Crusader in Crinoline: The Life of Harriet Beecher StoweAn absorbingly interesting portrait of a personality and an age. |
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Page 287
... letter to Dr. Parker . He must not make it too abject . Harriet touched leisurely at Hartford and New Haven and found Dr. Parker's and her husband's letters waiting for her when she reached Brooklyn . She was not perturbed . In fact ...
... letter to Dr. Parker . He must not make it too abject . Harriet touched leisurely at Hartford and New Haven and found Dr. Parker's and her husband's letters waiting for her when she reached Brooklyn . She was not perturbed . In fact ...
Page 320
... letter to her husband . She struck off a copy and sent it to Henry Ward Beecher , who found it in Brooklyn upon his return from Indiana , and who , when reading it , could not tell " whether amazement or indignation was the strongest ...
... letter to her husband . She struck off a copy and sent it to Henry Ward Beecher , who found it in Brooklyn upon his return from Indiana , and who , when reading it , could not tell " whether amazement or indignation was the strongest ...
Page 526
... letter to George Eliot written some years later she told how the place grew . The other letter brings up a darker theme . Harriet wrote it soon after her return to Hartford in the late spring or early summer of 1868. As if afraid to ...
... letter to George Eliot written some years later she told how the place grew . The other letter brings up a darker theme . Harriet wrote it soon after her return to Hartford in the late spring or early summer of 1868. As if afraid to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abolitionists American Andover anti-slavery Atlantic Aunt Esther began Boston Bowdoin British Brooklyn brother brought Brunswick called Calvin Stowe Catharine Beecher Charles Charles Beecher Charley Christian Union church Cincinnati daughter dear Dred editor Edward Eliza England eyes father feel Fred gave George girls hand Harriet Beecher Stowe Harriet wrote Hartford heart Henry Ward Beecher Henry's Howard husband Joel Parker John knew Lady Byron Lane Seminary later letter Litchfield literary lived London Lord Lyman Beecher Mandarin Mary Perkins mind Minister's Wooing Miss morning mother never North novel Ohio once paper Parker Professor Stowe published Roxana seemed serial sister slave slavery South story Stowe's Street summer Theodore Tilton thing thought Tilton told took Uncle Tom's Cabin Walnut Hills wanted week wife winter woman words writing York young