Category: Fleming
Kith and Kin: The Enduring Ethic of the South, Part 2
Attachment to kinfolk is not simply a Charleston mania, though it might seem so if you remember the old joke: “Why are Charlestonians like the Chinese?
Greek I.13
Pronouns, that is, words that stand in for nouns, come in different types, principally personal (I, thou, he, she etc.), interrogative (who? what? etc), and demonstrative (this, that etc).
Kith and Kin: The Enduring Ethic of the South, Part 1 of 3
This is a corrected and revised version of a talk delivered to an Abbeville Institute program held at Hopsewee Plantation on the Santee River in Lowcountry South Carolina.
Italian I.2.9
This is actually Lesson 9. I was distracted by travel. Please assume, whether I post on time or not, that we are doing one lesson per week, starting on Domenica.
Southing: Reflections in Washington Park, Part III
Henry Timrod’s dream of Southern freedom was about to undergo a trial by fire, as Charleston endured one of the most brutal sieges ever inflicted on a great and civilized city.



