Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Sigourney Lydia Huntley
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-93 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         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

81. Asy
Born on August 31, 1805, her first teacher was not Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, itwas lydia huntley sigourney (a poetess who composed more than one poem about
http://archives.gallaudet.edu/sp/srp/asy.html
The First Deaf Students at the Connecticut Asylum for the Instruction and Education of Deaf and Dumb Persons Jennifer Strunk Timothy Worthylake April 16, 1997 DST 101 April 16, 1997 Name Alice Cogswell
George H. Loring
Wilson Whiton
Abignil Dillingham
Otis Waters
John Brewster, Jr.
Nancy Orr
Age
Length
Cause of Deafness Spotted fever at 2 1/2 years old
Illness at 2 1/2 years old
Congenital Congenital Lost hearing at age 5 Congenital Illness at Infancy First school at The Old City Hotel on April 15th, 1817 with 3 pupils, Alice Cogswell, Wilson Whitton, and George Lording. By the end of the week, seven pupils were in attendance (the next four). There were 33 by the end of the year. Due to insufficient information for Otis Waters and Nancy Orr, we found other notable pupils who were one of the first 33 pupils that year. They were: Levi Backus Sophia Fowler Eliza C. Boardman George Comstock Mary E. Rose Totten * David H. Halberg, Guide to the Resting Places of the Founders of the American School for the Deaf. In the Beginning After sufficient funds were raised, The Connecticut Asylurn for the Instruction and Education of Deaf and Dumb Persons was opened on April 15, 1817. Seven students were enrolled during the first week. There were many visitors, including President James Monroe, Henry Clay and Charles Dickens. Clay was the Speaker of the House in the United States Congress and started a bill to grant the new school 23,000 acres of land in Alabarna, which was later sold to set up a permanent endowment fund.

82. Poem Book Index Page
A Butterfly on a Child s Grave. by lydia huntley sigourney. Indian Names,by lydia huntley sigourney. The Cherokee Mother, by lydia huntley sigourney.
http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/kingston/1024/
web hosting domain names email addresses Discover forgotten poems of yesterday A Butterfly on a Child's Grave by Lydia Huntley Sigourney Indian Names by Lydia Huntley Sigourney The Cherokee Mother by Lydia Huntley Sigourney The Thanksgiving Translated by Harriet Maxwell Converse The City by Richard Burton A Little Story by Anne Reeve Aldrich 'This But A Little Faded Flower by Ellen Clemintine Hawarth The Old Beau by Edgar Fawcett The Tea-Gown by Eugene Field "One, Two, Three!" by H. C. Bunner Speak Gently by David Bates Little Boy Blue by Eugene Field Solitude by Ella Wheeler Wilcox Acquainted With The Night by Robert Frost Resignation by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow The Tortoise Shell Comb by E. F. Ellet (1836) Not Lost by Thomas S. Collier Remember by Christina Rossetti Remembrance by Emily Jane Bronte A Reminiscence by Anne Bronte She Was A Phantom of Delight by William Wordsworth Ode To A Nightingale by John Keats Your Letter, Lady, Came Too Late by Colonel William S. Hawkins
web hosting
domain names web design
online games
... online casino

83. American Literary Voices Part 1 [Beyond Books]
Waldo Emerson will urge Americans to develop their own voice, and we ll see howAmerica s most popular female poet in 1850 — lydia sigourney — fell into
http://www.beyondbooks.com/lam11/index.asp?pf=on

