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Through stained glass

Through stained glass

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Chapter 1 No.1

Word Count: 1092    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ck-coated, wandering through the unfamiliar streets of the great South American capital, and saw a nightmare. There is a touch of panic in the despatch whic

r, claimed that not thousands of families, but a

misphere. But to the self-chosen few who suffered shipwreck and privation, financial loss from their already depleted store, disaster to

ds, but they found storms and shipwreck. Their scanty resources were calculated to meet the needs of only the crudest life, but upon the threshold of their goal they fell into the red-tape trammels of a civilization older than their own. Where they looked for a free country, a wilderness flowing with milk and hone

k in returning men-of-war. But when the reflux had waned and died, there was still a residue of half a hundred families, most of whom were so destitute that they could not reach the co

tion of bitterness, for the Leightons of Leighton, Virginia, had fought not alone ag

e pulpit, supported by text and verse, the divine right of personal dominion by purchase, and in superb contradiction voicing the constitutional right to self-government. When the day of words was past, he did not wait for the desperate cry of the South in her later need. Abandoning gown and pulpit for ch

ught against him. But for that very reason it was all the more poignantly directed against that vague entity, the North. Never, while life lasted, w

for a song a considerable property on the outskirts of the city. He rented, besides, a large building in the center of the town, and established therein the Leighton Academy. Here he labored single handed until his worth as an instructor became known; then the sudden

om the prevailing local style of architecture and from the stately colonial type dear to the heart of every Virginian. The building was long and low, with sloping roofs of flat French tiles. A broad veranda bordered it on three sides. T

-vines soon embowered the verandas, while, on the south side, English ivy was gradually coaxed up the bare brick wall. This medley of leaf and

his little family, which, at the beginning of this history, consisted of himself;

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