The century illustrated monthly magazine . Mrs. Ritchie THE DAUGHTER OF WILLIAM M. THACKERAY OF the literary talents of Mrs. Anne Ritchie, the gifted daughter of agifted father, little need be said. In story, poem and essay she hasshown a versatility which has placed her in the front rank of English recently published papers of her father show the sympathetic and intelli-gent interest in his work, and how close she was to him. Mrs. Ritchie willbe represented in the Journals special Famous Daughters issue by one ofthese delightful articles on Thackeray, in which she gives an interes


The century illustrated monthly magazine . Mrs. Ritchie THE DAUGHTER OF WILLIAM M. THACKERAY OF the literary talents of Mrs. Anne Ritchie, the gifted daughter of agifted father, little need be said. In story, poem and essay she hasshown a versatility which has placed her in the front rank of English recently published papers of her father show the sympathetic and intelli-gent interest in his work, and how close she was to him. Mrs. Ritchie willbe represented in the Journals special Famous Daughters issue by one ofthese delightful articles on Thackeray, in which she gives an interestingglimpse of him as a man. Nothing need be advanced in praise of such acontribution, of interest as well as Mrs. Richards THE THREE DAUGHTERS OF JULIA WARD HOWE IT is seldom, indeed, that one finds three daughters of a famous literarymother equally skilled with the pen. And that the one is as talentedas the other will be demonstrated in the Journal when contributions from allthe three daughters will be brought together upon one page. Mrs. Laura —cleverest in her jingles—will have one of her best rhymes; Howe Elliott will portray Country Maids as City Wives, whileMrs. Florence Howe Hall will write of the childhood of her mother, givingsome new and interesting glimpses of the early years of Mrs. Julia WardHowe, accompanied by the copy of her first letter in French, written at theage of seven, and an early portrait, never before published—presenting a trioof writers as interesting in themselves as in the happy subjects which theydiscuss. All THE DAUGHTER OF HORACE GREELEY PRIOR to her marriage last year, the name of Gabrielle Greeley wasseen once or twice to literary c


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectamerica, bookyear1882