84. TD&T Financial Group, Iowa -- Latest News From The Partners
chief. sigourney is named after a native author and poet lydia Huntleysigourney. The area is full of historical significance.
http://www.tdtpc.com/officeofmonth12.htm
Office of the Month Sigourney, Iowa 122 South Main
AROUND SIGOURNEY Sigourney is the geographical center of Keokuk County and is the county seat. Keokuk County is named for a Sac Indian chief. Sigourney is named after a native author and poet - Lydia Huntley Sigourney. The area is full of historical significance. The Lewis Memorial Fountain, located in Sigourney, is one of only five of its kind in the United States. The fountain was originally dedicated in 1940, then renovated and re-dedicated in 1994. The region around Sigourney is rich in military history - including the "Copperhead War" of 1863, which was an off-shoot of the Civil War. The area surrounding Sigourney boasts one of the largest pheasant populations in the United States, making it a popular fall destination for hunters. Belva Deer Park , located three miles northeast of Sigourney, includes a 260-acre lake, which is developing into a hot fishing attraction. The 1,669-acre park has been enhanced through the fundraising efforts of area outdoorsmen and recreation enthusiasts. It includes a wildlife refuge, horse trails, hunting, hiking and a beautiful, modern campground. The community is quite proud of the area, and it attracts visitors from far and wide In February 1990, Sigourney was selected as one of the first five pilot communities to receive funding through the

85. LITR 4232 American Renaissance UHCL Class On Range Of Antebellum Poetry
sigourney, “Death of an Infant” (1501). Notes on “Death of An Infant” byLydia Howard huntley sigourney, p. 1501. comments from Dawn Dobson on sigourney.
http://coursesite.cl.uh.edu/HSH/Whitec/LITR/4232/lecture/melvilleplus.htm
Tuesday, 8 April
Lydia Sigourney, “Death of an Infant” (1501): reader: Sandra
John Greenleaf Whittier, “The Farewell” (1617-18): reader: Lindsey
John Rollin Ridge, “The Stolen White Girl” (1442-43): reader: Marie
Frances E. W. Harper, “The Slave Mother” (1930-1931) reader: Katherine; “An Appeal to the American People” (1934-5): reader: Laurie
Mary Boykin Chesnut, from Mary Chesnut’s Civil War (1987-1996): reader: Jody (choose a highlight) idea of class: survey range of poetic subjects, styles appearing in classic, popular, and representative literature in American Renaissance
+ need recorder for Lindsey's presentation Whitman poetry handouts; review Thursday assignments Projects due 17 April Melville poetry (2728-9: Doug, Robert) Mary Chesnut (1987-96: Jody) Sigourney, “Death of an Infant” (1501): reader: Sandra or Dawn
Whittier, “The Farewell” (1617-18): reader: Lindsey
Ridge, “The Stolen White Girl” (1442-43): reader: Marie
Harper, “The Slave Mother” (1930-1931) reader: Katherine
“An Appeal to the American People” (1934-5): reader: Laurie preview Whitman?

86. Linda Huntley Sigourney
Linda huntley sigourney (17911865). From The Sonnet in American Literature.Linda huntley sigourney seems to have written but one sonnet.
http://www.sonnets.org/sigourney.htm
Linda Huntley Sigourney (1791-1865)
From The Sonnet in American Literature
Linda Huntley Sigourney seems to have written but one sonnet. [from "Poems," Philadelphia, 1846, p. 221]
To the Evening Primrose
Pale Primrose! lingering for the evening star
To bless thee with its beam,like some fair child
Who, ere he rests on Morpheus' downy car,
Doth wait his mother's blessing, pure and mild,
To hallow his gay dream. His red lips breathe
The prompted prayer, fast by that parent's knee,
Even as thou rear'st thy sweetly fragrant wreath
To matron Evening, while she smiles on thee.
Go to thy rest, pale flower! the star hath shed
His benison upon thy bosom fair,
The dews of summer bathe thy pensive head,
And weary man forgets his daily care;
Sleep on, my rose! till morning gilds the sky
And bright Aurora's kiss unseal thy trembling eye.

