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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe 5 5 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Walcott Boynton, Reader's History of American Literature 1 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe. You can also browse the collection for Byron Vindicated or search for Byron Vindicated in all documents.

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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe, Chapter 19: the Byron controversy, 1869-1870. (search)
rfect, and I want to do it as wisely and well as such story can be told. My post-office address after July 1st will be Westport Point, Bristol Co., Mass., care of Mrs. I. M. Soule. The proof-sheets will be sent you by the publisher. Very truly yours, H. B. Stowe. In reply to the storm of controversy aroused by the publication of this article, Mrs. Stowe made a more extended effort to justify the charges which she had brought against Lord Byron, in a work published in 1869, Lady Byron Vindicated. Immediately after the publication of this work, she mailed a copy to Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, accompanied by the following note:-- Boston, May 19, 1869. Dear doctor,--... In writing this book, which I now take the liberty of sending to you, I have been in . . . a critical place. It has been a strange, weird sort of experience, and I have had not a word to say to anybody, though often thinking of you and wishing I could have a little of your help and sympathy in getting out w
d in the chronological order of their publication:-- 1833An Elementary geography. 1843The Mayflower. 1852Uncle Tom's Cabin. 1853Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin. 1854Sunny memories. 1856Dred. 1858Our Charley. 1859Minister's Wooing. 1862Pearl of Orr's Island. 1863Agnes of Sorrento. 1864House and home papers. 1865Little foxes. 1866Nina Gordon (formerly Dred ). 1867Religious poems. 1867Queer little people. 1868The chimney corner. 1868Men of our times. 1869Oldtown folks. 1870Lady Byron Vindicated. 1871The history of the Byron Controversy (London). 1870Little pussy Willow. 1871Pink and white Tyranny. 1871Old town Fireside stories. 1872My wife and I. 1873Palmetto leaves. 1873Library of famous fiction. 1875We and our neighbors. 1876Betty's bright idea. 1877Footsteps of the master. 1878Bible Heroines. 1878Poganuc people. 1881A dog's mission. In 1872 a new and remunerative field of labor was opened to Mrs. Stowe, and though it entailed a vast amount of weariness
e with, 360, et seq.; attacks upon, 361; H. B. S. asks advice from, about manner of telling facts in relation to Byron Controversy, 452, 454; sends copy of Lady Byron Vindicated to, 454; on facts of case, 455; on sympathy displayed in his writings, 411; poem on H. B. S.'s seventieth birthday, 503; tribute to Uncle Tom, 504; letters H. B. S. from, on Uncle Tom's Cabin, 196, 218. Kossuth, on freedom, 195; Mrs. Stowe calls upon, 237. L. Labouchere, Lady, Mary, visit to, 283. Lady Byron Vindicated, 454; date , 490. Letters, circular, writing of, a custom in the Beecher family, 99; H. B. S.'s love of, 62, 63; H. B. S.'s peculiar emotions on re-readin Lady Byron, 449; reads Byron letters, 450; counsels silence and patience to Lady Byron, 451; writes True story of Lady Byron's life, 447, 453; publishes Lady Byron Vindicated, 454; History of the Byron Controversy, 455; her purity of motive in this painful matter, 455; George Eliot's sympathy with her in Byron matter, 458; her f