Things and Thoughts in Europe. Correspondence. No. XVI

Dublin Core

Title

Things and Thoughts in Europe. Correspondence. No. XVI

Subject

"First Impressions of Rome in the Spring--The Pope--Rome as a Capital--Tuscany--The Liberty of the Press there just established--The enlightened Minds and available Instructors of Tuscany--The Italians' Estimation of Pius IX"," and the influence"," present and future"," of his Labors--Foreign Intrusion the Curse of Italy--The Irruption of the Austrians into Italy"," and its final Effects--Louis Philippe's Apostacy turned to the Advantage of Freedom--The Great Gete in Florence in honor of the Grant of the National Guard--The American Sculptors"," Greenough"," Crawford"," and their Participaation in the Fete--Americans generally in Italy--Hymns in Florence in Honor of Pius IX--Happy Augury to be drawn from the wise Docility of the People-An expression of Sympathy from America toward Italy earnestly hoped for. "

Description

An article written by Margaret Fuller from Rome. The Pope makes reformist efforts in the Spring and the establishment of the National Guard potentially represents a move towards unity. published by Horace Greeley in New York.

Creator

Margaret Fuller

Source

New-York Tribune

Publisher

Horace Greeley

Date

Dateline: 18 October 1847; Publication Date: 27 November 1847

Contributor

Sarah Payne

Rights

PDF source: Library of Congress

Relation

[no text]

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Newspaper Article

Identifier

MF_NYDT_27_Nov_1847

Coverage

[no text]

Citation

Margaret Fuller, “Things and Thoughts in Europe. Correspondence. No. XVI,” Margaret Fuller Digital Archive, accessed May 13, 2024, http://omekasites.northeastern.edu/margaretfuller/items/show/22.

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