The Falls of Bash-Pish, or The Eagle's Nest
Tourism, nature, the Berkshires, Bash-Pish
Sedgwick shares the notes of her excursion with a party of friends to see the falls at Bash-pish, and reflects on the benefits of traveling to experience the beauty of nature.
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria.
Southern Literary Messenger [edited by T. H. White], Jan. 1839, pp. 34-39.
1839
L. Damon-Bach, D. Gussman
"The Falls of Bash-Pish: Or, the Eagle's Nest," By Miss C. M. Sedgwick, New-Yorker, 26 January 1839, pp. 290-93.
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The White Hills in October
Star-crossed lovers, filial piety, the White Mountains of New Hampshire, off-season tourism.
The narrator presents the journal of a trip to the White Mountains by Mary Langdon, a young American woman, who has just ended a relationship with her German lover due to her father's disapproval. A mysterious stranger appears at a significant moment and changes the young woman's fortunes.
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria. [published anonymously]
Harper's New Monthly Magazine [edited by Alfred A. Guernsey] (December 1856): 44-56.
1856
Margaret Erickson, D. Gussman
The Continental Monthly [by C. M. Sedgwick] (October 1862): 423-44.
English
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