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         Mrs Follen:     more books (27)
  1. LITTLE SONGS BY MRS. FOLLEN, NEW SONGS FOR LITTLE PEOPLE by Mary E. and Mrs. Eliza Lee Follen Anderson, 1892-01-01
  2. POEMS ; BY MRS. [CHARLES] FOLLEN by MRS. FOLLEN, 1839-01-01
  3. Little songs (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1868
  4. Piccolissima (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Adélaïde de Montgolfier, 1858
  5. SELECTIONS FROM THE WRITINGS OF FENELON : WITH A MEMOIR OF HIS LIFE ; BY MRS. FOLLEN by FENELON, 1861-01-01
  6. The pedler of dust sticks (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1857
  7. Conscience.Mrs. Follen's Twoilight Stories Series No. 10 by Mr.s Follen, 1858
  8. What the animals do and say (Mrs. Follen's twilight stories) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 1868
  9. The Pedler of Dust Sticks by Mrs. Follen, 1855
  10. The Old Garret.Part Third. by Mrs. Follen, 1855
  11. Peddler of Dust Sticks by Mrs Follen, 1856
  12. THE OLD GARRET, PART THIRD. by Mrs. Follen, 1856

21. Selections From The Writings Of Fenelon (Open Library)
with a memoir of his life by Mrs. Follen. 6th ed. Published 1851 by J. Munroe in Boston.
http://openlibrary.org/books/OL5246995M/Selections_from_the_writings_of_Fenelon

22. Father's Day Poems For Children - The Little Boy's Good Night
The Little Boy's Good Night is a Father's Day poem by Mrs. Follen Printable Father's Day Poems for Children
http://www.apples4theteacher.com/holidays/fathers-day/poems-rhymes/the-little-bo
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Puzzles Color Holiday Fun Shop A Fun Educational Website
for Teachers and Kids October 31, 2010 Featured
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Father's Day Poems
Answers, Not Questions, Cause Trouble The Little Boy's Good Night The Children's Hour The Land That Would ... The Wind's Song
Father's Day Poems for Children
Kids Printable Fathers Day Poetry
Home Holidays Father's Day Poems for Children
The Little Boy's Good Night
by Mrs. Follen

23. Printable Father's Day Poems For Kids - When Evening Is Come
When Evening is Come is part of a collection of Printable Father's Day Poems for Kids by Mrs. Follen Printable Father's Day Poetry and Rhymes for kids
http://www.apples4theteacher.com/holidays/fathers-day/poems-rhymes/when-evening-
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We would like to invite you to sign up for the completely free Apples4theteacher.com Newsletter! Join our other 283,422 readers. Subscribers are automatically registered to receive free teaching resources including lesson plan ideas, printables and more . Stay informed of all our new resources as they're developed...we have some exciting features coming in 2010! P.S.. To officially become a newsletter subscriber, be sure to confirm your subscription by responding to the email we send you.
Puzzles Color Holiday Fun Shop A Fun Educational Website
for Teachers and Kids October 31, 2010 Featured
sr_adspace_id = 1929307; sr_adspace_width = 160; sr_adspace_height = 600; sr_ad_new_window = true; sr_adspace_type = "graphic";
Father's Day Poems
Answers, Not Questions, Cause Trouble The Little Boy's Good Night The Children's Hour The Land That Would ... The Wind's Song
Children's Father's Day Poems
Printable Father's Day Poems for Kids
Home Holidays Father's Day Poems for Kids
When Evening is Come
by Mrs. Follen

24. William C. Nell's Review Of This Title In The Liberator, January 24, 1861
The lamented Mrs. Follen, in her admirable tract addressed to Mothers in the Free States, and with which that indefatigable colporteur, Miss Putnam, is doing so much good in her
http://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/jacobs/support8.html

25. Free Books To Read Audio Library - Conscience By Eliza Lee Follen - Page 1
MRS. FOLLEN . Illustrated with engravings. CONSCIENCE. The short wintry days were beginning to lengthen, the sun rose earlier and staid up longer.
http://www.freebookstoread.com/cnscn10_1.htm
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Conscience
Eliza Lee Follen
Page 1 of 69
CONSCIENCE BY MRS. FOLLEN Illustrated with engravings.
CONSCIENCE. The short wintry days were beginning to lengthen, the sun rose
earlier and staid up longer. Now and then a bluebird was heard
twittering a welcome to the coming spring. As for the robins, they
were as pert and busy as usual. The little streams were beginning to
find their way out of their icy prison slowly and with trembling, as
if they feared old winter might take a step and catch them, and pinch them all up again. First Page Next Page Last Page Titles Menu

