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On the contrary, how might it be argued that Emerson is really saying nothing new, but is merely verbalizing what Americans already believed but had not put into words? Are the people Emerson is addressing once again being "forced to take with shame [their] own opinions from another"?
What was Stowe's purpose in writing this book? Notice that Legree is not a southerner, but is from New England. Why would she have created such a character? Also, what of the "two coloured men" who served Legree as his "principal hands"? What was the author trying to say about the effect of slavery on slaves? Reread the section "Where Historians Disagree" in Chapter Eleven of the text. With which of these historians would Stowe have agreed?