John March, Southerner
In the State of Dixie, County of Clearwater, and therefore in the very heart of what was once the Southern Confederacy, lies that noted seat of government of one county and shipping point for three, Suez. The pamphlet of a certain land company—a publication now out of print and rare, but a copy of which it has been my good fortune to secure—mentions the battle of Turkey Creek as having been fought only a mile or so north of the town in the spring of 1864. It also strongly recommends to the attention of both capitalist and tourist the beautiful mountain scenery of Sandstone County, which adjoins Clearwater a few miles from Suez on the north, and northeast, as Blackland does, much farther away, on the southwest.
In the last year of our Civil War Suez was a basking town of twenty-five hundred souls, with rocky streets and breakneck sidewalks, its dwellings dozing most months of the twelve among roses and honeysuckles behind anciently whitewashed, much-broken fences, and all the place wrapped in that wide sweetness of apple and acacia scents that comes from whole mobs of dog-fennel. The Pulaski City turnpike entered at the northwest corner and passed through to the court-house green with its hollow square of stores and law-offices—two sides of it blackened ruins of fire and war. Under the town's southeasternmost angle, between yellow banks and over-hanging sycamores, the bright green waters of Turkey Creek, rambling round from the north and east, skipped down a gradual stairway of limestone ledges, and glided, alive with sunlight, into that true Swanee River, not of the maps, but which flows forever, far, far away, through the numbers of imperishable song. The river's head of navigation was, and still is, at Suez.
One of the most influential, and yet meekest among the citizens —men not in the army—whose habit it was to visit Suez by way of the Sandstone County road, was Judge Powhatan March, of Widewood. In years he was about fifty. He was under the medium stature, with a gentle and intellectual face whose antique dignity was only less attractive than his rich, quiet voice.
George Washington Cable
JOHN MARCH
SOUTHERNER
CONTENTS
JOHN MARCH, SOUTHERNER
SUEZ
TO A GOOD BOY
TWO FRIENDS
THE JUDGE'S SON MAKES TWO LIFE-TIME ACQUAINTANCES, AND IS OFFERED A THIRD
THE MASTER'S HOME-COMING
TROUBLE
EXODUS
SEVEN YEARS OF SUNSHINE
LAUNCELOT HALLIDAY
FANNIE
A BLEEDING HEART
JOHN THINKS HE IS NOT AFRAID
FOR FANNIE
A MORTGAGE ON JOHN
ARRIVALS AT ROSEMONT
A GROUP OF NEW INFLUENCES
THE ROSEMONT ATMOSPHERE
THE PANGS OF COQUETRY
MR. RAVENEL SHOWS A "MORE EXCELLENT WAY"
FANNIE SUGGESTS
MR. LEGGETT'S CHICKEN-PIE POLICY
CLIMBING LOVER'S LEAP
A SUMMONS FOR THE JUDGE
THE GOLDEN SPIKE
JOHN INSULTS THE BRITISH FLAG
TO SUSIE—FROM PUSSIE
INFORMATION FOR SALE
RAVENEL ASKS
ANOTHER ODD NUMBER
MR. FAIR VENTURES SOME INTERROGATIONS
JORDAN
THE OPPORTUNE MOMENT
DAPHNE AND DINWIDDIE: A PASTEL IN PROSE
A WIDOW'S ULTIMATUM
A NEW SHINGLE IN SUEZ
WISDOM AND FAITH KISS EACH OTHER
RUBBING AGAINST MEN
SAME AFTERNOON
ROUGH GOING
SQUATTER SOVEREIGNTY
JOHN HEADS A PROCESSION
ST. VALENTINE'S DAY
ST. VALENTINE'S: EVENING
A LITTLE VOYAGE OF DISCOVERIES
A PAIR OF SMUGGLERS
LEVITICUS
DELILAH
MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
THE JAMBOREE
BUSINESS
DARKNESS AND DOUBT
SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
AN UNEXPECTED PLEASURE
HOME-SICKNESS ALLEVIATED
CONCERNING SECOND LOVE
GO ON, SAYS BARBARA
TOGETHER AGAIN
THIS TIME SHE WARNS HIM
A PERFECT UNDERSTANDING
A SICK MAN AND A SICK HORSE
RAVENEL THINKS HE MUST
LETTERS AND TELEGRAMS
JUDICIOUS JOHANNA
THE ENEMY IN THE REAR
WARM HEARTS, HOT WORDS, COOL FRIENDS
PROBLEM: IS AN UNCONFIRMED DISTRUST NECESSARILY A DEAD ASSET?
FAREWELL, WIDEWOOD
IN YANKEE LAND
ACROSS THE MEADOWS
IN THE WOODS
MY GOOD GRACIOUS, MISS BARB
IMMEDIATELY AFTER CHAPEL
COMPLETE COLLAPSE OF A PERFECT UNDERSTANDING
A YEAR'S VICISSITUDES
AGAINST OVERWHELMING NUMBERS
"LINES OF LIGHT ON A SULLEN SEA"
BARBARA FINDS THE RHYME
THE END.