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113 images with subject Pictures.

  • "'THE BALANCE OF 'EM MUST OF GOT LOST'" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • "'YOU BETTER PUT ON A THICKER COAT, BUD'" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • "HE THREW HIMSELF AGAINST THE DOOR" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • "IT WAS ONLY FÉLICE" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • "IT YIELDED SUDDENLY, AS IF OPENED FROM WITHIN" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • "SHE FLUSHED AND HER BROWN EYES DROOPED" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • "SHE TURNED SLOWLY" [Frontispiece Image] From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • [Frontispiece Image] From The Carolinian, Edited by the Senior Class, 1909.


  • [Illustration] From The Carolinian, Edited by the Senior Class, 1909.


  • [Illustration] From The Carolinian, Edited by the Senior Class, 1909.


  • [Musical Notation] From The Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains.


  • 1861 He carried a knapsack, containing a jacket, white vest, dress shirts, collars, white gloves, toothbrush, undershirts, drawers, socks, soap, towels, needlecase, with needles, thread and buttons; an oilcloth, blanket, extra shoes, canteen, haversack, and tin cup. Frontispiece. From One of Jackson's Foot Cavalry: His Experience and what He Saw During the War 1861-1865, Including a History of "F Company," Richmond, Va., 21st Regiment Virginia Infantry, Second Brigade, Jackson's Division, Second Corps, A. N. Va.


  • ALEXANDER KNEELING AT THE SHRINE OF ACHILLES. Page 480. From Tupelo.


  • "ALL THAT DAY WAS DESPONDENCY, DEJECTION." From Balcony Stories.


  • "And while they chatter like monkeys, even about politics, they gesticulate violently." From The Great South; A Record of Journeys in Louisiana, Texas, the Indian Territory, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland.


  • THE ANIMAL PERSISTENTLY REFUSED TO STEP OVER HIS PROSTRATE BODY. Page 337. From Tupelo.


  • ARLINGTON PLANTATION ON THE MISSISSIPPI From Social Life in Old New Orleans. Being Recollections of My Girlhood.


  • AS I WAS RAPIDLY TRAVELING ALONG A NARROW PATH I SUDDENLY MET A NEGRO. Page 240 From Tupelo.


  • The author and his mother arrested and carried back into slavery. From Narrative of William W. Brown, an American Slave. Written by Himself.


  • The author caught by the bloodhounds. (See p.21.) From Narrative of William W. Brown, an American Slave. Written by Himself.


  • THE BEGGAR. Page 435. From Tupelo.


  • "BENJY HAD NO HEART FOR FURTHER CONCEALMENTS" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • ["Klutchem looked at him in perfect astonishment"] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • THE CAVALIER. From Tupelo.


  • ["Chad was groaning under a square wicker basket"] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • [The old Clock Tower] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • [The Colonel's Office] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • THE COLORED ELDER. From Tupelo.


  • "Crying, sister?" he asked coolly. See page 24. From A Slaveholder's Daughter.


  • DAVID AND GOLIATH. "I COME TO THEE IN THE NAME OF THE LORD OF HOSTS." Page 500. From Tupelo.


  • A FAMILIAR NIGHT SCENE TO THE ONES WHO WERE OVER THERE Just like a Fourth of July celebration. Star shells bursting to signal the artillery, flares to light up No-Man's Land, and the boom, boom of cannon, which sounded like huge fire crackers. Slow, but sure, we moved on through the Argonne. From Tar-Heel War Record (In the Great World War).


  • [The Advance Agent] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • THE FIRST COMMUNION. From Balcony Stories.


  • [The Colonel's Door] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • GOING OVER FIRST SIGHT OF FRANCE Panoramic view of a bit of the ground the boys covered From Tar-Heel War Record (In the Great World War).


  • 1863 He carried an oil cloth, in which was wrapped a blanket, drawers, and socks; haversack, in which was towel, soap and needle case; canteen, tin cup and tin can for cooking. Opposite page 174. From One of Jackson's Foot Cavalry: His Experience and what He Saw During the War 1861-1865, Including a History of "F Company," Richmond, Va., 21st Regiment Virginia Infantry, Second Brigade, Jackson's Division, Second Corps, A. N. Va.


