CONCLUSION.
Mr. Lawrence was of about the medium height, and, until reduced by sickness, was erect in person, and active and vigorous in his movements. The expression of his countenance was mild and cheerful, partaking of that benevolent cast which one would have been led to expect from the tenor of his daily life. His affections were warm, and his feelings quick and ardent. His temperament was of a nervous character, thereby inclining him to impatience. With this defect he had to struggle much in early life. It is related of him, that he once, by some hasty reply, wounded the sensitive feelings of a cherished sister, who afterwards died; and so much did he regret his impatience, that he made a resolution to persevere in his efforts until he had conquered the fault. A great change was soon remarked in him in this respect; so much so, that a relative, who passed several months under his roof during his early married life, was surprised at not seeing the least evidence of this tendency. During his latter years, when weakened by disease, and when his nervous system had been shattered by his violent and peculiar attacks of illness, he had more difficulty in controlling his feelings and expressions. On the second, sober thought, however, no one could have been more ready to confess the fault, and to make such reparation as the case demanded.
His daily actions were guided by the most exalted sense of right and wrong; and in his strict sense of justice, Aristides himself could not surpass him. He was a living example of a successful merchant, who had, from the earliest period of his business career, risen above all artifice, and had never been willing to turn to his own advantage the ignorance or misfortune of others. He demonstrated in his own case the possibility of success, while practising the highest standard of moral obligation. He had ever commanded the confidence of those around him. When an apprentice in his native town, many of his customers relied upon his judgment rather than their own. He never deceived them, and early adopted as his rule of life, to do to others as he would have them do to him. Thus he stood high in the confidence, as well as in the estimation, of his neighbors. What "Amos" said was right, and no one could gainsay.
If any one thing was, more than another, the means of promoting his success in life, we should say it was this faculty of commanding the confidence of others. To this can be traced the prosperity of his earliest business years; and, as his sphere enlarged, and his financial operations were extended, the same feeling of confidence gave him the unlimited command of the means of some of the wealthiest capitalists in New England, who, through the most critical seasons in the mercantile world, placed implicit confidence in the house of which he was the senior partner.
Mr. Lawrence had no fluency in conversation. His mind was ever active; but the volume of thought found no corresponding channel of utterance. The very number of ideas seemed to impede the power of expression.
Had his talents been devoted to literary or scientific pursuits, he would have earned distinction by his pen. His mind was not of that logical cast, which, from patient reasoning, can deduce effects from a succession of causes; but arrived at its conclusions by a kind of intuition, somewhat like those rare instances of mathematicians who solve a difficult problem, and yet can give no account of the mental process by which the solution has been reached.
As a husband and father, he was ever kind and affectionate. He was domestic in his tastes, and found his greatest enjoyment in his home. Here he was eminently favored, and ever found the warmest sympathy, and that considerate care and kindness so necessary in latter years to his feeble health. No one who has read the preceding correspondence can have failed to see the interest which he ever took in all that concerned the welfare of those whom Providence had committed to his keeping. His letters to his children would fill many volumes, and are in themselves an enduring testimony to his fidelity and watchful care during a long series of years. His motto was, "Line upon line, precept upon precept;" and thus his constant aim was to impress upon their minds the great principles of religion and morality. No parent could be more indulgent when such indulgence was consistent with the true welfare of his children, or more resolute in denying what was hurtful. Their present happiness was a great object; but his desire for their ultimate good was still greater.
As a friend, he was most faithful and sympathizing; and many now living can testify to the value of his friendship. Few, perhaps, have had more friends. Their affection for him was not founded so much upon gratitude for his constantly recurring favors, as upon the warm sympathy and affection with which his heart, was filled toward them and theirs.
As a citizen, his views were comprehensive, and were bounded by no lines of sectional or party feeling. He was most deeply interested in all that concerned the honor and prosperity of his country, and keenly sensitive to the injury inflicted by such measures as tended to depreciate her standing in the estimation of other nations, or of good men among her own citizens. He was a true patriot, and had adopted the views and aims of the best men of the republic in former days, while he viewed with distrust many of the popular movements of more modern times. From his father he had inherited the most profound veneration for Gen. Washington, and faith in his public policy; while the political principles of Alexander Hamilton and John Jay were those alone by which he thought the permanent happiness and prosperity of the country could be secured.
As a Christian, he endeavored to walk in the footsteps of his Master. He had no taste for the discussion of those minor points of doctrine upon which good men so often differ, but embraced with all his heart the revealed truths of the Gospel, which the great body of Christians can unite in upholding. He sought those fields of labor where all can meet, rather than those which are hedged in by the dividing lines of sect and party.
He reverenced the Bible, and, from the first chapter of the Old Testament to the last chapter of the New, received it as the inspired Word of God. This was his sheet-anchor; and to doubt was, in his view, to leave a safe and peaceful haven, to embark upon an unknown ocean of danger and uncertainty.
