Dickinson, Anna,305.Disciples,Church of the,256;Governor Andrew a member of,263."Divine Love and Wisdom,"Swedenborg's,204,209.Dix, Dorothea L.,her work for the insane,88."Don Giovanni,"its libretto,24;admired by Charles Sumner,176.Doré, Gustave,the artist,his studio and work,416-419.Douglas, Stephen A.,178."Downing Letters,"those of C. A. Davis,25.Dresel, Otto,musical critic and teacher,438;tribute to his memory,439.Dress,in the thirties,30,31;at Mrs. Astor's dinner,64,65;at Samuel Ward's wedding,65;at Lansdowne House,102,103;at the ball at Almack's,106.Dublin,the Howes in,112-114.Duer, John,at the Dickens dinner,26.Dwight, John S.,translates Goethe and Schiller,147;tries to teach Theodore Parker to sing,162,163;Henry James reads a paper at the house of,324;admires Athanase Coquerel's sermon at Newport,342;Dana's estimate of,435;his "Journal of Music,"436;his kindness to Mrs. Howe's children,437;Dr. Holmes's remark at his funeral,438.ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZEames, Charles,223,224.Eames, Mrs. Charles,her kindness to Count Gurowski,223-226;invites Mrs. Howe to dinner,308.Edgeworth, Maria,the Howes' visit to,113.Edinburgh, 121.Edwards, Jonathan,Dr. Holmes's paper on,286.Eliot, Thomas,attends a lecture by Mrs. Howe in Washington,309.Elliott, Mrs. (Maud Howe),her remark to Henry James, the elder,325;goes to Santo Domingo with her parents,347;takes charge of the woman's literary work at the New Orleans exposition,395;goes abroad with her mother,410.Ellis, Rev. George E.,lectures on the Rhode Island Indians,407.Elssler, Fanny,a ballet dancer,104;opinions of Emerson and Margaret Fuller on her dancing,105.Emblee,the Nightingales at,138.Emerson, Ralph Waldo,87;remark on Fanny Elssler's dancing,105;begins his work,144;caricatured by Cranch,145;avoids woman suffrage,158;praises "Passion Flowers,"228;at the Bryant celebration,279;a member of the Radical Club,282;objects to having its meetings reported: his paper on Thoreau,290;Theodore Parker's opinion of,291;character and attainments,292;his interest in Mrs. Howe's parlor lectures,307.England, Bank of,visited,116,117.Evans, Mrs.,421.Everett, C. C.,a member of the Radical Club,282."Evidences of Christianity,"Paley's,56.ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZFabens, Colonel,on the voyage to Santo Domingo,347.Farrar, Mrs.,visited by Mrs. Howe,295,296.Faucit, Helen,the actress,104."Faust," Goethe's,condemned by Mr. Ward,59.Felton, Prof. C. C.,first known by the Ward family through Mrs. Howe's brother Samuel,49;his friends,169."Female Poets of America,"Griswold's,5.Fern, Fanny,her essay onrhinosophy,404.Field, David Dudley,addresses the second meeting of the woman's peace crusade,329.Field, Mrs. D. D.,191.Field, Kate,at the Radical Club,290;at Newport,402.Fields, James T.,228.Finotti, Father,263,264.Fitzmaurice, Lady Louisa,daughter of the Marquis of Lansdowne,103.Fletcher, Alice,prominent at the woman's congress,386.Follen, Dr. Karl,22.Foresti, Felice,an Italian patriot,120;reads Dante with Mrs. Howe,206.Forks,three-pronged steel,in general use,30.Fornasari,an opera singer,104.Forster, John,at Charles Dickens's dinner: invites the Howes to dine,110.Fowler, Dr. and Mrs.,their courtesy to the Howes,139-141.Francis, Dr. John W.,accompanies Mrs. Ward to Niagara,8;becomes a member of the Ward household,12;his appearance,36;his humor,37;his habits,38;his introduction of Edgar Allan