Authors: Megan Marshall
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“my heart”:
FLV,
p. 257.
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“could not see”:
FLV,
p. 293.
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“What shall I write”:
Dispatches,
p. 285.
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“terrible” battle:
FLV,
p. 238.
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“The Italians fought”:
FLV,
p. 239.
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“cannonade” continued:
FLV,
p. 238.
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“fails this time”:
FLV,
p. 240.
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“Rome is being destroyed”:
FLV,
p. 240.
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“how terrible”; university student:
FLV,
p. 239;
Dispatches,
p. 300.
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“forget the great ideas”:
FLV,
p. 258.
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“the way of observation”:
FLV,
p. 240.
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“is perfectly well”:
FLV,
pp. 236, 235.
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“I am caught”:
FLV,
p. 240.
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“underrated” his friend:
JMNVIII,
pp. 368–69.
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“who pretend”:
Dispatches,
pp. 298–99.
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“the fatal”:
Dispatches,
p. 303.
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“watered with the blood”: “Recollections of the Vatican,” p. 64.
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“the balls”:
Dispatches,
p. 303.
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“for you only” . . . “My soul”: “Mazzini to Margaret Fuller,” p. 78.
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“whizzed and burst”:
Dispatches,
p. 303.
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“I don’t know”: “Mazzini to Margaret Fuller,” p. 78.
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“Government, Army and all”: Ibid., p. 79.
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“Wherever we go”: Arnold Whitridge,
Men in Crisis: The Revolutions of 1848
(New York: Scribner’s, 1949), p. 190.
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“ready to dare”:
Dispatches,
p. 304.
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“Never have I seen”:
Dispatches,
pp. 304–5.
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“to and fro”:
Dispatches,
p. 306.
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“the holocaust”:
Dispatches,
p. 264.
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“But for my child”:
FLV,
p. 243.
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“left helpless”:
FLV,
p. 247.
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“A marble”:
Dispatches,
p. 310.
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three thousand: Katherine A. Geffcken, “Burials on the Janiculum: The Cemetery of Santo Spirito,” in Katherine A. Geffcken and Norma W. Goldman, eds.,
The Janus View from the American Academy in Rome: Essays on the Janiculum
(Rome: The American Academy in Rome, 2007), p. 195.
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“Rest not supine”:
Dispatches,
p. 311.
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“I shall go”:
FLV,
pp. 243–44.
20. “I HAVE LIVED IN A MUCH MORE FULL AND TRUE WAY”
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“pale and trembling”: Lewis Cass Jr., quoted in
CFII,
p. 457.
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“much-exposed” apartment:
Dispatches,
p. 303.
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“I have united”:
FLV,
p. 250.
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“amid the roar”:
FLV,
p. 258.
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“worn to a skeleton”:
FLV,
pp. 245–46.
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“the cruel law”:
FLV,
pp. 258–59.
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“dearer self”:
FLV,
p. 257.
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the practice [of wet-nursing]: Michelle M. Dowd,
Women’s Work in Early Modern English Literature and Culture
(New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009); Valerie Fildes,
Wet Nursing: A History from Antiquity to the Present
(Oxford and New York: Basil Blackwell, 1988); Janet Golden,
A Social History of Wet Nursing in America: From Breast to Bottle
(Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996); Susan C. Greenfield and Carol Barash, eds.,
Inventing Maternity: Politics, Science, and Literature, 1650–1865
(Lexington, Ky.: University Press of Kentucky, 1999); David I. Kertzer,
Amalia’s Tale: A Poor Peasant, an Ambitious Attorney, and a Fight for Justice
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2007); George D. Sussman,
Selling Mothers’ Milk: The Wet-Nursing Business in France, 1715–1914
(Urbana, Chicago, London: University of Illinois Press, 1982).
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“for the sake”:
FLV,
p. 249.
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“fine healthy girl”:
FLV,
p. 249. For laws on foundling children in the Papal States, see
Amalia’s Tale,
pp. 11–12.
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“peaceful and gay”:
FLV,
p. 254.
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“American Circle”:
FLV,
p. 280.
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“wander[ing] feebly”:
FLV,
p. 249.
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“woman’s day”:
Dispatches,
p. 245.
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“free, independent, one”:
Dispatches,
p. 216.
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“from the married”: Joan Von Mehren, “Establishing the Facts on the Ossoli Family: An Experiment in E-Mail Research,”
Margaret Fuller Society Newsletter,
vol. 9, winter 2001, p. 2. I have altered Von Mehren’s translation slightly to correspond more closely to the original Latin, which is reprinted in “Margaret Fuller, the Marchese Giovanni Ossoli, and the Marriage Question: Considering the Research of Dr. Roberto Colzi,”
Resources for American Literary Study,
vol. 30, 2005, p. 122. For a thorough discussion of theories as to the timing of the Ossolis’ wedding, including the possibility that it may have taken place long after Nino’s birth when the family lived in Florence, or not at all, see “Margaret Fuller, the Marchese Giovanni Ossoli, and the Marriage Question,” pp. 104–43. Von Mehren concludes definitively that the wording of Nino’s baptismal record confirms that the couple had married in advance of the baptism.
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“half killed me”:
FLV,
p. 304.
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“your eldest child”:
FLV,
p. 260.
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“I am a mother”:
FLV,
p. 248.
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“Yet I shall never”:
FLV,
p. 248.
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“more afraid of being”: Quoted in
FLVI,
p. 9.