Religion was for him a practical thing for every-day use, consisting not so much in frames and emotions as in the steady and persevering performance of the daily duties of life. His view of duty did not limit him to the common obligations of morality, but included the highest sense of duty towards God; or, as he has expressed it in one of his early letters, "to be a moral man merely, is not to be a Christian." He was an active helper in all that tended to promote the cause of Christianity among nations, as well as to promote spiritual progress among individuals. The Christian banner, in his view, covered many denominations; and, with this belief, his charities were directed to the building up of institutions under the influence of the various sects differing from that under which he himself was classed.
What has been said of John Thornton might be applied to him:
"He was a merchant renowned in his generation for a munificence more than princely. He was one of those rare men in whom the desire to relieve distress assumes the form of a master-passion. Conscious of no aims but such as may invite the scrutiny of God and man, he pursued them after his own fearless fashion, yielding to every honest impulse, choosing his associates in scorn of mere worldly precepts, and worshipping with any fellow-Christian whose heart beat in unison with his own, however inharmonious might be some of the articles of their respective creeds. His benevolence was as unsectarian as his general habits; and he stood ready to assist a beneficent design in every party, but would be the creature of none. He not only gave largely, but he gave wisely. He kept a regular account (not for ostentation, or the gratification of vanity, but for method) of every pound he gave. With him, his givings were made a matter of business, as Cowper says, in an 'Elegy' he wrote upon him,—
'Thou hadst an industry in doing good,
Restless as his who toils and sweats for food'"
Those who were not acquainted with Mr. Lawrence might suppose that his long continued ill-health, extending through a period of twenty-one years, permitted the formation of a character which few could attain who should not be called upon to pass through a similar discipline.
That the isolation from the business-world, and freedom from the cares and struggles of active life, to which most men are subjected, tended to give him a more just and dispassionate view of his relations to God, as well as to his fellow-men, cannot be doubted.
The peculiar elevation and spirituality of mind which he acquired must not, however, be looked upon as the hot-bed growth of the invalid's chamber; but rather as the gradual development of a character whose germ was planted far back in the years of childhood. The principles of religion and truth which were inculcated by a faithful and sensible mother upon the heart of the child, shone forth in all the events which marked the life of the future man.
Of Mr. Lawrence's religious opinions respecting those doctrinal points upon which Christians are divided, the writer will not speak; though, from repeated conversations with his father on the subject, in the hours of health as well as of sickness, he might consistently do so. Rather than make assertions which might lead to discussion, it is more grateful to his feelings to leave the subject to the unbiassed judgment of those who shall read the preceding correspondence.
Let it rather be the aim of those who loved and honored him in life to imitate his example, now that he is dead. They may rejoice that they were permitted to claim as a relative, and to have daily intercourse with, one who has exhibited, in such an abundant degree, those fruits which are the truest and best evidence of a genuine faith.
In completing this volume, the editor feels that he has fulfilled a sacred trust; and his great regret is, that the work could not have been undertaken by some one more fitted, by his qualifications and past experience, to do justice to the subject. For reasons given in the Preface, this could not be; and it is, therefore, with great diffidence that these pages are submitted as a memorial of one whose life and character deserve more than a passing record.
If, however, what has been done shall be the means of directing the attention of those for whom the volume has been prepared to the consideration of the precepts here recorded; and, above all, if those precepts shall be the means of influencing them for good in their future course in life,—the effort will not have been in vain.
[INDEX.]
