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         Follen Eliza Lee:     more books (100)
  1. The old garret by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, Hammatt Billings, 2010-09-08
  2. New Nursery Songs for All Good Children by Eliza Lee Follen, 2010-03-31
  3. The Talkative Wig by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 2010-07-24
  4. Married Life by Eliza Lee Follen, 2001-04-17
  5. Selections from the Writings of Fenelon: With a Memoir of His Life by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 2010-02-23
  6. The Lark and the Linnet: Hymns, Songs, and Fables by Eliza Lee Follen, 2010-02-22
  7. Travellers' Stories by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 2010-07-24
  8. Sketches of Married Life by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 2010-10-14
  9. The Old Garret, Part 2 (1855) by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 2010-05-22
  10. The Works of Charles Follen: The Life of Charles Follen, Signed E. L. F. [I.E. Eliza Lee Follen by Anonymous, 2010-03-07
  11. True Stories About Dogs and Cats by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 2010-07-24
  12. Hymns, Songs, And Fables, For Young People - Eliza Lee Follen by Eliza Lee Follen, 2010-03-04
  13. Hymns, Songs and Fables for Young People by Eliza Lee Follen, 2010-09-10
  14. The Works Of Charles Follen, With A Memoir Of His Life. In Five Volumes - Vol I by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen, 2008-07-12

41. Charles Follen
Parker's words) a foil of precise thinking to the Transcendentalists' own freethinking. Follen's social place was assured by his marriage to Eliza Lee Cabot
http://www.harvard-magazine.com/on-line/0902141.html
Skip to main text. September-October Contents Class notes Obituaries Crimson Classifieds ... Harvard Magazine PDF
Click the image above to download a PDF of this page. PDFs are for personal use only. More information. Editor's E-mail Be the first to know when a new issue is on-line. Sign up for our bimonthly e-mail (or unsubscribe Vita Charles Follen Brief life of a vigorous reformer: 1796-1840 Thomas S. Hansen Student revolutionary, Follen's radicalism culminated in his support of fellow student Carl Ludwig Sand, who in 1819 murdered the Russophile diplomat and dramatist August von Kotzebue, who had publicly ridiculed the students' ideas. Follen destroyed letters that linked him to Sand, but his notorious commitment to violence in the name of freedom caused the historian Heinrich von Treitschke to label him "the German Robespierre." He escaped to Switzerland, but, fearing extradition, fled to New York in 1824. The Marquis de Lafayette aided him with introductions to prominent Americans. The 1841 portrait engraving of Follen appeared as the frontispiece of Eliza Follen's edition of her husband's works.

42. 404 Not Found
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43. 404 Not Found
Joseph Ernest Morris, William Moritz Morley, Christopher Mozart, Wolfgang AmadeusMörike Möser Mrs. Follen Also Known As Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot Munro, HH
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44. U.S. Women's History
writings (texts online). Follen, Eliza Lee , Eliza Lee Her writings(texts online) Forten, Shrah Louisa, Shrah Louisa. Her writings
http://web.uccs.edu/~history/index/women.html
General Sites
Archives, Collections and Bibliographies online.
Colonial/Early Republican Women's history
Historic Personalities
...
Women's Sexuality

The Nineteenth Century
Public Sphere
Abolitionists

Civil War

Social Reformers

Early Suffrage
...
Women in Professions
(Medicine/Science etc..) Private Sphere: The Home Motherhood Wifely Duties Fashion ... Twentieth Century Women's History: Also see the following: African-American History for African American Women's History resources The History of the American West for women in the West.
American Women's History Research on the Web Image from the National Women's History Project U.S. History Pages European, Asian/African and Other History Pages ... Click here for H-Net Reviews Online reviews of books and other multi-media sources. For American Women's History see especially H-Women H-Fraun-L H-Minerva H-Sawh ... European, Asian/African Women WOMEN WomenWOMENWomenWOMENWomenWOMENWomenWOMENWomenWOMENWomen General Sites National Women's History Project Gateway to the Internet for U.S. Women's History.

