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         Lazarus Emma:     more detail
  1. Admetus and other poems by Emma Lazarus. by Lazarus. Emma. 1849-1887., 1871-01-01
  2. Songs of a Semite The dance to death and other poems by Emma Laz by Lazarus. Emma. 1849-1887., 1882-01-01
  3. Songs of a Semite: The dance to death, and other poems by Emma, 1849-1887 Lazarus, 2009-10-26
  4. The Spagnoletto [a play in 5 acts] Unpublished manuscript by Emma, 1849-1887 Lazarus, 2009-10-26
  5. The poems of Emma Lazarus by Emma Lazarus 1849-1887 Lazarus Josephine 1846-1910, 1889-12-31
  6. Emma Lazarus (July 22, 1849-November 19, 1887): Selections from her poetry and prose by Emma Lazarus, 1982
  7. Emma Lazarus Rediscovered by Eve Merriam, 1999-03-01
  8. I Lift My Lamp: Emma Lazarus and the Statue of Liberty (Jewish Biography Series) by Nancy Smiler Levinson, 1986-06-30
  9. Emma Lazarus in Her World: Life and Letters by Bette Roth Young, 1995-05
  10. Emma Lazarus (American Women of Achievement) by Diane Lefer, 1988-03
  11. Emma Lazarus, Poet, Jewish Activist, Pioneer Zionist (Publications of the Jewish Historical Society of New York ; No. 3) by Charles Angoff, 1979-06

61. The Statue Of Liberty - New York City
Send these, the homeless, tempesttossed to me, I lift my lamp besidethe golden door! Emma Lazarus (1849-1887). Return to the Main Index.
http://www.si-web.com/Statue.html
The Statue Of Liberty
Visitors: for ticket and schedule information, call (212)269-5755
Also see: National Park Service website The Statue of Liberty was a gift to the United States from the people of France, conceived and designed as a monument to a great international friendship. But its significance has broadened and for many people throughout the world it has become the recognized symbol of liberty. See dedication poem: The New Colossus Historical Notes:
    Construction of the Statue began in France in the year 1875, by sculptor Auguste Bartholdi. The final completion date of the individual sections was in June of 1884, and it stood in Paris until it was dismantled in early 1885 for shipping to the US. Engineering of the structure's assembly was done by Gustave Eiffel. The French frigate "Isere" transported the Statue from France to the United States. In transit the Statue was reduced to 350 individual pieces and packed in 214 crates. On October 28, 1886 President Grover Cleveland accepted The Statue on behalf of the United States and said in part: "we will not forget that liberty here made her home; nor shall her chosen altar be neglected".
Physical Details:
    Winds of 50 miles per hour cause the Statue to sway 3 inches (7.62 cm) and the torch to sway 5 inches (12.7 cm).

62. Lazarus, Emma
Lazarus, Emma. (18491887), poet and essayist Born in New York, NewYork, on July 22, 1849, Emma Lazarus early displayed a talent
http://search.eb.com/women/articles/Lazarus_Emma.html
Lazarus, Emma
(1849-1887), poet and essayist Born in New York, New York, on July 22, 1849, Emma Lazarus early displayed a talent for poetry, and her first book, Poems and Translations (1867), was praised by Ralph Waldo Emerson. She dedicated her next book, Admetus and Other Poems (1871), to him. These and subsequent volumesthe prose Alide: An Episode of Goethe's Life (1874), a verse tragedy, The Spagnoletto (1876), and a fine translation of the Poems and Ballads of Heinrich Heine (1881)were cosmopolitan in flavor, sometimes technically excellent, but lacking in real distinction. About 1881, with the wave of immigration to the United States from European and Russian ghettoes, Lazarus, herself of Sephardic Jewish stock, took up the defense of persecuted Jews and of Judaism and began to work for the relief of immigrants. She published numerous essays in the Century and the weekly American Hebrew on the pogroms and persecutions and the often equivocal attitude of the Christian West. She was an early advocate of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. In 1882 she produced Songs of a Semite

