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Examples
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It was early in this same summer of 1846 that Lowell made his contract to write regularly for the _Anti-Slavery Standard_; and he soon began sending the "Biglow" poems to that paper instead of to the _Courier_.
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Charity Biglow stood in the lower hall staring at the younger Ralestones as they came through from the kitchen.
Ralestone Luck Andre Norton 1958
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This teacher was very sharp and severe, but he made all his boys learn Latin, as you may see by reading the learned notes and introductions to the "Biglow Papers," supposed to have been written by "Parson Wilbur," but in reality by Lowell himself.
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Violently piqued at this, and simultaneously conceiving a disgust for the Mexican war, he was impelled by both feelings to take the field as a satirist: to the former we owe the _Fable for Critics_; to the latter, the _Biglow
International Weekly Miscellany - Volume 1, No. 6, August 5, 1850 Various
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While Lowell was becoming famous indirectly as the anonymous author of the "Biglow Papers" and "A Fable for Critics," he was writing and publishing over his own name sweet, simple lines that came straight from his heart and which will no doubt be remembered when the uncouth
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Evidently he thought that he paid too much attention to politics, as in the "Biglow Papers," and to lecturing, and various side issues, when he ought to be cultivating pure poetry more assiduously; or rather, he would have liked to be a simple poet and do nothing else, not even earn a living.
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Charlie Raymond, Biglow, the Waller brothers and others.
Football Days Memories of the Game and of the Men behind the Ball William Hanford Edwards
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The letters of Biglow and Stevens, relative to the little child, prove this fact, and additional testimony found in the appended letter from Rev. J.W. Loguen conclusively confirms the same.
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One of our favorite American poets; LOWELL, indulges in a like fancy in the following lines from that dream, like, exquisite fantasy, "In the Twilight," found in the Biglow Papers:
Mosaics of Grecian History Marcius Willson
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In the original volume of "Biglow Papers," part of a page at the end of these "Notices of the Press" remained unfilled, and the printer asked Lowell if he could not send in something to occupy that space.
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