Skip to Navigation  Skip to Content  Skip to Footer Navigation  Skip to Sitemap Navigation Link 

The Walker Percy Project logo
The Walker Percy Project

The House of Percy: Honor, Melancholy, and Imagination in a Southern Family

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Bertram Wyatt-Brown

— "The House of Percy...traces, in a fascinating and eloquent way, the history of dark moods, suicide, and imagination in one of America's great — and most interesting — Southern families." – Kay Redfield Jamieson, author of The Unquiet Mind and Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament

The novels of Walker Percy — The Moviegoer, Lancelot, The Second Coming, and The Thanatos Syndrome to name a few — have left a permanent mark on twentieth-century Southern fiction; yet the history of the Percy family in America matches anything, perhaps, that he could have created. Two centuries of wealth, literary accomplishment, political leadership, depression, and sometimes suicide established a fascinating legacy that lies behind Walker Percy's acclaimed prose and profound insight into the human condition.

In The House of Percy, Bertram Wyatt-Brown masterfully interprets the life of this gifted family, drawing out the twin themes of an inherited inclination to despondency and an abiding sense of honor. The Percy family roots in Mississippi and Louisiana go back to "Don Carlos" Percy, an eighteenth-century soldier of fortune who amassed a large estate but fell victim to mental disorder and suicide. Wyatt-Brown traces the Percys through the slaveholding heyday of antebellum Natchez, the ravages of the Civil War (which produced the heroic Colonel William Alexander Percy, the "Gray Eagle"), and a return to prominence in the Mississippi Delta after Reconstruction.

In addition, the author recovers the tragic lives and literary achievements of several Percy-related women, including Sarah Dorsey, a popular post-Civil War novelist who horrified her relatives by befriending Jefferson Davis — a married man — and bequeathing to him her plantation home, Beauvoir, along with her entire fortune. Wyatt-Brown then chronicles the life of Senator LeRoy Percy, whose climactic re-election loss in 1911 to a racist demagogue deply stung the family pride, but inspired his bold defiance to the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s. The author goes on to tell the poignant story of poet and war hero Will Percy, the Senator's son. The weight of this family narrative found expression in Will Percy's memoirs, Lanterns on the Levee — and in the works of Walker Percy, who was reared in his cousin Will's Greenville home after the suicidal death of Walker's father and his mother's drowning.

As the biography of a powerful dynasty, steeped in Southern traditions and claims to kinship with English nobility, The House of Percy shows the interrelationship of legend, depression, and grand achievement. Written by a leading scholar of the South, it weaves together intensive research and thoughtful insights into a riveting, unforgettable story.

Table of Contents

Prologue: The Brooding Knight

Part One. The Early Male Percys
1. The Demons of Charles Percy
2. A Son of Two Fathers
3. Brevity of Life
Part Two. The Female Line
4. The Philadelphia Years
5. Two Southern Brontes
6. Sarah Dorsey
7. Collision of Minds
8. Enshrining the Lost Cause
Part Three. The Greenville Percys
9. A Knight-errant's Defeat
10. Will Percy: The Years of Testing
11. At War
12. The Terrors of Klan and Flood
13. An Acquaintance with Grief
14. Stoic Honor
15. New Duties and Old Memories
Part Four. Fiction, Legend, and Lineage
16. Walker and the Legacy of "Uncle Will"
17. Walker Percy: The Making of a Southern Novelist
18. Thanatos and Lineage
Appendices: Genealogical Charts
A Selected List of Manuscript Collections
Notes
Index

Bertram Wyatt-Brown is Richard J. Milbauer Professor of History at the University of Florida. Among his books include Southern Honor: Ethics and Behavior in the Old South, Yankee Saints and Southern Sinners, and The Literary Percys: Family History, Gender, and the Southern Imagination (1994).

Publication Date: November 1996