Abstinence; total, from tobacco and intoxicating drinks, by Mr. Lawrence, [25]
Accounts, benefit of keeping, illustrated, [86]
Adams, Amos, [44]
Adams, Samuel, [140]
Advice, letters of, to Abbott Lawrence, [48]-53
Amherst College, effort of Mr. Lawrence in behalf of, [243]
Amin Bey, letter to, from Mr. Lawrence, [285]
Anatomy, views of Mr. Lawrence respecting the dissection of human bodies, [218]
André, Major, [217]
Appleton, Jesse, [190]
Appleton, Mrs., death of, [190]
Athenæum, in Boston, Mr. Lawrence's plans for benefit of, [200]
Baldwin, Loammi, [338]
Baltimore, derangement of business in, [73]
Bangor Theological Seminary, donation by Mr. Lawrence to, [310]
donation for students in, [337]
Banks, suspension of in 1837, [141]
Bible, Mr. Lawrence's estimate of the, [257]
Birth-place, attachment to expressed by Mr. Lawrence, [151]
of Mr. Lawrence, engraving of, [151]
Blagden, George W., note from, respecting Rev. Dr. ——, of Scotland, [313]
letter from Mr. Lawrence to, [316]
Blake, George, [84]
Bondsmen, advice respecting fathers becoming, [37]
Book-keeping by double entry, adopted by Mr. Lawrence, [61]
Boston, religious controversy in, [65]
Mr. Lawrence elected representative of, [77]
wooden buildings in, [78]
post-office, dead letters from, [154]
Bowdoin College, donation by Mrs. Lawrence to, [244]
Brattle-street Church, Mr. Lawrence's connection with, [184]
Brazer, James, [22], [221]
his store described, [23]
Bridgman, Laura, [235]
Briggs, George N., [214], [281]
presentation of a cane to, by Mr. Lawrence, [227]
Brooks, Peter C., death and character of, [263]
Buckminster, J. S., remains of removed to Mount Auburn by Mr. Lawrence, [175]
Bunker Hill, desire of Mr. Lawrence to retain for posterity the battlefield, [99]
Bunker Hill Monument, Mr. Lawrence's interest in, [84]
objection to a lottery for, [91]
completion of, [169]
Mr. Lawrence's agency in securing the completion of, [170]-174
note from Mr. Lawrence respecting early history of, [332]
history of the plan of, [338]
Burial-places, Mr. Lawrence's views respecting, [129]
Business, secret of Mr. Lawrence's success in, [145]
Buxton, Lady, letter from, to Mr. Lawrence, [298]
letter from, to Mr. Lawrence, [324]
Buxton, Sir Thomas Fowell, [298]
Cabot, Samuel, [268]
Cambridge Theological School, views respecting, [163]
Canada, journey of Mr. Lawrence to, [89]
Canadian Boat-song, [261]
Canfield, Mr., [38]
Carroll, Charles, [276]
Caswell, Oliver, [235]
Chaplin, Daniel, [18]
Chapman, Jonathan, [192]
Charities, memorandum of, [92]-95
proportion of, in 1835, [137]
money for, [178]
"odds and ends" for, [186]-187
correction of a public statement respecting Mr. Lawrence's, [198]
amount expended during ten years in, [311]
total amount expended in, [312]
Charity, systematic, inculcated by Mr. Lawrence, [118]
Children, fondness of Mr. Lawrence for, [225]-226
hospital for, founded by Mr. Lawrence, [230]-233
Christ, object of his death, [266]
Christmas, Mr. Lawrence's view of, [91]
Cobb, Gershom, introduces book-keeping by double entry, [61]
Codman, Dr., [253]
Colebrooke, Lady, [217]
death of, [304]
Colebrooke, Sir William, letter to, from Mr. Lawrence, [240]
letter from Mr. Lawrence to, [304]
Colonization of Africa, aided by Mr. Lawrence, [299], [318]
Concord, Mr. Lawrence's account of the fight in 1775 at, [215]-217
Controversy, religious, in Boston, [55]
Copartnership, offer of Amos Lawrence to dissolve,—declined by Abbott Lawrence, [47]
Copartnership of A. & A. Lawrence dissolved by death, [340]
Cornhill-street, store of Mr. Lawrence in, [29]
Credit system, Mr. Lawrence's view of, [35]
Cresson, Elliott, letter to, from Mr. Lawrence, [299]
Darley, Mrs., [39]
Darracott, George, [172]
Davis, John, loan of $500 by Mr. Lawrence to, [330]
letter from, to Mr. Lawrence, [330]
Dearborn, H. A. S., [84], [338]
Debts, Mr. Lawrence's promptness in paying, [31]
Dexter, Franklin, estimate of his argument on the fugitive slave law, [287]
Dexter, Madam, [75]
Diet of Mr. Lawrence, [123], [326]
table of, kept by Mr. Lawrence, [124]
Dorchester Heights, reflections on, [140]
Drinking habits in Mr. Lawrence's early days, [23]
Dwight, Edmund, [332]
Dwight, Louis, [308]
testimony of Mr. Lawrence respecting, [219]
Ellis, Judge, [77]
Ellis, Mrs. Nancy, marriage of Mr. Lawrence to, [77]
Epicureanism, Mr. Lawrence's notion of, [124]
European fashions, introduction of discountenanced, [90]
