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Southern Stories: Retold from St. Nicholas
by Various
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
- Size
- 214 KB
Description
"Southern Stories: Retold from St. Nicholas" is a collection of short narratives drawn from early 20th-century American magazine literature. The stories reflect Southern life, culture, and folklore, highlighting both the charms and challenges faced by characters living in the region. The opening tales feature themes such as Civil War admiration and regional traditions, exemplified by Margaret Minor's "His Hero," which depicts a young boy’s fascination with General Robert E. Lee set against the backdrop of the Blue Ridge mountains. The anthology seeks to portray the diverse experiences and values of Southern communities through vivid storytelling.
Published during the early 1900s, this compilation provides insight into the era’s social sentiments, regional identity, and storytelling styles. It offers a window into the American South’s cultural landscape as imagined and narrated by various authors, capturing a blend of nostalgia, historical reflection, and local colour.
Published during the early 1900s, this compilation provides insight into the era’s social sentiments, regional identity, and storytelling styles. It offers a window into the American South’s cultural landscape as imagined and narrated by various authors, capturing a blend of nostalgia, historical reflection, and local colour.
From the opening pages
Beautiful is the land, with its prairies and forests of fruit-trees; Under the feet a garden of flowers, and the bluest of heavens Bending above, and resting its dome on the walls of the forest. Longfellow. HIS HERO BY MARGARET MINOR It was an October afternoon, and through Indian summer's tulle-like haze a low-swinging sun sent shafts of scarlet light at the highest peaks of the Blue Ridge. The sweet-gum leaves looked like blood-colored stars as they floated slowly to the ground, and brown chestnuts gleamed satin-like through their gaping burs; while over all there rested a dense stillness, cut now and then by the sharp yelp of a dog as he scurried through the bushes after a rabbit. Surrounded by this splendid autumn beauty stood Mountain Top Inn, near the crest of the Blue Ridge in Rockfish Gap, its historical value dating from the time when Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe, after a long and spirited discussion in one of its low-ceiled rooms, decided upon the location of the University of Virginia. On the porch of this old inn there now sat a little boy, idly swinging a pair of sun-tanned legs. Occasionally he tickled an old liver-colored hound that lay dozing in a limp heap; but being rewarded only by toothless snaps at very long intervals, he finally grew tired of this amusement, and stretching himself out on his back, he began to dream with wide-open eyes. At these dream-times, when he let his thoughts loose, they always bore him to the very same field, and here his fancy painted pictures with the vivid colors of a boy's imagination: pictures so strong that they left him flushed and tingling with pride; again, pictures that brought a cool, choking feeling to his throat; and at times pictures that made his childish mouth quiver and droop. Among all of these thought-born scenes, at intervals there would stand out the real ones, scenes that were etched on the clean walls of his memory in everlasting strokes. He never tired thinking of that first morning—that morning when all the world seemed gilded with sunshine and throbbing with martial music. His grandfather had lifted him up on one of the "big gate" posts to see the soldiers march by. With mingled feelings of admiration and childish envy he had watched them drill for many weeks, but they had never seemed such real, grand soldiers…
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EPUB, about 214 KB.
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