CONTENTS.

Previous
CHAPTER I.
Two cities.—Our home upon the waters.—Southward bound.—“Only a brass star.”—At Ford’s Hotel Pages1-13
CHAPTER II.
To-day and the yesterdays.—Richmond—Its monuments—Its surroundings.—The sculptor’s studio.—Andromache. Pages14-28
CHAPTER III.
Fire and ruins.—Through sylvan scenes.—The Cave of Lwray.—A jewelled city underground.—The white savages of Wise County Pages29-44
CHAPTER IV.
Through the great swamp.—Charleston.—A memory of the Old World.—Blacks and whites.—Peculiarities of the coloured folk.—A ghost of dead days.—Quaint scenes Pages45-62
CHAPTER V.
St. Michael’s chimes.—Architectural attraction.—Magnolia Cemetery.—A philosophical mendicant.—The market.—Aboard the boat—Fort Sumpter Pages63-83
CHAPTER VI.
The great Salt Marsh.—A break down.—We reach Savannah.—Fancy sketches.—The forest city.—A gossip with the natives.—Cross questions and crooked answers Pages84-90
CHAPTER VII.
To-day and yesterday.—General experience of travel in the South.—The associated Southern railways Pages100-109
CHAPTER VIII.
En route for Jacksonville.—A few words about Florida—Its climate.—Its folk—Its productions Pages110-121
CHAPTER IX.
Pine forests.—Arcadian scenes.—Strange companionship.—We reach Jacksonville Pages122-131
CHAPTER X.
Jacksonville.—Our hotel.—Greenleaf’s museum.—Floridian curiosities. East winds and tropical breezes.—Strawberry packing Pages132-143
CHAPTER XI.
Fernandina.—Romance or history?—Dungeness.—To Tocor.—On board the boat.—Oddities.—A lovely water drive Pages144-158
CHAPTER XII.
St. Augustine.—A land of the long ago.—A chat with a Spanish antiquity.—Quaint streets.—City gate.—Fort Marion.—The old Slave Market.—The monuments.—The Plaza.—Cathedral and Convent Pages159-179
CHAPTER XIII.
A chat by the way.—A steam bicycle.—Rough times.—At Ocala Pages180-188
CHAPTER XIV.
The “Okeehumkee.”—The Silver Springs.—The weird wonders of the Ocklawaha Pages189-203
CHAPTER XV.
Picturesque scenery on St. John’s River.—“Sickening for the fever ma’am?”—The inland lakes.—A pair of elderly turtle doves.—Sport on the Indian river Pages204-221
CHAPTER XVI.
Retrospective.—A critical conductor.—Montgomery.—Train wreckers at work.—Weird scenes in the moonlight.—Silent watchers.—“Wild Cat” train to New Orleans Pages222-237
CHAPTER XVII.
New Orleans, “The Paris of the South.”—French quarters.—Tropical street scene.—To Carrolton.—The LevÉes.—Classical architecture.—A coloured funeral.—The dismal swamp.—Lake Ponchartrain.—A gambling population Pages238-252

DOWN SOUTH

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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