147 resultados para Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 1792-1822
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Letter written from Gardiner discussing matters of business and briefly mentioning happenings at Oaklands.
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Three letters regarding Tudor’s literary works.
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One letter regarding subscriptions for Tudor’s work on James Otis.
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Four letters on topics including Gilman’s literary work, his upcoming move to Charleston, South Carolina, to become pastor of a Unitarian church, and his impressions of the city once there, as well as subscriptions for Tudor’s work on James Otis.
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Five letters in which Lee relays his efforts to obtain a political appointment for Tudor from President James Monroe. He also reports on the activities of Tudor’s brother-in-law, Charles Stewart, and a meeting between John Quincy Adams and Tudor’s brother-in-law, Robert Hallowell Gardiner.
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One letter regarding a report from Tudor’s brother, Frederic, on piracy, and Lowell’s thoughts on the North American Review and domestic politics.
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Four letters in which Otis relays his thoughts on the Boston judicial system and losing his Senate seat in 1822. Also included is correspondence responding to Tudor’s request for information on his uncle, James Otis.
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Undated narrative by an American scribe detailing the events of the 1822 Chilean Revolution.
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This is a contemporary draft composition reviewing the course of the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars. Tudor offers opinions on England’s diplomatic options after the renewal of hostilities and Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger: "His task is momentous and all Europe are watching his movements with anxiety." The document is signed "Marcus Valinus."
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Untitled and undated manuscript written by Tudor offering his opinions on political and commercial relations between the United States, England, and France, and the causes of American animosity toward those countries. Topics and events referenced include the slave trade, Napoleon, and the Little Belt Affair. Introduction and parts one through three.
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Parts four through eight.
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Parts nine through thirteen and postscript including transcriptions of contemporary London newspaper accounts of American naval maneuvers that Tudor believes are meant to portray Americans as "wholly destitute of veracity."
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"Lines occasioned by the assertion of Sir Charles Mordaunt in debate, that the Americans could not catch a mouse or shave themselves without having recourse to Birmingham." Undated, unsigned poem, likely by Tudor, in response to remarks made by Mordaunt during a debate on the Orders in Council in the English Parliament.
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Undated, unsigned manuscript on contemporary American politics, including observations on the reception of President James Monroe by citizens in different states during his tour of the country in 1817. Likely written by Tudor.
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Untitled and undated manuscript of an oration delivered before a Harvard audience expanding on his views regarding world literature and its promulgation.