Don’t bother sitting inside the Saint’s nose
And other travel commentaries by the Abbé Baruffi.
Continue reading “Don’t bother sitting inside the Saint’s nose”And other travel commentaries by the Abbé Baruffi.
Continue reading “Don’t bother sitting inside the Saint’s nose”But be aware that sometimes “Nothing can be farther from correct than Murray’s account of it.”
Continue reading ““See Murray’s guide-book!!””Caroline Crane Marsh (CCM) is generally fairly equanimous in her diaries, so I was surprised to see her use the word witch as an epithet for 5 women over the course of the diaries.
Continue reading “CCM’s witches”Does that title strike you as odd? It does me, but one of the many fun things in reading Caroline Crane Marsh’s diaries is coming across older, now obsolete (or virtually) aspects of English, as is this use of adventure.
Continue reading “Adventuring myself into the diaries”Caroline Crane Marsh didn’t just write about serious things in her diaries, and when she writes about her personal life, we get a view of her personality, which is often gently self-deprecating.
Continue reading ““Alas for mortal ambitions!””In thinking about the Alphabetical Diaries, I ended up exploring two other notable diaries. One is by Julia Wilbur, and is featured on my simulacrum of the Alphabetical Diaries. The other diary is by Caroline Crane Marsh (CCM), the American ambassadress (wife of the American ambassador) in Italy, for the period 1861-1865. I was so taken with CCM’s diaries that I decided to make an HTML version of the diaries that makes them a bit easier to read. I’ve also added a few different ways to browse and search the diaries, making use of the additional markup structure that I added to the diaries.
Continue reading “Caroline Crane Marsh diaries available”