When she returned home from the north, immediately ran into the her black wet nurse's arms, kiss all the time, while the nurse put her tightly in his arms, and crying, laughing, the sincere feelings of self-evident; she and her family all the servants to kiss, shaking hands with each. One way to save every kind of food, toys and share these things, even let hatred Ofelia miss slaverywas feel nausea." When his father asked what kind of lifestyle Eva liked, there were no servants or servants in groups. Eva chose the latter, but the reason is not that slavery is reasonable, it because there are more people that she can love. Although Eva love home slave communities, but the drawbacks brought by slavery, she heard and saw some misfortune, the destruction of the things deeply engraved in her kind and pure heart, make her feel sad and distressed this system, so she often advised my father to give up his slavery and used his influence to persuade others also give up. ‘Poor old Prue’s child was all that she had; and yet she had to hear it crying, and she couldn’t help it! Papa, these poor creatures love their children as much as you do me. Oh, do something for them! There’s poor Mammy loves her children; I’ve seen her crying when she talked about them. And Tom loves his children; and it’s dreadful, papa, that such things are happening, all the time!’(Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Harriet Beecher …show more content…
At the last minute of Eva's life, she was talking, "ah, love, - happy, - peace!" In the twenty-seventh chapter of the novel, the expression of Eva's death is described: “ There she lay, robed in one of the simple white dresses she had been wont to wear when living; the rose-coloured light through the curtains cast over the icy coldness of death a warm glow. The heavy eyelashes drooped softly on the pure check; the head was turned a little to one side, as if in natural sleep, but there was diffused over every lineament of the face that high celestial expression, that mingling of rapture and repose, which showed it was no earthly or temporary sleep, but the long, sacred rest which ‘He giveth to his beloved’.” (Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe, page 275). Thus, in the face of death, Eva not only without pain and fear, and even showed a desire, longing and joy. It is not easy for a child of only six years of age to be calm and happy about death. Is the spirit of Christ gave the young life a pure heart of love, let her know how to care for others at a young age; the spirit of Christ let her try to teach family servants to read, hope they have a day can also read the "Bible" in praise of the spirit of Christ is to let her in pain no longer feel pain and suffering, let her in death to find the peace and eternal