Read The Year Without Summer Online
Authors: William K. Klingaman,Nicholas P. Klingaman
Tags: #History, #Modern, #19th Century, #Science, #Earth Sciences, #Meteorology & Climatology
“Eight weeks of rain…”: Harington, p. 369.
“We were held prisoners…”: Sraffa,
Ricardo,
p. 48.
“a taste for other objects…”: ibid.
“rouse the Irish…”: ibid., pp. 48–9.
“could not find…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, September 12, 1816.
“I hear old England…”: Paget, p. 161.
“I should think England…”: ibid., p. 166.
“too small for…”: ibid., p. 165.
“been violent & incessant…”: ibid., p. 170.
“It is being…”: ibid., pp. 168–9.
“the divine beauty”: Jones,
Percy Bysshe Shelley
, vol. 1, p. 352.
“In my mind…”: ibid., p. 357.
“I never saw a monument…”: ibid., p. 485.
“a town more beautiful…”: ibid., p. 487.
“What a thing it would be…”: Vail, p. 189.
“Really we have had lately…”: ibid., p. 185.
“the general headquarters of…”: Goodden,
Dangerous Exile
, p. 284.
“as at some outlandish beast…”: ibid., p. 278.
“I believe Madame…”: ibid.
“She has made Coppet…”: Fairweather,
Madame de Staël,
p. 456.
“ventured to protect me…”: Goodden, p. 283.
“the cornfields on each side…”: Feldman,
Journals,
p. 113.
“The rain continued…”: ibid., p. 118.
“This is the most desolate…”: ibid., p. 119.
“a Hurricane of Thunder…”: Paget, pp. 170–1.
“but felt the wind…”: ibid., p. 171.
“seasons the most adverse…”: Ford, p. 51.
“On account of the extreme…”:
Albany Argus,
July 19, 1816.
“It is acknowledged on all hands…”:
Brattleboro Reporter
, July 17, 1816.
“rye is said to be…”: Hoyt, p. 122.
“It would astonish the plain…”:
Maryland Gazette
, May 2, 1816.
“commerce is languishing…”:
Maryland Gazette
, July 4, 1816.
“There has never been an instance…”: Wood, p. 719.
“the alien or sedition laws…”: ibid.
“A mind neither rapid…”: Wilentz,
Rise of American Democracy
, p. 202.
“Madison is quick…”: Skeen,
1816
, p. 212.
“stupid and illiterate…”: ibid., p. 213.
“this ridiculous man of straw…”:
Maryland Gazette
, August 1, 1816.
“A belief begins to…”: Vail, p. 184.
“are the conceived cause…”: Vail, p. 185.
“a kind of cone…”:
Gentleman’s Magazine
, February 1817, pp. 109–110.
“has occasion’d this change…”: quoted in Vail, p. 187.
“the wheat crop has suffered…”:
Times
(London), August 6, 1816.
“The rain descended…”: ibid.
“I thought I was to leave…”: ibid.
“in such a state…”:
Gentleman’s Magazine
, September 1816, p. 170.
“grain, meal of…”:
Times
(London), August 14, 1816.
“And the necessary consequence…”:
Times
(London)
,
August 12, 1816.
“Instead of crowding our ports…”: Spater,
Cobbett,
vol. II, p. 343.
“a circumstance without parallel…”: Ashton,
Social England
, p. 279.
“Scarcely a day passes…”: Spater, p. 343.
“When no other sufficient cause…”:
Times
(London), August 15, 1816.
“the present distressed…”:
Gentleman’s Magazine
, July 1816, p. 149.
“No newspaper can describe…”: Halévy,
Liberal Awakening,
p. 13.
“it be impossible for any…”:
Gentleman’s Magazine
, August 1816, p. 174.
“It is impossible…”:
Gentleman’s Magazine
, July 1816, p. 76.
7.
P
OVERTY AND
M
ISERY
“the crops of wheat and rye…”:
Niles’ Weekly Register
, August 10, 1816, p. 386.
“It has been observed…”: ibid., p. 385.
“a very violent storm…”:
Farmers’ Cabinet
, August 24, 1816.
“all of a sudden…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, September 3, 1816.
“Indeed we have the air…”: ibid.
“a temperature, such as is…”:
Daily National Intelligencer,
August 30, 1816.
