. Portrait gallery of eminent men and women of Europe and America. With biographies. k, was continued inBoston, Philadelphia, and other citiesof the Union, the management of theconcerts remaining in the hands ofMr. Barnum till nearly one hundredof the number originally jiroposedwere given, when Mdlle. Lind availedherself of a clause in the agreement bywhich she was at liberty to dissolvethe eno-aeement on forfeiture of aconsiderable sum. This was in thesummer of 1851. Some other concertswere then given, after which, before her departure from the country, was married at New York, toM


. Portrait gallery of eminent men and women of Europe and America. With biographies. k, was continued inBoston, Philadelphia, and other citiesof the Union, the management of theconcerts remaining in the hands ofMr. Barnum till nearly one hundredof the number originally jiroposedwere given, when Mdlle. Lind availedherself of a clause in the agreement bywhich she was at liberty to dissolvethe eno-aeement on forfeiture of aconsiderable sum. This was in thesummer of 1851. Some other concertswere then given, after which, before her departure from the country, was married at New York, toMr. Otto Goldschmidt, a young pian-ist, son of a wealthy merchant of Ham-burg. After her marriage, MadameGoldschmidt returned to Europe,passing through England to Germany ;and, declining all projjositions to singin public, settled for a time at Dresden,largely employing herself in works ofcharity. She afterwards made her resi-dence in England. She has several timessince reappeared in concert rooms, main-taining her old reputation, chiefly inher effective rendering of sacred


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjec, booksubjectportraits