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A Man of Honor

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 1746    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

something about the C

. Robert Pagebrook, however, the vehicle presented itself as an antique and a curiosity. Its body was suspended by leathern straps which came out of some high semicircular springs at the back, and it was thus raised so far above the axles that one could enter it only by mounting quite a stairway of steps, which unfolded themselves from its interior. Swinging thus by its leathern straps, the great heavy carriage body really seemed to have no support at all, and Mr. Robert found it necessary to exercise all the f

seat, Mr. Rob began to look at the country or, more properly, to study the road-side,

hirley?" he asked after awhile, as the c

cousin. "It's five miles, or ne

house? Wher

we left the train! Th

call a village a c

ften make much of it. There's Powhatan Court House now, I believe it tried to get itself called 'Scottsville,' or something of that sort, bu

dispense wholly with public roads? I ask for information merely, and the question is suggested by the fac

ad. It's one of the principal

ert as the negro boy who rode behind th

hat abou

blic thoroughfare before. Do you rea

it easy to open on horseback-or, as you would put it, 'by a person riding on horseback.' You see I'm growing circumspect in my choice of words since I've been with yo

now that I know them as another 'custom of the country.' How do thei

d, and the man who would leave a neighbor's gate open might as well take to s

d, consisting of a single carriage track, with a grass plat on each side, fringed with thick undergrowth and overhung by

ked Robert, as a larg

aks, Cousin E

s your Cou

n Edwin Pagebrook. He is our second cousin or, as

subject of cousinhood in its higher branches, and as I understand that a good deal of stress is laid

to go by. It's a 'case in point' as we lawyers say. Let's see. Cousin Edwin's grandfather was our great grandfather; then his father was our grandfather's brother, and that makes him first cousin to my mother and your father. Now I would call mother's first cousin m

at is the exact relationship between Cousin E

ut it. You must get some old lady to explain it with her keys, a

ging, certainly,

families here have intermarried so often that the relationships are all mixed up, and we always claim kin when there is any ghost of a chance for it

gebrook, under any consequent obligation to cons

ly answer

ey. I am sadly ignorant, you understand, and I do not wish to ma

l him Uncle Carter, of course. He i

f course, but I did not know h

he never was. What

alled him

sort of title or other. They call father 'Colonel Barksdale,' and Cousin Edw

ing custom of the cou

ary,' you know, and then

is she? Is

lady, you understand, and Shirley is her home. You'll find somebody of that sort in nearly every house, and they're a delightful sort of somebody, too, to have round. She'll post you up on relationships. She can use up a whole key-basket full of keys, and run 'em over by name backwards or forwards, just as you please. You needn't follow her though if you object to a

akin to me

s father's own b

only my uncle by marriage, a

real relationship; but she's your cousin, anyhow, and you'll offend

uppose I must. However, in the case of a young

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1 Chapter 1 No.12 Chapter 2 No.23 Chapter 3 No.34 Chapter 4 No.45 Chapter 5 No.56 Chapter 6 No.67 Chapter 7 No.78 Chapter 8 No.89 Chapter 9 No.910 Chapter 10 No.1011 Chapter 11 No.1112 Chapter 12 No.1213 Chapter 13 No.1314 Chapter 14 No.1415 Chapter 15 No.1516 Chapter 16 No.1617 Chapter 17 No.1718 Chapter 18 No.1819 Chapter 19 No.1920 Chapter 20 No.2021 Chapter 21 No.2122 Chapter 22 No.2223 Chapter 23 No.2324 Chapter 24 No.2425 Chapter 25 No.2526 Chapter 26 No.2627 Chapter 27 No.2728 Chapter 28 No.2829 Chapter 29 No.2930 Chapter 30 No.3031 Chapter 31 No.3132 Chapter 32 —A Private Lesson from a Bull-dog.33 Chapter 33 —A Spell Coming.34 Chapter 34 —Mirandy, Hank, and Shocky.35 Chapter 35 —Spelling down the Master.36 Chapter 36 —The Walk Home.37 Chapter 37 —A Night at Pete Jones's.38 Chapter 38 —Ominous Remarks of Mr. Jones.39 Chapter 39 —The Struggle in the Dark.40 Chapter 40 —Has God Forgotten Shocky 41 Chapter 41 —The Devil of Silence.42 Chapter 42 —Miss Martha Hawkins.43 Chapter 43 —The Hardshell Preacher.44 Chapter 44 —A Struggle for the Mastery.45 Chapter 45 —A Crisis with Bud.46 Chapter 46 —The Church of the Best Licks.47 Chapter 47 —The Church Militant.48 Chapter 48 —A Council of War.49 Chapter 49 —Odds and Ends.50 Chapter 50 —Face to Face.51 Chapter 51 —God Remembers Shocky.52 Chapter 52 —Miss Nancy Sawyer.53 Chapter 53 —Pancakes.54 Chapter 54 —A Charitable Institution.55 Chapter 55 —The Good Samaritan.56 Chapter 56 —Bud Wooing.57 Chapter 57 —A Letter and its Consequences.58 Chapter 58 —A Loss and a Gain.59 Chapter 59 —The Flight.60 Chapter 60 —The Trial.61 Chapter 61 — Brother Sodom. 62 Chapter 62 —The Trial Concluded.63 Chapter 63 —After the Battle.64 Chapter 64 —Into the Light.65 Chapter 65 —BOTANICAL CLASSIFICATION.66 Chapter 66 —GARDEN CLASSIFICATION.67 Chapter 67 —GENERAL CULTURE OF THE ROSE.68 Chapter 68 —SOIL, SITUATION, AND PLANTING.69 Chapter 69 —PRUNING, TRAINING, AND BEDDING.70 Chapter 70 —POTTING AND FORCING.71 Chapter 71 —PROPAGATION.72 Chapter 72 —MULTIPLICATION BY SEED AND HYBRIDIZING.73 Chapter 73 —DISEASES AND INSECTS ATTACKING THE ROSE.74 Chapter 74 —EARLY HISTORY OF THE ROSE, AND FABLES RESPECTING ITS ORIGIN.75 Chapter 75 —LUXURIOUS USE OF THE ROSE.76 Chapter 76 —THE ROSE IN CEREMONIES AND FESTIVALS, AND IN THE ADORNMENT OF BURIAL-PLACES.77 Chapter 77 —THE ROSE IN THE MIDDLE AGES.78 Chapter 78 —PERFUMES OF THE ROSE.79 Chapter 79 —MEDICAL PROPERTIES OF THE ROSE.80 Chapter 80 —GENERAL REMARKS.