC15 News Presents: The 2005 Crystal Apple Awards Congratulations to all the teachers in our area who were nominated for the NBC 15 Crystal Apple Award. Each year, NBC 15 honors teachers, through nominations by students, parents and fellow educators for making an impact on their students’ lives, a teacher who goes out of his or her way to make the learning experience richer. You can see who won our Crystal Apple each day by clicking on the video play list to your right. Teachers who made our Honor Roll are listed below. Monday Honor Roll
    Cynthia Jefko - Mt. Horeb Intermediate

    50. Books / Childrens At Earthly Remains
    1889 BILLINGS ILLUS TWILIGHT STORIES TRUE STORIES ABOUT DOGS AND CATS by Mrs.Follen was published 1889 (Date to title page) by Lee Shepard; Boston.
    http://pages.tias.com/1692/InventoryPage/59/1.html
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    HEAVENLY TENANTS Maxwell + Karasz 1st... AEROPLANE BOYS 1912 w/ ORIG DJ! RUSHTON BOYS w/ DJ! Scarce Whitman TOM SWIFT UNDERSEA SEARCH '20s DJ! Item # Description Quantity Price
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    Adventures of Sonny Bear. Warner Carr illus.
    Our Price: $125.00
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    Gulliver's Travels. Illus. Arthur Rackham
    Jonathan Swift's classic book illustrated by Arthur Rackham. 1938. Third Edition. J.M. Dent & Sons: London. Printed at Temple Press GB. This adorable (apx.7x5") book had eight full-page, full color plates and ten b/w page decorations by Rackham. Some wear to extrems, o/w contents very clean. Our Price: $75.00
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    Donohue LOST HEIR G.A. HENTY w/ VHTF DJ No Date, early 20th Century reprint in very seldom seen VHTF in not RARE dust wrapper. Near fine book, inset pictorial pastedown of men on deck of ship, printing in black on tan cloth. VG chipped, sm. cl. tears yet a very scarce dust wrapper. Back panel lists 45 Henty titles. Thanks for looking feel free to inquire about this or other Henty titles we may have in stock. Our Price: $65.00

    51. TRUE CAT & DOG STORIES 1889 BILLINGS ILLUS (Books-Childrens) At Earthly Remains
    TWILIGHT STORIES TRUE STORIES ABOUT DOGS AND CATS by Mrs. Follen was published1889 (Date to title page) by Lee Shepard; Boston.
    http://pages.tias.com/1692/PictPage/1921434132.html
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    52. KIDiddles: Song Lyrics: Daisy, The Good Jersey Cow
    Words and Music By Mrs. Follen Adapted By Terry Kluytmans Adaptation Copyright ©1999 Terry Kluytmans. Come, supper is ready, Come boys and girls now,
    http://www.kididdles.com/mouseum/d033.html
    Daisy, The Good Jersey Cow
    Words and Music By: Mrs. Follen
    Adapted By: Terry Kluytmans
    Terry Kluytmans
    Come, supper is ready,
    Come boys and girls now,
    Fresh milk for you, too,
    From the good Jersey cow.
    And here comes our kitty;
    She means by 'meow,'
    "May I have some milk
    From the good Jersey cow?"
    And when you meet Daisy, Just say with a bow, "Thank you for your milk, You're a good Jersey cow." If you haven't already done so, please take a moment to read the ' very important fine print ' regarding use of the songs on this site and other related information. This site is dedicated to the memory of my father, Peter Frewin. Stairway to Webbin' Design Services Last Modified: Friday, 05-Sep-2003 12:03:15 PDT Subject Keywords for Internal Search Engine: Animals / Farm

    53. Society In America, Vol 3, Part 3, Ch 1, Section 3 - Intercourse - Harriet Marti
    I refer to Dr. and Mrs. Follen, late of Boston.Dr. Follen is a German wellknown in Germany for his patriotism; as troublesome to its princes as
    http://www2.pfeiffer.edu/~lridener/DSS/Martineau/v3p3c1s3.html
    SECTION III.
    INTERCOURSE.
    Of course, there must be some general influence which sweetens or restrains the temper of a whole nation, of the same Saxon race which is not everywhere so amiable. I imagine that the practice of forbearance requisite in a republic is answerable for this pleasant peculiarity. In a republic, no man can in theory overbear his neighbour; nor, as he values his own rights, can he do it much or long in practice. If the moral independence of some, of many, sinks under this equal pressure from all sides, it is no little set-off against such an evil that the outbreaks of domestic tyranny are thereby restrained; and that the respect for mutual rights which citizens have perpetually enforced upon them abroad, comes thence to be observed towards the weak and unresisting in the privacy of home. This story may be useful to those (if such there be) for whom the catastrophe of Hamilton is not strong enough. The two cases differ in degree, not in kind. That such hubbub as this is occasioned by a false idea of honour, and not by fault of temper, is made clear by the amiability shown by Americans, in all cases where their idea of honour is not concerned. In circumstances of failure and disappointment, delay, difficulty, and other provocation, they show great self-command. In all cases that I witnessed, from the New York fire, and baffled legislation, down to the being "mired" in bad roads, they appeared to be proof against irritation. Sometimes this went further than I could quite understand.