  • 1864 He carried an oil cloth, in which was wrapped a cotton fly tent; haversack, in which was towel, soap and needle case; canteen, tin cup and tin can for cooking. Opposite page 228. From One of Jackson's Foot Cavalry: His Experience and what He Saw During the War 1861-1865, Including a History of "F Company," Richmond, Va., 21st Regiment Virginia Infantry, Second Brigade, Jackson's Division, Second Corps, A. N. Va.


  • ["Down a flight of stone steps"] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • ["Like an ebony Statue of Liberty"] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • HE RAN AT THE FIRST FIRE. Page 589. From Tupelo.


  • "HER HEART DROVE HER TO THE WINDOW." From Balcony Stories.


  • HOW THE DARKIES SHOUTED. Page 562. From Tupelo.


  • I ASKED FOR SOMETHING TO EAT. Page 294 From Tupelo.


  • I CALLED, 'HALLO, UNCLE!' AS HE RESTED FOR A MOMENT. Page 200 From Tupelo.


  • I ENCOUNTERED AN OLD COLORED MAN. Page 48 From Tupelo.


  • I ENTERED, BUT A GLANCE REVEALED TO ME THE CHARACTER OF THE PROPRIETOR. Page 149 From Tupelo.


  • I GAVE HIM A PRESENT OF FIFTY DOLLARS IN GOLD. Page 548. From Tupelo.


  • I GOT MY BACK AGAINST A TREE, AND WITH A KNOTTY CLUB I KILLED SIX HOUNDS. Page 120 From Tupelo.


  • I SAW THEM GAZING DOWN UPON ME WITH EVIDENT AMAZEMENT AND ALARM. Page 248 From Tupelo.


  • "I WEPT, I WEPT, I WEPT" From Balcony Stories.


  • "I'LL WHIP THE STORY OUT OF HIM." Page 544. From Tupelo.


  • [Some Stray Pickaninnies] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • IN THE EAST THE TENTS OF A GREAT ENCAMPMENT WERE SPREAD OUT IN FULL VIEW. Page 256 From Tupelo.


  • INSTANTLY THEY ALL THREE FIRED UPON THEIR WOUNDED AND DEFENCELESS VICTIM. Page 70 From Tupelo.


  • JUST THEN, THE CAP'N ORDERED ME TO MOUNT MY HORSE. Page 164 From Tupelo.


  • "MA, I THINK THEY WILL LET PA LOOSE, 'CAUSE WE PRAY SO MUCH FOR HIM." Page 284 From Tupelo.


  • MAST AND ALL WENT OVERBOARD From To Have and to Hold.


  • [MIMI] From Balcony Stories.


  • MOVED OVER THE COUNTRY WITH FIRE AND ROPE. Page 556. From Tupelo.


  • "MRS. MANNING STUMBLED FORWARD" From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • "My fire is my friend."—Page 27. [Frontispiece Image] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • " 'My sweet sister!' " From The Clansman: An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan.


  • [The Nervous Man] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • "NO, NEVER! I WILL VOLUNTEER AS ONE OF THIRTY THOUSAND TO BUTCHER THE VILLIAN IF EVER HE SETS FOOT ON SLAVE TERRITORY." Page 30 From Tupelo.


  • "NOAH GOT TIGHT TOO, AND CUSSED HIS NIGGER BOY HAM." Page 517. From Tupelo.


  • NORTH WILKESBORO, WILKES COUNTY (NEW). From The Woman's Association for the Betterment of Public School Houses in North Carolina.


  • THE OLD EXPERT WHO PRESIDES OVER EACH KETTLE. Page 398. From Tupelo.


  • [Henny] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • "On the brink of the precipice the mother trembled." From The Clansman: An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan.


  • "Our hopes in youth are like those roseate shadows Cast by the sunlight on the dewy grass." From Poems of Paul Hamilton Hayne.


  • [Frontispiece Image] [P.68 "'I'M MIGHTY GLAD YOU'VE SPOKE'" From In Simpkinsville: Character Tales.


  • PENDER FELL PIERCED BY TWO BALLS. Page 134 From Tupelo.


