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Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields, The
Book IV - The Awakening   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter V. Maria Stands on Christopher's Ground
Ellen Glasgow
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       _ A broad yellow beam sliding under the door brought Maria into
       sudden consciousness, and rising hastily from the straw, where
       her figure had shaped an almost perfect outline, she crossed the
       dusky floor smelling of trodden grain and went out into the early
       sunshine, which slanted over the gray fields. A man trundling a
       wheelbarrow from the market garden, and a milkmaid crossing the
       lawn with a bucket of fresh milk, were the only moving figures in
       the landscape, and after a single hurried glance about her she
       followed the straight road to the house and entered the rear
       door, which Malindy had unlocked.
       Meeting Fletcher a little later at breakfast, she found, to her
       surprise, that he accepted her presence without question and made
       absolutely no allusion to the heated conversation of the evening
       before. He looked sullen and dirty, as if he had slept all night
       in his clothes, and he responded to Maria's few good-humoured
       remarks with a single abrupt nod over his coffee-cup. As she
       watched him a feeling of pity for his loneliness moved her heart,
       and when he rose hastily at last and strode out into the hall she
       followed him and spoke gently while he paused to take down his
       hat from one of the old antlers near the door.
       "If I could only be of some use to you, grandfather," she said;
       "are you sure there is nothing I can do?"
       With his hand still outstretched, he hesitated an instant and
       stood looking down upon her, his heavy features wrinkling into a
       grin.
       "I've nothing against you as a woman," he responded, "but when
       you set up and begin to charge like a judge, I'll be hanged if I
       can stand you."
       "Then I won't charge any more. I only want to help you and to do
       what is best. If you would but let me make myself of some
       account."
       He laughed not unkindly, and flecked with his stubby forefinger
       at some crumbs which had lodged in the folds of his cravat.
       "Then I reckon you'd better mix a batch of dough and feed the
       turkeys," he replied, and touching her shoulder with his hat-
       brim, he went hurriedly out of doors.
       When he had disappeared beyond the last clump of shrubbery
       bordering the drive, she remembered the lantern she had left
       hanging in the barn, and, going to look for it, carried it
       upstairs to her room. In the afternoon, however, it occurred to
       her that Christopher would probably need the light by evening,
       and swinging the handle over her arm, she set out across the
       newly ploughed fields toward the Blake cottage. The stubborn
       rustic pride which would keep him from returning to the Hall
       aroused in her a frank, almost tender amusement. She had long ago
       wearied of the trivial worldliness of life; in the last few years
       the shallowness of passion had seemed its crowning insult, and
       over the absolute sincerity of her own nature the primal emotion
       she had heard in Christopher's voice exerted a compelling charm.
       The makeshift of a conventional marriage had failed her utterly;
       her soul had rejected the woman's usual cheap compromise with
       externals; and in her almost puritan scorn of the vanities by
       which she was surrounded she had attained the moral elevation
       which comes to those who live by an inner standard of purity
       rather than by outward forms. In the largeness of her nature
       there had been small room for regret or for wasted passion, and
       until her meeting with Christopher on the day of her homecoming
       he had existed in her imagination only as a bright and impossible
       memory. Now, as she went rapidly forward along the little path
       that edged the field, she found herself wondering if, after all,
       she had worn unconsciously his ideal as an armour against the
       petty temptations and the sudden melancholies of the last six
       years.
       As she neared the fence that divided the two farms she saw him
       walking slowly along a newly turned furrow, and when he looked up
       she lifted the lantern and waved it in the air. Quickening his
       steps, he swung himself over the rail fence with a single bound,
       and came to where she stood amid a dried fringe of last summer's
       yarrow.
       "So you are none the worse for the night in the barn?" he asked
       anxiously.
       "Why, I dreamed the most beautiful dreams," she replied, "and I
       had the most perfect sleep in the world."
       "Then the mice kept away?"
       "At least they didn't wake me."
       "I stayed within call until sunrise," he said quietly. "You were
       not afraid?"
       Her rare smile shone suddenly upon him, illumining the delicate
       pallor of her face. "I knew that you were there," she answered.
       For a moment he gazed steadily into her eyes, then with a
       decisive movement he took the lantern from her hand and turned as
       though about to go back to his work.
       "It was very kind of you to bring this over," he said, pausing
       beside the fence.
       "Kind? Why, what did you expect? I knew it might hang there
       forever, but you would not come for it."
       "No, I should not have come for it," he replied, swinging the
       lantern against the rails with such force that the glass
       shattered and fell in pieces to the ground.
