"Because books are not just books, they are past lives, core, core, reasons for men working and die, and the essence and essence of their lives." This is the greatest quote written by Amy Lowell I think. It is one. I chose to write Emily Earl just because her sentences seem interesting. I like the fact that she is a traitor. She is known for breaking old morality. She boasts her obesity, smokes the cigar, curses it in everyday conversation, and even has someone who loves homosexuals.
Born in Boston, Massachusetts on March 13, 1855, Percival Lowell was the first son of Augustus Lowell and Catherine Bigelow Lowell. As a member of the Brahmin Lowell family, his brothers and sisters include poet Amy Lowell, pedagographer and law scholar Abbott Lawrence Lowell, and early prenatal care activist Elizabeth Lowell Putnam. They are grandchildren of John Lowell and near their mothers are Abbott Lawrence's grandchildren. Percival graduated from Noble and Grinot school in 1872, graduated from Harvard University in 1876, and is known for his mathematics. At his university graduation ceremony, he announced a speech that was thought to have made great progress on the nebula hypothesis. He later acquired an honors degree from Amherst College and Clark University. After graduation he operated the cotton fabric factory for 6 years.
Born in Brooklyn, Massachusetts in 1874, Amy Lowell was the youngest daughter of the Boston Lowell family and included a later acclaimed poet Robert Lowell. From the 18th century to the middle of the 20th century, Lowells was one of the most famous "Wall of Brahmin" families, and produced a number of influential writers, judges, scientists, innovators, and social activists. Amy's father, Augustus Lowell, a classic industrialist of the 19th century, her brothers Perseval and Abbott Lawrence became famous astronomers and presidents of Harvard University. Amy Lowell imagined from the very young age to follow her elder, poet, Atlantic monthly magazine editor, and Ambassador James Russell Lowell.