26. Religion Through The Ages, An Anthology
Mrs. Follen. James Munroe Company, Boston, 1851. Entered according to act of Congress, 1841, by Samuel G. Simpkins in Clerk's Office of District Court of Massa
http://www.questia.com/read/94994455?title=Bibliographical Acknowledgments

27. Margarethe Schurz - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Mrs. Follen The Pedler of dust Sticks. Boston 1854; Elizabeth Jenkins How the Kindergarten Found its Way to America. Wisconsin Magazine of History 14.1 (1930), S. 46–62.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margarethe_Schurz
Margarethe Schurz
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation search Margarethe Meyer-Schurz Margarethe Meyer-Schurz (born Margarethe Meyer; also called Margaretha Meyer-Schurz or just Margarethe Schurz; born 27 August 1833 in Hamburg ; died 15 March 1876 in New York ) opened the first German-language Kindergarten in the USA
edit Life
Carl Schurz and Margarethe Meyer-Schurz Margarethe Meyer-Schurz (1833-1876) was born in Hamburg as the youngest daughter of Heinrich Christian Meyer on August 27, 1833. Her mother died only a few hours after her birth. Her father encouraged education and the arts. In Hamburg, she studied under educators influenced by the creator of the “kindergarten” concept, child advocate Friedrich Froebel.Her father died when she was only 15 years old. Through her older sisters Amalie and Bertha, she came into early contact with the "Society of German Catholics" and later attended the "School for the Female Sex". After her older sister Bertha divorced her husband Friedrich Traun, she entered a new marriage with the excommunicated priest Johannes Ronge , the founder of German Catholicism.

28. Anti-slavery History
Mrs. Follen was the literary light of the Brookline workers, and many of her interesting articles are to be found in the Liberty Bell. When Harrison was elected, November
http://www.garrenshay.com/ur/Brookline in the anti-slavery movement 1899.htm
Brookline Historical Publication Society Publications NO. Brookline in the Anti-Slavery Movement.
by Harold Parker Williams ,l . Murray Kay Prize Essay for 1899. On the 6th of January, 1832, fifteen determined men met in the African Baptist Church on Joy Street, Boston, and founded the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society. Among them were Samuel E. Sewall, who in his early life lived on Cypress street, Brookline. He was the great-great-grandson of Chief Justice Sewall, the old Brookline land-owner; who in 1700 published The Selling of Joseph" the first anti-slavery tract written in the United States. Samuel Sewall, with Ellis Gray Loring, afterward a noted citizen of this town, represented the more conservative element of the meeting; Garrison and Johnson the more uncompromising. The conservatives at first refused to agree to the constitution that was presented, but they soon signed, and entered heart and soul into the work of the society, This little assembly on Joy Street inaugurated the anti-slavery movement that in 1861 culminated in the Civil War. It aroused the whole of Eastern Massachusetts, and in almost every town there sprang up a small body of men eager to forward the good work.

29. Chapter 20. George Eliot [Life Of Harriet Beecher Stowe]
Speaking of this incident she (George Eliot) writes Mrs. Follen showed me a delightful letter which she has just had from Mrs. Stowe, telling all about herself.
http://www.readbookonline.net/read/11182/28185/
Home Fictions/Novels Short Stories Poems ... Life of Harriet Beecher Stowe > This page
The Life of Harriet Beecher Stowe , a non-fiction book by Harriet Beecher Stowe
Chapter 20. George Eliot
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CHAPTER XX. GEORGE ELIOT CORRESPONDENCE WITH GEORGE ELIOT.GEORGE ELIOT'S FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF MRS. STOWE.MRS. STOWE'S LETTER TO MRS. FOLLEN.GEORGE ELIOT'S LETTER TO MRS. STOWE.MRS. STOWE'S REPLY.LIFE IN FLORIDA.ROBERT DALE OWEN AND MODERN SPIRITUALISM.GEORGE ELIOT'S LETTER ON THE PHENOMENA OF SPIRITUALISM.MRS. STOWE'S DESCRIPTION OF SCENERY IN FLORIDA.MRS. STOWE CONCERNING "MIDDLEMARCH."GEORGE ELIOT TO MRS. STOWE DURING REV. H. W. BEECHER'S TRIAL.MRS. STOWE CONCERNING HER LIFE EXPERIENCE WITH HER BROTHER, H. W. BEECHER, AND HIS TRIAL.MRS. LEWES' LAST LETTER TO MRS. STOWE.DIVERSE MENTAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THESE TWO WOMEN.MRS. STOWE'S FINAL ESTIMATE OF MODERN SPIRITUALISM. It is with a feeling of relief that we turn from one of the most disagreeable experiences of Mrs. Stowe's life to one of the most delightful, namely, the warm friendship of one of the most eminent women of this age, George Eliot. There seems to have been some deep affinity of feeling that drew them closely together in spite of diversity of intellectual tastes.