63. Authors Of American Verse
John (17721820); Lazarus, Emma (1849-1887); Legaré, James Mathewes(1823-1859); Leland, Charles Godfrey (1824-1903); Lewis, Richard
http://www.hti.umich.edu/a/amverse/authlist.html
Authors of American Verse
  • Adams, Henry (1838-1918)
  • Adams, John (1704-1740)
  • Adams, John Quincy (1767-1848)
  • Alcott, Amos Bronson (1799-1888)
  • Aldrich, Thomas Bailey (1836-1907)
  • Alger, Jr., Horatio (1832-1899)
  • Allen, Elizabeth Akers (1832-1911 )
  • Allen, James (1739-1808)
  • Allen, Paul (1784-1826)
  • Allston, Washington (1779-1843)
  • Alsop, George (1636-1673?)
  • Arthur, T. S. (1809-1885)
  • Barlow, Joel (1754-1812)
  • Bates, Katharine Lee (1859-1929)
  • Beadle, Samuel Alfred (1857-1932)
  • Belknap, Jeremy (1744-1798)
  • Bell, James Madison (1826-1902)
  • Benjamin, Park (1809-1864)
  • Benjamin, Robert C. O. (1855-1900)
  • Bibb, Eloise A. (1878-1927)
  • Bierce, Ambrose (1842-1914)
  • Blackson, Lorenzo Dow (b.1817)
  • Bland, James A. (1854-1911)
  • Bleeker, Ann Eliza (1752-1783)
  • Blood, Benjamin Paul (1832-1919)
  • Bodman, Manoah (1765-1850)
  • Boker, George Henry (1823-1890)
  • Botta, Anne C. Lynch (1815-1891)
  • Boyesen, Hjalmar Hjorth (1848-1895)
  • Brackenridge, Hugh Henry (1748-1816)
  • Bradford, William (1590-1657)
  • Bradstreet, Anne (1612 or 1613-1672)
  • Brainard, John Gardiner Calkins (1796-1828)
  • >Braithwaite, William Stanley (1878-1962)
  • 64. Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > L
    Eliot, 1960; Lazarillo Of Tormes; Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887; Le Bon,Gustave, 1841-1931; Le Fanu, Joseph Sheridan, 1814-1873; LeFebure
    http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au

    65. WebExhibits Catalogue - Search Results
    From http//www.jwa.org/exhibits/gratz/. Emma Lazarus 18491887 Give meyour tired, your poor,/ Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.
    http://webexhibits.org/dir/c/e/a/
    Home Society Women's studies
      Amalie Dietrich
      A German naturalist and botanist, Dietrich was a strong and courageous woman who spent many years 'wandering' north and central Queensland in the late 1800s to bring the natural wonders of Australia to the European scientific community.
      From Bright Sparcs Online Exhibition: Amalie Dietrich
      http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/bsparcs/exhib/dietrich/dietrich.htm
      Around the World in 72 Days
      http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/world/
      Isle of Lesbos
      A place of art, culture, and learning, for women-oriented women. Features lesbian poetry, lesbian-interest classical art, vintage photos and postcards, letters and journals, and quotations
      From Isle of Lesbos
      http://www.sappho.com/
      Language of Love
      In Victorian times, the rules of romance were quite different from today's dating guidelines. Here's a look at the code of etiquette that defined 19th-century courtships. One page site. Includes pleasant Ragtime music.
      From The Language of Love
      http://www.stormi.com/luv.html
      The Peculiar Art of Art Frahm A study on the effects of celery on loose elastic. It is unfair to judge Art Frahm by these illustrations. He did many that were much, much worse. (And better, too.) But the falling-panty theme is a staple of his work. These pictures aren't taken from a calendar he did when hungry and desperate, chafing against the dictates of some gnomish pervert who wanted a year's worth of falling-panty pictures. From LILEKS (James) The Peculiar Art of Mr. Frahm