87. The New England Quarterly: March 2004
James E. McWilliams, 25. A Passion for Distinction lydia huntley Sigourneyand the Creation of a Literary Reputation, Melissa Ladd Teed, 51.
http://www.newenglandquarterly.org/issues/
Current Issue:
March 2004
Essays
Reconsiderations Memoranda and Documents Essay Reviews ... Book Reviews
Essays
Editorial Linda Smith Rhoads A Poet's Quarrel: Jamesian Pragmatism and Frost's "The Road Not Taken" John Savoie "To Forward Well-Flavored Productions": The Kitchen Garden in Early New England James E. McWilliams A Passion for Distinction: Lydia Huntley Sigourney and the Creation of a Literary Reputation Melissa Ladd Teed From Petitions to Partyism: Antislavery and the Domestication of Maine Politics in the 1840s and 1850s Alice Taylor page top
Reconsiderations The Missing Clause: Myth and the Massachusetts Bay Charter of 1629 Ronald Dale Karr page top
Memoranda and Documents War and Peace: Robert Frost and the United Nations Meditation Room Lisa Seale Chiasmus in Walden Richard Kopley page top
Essay Reviews The Rust of Time, the Patina of Place: Recent Studies in New England Regionalism Karen Halttunen Marsden Hartley: The Return of the Native?

88. Homepage Der Nordamerikastudien An Der Universität Göttingen
STUDY QUESTIONS FOR SESSION 12 HARRIET BEECHER STOWE, lydia HUNTLEYSIGOURNEY, ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH, FRANCES SARGENT OSGOOD. (Texts
http://www.amstud.uni-goettingen.de/studyquestions/lec3sess12.php?bereich=studyq

89. Blacks, Indians, Women: 1800-1899 (Primary Sources)
1827. Sedgwick, Susan. Alida; or, Town and Country. (1844) sigourney, LydiaHuntley. Pocahontas and Other Poems. 1841. Simms, William Gilmore.
http://www.asle.umn.edu/archive/biblios/howarth1.html
Blacks, Indians, Women: 1800-1899 (Primary Sources)
William Howarth, Princeton Univ.
Blacks, Indians, Women: 1800-1850 (Primary Sources)
Allen, Paul. History of the Expedition of Captains Lewis and Clark. 1814. Beecher, Catharine Esther. The Evils Suffered By American Women and . . . Children. 1846. Campbell, Thomas. Gertrude of Wyoming. 1809. Catlin, George. The Manners, Customs, and Condition of the North American Indians. 1841. Child, Lydia Maria. Hobomok. 1824. Cooper, James Fenimore. The Last of the Mohicans: A Narrative of 1757. 1826. Cooper, James Fenimore. Wyandotte; or, The Hutted Knoll. 1843. Copway, George. The Ojibway Conquest. 1850. Darley, Felix Octavius Carr. Scenes in Indian Life. 1843. Doddridge, Joseph. Notes on the Settlement and Indian Wars of Virginia and Pennsylvania from 1763 to 1783. 1824. Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. 1845. Du Ponceau, Pierre Etienne. Grammatical System of Some of the Languages of the Indian Nations of North America. 1838. Eastman, Mary H. Dacotah, or Life and Legends of the Sioux Around Fort Snelling. 1849.

90. About The Hartford Collection
areas of concentration HARTFORD AUTHORS Mark Twain, Harriet Beecher Stowe, LydiaHuntley sigourney, Jupiter Hammon, Charles Dudley Warner, Noah Webster
http://www.hplct.org/hartford-collection.htm
H A R T F O R D
P U B L I C · L I B R A R Y Resources
Catalog

Community Resources

Databases

School Catalogs
...
Weather

At HPL
About the Library

Article Request

Branches
Building Project ... TeenConnection On the Web Black History Free Email Gateway to Health Resources Government ... Hog River Journal Reference Community Database Databases Almanacs CT Transit Bus Schedules ... Make HPL your homepage!
Explore Hartford's History in the Library's HARTFORD COLLECTION Hartford is a remarkable city to contemplate, and the Hartford Collection is dedicated to promoting just such contemplation. Though begun officially in 1945 as a response to the growing movement to maintain regional history, the materials in the Hartford Collection date back to the Library Company, founded in 1774. Today the Collection is the city's central depository of its accumulated history. Augmented steadily over the years, formats include books, pamphlets, manuscripts, photographs, periodicals, and scrapbooks, giving customers a variety of primary sources to consult in reconstructing the past. The Hartford Collection comprises three main areas of concentration: HARTFORD AUTHORS Mark Twain, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Lydia Huntley Sigourney, Jupiter Hammon, Charles Dudley Warner, Noah Webster... Hartford has long been home to prominent literary figures. From the ecclesiastical exegeses of Thomas Hooker to the literary offerings of Nook Farm's notables to the surly insurance executive by day/Pulitzer Prize winning poet by night Wallace Stevens, Hartford has been a city of words.