30. 1800's Antique Story Books By Gardner3863 On Etsy
When I was a Girl Mrs. Follen's Twilight Stories copyright 1855 Boston, Lee and Shepard written by Mrs. Follen, book measures 6 1/4 x 4 3/4 2.
http://www.etsy.com/listing/53345687/1800s-antique-story-books
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31. Follen, Eliza (Lee) Cabot
Wrote under Eliza Lee Follen, Mrs. Follen, Mrs. C. T. C. Follen. Daughter of Samuel and Sally Barrett Cabot; married Charles T.Christian Follen, 1828 (died 1840)
http://www.novelguide.com/a/discover/aww_02/aww_02_00410.html

32. Wright American Fiction, 1851-1875
Edited by Rev. H. Ware, Jr. Six vols. 18mo., 37 cts. each. Comprising Trial and SelfDiscipline, by Miss Savage; The Skeptic, by Mrs. Follen; Home, by Miss Sedgwick; Gleams
http://www.letrs.indiana.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=wright2;idno=Wright2-0975;rgn

33. Little Songs
96 p. ill. ; 17 cm.......Material Information Title Little songs Series Title Mrs. Follen's twilight stories Uniform Title Three little kittens Physical
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/ufdc2/items/UF/00/00/04/15/UF00000415_00001.html
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34. Annie' Garden By Eliza Lee Follen At Old Poetry
In little Annie's garden Grew all sorts of posies; There were pinks, and mignonette, From Little Songs By Mrs. Follen, 1832
http://oldpoetry.com/opoem/123812-Eliza-Lee-Follen-Annie--Garden
Poetry Poets Essays Forums
Annie' Garden
In little Annie's garden
Grew all sorts of posies;
There were pinks, and mignonette,
And tulips, and roses.
Sweet peas, and morning glories,
A bed of violets blue,
And marigolds, and asters,
In Annie's garden grew.
There the bees went for honey,
And the humming-birds too;
And there the pretty butterflies And the lady-birds flew. And there among her flowers, Every bright and pleasant day, In her own pretty garden Little Annie went to play.
Notes
From: Little Songs By Mrs. Follen, 1832
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35. HOLIDAY SUPPLEMENT 031
Congregation sings Jingle Bells (Insert) Mrs. Follen and Follen child ren come from East side, shaking bells in time with chor us of song, stand in front of stage, shake bells
http://cuc.ca/canuue/HOLIDAY SUPPLEMENT 031.pdf

36. BYRON, Anne Isabella Milbanke, Lady, Autographs, Letters
Mrs Follen writes to me that the outrage on Mr Sumner, the subsequent defence of it by the Southerners, has had the effect of strengthening the Abolitionists in the North, if not
http://manuscripts.co.uk/stock/22552.HTM
'The outrage on Mr Sumner ...'
BYRON, Anne Isabella Milbanke, Lady
(1792-1860). Wife of Lord Byron.
Good Autograph Letter Signed to Mr Foster, 3 pages 8vo with endorsement, 1 Cambridge Terrce, Regent's Park, 24 June 1856. Discussing the moral dangers to young women, the anti-slavery agitation in America, local politics and family matters.
'Any case in which a young Girl would probably Transcription , than by any other means within my reach - not that I deny the efficacy of other means employed by the persons possessed of them - "divers gifts". ...' She promises to send 5 to Foster's banker (whose name she has forgotten) and she writes of abolitionist shenanigans in America: She adds that Miss Murray's book has been a triumph, she assumes that Foster will be pleased by 'last night's reversal of Mr Walpole's bill', and adds a good deal of family news.
Charles Sumner (1811-1874), the American abolitionist, had been brutally assaulted on 22 May 1856 by Representative Preston S. Brooks of South Carolina. He never fully recovered.
[No: 22552]
The image is of the third page only.