    66. Forthcoming Books, June 2002
    Lazarus, Emma, 18491887. Emma Lazarus selected poems and other writings /edited by Gregory Eiselein. Peterborough, Ont. Broadview Press, 2002.
    http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/forthbks/2002-06/en/e800.htm
    ISSN 1487-5039
    Forthcoming Books
    June 2002
    800 LITERATURE (GENERAL)
    Amis, Martin, 1949-
    The war against cliché : essays and reviews, 1971-2000 / Martin Amis. Toronto : Vintage, 2002.
    Includes index.
    ISBN 0-676-97405-8 : $24.95
    1. LiteratureHistory and criticism
    I. Title.
    Barlow, Arthur James, 1931-
    Sourdoughs and scallawags / Arthur James Barlow. Victoria, B.C. : Trafford Pub., 2002.
    ISBN 1-55369-312-4
    1. AlaskaFiction
    I. Title. Behan, Carol Ohmart. Point of departure / Carol Ohmart Behan. Victoria, B.C. : Trafford, 2002. ISBN 1-55369-276-4 I. Title. Bergeron, Serge, 1962- La dissertation critique : rédaction, correction, amélioration du style / Serge Bergeron. Sainte-Foy, Québec : Éditions Le Griffon d'argile, 2002. (Collection Griffon / La lignée) Pour les étudiants du niveau collégial. Comprend des réf. bibliogr. et un index. ISBN 2-89443-184-8 : 14,95 $

    67. World Book || Poets L-Q
    Top of page. Emma Lazarus (18491887) was an American poet. She isbest known for her sonnet, The New Colossus (1883), which was
    http://www2.worldbook.com/features/wwriters/html/poetsl-q.htm
    Emma Lazarus Amy Lowell Phyllis McGinley Edna St. Vincent Millay ... Sylvia Plath
    Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) was an American poet. She is best known for her sonnet, "The New Colossus" (1883), which was inscribed on a plaque inside the Statue of Liberty.
    Lazarus was born in New York City. She wrote sentimental poetry about love and death and also translated works by the French author Victor Hugo and the German authors Heinrich Heine and Johann von Goethe. In 1881, violent anti-Jewish attacks took place in Russia, resulting in a wave of Jewish immigration to the United States. The attacks inspired Lazarus, a Jew, to write poetry that emotionally protested against the persecution of the Jews in Russia. The poems were collected in Songs of a Semite Amy Lowell (1874-1925) was an American poet, critic, and biographer. Like a number of other poets of her day, Lowell was strongly influenced by the American poet Ezra Pound. She was particularly influenced by Pound's belief that many poetic conventions of the past were worn out and restricted the poet's creativity. With Pound and other poets, Lowell became a leader of a movement called imagism. The imagists emphasized the clear, objective, and precise treatment of images, objects, and events. They wrote in a style known as free verse.
    Lowell experimented with her own version of free verse, beginning with her second volume of poems

    68. Spring 2002 Page 1
    Emma Lazarus (18491887) was one of the first successful Jewish-Americanauthors. Her most famous poem, The New Colossus, was
    http://www.myvoguefabrics.com/voguebymailonline/022Pages/22Page1.htm
    cotton/ metallic
    100% polyester
    100% polyester
    100% polyester
    100% polyester Strike a "prose" this Spring! Help us celebrate Women's History Month (March) and National Poetry Month (April) in style! Nine amazing women poets who have contributed their voice and vision are all saluted in our Spring Collection!
    "Give me your tired, your poor,
    Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
    The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
    Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
    I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
    -"The New Colossus" by Emma Lazarus
    Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) was one of the first successful Jewish-American authors. Her most famous poem, "The New Colossus," was written to help raise funds for a pedestal for the Statue of Liberty. (In 1901, it was added to a bronze plaque at the base of the statue.) Highly educated and well traveled, Lazarus was a published poet and author by age 25. She wrote boldly, protesting anti-Semitism and advocating Russian immigrants' rights. In her honor, we name our premier collection. Click on any fabric for a full picture and its information or click on a page number below to see one of our other collections from Spring '02. Return to Vogue Fabrics by Mail Main Page Page

    69. Kids Cookie Mix .. Statue Of Liberty
    The New Colossus 1883 by Emma Lazarus (18491887). Not like the brazengiant of Greek fame, With conquering limbs astride from land to land.
    http://www.kidscookiemix.com/seasonal/july/statueofliberty.htm
    T hank you for visiting Kids Cookie Mix - where we have provided many " C hildren's C lassic" Stories, Poems, Songs, Histories, etc., that you will find of interest. W Did you know the average sex offender has 117 Victims! You can help save a child in the time it takes to bake a batch of cookies! Kids Cookie Mix - 4th of July
    "The Statue of Liberty"
    Statue of Liberty The Statue of Liberty celebrated her 100th birthday on October 28, 1986. The Statue is made of sheet copper, stands 151 feet high on Liberty Island in the New York Harbor. She is assembled atop a 154 foot high pedestal. Under her arm she holds a tablet with the inscription, "July 4, 1776" (in Roman numerals) and at her feet are broken shackles. Inside the pedestal, on a bronze tablet, is a poem, written in 1883, by Emma Lazarus

