Margaret Fuller (74 page)

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[>]
   “
my
America”:
Dispatches,
p. 230.

[>]
   “Still Europe toils”:
Dispatches,
p. 164.

[>]
   “Our age is one”:
Dispatches,
p. 155.

[>]
   “the fortieth”:
Dispatches,
p. 203.

[>]
   “As to eating”:
Dispatches,
p. 206.

[>]
   “authentic news”:
Dispatches,
p. 207.

[>]
   “full insurrection”:
Dispatches,
p. 202.

[>]
   “revolution has now”:
Dispatches,
p. 208.

[>]
   “war is everywhere”:
FLV,
pp. 58–59.

[>]
   “I cannot”:
FLV,
p. 58.

[>]
   King Louis Philippe’s “dethronement”:
Dispatches,
p. 211.

[>]
   “I am nailed”:
FLV,
p. 61.

[>]
   “It is a time”:
FLV,
p. 58.

[>]
   “a great past”:
FLV,
p. 174.

[>]
   “squadron” of Polish:
Dispatches,
p. 223.

[>]
   “Mickiewicz is with me”:
FLV,
p. 55.

[>]
   “if bullets have ceased”:
ELIV,
p. 27.

[>]
   “I have him much better”:
FLV,
p. 55.

[>]
   “unswerving and most tender”:
FLV,
p. 261.

[>]
   “At present”:
FLV,
p. 55.

[>]
   “a bestower” . . . “a being”:
OMII,
pp. 294, 293.

[>]
   “Children, with all”:
FLV,
p. 64.

[>]
   “The Gods themselves”:
FLV,
pp. 59–60.

[>]
   “A million birds”:
Dispatches,
p. 216.

[>]
   “Now this long dark”:
Dispatches,
p. 209.

[>]
   “official” news:
Dispatches,
p. 216.

[>]
   “
Miracolo, Providenza!
”:
Dispatches,
p. 212.

[>]
   “O, Dante”:
Dispatches,
p. 223.

[>]
   “most beauteous”: Leona Rostenberg, “Mazzini to Margaret Fuller, 1847–1849,”
American Historical Review,
vol. 47, no. 1, October 1941, p. 73.

[>]
   “gorgeous shows”:
FLV,
p. 62.

[>]
   “abide in close”:
FLV,
p. 65n.

[>]
   “Italy was so happy”:
FLV,
p. 65.

[>]
   “bird’s-nest village”:
Dispatches,
p. 237.

[>]
   “I am going” . . . “into the mountains”:
FLV,
pp. 64, 67, and 69.

[>]
   “mountain solitude”:
FLV,
p. 86. Thomas Hicks’s portrait of MF can be seen in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.

[>]
   “a piece of the porphyry”:
FLV,
pp. 63–64.

[>]
   “only artist”:
FLV,
p. 307.

[>]
   “The artists’”:
FLV,
p. 168.

[>]
   “You must always”:
FLV,
p. 71.

[>]
   “What mystery”: Quoted in
VM,
p. 284.

[>]
   “sit in my obscure”:
FLV,
p. 69.

[>]
   “debility and pain”:
ELIV,
p. 61.

[>]
   “come live”:
ELIV,
p. 28.

[>]
   “a poverty”:
ELIV,
p. 33.

[>]
   “You are imprudent”:
ELIV,
p. 61.

[>]
   “there was a revolution”:
ELIV,
p. 72.

[>]
   “come to London”:
ELIV,
p. 79.

[>]
   “I have much to do”:
FLV,
p. 66.

[>]
   “say to those”:
FLV,
p. 66.

[>]
   “Fortune favors”:
FLV,
pp. 64–65.

[>]
   “lonely mountain home”:
FLV,
p. 73.

[>]
   “frightened at a very”: Leopold Wellisz, “The Friendship of Margaret Fuller d’Ossoli and Adam Mickiewicz,”
Bulletin of the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences in America,
vol. 4, 1945–46, p. 116.

[>]
   “All life”:
FLV,
p. 210.

