CONTENTS.

[AUTHOR'S PREFACE.]
[PROEM.]
[CHAPTER I. A Girl Perplexed]
[CHAPTER II. The Cause Revealed but not Removed]
[CHAPTER III. Other Actors]
[CHAPTER IV. A Lady who did not know that she was a Lady]
[CHAPTER V. What a Kiss Did]
[CHAPTER VI. Up to Date Aristocracy in a Negro Church]
[CHAPTER VII. Rev. Josiah Nerve, D. D. S.]
[CHAPTER VIII. He Narrowly Escapes]
[CHAPTER IX. The Pit is Dug]
[CHAPTER X. The Victims]
[CHAPTER XI. Murder]
[CHAPTER XII. The Visit of a Policeman]
[CHAPTER XIII. Backward, then Forward]
[CHAPTER XIV. As Least Expected]
[CHAPTER XV. An Awful Resolve]
[CHAPTER XVI. A Political Trick]
[CHAPTER XVII. Paving the Way]
[CHAPTER XVIII. John Wysong Confesses]
[CHAPTER XIX. Added Sorrows]
[CHAPTER XX. Speaker Lanier]
[CHAPTER XXI. The Hanging]
[CHAPTER XXII. Worse than Death]
[CHAPTER XXIII. Full of Joy]
[CHAPTER XXIV. Opposing the Wedding]
[CHAPTER XXV. Erma and an Assassin]
[CHAPTER XXVI. Name the Chapter After you Read It]
[CHAPTER XXVII. The Funeral]
[EPILOGUE.]


PROEM.

A farmer who is planting corn in a fertile field, halts beneath the shade of a huge oak to rest at noon.

Accidentally a grain of corn drops from his bag, finds lodgement in the soil, and in time begins to grow.

The grains that fell in the field will have their difficulties in reaching maturity.

There is the danger of too much water, of the drought, of the coming worms.

But the grain that came to life under the oak has its peculiar struggles.

It must contend for sustenance with the roots of the oak.

It must wrestle with the shade of the oak.

The life of this isolated grain of corn is one continuous tragedy.

Overshadowed is the story of this grain of corn, the Anglo-Saxon being the oak, and the Negro the plant struggling for existence.

To be true to life, the story must indeed be a sombre one.

So, Overshadowed is a tragedy—a story of sorrow and suffering.

Yet the gloom is enlivened by the presence of a heroic figure, a beautiful, noble girl, who stands unabashed in the presence of every ill.

Overshadowed does not point the way out of the dungeon which it describes, but it clearly indicates the task before the reformer when he comes.

If you have time and inclination for such a recital—the curtain rises and the play begins.


OVERSHADOWED.


CHAPTER I.