Rebuilding the south with Smith's Dream Killer "The world is love good, tells you that people are important, then denies love and insults people, this is wrong." Short quotes are a perfect summary of the changing world that many people in the south face as they approach the 20th century. On the day of plantation, a housewife overseeing 50 black slaves and many of this ideal of life style has gone forever.
Southern writers are not deeply involved in racial injustice than Lilian Smith. She grew up deep in the south and lived with her colleague Paula Snelling on the hills of northern Georgia where she ran camps for summer girls and published a magazine named South Today . I will talk about southern ethnic groups, gender, class problems. In 1944, Smith published her most famous novel "Strange Fruit". This is a novel about the effect of two apartheid in a small town in the south. In 1949, Lilian Smith gave her the most wonderful work she asked, "Why does this white dream fill the freedom and dream of human dignity and over and over again beautifully" A murderer ". Soon afterwards, most of her house was destroyed by arson and she was surprised but was not intimidated.
But Smith is 80 years old now, and the old man is increasingly forgotten. "The dream of Franklin Webster and Smith was surprisingly dreamy because it was too bad," the editor of Wichita Daily Eagle concluded in the beginning of 1908. The Auburn Hills Cemetery, built in 1831 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was the first rancher cemetery in the United States. The gate is a lotus pillar and veranda forming a central portal reminding the ruins of Dendera and Karnak. On the entrance, the clergy says "At that time dust returns to the earth, the Holy Spirit returns to the god who gave it." Some of the silly memories of Isola Bella are sitting on a covered tower, miniature Gothic cathedral, Roman Perris style, American Sphinx.