Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Uncle Toms Cabin Essays - Lost Films, Red River Of The South
  Uncle Tom's Cabin    Uncle Tom manages the Shelby plantation. Strong, intelligent, capable, good, and kind, he is the most heroic  figure in the novel that bears his name. The list of Tom's virtues is endless. He is a good father to his own  children, especially the baby, Polly, and        also nurtures the children of his masters, George Shelby and Eva St.Clare. From Stowe's description of his  voice, "tender as a woman's," and his "gentle, domestic heart," you might almost suspect that he is a woman  disguised as a muscular black man.                    Tom's most important characteristic, from Stowe's point of view, is his Christian faith. The Bible-  which George Shelby has taught him to read- is alive for him, and he makes it live for the people around  him. He preaches at the service in his native Kentucky. And he makes the people he encounters, black and  white- Prue, Augustine     St. Clare, Cassy- feel and believe in the love of Jesus. Tom doesn't just talk  about religion, he lives it. Through his example, and then by his death, he makes converts.                          Religion is very simple for Tom. It means loving all of God's creatures and serving God by helping  them. Tom feels real compassion for others, as he demonstrates when St. Clare drinks too much. He is  always willing to help- by jumping into the Mississippi to save Eva or by putting cotton in Lucy's bag. Tom  also feels responsible for         other people. He refuses to escape from the Shelby plantation with Eliza, because he knows that his sale will  make it possible for Mr.Shelby to keep running it, and to save the other slaves. He will not escape from  Legree's plantation with Cassy and Emmeline because he feels that he has work among the slaves there, and  he dies rather than betray them to Legree. God has given Tom an extraordinary ability. He can forgive the  evil done to him, even by the beastly Legree. His self-sacrificing love for others has been called motherly. It  has also been called truly Christian.    
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