Richard Henry Stoddard's early years were rather Dickensian.
Edmund Clarence Stedman wrote a tribute to the late Elizabeth Stoddard which appeared along with her obituary in the New York Times.
In his tribute to Elizabeth Stoddard, Stedman includes Stoddard's statements regarding the death of his wife and his meditations on his own mortality.
Edmund Clarence Stedman wrote a tribute to the late Elizabeth Stoddard which appeared along with her obituary in the New York Times.
In his tribute to Elizabeth Stoddard, Stedman mentions the associates in her literary circle, including Bayard Taylor, General McClellan, James Russell Lowell, and Edmund Booth.
In his tribute to Elizabeth Stoddard, Stedman praises her writing as being ahead of her time, and discusses the literary circle she formed with her husband.
In his tribute to Elizabeth Stoddard, Stedman includes Stoddard's statements regarding the death of his wife and his meditations on his own mortality.
In his tribute to Elizabeth Stoddard, Stedman mentions the associates in her literary circle, including Bayard Taylor, General McClellan, James Russell Lowell, and Edmund Booth.
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Remembered as a novelist and poet, Elizabeth Drew Barstow Stoddard was the second of nine children raised in Mattapoisett, Massachusetts, a setting she drew on for her novels.
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