    54. 514 Transcendentalists, Abolitionism, And The Unitarian Association
    In 1825 Dr. Charles Follen, a gentle but uncompromising advocate of human Mrs. LM Child, Mrs. Maria W. Chapman, Mrs. Follen, Miss Cabot, Mrs. Mary May,
    http://www.uua.org/ga/ga00/514.html
    2000 UUA General Assembly
    Transcendentalists, Abolitionism, and the Unitarian Association

    Collegium Lecture
    F. Jay Deacon, D.Min.
    Originally presented at Collegium, October 1999, Chicago
    Introduction S ince the publication in 1995 of the corpus of his antislavery essays and lectures by Len Gougeon and Joel Myerson, we are no longer entitled to the view that Ralph Waldo Emerson was disengaged from or uninterested in the commanding human issues of his times, particularly slavery. It is time now to acknowledge that, in these matters, Emerson and the bulk of his fellow Transcendentalists were not, in Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.'s assessment, "failure," but fulcrum, carrying far more than has been recognized of the spiritual, intellectual, and moral freight of that struggle. It is fair to say that he was, like Channing, a reluctant radical. He did not enter the fray predisposed toward controversial public engagement. Nor were the visible early figures in Abolition agreeable to him as personalities. But by the mid-1840s, he had willingly surrendered much of his public esteem to be counted among the "fanatics, madmen, incendiaries, traitors, and infidels." The role was both natural and inevitable. Octavius Brooks Frothingham, prominent among the Transcendentalists, explains

    55. Unitarian Universalist Biographical Dictionary
    When the impeccably gowned and coiffed Mrs. Chapman first appeared at antislavery Eliza Cabot Follen, Wendell Phillips, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,
    http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/mariawestonchapman.html
    Search the Dictionary
    Notes for Contributors
    Information Form Contributors
    Universalist Register Obituaries
    ...
    Notable American Unitarians

    Maria Weston Chapman and the Weston Sisters
    Maria Weston Chapman (1806-1885) was described by Lydia Maria Child as "One of the most remarkable women of the age." Chapman and three of her five younger sisters played vital roles in the antislavery movement. Even the smaller Weston girls were pressed into service for the cause that dominated the lives of this family. Chapman, best-known of the group, was a "mainspring" and "lieutenant" of the movement, but her sisters worked closely with her in support of William Lloyd Garrison. They founded an organization, circulated petitions, raised money, wrote and edited numerous publications, and left behind a remarkable correspondence. Maria Weston was the eldest of six daughters and two sons born in Weymouth, Massachusetts, to Warren and Nancy Bates Weston, descendants of the Pilgrims. Maria's birth was followed by those of Caroline in 1808, Anne in 1812, Deborah in 1814, Hervey Eliphaz in 1817, Richard Warren in 1819, Lucia in 1822, and Emma in 1825. The children grew up on the family farm and went to local schools. Joshua Bates, an uncle and prosperous London banker, invited Maria to England to complete her education. Upon her return to Boston in 1828, she became principal of Ebenezer Bailey's Young Ladies' High School. In 1830 she married Henry Grafton Chapman, son of Henry Chapman, a wealthy Boston merchant. The Chapmans were members of Federal Street Church, where

    56. McGuffey 5th Reader
    Mrs. EL Follen; Snow Falling; JJ Piatt; Squeers s Method; Dickens; The Gift ofEmpty Hands; Mrs. SMB Piatt; Capturing the Wild Horse
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  • The Good Reader
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  • The Festal Board How to Tell Bad News The Battle of Blenheim
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  • I Pity Them An Elegy on Madam Blaize
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  • Louisa M. Alcott

    57. UVa Library: Early American Fiction Collection
    NURSERY SONGS, by Mrs. Follen. TALES AND BALLADS. BY CAROLINE GILMAN. In extrabinding a pleasant and interesting volume.
    http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/eafbin2/toccer-eaf?id=eaf086v2&data=/texts/

