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The Queen of the Swamp, and other plain Americans cover

The Queen of the Swamp, and other plain Americans

Chapter 2: NOTE
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About This Book

A collection of short stories set across Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois that sketches rural Midwestern life in the nineteenth century. The pieces range from domestic vignettes and local-color portraits to modest historical touches, following villagers, itinerant preachers, courting couples, and working families as they negotiate faith, social expectations, and economic pressures. Focused on community rituals, seasonal gatherings, and personal choices, the stories use gentle sentiment and close observation to record manners, vanished customs, and everyday struggles of pioneer and small-town existence.

NOTE

Some of these stories were written more than a dozen years ago. They have been gathered in from the Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s Bazar, Outing, the Independent, the Delineator, the Chicago Tribune, the late Chicago Graphic, and Lippincott’s Magazine, by courteous permission of the editors; and revised year after year. Many of them embody phases of American life which have entirely passed away, or are yet to be found in secluded spots like eddies along the margin of the nation’s progress. Their honest preservation of middle western experience makes them, at least in the author’s eyes, seem worthy themselves of preservation.

The Puritan and the Church of England took possession of the Atlantic seaboard, north and south; and Jesuit and Recollet missionaries carried the cross through Canada and down the Mississippi. But the pioneer evangelist of the Middle West was the Methodist itinerant.