OF MARY L. WARE, WIFE OF HENRY WARE, JR. BY EDWARD B. HALL. Third Thousand. BOSTON: CROSBY, NICHOLS, AND COMPANY. NEW YORK: CHARLES 8. FRANCIS AND COMPANY Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1852, by CROSBY, NICHOLS, AND COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. CAMBRIDGE: STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BY METCALF AND COMPANY, PRINTERS TO THE UNIVERSITY. Character of the Mother. First Training of - - . 16 ness and Death of Mrs. Pickard. - Mary's Position. - Her Father's Circumstances. - Dr. Park's School. Earliest Letters. Thoughts and Themes. Chosen Friend. - l'e- with Mary. Her Sympathy and Faith. Her Teacher's - - - Testimony to her Piety. - She leaves Hingham. · - Her Grandfather's Death. - Devotion to her Grandmother. — Visit to Northampton.— Her Self-distrust. — Interest in Dr. Channing. Letters on his Preaching, and Interview with - - Leaving Pearl Street. - Fears for the Future.Pecuniary ters on Providence and Bereavement. Death of J. E. Abbot. Living in Dorchester. - Morbid Feelings. — Mar- riage of her Friend. - Her own Trials. Influence upon Loneliness. Invitation to go Abroad. — Letters relating to it. A Friend's Admiration. - Arrival in England. – Mrs. Freme.-Letters from London and Broadwater. - Isle of Wight. Paris. — Her Friends' Return to America. - She remains with Relatives in England. - Chatham. —- Bur- America. - -Description of the Country. - 92 The Poor Aunt. - Osmotherly. - Sickness and Sorrow own Sickness. Anxiety of Friends in England and Amer- ica. Joy at her Escape. |