    70. In Thanksgiving
    THE NEW COLOSSUS. by Emma Lazarus (18491887). NOT like the brazen giantof Greek fame,. With conquering limbs astride from land to land;.
    http://www.debv.com/rant112802.htm
    In Thanksgiving Deborah Venable As we gather to celebrate in the true traditions of American families who have done so for generations, may we all feel a genuine thankfulness to be who we are, where we are and with not so much attention for what we have or don’t have in worldly goods. We have acquired varying degrees of material wealth not necessarily with our Creator’s blessing, but possibly due to the shrewdness of our dealings with our fellow man or the simply the lack thereof if our possessions are meager. Such things that cannot be taken with us after we have left this earth do not determine the measure of human worth. The only true measure of our worth is in the value of our spirit and the strength of our faith that we have not betrayed our purpose for being here. If we are blessed with loving families, sound minds, and strong bodies, then we are truly blessed. Where we lack any of these things, we may find spiritual solace, if we choose to, in helping others to recognize and appreciate these important blessings. All too often they go unnoticed by those who have too much or too little in material wealth.

    71. Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882. Additional Papers, Ca. 1835-1891: Guide.
    (98) Lazarus, Emma, 18491887. 1 letter to Ellen Tucker Emerson; 1876. (99)Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887. 1 letter to Lidian (Jackson) Emerson; 1875.
    http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/hou00322.html
    bMS Am 1280.220
    Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882. Additional papers, ca. 1835-1891: Guide.
    Houghton Library, Harvard College Library
    Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
    Descriptive Summary
    Repository: Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University
    Location: b
    Call No.: MS Am 1280.220
    Creator: Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882.
    Title: Additional papers,
    Date(s): ca.1835-1891.
    Quantity: 5 boxes (2 linear ft.)
    Abstract: Correspondence and compositions of American writer Ralph Waldo Emerson.
    Administrative Information
    Acquisition Information:
    Deposited by the Ralph Waldo Emerson Memorial Association; received: 1969.
    Historical Note
    Emerson was an American essayist, poet, and philosopher.
    Organization
    Organized into the following series:
    • I. Letters of RWE II. Letters to RWE III. Other letters IV. Manuscripts of RWE
    Scope and Content
    Correspondence and compositions of RWE and of his family, friends, and colleagues including Charles Chauncy Emerson, Ellen Tucker Emerson, and Mary Moody Emerson among others.
    Container List
    • Series: I. Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson

