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5 revisions | Landon Braun at Aug 14, 2020 09:59 AM | |
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142A WORD (By Elia W. Peattie.) The garden flowers are almost gone, The frist manscript prepared by Alfred It is strange that the manscript Mrs. Eva A. Weed of Brooklyn is Massachusettes have anovel campaign | 142A WORD WITH THE WOMEN (By Elia W. Peattie.) The garden flowers are almost gone, but a few of the late ones are still in bloom, and will be very welcome at the flower mission. Mrs. Hoagland wishes her friends to know that no contribution of flowes will be too small. There are a few suff suffering persons whom she particularly wishes to present with flowers this week. The frist manscript prepared by Alfred Tennyson, and his brother is still in existence, and lies in a little box at Louht, Two or three times a year it is reverently lifted from is place of safety, ecamined and replaced. The title of this manuscript is "Poems by Two Brothers," and it was published in March, 1827. Perhaps it would never have got into print but for the interests which an old family servant took in the writings of his younf masters. With them writing was only a diversion, but the desire for seeing the name of his his well-belowed young friends in print fired the breast of the old servant, and he induced them to send the manuscript to the published. Charles and Alfred took the manuscript to J. & J. Jackson of Louth, who after reading the poems consented to purchase the poems of $50. Typographically speaking, the little volume is poor. It appears without the names or initials of the authors, nor is there any means of telling which poems were written by Alfred and which by Charles. A well preserved copy of this book is not worth $500 and had brought that price. It is strange that the manscript should have preserved. It was, however, and is said to be very poor manuscript indeed, from a printer's point of view. It is written in the chiography of the repective authors and in scratchy characters. It covers both sides of the paper. Sometimes the apges are disfigured by rude, school boy charcters. On some pages whole verses have been struck out by heavy back lines running in all directions: The lines overrun a good deal, and as many verses as possible are crowded into each page. On one small sheet of note paper the writer has managed to crush no less than ninety-one lines. This boyish manyscript-prepared in a house where there was evidently a greater abundance of idea than of note paper-is now, of course, priceless. Mrs. Eva A. Weed of Brooklyn is known as a "daughtswoman." She has received an appointment as assistant in the draughting department of the bureau of sweres in that city, having taken the civil service examination a few months ago with 180 men and eclipsing them with her average of 95. Mrs. Weed is but 25 years of age, and a very attractice and vivacious woman. She has had a lifelong ecperience in draughting. Her father was a city engineer, and she grew up with a draughtsman's tool for her playing. When she was of the proper age she took the course at the Cooper insitute. Massachusettes have anovel campaign this year. It is over the question of women sufferage, using the referendum to decide the question The last legislature passed an act giving to all persons qualified to vote for school committees an opportunity to express their opinion at the election as to whether or not it be expedient for women to be given the municipal franchise. In casting this ballot the vote of the women are ot be kept separate from the men, in order to arrive at the desire of the women. |
