|
Showing 1 - 20 of
20 matches in All Departments
"The desire to leave behind me some recollections of my life, has
been cherished by me, for many years past; but failing strength or
increasing infirmities have prevented its accomplishment. At my
suggestion and with what assistance I have been able to render, my
son, Ross Charles Edward Stowe, has compiled from my letters and
journals, this biography. It is this true story of my life, told
for the most part, in my own words and has therefore all the force
of an autobiography. It is perhaps much more accurate as to detail
and impression than is possible with any autobiography, written
later in life. If these pages, shall help those who read them to a
firmer trust in God and a deeper sense of His fatherly goodness
throughout the days of our earthly pilgrimage I can say with
Valiant for Truth in the Pilgrim's Progress! I am going to my
Father's and tho with great difficulty, I am got thither, get now,
I do not repent me of all the troubles I have been at, to arrive
where I am. My sword I give to him that shall succeed me in my
pilgrimage and my courage and skill to him that can get it." -
Harriet Beecher Stowe, Hartford, September 30, 1889
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1911 Edition.
1911. With portraits and other illustrations. The story of Stowe's
life written by her son and grandson. From the Preface: This life
of Harriet Beecher Stowe is not a biography in the ordinary sense.
It is rather the story of a real character; telling, not so much
what she did as what she was, and how she became what she was. Each
of the ten chapters is meant to be complete in itself, and to tell
how the child grew, how she became a teacher and writer, a wife and
mother; and, as the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, rose from
obscurity to fame. Then, we see her in the storm and stress of a
war that she had done much to bring on; in her Southern home; as a
delineator of New England life and character, and, finally as she
waits the muffled oar beside the silent sea and gently drifts away
with the ebbing tide. She herself is ever at the centre, and
everything else is subordinated to her and viewed through her
consciousness, and we look at the facts of her life as they were
mirrored there. What her critics in the past thought of her, or
what they think of her in the present, or may think of her in the
future, is not a matter that concerns us.
It is so far from being irrelevant for England to notice slavery
that I already see indications that this subject, on both sides, is
yet to be presented there, and the battle fought on English ground.
I see that my friend the South Carolinian gentleman has sent to
"Fraser's Magazine" an article, before published in this country,
on "Uncle Tom's Cabin." The article in the London "Times" was
eagerly reprinted in this country, was issued as a tract and sold
by the hundred, headed, "What they think of 'Uncle Tom' in
England." If I mistake not, a strong effort will be made to pervert
the public mind of England, and to do away the impression which the
book has left.
It is so far from being irrelevant for England to notice slavery
that I already see indications that this subject, on both sides, is
yet to be presented there, and the battle fought on English ground.
I see that my friend the South Carolinian gentleman has sent to
"Fraser's Magazine" an article, before published in this country,
on "Uncle Tom's Cabin." The article in the London "Times" was
eagerly reprinted in this country, was issued as a tract and sold
by the hundred, headed, "What they think of 'Uncle Tom' in
England." If I mistake not, a strong effort will be made to pervert
the public mind of England, and to do away the impression which the
book has left.
1911. With portraits and other illustrations. The story of Stowe's
life written by her son and grandson. From the Preface: This life
of Harriet Beecher Stowe is not a biography in the ordinary sense.
It is rather the story of a real character; telling, not so much
what she did as what she was, and how she became what she was. Each
of the ten chapters is meant to be complete in itself, and to tell
how the child grew, how she became a teacher and writer, a wife and
mother; and, as the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, rose from
obscurity to fame. Then, we see her in the storm and stress of a
war that she had done much to bring on; in her Southern home; as a
delineator of New England life and character, and, finally as she
waits the muffled oar beside the silent sea and gently drifts away
with the ebbing tide. She herself is ever at the centre, and
everything else is subordinated to her and viewed through her
consciousness, and we look at the facts of her life as they were
mirrored there. What her critics in the past thought of her, or
what they think of her in the present, or may think of her in the
future, is not a matter that concerns us.
1911. With portraits and other illustrations. The story of Stowe's
life written by her son and grandson. From the Preface: This life
of Harriet Beecher Stowe is not a biography in the ordinary sense.
It is rather the story of a real character; telling, not so much
what she did as what she was, and how she became what she was. Each
of the ten chapters is meant to be complete in itself, and to tell
how the child grew, how she became a teacher and writer, a wife and
mother; and, as the author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, rose from
obscurity to fame. Then, we see her in the storm and stress of a
war that she had done much to bring on; in her Southern home; as a
delineator of New England life and character, and, finally as she
waits the muffled oar beside the silent sea and gently drifts away
with the ebbing tide. She herself is ever at the centre, and
everything else is subordinated to her and viewed through her
consciousness, and we look at the facts of her life as they were
mirrored there. What her critics in the past thought of her, or
what they think of her in the present, or may think of her in the
future, is not a matter that concerns us.
CONTENTS Childhood, 1811-1824 School Days in Hartford, 1824-1832
Cincinnati, 1832-1836 Early Married Life, 1836-1840 Poverty and
Sickness, 1840-1850 Removal to Brunswick, 1850-1852 Uncle Tom's
Cabin, 1852 First Trip to Europe, 1853 Sunny Memories, 1853 From
over the Sea, 1853 Home Again, 1853-1856 Dred, 1856 Old Scenes
Revisited, 1856 The Minister's Wooing, 1857-1859 The Third Trip to
Europe, 1859 The Civil War, 1860-1865 Florida, 1865-1869 Oldtown
Folks, 1869 The Byron Controversy, 1869-1870 George Eliot Closing
Scenes, 1870-1889
It is so far from being irrelevant for England to notice slavery
that I already see indications that this subject, on both sides, is
yet to be presented there, and the battle fought on English ground.
I see that my friend the South Carolinian gentleman has sent to
"Fraser's Magazine" an article, before published in this country,
on "Uncle Tom's Cabin." The article in the London "Times" was
eagerly reprinted in this country, was issued as a tract and sold
by the hundred, headed, "What they think of 'Uncle Tom' in
England." If I mistake not, a strong effort will be made to pervert
the public mind of England, and to do away the impression which the
book has left.
|
You may like...
Hoe Ek Dit Onthou
Francois Van Coke, Annie Klopper
Paperback
R300
R219
Discovery Miles 2 190
|