Miss Ravenel's Conversion from Secession to Loyalty (Historical Novel)

Miss Ravenel's Conversion from Secession to Loyalty (Historical Novel)
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Lillie Ravenel is a teenage girl from Louisiana, brought to the north by her loyalist father at the outbreak of the American Civil War. She is pursued by two contrasting suitors. Captain Edward Colburne is a virtuous New Englander whose bland goodness makes him seem a perfect match for the uninspiring Miss Ravenel. Her second suitor, Colonel John Carter is a native Virginian, but loyal to the Union. Opposite to Colburne likes to drink and gamble, but he is a man of honor and an admirable military officer. Friendship with these men of the North brings the change in her belief, eventually converting her to the cause of the Union. She returns to New Orleans only to find herself shunned by her old circle of friends for having too many associations with the enemy. Civil War battles that Lillie's suitors go through are described as a bloody and inglorious hell.

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John William De Forest. Miss Ravenel's Conversion from Secession to Loyalty (Historical Novel)

Miss Ravenel's Conversion from Secession to Loyalty (Historical Novel)

Table of Contents

CHAPTER I. MR. EDWARD COLBURNE BECOMES ACQUAINTED WITH MISS LILLIE RAVENEL

CHAPTER II. MISS RAVENEL BECOMES ACQUAINTED WITH LIEUTENANT-COLONEL CARTER

CHAPTER III. MR. COLBURNE TAKES A SEGAR WITH LIEUTENANT-COLONEL CARTER

CHAPTER IV. THE DRAMATIC PERSONAGES GO ON A PIC-NIC, AND STUDY THE WAYS OF NEW BOSTON

CHAPTER V. THE DRAMATIC PERSONAGES GET NEWS FROM BULL RUN

CHAPTER VI. MR. COLBURNE SEES HIS WAY CLEAR TO BE A SOLDIER

CHAPTER VII. CAPTAIN COLBURNE RAISES A COMPANY, AND COLONEL CARTER A REGIMENT

CHAPTER VIII. THE BRAVE BID GOOD-BYE TO THE FAIR

CHAPTER IX. FROM NEW BOSTON TO NEW ORLEANS, VIA FORT JACKSON

CHAPTER X. THE RAVENELS FIND CAPTAIN COLBURNE IN GOOD QUARTERS

CHAPTER XI. NEW ORLEANS LIFE AND NEW ORLEANS LADIES

CHAPTER XII. COLONEL CARTER BEFRIENDS THE RAVENELS

CHAPTER XIII. THE COURSE OF TRUE LOVE BEGINS TO RUN ROUGH

CHAPTER XIV. LILLIE CHOOSES FOR HERSELF

CHAPTER XV. LILLIE BIDS GOOD-BYE TO THE LOVER WHOM SHE HAS CHOSEN, AND TO THE LOVER WHOM SHE WOULD NOT CHOOSE

CHAPTER XVI. COLONEL CARTER GAINS ONE VICTORY, AND MISS RAVENEL ANOTHER

CHAPTER XVII. COLONEL CARTER IS ENTIRELY VICTORIOUS BEFORE HE BEGINS HIS CAMPAIGN

CHAPTER XVIII. DOCTOR RAVENEL COMMENCES THE ORGANIZATION OF SOUTHERN LABOR

CHAPTER XIX. THE REORGANIZATION OF SOUTHERN LABOR IS CONTINUED WITH VIGOR

CHAPTER XX. CAPTAIN COLBURNE MARCHES AND FIGHTS WITH CREDIT

CHAPTER XXI. CAPTAIN COLBURNE HAS OCCASION TO SEE LIFE IN A HOSPITAL

CHAPTER XXII. CAPTAIN COLBURNE REINFORCES THE RAVENELS IN TIME TO AID THEM IN RUNNING AWAY

CHAPTER XXIII. CAPTAIN COLBURNE COVERS THE RETREAT OF THE SOUTHERN LABOR ORGANIZATION

CHAPTER XXIV. A DESPERATE ATTACK AND A SUCCESSFUL DEFENCE

CHAPTER XXV. DOMESTIC HAPPINESS, IN SPITE OF ADVERSE CIRCUMSTANCES

CHAPTER XXVI. CAPTAIN COLBURNE DESCRIBES CAMP AND FIELD LIFE

CHAPTER XXVII. COLONEL CARTER MAKES AN ASTRONOMICAL EXPEDITION WITH A DANGEROUS FELLOW TRAVELLER

CHAPTER XXVIII. THE COLONEL CONTINUES TO BE LED INTO TEMPTATION

CHAPTER XXIX. LILLIE REACHES THE APOTHEOSIS OF WOMANHOOD

CHAPTER XXX. COLONEL CARTER COMMITS HIS FIRST UNGENTLEMANLY ACTION

CHAPTER XXXI. A TORTURE WHICH MIGHT HAVE BEEN SPARED

CHAPTER XXXII. A MOST LOGICAL CONCLUSION

CHAPTER XXXIII. LILLIE DEVOTES HERSELF ENTIRELY TO THE RISING GENERATION

CHAPTER XXXIV. LILLIE'S ATTENTION IS RECALLED TO THE RISING GENERATION

CHAPTER XXXV. CAPTAIN COLBURNE AS MR. COLBURNE

CHAPTER XXXVI. A BRACE OF OFFERS

CHAPTER XXXVII. A MARRIAGE

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John William De Forest

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It may seem odd to some sensible people that this learned gentleman of over fifty should expose his own history so freely to a young fellow whom he had not seen until half an hour before. But it was a part of the Doctor's character to suppose that humanity took an interest in him just as he took an interest in all humanity; and his natural frankness had been increased by contact with the prevailing communicativeness of his open-hearted fellow-citizens of the South. I dare say that he would have unfolded the tale of his exile to an intelligent stage-driver by whom he might have chanced to sit, with as little hesitation as he poured it into the ears of this graduate of a distinguished university and representative of a staid puritanical aristocracy. He had no thought of claiming admiration for his self-sacrificing loyalty. His story was worth telling, not because it was connected with his interests, but because it had to do with his sentiments and convictions. Why should he not relate it to a stranger who was evidently capable of sympathising with those sentiments and appreciating those convictions?

But there was another reason for the Doctor's frankness. At that time every circumstance of the opening civil war, every item of life that came from hostile South to indignant North, was regarded by all as a species of public property. If you put down your name on a hotel register as arrived from Charleston, Savannah, Mobile, New Orleans, or any other point south of Mason & Dixon's line, you were immediately addressed and catechised. People wanted to know how you escaped, and why you tried to escape; and were ready to accord you any credit you demanded for perilous adventures and patriotic motives; and did not perceive it nor think a bit ill of you if you showed yourself somewhat of a romancer and braggart. And you, on the other hand, did not object to telling your story, but let it out as naturally as a man just rescued from drowning opens his heart to the sympathising crowd which greets him on the river bank.

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