91. Celebrities Directory - World-of-Celebrities.com
WorldOf-Celebrities, Friday, May 21, 2004 • Famous Birthday Mr. T (1952).
http://www.world-of-celebrities.com/Authors
Brad Pitt
Orlando Bloom
Tobey Maguire
Daniel Radcliffe
Link to us Add to favorites
May 28th, 2004 Happy Birthday:
Glenn Quinn

Kylie Minogue

Christa Miller

Thora Hird

Search for: Browse by Name A B C D ... Z
Celebrities Directory
Celebrities Directory Link to us About Star News What's Next For The 'American Idol' Finalists?
Clay Aiken proved you don't have to win "American Idol" to succeed in entertainment, and now a number of former contestants are showing you don't even need to make the final two. - Read the article Usher - as popular as The Beatles USHER has matched the US success of THE BEE GEES and THE BEATLES by having three singles in the Top Ten of the BILLBOARD HOT 100 chart. - Read the article Soul Plane' has laughs, then runs out of gas "Soul Plane" does manage some good gags, but most of them seem to have been created by accident, because so many fall flat as an airport runway. Part of the problem is that the writers, of which there are no less than six, always seemed to ... - Read the article So how much is Janet's boob worth? Salt Lake City - Janet Jackson's wardrobe malfunction in the Super Bowl show is apparently not worth $5 000 (about R30 000). -

92. L Histoire De Famille De Sigournay
les contradictions surprenantes. Elle celui était d Amérique
http://www.rickmansworthherts.freeserve.co.uk/webpage16.htm
L'Histoire de Famille de Sigournay
SIGOURNEY DANS LE RETOUR D'AMERIQUE
A LA PAGE D'ACCUEIL

DEMANDER PLUSIEURS RENSEIGNEMENTS

SIGOURNEY DANS LE RETOUR D'AMERIQUE
...
A LA PAGE D'ACCUEIL
J.Sigournay advertisment L'Hopital francais, Londres
68, Hill Rise, Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom
Tel: UK 01923 775025
e-mail: norman@lucey.net

93. American Literary Voices Part 1 [Beyond Books]

http://www.beyondbooks.com/lam11/index.asp
Hello, GUEST
Log in

The Colonial Era to 1789
Quest for an "American Identity"
Growing Pains
Edgar Allan Poe: The Sad Life and Times
Hawthorne and Melville
The Emergence of American Poetry
Tiny Brush Strokes: Local Colorists "Paint" America
Luck, Pluck, and the American Dream
Surmounting Cultural, Racial, and Gender Barriers The Evolution of Women's Spheres Interesting Incidentals The Early Moderns: Terror and Wonder in the 20th Century Search BB Program Contents Page American Literary Voices Part 1 [Introduction] 1. The Colonial Era to 1789 1a. Discovery! The New World 1b. Settlers Arrive: The Colonial Experience 1c. Women's Perspectives 1d. Preachers and Pedagogues 1e. Revolutionary Voices 1f. Phillis Wheatley and Olaudah Equiano 2. Quest for an "American Identity" 2a. Early Popular Drama and Novels 2b. Washington Irving and "The Knickerbocker Tales" 2c. James Fenimore Cooper 2d. Transcendentalism 2e. Ralph Waldo Emerson 2f. Henry David Thoreau 3. Growing Pains 3a. Native American Voices

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 5     81-93 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

free hit counter