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CONTENTS.
CHAPTER. PAGE.
I. AN ANGLO-SAXON'S DEATH 9
II. "A NEW KING ... WHICH KNEW NOT JOSEPH" 15
III. A FALLEN MAN SHOOTS 22
IV. THE CLANS GATHER 29
V. BREEDS TROUBLE FOR AFTER YEARS 37
VI. AN ACT OF WHICH NOBODY IS PROUD 46
VII. A MAN AGAINST A REGIMENT 54
VIII. THE HINT NOT TAKEN 62
IX. DORLAN WARTHELL 70
X. CUPID SHOULD BE MORE CAREFUL 73
XI. A STORMY INTERVIEW 78
XII. MORLENE AND DORLAN 83
XIII. A WHOLE CITY STIRRED 92
XIV. BLOODWORTH AT WORK 101
XV. HARRY BECOMES A TOOL 106
XVI. A WOMAN AROUSED 111
XVII. CLANDESTINELY, YET IN HONOR 121
XVIII. WHO WINS? 126
XIX. THE SCENE SHIFTS 134
XX. THE BYSTANDERS CHEER 142
XXI. TO BEGIN LIFE ANEW, AS IT WERE 149
XXII. EXCUSABLE RUDENESS 153
XXIII. A STREET PARADE 160
XXIV. GOING FORTH TO UNFETTER 169
XXV. TONY MARSHALL 179
XXVI. A MORNING RIDE 185
XXVII. THEY FEAR EACH OTHER 189
XXVIII. "O DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING?" 194
XXIX. IN THE BALANCES 201
XXX. THE TELEGRAM 207
DORLAN'S PLAN.
PAGE.
FOREWORD 219
WHERE THE TROUBLE ARISES 223
OUR PROBLEM 225
THE INSPIRATION OF THE OPPOSITION 226
STILL IN THE BALANCES 228
HE WHO HAS HITHERTO FOLLOWED CALLED UPON TO LEAD 231
REVISITING THE ORIENT 233
CLASPING HANDS 234
RENOVATION 237
WHERE TO BEGIN 239
"THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME" 240
RELIGION A FACTOR 244
TO WEAR WELL OUR CROWN 245
IN THE UPPER REALMS 247
"OF MAKING MANY BOOKS THERE IS NO END" 249
WE EAT TO LIVE 251
LITTLE AFRICAS 253
"YE HAVE THE POOR WITH YOU ALWAYS" 254
THE WINDS HAVE VEERED 255
"THE FIELD IS THE WORLD" 256
WHERE THE GALE BLOWS FIERCEST 257
WITH THE HEN GOES HER BROOD 265
THE PROBLEM OF THE OTHER MAN 266
OUR LAST FOE 269
MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD 271
THE END DRAWETH NIGH 274
CHAPTER I.
AN ANGLO-SAXON'S DEATH.
Gently the midsummer breezes rustled the green leaves of the giant oaks and
towering poplars that stood guard over the Dalton house, which, as though
spurning their protection, rose majestically above them and commanded a
splendid view of the Tennessee fields and woodlands, stretching far out on
either side of the leisurely flowing Cumberland.
The subdued whisperings of the winds, their elf-like tread as they
cautiously crept from tree top to tree top, tended to create the suspicion
that they were aware of the tragedy which their mother, Nature, was so soon
to enact within the walls of the house around which we now see them
hovering.
In a sumptuously furnished room of this magnificent structure, Maurice
Dalton, the present owner thereof, lies dying; battling heroically yet
losingly in that last, inevitable conflict which he had been summoned to
wage with the forces of decay. The head of this dying Anglo-Saxon rests, in
these its last moments, on the bosom of Aunt Catherine, an aged Negro
woman, who was his first and loving nurse in infancy, and has been his one
unswerving friend and worshipper in all of his after life.
CHAPTER. PAGE.
I. AN ANGLO-SAXON'S DEATH 9
II. "A NEW KING ... WHICH KNEW NOT JOSEPH" 15
III. A FALLEN MAN SHOOTS 22
IV. THE CLANS GATHER 29
V. BREEDS TROUBLE FOR AFTER YEARS 37
VI. AN ACT OF WHICH NOBODY IS PROUD 46
VII. A MAN AGAINST A REGIMENT 54
VIII. THE HINT NOT TAKEN 62
IX. DORLAN WARTHELL 70
X. CUPID SHOULD BE MORE CAREFUL 73
XI. A STORMY INTERVIEW 78
XII. MORLENE AND DORLAN 83
XIII. A WHOLE CITY STIRRED 92
XIV. BLOODWORTH AT WORK 101
XV. HARRY BECOMES A TOOL 106
XVI. A WOMAN AROUSED 111
XVII. CLANDESTINELY, YET IN HONOR 121
XVIII. WHO WINS? 126
XIX. THE SCENE SHIFTS 134
XX. THE BYSTANDERS CHEER 142
XXI. TO BEGIN LIFE ANEW, AS IT WERE 149
XXII. EXCUSABLE RUDENESS 153
XXIII. A STREET PARADE 160
XXIV. GOING FORTH TO UNFETTER 169
XXV. TONY MARSHALL 179
XXVI. A MORNING RIDE 185
XXVII. THEY FEAR EACH OTHER 189
XXVIII. "O DEATH, WHERE IS THY STING?" 194
XXIX. IN THE BALANCES 201
XXX. THE TELEGRAM 207
DORLAN'S PLAN.
PAGE.
FOREWORD 219
WHERE THE TROUBLE ARISES 223
OUR PROBLEM 225
THE INSPIRATION OF THE OPPOSITION 226
STILL IN THE BALANCES 228
HE WHO HAS HITHERTO FOLLOWED CALLED UPON TO LEAD 231
REVISITING THE ORIENT 233
CLASPING HANDS 234
RENOVATION 237
WHERE TO BEGIN 239
"THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME" 240
RELIGION A FACTOR 244
TO WEAR WELL OUR CROWN 245
IN THE UPPER REALMS 247
"OF MAKING MANY BOOKS THERE IS NO END" 249
WE EAT TO LIVE 251
LITTLE AFRICAS 253
"YE HAVE THE POOR WITH YOU ALWAYS" 254
THE WINDS HAVE VEERED 255
"THE FIELD IS THE WORLD" 256
WHERE THE GALE BLOWS FIERCEST 257
WITH THE HEN GOES HER BROOD 265
THE PROBLEM OF THE OTHER MAN 266
OUR LAST FOE 269
MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD 271
THE END DRAWETH NIGH 274
CHAPTER I.
AN ANGLO-SAXON'S DEATH.
Gently the midsummer breezes rustled the green leaves of the giant oaks and
towering poplars that stood guard over the Dalton house, which, as though
spurning their protection, rose majestically above them and commanded a
splendid view of the Tennessee fields and woodlands, stretching far out on
either side of the leisurely flowing Cumberland.
The subdued whisperings of the winds, their elf-like tread as they
cautiously crept from tree top to tree top, tended to create the suspicion
that they were aware of the tragedy which their mother, Nature, was so soon
to enact within the walls of the house around which we now see them
hovering.
In a sumptuously furnished room of this magnificent structure, Maurice
Dalton, the present owner thereof, lies dying; battling heroically yet
losingly in that last, inevitable conflict which he had been summoned to
wage with the forces of decay. The head of this dying Anglo-Saxon rests, in
these its last moments, on the bosom of Aunt Catherine, an aged Negro
woman, who was his first and loving nurse in infancy, and has been his one
unswerving friend and worshipper in all of his after life.
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