“frost so severe…”: Skeen, p. 6.
“a hard frost…”: Stommel,
Volcano Weather
, p. 41.
“had perverted the college…”: Turner,
Ninth State
, p. 295.
“August proved to be…”: Schlegel, p. 1.
“August was more cheerless…”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 19, 1850.
“was white with frost…”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 1, 1816.
“The crops will be…”: ibid.
“a circumstance unparalleled…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, September 3, 1816.
“the oldest inhabitants…”: Skeen, p. 7.
“killed much corn…”: Ford,
Writings
, p. 64.
“Oh! It rains again…”: Austen, “Jane Austen’s Letters,” Letter 130, July 9, 1816.
“Whoever is fond…”: Nokes,
Austen,
p. 480.
“so much nature…”: ibid., p. 478.
“I could no more…”: Austen, Letter 126, April 1, 1816.
“We were obliged…”: Austen, Letter 130, July 9, 1816.
“it’s being bad weather…”: ibid.
“I have often observed…”: ibid.
“She speaks of France…”: Austen, Letter 133, September 8, 1816.
“Weather miserably wet…”: Bailey,
Standing
, p. 211.
“a summary of all that…”: Wilton,
Turner
, p. 27.
“reflect the form and essence…”: Hamilton,
Turner’s Britain
, p. 114.
“flat and tame”: Edgcumbe, p. 226.
“was violently lashing…”: ibid., p. 224.
“It is a country to be in…”: Fairweather, p. 454.
“Lord Byron looked in…”: Edgcumbe, p. 236.
“had washed away…”: ibid., p. 241.
“Alas! All our…”: ibid., pp. 241–2.
“The inundations…”: ibid., p. 251.
“was not only a believer…”: Feldman, p. 126.
“A foolish girl…”: Marchand,
Byron,
p. 125.
“at Geneva, where there was…”: Vail, p. 184.
8. T
HE
P
RICE OF
B
READ
“The waters are…”:
Times
(London), August 13, 1816.
“Thunderstorms brought forth … “: Lederer, “Report of the Famine,” p. 1.
“The weather continues…”:
Times
(London), August 8, 1816.
“burst its dikes … and in consequence…”:
Times
(London), August 12, 1816.
“The increase of waters…”:
Times
(London)
,
August 17, 1816.
“the harvest is completely…”:
Times
(London), August 14, 1816.
“with an immense concourse…”:
Times
(London), August 9, 1816.
“the first crop of hay…”:
Times
(London), August 13, 1816.
“laid on with a…”:
Times
(London), August 9, 1816.
“inflammation of…”: Adams, p. 434.
“a girdle of…”: ibid.
“He said that he hoped…”: ibid., p. 422.
“The wheats everywhere…”:
Times
(London), August 10, 1816.
“The late rains have…”: ibid.
“The weather continues fine…”:
Times
(London), August 20, 1816.
“notwithstanding the lateness…”: Adams, p. 430.
“It is strange that…”: ibid.
“So certain is the result…”: Skeen, p. 229.
“There was no election…”: ibid.
“it may be crossed on foot…”:
Farmer’s Cabinet
, September 7, 1816.
“never has there been…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, September 7, 1816.
“every part of the…”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 8, 1816.
“A failure of the crops…”:
American Advocate
, September 28, 1816.
“corn froze to…”: Worthen,
Sutton
, p. 222.
“It is believed…”
Farmer’s Cabinet
, September 7, 1816.
“the corn is said to be…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, September 13, 1816.
“July of 1816…”: Trigo, “Iberia,” p. 102.
“in many ways the basest king…”: Payne,
A History of Spain
, p. 428.
“July had only…”: Trigo, p. 102.
“the unusual cool weather…”: ibid.
“I note here as something…”: ibid., p. 103.
“A cold and humid temperature…”:
Times
(London), September 9, 1816.
“The state of the weather…”:
Times
(London), September 5, 1816.
“Such a set of venal…”: Frye,
After Waterloo
, p. 151.
“pure but moderate…”: de Sauvigny,
Bourbon,
p. 111.
“who do not believe…”: ibid.
“They are more considerable…”:
Times
(London), September 20, 1816.
“with its cheeks…”:
Times
(London), September 20, 1816.