37. True Stories About Dogs And Cats
True Stories About Dogs And Cats by Mrs. Follen Feel free to download and pass around. Brought to you by Caribbean Videos http//www.funnyvideos-of-cats.com http//www
http://www.scribd.com/doc/21772105/True-Stories-About-Dogs-And-Cats

38. A Child's Anti-Slavery Book By Various Authors - Free EBook
Had he been a poet he might have put his wishes into verses like the following, in which Mrs. Follen has given beautiful expression to the wishes of such a slave boy as
http://manybooks.net/titles/various10461046410464.html
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    A Child's Anti-Slavery Book
    Containing a Few Words About American Slave Children and Stories of Slave-Life.
    Author: Various Authors Language: English Wordcount: 24,511 / 147 pg LoC Category: D Downloads: mnybks.net#: Genres: Young Readers History Poetry Excerpt didn't come to console her when she lost her other children; "three all at once" she said, "and they're ten times worse than dead. You never consoled me then at all. Religion? Pooh! I don't want none of your religion." And now she, too, was gone. She had been gone more than a year. It was said that she was hired out to work in another family; but it wasn't so. They only told her that story to get her away from the children peaceably. She was sold quite a distance away to a very bad man, who used her cruelly. Ned, who was some two years younger than Lewis, and the only brother he had left, was a wild, careless boy, who raced about among the other children, and did not seem to think much about anything. Lewis often wished he could have somebody to talk with, and he wondered if his mother would ever come back again.

39. The Life Of Harriet Beecher Stowe By Harriet Beecher Stowe: Chapter 20
Speaking of this incident she (George Eliot) writes Mrs. Follen showed me a delightful letter which she has just had from Mrs. Stowe, telling all about herself.
http://www.online-literature.com/stowe/life-of-stowe/20/
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  • Home Authors Shakespeare Bible ... Chapter 20
    Chapter 20
    GEORGE ELIOT. CORRESPONDENCE WITH GEORGE ELIOT.GEORGE ELIOT'S FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF MRS. STOWE.MRS. STOWE'S LETTER TO MRS. FOLLEN.GEORGE ELIOT'S LETTER TO MRS. STOWE.MRS. STOWE'S REPLY.LIFE IN FLORIDA.ROBERT DALE OWEN AND MODERN SPIRITUALISM.GEORGE ELIOT'S LETTER ON THE PHENOMENA OF SPIRITUALISM.MRS. STOWE'S DESCRIPTION OF SCENERY IN FLORIDA.MRS. STOWE CONCERNING "MIDDLEMARCH."GEORGE ELIOT TO MRS. STOWE DURING REV. H. W. BEECHER'S TRIAL.MRS. STOWE CONCERNING HER LIFE EXPERIENCE WITH HER BROTHER, H. W. BEECHER, AND HIS TRIAL.MRS. LEWES' LAST LETTER TO MRS. STOWE.DIVERSE MENTAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THESE TWO WOMEN.MRS. STOWE'S FINAL ESTIMATE OF MODERN SPIRITUALISM. It is with a feeling of relief that we turn from one of the most disagreeable experiences of Mrs. Stowe's life to one of the most delightful, namely, the warm friendship of one of the most eminent

40. Caroline Severance
I will not tell you how prosy and dull I fear it was, but I now it was earnest, and well considered, and dear Mrs. Follen's and Miss Peabody's beaming eyes, kept me in heart all
http://www.pinn.net/~sunshine/whm2002/sever.html
Sunshine for Women
WHM 2002, ToC
Home Caroline Maria Seymour Severance
from Eminent women of the age being narratives of the lives and deeds of the most prominent women of the present generation. By James Parton, Horace Greeley, T. W. Higginson, J. S. C. Abbott, Prof. James M. Hoppin, William Winter, Theodore Tilton, Fanny Fern, Grace Greenwood, Mrs. E. C. Stanton, etc. Richly illustrated with fourteen steel engravings. Caroline Severance I cannot do better than to give the reader, what, in her easy, playful way, she writes in a letter to me of herself. I wrote to her asking for the facts of her life, telling her there was no escape, that nolens volens she was to be sketched, and it rested with her, whether is should be based wholly on such an objective view, such as I could get in being en rapport with herself. She choose the latter, as the least of two evils, and frankly tells me what she knows of herself. "Dear Friend, Isn't this an interesting dilemma to find one's self in? to be exhibited whether we will or no! One who has arrived at years of discretion, surely, in our free land, to have no change of choice, whether to remain incog., or be set on high for all the daws to peck at! 'But to this it seems we have come at last,' and, in my extremity, if I may choose nothing else, I surely shall snatch at the chance to say by whom this most undesirable service shall be performed, and I gladly submit to you.' multum in parvo , it must be confessed.

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