Stone, Lucy, [305];
speaks for woman suffrage in Boston, [375];
her skill and zeal, [377], [378];
her work for that cause, [380], [381];
prominent at the woman's congress, [385].
Stonehenge,
Druidical stones at, [140].
Story, Chief Justice, [169].
Stowe, Mrs. Harriet Beecher,
her "Uncle Tom's Cabin," [253].
Sue, Eugène,
his "Mystères de Paris," [204].
Sumner, Albert,
brother of the senator, [402].
Sumner, Charles,
first known to the Wards through Mrs. Howe's brother Samuel, [49];
takes the Wards to the Perkins Institution, [81], [82];
Thomas Carlyle's estimate of, [96], [97];
inability to sing, [163];
his first appearance at the Ward home, [168];
his friends, [169];
his political opinions, [170];
his temperament and aspect, [171]-[173];
attitude on prison reform, [173], [174];
his eloquence, [175];
his culture, [176];
his life in Washington, [177]-[180];
opposes the annexation of Santo Domingo, [181];
his death, [182];
defeats Webster for the Senate, [218];
his breach with Count Gurowski, [223];
grieves at Gurowski's death, [226];
dines at Mrs. Eames's, [308].
Sumner, Charles Pinckney,
sheriff,
anecdote of, [171], [172].
Sumner, Mrs. C. P.,
anecdotes of, [177], [178].
Sunday,
observance of, in the Ward family, [48].