“There has not been…”: Adams, p. 438.
“one of the most…”:
Times
(London), September 5, 1816.
“In the orchards and…”:
Times
(London), September 5, 1816.
“Snow in harvest…”: quoted in
Times
(London)
,
September 3, 1816.
“a considerable fall…”:
Times
(London)
,
September 7, 1816.
“somewhat extraordinary…”: ibid.
“the weather here…”:
Times
(London), September 11, 1816.
“Indeed, the whole…”:
Times
(London), September 5, 1816.
“and still the weather…”:
Times
(London), September 7, 1816.
“The gale has abated…”: Adams, pp. 440–1.
“extraordinary visitation…”:
Times
(London), September 7, 1816.
“the hops have been…”:
Times
(London), September 11, 1816.
“the present harvest…”: ibid.
“as large as…”:
Times
(London), September 16, 1816.
“Snow fell once or twice…”: ibid.
“the late and wet…”: ibid.
“the continuance of the cold…”: Sraffa, pp. 66–7.
“has begun about us…”: ibid., p. 68.
“Secrecy is looked upon…”:
Times
(London), September 23, 1816.
“the friends of the Government…”: Adams, p. 440.
“the distresses of the country…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, October 29, 1816.
“Of distresses, such as now…”:
Quarterly Review
, October 1816, p. 276.
“Every expedient should be used…”:
Times
(London), September 4, 1816.
“the season has been even…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, September 10, 1816.
“the corn here is…”: Sraffa, pp. 61–2.
“The Swiss are very slow…”: Feldman, p. 132.
“In all that essentially belongs…”: ibid., pp. 132–3.
“Our passage from…”: Jones,
Percy Shelley
, p. 504.
“The harvest is not yet…”: ibid., pp. 505–6.
“Even now we have…”: Paget, p. 172.
“does not answer to…”: Cochran, “Hobhouse,” p. 191.
“Grapes appeared many…”: ibid., p. 194.
“the most inclement…”:
Times
(London), October 3, 1816.
“thousands of fathers…”: ibid.
“How cold and triste…”: Edgcumbe, p. 280.
“the weather is dreadfully cold…”: ibid., p. 283.
“incalculable”: Post,
Subsistence Crisis
, p. 18.
“of the lower class”:
Times
(London), September 2, 1816.
“This looked as dismal…”: Edgcumbe, p. 288.
“The peasants must…”: ibid., pp. 291–2.
“rendered the seasons…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, September 3, 1816.
“I recollect no period…”: Parker, p. 228.
“There never was such distress…”: O’Connell,
Correspondence
, p. 112.
“I have had an immense…”: ibid., p. 116.
“Between the fall of prices…”: ibid., p. 121.
“I think it still more…”: Parker, pp. 233–4.
9. H
ARVEST
“The whole summer has also…”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 15, 1816.
“No prospect of crops…”: Hoyt, p. 123.
“The four greatest frosts known…”: Mussey, p. 444.
“These frosts have destroyed…”: Ludlum,
Vermont Weather
, p. 98.
“Frost killed almost…”: Hoyt, p. 123.
“The ice on the ponds…”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 29, 1816.
“The oldest inhabitants…”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 15, 1816.
“The woods are every where…”: ibid.
“We have seen a gentleman…”: quoted in
Connecticut Courant
, October 15, 1816.
“I fear that the smoke…”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 15, 1816.
“Europeans can have little idea…”:
Gentleman’s Magazine
, November 1816, p. 454.
“Never before in this vicinity…”: Ludlum,
Vermont Weather
, p. 99.
“Many parishes in Quebec…”:
Albany Advertiser
, October 19, 1816.
“A fall of snow…”:
Daily National Intelligencer
, October 29, 1816.
“self-sufficiency and survival…”: Schlegel, p. 1.
“people were in…”: Warren,
Waterford
, p. 128.
“It is not probable…”:
Vermont Journal
, October 7, 1816.
“Indian corn on which…”: Hoyt, p. 123.
“of excellent quality”:
Connecticut Courant
, October 15, 1816.
“there will not be…”: Stommel,
Volcano Weather,
pp. 74–5.
“It would be well…”:
National Register
, September 14, 1816.
“The uncommon failure…”: Galusha, “Executive Speech,” pp. 3–4.