6IV Of the Meaning of Progress
35Appendix C. Typical Cases of Vessels Engaged in the American Slave-trade. 1619-1864.
7V Of the Wings of Atalanta
36Appendix D. Bibliography.
8VI Of the Training of Black Men
37Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil
9VII Of the Black Belt
38Postscript
10VIII Of the Quest of the Golden Fleece
39Credo
11IX Of the Sons of Master and Man
40I The Shadow of Years
12X Of the Faith of the Fathers
41II The Souls of White Folk
13XI Of the Passing of the First-Born
42III The Hands of Ethiopia
14XII Of Alexander Crummell
43IV Of Work And Wealth
15XIII Of the Coming of John
44V "The Servant in the House"
16XIV Of the Sorrow Songs
45VI Of the Ruling of Men
17The Afterthought
46VII The Damnation of Women
18The Suppression of the African Slave Trade
47VIII The Immortal Child
19Preface
48IX Of Beauty and Death
20Chapter I Introductory
49X The Comet
21Chapter II The Planting Colonies
50A Negro Schoolmaster in the New South
22Chapter III The Farming Colonies.
51Of the Training of Black Men
23Chapter IV The Trading Colonies.
52The Talented Tenth
24Chapter V The Period of the Revolution. 1774–1787.
53The Conservation of Races
25Chapter VI The Federal Convention. 1787.
54The Economic Revolution in the South
26Chapter VII Toussaint l'Ouverture and Anti-Slavery Effort, 1787–1806.
55Religion in the South
27Chapter VIII The Period of Attempted Suppression. 1807–1825.
56Strivings of the Negro People
28Chapter IX The International Status of the Slave-Trade. 1783–1862.
57The Black North: A Social Study
29Chapter X The Rise of the Cotton Kingdom. 1820–1850.