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The Leopard's Spots (1902)

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The Leopard's Spots (1902)
by Thomas Frederick Dixon
Thomas Frederick Dixon4469482The Leopard's Spots1902The Leopard's Spots (1902) front cover.png

The Leopard's Spots

"Two thousand men went mad."

Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots?

The
Leopard's Spots

A Romance of the White Man's Burden—1865–1900

By
Thomas Dixon, Jr.

Illustrated by C. D. Williams

New York
Doubleday, Page & Co.
1902

Copyright, 1902,
by

Doubleday, Page & Co.
All rights reserved

Published, March 1, 1902

To
Harriet
Sweet-voiced daughter of the
old fashioned South

Historical Note

In answer to hundreds of letters, I wish to say that all the incidents used in Book I., which is properly the prologue of my story, were selected from authentic records, or came within my personal knowledge.

The only serious liberty I have taken with history is to tone down the facts to make them credible in fiction. The village of "Hambright" is my birthplace, and is located near the center of "Military District No. 2," comprising the Carolinas, which were destroyed as States by an Act of Congress in 1867. It will be a century yet before people outside the South can be made to believe a literal statement of the history of those times.

I tried to write this book with the utmost restraint.

Thomas Dixon, Jr.

May 9, 1902.
Elmington Manor,
Dixondale, Va.

List of illustrations

"Two thousand men went mad" Frontispiece
Page
"You thief!" 76
"Come on, boys!" 124
"I'll kill the first nigger that crosses that line." 132
"A dazzling vision of beauty" 250
"This is my throne" 270
Tom Camp. 364
"I have resigned my church—to kill you" 450

Leading Characters of the Story

Scene: The Foothills of North Carolina—Boston—New York Time: From 1865 to 1900


Charles Gaston Who dreams of a Governor's Mansion
Sallie Worth A daughter of the old fashioned South
Gen. Daniel Worth Her father
Mrs. Worth Sallie's mother
The Rev. John Durham A preacher who threw his life away
Mrs. Durham Of the Southern Army that never surrendered
Tom Camp A one-legged Confederate soldier
Flora Tom's little daughter
Simon Legree Ex-slave driver and Reconstruction leader
Allan McLeod A Scalawag
Hon. Everett Lowell Member of Congress from Boston
Helen Lowell His daughter
Miss Susan Walker A maiden of Boston
Major Stuart Dameron Chief of the Ku Klux Klan
Hose Norman A dare-devil poor white man
Nelse A black hero of the old régime
Aunt Eve His wife—"a respectable woman."
Hon. Tim Shelby Political boss of the new era
Hon. Pete Sawyer Sold seven times, got the money once
George Harris, Jr An Educated Negro, son of Eliza
Dick An unsolved riddle

Contents

Book I
Legree's Regime

Chapter Page
I. A Hero Returns 3
II. A Light Shining in Darkness 19
III. Deepening Shadows 30
IV. Mr. Lincoln's Dream 34
V. The Old and the New Church 38
VI. The Preacher and the Woman of Boston 44
VII. The Heart of a Child 52
VIII. An Experiment in Matrimony 58
IX. A Master of Men 63
X. The Man or Brute in Embryo 72
XI. Simon Legree 83
XII. Red Snow Drops 93
XIII. Dick 98
XIV. The Negro Uprising 100
XV. The New Citizen King 104
XVI. Legree Speaker of the House 109
XVII. The Second Reign of Terror 118
XVIII. The Red Flag of the Auctioneer 130
XIX. The Rally of the Clansmen 143
XX. How Civilisation Was Saved 153
XXI. The Old and the New Negro 163
XXII. The Danger of Playing With Fire 165
XXIII. The Birth of a Scalawag 171
XXIV. A Modern Miracle 176

Book II
Love's Dream

Chapter Page
I. Blue Eyes and Black Hair 187
II. The Voice of the Tempter 193
III. Flora 200
IV. The One Woman 206
V. The Morning of Love 213
VI. Beside Beautiful Waters 221
VII. Dreams and Fears 234
VIII. The Unsolved Riddle 240
IX. The Rhythm of the Dance 244
X. The Heart of a Villain 256
XI. The Old Old Story 265
XII. The Music of the Mills 277
XIII. The First Kiss 282
XIV. A Mysterious Letter 286
XV. A Blow in the Dark 290
XVI. The Mystery of Pain 301
XVII. Is God Omnipotent? 306
XVIII. The Ways of Boston 310
XIX. The Shadow of a Doubt 317
XX. A New Lesson in Love 320
XXI. Why the Preacher Threw His Life Away 328
XXII. The Flesh and the Spirit 337
Chapter Page
I. A Growl Beneath the Earth 349
II. Face to Face With Fate 351
III. A White Lie 361
IV. The Unspoken Terror 364
V. A Thousand-legged Beast 372
VI. The Black Peril 381
VII. Equality With a Reservation 385
VIII. The New Simon Legree 395
IX. The New America 404
X. Another Declaration of Independence 409
XI. The Heart of a Woman 417
XII. The Splendour of Shameless Love 423
XIII. A Speech That Made History 431
XIV. The Red Shirts 445
XV. The Higher Law 447
XVI. The End of a Modern Villain 455
XVII. Wedding Bells in the Governor's Mansion 457



This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in 1902, before the cutoff of January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1946, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 77 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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