    72. Lutz : Biography, Scope And Content, Added Entries
    18481916 Garrison, Helen Eliza (Benson), 1811-1876 Garrison, Wendell Phillips,1840-1907 Greeley, Horace, 1811-1872 Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887 Lecturers Loring
    http://www.radcliffe.edu/schles/libcolls/mssarch/findaids/Lutz/Lutzbio.html
    A-110 ALMA LUTZ, 1890-1973 Collection, 1775-1943, n.y., n.d. 1 file box, 1 folio folder Reprocessed: January 1986 Accession numbers: 55-82, 56-89, 370, 430, 1164, By: Bert Hartry 70-12, 70-61 The papers in this collection were purchased by Alma Lutz and given to the Schlesinger Library in 1955, 1956, 1958, 1961, 1962, 1967, and 1970. The collection was reprocessed and microfilmed with the support of the Friends of the Schlesinger Library. BIOGRAPHY Alma Lutz became involved in the woman's suffrage movement when she returned home to North Dakota after graduating from Vassar College (1912). She continued to work for equal rights for women all her life and was the author of many articles and books, including Created Equal: A Biography of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony. AL was an active member of the National Woman's Party, the Massachusetts Committee for the Equal Rights Amendment, and many other organizations. During 1951-73 she served on the Advisory Committee of the Schlesinger Library. For additional biographical information, see MC 182, the Alma Lutz papers in the Schlesinger Library, and the AL biography file; see also Who Was Who in America (1974-76). SCOPE AND CONTENT This collection consists of letters, and a few other items, purchased by AL and reflects her interest in women in American history, particularly those active in the abolition and suffrage movements. The items in the collection are arranged alphabetically by writer, and chronologically when there is more than one item by the same writer. The inventory names the recipient of each letter, when known, and the index that follows the inventory includes the names of all recipients. In the inventory each letter except short notes, fragments valuable only as autographs, and items with trivial contents is described as follows: name or title of recipient, date, topics discussed. Letters of one or more pages with either the salutation or the signature missing have been listed as fragments. Dates and/or other information have been written on some items by persons unknown; some dates and other information have been supplied by researchers. In organizing the material the processor accepted and used this information. Everything added by the processor is in square brackets, but some dates and other information in square brackets were previously added by persons unknown. The bulk of the letters are ALsS (autograph letters signed); only a few are TLsS (typed letters signed). There are typed transcripts of some of the letters; these were prepared by persons unknown. Corrections, some by persons unknown, others by the processor, appear on many of these transcripts. The researcher is cautioned that the transcripts are not always accurate. Three folders of papers that were in A-110 (#64, 69-70) have been moved to MC 182. This material (mainly Florence Kitchelt and Rose Arnold Powell correspondence re: Equal Rights Amendment, National Woman's Party, and Susan B. Anthony) derives from Alma Lutz's work with the National Woman's Party rather than her autograph collecting. Two portions of the collection were previously filmed and have not been refilmed with this collection. The Lydia Maria Child letters (#8-9) were filmed as part of the microfiche edition of her correspondence (Kraus Microform, 1980), available at many libraries; at the Schlesinger Library the call number is Mf-3. (The folder numbers on the Child fiches are those of the original A-110 inventory.) The Mary Grew diary (in #12) was filmed as part of the History of Women microfilm project (Research Publications, Inc., 1976); the call number at the Schlesinger Library is M-59, reel 973, no. M13. Additional catalog entries (a card for each of the following appears in the card catalog): Adams, Abigail (Smith), 1744-1818 Adams, Hannah, 1755-1831 Addams, Jane, 1860-1935 Alcott, Louisa May, 1832-1888 Authors' Guild of American Women Avery, Rachel (Foster), 1858-1919 Barton, Clara, 1821-1912 Beecher, Catharine Esther, 1800-1878 Blackwell, Alice Stone, 1857-1950 Blackwell, Antoinette (Brown), 1825-1921 Blackwell, Elizabeth, 1821-1910 Blackwell, Henry Browne, 1825-1909 Bowring, Sir John, 1792-1872 Catt, Carrie (Lane) Chapman, 1859-1947 Chapman, Maria (Weston), 1806-1885 Child, Lydia Maria (Francis), 1802-1880 Comstock, Ada Louise, 1876-1973 