Everett, Edward, [172], [338]
Expenditures, by Mr. Lawrence, in 1849, [278]
from 1842 to 1852, [311]
Fac-simile of Mr. Lawrence's hand-writing, [248]
Family worship, Mr. Lawrence's remarks on, [150]
Farwell, Captain, [17], [301]
Fillmore, Millard, [256]
Foreign gold, exchange of negotiated, [75]
Fraternal affection, example of, [147]
French Revolution of 1830, Mr. Lawrence's sympathy with, [101]
Fugitive slave law, Mr. Lawrence's opinion of the, [287]
Funeral ceremonies at the death of Amos Lawrence, [341], [342]
Gannett, Ezra S., letter to, [45]
Gannett, Caleb, [45]
Gannett, Mrs., hymn for her little boy by, [46]
Goddard, N., [76]
Granger's Coffee House, [38]
Gray, Mrs. Martha, present from Mr. Lawrence to, [214]
Gray, Robert, [214]
Green, Wm. L., death of, [251]
Greenough, Horatio, [338]
Greenwood, Rev. Dr., [123]
Groton, scenery in, [152], [153]
Groton Academy, donations of Mr. Lawrence to, preamble of the deed, [221]
amount of donations to, by Mr. Lawrence, [222]
donations of $45,000 by William Lawrence to, [222]
extract from address at jubilee of, [223]
Gurney, Hannah (see Buxton, Lady), [299]
Haddock, Charles B., letter from Mr. Lawrence to, [305]
Hallock, Rev. Mr., [279]
Hamilton, James, letters from Mr. Lawrence to, [269], [279], [322]
letter from, to Mr. Lawrence, [293]
Hancock, John, [140]
Harris, Colonel, [268]
Harvard College, donation of $50,000 by Abbott Lawrence to, [244]
Heaven, reunion of friends in, [157]
Hillsborough Bank, Mr. Lawrence's draft on for specie, [36], [37]
Hone, Isaac, [76]
Hone, Philip, [76]
Hopkins, Mark, President of Williams College, [341]
letters to, from Mr. Lawrence, [124], [183], [213], [214], [255], [257], [258], [259], [265], [272], [280], [285], [292]
lectures in Boston, [182]
Hopkins, Mark, extract from his sermon on death of Mr. Lawrence, [287]
peculiarities of Mr. Lawrence's bounty sketched by, [346]-360
Howe, Dr., [235]
Hubbard, Judge, [253]
Hubbart, Tuthill, [154]
Hulsemann, Chevalier, interview of Mr. Lawrence with, [158]
Immigration from Europe, Mr. Lawrence's view of, [258], [270]
Income, net, of Mr. Lawrence in the first two years, [36]
practice of spending it, adopted by Mr. Lawrence, [263]
Intoxicating liquors, total abstinence from, by Mr. Lawrence, [25]
Ireland, Mr. Lawrence's contributions to the famished in, [236], [238]
Johnson School, donation to, by Mr. Lawrence, [224]
Kast, Dr., [302]
Kent, Chancellor, [76]
ride with—character of, [158]
Kenyon College, aid to by Mr. Lawrence, [177]
Lafayette, General, Mr. Lawrence's opinion of, [84]
message to, [96]
Lothrop, Samuel K., [122], [138], [175], [342]
extract from his sermon on the death of Mr. Lawrence, [185]
sketch of character of Mr. Lawrence by, [343]-346
Lawrence, Abbott, [30], [131], [138]
letters to, [48], [49], [51], [52], [55], [56], [72], [73], [189], [244], [266], [267]
becomes partner with Amos, [38]
character as an apprentice, [38]
declines offer to dissolve copartnership, [47]
sails for Europe, [48]
his dispatch of business, [52]
his military service in the last war with Great Britain, [56], [295]
donation of $50,000 to Harvard College, [244]
candidate for the Vice-Presidency, [256]
tendered the office of Secretary of the Navy, [266]
appointed Minister to the Court of St. James, [269]
his popularity in Great Britain, [295]
likeness of, [295]
Lawrence, Mrs. Abbott, [280]
Lawrence, Amos, when and where born, [15]
ancestry of, [15]
early instruction of, [20]
his mechanical skill in boyhood, [20]
anecdote of his school-days, [22]
enters Groton Academy, [22]
becomes a merchant's clerk, [22]
adopts the principle and practice of total abstinence, [24]
wounded by a gun-shot, [26]
apprenticeship terminated, [28]
accepts a clerkship in Boston, [29]
commences business in Boston, [29]
his boarding-house rule, [30]
his promptness in paying bills, [31]
motive for daily study, [32]
his remarks on letter-writing, [32]
his distinction between morality and religion, [34]
his mercantile principles, [35]
view of the credit system, [35]
net income of first two years, [36]
advice against parents becoming bondsmen for their sons, [37]
his opinion of the theatre, [39]
assists to establish his brother William in business, [39]
flying visits to Groton, [40]
alarming illness, [40]
engagement of marriage, [43]
marriage, [46]
offer to dissolve copartnership declined, [47]
letter on the death of his sister, [54]