45. Professor Brought Christmas Tree To New England
From the Harvard Gazette, an article on Unitarian minister and abolitionist Charles Follen, and the Category Society Religion and Spirituality History...... Follen found the freedom of American society immensely refreshing and flourishedin his adopted country. In 1828 he married Eliza Lee Cabot, one of the
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/1996/12.12/ProfessorBrough.html
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December 12, 1996
SEARCH THE GAZETTE
HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Professor Brought Christmas Tree to New England
200th Anniversary of Charles Follen's birth marked this year
By Ken Gewertz Gazette Staff This December, as tree lot attendants load the fragrant, streamlined shapes of netted firs and spruces onto auto roof-racks and count out change with fingers numbed by cold, it would be well to remember that 1996 is the 200th birthday of the man who brought the tradition of the decorated Christmas tree to New England. That man was Charles Follen (1796-1840), and besides introducing the Christmas tree at a party at his Cambridge home in 1832, he lived an eventful life filled with varied accomplishments (including a 10-year stint as a Harvard professor) and marked by a passionate devotion to the cause of liberty. "Follen has left us a legacy of social action based on the principle of freedom. It's a principle that we continue to test ourselves against," said Lucinda Duncan, minister of the Follen Community Church of East Lexington, the church that Follen founded in 1839. Born in Darmstadt, Germany, Follen came of age under the influence of the Napoleonic Wars and their repressive aftermath. He and his generation saw French domination come to an end, only to be replaced by a resumption of aristocratic rule instituted by the Congress of Vienna.

46. PotW.org - Past Poems By Poet
Fogelberg, Dan Same Old Lang Syne Follen, Eliza Lee - On the Death of a BeautifulGirl Forché, Carolyn - The Visitor Frost, Robert - The Road Not Taken The
http://www.potw.org/bypoet.html
Poem of the Week
PotW.org
Founded August 1996 Past Poems by Poet This Week's Poem Past Poems...
...by Poet

...by Title and First Line

...by Occasion
Contact about...
...Free Subscription

...Submitting a Poem

...other Questions
The Fine Print...
...Page Mission

Links to... ...other Poetry Sites only a reference is provided. While all of the past selections are listed, several have yet to be converted to the new format and/or linked. The "renovation" is 71.2% complete. Adams, Franklin P. - A Ballad of Baseball Burdens Us Potes Akiko, Yosano - Following his bath (trans. by S. Hamill) Allingham, William - The Fairies American Folk Song - The Great Titanic Ammons, A.R. - Layabout Anacreon - The Thracian Filly (trans. by W. Headlam) Anacreontea - The Wounded Cupid (trans. by R. Herrick) Angelou, Maya - Caged Bird Anonymous - I Saw a Peacock with a Fiery Tail Appleman, Philip - O Karma, Dharma, pudding and pie Arnold, Matthew - Dover Beach Atwood, Margaret - Habitation Auden, W.H. - Preface ( from The Sea and the Mirror) That night when joy began ( from Five Songs) The Unknown Citizen Baker, Karle Wilson - Let Me Grow Lovely

47. Harvard University Press/Charles Follen's Search For Nationality And Freedom
His marriage to Eliza Lee Cabot allowed him to move in elite Boston social circles.After his ordination as a Unitarian minister in 1836, Follen combined his
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/SPECHA.html
Edmund Spevack was a Research Fellow at the German Historical Institute , Washington, D.C.
Charles Follen's Search for Nationality and Freedom
Germany and America, 1796-1840
Edmund Spevack
This unique account of the life of German nationalist and revolutionary Charles Follen opens a window on several worlds during the first half of the nineteenth century. Seldom does one biography embrace so many important historical issues and events. During the last two years of his life, Follen began to doubt his own power to bring about political change and suffered a crisis in self-confidence before his accidental death at the age of forty-three.
July 1997
Harvard Historical Studies
Cloth edition:
ISBN 0-674-11011-0
History: General

48. Research Project For U. S. Literature I
fiction. Finley, Martha (18281909), fiction. Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot(1787-1860), fiction. Foster, Hannah Webster (1758-1840), fiction.
http://www.nwc.cc.wy.us/id/koellind/2310/project.htm

