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Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe 28 0 Browse Search
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original characters of his native town. March 26, 1882, Professor Stowe wrote the following characteristic letter to Mrs. Lewes:-- Mrs. Lewes,--I fully sympathize with you in your disgust with Hume and the professing mediums generally. HumMrs. Lewes,--I fully sympathize with you in your disgust with Hume and the professing mediums generally. Hume spent his boyhood in my father's native town, among my relatives and acquaintances, and he was a disagreeable, nasty boy. But he certainly has qualities which science has not yet explained, and some of his doings are as real as they are strange. m, and always have been in the main, a Calvinist of the Jonathan Edwards school. God bless you! I have a warm side for Mr. Lewes on account of his Goethe labors. Goethe has been my admiration for more than forty years. In 1830 I got hold of his , I was perfectly dissolved by it. Sincerely yours, C. E. Stowe. In a letter to Mrs. Stowe, written June 24, 1872, Mrs. Lewes alludes to Professor Stowe's letter as follows: Pray give my special thanks to the professor for his letter. His
great devotion and regard, Yours always, M. L. Lewes. Mrs. Stowe writes from Mandarin to Geor of the present day whom I more esteem than Mrs. Lewes, nor any one whose opinion of my work I shouressed . . Yours with sincere affection, M. L. Lewes. (Began April 4th.) Mandarin, Florida, Mas, and all sorts of things, such as you and Mr. Lewes would enjoy. Don't be afraid of the ocean, icious, and groundless attack on his purity, Mrs. Lewes wrote the following words of sympathy:-- efore our friend's letter came I had said to Mr. Lewes: What must Mrs. Stowe be feeling! I remembe H. B. S. In her reply to this letter Mrs. Lewes says, incidentally: Please offer my reterested in my spiritual children. After Mr. Lewes's death, Mrs. Lewes writes to Mrs. Stowe:-- Mrs. Lewes writes to Mrs. Stowe:-- The Priory, 21 North Bank, April 10, 1879. My dear friend,--I have been long without sending youe, dear friend, Yours always gratefully, M. L. Lewes. As much as has been said with regard t