Clotel: Or, the President's Daughter

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The Floating Press, 1 may 2009 - 265 páginas
William Wells Brown's Clotel or, The President's Daughter is often considered the first novel by an African-American. When the book was published, Brown himself was legally the property of someone else within the United States, having escaped from slavery in Kentucky when he was younger. In this story President Thomas Jefferson and his former mulatto mistress Currer have had two daughters together: Althesea and Clotel. When their master passes away, their relatively comfortable lives are swept away and Currer and Althesea are bought by the harsh slave trader Dick Walker.

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Chapter XVI Death of the Parson
133
Chapter XVII Retaliation
142
Chapter XVIII The Liberator
147
Chapter XIX Escape of Clotel
157
Chapter XX A True Democrat
175
Chapter XXI The Christians Death
182
Chapter XXII A Ride in a StageCoach
192
Chapter XXIII Truth Stranger than Fiction
208

Chapter VIII The Separation
80
Chapter IX The Man of Honour
87
Chapter X The Young Christian
90
Chapter XI The Parson Poet
100
Chapter XII A Night in the Parsons Kitchen
106
Chapter XIII A Slave Hunting Parson
114
Chapter XIV A Free Woman Reduced to Slavery
123
Chapter XV ToDay a Mistress toMorrow a Slave
128
Chapter XXIV The Arrest
217
Chapter XXV Death is Freedom
224
Chapter XXVI The Escape
233
Chapter XXVII The Mystery
246
Chapter XXVIII The Happy Meeting
251
Chapter XXIX Conclusion
263
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