1. Education
ANTI-SLAVERY TRACTS.
No. 1. New Series . CORRESPONDENCE
BETWEEN
LYDIA MARIA CHILD,
AND
GOV. WISE AND MRS. MASON,
OF VIRGINIA.
NEW YORK:
PUBLISHED BY THE AMERICAN ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY.
1860.
Correspondence:
1. L. Maria Child, Letter to Gov. Wise, Wayland, Mass., October 26th, 1859.
2. Reply of Gov. Wise (Richmond, Virginia), October 29th, 1859.
3. Mrs. Child to Gov. Wise
4. L. Maria Child
EXPLANATORY LETTER.
To The Editor Of The New York Tribune, Boston, Nov. 10, 1859
.
5. MRS. CHILD TO JOHN BROWN. Wayland, Mass., Oct. 26, 1859.
6. REPLY OF JOHN BROWN.
7. LETTER OF MRS. MASON. Alto, King George's Co., Va., Nov. 11th, 1859.
8. REPLY OF MRS. CHILD.
Wayland, Mass., Dec. 17th, 1859
.
9. THE TOUGHSTONE.
BY WILLIAM ALLENGHAME.
(a closing poem)

Lydia Maria Child
Correspondence
with Gov. Wise, John Brown, and Mrs. Mason

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REPLY OF JOHN BROWN.
Mrs. L. Maria Child:

My Dear Friend--Such you prove to be, though a stranger--your most kind letter has reached me, with the kind offer to come here and take care of me. Allow me to express my gratitude for your great sympathy, and at the same time to propose to you a different course, together with my reasons for wishing it. I should certainly be greatly pleased to become personally acquainted with one so gifted and so kind, but I cannot avoid seeing some objections to it, under present circumstances. First, I am in charge of a most humane gentleman, who, with his family, has rendered me every possible attention I have desired, or that could be of the least advantage; and I am so recovered of my wounds as no longer to require nursing. Then, again, it would subject you to great personal inconvenience and heavy expense, without doing me any good. Allow me to name to you another channel through which you may reach me with your sympathies much more effectually. I have at home a wife and three young daughters, the youngest but little over five years old, the oldest nearly sixteen. I have also two daughters-in-law, whose husbands have both fallen near me here. There is also another widow, Mrs. Thompson, whose husband fell here. Whether she is a mother or not, I cannot say. All these, my wife included, live at North Elba, Essex county, New York. I have a middle-aged son, who has been, in some degree, a cripple from his childhood, who would have as much as he could well do to earn a living. He was a most dreadful sufferer in Kansas, and lost all he had laid up. He has not enough to clothe himself for the winter comfortably. I have no living son, or son-in-law, who did not suffer terribly in Kansas.

Now, dear friend, would you not as soon contribute fifty cents now, and a like sum yearly, for the relief of those very poor and deeply afflicted persons, to enable them to supply themselves and their children with bread and very plain clothing, and to enable the children to receive a common English education? Will you also devote your own energies to induce others to join you in giving a like amount, or any other amount, to constitute a little fund for the purpose named?

I cannot see how your coming here can do me the least good; and I am quite certain you can do immense good where you are. I am quite cheerful under all my afflicting circumstances and propects; having, as I humbly trust, "the peace of God which passeth all understanding" to rule in my heart. You may make such use of this as you see it fit. God Almighty bless and reward you a thousand fold!

Yours in sincerity and truth,
.......... JOHN BROWN.


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