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قراءة كتاب Twenty Years in Europe A Consul-General's Memories of Noted People, with Letters From General W. T. Sherman

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Twenty Years in Europe
A Consul-General's Memories of Noted People, with Letters
From General W. T. Sherman

Twenty Years in Europe A Consul-General's Memories of Noted People, with Letters From General W. T. Sherman

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 4

Saving a Million Dollars to the Government​--​Another Letter from General Sherman​--​His Coming Retirement from the Army.

216 CHAPTER XXV. 1884. Some Interesting Letters from General Sherman​--​Requests for Souvenirs​--​His “Flaming Sword”​--​One on the Presidency​--​I Am Appointed Consul General for Italy​--​An American Fourth of July Picnic on Lake Zurich​--​Lord Byron’s Home in Switzerland​--​Some Old Letters about His Life There​--​The Lake Dwellings of Switzerland​--​Keller, the Antiquarian​--​Power of Swiss Torrents. 225 CHAPTER XXVI. 1884. Start for Italy​--​The Cholera​--​Ten Days in Quarantine on Lake Maggiore​--​A Heroic King​--​We Are Presented to Queen Margaret​--​American Artists in Rome​--​The Royal Balls​--​Receptions and Parties​--​Meet Many People of Note​--​The Hills of Rome​--​Minister Astor and His Home​--​Hugh Conway​--​Ibsen​--​Marion Crawford​--​One of the Bonapartes​--​Keats’ Room​--​The Cardinals​--​Ischia Destroyed​--​Christmas in Rome​--​Letter from General Sherman​--​His Views of Rome​--​Cleveland’s Election​--​Franz Liszt Again. 244 CHAPTER XXVII. 1885. Still in Rome​--​Presented to Pope Leo XIII​--​Story, the Poet Sculptor​--​Randolph Rogers​--​Tilton​--​Elihu Vedder​--​Astor Resigns​--​Secretary of Legation Dies with Roman Fever​--​I Am Put in Charge of Legation​--​Capri​--​Governor Pierpont​--​Things Supernatural​--​Talk against Gladstone​--​Shakespeare Wood​--​Senator Moleschott, a Remarkable Man​--​Interesting Letters from General Sherman​--​Party Stronger than Patriotism; My Recall​--​Money Lending and Taxes​--​Keep Out of Debt. 261 CHAPTER XXVIII. 1886. The North American Review Engages Me to Edit Several Chapters of the Sherman Correspondence​--​Sherman Writes as to Magazines and His Book​--​The General Invites Me to Come and Stay at His Home in St. Louis​--​He Offers Me the Use of All His Papers​--​I Publish Also in the Review a Prose Narrative of the March to the Sea​--​Mrs. Sherman Reads It to the General​--​Buffalo Bill​--​General Gives Me His Army Badge​--​Nights in Sherman’s Office​--​Conversations with Him​--​Life in the Sherman Home​--​The General’s Complete Reconciliation with His Son Tom​--​Interesting Letters from Sherman as to Magazines​--​His Forthcoming Book​--​Farms and Taxes​--​War Histories​--​Grant’s Book​--​Newspapers​--​Christmas Letter. 274 CHAPTER XXIX. 1887–1890. An Interesting Letter from General Grant​--​Sherman Living in New York​--​His Immense Popularity with All Americans​--​Letters from Him​--​Exhibited Like a Circus​--​No Union Man Left in Foreign Service by Cleveland​--​He Writes for the Magazines​--​Magazines Again​--​Approves My Article in the North American Review on the March to the Sea​--​Humblest Union Man Better Patriot than the Proudest South Carolina Rebel​--​Sheridan Dying​--​Congress Should Make Rank of Lieutenant General Permanent​--​His Reception at Columbus​--​Death of Mrs. Sherman​--​About His Memoirs​--​No Profit​--​The Army of the Tennessee at Cincinnati​--​My Poem There​--​An Odd Interview at the White House​--​Conversations with Secretary Blaine​--​Death of the Great General​--​Speeches About Him in the Senate​--​I Am Again Appointed to Switzerland. 287 CHAPTER XXX. 1891. Go to Switzerland as Consul General​--​An Ocean Voyage Then and Now​--​A Glimpse of Burns’ Home​--​The Highest City in Europe​--​A Novel Republic​--​Life in the Higher Alps​--​Headquarters for Embroidery​--​Princess Salm-Salm​--​An Open Air Parliament​--​The Upper Rhine​--​At Hamburg​--​A Summer on the Baltic​--​Interview with Prince Bismarck. 304

TWENTY YEARS IN EUROPE


CHAPTER I
1869

A LITTLE WHITE CARD WITH PRESIDENT GRANT’S NAME ON IT​--​A VOYAGE TO EUROPE​--​AN ENGLISH INN​--​HEAR GLADSTONE SPEAK​--​JOHN BRIGHT AND DISRAELI.

In the State Department at Washington, there is on file a plain little visiting card, signed by President U. S. Grant. That card was the Secretary’s authority for commissioning me Consul to Zurich. “I would much like to have that little card,” I said to an Assistant Secretary, long years afterward. “Most anybody would,” replied the official, smiling. “You may copy it, but it can not be taken from the files.”

That card, in its time, had been of consequence to me. It took me from a quiet little Western town to a beautiful Swiss city, where I was to spend many years of my life, and where I was to meet people, look on scenes and experience incidents worth telling about. And now it

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