
Project Gutenberg's The Pearl of Orr's Island, by Harriet Beecher Stowe
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Title: The Pearl of Orr's Island
A Story of the Coast of Maine
Author: Harriet Beecher Stowe
Release Date: March 6, 2010 [EBook #31522]
Language: English
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THE
PEARL OF ORR'S ISLAND
A Story of the Coast of Maine
BY
HARRIET BEECHER STOWE

BOSTON AND NEW YORK
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
The Riverside Press, Cambridge
1896

Copyright, 1862 and 1890,
By HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
Copyright, 1896,
By HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.
All rights reserved.
The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U.S.A.
Electrotyped and Printed by H.O. Houghton & Co.

CONTENTS
Introductory Note | ||
CHAPTER | ||
I. | Naomi | 1 |
II. | Mara | 5 |
III. | The Baptism and the Burial | 9 |
IV. | Aunt Roxy and Aunt Ruey | 15 |
V. | The Kittridges | 25 |
VI. | Grandparents | 36 |
VII. | From the Sea | 47 |
VIII. | The Seen and the Unseen | 58 |
IX. | Moses | 74 |
X. | The Minister | 85 |
XI. | Little Adventurers | 99 |
XII. | Sea Tales | 110 |
XIII. | Boy and Girl | 120 |
XIV. | The Enchanted Island | 132 |
XV. | The Home Coming | 143 |
XVI. | The Natural and the Spiritual | 154 |
XVII. | Lessons | 165 |
XVIII. | Sally | 175 |
XIX. | Eighteen | 179 |
XX. | Rebellion | 186 |
XXI. | The Tempter | 198 |
XXII. | A Friend in Need | 208 |
XXIII. | The Beginning of the Story | 218 |
XXIV. | Desires and Dreams | 229 |
XXV. | Miss Emily | 235 |
XXVI. | Dolores | 245 |
XXVII. | Hidden Things | 258 |
XXVIII. | A Coquette | 270 |
XXIX. | Night Talks | 279 |
XXX. | The Launch of the Ariel | 290 |
XXXI. | Greek meets Greek | 303 |
XXXII. | The Betrothal | 315 |
XXXIII. | At a Quilting | 323 |
XXXIV. | Friends | 329 |
XXXV. | The Toothacre Cottage | 335 |
XXXVI. | The Shadow of Death | 339 |
XXXVII. | The Victory | 351 |
XXXVIII. | Open Vision | 358 |
XXXIX. | The Land of Beulah | 368 |
XL. | The Meeting | 376 |
XLI. | Consolation | 380 |
XLII. | Last Words | 387 |
XLIII. | The Pearl | 393 |
XLIV. | Four Years After | 398 |
The frontispiece (Mara, page 376) was drawn by W.L. Taylor. The vignette was etched by Charles H. Woodbury.
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
The publication of Uncle Tom's Cabin, though much more than an incident in an author's career, seems to have determined Mrs. Stowe more surely in her purpose to devote herself to literature. During the summer following its appearance, she was in Andover, making over the house which she and her husband were to occupy upon leaving Brunswick; and yet, busy as she was, she was writing articles for The Independent and The National Era. The following extract from a letter written at that time, July 29, 1852, intimates that she already was sketching the outline of the story which later grew into The Pearl of Orr's Island:—
"I seem to have so much to fill my time, and yet there is my Maine story waiting. However, I am composing it every day, only I greatly need living studies for the filling in of my sketches. There is old Jonas, my "fish father," a sturdy, independent fisherman farmer, who in his youth sailed all over the world and made up his mind about everything. In his old age he attends prayer-meetings and reads the Missionary Herald. He also has plenty of money in an old brown sea-chest. He is a great heart with an inflexible will and iron muscles. I must go to Orr's Island and see him again." The story seems to have remained in her mind, for we are told by her son that she worked upon it by turns with The Minister's Wooing.
It was not, however, until eight years later, after The Minister's Wooing had been published and Agnes of Sorrento was well begun, that she took up her old story in earnest and set about making it into a short serial. It would seem that her first intention was to confine herself to a sketch of the childhood of her chief characters, with a view to delineating the influences at work upon them; but, as she herself expressed it, "Out of the simple history of the little Pearl of Orr's Island as it had shaped itself in her mind, rose up a Captain Kittridge with his garrulous yarns, and Misses Roxy and Ruey, given to talk, and a whole pigeon roost of yet undreamed of fancies and dreams which would insist on being written." So it came about that the story as originally planned came to a stopping place at the end of Chapter XVII., as the reader may see when he reaches that place. The childish life of her characters ended there, and a lapse of ten years was assumed before their story was taken up again in the next chapter. The book when published had no chapter headings. These have been supplied in the present edition.