Practice stone
. The Charlestown Stonecutter. ca. 1680.
Research Project
ENGL 2310 American Literature I
Northwest College, Fall 1999
Overview Assignment Research Plan Resources ... Some Authors
" . . . America is now wholly given over to a dd mob of scribbling women, and I should have no chance of success while the public taste is occupied with their trashand should be ashamed of myself if I did succeed." Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1855
In the 17th c., the first published American poet was Anne Bradstreet, a Puritan colonial woman. At the time of the Revolutionary War of the 18th c., the American bestsellers were Charlotte Temple (by Susanna Rowson) and The Coquette (by Hannah Foster). During the mid-19th c., authors such as Susan Warner ( The Wide, Wide World) and Harriet Beecher Stowe ( Uncle Tom's Cabin) greatly outsold the likes of Herman Melville and Hawthorne (which helps explain Hawthorne's misogynistic outburst). If female early American authors were once so popular and so economically successful, where are they today? A look at an anthology (such as the one we're using in this course) shows a sprinkling of token women authors in a book otherwise dominated by male authorsthe ones scholars traditionally have identified as the great American authors: Franklin, Cooper, Irving, Emerson, Thoreau, Poe, Hawthorne, Melville. According to some scholars, the omission of women authors in the American canon traces its origins to the 1920s and 1930s (ironically, after passage of the Nineteenth Amendment), when women's literature endured systematic devaluation because of its feminine values. After the Great Depression and the Great War, academia saw only weakness and sentimentality in women's literature, when it wanted the masculine themes of vigor and toughness.

49. From The Files Of The CHC
Born in Darmstadt, Germany, Follen had emigrated to the United States in the mid Hemarried Eliza Lee Cabot in 1828 and became a naturalized citizen in 1830.
http://www.ci.cambridge.ma.us/~Historic/winter.html
Cambridge Winter Trivia Famous Blizzards on Record A Winter's Day in Massachusetts, 1621
Dr. Follen's decorated Christmas tree, 1832
new book: ... A History of the Cambridge Skating Club, 1897-2001 Famous Blizzards on Record Several severe snow storms have been mentioned in Cambridge history records. The "New York Blizzard" of 1866 brought at least two feet of snow to most of the northeastern states. All communications between Boston and New York were halted for several days due to the storm. (note 1) Heavy snowfall was also recorded in 1898 and 1956. The February 6-7, 1978 storm, the "Blizzard of '78", dropped over two feet of heavy snow on Boston and Cambridge and is still known as the worst snowstorm of the 20th century. In recent years, we can recall the April Fool's snowstorm of 1997, which pummelled Cambridge with 24 inches of wet spring snow, damaging close to 4,000 trees in the city. Endnotes
1. Eliot, Charles William. "Personal Recollections of Dr. Morrill Wyman, Professor Dunbar, Professor Sophocles and Professor Shaler," as published in the Proceedings of the Cambridge Historical Society , v. 12, p. 26.

50. Loring, Ellis Gray, 1802-1858. Family Papers, 1809-1942 (A-115): A Finding Aid
Fields, Annie Adams, 18341815; xxi. Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot, 1787-1860; xxii. 1letter to LL nd. 35. Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot, 1 letter to LL 1858. 36.
http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/sch00150.html
A-115
Loring, Ellis Gray, 1802-1858. Family Papers, 1809-1942 (A-115): A Finding Aid
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University
REQUEST AS:
Call No.: A-115
Repository: Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute
Creator: ELLIS GRAY LORING FAMILY
Title: Papers, 1828-1919
Quantity: 3 file boxes.
Abstract: Correspondence of Ellis Gray Loring, lawyer and abolitionist, from Boston, Massachusetts.
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information: Accession numbers: 165, 420, 85-M152
Received July 1960 from Goodspeed's Acc. no. 165. March 1961 from Paul Richards Acc. no. 420
BIOGRAPHY
(According to the Loring Genealogy, Pope and Loring; Cambridge, 1917) Ellis Gray Loring was the son of James Tyng Loring and Relief Faxon. In one place his birth is given as April 14, 1802 and in another place as April 14, 1803. His father was a member of the Boston Light Infantry. He was a druggist by trade. The following quotation is from the Loring Genealogy: "Ellis Gray Loring, born in Boston, April 14, 1803; married October 29, 1827, Louisa Gilman, daughter of Frederick Gilman and Abigail Gilman, born at Gloucester, January 1, 1797, died May 25, 1868.