letter on the birth of his daughter, [57]
recommends marriage, [57]
domestic attachments, [60]
adoption of book-keeping by double entry, [61]
leniency to unfortunate debtors, [61]
second alarming illness, [62]
resignation in prospect of his wife's death, [64]
tour through the Middle States, [68]
appreciation of the right of suffrage, [70]
delegate to assist in settlement of Jared Sparks, [71]
becomes an inmate of his brother's family, [74]
negotiates an exchange of foreign gold, [75]
narrow escape from shipwreck, [75]
second marriage of, [77]
resumes housekeeping, [77]
representative in the Legislature, [77]
letter to Mr. Wolcott respecting his son, [78]
becomes a manufacturer, [79]
curtailment of his business, [81]
extent of his correspondence, [83]
opinion of Lafayette, [84]
interest in Bunker Hill Monument, [84]
journey to Canada, [89]
objection to European fashions, [90]
objection to a lottery for Bunker Hill Monument, [91]
presentation of plate to Daniel Webster, [102], [103]
dangerous illness of, [105]
feelings in sickness, [106], [107], [111]
visit to New Hampshire, [109]
his life in a sick chamber, [112]
his submission under divine chastisements, [112]-114
inculcates systematic charity, [118]
secret of his success, [118]
exercise on horseback, [122]
his diet, [123]
improvement of health, [125]
avoids the appearance of evil, [126]
his views of burial-places, [129]
advice about selecting a wife, [130]
advice to his daughter, [131], [132]
gratitude towards his mother, [135]
visit to Washington, [138]
aversion to matrimonial speculations, [138]
estimate of Congressional debates, [139]
visit to Rainsford Island, [139]
reflections on completing thirty years of business, [141]
pecuniary condition, January 1st, 1838, [142]
habits of promptness, [144]
prospects on December 31st, 1838, [146]
reflections on the death of his brother, [149]
advocates family worship, [150]
engraving of his birth-place, [151]
character in the bestowal of gifts, [153]
enjoyment of natural scenery, [155], [156]
belief in reunion of friends hereafter, [157]
annoyances arising from his reputation for benevolence, [159]
his religious belief, [160]
interest in a young colored lawyer, [165]-6
reflections on his fifty-eighth birth-day, [167]
his agency in securing completion of Bunker Hill Monument, [170]-174
poetical toast to, [174]
renders aid to Kenyon College, [177]
acquaintance with Pres. Hopkins, [182]
presents sent to President Hopkins, [183]-4
his aversion to public commendation of himself, [189], [229]
advice respecting his grandchildren, [191]
opposes annexation of Texas, [192]
joy at birth of twin granddaughters, [193]
letter on death of his daughter, [194]-196
sentiments in view of his prosperity, [197]
his view of keeping the Sabbath, [202]
offer of his remains for the dissecting-room, [218]
his interest in the Johnson School, [224]
fondness for children, [226]
provides a hospital for sick children, [230]
his gratitude for prosperity, [234]
contributes to the famished in Ireland, [236]
his application in behalf of Amherst College, [242]
congratulates Abbott Lawrence on his donation to Harvard College, [244]
his attendance at church, [246]
his exactness in business, [247]
kindness to an old debtor, [248]
fac-simile of his hand-writing, [248]
sentiments respecting a religious awakening in college, [255], [312]
objects to his brother's taking political office, [256]-257, [258], [266]
estimate of the Bible, [257]
prefers Gen. Taylor for President, [258]
treatment of an applicant for aid, [260]
joy at a revival of religion among Unitarians, [267]
interview with Father Mathew, [270]
adds a codicil to his will, [271]
illness, [272]
desire for death, [272]
keeps Christmas with children, [277]
circulates Dr. Hamilton's works, [279], [291], [292], [294]
lameness, [281]
attentions to children, [292]
circulates Buxton's Life, [298]
cancels a note for $500 against a clergyman, [300]
interest in Wabash College, [309]
controversy with a Scotch clergyman, [313]-315
his ground of religious hope, [316]
circulates Uncle Toby's Stories on Tobacco, [319]
his diet, [326]
prefers Scott for President, [327]
solicits aid for Williams College, from Jonathan Phillips, [328]
relieves the straitened circumstances of Gov. Davis, [330]
chosen presidential elector, [333]
votes for Scott and Graham, [334]
intercourse with Franklin Pierce, [335]
his last writing, [339]
