The Portland Sketch Book

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THE

MRS. ANN S. STEPHENS.

PREFACE.

CONTENTS.

THE PORTLAND SKETCH BOOK.

DIAMOND COVE.

OUR OWN COUNTRY. By James Brooks.

THE CRUISE OF THE DART. By S. B. Beckett. "There was an old and

TO M***, ON HER BIRTH-DAY. By William Cutter. What though the

RELIGIOUS OBLIGATION IN RULERS. By John W. Chickering.

A NEW-ENGLAND WINTER-SCENE. EXTRACT FROM A LETTER TO A FRIEND

LOCH KATRINE. By N. H. Carter.

WORSHIP. By Asa Cummings.

THE VALLEY OF SILENCE. By William Cutter.

DESCRIPTIONS OF THE DIVINE BEING. By Gershom F. Cox.

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. By Charles S. Daveis.

MRS. SYKES. By Nathaniel Deering.

OLD AND YOUNG. By James Furbish.

AUTUMNAL DAYS. By P. H. Greenleaf. "The melancholy days are

THE PLAGUE. By Charles P. Ilsley.

"OH, THIS IS NOT MY HOME!" By Charles P. Ilsley. Oh, this is

THE VILLAGE PRIZE. By Joseph Ingraham.

INDIFFERENCE TO STUDY. By George W. Light.

THE VILLAGE OF AUTEUIL. By Henry W. Longfellow.

THE PAST AND THE NEW YEAR. By Prentiss Mellen.

THE RUIN OF A NIGHT. STANZAS SUGGESTED ON VIEWING THE GROUND OF

COURTSHIP. By Wm. L. McClintock.

VENETIAN MOONLIGHT. By Frederick Mellen. The midnight chime had

BALLOONING. By I. McLellan, Jr.

ODE, ON OCCASION OF JUDGE STORY'S EULOGY ON CHIEF JUSTICE

THE BOY'S MOUNTAIN SONG. FROM THE GERMAN. By I. McLellan, Jr. I

THE UNCHANGEABLE JEW. By John Neal. ' Who views with equal eye

A WAR-SONG OF THE REVOLUTION. By John Neal. Men of the North!

MUSINGS ON MUSIC. By James F. Otis. And while I was musing, the

SIN ESTIMATED BY THE LIGHT OF HEAVEN. By Edward Payson. Thou

THE WAY OF THE SOUL. By L. S. P.

FRAGMENTS OF AN ADDRESS ON MUSIC. By Edward Payson.

THE BLUSH. By Mrs. Elizabeth Smith.

THE WIDOWED BRIDE. By Mrs. Ann S. Stephens.

JACK DOWNING'S VISIT TO PORTLAND. By Seba Smith.

PORTLAND AS IT WAS. By William Willis.

THE CHEROKEE'S THREAT. By N. P. Willis.

GRECIAN AND ROMAN ELOQUENCE. By Ashur Ware.

RELIGION. By Jason Whitman.

THE DESERTED WIFE. By Mrs. Ann S. Stephens. 'Like ivy, woman's

In "Descriptions of the Divine Being," P. 96, the block quote inside ~ (tilde) marks is a transliteration of the Hebrew. The transliteration was not present in the original and has been added by the transcriber; [h.] is used for Het, to distinguish it from h for Hey. The UTF8 and HTML versions also have the Hebrew script shown in the original.

Remaining transcriber's notes are at the end of the text.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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