Poe,39.Francis, Mrs. John W. (Eliza Cutler),takes charge of the Ward family at her sister's death,11,12;dances in "stocking-feet" at her sister's wedding,34;her kindness,38;her hospitality,39.François,a colored man in Santo Domingo,invites Mrs. Howe to hold religious services,350,353.Freeman, Edward,the artist,127;a neighbor of Mrs. Howe in Rome,191.Freeman, Mrs. Edward,192."From the Oak to the Olive,"extracts from,315-319.Frothingham, O. B.,a member of the Radical Club,282.Froude, James Anthony,the historian,at Miss Cobbe's reception,333.Fuller, Margaret,urges Mrs. Howe to publish her earlier poems,61;her remark on Fanny Elssler's dancing,105;in Cranch's caricature,145;translates Eckermann's "Conversations with Goethe,"147;life of, undertaken by Emerson,158;criticises Dr. Hedge's Phi Beta address,296;highly esteemed by Dr. Hedge,300;the sixtieth anniversary of her birth celebrated,301.Fuller, Mrs. Samuel R.,goes to Santo Domingo with the Howes,347.ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZGalway, Lady,98.Gambetta, M.,at Mr. Healey's ball,421.Garcia, the opera singer,14.Garrison, William Lloyd,Mrs. Howe's dislike of, dispelled,152,153;attacks a statement of hers,236;joins the woman suffrage movement,375;his work for that cause,380,381.Gennadius, John,Greek minister to England,411.German scholarship,its beneficial effect on New England,303.Gibbon, Edward,57;his "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,"205.Gladstone, William E.,at Devonshire House,410;breakfast with him,411.Gloucester, Duchess of,her appearance,101.Godwin, Parke,admires Athanase Coquerel's sermon at Newport,342.Goethe,his "Faust" and "Wilhelm Meister,"59;Mrs. Howe's essay on his minor poems,60;his motto,205.Gonfalonieri, Count,an Italian patriot imprisoned at Spielberg:his life saved by his wife,119.Goodwin, Juliet R.,becomes secretary of the Town and Country Club,406.Goodwin, Prof. William W.,402;his Latin version of the "Man in the Moon,"404.Graham, Mrs. Elizabeth,school of,5.Grant, Gen. U. S.,at the ball at Mr. Healy's,421.Graves, Rev. Mary H.,takes part in the convention of women ministers,312.Greeks,Dr. Howe's labors for,85,86,313,319."Green Peace Estate, The,"152.Green, J. R.,the historian,412.Greene, George Washington,American consul at Rome,helps Dr. Howe,123;accompanies the Howes to the papal reception,125.Greene, Gen. Nathanael,7,123.Greene, Mrs. N. R.,cousin of Mrs. Howe's father,anecdote of,6.Greene, William,governor of Rhode Island,4.Greene, Mrs. William (Catharine Ray),an ancestress of Mrs. Howe,3;her connection with Block Island families of service,51.Greene, William B.,colonel of the First Mass. Heavy Artillery,271.Gregory XVI., Pope,receives the Howes,125;anecdote of,126,127.Grey, Mrs.,her interest in schools for girls of the middle class,333.Grimes, Brother,a colored preacher,263.Grimes, James W.,senator from Iowa,225.Grimes, Medora.SeeWard, Mrs. Samuel.Grisi,sings at Lansdowne House,101;in "Semiramide,"104.Griswold, R. W.,his "Female Poets of America,"5.Grote, George,the historian,93.Grote, Mrs. George (Harriet Lewin),somewhatgrotesque,93.Guizot, M.,prime minister of France,135.Gurowski, Adam, Count,220;employed by the State Department: his temper and curiosity,221,222;dismissed by Seward,222;his breach with Sumner,223;befriended by Mrs. Eames,223,224;his death,225;his family affairs,227.Gurowski, John,227.Gustin, Rev. Ellen,at the convention of women ministers,312.ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZHair,mode of dressing,65.Hale, Rev. Edward Everett,his opinion of Samuel Longfellow,293;speaks at the meeting in behalf of the Cretan insurgents,313.Hale, George S.,a friend of woman suffrage,378.Hall, Mrs. David P. (Florence Howe),her interest in sewing for the Cretan refugees,316.Hallam, Henry,the historian,139.Halleck, Fitz-Greene,his "Marco Bozzaris,"22;frequent visitor at the Astor mansion,77;his remarks on Margaret Fuller's English,146.Hampton, Mrs. Frank (Sally Baxter),meets the Howes in Havana,234;invites them to her home in South Carolina,235.Hampton, Wade, his statement with regard to slavery,235.Handel,his "Messiah" given in New York,15;appreciation of his work taught,16.Handel and Haydn Society,14.Harte, Bret,at Newport,402.Harvard College,shunned as a Unitarian institution,24.Harvard Divinity School,Theodore Parker at,162.Hawkes, Rev. Francis L.,his abuse of Germans and abolitionists,61.Haynes, Rev. Lorenza,takes part in the convention of women ministers,312.Healy, G. P. A.,the artist,ball at his residence,420,421.Healy, Mrs.,420.Hedge, Dr. F. H.,his translations,147;member of the Radical Club,282;defends Protestant progress,285;his Phi Beta address,295;pastorates in Providence and Boston,296,297;second Phi Beta address,298;becomes professor of German at Harvard,299;fondness for the drama,299,300;his high opinion of Margaret Fuller,300,301;his statement of the Unitarian faith,302;broadening effect of his studies in Germany,303.Hegel,the German philosopher,209;estimates of,210;his "Aesthetik" and "Logik,"212.Hell,ideas of,62.Hensler, Miss Elise,sings first at Mrs. Benzon's house,435.Herder,works of,read,59,206.Herne, Colonel,first husband of Mrs. Cutler, Mrs. Howe's grandmother,35.Heron, Matilda,in "The World's Own,"230.Higginson, Colonel Thomas Wentworth,at the Shadrach meeting,165;his paper "Ought Women to learn the Alphabet,"232;his position on Christianity at the Radical Club,285;at the woman suffrage meeting,375;aids that cause,382;at Newport,402;at a mock "Commencement,"403;becomes treasurer of the Town and Country Club,406;at the woman's rights congress in Paris,420.Hillard, George S.,his friends and character,169,170.Hillard, Kate,speaks at the Town and Country Club,406."Hippolytus,"Mrs. Howe's drama of,proposed by Booth,237;ultimately declined,240.Hoar, Hon. George Frisbie,a friend of woman suffrage,378;secures an appropriation for the New Orleans Exposition,398.Hoffman, Matilda,engaged to Washington Irving,28.Holland, Mrs. Henry (Saba Smith),reception at her house,92.Holland, Dr. J. G.,at Newport,402.Holmes, Dr. Oliver Wendell,at the Bryant celebration,277-280;as a traveling companion,277,280;his paper at the Radical Club on Jonathan Edwards,286;speaks at the meeting to help the Cretan insurgents,313;writes a poem for the memorial meeting to Dr. Howe,370.Hooker, Mrs. Isabella Beecher,speaks at the woman's congress,385.Horace,174;Orelli's edition of,209.Houghton, Lord (Richard Monckton Milnes),the poet,Mrs. Howe meets,97;entertains her in 1877,410;takes her to Mr. Gladstone's,411.Housekeeping,the trials of,213-215;every girl should learn the art of,216.Howe, Florence.SeeHall, Mrs. David P.Howe, Julia Romana.SeeAnagnos, Mrs. Michael.
Dickinson, Anna,305.
Disciples,Church of the,256;Governor Andrew a member of,263.
"Divine Love and Wisdom,"Swedenborg's,204,209.
