He had heard of Margaret in her school-girl days as
a prodigy of talent and attainment. During the period
of his own studies in Cambridge he first made her
acquaintance. He was struck, but not attracted, by
her "saucy sprightliness." Her intensity of temperament, unmeasured satire, and commanding air were
indeed somewhat repellent to him, and almost led him
to conjecture that she had chosen for her part in life
the role of a Yankee Corinne. Her friendships, too,
seemed to him extravagant. He dreaded the encounter
of a personality so imperious and uncompromising in
its demands, and was content to observe her at a safe
and respectful distance. Soon, however, through the
"shining fog" of brilliant wit and sentiment the real
nobility of her nature made itself seen and felt. He
found her sagacious in her judgments. Her conversation showed breadth of culture and depth of thought.
Above all, he was made to feel her great sincerity of
purpose. "This it was," says he "that made her
criticism so trenchant, her contempt of pretence so quick
and stern." The loftiness of her ideal explained the
severity of her judgments, and the heroic mould and
impulse of her character ad much to do with her
stately deportment. Thus the salient points which, at
a distance, had seemed to him detects, were found, on
a nearer view, to be the indications of qualities most
rare and admirable.
James Freeman Clarke, an intimate of both parties, made them better known to each other by his cordial interpretation of each to each. But it was in the year 1839, in the days of Margaret's residence at Jamaica Plain, that the friendship between these two eminent persons, “long before rooted, grew up, and leafed and blossomed." Mr. Channing traces the