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Trixy

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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1904 edition. ... TEIXY CHAPTER I The sun struggled to enter the windows of the lecture-room. The tall adjoining building prevented this. The shaft of light stopped on the window sill, and wavered with an uncertain and troubled air. It was November, and one bare bough from a neighboring tree pointed straight at the glass. Beyond, the sky was blue and beneficent. The wind was quietly rising, and the bough moved like a finger extended in silent admonition. Some such thought as this occurred to the second student in the tenth row. The lectureroom was in the form of an amphitheatre, the seats rising in tiers. Young Steele could see the professor's desk and table quite distinctly, as, in fact, could every man in the room. Our student was twenty-one. He was rather a handsome fellow in his way, with a good head, and forehead well developed over the eyes. These were gray and kindly, but set a little near together. His face was more finished than the faces of the students about him. His mouth was not coarse, and his features were agreeable. He had the bearing of good birth and breeding. At this time he was not destitute of imagination, and his heart surged with the fervors of youth and of science. He was at the beginning of his professional career. He had graduated at a neighboring college with honors, not five months ago. He had been but a few weeks a member of the medical school. His studies up to this time had been of a rather pleasant, preliminary nature. He had made as yet no friends in the upper classes, and few in his own, so that he knew little of what was going on in other parts of the building. Olin Steele had not chosen his profession lightly. He was capable of ideals, and at this period of his life he cherished them. Nor had he abandoned what is known...

54 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1904

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About the author

Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward

138 books23 followers
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward, born Mary Gray Phelps, was an American author.

She was born at Andover, Massachusetts. In most of her writings she used her mother's name "Elizabeth Stuart Phelps" as a pseudonym, both before and after her marriage in 1888 to Herbert Dickinson Ward, a journalist seventeen years younger. She also used the pseudonym Mary Adams. Her father Austin Phelps was pastor of the Pine Street Congregational Church until 1848, when he accepted a position as the Chair of Rhetoric at Andover Theological Seminary and moved the family to Boston.

Ward wrote three Spiritualist novels, The Gates Ajar, Between the Gates and Beyond the Gates, and a novella about animal rights, Loveliness. While writing other popular stories, she was also a great advocate, by lecturing and otherwise, for social reform, temperance, and the emancipation of women. She was also involved in clothing reform for women, urging them to burn their corsets in 1874.

Ward's mother, Elizabeth (Wooster) Stuart Phelps, (August 13, 1815—November 30, 1852) wrote the Kitty Brown books under the pen name H. Trusta.

Elizabeth Stuart Phelps and her husband co-authored two Biblical romances in 1890 and 1891. Her autobiography, Chapters from a Life was published in 1896 after being serialized in McClure's. She also wrote a large number of essays for Harper's

Phelps continued to write short stories and novels into the twentieth century. One work, Trixy (1904), dealt with another cause she supported, anti-vivisection (a topic on which she also addressed the Massachusetts State Legislature). Her last work, Comrades (1911), was published posthumously. Phelps died January 28, 1911, in Newton Center, Massachusetts.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Moondance.
1,214 reviews63 followers
June 16, 2019
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for allowing me to read this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

The sun struggled to enter the windows of the lecture-room.

This book was originally written in the early 1900s as an outcry to abolish vivisection of animals in medical schools. Although the writing and conversations are outdated, it sends the strong message that Mrs. Phelps intended.

Olin Steele is a 21 year old medical student. One day another student brings in a beautiful kitten with a pink ribbon around its neck that Olin is immediately smitten with. Much to his horror, the kitten becomes the lesson for the day. He leaves the lecture and runs home vowing to never return. Of course he does return to school and becomes one of the professors that performs experiments on animals.

Miriam Lauriat is a lady in every sense of the word. Miss Lauriat has befriended a lad, Dan, who has a French poodle named Trixy. Trixy is trained to perform. She is very intelligent and helps Dan earn money.

Steele meets Miriam by chance and becomes infatuated with her. His courtship is dignified and slow. He intends to marry her until Trixy goes missing. It is during the search for Trixie that Miriam discovers that Steele is involved in vivisection, something she abhors.

