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Excerpt from Biographical Sketch of Louisa J. Roberts: With Extracts From Her Journal and Selections From Her Writings Poems My Childhood Home, The Birth-day, To My Sister Emily, on Her Silver Wedding Day, The Golden Wedding, The Angler, Wayside Beauty, Touch Not, Taste Not, Wedded. TO B. And E. G. The Snow, Love 's Greeting, poems (continued) men The Pet Birds, The Carrier Pigeon, Evening, Growing Old Together, To Alice (granddaughter), A Birth-day Sonnet, The River Jordan, Prayer, Bereavement, Written During a Thunder-storm, Solitude, When He Maketh Up His Jewels, Who The Sinew That Shrank (gen. 32 Resignation. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and...
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This text chronicles the history of vacationing in America since the early 19th century. It is concerned with how, when, and why vacationing came to be part of life, charting this social and cultural institution as it grew from the custom of a small elite in to a mass phenomenon
If you are a Quaker, you will naturally want to read this portrayal of the remarkable woman—teacher, minister, writer—whose life was synonymous with the Philadelphia Race Street Yearly Meeting and the Friends General Conference. Quaker or not, you will find deep interest and everything to admire in the record of a personality so matter-of-factly devoted to religious tolerance and social progress. Jane Rushmore's life covers nearly three-quarters of the period during which American Quakerism has been divided into "Hicksite" and "Orthodox" branches. While there has been endless discussion and analysis concerning the Separation, little attention has been paid the independent accomplishments of each group of their mutual efforts toward reconciliation. More than the biography of one person, Under Quaker Appointment also tells the neglected, impressive story of how the two groups worked their way back to organic union. Here is the absorbing study of an outstanding American and of great events in the history of an organization whose expression of Christianity is universally unique.