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  1. alled the Olive Branch, which paid her fifty cents. In September, she began using the pen name Fanny Fern, and her sketches were being pirated by other papers, including her brother N.P. …

  2. Free Resources Pack ann y Crosb would be “the face of Jesus in heaven.” Fanny used her extraordinary musical ability to write hymns we still sing today, such as “To God This Freebie …

  3. Over the course of her twenty-year writing career, Fanny Fern became one of the most popular, well-paid, and influential prose writers of her era.

  4. reats his slaves, including Fanny Price, with firmness but compassion. In this essay, we want both to extend and to contest these interpretations by reading Mansfield Park through the lens of …

  5. Austen's most unpopular heroine. Not all, it is true, take up exactl the same un- equivocal position. For instance, in 1967 Roberl A. Colby found some faults in Fanny-she is occa ionally jealous …

  6. Most readers of J~e Austen's Mansfield Park observe the differences between Fanny Price and her Aunt Norris. Fanny is quiet, timid, and obliging, while Mrs. Norris is loud and bossy. Yet …

  7. Song titles are italicized. If no title is listed, the first line is given, preceded by an asterisk (*). At the Cross! Peace by still! Let Jesus speak. Ho! Everyone that thirsteth. Prayer for ? Awake! …