kathryn beecher who eventually moved in with her and they all came and worshiped here this church. he is not really in a cabin that he is in a slave hut. what is he doing? he is learning to read the bible and it is in the bible or the bible is an inter-test for uncle tom's cabin because what we do, right and wrong, is what this novel is telling us to do. one thing that irritates people about uncle tom's cabin is how didactic it is. several times the narrator, still, appears in the novel and saying no reader what would you do in this situation? would you do the right thing or the wrong thing? that kind of moral order is what she is re-creating in uncle tom's cabin. she is really kind of writing a new bible, -- >> we are at number six -- 63 central street at the house of harriet beecher stowe where she lived and worked in 1850. it was also known as the house named after the original owner. she rented this house from him. he does live down the road over there and he did most of the repairs on the house when she lived here. she needed new sink and she needed a new stove or go the house