Dix, Dorothea L.,her work for the insane,88.
"Don Giovanni,"its libretto,24;admired by Charles Sumner,176.
Doré, Gustave,the artist,his studio and work,416-419.
Douglas, Stephen A.,178.
"Downing Letters,"those of C. A. Davis,25.
Dresel, Otto,musical critic and teacher,438;tribute to his memory,439.
Dress,in the thirties,30,31;at Mrs. Astor's dinner,64,65;at Samuel Ward's wedding,65;at Lansdowne House,102,103;at the ball at Almack's,106.
Dublin,the Howes in,112-114.
Duer, John,at the Dickens dinner,26.
Dwight, John S.,translates Goethe and Schiller,147;tries to teach Theodore Parker to sing,162,163;Henry James reads a paper at the house of,324;admires Athanase Coquerel's sermon at Newport,342;Dana's estimate of,435;his "Journal of Music,"436;his kindness to Mrs. Howe's children,437;Dr. Holmes's remark at his funeral,438.
Eames, Charles,223,224.
Eames, Mrs. Charles,her kindness to Count Gurowski,223-226;invites Mrs. Howe to dinner,308.
Edgeworth, Maria,the Howes' visit to,113.
Edinburgh, 121.
Edwards, Jonathan,Dr. Holmes's paper on,286.
Eliot, Thomas,attends a lecture by Mrs. Howe in Washington,309.
Elliott, Mrs. (Maud Howe),her remark to Henry James, the elder,325;goes to Santo Domingo with her parents,347;takes charge of the woman's literary work at the New Orleans exposition,395;goes abroad with her mother,410.
Ellis, Rev. George E.,lectures on the Rhode Island Indians,407.
Elssler, Fanny,a ballet dancer,104;opinions of Emerson and Margaret Fuller on her dancing,105.
Emblee,the Nightingales at,138.
Emerson, Ralph Waldo,87;remark on Fanny Elssler's dancing,105;begins his work,144;caricatured by Cranch,145;avoids woman suffrage,158;praises "Passion Flowers,"228;at the Bryant celebration,279;a member of the Radical Club,282;objects to having its meetings reported: his paper on Thoreau,290;Theodore Parker's opinion of,291;character and attainments,292;his interest in Mrs. Howe's parlor lectures,307.
England, Bank of,visited,116,117.
Evans, Mrs.,421.
Everett, C. C.,a member of the Radical Club,282.
"Evidences of Christianity,"Paley's,56.
Fabens, Colonel,on the voyage to Santo Domingo,347.
Farrar, Mrs.,visited by Mrs. Howe,295,296.
Faucit, Helen,the actress,104.
"Faust," Goethe's,condemned by Mr. Ward,59.
Felton, Prof. C. C.,first known by the Ward family through Mrs. Howe's brother Samuel,49;his friends,169.
"Female Poets of America,"Griswold's,5.
Fern, Fanny,her essay onrhinosophy,404.
Field, David Dudley,addresses the second meeting of the woman's peace crusade,329.
Field, Mrs. D. D.,191.
Field, Kate,at the Radical Club,290;at Newport,402.
Fields, James T.,228.
Finotti, Father,263,264.
Fitzmaurice, Lady Louisa,daughter of the Marquis of Lansdowne,103.
Fletcher, Alice,prominent at the woman's congress,386.
Follen, Dr. Karl,22.
Foresti, Felice,an Italian patriot,120;reads Dante with Mrs. Howe,206.
Forks,three-pronged steel,in general use,30.
Fornasari,an opera singer,104.
Forster, John,at Charles Dickens's dinner: invites the Howes to dine,110.
Fowler, Dr. and Mrs.,their courtesy to the Howes,139-141.
Francis, Dr. John W.,accompanies Mrs. Ward to Niagara,8;becomes a member of the Ward household,12;his appearance,36;his humor,37;his habits,38;his introduction of Edgar Allan Poe,39.
