
audiobook
THE UNWELCOME CHILD; OR, THE CRIME OF AN UNDESIGNED AND UNDESIRED MATERNITY.
CONTENTS.
PREFACE.
INTRODUCTORY LETTER. A Husband to Henry C. Wright.
LETTER I. THE MOTHER’S POWER OVER HER CHILD.
LETTER II. THE CRIME AGAINST THE MOTHER.—HOW IT AFFECTS HER TOWARDS THE FATHER OF HER CHILD.
LETTER III. THE CRIME AGAINST THE CHILD.
LETTER IV. THE CRIME AGAINST THE CHILD, AS AFFECTING ITS ANTE-NATAL EDUCATION.
LETTER V. THE WIFE’S APPEAL—THE HUSBAND’S RESPONSE.
LETTER VI. WORDS FITLY SPOKEN, BY ONE WHO SPEAKS WITH AUTHORITY.
An urgent and thought‑provoking exploration opens the work, confronting the hidden anguish that can accompany conception. It asks unsettling questions about who truly owns the decision to become a mother, and what moral weight rests on a husband who imposes parenthood without regard for his wife’s welfare. The author frames unwanted maternity as a profound injustice, likening it to a crime that reverberates through both the mother’s spirit and the child’s future character.
Through a series of intimate letters, the discussion moves from the mother’s power over her unborn child to the wider social consequences of prenatal neglect. Readers hear earnest appeals to women seeking agency, and to husbands called to recognize their responsibility. By linking the prenatal environment to the shaping of a person’s virtues and vices, the text invites listeners to reconsider the deepest foundations of family life and the ethical choices that bind it together.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (198K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: Colby & Rich, 1858, copyright 1876.
Credits
Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
Release date
2023-07-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1797–1870
A fiery 19th-century reformer, he pushed for the immediate end of slavery while also arguing for peace, women's rights, and a radical rethinking of authority. His writing and speaking made him one of the more uncompromising voices in American reform movements of his time.
View all books
by Order of the Eastern Star. General Grand Chapter

by Henry Adams

by Edward Prime-Stevenson

by John Henry Newman

by Stendhal

by Stephen Charnock

by Brillat-Savarin

by Honoré de Balzac