Memoirs of Margaret Fuller
Ossoli, Vol. I
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Title: Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Vol. I
Author: Margaret Fuller Ossoli
Release Date: August 3, 2004 [EBook #13105]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK
MARGARET FULLER, VOL. 1 ***
Produced by Leah Moser and the Online Distributed Proofreading
Team.
MEMOIRS
OF
MARGARET FULLER OSSOLI
VOL. I.
* * * * *
Only a learned and a manly soul I purposed her, that should with even
powers The rock, the spindle, and the shears control Of Destiny, and
spin her own free hours.
BEN JONSON.
Però che ogni diletto nostro e doglia Sta in si e nò saper, voler, potere;
Adunque quel sol può, che col dovere Ne trae la ragion fuor di sua
soglia.
Adunque tu, lettor di queste note, S' a te vuoi esser buono, e agli altri
caro, Vogli sempre poter quel che tu debbi.
LEONARDO DA VINCI
BOSTON: PHILLIPS, SAMPSON AND COMPANY. MDCCCLVII.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1851,
BY R.F. FULLER,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of
Massachusetts.
Stereotyped by HOBART & ROBBINS; NEW ENGLAND TYPE
AND STEREOTYPE FOUNDRY BOSTON.
TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR VOLUME FIRST.
I. YOUTH. AUTOBIOGRAPHY PARENTS DEATH IN THE
HOUSE OVERWORK THE WORLD OF BOOKS FIRST FRIEND
SCHOOL-LIFE SELF-CULTURE
II. CAMBRIDGE, _By J.F. Clarke_ FRIENDSHIP
CONVERSATION.--SOCIAL INTERCOURSE STUDIES
CHARACTER.--AIMS AND IDEAS OF LIFE
III. GROTON AND PROVIDENCE. LETTERS AND JOURNALS
SAD WELCOME HOME OCCUPATIONS MISS MARTINEAU
ILLNESS DEATH OF HER FATHER TRIAL BIRTH-DAY DEATH
IN LIFE LITERATURE FAREWELL TO GROTON WINTER IN
BOSTON PROVIDENCE SCHOOL EXPERIENCES PERSONS ART
FANNY KEMBLE MAGNANIMITY SPIRITUAL LIFE FAREWELL
TO SUMMER
IV. CONCORD, _By R.W. Emerson_ ARCANA DÆMONOLOGY
TEMPERAMENT SELF-ESTEEM BOOKS CRITICISM NATURE
ART LETTERS FRIENDSHIP PROBLEMS OF LIFE WOMAN, OR
ARTIST? HEROISM TRUTH ECSTASY CONVERSATION
V. BOSTON, _By R.W. Emerson_ CONVERSATIONS ON THE
FINE ARTS
YOUTH.
AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
* * * * *
"Aus Morgenduft gewebt und Sonnenklarheit Der Dichtung Schleir aus
der Hand der Wahrheit."
GOETHE.
"The million stars which tremble O'er the deep mind of dauntless
infancy."
TENNYSON.
"Wie leicht ward er dahin gefragen, Was war dem Glücklichen zu
schwer! Wie tanzte vor des Lebens Wagen Die luftige Begleitung her!
Die Liebe mit dem süssen Lohne, Das Glück mit seinem gold'nen
Kranz, Der Ruhm mit seiner Sternenkrone, Die Wahrheit in der Sonne
Glanz."
SCHILLER
What wert thou then? A child most infantine, Yet wandering far
beyond that innocent age, In all but its sweet looks and mien divine;
Even then, methought, with the world's tyrant rage A patient warfare
thy young heart did wage, When those soft eyes of scarcely conscious
thought Some tale, or thine own fancies, would engage To overflow
with tears, or converse fraught With passion o'er their depths its
fleeting light had wrought.'
SHELLE
"And I smiled, as one never smiles but once; Then first discovering my
own aim's extent, Which sought to comprehend the works of God. And
God himself, and all God's intercourse With the human mind."
BROWNING.
I.
YOUTH.
* * * * *
'Tieck, who has embodied so many Runic secrets, explained to me what
I have often felt toward myself, when he tells of the poor changeling,
who, turned from the door of her adopted home, sat down on a stone
and so pitied herself that she wept. Yet me also, the wonderful bird,
singing in the wild forest, has tempted on, and not in vain.'
Thus wrote Margaret in the noon of life, when looking back through
youth to the "dewy dawn of memory." She was the eldest child of
Timothy Fuller and Margaret Crane, and was born in Cambridge-Port,
Massachusetts, on the 23d of May, 1810.
Among her papers fortunately remains this unfinished sketch of youth,
prepared by her own hand, in 1840, as the introductory chapter to an
autobiographical romance.
PARENTS.
'My father was a lawyer and a politician. He was a man largely
endowed with that sagacious energy, which the state of New England
society, for the last half century, has been so well fitted to develop. His
father was a clergyman, settled as pastor in Princeton, Massachusetts,
within the bounds of whose parish-farm was Wachuset. His means
were small, and the great object of his ambition was to send his sons to
college. As a boy, my father was taught to think only of preparing
himself for Harvard University, and
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