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“I have lived”:
FLV,
p. 283. Although this letter survives without identification of the recipient, a reference to “something of the violet” suggests that it was written to WHC, who initiated this shared metaphor.
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“little heart”:
FLV,
p. 270.
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“an inestimable”:
FLV,
pp. 291–92.
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“In him” . . . “I have found”:
FLV,
p. 261.
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“moored” themselves:
FLV,
p. 273.
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“What a difference”:
FLV,
p. 280.
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“kicking, throwing”:
FLV,
p. 302.
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“not handsome”:
FLV,
p. 288n.
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“I feel so refreshed”:
FLV,
p. 302.
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“a dark-haired, quiet, modest”:
FLV,
p. 288n.
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“so cheerful and busy”:
FLV,
p. 265.
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“glorious days that expand”:
FLVI,
p. 66.
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“the world can no longer”:
Dispatches,
p. 320.
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“comfort, no solution”:
FLV,
p. 295.
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“Heaven and Hell”:
FLV,
p. 273.
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“blighted” hopes:
FLV,
p. 257.
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“it has ploughed”:
FLV,
p. 301.
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“angry” older brother:
FLV,
p. 262.
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“eke out bread”:
FLV,
p. 285.
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“I should not be sorry”:
FLV,
p. 284.
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frequently wore: William Henry Hurlbert, quoted in Joel Myerson, ed.,
Fuller in Her Own Time
(Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2008), p. 97.
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“a new revolution”:
FLV,
p. 299.
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“the restored authorities”:
FLV,
p. 287.
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“find really a home”:
FLV,
p. 299.
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two feet of snow:
Dispatches,
p. 320;
FLV,
p. 306.
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“kind of fearful”:
FLV,
pp. 305–6.
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“running about” . . . “blind”:
FLV,
p. 269.
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“revolutionary” . . . “The heart”:
FLV,
p. 250.
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“I have acted”:
FLVI,
p. 88.
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“whatever I have done”:
FLV,
p. 285.
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“no questions”:
FLV,
p. 269.
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“increased warmth of interest”:
FLV,
p. 269.
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“retiring from the Roman”:
FLV,
p. 280n.
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“strange story”:
Fuller in Her Own Time,
pp. 92–93.
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figure of steadfast resolve: Joseph Mozier’s portrait bust of MF is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery. A photo can be seen in Robert N. Hudspeth, “A New Image of Margaret Fuller,”
Thoreau Society Bulletin,
no. 273, winter 2011, p. 4.
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“the handsomest”: Nathaniel Hawthorne’s account of Joseph Mozier’s views, in
Fuller in Her Own Time,
p. 176.
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“to impose”: Ibid., pp. 97, 94, 98.
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“pale, erect, narrow”:
FLV,
pp. 275, 277.
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“I am just the same”:
FLV,
p. 293.
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“Margaret F. has been”:
ELIV,
p. 168.
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“I expect that to many”:
FLV,
p. 291.
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“he will feel very strange”:
FLV,
p. 286.
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“He is not in any”:
FLV,
p. 261.
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“
some
of my friends”:
FLV,
p. 291.
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“
La Madre
”:
FLV,
p. 299.
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“left” to “hear”:
FLV,
pp. 294–95.
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“possessed of a great”:
FLV,
p. 58.
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“the peace way”:
FLV,
p. 295.
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“the much that calls”: Jeffrey Steele, ed.,
The Essential Margaret Fuller
(New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1992), p. 18.
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“These are not the things”:
FLV,
p. 296.
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“absolutely wanting”: MF,
Essays on American Life and Letters,
Joel Myerson, ed. (Albany, N.Y.: NCUP, 1978), p. 390.
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“lived cheek by jowl”: Quoted in
VM,
p. 294.
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“too cruel”:
FLV,
p. 199.
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“a useless resistance”:
FLV,
p. 199.
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“I pity those”:
FLVI,
p. 77.
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“if my life be not”:
FLVI,
p. 57.
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“feel anxious”:
FLVI,
pp. 87–88.
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“I will believe”:
FLVI,
p. 86.
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“marble and rags”:
FLVI,
p. 83.
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the wrecks of three:
FLVI,
p. 81.
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“Siberian winter”:
FLVI,
p. 85.
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“his great stout Roman”:
FLVI,
p. 68.
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“an immense stock”:
FLVI,
p. 75.
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“full of boxes”:
FLVI,
p. 85.
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“I have never”:
FLVI,
p. 67.
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“I feel works of art”; A
Last Supper:
FLVI,
p. 68; John Ruskin,
The Complete Works of John Ruskin,
vol. 4, E. T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn, eds. (London and New York: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1903), p. 40.
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“sufficient number”:
FLVI,
p. 70.
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“full of armed men”: MF, “Recollections of the Vatican,”
United States Magazine and Democratic Review,
vol. 27, July 1850, pp. 65, 64.
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“find always” . . . “can take”:
FLVI,
p. 69.
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“great novelty”:
FLV,
p. 293.
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“nothing else can break”:
FLVI,
p. 69.
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“For his sake”:
FLVI,
p. 70.
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“I never think”:
FLV,
p. 284. See note following “I have lived” on page 445.
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“dangerous pressure”:
FLVI,
p. 74.
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“so sad and weary”:
FLVI,
p. 86.
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“One would think”:
FLVI,
p. 70.
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“I hope he will”:
FLV,
p. 305.
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“It has long seemed”:
FLV,
p. 300.
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“Joy to those born”:
Dispatches,
pp. 322–23.
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“with most sad”:
FLVI,
p. 85.