[>]
   “lonely, imprisoned”:
FLV,
pp. 79, 78. Margaret wrote to Giovanni in Italian; in some instances, as here, I have given both the English translation and the Italian to remind readers that the correspondence was conducted in Giovanni’s native tongue and to give a sense of Margaret’s fluency in the language.

[>]
   “According to these women”:
FLV,
p. 85.

[>]
   “hid[ing] thus in Italy”:
FLV,
p. 251.

[>]
   “fits of deep longing”:
FLV,
pp. 76–77.

[>]
   “a lively Italian”:
FLV,
p. 77.

[>]
   “The country”:
FLV,
p. 77. “Mrs. M.”: quoted in
CCII,
p. 390.

[>]
   “I don’t like”:
FLV,
pp. 81, 80.

[>]
   “I never see”:
FLV,
pp. 85–86.

[>]
   “hive of very ancient”:
FLV,
p. 208.

[>]
   “we are of mutual”:
FLVI,
p. 65.

[>]
   “figs, grapes, peaches”:
FLV,
p. 104.

[>]
   “if it is necessary”:
FLV,
p. 99.

[>]
   “All goes wrong”:
FLV,
pp. 105, 103.

[>]
   “ordeal” of the birth:
FLV,
p. 109.

[>]
   “seem worth”:
FLV,
pp. 74–75.

[>]
   “was I not cruel”:
FLV,
p. 292.

[>]
   “Carissimo Consorte”:
FLV,
p. 111. “Carissimo” is abbreviated as “Cmo.”

[>]
   “mio caro”:
FLV,
pp. 114, 115.

[>]
   “he refuses”:
FLV,
p. 116.

[>]
   “I am delighted”:
FLV,
p. 113.

[>]
   “very beautiful”:
FLV,
p. 112.

[>]
   “has your mouth”:
FLV,
p. 117.

[>]
   “he is still”:
FLV,
p. 124.

[>]
   “odious brothers”: GAO, quoted in
CFII,
pp. 348–49.

[>]
   “He knows”:
FLV,
p. 125.

[>]
   “seemed to look”:
FLV,
pp. 125–26.

[>]
   “exstatic smiles”:
FLV,
p. 302.

[>]
   “entire” nights:
FLV,
p. 199.

[>]
   “becomes more interesting”:
FLV,
p. 139.

[>]
   “has grown much fatter”:
FLV,
p. 141.

[>]
   “seclusion” in summer and December 1848 column:
Dispatches,
pp. 238–39.

[>]
   “Were you here”:
FLV,
p. 145.

[>]
   “this kind of pain”:
FLV,
p. 303.

[>]
   “empty of foreigners”:
Dispatches,
p. 239.

[>]
   “remained at their posts”:
FLV,
pp. 146–47.

[>]
   stormed the Quirinal:
Dispatches,
p. 242.

[>]
   “Thank Heaven”:
FLV,
p. 147.

[>]
   “Utopia is impossible”:
FLII,
p. 109.

[>]
   “at one time”:
FLV,
pp. 145, 147, 149.

[>]
   “These events”:
FLV,
pp. 147, 149.

[>]
   “Another century”:
Dispatches,
pp. 245–46.

[>]
   “Rome has at last”: Leona Rostenberg, “Margaret Fuller’s Roman Diary,”
Journal of Modern History,
vol. 12, no. 2, June 1940, p. 211.

[>]
   “seems to be well”:
FLV,
pp. 163–64.

[>]
   “seemed to recognize”:
FLV,
p. 165.

[>]
   “He seemed very excited” . . . “leave”:
FLV,
p. 167.

[>]
   “Rome is always”:
FLV,
p. 169.

[>]
   “men of princely”:
Dispatches,
p. 244.

[>]
   “the Murray”:
FLV,
p. 159.

[>]
   “veiled” . . . “struck up”:
Dispatches,
p. 255.

[>]
   “walked without”:
Dispatches,
p. 256.

[>]
   “ring all the bells”:
Dispatches,
p. 256.

[>]
   “The revolution”:
Dispatches,
p. 250.

[>]
   “people in U.S.”:
FLV,
p. 159.

[>]
   “large and brilliant”:
FLIII,
p. 39.

