WOW! Getting some ice time for the grandkids on the Capitals' rink! LOL But, JoanP, who comes to DC in August packing long sleeves, long pants, mittens and caps? Wish I could join you.
As for going to Paris, Bella, look what Harriet Beecher Stowe has to say about it, on page 218: '...coming into Paris one feels a rustling and a waking within, as if the soul were crying to unfold her wings.' And this must have been a shock. After all she came to Paris looking for 'some peace and privacy, to be released from care, to feel unknown and unknowing. And soon exclaimed 'At last I have come into a dreamland.'
Of all McCullough's travellers I'm enjoying Stowe the most. And obviously the author enjoyed putting her into his book. He included HBS in an earlier book of his. Brave Companions: Portraits in History, in which she gets about 20 pages. There he quotes her as saying "God wrote it" about Uncle Tom's Cabin. A fantastic book. That was certainly a shot that was heard around the world. Sales took off like a rocket. I remember being thrilled by it when I was about 12. By a strange coincidence I found J D Hedrick's bio of her yesterday, browsing at the booksellers. The whole Beecher clan was so darn clever. As McCullough writes in Brave Companions, '...brother Edward, who was growing ever more militant over the slavery issue. All the Beechers were growing ever more militant over one thing or another. For Isabella it was women's rights; for the brilliant Catherine, education; for Charles, freedom from theological authority." And of coure there was famous preacher, brother Henry Ward Beecher embarrassing the family with his love affair with his parishoner in Brooklyn.