This was a quick easy read even with the dated writing. I started crying at the beginning of the book with the kitten and kept it up most of the book. I'm in the medical field and understand the need for research but vivisection was an awful technique. There is an extensive foreword with lots of information about Mrs. Phelps and her work with the Anti-vivisection campaign. It also includes a story from Mark Twain who was a friend of Mrs. Phelps. Although not for the faint of heart, I would recommend this book highly.

A rare 5 stars from me!

Profile Image for Clariana.
34 reviews2 followers
July 4, 2019
Tricky: Trixy by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps
I admit that when I first saw this book posted on Netgalley since I was at bit of a loose end I decided to take it on as a sort of challenge. Trixy is a novel first published in 1904 and this, obviously, is a re-edition with an academic purpose which is in part to rehabilitate Elizabeth Stuart Phelps and also take another critical look at the development of the animal rights movement. But for me the question was, could I finish it?

Professional ReaderEventually the answer was "Yes", but not without a long hiatus in the middle in which I read a few other books which were more to my taste. The problem with Trixy is that it is very much of its age, it is melodramatic, over-sweet and has some very dense patches of purple prose, at crucial stages it also elides certain information by openly stating something along the lines of "I cannot describe this , it will be too hard on my readers" which I found patronising and somewhat insulting.

The first problem I had was with the heroine, who is not Trixy (Trixy is actually a little white poodle), but a very tenderhearted young lady of some means. She is a very stereotypical character which very few novels would get away with today. She is the amiable landlady of a bunch of 'umble tenants who for some reason that escapes me, love her to bits, oh, sorry that's right, they love her because she's so kind! Among her tenants is a frail crippled lad who is Trixy's owner as a way of making some sort of living he has taught the poodle to perform some tricks. This young lady is also courted by two gentlemen, one is a doctor and the other is a lawyer.

In a fairly novel approach, which is a former lawyer I cannot but applaud, the doctor turns out to be a baddie and the lawyer a goodie. For the simple reason that the doctor is a vivisectionist. At a crucial point, Trixy disappears, and well... You'll have to read the book as I did.

Apart from the melodrama the purple prose the hackneyed plot, this novel does have some redeeming features, that is a very good study of the coarsening of some members of the medical profession. I've had quite a few illnesses of my own in my time and therefore I've met many doctors physicians and nurses, most were fairly nice human beings, some were superb, and others, how shall I put it? Didn't seem to give a fuck. Phelps portrays this very well and in my view rightly attributes this deficiency to two main causes, the first being that some members of the medical profession are not very nice people to begin with and have joined the profession as a means of enhancing their status, exercising power or even giving free rein to their sadistic impulses. The second, and most original approach in my view, is that they have been bent and twisted and rendered indifferent by having too much power over animals and people. This group started off well, but had to harden itself in order to progress and have lost touch with an important part of their humanity.

For me this insight seems to be more valuable than the author's all encompassing anti-vivisectionist stance. At some point in the book she hints that she is condemning only unnecessary vivisection... But it doesn't seem to me that she modulates this. I am a pet owner I love animals but that is not the same as failing to recognise that in many instances experimenting on animals has helped medicine progress, indeed this is an argument that she puts in the mouths of one of her doctor characters but she actually only does so to discredit it.

There are some good scenes in this novel, one in particular I think will always stick in my mind. And as I said above it is in some ways very perceptive, but I am not sure that overall these two traits overcome the setback of what is a very dated text.
Profile Image for Doris Vandruff .
468 reviews4 followers
July 1, 2019
This is a book written by a great advocate against the vivisection of live animals.the stories in here are heartbreaking.
Pets, animals that had homes and families that loved them were stolen and used for experiments. They were cut and mutilated. Some lived, most did not. All this was done in the name of science.
Trixie was a wonderful little dog. A performer, she could dance and sing and interact with a crowd. Most importantly she was the pet of her owner, Dan. They did everything together. Homeless, they earned money from the performances they put on to live. Then, one day she disappeared. She was found in the nick of time, tied to a table, ready to be eviscerated. She was rescued, but the twinkle in her eye was gone forever. She knew that most men could not be trusted.
I loved this book. I cried over the stories. Definitely worth reading as a whole different perspective is set before us.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews