![]() ![]() So at the end of their long days of physical labor, he would undertake to teach them reading and writing and a general education. March is sent by the Army to help the former slaves on the plantation, who are still working there, in whatever way he can and to educate them. While in the South, he works at a plantation that is leased to a slightly crippled Northern man. That provides some thread between his young self and old, embittered, deeply saddened self. She reappears near the end of the book and is working in a hospital where he ends up near the end of the book. Before he met Marmee, he had an encounter with a slave girl, an innocent one, but a loving one. So its sweet and brutal, all at various times. ![]() March's time in the South and where he goes and what happens and back in time to his courtship with Marmee (who is much more human and has more human failings in this book than in Little Women). The book goes back and forth between telling of Mr. Alcott did in his real life) as they all live in the Concord area. He socializes with Emerson and Thoreau (which Mr. He is an abolitionist and participates in the Underground Railroad. March is very idealistic and is somewhat radical in his notions. ![]()
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