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Notes 1. Kelly, Lydia Sigourney: Selected Poetry and Prose, 5. 2. Beecher, “Mrs. Lydia H. Sigourney,” 563. 3. “The Poets of America,” 209; May, The American Female Poets, 77. 4. Hall, “Beyond Self-Interest,” 493. 5. Leonard, “A Rebel in Conservative Clothes.” 6. Kelly, Lydia Sigourney: Selected Poetry and Prose, 15. 7. Frye, “Towards Defining an Age of Sensibility,” 147. 8. Franklin, “Silence Dogood, Letter 7,” June 25, 1722. 9. Petrino, Emily Dickenson and Her Contemporaries, 55. 10. See, for example, “Interview of the Blind with the Deaf and Dumb,” Youth’s Magazine, 1837. 11. Gitter, “Deaf-Mutes and Heroines in the Victorian Era,” 183. 12. Gitter, Imprisoned Guest, 109–10, 7. 13. Delbanco, “This Curse of Slavery.” 14. Okker, “Sarah Josepha Hale, Lydia Sigourney, and the Poetic Tradition in Two Nineteen-Century Women’s Magazines,” 32. 15. Sigourney, “Essay on the Genius of Mrs. Hemans,” xv. 16. Fetterley, Provisions, 108. 17. Olwell, “‘It Spoke Itself,’” 33. 18. Quotation from Walker, The Nightingale’s Burden, 34. 19. McGann, The Poetics of Sensibility, 195. 20. See, for example, Wry, “Lydia Sigourney’s ‘To a Shred of Linen,’” 405. 21. Olwell, “‘It Spoke Itself,’” 39. 22. See, for example, Wry, “Lydia Sigourney’s ‘To a Shred of Linen,’” and Day, “‘This comes of writing poetry.’” 23. Conrad, Perish the Thought, 170–71. 24. Parsons, The Friendly Club and other Portraits, 109. 25. Saunders, Daniel Wadsworth, Patron of the Arts, 23. 26. Sigourney, Letters of Life, 201–2. 27. Sigourney, Letters to My Pupils, 211, 224, 295. 28. Lane, When the Mind Hears, 156, 179. 29. [Dwight], Review of Mrs. L. H. Sigourney, Letters of Life, 347, 348. 30. Gallaudet, Life of Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, 86. 31. Quotation from Gallaudet’s letter to Cogswell in Lane, When the Mind Hears, 187; the underlining is Gallaudet’s. 32. Sigourney, “Record of My School.” 33. Wait, “Lydia Huntley Sigourney and Deaf Education.” 149 Sigourney Main Pgs 1-162.indd 149 4/4/2013 12:35:34 PM 150 Notes 34. Sigourney, Letter to the Ladies of the Directors of the American Asylum for the Education of the Deaf & Dumb. 35. Sigourney, Letter to Seth Terry, 1823 and 1828. 36. Sigourney, “Record of My School.” 37. Sigourney, “Minutes for the Society for the Former Scholars of Mrs. Sigourney.” 38. Sigourney, “Executive Committee of the Ladies for Greek Subscription Memorandum.” 39. Day, “‘This comes of writing poetry,’” 114. 40. Searing, Papers. 41. See, for example, Douglas, The Feminization of American Culture, and Day, “‘This comes of writing poetry.’” 42. Wood, “Mrs. Sigourney and the Sensibility of the Inner Space,” 175. 43. Kelly, Lydia Sigourney: Selected Poetry and Prose, 20, 40. 44. Wadsworth, The Will of Daniel Wadsworth. 45. Ladd, Understanding Deaf Culture. 46. Barnard, Tribute to Gallaudet, 7. 47. Ibid., 7–8. 48. Ibid., 13. 49. Weld, “The American Asylum,” 132. 50. Humphrey, The Life and Labors of the Rev. T. H. Gallaudet, LL.D., 29, 129. 51. Huntington, “Lydia H. Sigourney,” 100. 52. Phillips, “Yale Teachers of the Deaf.” 53. [Dwight], Review of Mrs. L. H. Sigourney, Letters of Life. 54. See, for example, Day, “‘This comes of writing poetry,’”191, on the rarity of autobiographies by women. 55. Parsons, The Friendly Club and Other Portraits; Haight, Mrs. Sigourney; Lane, When the Mind Hears, 181. 56. Beers, “Hartford in Literature,” 163. 57. Gallaudet, Life of Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, 49. 58. “Note to ‘La Sourde-Muette,’” emphasis added. 59. Fetterley, Provisions, 107. 60. Donawerth, “Hannah More, Lydia Sigourney, and the Creation of a Woman’s Tradition of Rhetoric,” 157. 61. Root, Father and Daughter, 65. 62. Walker, The Nightingale’s Burden, 74; Dobson, Dickinson and the Strategies of Reticence, 94; Baym, Feminism and American Literary History, -, 166. 63. Petrino, Emily Dickenson and Her Contemporaries, 70; Kelly, Lydia Sigourney: Selected, Poetry and Prose, 27. 64. Roller, “Early American Writers for Children,” 233; Walker, The Nightingale ’s Burden, 34. 65. Fetterley, Provisions, 107. 66. Quoted in Wait, “Lydia Huntley Sigourney and Deaf Education.” 67. Loew, Akamatsu, and Lanaville, “A Two-Handed Manual Alphabet in the United States.” Sigourney Main Pgs 1-162.indd 150 4/4/2013 12:35:34 PM [34.229.50.161] Project MUSE (2024-03-28 13:07 GMT) Notes 151 68. Sigourney, Letters to My Pupils, 230. 69. Humphrey, The Life and Labors of the Rev. T. H. Gallaudet, LL.D., 345. 70. Flournoy, Booth, et al., “Correspondence.” 71. Quoted in Imbarrato, Traveling Women, 122. 72. Charlotte, Personal Recollections, 75. 73. Wait, Personal correspondence to...