Francis, Mrs. John W. (Eliza Cutler),takes charge of the Ward family at her sister's death,11,12;dances in "stocking-feet" at her sister's wedding,34;her kindness,38;her hospitality,39.
François,a colored man in Santo Domingo,invites Mrs. Howe to hold religious services,350,353.
Freeman, Edward,the artist,127;a neighbor of Mrs. Howe in Rome,191.
Freeman, Mrs. Edward,192.
"From the Oak to the Olive,"extracts from,315-319.
Frothingham, O. B.,a member of the Radical Club,282.
Froude, James Anthony,the historian,at Miss Cobbe's reception,333.
Fuller, Margaret,urges Mrs. Howe to publish her earlier poems,61;her remark on Fanny Elssler's dancing,105;in Cranch's caricature,145;translates Eckermann's "Conversations with Goethe,"147;life of, undertaken by Emerson,158;criticises Dr. Hedge's Phi Beta address,296;highly esteemed by Dr. Hedge,300;the sixtieth anniversary of her birth celebrated,301.
Fuller, Mrs. Samuel R.,goes to Santo Domingo with the Howes,347.
Galway, Lady,98.
Gambetta, M.,at Mr. Healey's ball,421.
Garcia, the opera singer,14.
Garrison, William Lloyd,Mrs. Howe's dislike of, dispelled,152,153;attacks a statement of hers,236;joins the woman suffrage movement,375;his work for that cause,380,381.
Gennadius, John,Greek minister to England,411.
German scholarship,its beneficial effect on New England,303.
Gibbon, Edward,57;his "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,"205.
Gladstone, William E.,at Devonshire House,410;breakfast with him,411.
Gloucester, Duchess of,her appearance,101.
Godwin, Parke,admires Athanase Coquerel's sermon at Newport,342.
Goethe,his "Faust" and "Wilhelm Meister,"59;Mrs. Howe's essay on his minor poems,60;his motto,205.
Gonfalonieri, Count,an Italian patriot imprisoned at Spielberg:his life saved by his wife,119.
Goodwin, Juliet R.,becomes secretary of the Town and Country Club,406.
Goodwin, Prof. William W.,402;his Latin version of the "Man in the Moon,"404.
Graham, Mrs. Elizabeth,school of,5.
Grant, Gen. U. S.,at the ball at Mr. Healy's,421.
Graves, Rev. Mary H.,takes part in the convention of women ministers,312.
Greeks,Dr. Howe's labors for,85,86,313,319.
"Green Peace Estate, The,"152.
Green, J. R.,the historian,412.
Greene, George Washington,American consul at Rome,helps Dr. Howe,123;accompanies the Howes to the papal reception,125.
Greene, Gen. Nathanael,7,123.
Greene, Mrs. N. R.,cousin of Mrs. Howe's father,anecdote of,6.
Greene, William,governor of Rhode Island,4.
Greene, Mrs. William (Catharine Ray),an ancestress of Mrs. Howe,3;her connection with Block Island families of service,51.
Greene, William B.,colonel of the First Mass. Heavy Artillery,271.
Gregory XVI., Pope,receives the Howes,125;anecdote of,126,127.
Grey, Mrs.,her interest in schools for girls of the middle class,333.
Grimes, Brother,a colored preacher,263.
Grimes, James W.,senator from Iowa,225.
Grimes, Medora.SeeWard, Mrs. Samuel.
Grisi,sings at Lansdowne House,101;in "Semiramide,"104.
Griswold, R. W.,his "Female Poets of America,"5.
Grote, George,the historian,93.
Grote, Mrs. George (Harriet Lewin),somewhatgrotesque,93.
Guizot, M.,prime minister of France,135.
Gurowski, Adam, Count,220;employed by the State Department: his temper and curiosity,221,222;dismissed by Seward,222;his breach with Sumner,223;befriended by Mrs. Eames,223,224;his death,225;his family affairs,227.