51. Index
Translate this page Fleming, Walter Lynwood, 1874-1932 Gutenberg Flipper, Henry Ossian, 1856-1940 GutenbergFloyd, Juanita Helm, 1880- Gutenberg Follen, Eliza Lee Gutenberg Follen
http://www.elbooks.sk/angautF.html
KEK Klub Elektronických Kníh VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNIHY LINKY DOWNLOAD ... INDEX
NOVINKY
VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNÍH - ANGLICKÉ TITULY - AUTOR - pís. F SLOVENSKÉ ÈESKÉ ANGLICKÉ ANGLICKÉ POD¼A AUTORA ... Z Fa-hsien, ca. 337-ca. 422 Gutenberg
Fabre, Jean-Henri, 1823-1915 Gutenberg
Fairless, Michael, 1869-1901 AKA: Barber, Margaret Fairless, 1869-1901 Gutenberg
Farjeon, Eleanor, 1881-1965 Gutenberg
Farnol, Jeffery, 1878-1952 Gutenberg
Farrand, Max, 1869-1945 Gutenberg
Farrar, John Gutenberg
Father Ryan AKA: Ryan, Abram Joseph, 1839-1886 Gutenberg
Fee, Greg Gutenberg Ferber, Edna, 1887-1968 Gutenberg Ferguson, William Blair Morton, 1882- Gutenberg Ferri, Enrico, 1856-1929 Gutenberg Feuillet, Octave, 1821-1890 Gutenberg Field, Edward Salisbury, 1878-1936 Gutenberg Field, Ellen Robena Gutenberg Field, Eugene, 1850-1895 Gutenberg Fielding, Henry, 1707-1754 Gutenberg Fielding, Sarah, 1710-1768 Gutenberg Filson, John, ca. 1747-1788 Gutenberg Fish, Carl Russell, 1876-1932 Gutenberg Fisher, Joseph, the younger, of Youghal Gutenberg Fisher, Sydney George, 1856-1927 Gutenberg Fiske, John, 1842-1901 Gutenberg Fitzgerald, F. Scott (Francis Scott), 1896-1940

52. Index
Translate this page Mowry, Sylvester, 1830-1871 Gutenberg Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 1756-1791 GutenbergMrs. Follen AKA Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot, 1787-1860 Gutenberg Muhlbach, L
http://www.elbooks.sk/angautM.html
KEK Klub Elektronických Kníh VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNIHY LINKY DOWNLOAD ... INDEX
NOVINKY
VYH¼ADÁVAÈ E-KNÍH - ANGLICKÉ TITULY - AUTOR - pís. M SLOVENSKÉ ÈESKÉ ANGLICKÉ ANGLICKÉ POD¼A AUTORA ... Z Maag, Carl Gutenberg
Mabie, Hamilton Wright, 1846-1916 Gutenberg
MacCaffrey, James, 1875-1935 Gutenberg
MacClintock, William Darnall, 1858-1936 Gutenberg
MacClure, Victor, 1887- Gutenberg
MacDonald, George, 1824-1905 Gutenberg
MacGrath, Harold, 1871-1932 Gutenberg
MacKay, Charles, 1814-1889 Gutenberg
Macaulay, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Baron, 1800-1859 Gutenberg Machen, Arthur, 1863-1947 Gutenberg Machiavelli, Niccol?, 1469-1527 Gutenberg Mackay, Isabel Ecclestone, 1875-1928 Gutenberg Mackenzie, Alexander, 1833-1898 Gutenberg Maclaren, Ian [pseud.] AKA: Watson, John, 1850-1907 Gutenberg Macy, Jesse, 1842-1919 Gutenberg Maeterlinck, Maurice, 1862-1949 Gutenberg Malory, Thomas, d. 1471 Gutenberg Malot, Hector, 1830-1907 Gutenberg Malthus, T. R. (Thomas Robert), 1766-1834 Gutenberg Mandeville, John, Sir Gutenberg Manners, J. Hartley Gutenberg Mansfield, Katherine, 1888-1923 Gutenberg Marbot, Jean-Baptiste-Antoine-Marcelin, Baron de, 1782-1854

