TY - BOOK AU - Gold,Michael AU - Haldeman-Julius,E. TI - Life of John Brown T2 - Little blue book no. 521 AV - E300 PY - 2025/// CY - Salt Lake City, UT PB - Project Gutenberg KW - Brown, John, 1800-1859 KW - Abolitionists -- Biography N1 - Release date is 2025-11-17; Tim Miller, Sam Lamb and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive); Originally published; Girard: Haldeman-Julius Company, 1924 N2 - Life of John Brown by Michael Gold is a biography and historical account written in the early 20th century. It follows the abolitionist John Brown’s rise from a devout, impoverished Yankee farmer to a militant opponent of slavery, focusing on his battles in “Bleeding Kansas,” the raid on Harpers Ferry, and the powerful moral legacy that followed. The book opens by showing how slavery had become “respectable,” then traces Brown’s frontier childhood, his tender conscience awakened by witnessing a slave boy’s abuse, and his self-made education and stern leadership. Family hardships and the Fugitive Slave Law push him from aiding fugitives to armed resistance in Kansas—through the sack of Lawrence, the Pottawatomie reprisals, and fights at Black Jack and Osawatomie—while he argues that conscience outranks majorities and that slavery is the “sum of all villainies.” After freeing Missouri slaves and guiding them to Canada, he shapes a daring plan for Virginia, gathers limited Northern support, and leads a small interracial band to seize the arsenal at Harpers Ferry. Trapped and battered after two sons are killed, he is captured by U.S. Marines under Robert E. Lee. Questioned by Governor Wise, he invokes the Golden Rule; tried for murder, treason, and inciting insurrection, he answers with calm, prophetic eloquence and writes moving jail letters that turn defeat into moral victory. The narrative ends with his steadfast execution and the shock his deed sends through the nation, quickening Northern resolve, prefiguring Lincoln’s rise, and pointing toward a war in which, as the author suggests, his soul goes marching on. (This is an automatically generated summary.) UR - https://archive.org/details/lifeofjohnbrown00gold/mode/2up UR - https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/77258 ER -