5 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
    1. Mr. and Mrs. Shelby had retired to their apartment for the night. He was lounging in a large easy-chair, looking over some letters that had come in the afternoon mail, and she was standing before her mirror, brushing out the complicated braids and curls in which Eliza had arranged her hair; for, noticing her pale cheeks and haggard eyes, she had excused her attendance that night, and ordered her to bed. The employment, naturally enough, suggested her conversation with the girl in the morning; and turning to her husband, she said, carelessly,

      This moment is so casual it’s kind of unsettling. Eliza is clearly exhausted and distressed, but it’s treated as something small and easily brushed aside. Her fear exists quietly in the background while the Shelbys stay comfortable.

    2. Whoever visits some estates there, and witnesses the good-humored indulgence of some masters and mistresses, and the affectionate loyalty of some slaves, might be tempted to dream the oft-fabled poetic legend of a patriarchal institution, and all that; but over and above the scene there broods a portentous shadow—the shadow of law. So long as the law considers all these human beings, with beating hearts and living affections, only as so many things belonging to a master,—so long as the failure, or misfortune, or imprudence, or death of the kindest owner, may cause them any day to exchange a life of kind protection and indulgence for one of hopeless misery and toil,—so long it is impossible to make anything beautiful or desirable in the best regulated administration of slavery.

      This is where Stowe basically says the idea of “kind” slavery is fake. Even if a master seems nice, it doesn’t matter, because the law still treats enslaved people like property. That “shadow of law” means their lives can flip at any moment, no matter how safe things look.

  2. Jan 2026
    1. When a just estimate is placed upon the crime of slave-holding, the work will have been accomplished, and the glorious day ushered in— “When man nor woman in all our wide domain,Shall buy, or sell, or hold, or be a slave.”

      By calling slave-holding a “crime,” it removes any neutrality from the issue and imagines a future where slavery is completely abolished from society.

    2. “For he who settles Freedom’s principles,Writes the death-warrant of all tyranny.”

      This line suggests that clearly defining freedom makes oppression impossible to justify.

    3. This book will do much to unmask those who have “clothed themselves in the livery of the court of heaven” to cover up the enormity of their deeds.

      Brown uses religious imagery because there were Christians that tried to justify their actions by being "clothed" in holiness.