53. MVUF - R.W. Emerson - What The Heart Knows - Richard Venus
Eliza Lee Cabot Follen Written My name is Eliza Lee Cabot Follen and Ithank you most kindly for inviting me to your Fellowship today. I
http://www.mvuf.org/minister/emerson.html
December 15, 2002
R.W. Emerson—What the Heart Knows
(Part III—John, Henry and Ralph)
Richard Venus
It is Ralph Waldo Emerson, perhaps more than any other Unitarian or Universalist, who offers me a framework around which to build a theology for today. “The religions we call false were once true,” Emerson wrote, and to that I would add that he moved us to a new understanding of the truth. The task before us is how do we build on what he gave us to create a theology or a framework for living in our time.
We are blessed by the legacy we have received from a man influenced by so many others. He listened to Coleridge soliloquize, earned the friendship of Thomas Carlyle, entertained John Brown, talked on the same platform with Susan B. Anthony, and met everyone from Lincoln and Ruskin to Brigham Young, and, late in life, John Muir. He developed a friendship with Walt Whitman, and there was a mutual feeling of admiration between them. “I never get tired of talking of him,” Whitman said one day. “I think everybody was fascinated by his personality. His usual manner carried within something penetrating and sweet beyond mere description. There is in some men an indefinable something which flows out and over you like a flood of light—as if they possessed it illimitably—their whole being suffused with it. Being—in fact that is precisely the word. Emerson’s whole attitude shed forth such an impression. Never a face more gifted with power to express, fascinate, maintain.” Emerson ate pie for breakfast. He preferred translations to texts in the original, although he was well versed in several languages, including Greek and German. He added that one should not bother reading other than authors in the original, and he managed to cultivate more than 100 different kinds of trees in and about the community of Concord, where he lived his entire life following his second marriage.

54. Completed Gold E-Texts
the Great and His Court , L. Muhlbach Uploaded Tuesday, January 1st, 2002 zip version,text version, 88) Who Spoke Next , Eliza Lee Follen Uploaded Tuesday
http://texts01.archive.org/dp/list_etexts.php?x=g&sort=4

55. Completed Gold E-Texts
Washington Gladden Uploaded Wednesday, February 12th, 2003 zip version, text version,html version 24) Who Spoke Next , Eliza Lee Follen Uploaded Tuesday
http://texts01.archive.org/dp/list_etexts.php?x=g&sort=1

56. Notable Women With Liberal Religious Connections (Unitarian Universalist Ethical
17791835 Universalist (jailed after preaching Universalism) Lucy Barnes 1780-1809Universalist (Universalist writer, poet) Eliza Lee Cabot Follen 1787-1860
http://www.geocities.com/Wellesley/Garden/1101/uuwomenl.html
home page links for more information research help credits
Some Women with
Unitarian and Universalist
Connections
Listed in order of their birth years. American unless otherwise indicated.
Anne Bradstreet 1612-1672 Nonconformist
poet , writer; descendents include Unitarians William Ellery Channing Wendell Phillips Oliver Wendell Holmes
Anna Laetitia Aiken Barbauld 1743-1825 Unitarian (British)
activist poet more
Judith Sargent Murray 1751-1820 Universalist
(poet and author ; wrote essay on feminism: 1790 "On the Equality of the Sexes" (Rossi, 1973))
Mary Wollstonecraft 1759-1797 Unitarian; married Unitarian minister
(author, wrote " Vindication of the Rights of Woman " 1792, and Maria or the Wrongs of Woman ; daughter was Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley author
Mary Moody Emerson 1774-1863 Unitarian
(writer; many of her unpublished writings foreshadow the ideas of her nephew, Ralph Waldo Emerson
Maria Cook 1779-1835 Universalist
(jailed after preaching Universalism)
Lucy Barnes 1780-1809 Universalist
(Universalist writer, poet)

57. Foxborough Universalist Church - Newsletter Highlights - Www.geocities.com/foxbo
In 1828 he married Eliza Lee Cabot of Boston and soon began studying for the ministrywhile continuing to work at Harvard. Charles Follen wanted to recreate
http://www.geocities.com/foxboroughuu/Newsletters/News02Dec.html
Foxborough Universalist Church
6 Bird Street
Foxborough, MA 02035
Reverend Fayre C. Stephenson, Minister On Sundays
Worship 10:00 AM
Sunday School 10:00 AM
Friendship Hour 11:00 AM Home Worship Religious Education Calendar ... View Our Guest Book December 2002 Newsletter Highlights
What’s Happening in Religious Education?
This year the children in our Religious Education RE Program have undertaken a year long study of the seven Unitarian Universalist Principles. Using Timeless Themes and parts of three other UU Religious Education curricula, RE Chairperson Janice has tailored each Sunday’s lessons for three classes appropriate for three age groups. To better understand the meaning of each principle, the principle has been illustrated with stories from religious traditions. The children then work on discussion questions and/or craft projects that relate to the story. The Story of Joshua, The Story of Joseph and his Multicolored Robe, and “The Teachings of Jesus” were used for the first three principles. Janice has outdone herself in fashioning this wonderful curriculum to the ages and interests of the children in our religious education program. Many thanks to her and all the parents who have signed up and stepped up to assist downstairs in religious education!

