. Home school of American literature: . She has entertained, in-structed, and inspireda generation born the last slave wasmade free,and to whomtlie great questionwhich once convulsedour country is only aname. But her lii-stgreat work has neverbeen surpassed, and itwill never be the war whichaccomplislied the abo-lition of slavery, lived in Hart-ford, Connecticut, insummer, and spent thewinters in Florida,where she bought aluxurious home. Herpen was hardly everidle; and the popular-ity of her works seemedto steadily passed away onthe 1st of Jul


. Home school of American literature: . She has entertained, in-structed, and inspireda generation born the last slave wasmade free,and to whomtlie great questionwhich once convulsedour country is only aname. But her lii-stgreat work has neverbeen surpassed, and itwill never be the war whichaccomplislied the abo-lition of slavery, lived in Hart-ford, Connecticut, insummer, and spent thewinters in Florida,where she bought aluxurious home. Herpen was hardly everidle; and the popular-ity of her works seemedto steadily passed away onthe 1st of July, 1896,amid the surroundingsof her quiet, prettyr< .• ^ rp, 1 , ,. , home at Hartford, Connecticut, The whole reading world was moved at the news of her death andmany a chord vibrated at the remembrance of her powerful, and we may even savsiiccessful, advocacy of the cause of the slave. The good which Uncle TomsLabm achieved can never be estimated, and the noble efforts of its author havebeen interwoven m the work of the e.^ Little Eva. A SCEXE IN UNCLE TOMs CABIN. Oh. Uncle Tom ! what funuy thiugs you arc makino- there 9; 22 HARRIET BEECHER STOWE. THE LITTLE EVANGELIST. FROM • UNCLE TOMs CABIN.


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectenglishliterature