Keywords: bookid:newenglandmagazi1900bost bookidnewenglandmagazi1900bost bookyear:1887 bookyear1887 bookdecade:1880 bookdecade1880 bookcentury:1800 bookcentury1800 bookpublisher:boston____new_england_magazine_co__ bookpublisherbostonnewenglandmagazineco bookcontributor:allen_county_public_library_genealogy_center bookcontributorallencountypubliclibrarygenealogycenter booksponsor:internet_archive booksponsorinternetarchive bookleafnumber:124 bookleafnumber124 bookcollection:allen_county bookcollectionallencounty bookcollection:americana bookcollectionamericana indoor bookid:newenglandmagazi1900bost bookidnewenglandmagazi1900bost bookyear:1887 bookyear1887 bookdecade:1880 bookdecade1880 bookcentury:1800 bookcentury1800 bookpublisher:boston____new_england_magazine_co__ bookpublisherbostonnewenglandmagazineco bookcontributor:allen_county_public_library_genealogy_center bookcontributorallencountypubliclibrarygenealogycenter booksponsor:internet_archive booksponsorinternetarchive bookleafnumber:124 bookleafnumber124 bookcollection:allen_county bookcollectionallencounty bookcollection:americana bookcollectionamericana indoor Identifier: newenglandmagazi1900bost Title: The New England magazine Year: 1887 (1880s) Authors: Subjects: Publisher: Boston : [New England Magazine Co.] Contributing Library: Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: FIREPLACE IN THE BARR MANSION. ashes and prepare for slumber. Thereare few New England villages wherethe bells have a sweeter sound orwhere one would seem to have rightand title to a sweeter sleep than in thisquaint village of old New Ipswich. A PACKAGE OF OLD LOVE LETTERS. FROM THE PRINCE COLLECTION OF MANUSCRIPTS. Copied and Edited by C. Alice Baker. Text Appearing After Image: VERY remnant of thehuman life of long agoawakens our interest.The sculptured friezefrom a Central Amer-ican forest, a wall ofwell-laid masonry a thousand feetup on the narrow shelf of someColorado canon, Danish kitchen-mid-den and Florida shell heap, bronzecelt from an English barrow, gro-tesque pipe from an Ohio mound, pileof the Lake dweller, pestle of the Caveman, beads from the stone graves ofTennessee and arrow points from thefields of New England,—all theserelics of nations that have vanished,leaving only these hints of their civil-ization, fill us with wonder and appealto our sympathy. From nothing,however, can we gain such vivid andcomplete pictures of the social anddomestic life and thought of a formergeneration as from the diaries andcorrespondence it has left behind.These give us the truest illustrationsof character and society, because un-studied and not intended for the pub-lic gaze. I must believe that it is atender human sympathy, rather thanmere vulgar curiosity, tha Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work. Identifier: newenglandmagazi1900bost Title: The New England magazine Year: 1887 (1880s) Authors: Subjects: Publisher: Boston : [New England Magazine Co.] Contributing Library: Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: FIREPLACE IN THE BARR MANSION. ashes and prepare for slumber. Thereare few New England villages wherethe bells have a sweeter sound orwhere one would seem to have rightand title to a sweeter sleep than in thisquaint village of old New Ipswich. A PACKAGE OF OLD LOVE LETTERS. FROM THE PRINCE COLLECTION OF MANUSCRIPTS. Copied and Edited by C. Alice Baker. Text Appearing After Image: VERY remnant of thehuman life of long agoawakens our interest.The sculptured friezefrom a Central Amer-ican forest, a wall ofwell-laid masonry a thousand feetup on the narrow shelf of someColorado canon, Danish kitchen-mid-den and Florida shell heap, bronzecelt from an English barrow, gro-tesque pipe from an Ohio mound, pileof the Lake dweller, pestle of the Caveman, beads from the stone graves ofTennessee and arrow points from thefields of New England,—all theserelics of nations that have vanished,leaving only these hints of their civil-ization, fill us with wonder and appealto our sympathy. From nothing,however, can we gain such vivid andcomplete pictures of the social anddomestic life and thought of a formergeneration as from the diaries andcorrespondence it has left behind.These give us the truest illustrationsof character and society, because un-studied and not intended for the pub-lic gaze. I must believe that it is atender human sympathy, rather thanmere vulgar curiosity, tha Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work. Identifier: newenglandmagazi1900bost Title: The New England magazine Year: 1887 (1880s) Authors: Subjects: Publisher: Boston : [New England Magazine Co.] Contributing Library: Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: FIREPLACE IN THE BARR MANSION. ashes and prepare for slumber. Thereare few New England villages wherethe bells have a sweeter sound orwhere one would seem to have rightand title to a sweeter sleep than in thisquaint village of old New Ipswich. A PACKAGE OF OLD LOVE LETTERS. FROM THE PRINCE COLLECTION OF MANUSCRIPTS. Copied and Edited by C. Alice Baker. Text Appearing After Image: VERY remnant of thehuman life of long agoawakens our interest.The sculptured friezefrom a Central Amer-ican forest, a wall ofwell-laid masonry a thousand feetup on the narrow shelf of someColorado canon, Danish kitchen-mid-den and Florida shell heap, bronzecelt from an English barrow, gro-tesque pipe from an Ohio mound, pileof the Lake dweller, pestle of the Caveman, beads from the stone graves ofTennessee and arrow points from thefields of New England,—all theserelics of nations that have vanished,leaving only these hints of their civil-ization, fill us with wonder and appealto our sympathy. From nothing,however, can we gain such vivid andcomplete pictures of the social anddomestic life and thought of a formergeneration as from the diaries andcorrespondence it has left behind.These give us the truest illustrationsof character and society, because un-studied and not intended for the pub-lic gaze. I must believe that it is atender human sympathy, rather thanmere vulgar curiosity, tha Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work. Identifier: newenglandmagazi1900bost Title: The New England magazine Year: 1887 (1880s) Authors: Subjects: Publisher: Boston : [New England Magazine Co.] Contributing Library: Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Text Appearing Before Image: FIREPLACE IN THE BARR MANSION. ashes and prepare for slumber. Thereare few New England villages wherethe bells have a sweeter sound orwhere one would seem to have rightand title to a sweeter sleep than in thisquaint village of old New Ipswich. A PACKAGE OF OLD LOVE LETTERS. FROM THE PRINCE COLLECTION OF MANUSCRIPTS. Copied and Edited by C. Alice Baker. Text Appearing After Image: VERY remnant of thehuman life of long agoawakens our interest.The sculptured friezefrom a Central Amer-ican forest, a wall ofwell-laid masonry a thousand feetup on the narrow shelf of someColorado canon, Danish kitchen-mid-den and Florida shell heap, bronzecelt from an English barrow, gro-tesque pipe from an Ohio mound, pileof the Lake dweller, pestle of the Caveman, beads from the stone graves ofTennessee and arrow points from thefields of New England,—all theserelics of nations that have vanished,leaving only these hints of their civil-ization, fill us with wonder and appealto our sympathy. From nothing,however, can we gain such vivid andcomplete pictures of the social anddomestic life and thought of a formergeneration as from the diaries andcorrespondence it has left behind.These give us the truest illustrationsof character and society, because un-studied and not intended for the pub-lic gaze. I must believe that it is atender human sympathy, rather thanmere vulgar curiosity, tha Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work. |