death of, [340]
funeral ceremonies, [341], [342]
sketches of his character, [343]
personal appearance, [352]
character of John Thornton applied to, [357]
general character, [352]-359
Lawrence, Amos A., [288]
Lawrence, Arthur, [235]
Lawrence, John, [15]
Lawrence, Luther, value of his property, [30]
Speaker of House of Representatives, [148]
Mayor of Lowell, [148]
death of, [148], [149]
Lawrence, Robert, illness of, [205]
letters of Mr. Lawrence respecting, [206]-210
Lawrence, Samuel, Sen., [30]
account of, [16]
sketch of his military career, [17], [18]
Lawrence, Samuel, presentation of a gold box to, by Mr. Lawrence, [235]
Lawrence, Mrs. Sarah, illness of, [62]
letter to her husband, [63]
her condition described by Mr. Lawrence, [64]
death of, [65]
her death-bed scene described, [65]-6
Lawrence, Mrs. Susanna, character of, [19]
death of, [199]
Lawrence, William, [30], [252]
commences business in Boston, [39]
donations of $45,000 to Groton Academy by, [222]
death and character of, [261], [262]
Lawrence Association, in the Mather School, note to, [237]
contributions for Ireland by, [238]
presentation of a silver cup to Mr. Lawrence by, [277]
hymn sung at funeral of Mr. Lawrence by, [342]
Letsom, Dr. C., [302]
Letters from Amos Lawrence, [47]
to a friend, [17], [57], [70], [73], [126], [130], [157], [186], [187], [190], [201], [215], [245], [246], [252], [262], [267], [283]
to his son, [20], [30], [85], [99], [100], [101], [112], [114], [115], [124], [152], [190], [194], [200], [205], [206], [207], [332]
to a college student, [24], [25]
to Gen. Henry Whiting, [30], [273], [276]
to a sister, [32], [33], [42], [68], [71], [73], [130], [166], [145]
to Dr. Gannett, [45]
to Abbott Lawrence, [48], [49], [51], [52], [55], [56], [72], [73], [189], [244], [266], [267]
to his wife, [52], [63], [126]
to a brother, [54], [68]
to his mother-in-law, [63]
to his sister-in-law, [69], [112]
to Frederic Wolcott, [78]
to his eldest son, abroad, [83], [87], [90], [91], [96], [98], [103], [106]
to his second son, at Andover, [86], [117], [118], [125]
to Daniel Webster, [97], [102]
to his mother, [106], [107], [109], [110], [134], [141]
to his daughter, [119], [127], [129], [131], [133], [150], [152]
to his youngest son, [143]
to his sisters, [149], [151]
to a connection, [149]
to his second son, in Europe, [154]
to Rev. Charles Mason, [155]
to Rev. Robert Turnbull, D.D., [160]
to Hon. Robert C. Winthrop, [165]
to General ——, [168]
to Mr. Parker (a partner), [177], [204]
to the Mechanic Apprentices' Library Association, [181]
to President Hopkins, [183], [213], [214], [255], [257], [258], [259], [265], [272], [280], [285], [292]
to his partners, [196], [245]
to his children in France, [196]
to his grandson, [209]
to R. G. Parker, [224], [229]
to Gov. Briggs, [227]
to Alexander S. McKenzie, [234]
to J. A. Stearns, for Lawrence Association, [237]
to Madam Prescott, [239]
to Sir Wm. Colebrooke, [240], [304]
to a wealthy bachelor, [242]
to Prof. Packard, [243], [338]
to Mr. G——, [251]
to Mr. and Mrs. Green, [252]
to a physician, [253]
to a newspaper editor, [257]
to Rev. James Hamilton, D.D., [269], [279], [294], [296], [322]
to his sons, [272]
to Robert Barnwell Rhett, [274]
to a country clergyman, [280]
to an aged clergyman, [292]
to Elliott Cresson, [299]
to Lady Buxton, [300]
to a lady in Philadelphia, [301]
to Charles B. Haddock, [305]
to Rev. Dr. Scoresby, [307]
to. Rev. Geo. W. Blagden, D.D., [316]
to a friend in South Carolina, [317]
to Benjamin Seaver, [320]
to a lady in Florida, [326]
to Jonathan Phillips, [327]
Levelling, Judge Story's maxim of, [266]
Loan of money to Mr. Lawrence by his father, [36]
Lowell, Charles, letter to Mr. Lawrence from, [321]
Lowell, John, [78]
Lunatic Asylum, plan for the new, [308]
Manufactures, engagement of Mr. Lawrence in, [79]
largeness of his interest in, [104]
fluctuations in, [236]
views of Mr. Lawrence respecting coarse and fine, [275]
Marriage of Amos Lawrence, [46]
Mason, Charles, [193] letter from Mr. Lawrence to, [155]
Mason, Jeremiah, [109], [117]
remarks of, on Rev, Dr. ——'s lectures, [219], [220]
death and character of, [261], [262]
Mason, Mrs. Susan, Mr. Lawrence's letter on the death of, [194]-196
Massachusetts General Hospital, place of Trustee resigned by Mr. Lawrence, [116]
Mather School, character of, [276]
Mathew, Father, [270]
Matrimonial speculations, aversion of Mr. Lawrence to, [138]
