Edité par Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, 1997
ISBN 10 : 1570083576 ISBN 13 : 9781570083570
Langue: anglais
Vendeur : Confetti Antiques & Books, Spanish Fork, UT, Etats-Unis
EUR 21,95
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHardcover. Etat : Very Good wear. Etat de la jaquette : Very Good. Cover has some light edge and corner; As a prominent woman in the Relief Society and a public advocate of plural marriage, Helen Mar Whitney was revered among the Latter-day Saints as an example of faith and a defender of gospel principles. This book records her experiences from 1838. ; 6.25" x 9.25"; 519 pages;
Edité par Bookcraft, Inc, Salt Lake City, UT, 1997
ISBN 10 : 1570083576 ISBN 13 : 9781570083570
Langue: anglais
Vendeur : Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA, Salt Lake City, UT, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
EUR 26,34
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHardcover. Etat : Very Good. Etat de la jaquette : Very Good. First printing. 519pp. Octavo [23.5 cm]. Pine green paper over boards. Title gilt stamped on backstrip and front board. Green endpapers. Front and back board corners and endstrip bump damage. Dust jacket with light wear and rubbing wear on edges. From the publisher: "Helen Mar Kimball Smith Whitney (182896) witnessed early Mormon history from its center. She was a daughter of Heber C. and Vilate Kimball and she became a plural wife of Joseph Smith. After the Prophet's death, she married Horace K. Whitney, with whom she raised a large family in Utah. Near the end of her life, Helen wrote her reminiscences of life among the early Latter-day Saints. She relayed her experiences of the momentous: the Missouri persecutions, the very beginnings of polygamy, the exodus from Nauvoo, and the sojourn at Winter Quarters. She also wrote much of daily living: family life, friendships, dancing, and Sabbath-day observance. Her narrative provides a woman's view of the ordinary and the extraordinary in early Mormon history. Reminiscing from the distance of four decades makes for memory problems, but Helen Mar Whitney's narrative benefits from her use of letters and diaries of her father and others. Also, the retrospective position from which she wrote allowed for mature reflection and enabled her to see life lessons in her past experiences. For example, she wrote, "The experience had at Winter Quarters taught me that it was only through obedience and great humiliation, more especially through fasting and prayer, that we could obtain any great manifestations from on high, or the power to enable us to overcome the adversary" (46263). Helen's reminiscences were published serially in the Woman's Exponent from 1880 to 1886. The Holzapfels provide us the service of pulling together into one book all the scattered installments from this practically inaccessible periodical. In appendixes the editors also provide Whitney's autobiography and her obituary written by her friend Emmeline B. Wells. An introductory essay, accompanied by a number of photographs, invites the reader into the book.".