Lives of Girls Who Became Famous eBook

Sarah Knowles Bolton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 307 pages of information about Lives of Girls Who Became Famous.

Lives of Girls Who Became Famous eBook

Sarah Knowles Bolton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 307 pages of information about Lives of Girls Who Became Famous.
On the other links are now engraved the dates of Emancipation in the District of Columbia; President Lincoln’s proclamation abolishing slavery in the States in rebellion, Jan. 1, 1863; and finally, on the clasp, the date of the Constitutional amendment, abolishing slavery forever in the United States.  Only a decade after Uncle Tom’s Cabin was written, and nearly all this accomplished!  Who could have believed it possible?

On Mrs. Stowe’s return from Europe, she wrote Sunny Memories of Foreign Lands, which had a large sale.  Her husband was now appointed to the professorship of sacred literature in the Theological Seminary at Andover, Mass., and here they made their home.  The students found in her a warm-hearted friend, and an inspiration to intellectual work.  Other books followed from her pen:  Dred, a powerful anti-slavery story; The Minister’s Wooing, with lovely Mary Scudder as its heroine; Agnes of Sorrento, an Italian story; the Pearl of Orr’s Island, a tale of the New England coast; Old Town Folks; House and Home Papers; My Wife and I; Pink and White Tyranny; and some others, all of which have been widely read.

The sale of Uncle Tom’s Cabin has not ceased.  It is estimated that over one and a half million copies have been sold in Great Britain and her colonies, and probably an equal or greater number in this country.  There have been twelve French editions, eleven German, and six Spanish.  It has been published in nineteen different languages,—­Russian, Hungarian, Armenian, Modern Greek, Finnish, Welsh, Polish, and others.  In Bengal the book is very popular.  A lady of high rank in the court of Siam, liberated her slaves, one hundred and thirty in number, after reading this book, and said, “I am wishful to be good like Harriet Beecher Stowe, and never again to buy human bodies, but only to let them go free once more.”  In France the sale of the Bible was increased because the people wished to read the book Uncle Tom loved so much.

Uncle Tom’s Cabin, like Les Miserables, and a few other novels, will live, because written with a purpose.  No work of fiction is permanent without some great underlying principle or object.

Soon after the Civil War, Mrs. Stowe bought a home among the orange groves of Florida, and thither she goes each winter, with her family.  She has done much there for the colored people whom she helped to make free.  With the proceeds of some public readings at the North she built a church, in which her husband preached as long as his health permitted.  Her home at Mandarin, with its great moss-covered oaks and profusion of flowers, is a restful and happy place after these most fruitful years.

Her summer residence in Hartford, Conn., beautiful without, and artistic within, has been visited by thousands, who honor the noble woman not less than the gifted author.

Many of the Beecher family have died; Lyman Beecher at eighty-three, and Catharine at seventy-eight.  Some of Mrs. Stowe’s own children are waiting for her in the other country.  She says, “I am more interested in the other side of Jordan than this, though this still has its pleasures.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Lives of Girls Who Became Famous from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.