Maxims of business—speculation condemned, [72]
McIlvaine, Charles P., letter from, to Mr. Lawrence, [177]
McKenzie, Alexander S., letter to,
from Mr. Lawrence, [234]
present of a cane to Mr. Lawrence from, [260]
death of, [261]
Means, James, extract from address at jubilee of Groton Academy, by, [223]
Means, Robert, [77]
Mercantile principles adopted by Mr. Lawrence, [35]
"Milo," arrival of ship, [52]
Money, advice about spending, [143]
Morality and religion, Mr. Lawrence's distinction between, [34]
Mortgage of his father's farm, [36]
Mount Auburn, interest taken in, by Mr. Lawrence, [175]
National character, reflections upon, [133], [134]
Native Americans, Mr. Lawrence's view of, [199]
Natural History Society, donation to, by Mr. Lawrence, [231]
Old Ladies' Home, donation to, by Mr. Lawrence, [321]
"Old Oak," in Mount Auburn, [207], [208]
Paine, Robert Treat, [38]
Parker, C. H., letter to, [177]
Parker, Daniel P., [268]
Parker, R. G., letter from to Mr. Lawrence, [225]
Parker, Susanna, [16]
Parkman, Messrs., [37]
Percy, Lord, [217]
Perkins, Thomas H., [338]
Pestilence, Dr. Shattuck's account of the, [40]-42
Phelps, Mrs., [325]
Phillips, Jonathan, letter from Mr. Lawrence to, respecting aid to Williams College, [327]
donation from, to Williams College, [229]
Pierce, Benjamin, son of President Pierce, note from, to Mr. Lawrence, [336]
sudden death of, [336]
Pierce, Franklin, character of, [318], [326]
his intercourse with Mr. Lawrence, [335]
Pitcairn, Major, account of his death, [302]
removal of his remains to England, [303]
Pitcairn, William, [302]
Pond, Rev. Dr., [310]
Prayer adopted by Mr. Lawrence, [248]
Prescott, General, [17]
Madam, note from Mr. Lawrence to, [239]
her views on the comforts of old age, [239]
Presidential Elector, Mr. Lawrence chosen in 1852, [334]
Prince, Martial, [268]
Property, memorandum-book of Mr. Lawrence respecting his, [80]
Prudhoe, Lord, [217]
Rainsford Island, visit to, and description of scenery, [139]
Religion. (See Morality.)
its cultivation urged upon his daughter, [119]-121
Representative, Mr. Lawrence elected, [77]
Richards, Giles, his card manufactory, [44]
Richards, Sarah, Mr. Lawrence's engagement of marriage with, [43]
Richardson, Captain, [22]
Sabbath, Mr. Lawrence's view of keeping the, [202]
Savings Institution. (See Athenæum.)
Scenery, Mr. Lawrence's enjoyment of, [155], [156]
Scoresby, Wm., letter from Mr. Lawrence to, [307]
Sea-serpent seen at Hampton Beach in 1830, Mr. Lawrence's belief in the, [100]
Mr. Lawrence's belief in the existence of the, [268]
Sectarianism, Mr. Lawrence's freedom from, [161]
Sharp, Daniel, [253], [342]
letters from, to Mr. Lawrence, [176], [203], [282]
Shattuck, George C, his account of the New England pestilence, [40]-42
Shaw, Robert G., [333], [334]
Shipwreck, narrow escape of Mr. Lawrence from, [75]
Slavery, views of Mr. Lawrence on questions of, [275]
view of its tendencies, [318]
contribution for freeing a negro from, [334]
South Carolina, manufactures in, encouraged by Mr. Lawrence, [275]
Sparks, Jared, Mr. Lawrence a delegate to assist in the settlement of, [71]
Story, Joseph, [169]
letter from, to Mr. Lawrence, [179], [180]
his maxim of "levelling," [266]
Stone, John S., [123]
letter from to Mr. Lawrence, [162]
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, [325]
Strachan, Lady, [237]
Stuart, Moses, letter of thanks from, [263]
Sullivan, William, [84]
Tarbell, Thomas, tribute to the memory of, [320]
Taylor, Father, [123]
Zachary, preferred for President by Mr. Lawrence, [258]
Tennett, Mr., [38]
Texas, letter of Mr. Lawrence to Mayor Chapman, on the annexation of, [192]
Ticknor, George, [338]
Tobacco, total abstinence from, by Mr. Lawrence, [25]
book against, circulated by Mr. Lawrence, [319]
letter respecting use of, [319]
Touro, Judah, his donation for Bunker Hill Monument, [173]
Turnbull, Robert, letter from Mr. Lawrence to, [160]
Uncle Tom's Cabin, Lady Buxton's testimony respecting, [325]
Unitarianism, Mr. Lawrence's opinion of, [246], [247]
Van Schaick, M., [76]
Vinton, Alexander H., [341]
Wabash College, donation from Mrs. Lawrence to, [309]
Ward, General, [140]
Ware, Henry, Jr., [163]
Warren, John C., [84], [170], [218]
Washington, General, [44]
celebration of his birth-day, [116]
Webster, Daniel, letter from Mr. Lawrence respecting, [68], [69]
Mr. Lawrence's view of his speech in reply to Hayne, [97]