[>]
   “O Jamie”:
FLV,
p. 174.

[>]
   “I am leading”:
FLV,
p. 187.

[>]
   “screwed my expenses”:
FLV,
p. 158.

[>]
   “nothing can be more”:
Dispatches,
p. 260.

[>]
   “France is not to”:
FLV,
p. 171.

[>]
   “accomplish at least one”:
FLV,
p. 213.

[>]
   “I am not”:
FLV,
pp. 205–6.

[>]
   “true consolation”:
FLV,
p. 207.

[>]
   “little swaddled child”:
FLV,
p. 209.

[>]
   “a strangely precocious”:
FLV,
pp. 209–10.

[>]
   “I only live”:
FLV,
pp. 209–10.

[>]
   “The Roman Republic”:
Dispatches,
pp. 260–61.

[>]
   “King Wobble”: “Margaret Fuller’s Roman Diary,” p. 220.

[>]
   “Let us not”:
Dispatches,
p. 264.

[>]
   “I heard a ring”:
FLV,
p. 201. See also Denis Mack Smith,
Mazzini
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994), pp. 68–69.

[>]
   “the celestial fire”:
FLV,
p. 201.

[>]
   “as tranquil”:
Dispatches,
p. 274.

[>]
   “struggling unaided”:
Dispatches,
pp. 265–66.

[>]
   “the setting sun”:
Dispatches,
p. 274.

[>]
   “la cittadina”:
VM,
p. 299.

[>]
   “in excellent”:
FLV,
p. 218.

[>]
   “tell our secret”:
FLV,
p. 220.

[>]
   “We must pray”:
FLV,
p. 223.

[>]
   “I rose and went”:
Dispatches,
p. 256.

[>]
   “refreshment, keen and sweet”: MF, “Recollections of the Vatican,”
United States Magazine and Democratic Review,
vol. 27, July 1850, p. 65.

[>]
   “reaction” in Florence: “Margaret Fuller’s Roman Diary,” p. 220. I have amended the punctuation in the final sentence of this entry to conform to that of the original, MF “1849 Journal” bMs Am 1086 [4] FMW.

[>]
   “I wish I were”: Jeffrey Steele, ed.,
The Essential Margaret Fuller
(New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1992), p. 19.

[>]
   “called to act”:
FLV,
p. 58.

[>]
   “fought like a man”:
FLV,
p. 241.

[>]
   Princess Belgioioso:
Dispatches,
p. 281.

[>]
   “Margherita Fuller”: Donato Tamblé, “Documents in the State Archive of Rome: Margaret Fuller’s Hospital Service During the Roman Republic,” in Charles Capper and Cristina Giorcelli, eds.,
Margaret Fuller: Transatlantic Crossings in a Revolutionary Age
(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2007), pp. 243, 242.

[>]
   “female invasion”: Ibid., p. 246.

[>]
   “the soldiers”:
Dispatches,
p. 275.

[>]
   “quick and shameful”:
Dispatches,
p. 275.

[>]
   “Roman blood”:
Dispatches,
p. 276.

[>]
   “the terrible”:
Dispatches,
p. 280.

[>]
   “grand and impassioned”:
FLVI,
p. 83.

[>]
   “we climbed”: “Recollections of the Vatican,” p. 65.

[>]
   “mock confessions”:
Dispatches,
p. 279.

[>]
   six priests: Larry Reynolds, “Righteous Violence: The Roman Republic and Margaret Fuller’s Revolutionary Example,” in
Margaret Fuller: Transatlantic Crossings in a Revolutionary Age,
p. 188 n. 10.

[>]
   “brotherly scope”:
Dispatches,
p. 279.

[>]
   “the female”: Quoted in “Righteous Violence,” pp. 175–76.

[>]
   Casa Diez: Although several recent biographies of MF use the spelling “Dies,” I have chosen to use “Diez,” the spelling employed by Robert Hudspeth in
FL
and in the popular Murray guides of the period.

[>]
   “The French seem”:
FLV,
p. 229.

[>]
   “I am alone”:
Dispatches,
p. 284.

[>]
   “became a coward”:
FLV,
p. 292.

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