Crandall, Prudence, 1803-1890 Dall, Caroline Wells (Healey), 1822-1912 Dodge, Mary Abigail [pseud. Gail Hamilton], 1833-1896 Elliott, Maud (Howe), 1854-1948 Fern, Fanny, see Parton, Sara Payson (Willis) Foster, Abigail (Kelley), 1810-1887 Fuller, Margaret, 1810-1850 Furness, William Henry, 1802-1896 Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879 Gerry, Elbridge, 1744-1814 Gilman, Charlotte Anna (Perkins) Stetson, 1860-1935 Grew, Mary, 1813-1896 Grimke, Sarah Moore, 1792-1873 Harper, Ida (Husted), 1859-1931 Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 1823-1911 Holley, Marietta, 1836-1926 Hooker, Isabella (Beecher), 1822-1907 Hopper, Isaac Tatem, 1771-1852 Hosmer, Harriet Goodhue, 1830-1908 Howe, Julia (Ward), 1819-1910 Hunt, Harriot Kezia, 1805-1875 Hutchinson, Abigail Jemima, 1829-1892 Johnson, Adelaide, 1859-1955 Johnson, Oliver, 1809-1889 Larcom, Lucy, 1824-1893 Lippincott, Sara Jane (Clarke), 1832-1904 Livermore, Mary Ashton (Rice), 1820-1905 Long, John Davis, 1838-1915 Longfellow, Alice Mary, 1850-1928 Love, Alfred Henry, 1830-1913 McKim, James Miller, 1810-1874 Martineau, Harriet, 1802-1876 Owen, Robert L Parton, Sara Payson (Willis), 1811-1872 Philleo, Prudence Crandall, see Crandall, Prudence Phillips, Wendell, 1811-1884 Pillsbury, Parker, 1809-1898 Prang, Mary Amelia (Dana) Hicks, 1836-1927 Purvis, Robert Rankin, Jeannette, 1880-1973 Sanger, Margaret (Higgins), 1879-1966 Severance, Caroline Maria (Seymour), 1820-1914 Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919 Sigourney, Lydia (Huntley), 1791-1865 Smith, Abigail (Adams), 1765-1813 Smith, Elizabeth Oakes (Prince), 1806-1893 Solis-Cohen, Solomon, 1857-1948 Stone, Lucy, 1818-1893 Wallace, Zerelda Gray (Sanders), 1817-1901 Warren, Mercy (Otis), 1728-1814 Washington, Booker Taliaferro, 1856-1915 Weld, Theodore Dwight, 1803-1895 Weston, Caroline Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892 Adams, John, 1735-1826 American Anti-Slavery Society Anthony, Susan Brownell, 1820-1906 Authors Baldwin, Hannah Baldwin, William Booth, Mary Louise, 1831-1889 Bowles, Ada Chastina, 1836-1928 Boyer, Ida Porter, 1859- ? Claflin, William, 1818-1905 Clarke, James Freeman, 1810-1888 Cleveland, Grover, 1837-1908 Colby, Clara Dorothy (Bewick), 1846-1916 Diaries Garrison, Francis Jackson, 1848-1916 Garrison, Helen Eliza (Benson), 1811-1876 Garrison, Wendell Phillips, 1840-1907 Greeley, Horace, 1811-1872 Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887 Lecturers Loring, Ellis Gray, 1803-1858 May, Samuel Joseph, 1797-1871 Mott, Lucretia (Coffin), 1793-1880 Mott, Lydia Pankhurst, Christabel Harriette, 1880-1958 Pankhurst, Emmeline (Goulden), 1857-1928 Plummer, Charles H Sanborn, Franklin Benjamin, 1831-1917 Sargent, Mary Elizabeth (Fiske) SlaveryAnti-slavery movements Spiritualism Stanton, Elizabeth (Cady), 1815-1902 Suffrage Temperance Tubman, Harriet, -1913 Voyages and travels19th century Wallcut, Robert Folger Ward, William Hayes, 1835-1916 Wells, Charlotte (Fowler), 1814-1901 Whiting [Eliza Rose (Gray)?] Woman's ministerial conference Women's rights World's Anti-Slavery Convention, London, 1840 MICROFILM OF COLLECTION -The pages of some items were numbered by the processor (in square brackets) to aid the microfilmer, the proofreader, and researchers. Blank pages were not numbered. -All reels were proofread by the processor and corrections were made where necessary. These corrections may disrupt the sequence of frame numbers. -Some items in the collection were difficult to film due to such problems as flimsy paper with text showing through or faded or smudged writing. The film was carefully produced and proofread to insure that these items are as legible as possible. -There are some letters with the text on the two inside pages written in two different directions, and some letters that have the final lines of text and the signature on page one. In these cases letters were microfilmed as they appear; pages were not turned and first pages were not refilmed. REEL GUIDE For a list of the contents of A-110, see the inventory that follows. When requesting microfilm, please use the microfilm number and the reel number. For Mf-3, see The Collected Correspondence of Lydia Maria Child 1817-1880, Patricia G. Holland and Milton Meltzer, Editors, Kraus Microform, New York; the call number at the Schlesinger Library is 322.44/C53h. A-110 M-133,reel #1-7, 10-21.......................................A12 #22-30............................................A13 #8-9............................................Mf-3 #12 (Mary Grew diary only)...........M-59, reel 973,no.M13 - Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Massachusetts