Gurowski, John,227.
Gustin, Rev. Ellen,at the convention of women ministers,312.
Hair,mode of dressing,65.
Hale, Rev. Edward Everett,his opinion of Samuel Longfellow,293;speaks at the meeting in behalf of the Cretan insurgents,313.
Hale, George S.,a friend of woman suffrage,378.
Hall, Mrs. David P. (Florence Howe),her interest in sewing for the Cretan refugees,316.
Hallam, Henry,the historian,139.
Halleck, Fitz-Greene,his "Marco Bozzaris,"22;frequent visitor at the Astor mansion,77;his remarks on Margaret Fuller's English,146.
Hampton, Mrs. Frank (Sally Baxter),meets the Howes in Havana,234;invites them to her home in South Carolina,235.
Hampton, Wade, his statement with regard to slavery,235.
Handel,his "Messiah" given in New York,15;appreciation of his work taught,16.
Handel and Haydn Society,14.
Harte, Bret,at Newport,402.
Harvard College,shunned as a Unitarian institution,24.
Harvard Divinity School,Theodore Parker at,162.
Hawkes, Rev. Francis L.,his abuse of Germans and abolitionists,61.
Haynes, Rev. Lorenza,takes part in the convention of women ministers,312.
Healy, G. P. A.,the artist,ball at his residence,420,421.
Healy, Mrs.,420.
Hedge, Dr. F. H.,his translations,147;member of the Radical Club,282;defends Protestant progress,285;his Phi Beta address,295;pastorates in Providence and Boston,296,297;second Phi Beta address,298;becomes professor of German at Harvard,299;fondness for the drama,299,300;his high opinion of Margaret Fuller,300,301;his statement of the Unitarian faith,302;broadening effect of his studies in Germany,303.
Hegel,the German philosopher,209;estimates of,210;his "Aesthetik" and "Logik,"212.
Hell,ideas of,62.
Hensler, Miss Elise,sings first at Mrs. Benzon's house,435.
Herder,works of,read,59,206.
Herne, Colonel,first husband of Mrs. Cutler, Mrs. Howe's grandmother,35.
Heron, Matilda,in "The World's Own,"230.
Higginson, Colonel Thomas Wentworth,at the Shadrach meeting,165;his paper "Ought Women to learn the Alphabet,"232;his position on Christianity at the Radical Club,285;at the woman suffrage meeting,375;aids that cause,382;at Newport,402;at a mock "Commencement,"403;becomes treasurer of the Town and Country Club,406;at the woman's rights congress in Paris,420.
Hillard, George S.,his friends and character,169,170.
Hillard, Kate,speaks at the Town and Country Club,406.
"Hippolytus,"Mrs. Howe's drama of,proposed by Booth,237;ultimately declined,240.
Hoar, Hon. George Frisbie,a friend of woman suffrage,378;secures an appropriation for the New Orleans Exposition,398.
Hoffman, Matilda,engaged to Washington Irving,28.
Holland, Mrs. Henry (Saba Smith),reception at her house,92.
Holland, Dr. J. G.,at Newport,402.
Holmes, Dr. Oliver Wendell,at the Bryant celebration,277-280;as a traveling companion,277,280;his paper at the Radical Club on Jonathan Edwards,286;speaks at the meeting to help the Cretan insurgents,313;writes a poem for the memorial meeting to Dr. Howe,370.
Hooker, Mrs. Isabella Beecher,speaks at the woman's congress,385.
Horace,174;Orelli's edition of,209.
Houghton, Lord (Richard Monckton Milnes),the poet,Mrs. Howe meets,97;entertains her in 1877,410;takes her to Mr. Gladstone's,411.
Housekeeping,the trials of,213-215;every girl should learn the art of,216.
Howe, Florence.SeeHall, Mrs. David P.
Howe, Julia Romana.SeeAnagnos, Mrs. Michael.