    58. Two Festivals By Eliza Lee Follen : Arthur's Classic Novels
    This is the etext version of the book Two Festivals by Mrs. Follen, taken fromthe original etext twfst10.txt. Arthur s Classic Novels
    http://arthurwendover.com/arthurs/follen/twfst10.html
    This document was prepared with borrowed Project Gutenberg etext for Arthur's Classic Novels. This etext was produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. XHTML markup by Arthur Wendover. July 1, 2003. (See source text for details.) This is the etext version of the book Two Festivals by Mrs. Follen, taken from the original etext twfst10.txt. Arthur's Classic Novels
    Two Festivals
    By Mrs. Follen
    With Illustrations by Billings and others
    May Morning And New Year's Eve. It is the evening before the first of May, and the boys are looking forward to a May-day festival with the children in the neighborhood. Mrs. Chilton read aloud these beautiful lines of Milton: Now the bright morning star, Day's harbinger, Comes dancing from the east, and loads with her The flowery May, who from her green lap throws The yellow cowslip, and the pale primrose. Hail beauteous May that dost inspire Mirth, and youth, and warm desire; Woods and groves arc of thy dressing, Hill and dale doth boast thy blessing. Thus we salute thee with our early song, And welcome thee, and with thee long. "I think he must have felt as glad when he wrote it," said Harry, "as I hope to feel tomorrow. 'Comes dancing from the east' how beautiful it is! What a pity he ever lost his sight!" "Milton," said the mother, "made such a good use of his eyes while he could see, that he laid up stores of beautiful images, which he remembered when he could no longer use his bodily eyes. The poetry he wrote when he was blind shows the most accurate observation of the outward appearances of things, of shades of color, and of all those beauties which only sight could have taught him. It is worth while, boys, for you to imitate him in this, while you admire his poetry."

    59. More Children's Stories : Arthur's Classic Novels
    Two Festivals by Eliza Lee Follen The country village in which Mrs. Chilton livedwas as noisy as a martin box, at break of day, when doubtless,
    http://arthurwendover.com/arthurs/child2.html

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    He had wandered up and down the Laughing Brook. He had followed it way up to the place where it started. And all the time he had been studying and studying to make sure that he wanted to stay in the Green Forest. In the first place, he had to be sure that there was plenty of the kind of food that he likes. Then he had to be equally sure that he could make a pond near where this particular food grew. Last of all, he had to satisfy himself that if he did make a pond and build a home, he would be reasonably safe in it. And all these things
    The Life and Perambulations of a Mouse
    The first circumstance I can recollect was my mother's addressing me and my three brothers, who all lay in the same nest, in the following words:-'I have, my children, with the greatest difficulty, and at the utmost hazard of my life, provided for you all to the present moment; but the period is arrived, when I can no longer pursue that method: snares and traps are everywhere set for me, nor shall I, without infinite danger

    60. Charles Theodore Christian Follen
    He was the second son of Christopher Follen, an eminent jurist. Mrs. Pollen wasan intimate friend of William Ellery Channing, and was a zealous
    http://www.famousamericans.net/charlestheodorechristianfollen/
    You are in: Museum of History Hall of North and South Americans Charles Theodore Christian Follen
    Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, edited by James Grant Wilson, John Fiske and Stanley L. Klos. Six volumes, New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1887-1889 and 1999. StanKlos.com warns that these 19th Century biographies contain errors and bias. We rely on volunteers to edit the historic biographies on a continual basis. If you would like to edit this biography please submit a rewritten biography in text form . If acceptable, the new biography will be published above the 19th Century Appleton's Cyclopedia Biography citing the volunteer editor.
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    Charles Theodore Christian Follen
    FOLLEN, Charles Theodore Christian, educator, born in Romrod, Germany, 4 September 1796; died in Long Island sound, 13 January 1840. He was the second son of Christopher Follen, an eminent jurist. He was educated at the preparatory school at Giessen, where he distinguished himself for proficiency in Greek, Latin, Hebrew, French, and Italian. At the age of seventeen he entered the University of Giessen, and began the study of jurisprudence, but presently, on hearing the news of Napoleon's defeat at Leipsic, he enlisted in a corps of riflemen. A few weeks after enlisting, his military career was cut short by an acute attack of typhus fever, which seemed for a time to have completely destroyed his memory. After his recovery he returned to the University, where he took the degree of doctor of civil law in 18i7.

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