letter to Mr. Lawrence from, [97]
letter to, from Mr. Lawrence, accompanying a presentation of plate, [102]
letter from to Mr. Lawrence, [103]
remarks on his address at Plymouth, [208]
view of his character by Mr. Lawrence, [327]
of his preparation for death, [337]
White, Charles, account of his play, the "Clergyman's Daughter," 38, [39]
White, Charles, President of Wabash College, [309]
Whiting, Henry, clerk to Mr. Lawrence, [29]
Will of Amos Lawrence, codicil to, [271]
Williams College, Mr. Lawrence's interest in, [182]
donation of $10,000 to, by Mr. Lawrence, [197]
donation of $5,000 by Mr. Lawrence, for a library building at, [213]
enlargement of library building proposed, [215]
scholarships established in, by Mr. Lawrence, [245]
account of Mr. Lawrence's benefactions to, [287]-291
donation to, by Jonathan Phillips, [329]
Winship, Dr., [302]
Wolcott, Frederic, letter to, from Mr. Lawrence, [78]
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A Narrative of the Excursion of Mr. Vanderbilt's Party, in her Voyage to England, Russia, Denmark, France, Spain, Italy, Malta, Turkey, Madeira, etc. By Rev. John Overton Choules, D. D. With elegant Illustrations, etc. 12mo, cloth, gilt back and sides, $1.50.
VISITS TO EUROPEAN CELEBRITIES.
By the Rev. William B. Sprague, D. D. 12mo, cloth, $1.00.
A series of graphic and life-like Personal Sketches of many of the most distinguished men and women of Europe, with whom the author became acquainted in the course of several European tours, where he saw them in their own homes and under the most advantageous circumstances. "It was my uniform custom, after every such interview, to take copious memoranda of the conversation, including an account of the individual's appearance and manners; in short, defining, as well as I could, the whole impression which his physical, intellectual, and moral man had made upon me." From the memoranda thus made, the material for the present instructive and exceedingly interesting volume is derived. Besides these "pen and ink" sketches, the work contains the novel attraction of a FAC SIMILE OF THE SIGNATURE of each of the persons introduced.
PILGRIMAGE TO EGYPT; EXPLORATIONS OF THE NILE.
With Observations, illustrative of the Manners, Customs, etc. By Hon. J. V. C. Smith, M. D. With numerous elegant Engravings. 12mo, cloth, $1.25.
THE STORY OF THE CAMPAIGN.
A complete Narrative of the War in Southern Russia. Written in a Tent in the Crimea. By Major E. Bruce Hamley, author of "Lady Lee's Widowhood." With a new and complete Map of the Seat of War. 12mo, paper covers, 371⁄2 cts.
POETICAL WORKS.
MILTON'S POETICAL WORKS. With Life and Elegant Illustrations. 16mo, cloth, $1.00; fine cloth, gilt, $1.25.
POETICAL WORKS OF SIR WALTER SCOTT. With Life, and Illustrations on Steel. 16mo, cl., $l; fine cl., gilt, $1.25.
COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS OF WILLIAM COWPER. With a Life, and Critical Notices of his Writings. With new and elegant Illustrations on Steel. 16mo, cloth, $1.00; fine cloth, gilt, $1.25.
☞The above Poetical Works, by standard authors, are all of uniform size and style, printed on fine paper, from clear, distinct type, with new and elegant illustrations, richly bound in full gilt, and plain; thus rendering them, in connection with the exceedingly LOW PRICE at which they are offered, the cheapest and most desirable of any of the numerous editions of these author's works now in the market.
LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE OF JOHN FOSTER.
Edited by J. E. Ryland, with Notices of Mr. Foster as a Preacher and a Companion. By John Sheppard. Two volumes in one, 700 pages. 12mo, cloth, $1.25.
In simplicity of language, in majesty of conception, in the eloquence of that conciseness which conveys in a short sentence more meaning than the mind dares at once admit,—his writings are unmatched.—[North British Review.
GUIDO AND JULIUS.
The Doctrine of Sin and the Propitiator; or, the True Consecration of the Doubter. Exhibited in the Correspondence of two Friends. By Frederick Augustus O. Tholuch, D. D. Translated by Jonathan Edwards Ryland. With an Introduction by John Pye Smith, D. D. 16mo, cloth, 60 cents.
NEW AND COMPLETE CONDENSED CONCORDANCE
To the Holy Scriptures. By Alexander Cruden. Revised and re-edited by Rev. David King, L.L. D. Octavo, cloth backs, $1.25; sheep, $1.50.