  • PLEASANT HILL, HENDERSON COUNTY (NEW). From The Woman's Association for the Betterment of Public School Houses in North Carolina.


  • [Polishing the Parlor Floor] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • THE PURITAN. Page 370 From Tupelo.


  • "THE QUIET, DIM-LIGHTED ROOM OF A CONVALESCENT." From Balcony Stories.


  • "'Read yourself—this once,' he pleaded, 'and let me listen.'" See page 435 [Frontispiece Image] From The Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields.


  • THE ROOM IN THE OLD GALLERY. From Balcony Stories.


  • SADIE BECK AND SALLIE RITTER FROM BEHIND TREES KEPT UP AN INCESSANT FIRE. Page 82 From Tupelo.


  • Search Lights at work in the Argonne, trying to locate the enemy plane. From Tar-Heel War Record (In the Great World War).


  • THE SISTERS BID HER GOOD-BY. From Balcony Stories.


  • The slave-trader Walker and the author driving a gang of slaves to the southern market. From Narrative of William W. Brown, an American Slave. Written by Himself.


  • SLAVES WORKING IN THE COTTON FIELD. From Tupelo.


  • [Fitz] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • THE SOLDIER'S REPRIVE. Page 461. From Tupelo.


  • [The Street Entrance] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • "...stood, bareheaded, gazing over the broad field." From The Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields.


  • " 'Take dat f'um yo' equal--" From The Clansman: An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan.


  • TANKS IN THE MEUSE-ARGONNE Those rumbling little tanks go wabbling over the shell-torn grounds up to a stone house. You hear a crack, see a puff of smoke, and the stone house begins to crumble. A few more shots, and a few more Huns rush out with hands over their heads, and you can almost hear them yell "Kamerad." The house is down, prisoners captured and the little tanks wabble to the next victim. From Tar-Heel War Record (In the Great World War).


  • THE BAMBOULA From An Elephant's Track and Other Stories.


  • ["Gentlemen, a true Southern lady"] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • [Mister Grocerman] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • THE DOOR BLEW OPEN AND I STAGGERED IN. Page 267 From Tupelo.


  • " 'The Fiery Cross of old Scotland's hills!' " From The Clansman: An Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan.


  • ["The little negroes around the door"] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • THE MEN RAN UP THE KNOLL AND FIRED AT US. Page 277 From Tupelo.


  • THEY HUNG MY SON TO THE LIMB OF A TREE. Page 187 From Tupelo.


  • THEY LIVED IN A CAVE ON THE BANKS OF THAT STREAM. Page 57 From Tupelo.


  • "THIS TIME WE HAVE CAUGHT IT!" From Balcony Stories.


  • [Title Page Image] From The Warm Springs, Madison County, Western North Carolina. Howerton & Klein, Proprietors. Hot, Warm, Tepid and Cold Baths.


  • "TO POSE IN ABJECT PATIENCE AND AWKWARDNESS." From Balcony Stories.


  • "TURNED TO HER DOMESTIC DUTIES." From Balcony Stories.


  • "Ugh! I ain't see'd no silver myself!" See page 13. From A Slaveholder's Daughter.


  • VIRGINIA [Frontispiece Image] From Virginia.


  • "...waited for the oxen to reach the summit of the hill." From The Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields.


  • "WALKING AWAY WITH A SHRUG OF THE SHOULDERS." From Balcony Stories.


  • WE WERE BROUGHT INTO THE PRESENCE OF GEN. THOS. JORDAN. 102 From Tupelo.


  • ["Who's that?"] From Colonel Carter of Cartersville.


  • "Where is that idiot, that dolt, that sluggard, that snail, with my mail?" From Balcony Stories.


  • WHILE THE YOUNG PATRIOT WAS DRINKING SHE DREW A PISTOL AND IMMEDIATELY SHOT HIM. Page 526. From Tupelo.


  • "'WHITE IS FOR BABIES'" From In Simpkinsville: Character Tales.


  • [Frontispiece Image] "WHY DON'T YOU END IT?" (page 209) From To Have and to Hold.


  • WILLIS WADED IN THE CREEK FOR THREE MILES. Page 204 From Tupelo.