    73. Midway Jewish Center - Cybershul
    *Emma Lazarus (18491887)**. At Least Three Cyber Gabbayim Caught the Error!A Jew, Too! Devoted to letting you know who in history was Jewish!
    http://www.mjc.org/cyber Shul/cyber2000/Cyb041500.html

    74. Elektroninen Kirjasto: L
    Mendoza (txt). Lazarus, Emma (18491887) Admetus and Other Poems(html). Lear, Edward (1812-88) A Book of Nonsense (html). Le Bon
    http://www.utu.fi/hum/historia/kirjasto/l.html
    E lektroninen K irjahylly L Lafargue, Paul:
    Le droit à la paresse
    . 1883? (txt) La Fayette, Madame de (1634-93):
    The Princess of Cleves
    , 1678 (txt) Lagrange, M. J.:
    Luther on the Eve of His Revolt
    , 1917 (txt) La Mettrie, Julien Offroy de (1709-51):
    Man a Machine
    , 1748 (html) Lancashire, Ian:
    The Elizabethan Homilies 1623
    , ed. by Ian Lancashire (sgml) Lang, Andrew (1844-1912):
    The Arabian Nights Entertainments, html txt
    Ballads and Lyrics of Old France, With Other Poems
    (txt)
    Blue Fairy Book
    (illustrated html)
    The Puzzle of Dickens' Last Plot
    (txt)
    The Red Fairy Book, html txt The Violet Fairy Book, illustrated html txt The Yellow Fairy Book, html txt Langland, William (n.1332-n.1400): The Vision of Piers Plowman (html) Lanier, Sidney (1842-81): Hymns of the Marshes (html) Poems of Sidney Lanier (html) Lao-tse (n. 600-l. eKr.): Tao De Ching (Chinese and English html) Tao Teh Ching (txt) Tao Teh King (txt) Larbaud, Valéry (1881-1957): Rldasedlrad les dlcmhypbgf (txt) Larcom, Lucy (1824-1893): At the Beautiful Gate, and Other Songs of Faith (html) Idyl of Work (html) Law, John (1671-1729):

    75. Organica News -- Book Reviews: Telling And Remembering:
    Opening with a poem by Emma Lazarus (18491887), the Þrst American Jewish poetto be read by a wide audience, the anthology is arranged chronologically into
    http://www.organicanews.com/news/article.cfm?story_id=37

    76. Insights - A Selection Of Favorite Quotations And Links To Others.
    breathe free. Emma Lazarus (1849-1887) in The New Colossus Underthe bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody, but unbowed. I am
    http://www.fleurdelis.com/quotes.htm
    Favorite Quotations
    Desiderata
    by Max Ehrmann
    Invictus

    by William Ernest Henley The Passionate Shepherd To His Love
    by Christopher Marlowe Annabel Lee
    by Edgar Allan Poe Shall I Compare Thee To A Summer's Day?
    by William Shakespeare She Walks In Beauty
    by George Gordon, Lord Byron Sonnets from the Portuguese 43: How Do I Love Thee?
    by Elizabeth Barrett Browning The Road Not Taken
    by Robert Frost When, In Disgrace With Fortune and Men's Eyes
    by William Shakespeare When an idea is wanting, a word can always be found to take its place. - Johoann W. von Goethe ( 1749-1832) The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two words when one will do. - Thomas Jefferson Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? - Abraham Lincoln The moving finger writes, and having writ, moves on. - Omar Khayyam We should have a great many fewer disputes in the world if words were taken for what they are, the signs of our ideas only, and not for things themselves. - John Locke I am the inferior of any man whose rights I trample underfoot.

    77. Learning Family In New York City
    Emma Lazrus, Poet/Essayist (18491887). Emma Lazarus wrote The NewColossus in 1882 to raise money in the pedestal fund campaign.
    http://www.learningfamily.net/reiser/2kf/places/036immigrants/
    Immigrants
    New York, NY Places Pictures Faces Tips ... Books "Give me your tired your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, Send them, the homeless, tempest-tost to me: I lift my light beside the golden door!" Emma Lazarus , "The New Colossus", 1886 America is not a nation of one culture, ethnic group, race or nationality. No one but the Native Americans can claim this country as their place or origin. Many American families can trace their roots to New York City and the Ellis Island immigration center. Our first encounter with New York City was only one day, so after Thanksgiving in Ohio with family, we returned to the Big Apple for several days of exploration. Since we were staying in New Jersey, we drove to Staten Island and rode the ferry into Manhattanfour times! This gave us many opportunities to see the Statue of Liberty in all kinds of weather and times of day. It is quite a piece of workmanship. We know why the thousands of immigrants who entered the country in New York were inspired by this icon of Americanism. Our history studies came alive as we spent a day at Ellis and Liberty Islands and learned about the experience of 12 million people that entered America through New York from 1892 to 1954.

    78. MIT > CAES > Research > Jewish Women's Archive
    Emma Lazarus (18491887) - Poet of The New Colossus on the Statue of Liberty;Hannah Solomon (1858-1942) - Founder of the National Council of Jewish Women;
    http://www-caes.mit.edu/research/jwa/

    MIT
    CAES Research
    Jewish Women's Archive
      T he Jewish Women's Archive and CECI have collaborated since the Fall of 1997 on creating a web presence for the JWA. The archive's mission is to uncover, chronicle and transmit the historical record of Jewish women's lives, their impact on Jewish culture and their active participation in society at large. Part of this mission is create a "virtual archive" accessible over the Internet. The virtual archive establishes collections that can be searched without regard to geographical distance and takes advantage of multiple virtual contexts, while preserving the integrity of the individual physical repositories in which resources on Jewish women are physically housed. Currently users can do searches not only for specific women but also for occupations, dates, subjects, repositories, collections, as well as journals, letters and other collection types. In addition to the virtual archive, CECI has worked on "

    79. New Worldhistory.com E-Newsletter: The Earthquake Of 1906
    teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempesttossed to me, Ilift my lamp beside the golden door! Emma Lazarus (1849-1887).
    http://www.worldhistory.com/newsletter1_earthquake.htm
    Volume 1, Issue 1 The Great Earthquake of 1906: On the morning of April 18, 1906 the residents of San Francisco woke to the nation's worst natural disaster. At 5:13 a.m. an earthquake which experts estimate was 8.25 on the Richter Scale, hit the city, causing an upheaval which lasted for less than one minute. The shock was felt from Coos Bay, Oregon, to Los Angeles, and as far east as central Nevada. It covered an area of about 375,000 square miles, approximately half of which was in the Pacific Ocean. The greatest destruction came from the fires ignited by the quake. The flames ravaged the city for three days before they burned themselves out. The fire and earthquake combined killed more than 3,000 people. Approximately 25,000 buildings and 490 city blocks were destroyed. Around 250,000 people were made homeless. Jerome B. Clark described what he saw from the ferry while traveling to San Francisco, "In every direction from the ferry building flames were seething, and as I stood there, a five-story building half a block away fell with a crash, and the flames swept clear across Market Street and caught a new fireproof building recently erected....The street car tracks were bent and twisted out of shape. Electric wires lay in every direction. Streets on all sides were filled with brick and mortar, buildings either completely collapsed or brick fronts had just dropped completely off. Wagons with horses hitched to them, drivers and all, lying on the streets, all dead., struck and killed by the falling bricks....

    80. The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine The Century Co. New York Vol. 36 (14 Ne
    and peace everlasting? Emma Lazarus Web Links Emma Lazarus (18491887)Poem Background from the University of Virginia Statue of
    http://www.endex.com/gf/buildings/liberty/libertyfacts\EmmaLazarus\emma.htm
    EMMA LAZARUS The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine
    The Century Co. New York
    Vol. 36 (14 New Series), Number 6, October 1888
    EMMA
    LAZARUS
    EMMA LAZARUS
    BORN JULY 22, 1849
    DIED NOVEMBER 19, 1887

    NE hesitates to lift the veil and throw the light upon a life so hidden and a personality so withdrawn as that of Emma Lazarus; but while her memory is fresh, and the echo of her songs still lingers in these pages, we feel it a duty to call up her presence once more and to note the traits that made it remarkable and worthy to shine out clearly before the world. Of dramatic episode or climax in her life there is none; outwardly all was placid and serene, like an untroubled stream whose depths alone hold the strong, quick tide.
    One cannot fail to be rather painfully impressed by the profound melancholy pervading the book. The opening poem is " In Memoriam " - on the death of a school friend and companion; and the two following poems also have death for theme." On a Lock of my Mother's Hair " gives us reflections on growing old. These are the four poems written at the age of fourteen. There is not a wholly glad and joyous strain in the volume, and we might smile at the recurrence of broken vows, broken hearts, and broken lives in the experience of this maiden just entered upon her teens, were it not that the innocent child herself is in such deadly earnest. The two long narrative poems, " Bertha " and " Elfrida," are also tragic in the extreme. Both are dashed off apparently at white heat - "Elfrida", over 1500 lines of blank verse, in two weeks; "Bertha", in three and a half.

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