58. Shaw Correspondence Finding Aid
Gruender, Charles Correspondence (3 items) 22. Follen, Eliza Lee (1 item) 23.From Ted Geisel (Dr. Seuss) To John Shaw (1 item) CL=PS3513E2S541956 24.
http://www.fsu.edu/~speccoll/shawcorr.htm
John Shaw Collection Correspondence The Shaw Collection is in the process of being cataloged, and many of the works of the persons listed below are at the present moment uncataloged. As works are cataloged, this finding aid will be updated to provide the user with the call number of materials representative of a certain author. Beside each author's entry below, a call number will appear preceded by "CL" To find a particular name quickly, use the Find Shaw Box 1659
1. Sendak, Maurice (1 item) 2. Horton, Ronald (2 items) 3. Robert Nichols (1 item) 4. To Mr. William Cole: From Marianne Moore August 24, 1959 (1 item) 5. Howittt, Mary (3 items) 6. Postal Card from Lois Lenski to Mr. Shaw (4 items) 7. McGinley, Phyllis (1 item) 8. Letters: Phyllis McGinley, John Mackay Shaw: 1961 (3 items) 9. Krishnamurti, Gutala (9 items) 10. Mildred Plew Merryman (Meigs): 1962 (1 item) 11. Maxwell, Margaret Nadine Finlayson 1927-? (1 item) 12. Michel, Donald E. (14 items) 13. Scott, Harold M. 1974 (3 items) 14. Shaw, Cathmar Moonsonnet-1965 pg 27 (1 item) 15. From Alfred Tresidder Sheppard To: J.C. Mabel Edgarley Dec. 11,1934 (1 item)

59. Feline Folklore ~ Pawprints And Purrs
Folklore, superstitions, and nursery rhymes about the cat.Category Society Folklore Tales Animals and Plants Cats...... But I smell a rat close by, Hush, hush! Meeow, mee-ow. We smell a rat closeby, Mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow. by Eliza Lee Follen Feline Folklore continued.
http://www.sniksnak.com/folklore.html

HOME
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Home of the Bachman Kiddens
Feline Folklore
A Collection of Folklore, Superstitions, and Nursery Rhymes
"It is in their eyes that their magic resides." ~ Arthur Symons
There are many proverbs and folk sayings which refer to cats. Many have superstition entwined within the words and some are just sweet little ditties remembered from childhood. I've listed a number of folk sayings/superstitions/proverbs and nursery rhymes here.
Feline Folk Sayings, Superstitions, and Proverbs:
When the cat's away, the mice will play.Folk Saying
Rub a cat's paws with butter and it will never leave home.Folk Saying-Remedy
Whenever the cat of the house is black, the lasses of lovers will have no lack.Folk Saying Nobody can truly own a cat.Old British Saying A cat's a cat and that's that.Folk Saying The cat is mighty dignified until the dog comes by.Southern Folk Saying It is bad luck to see a white cat at night.American Superstition Dreaming of a white cat means good luck.American Superstition A cat sleeping with all four paws tucked under means cold weather ahead.English Superstition

60. Ongoing Tales Poem Three Little Kittens
This children's poem was written by Eliza Lee Follen Electronic enhancement © Copyrightedby Antelope Publishing ~ EPublishers of Browser Readable E-Books on
http://www.ongoing-tales.com/SERIALS/oldtime/POETRY/threekittens.html
    Enhancing the enjoyment of children's poetry with electronic media!
    ANTELOPE-EBOOKS.COM
    THREE LITTLE KITTENS
    This children's poem was written by Eliza Lee Follen
    E-Publishers of Browser Readable E-Books on CD-ROM Since 1995
    Three little kittens lost their mittens;
    And they began to cry,
    O mother dear,
    We very much fear
    That we have lost our mittens. Lost your mittens!
    You naughty kittens!
    Then you shall have no pie.
    Mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow.
    No, you shall have no pie. Mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow. The three little kittens found their mittens, And they began to cry, O mother dear, See here, see here; See, we have found our mittens. Put on your mittens, You silly kittens, And you may have some pie. Purr-r, purr-r, purr-r, O let us have the pie. Purr-r, purr-r, purr-r. The three little kittens put on their mittens, And soon ate up the pie; O mother dear, We greatly fear That we have soiled our mittens. Soiled your mittens! You naughty kittens! Then they began sigh, Mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow, Then they began to sigh. Mee-ow, mee-ow, mee-ow.

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