To Mrs. S. B. Shaw.
Mrs. Stowe's truly great work, “Uncle Tom's Cabin,” has also done much to command respect for the faculties of woman. Whittier has poured forth verses upon it; Horace Mann has eulogized it in Congress; Lord Morpeth is carried away with it; the music stores are full of pieces of music suggested by its different scenes; somebody is going to dramatize it; and 100,000 copies sold in little more than six months! Never did any American work have such success! The passage of the Fugitive Slave Law roused her up to write it. Behold how “God makes the wrath of man to praise him!” Charles Sumner has made a magnificent speech in Congress against the Fugitive Slave Law. How thankful I was for it! God bless him! The Republican party don't know how to appreciate his honesty and moral courage. They think he makes a mistake in speaking the truth, and does it because he don't know any better. They do not perceive how immeasurably superior his straightforwardness is to their crookedness. History will do him justice.
It is really droll to see in what different states of mind people read “Uncle Tom.” Mr. Pierce, Senator from Maryland, read it lately, and when he came to the sale of “Uncle Tom,” he exclaimed with great emotion, “Here's a writer that knows how to sympathize with the South! I could fall down at the feet [70] of that woman! She knows how to feel for a man when he is obliged to sell a good honest slave!” In his view the book was intended as a balsam for bereaved slave-holders.