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Updated: June 14, 2025
Dilke begged me once, while I was writing for him, to write the name of God and Jesus Christ as little as I could, because those names did not accord with the secular character of the journal! Ever your affectionate and grateful ELIZABETH B. BARRETT. Keep the 'Athenaeum. To H.S. Boyd December 24, 1842.
It is a peculiarity of the English people, which redounds to their honor, to exclude from public approbation any man, however gifted or famous, who has outraged the moral sense by open and ill-disguised violation of the laws of morality. The cases of Dilke and Parnell in our own day are illustrations known to all. What in France or Italy is condoned, is never pardoned or forgotten in England.
Sir Charles Dilke and the Bishop of Oxford, William Stubbs, author of the great Constitutional History, I also never met, but I have letters from them which I keep with those of Lecky as things which my children will prize. With Edward A. Freeman, however, I came into cordial relations, a character well worthy of a sketch.
"'An' if you as ain't her mother wants her so, at last, somethin' inside says to me, 'how much more must th' mother what's lost her want her? and at that, Norma, the Lord won an' I got up an' come back with the child." "He's going fast." So the nurse whispered to Miss Stannard, as with Mr. Dilke and Old G. A. R., she came in that December afternoon.
And this reminds me that you may be looking all the while for the 'Athenaeum's' reply to your friend's proposition of which I lost no time in apprising the editor, Mr. Dilke, and here are some of his words: 'An American friend who had been long in England, and often conversed with me on the subject, resolved on his return to establish such a correspondence. Dilke is unwilling to risk another.
The mention of JEAN BAPTISTE SIMEON CHARDIN among this brilliant and frivolous galaxy seems almost out of place. "He is not so much an eighteenth-century French artist," Lady Dilke says of him, "as a French artist of pure race and type.
"Howly Mither, forgive me," cried Mrs. O'Malligan. Miss Ruth turned away to hide her tears. "Have you had a doctor yet?" she inquired. "No, I had just gotten here a moment ahead of you," explained Mr. Dilke. "Well," said Miss Ruth, decidedly, "whether it proves serious or not, he ought to go to St.
But Sir Charles Dilke was beginning to open the people's eyes. "Another Japanese loan," he cried, "will slip a sharp dagger into the hand of our greatest commercial rival."
Charles Dickens was the first editor, but politics were not much in the line of the genial and unrivalled novelist, and he was soon succeeded by John Forster and Charles Wentworth Dilke, whose connection with the South Kensington Museum and the great Exhibition has made him a knight, a C. B., and a very important personage.
I would not be practised upon no, not for one of Flushie's ears, and I hate the whole theory. It is hideous to my imagination, especially what is called phrenological mesmerism. After all, however, truth is to be accepted; and testimony, when so various and decisive, is an ascertainer of truth. Now do not tell Mr. Dilke, lest he excommunicate me.
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