       "Why, what a shame!" said Maria; "and it is all my fault."
       A smile was on his face as he looked at her.
       "You are right--it is all your fault," he repeated, while his
       gaze dropped to the level of her lips and hung there for a
       breathless instant.
       With an effort she broke the spell which had fallen over her,
       and, turning from him, pointed to the old Blake graveyard on the
       little hill.
       "Those black cedars have tempted me for days," she said. "Will
       you tell me what dust they guard so faithfully?"
       He followed her gesture with a frown.
       "I will show you, if you like," he answered. "It is the only spot
       on earth where I may offer you hospitality."
       "Your people are buried there?"
       "For two hundred years. Will you come?"
       While she hesitated, he tossed the lantern over into his field
       and came closer to her side. "Come," he repeated gently, and at
       his voice a faint flush spread slowly from her throat to the
       loosened hair upon her forehead. The steady glow gave her face a
       light, a radiance, that he had never seen there until to-day.
       "Yes, I will come if you wish it," she responded quietly.
       Together they went slowly up the low, brown incline over the
       clods of upturned earth. When they reached the bricked-up wall,
       which had crumbled away in places, he climbed over into the bed
       of periwinkle and then held out his hands to assist her in
       descending. "Here, step into that hollow," he said, "and don't
       jump till I tell you. Ah, that's it; now, I'm ready."
       At his words, she made a sudden. spring forward, her dress caught
       on the wall, and she slipped lightly into his outstretched arms.
       For the half of a second he held her against his breast; then, as
       she released herself, he drew back and lifted his eves to meet
       the serene composure of her expression. He was conscious that his
       own face flamed red hot, but to all outward seeming she had not
       noticed the incident which had so moved him. The calm distinction
       of her bearing struck him as forcibly as it had done at their
       first meeting. "What a solemn place," she said, lowering her
       voice as she looked about her.
       For answer he drew aside the screening boughs of a cedar and
       motioned to the discoloured marble slabs strewn thickly under the
       trees.
       "Here are my people," he returned gravely. "And here is my
       ground."
       Pausing, she glanced down on his father's grave, reading with
       difficulty the inscription beneath the dry dust from the cedars.
       "He lived to be very old," she said, after a moment.
       "Seventy years. He lived exactly ten years too long."
       "Too long?"
       "Those last ten years wrecked him. Had he died at sixty he would
       have died happy."
       He turned from her, throwing himself upon the carpet of
       periwinkle, and coming to where he lay, she sat down on a granite
       slab at his side.
       "One must believe that there is a purpose in it," she responded,
       raising a handful of fine dust and sifting it through her
       fingers, "or one would go mad over the mystery of things."
       "Well, I dare say the purpose was to make me a tobacco-grower,"
       he replied grimly, "and if so, it has fulfilled itself in a
       precious way. Why, there's never been a time since I was ten
       years old when I wouldn't have changed places, and said 'thank
       you,' too, with any one of those old fellows over there. They
       were jolly chaps, I tell you, and led jolly lives. It used to be
       said of them that they never won a penny nor missed a kiss."
       "Nor learned a lesson, evidently. Well, may they rest in peace;
       but I'm not sure that their wisdom would carry far. There are
       better things than gaming and kissing, when all is said."
       "Better things? Perhaps."
       "Have you not found them?"
       "Not yet; but then, I can't judge anything except tobacco, you
       know."
       For a long pause she looked down into his upturned face.
       "After all, it isn't the way we live nor the work we do that
       matters," she said slowly, "but the ideal we put into it. Is
       there any work too sordid, too prosaic, to yield a return of
       beauty?"
       "Do you think so?" he asked, and glanced down the hill to his
       ploughshare lying in the ripped-up field. "But it is not beauty
       that some of us want, you see--it's success, action, happiness,
       call it what you will."
       "Surely they are not the same. I have known many successful
       people, and the only three perfectly happy ones I ever met were
       what the world calls failures."
       "Failures?" he echoed, and remembered Tucker.
       Her face softened, and she looked beyond him to the blue sky,
       shining through the interlacing branches of bared trees.
       "Two were women," she pursued, clasping and unclasping the quiet
       hands in her lap, "and one was a Catholic priest who had been
       reared in a foundling asylum and educated by charity. When I knew
       him he was on his way to a leper island in the South Seas, where
       he would be buried alive for the remainder of his life. All he
       had was an ideal, but it flooded his soul with light. Another was
       a Russian Nihilist, a girl in years and yet an atheist and a
       revolutionist in thought, and her unbelief was in its way as
       beautiful as the religion of my priest. To return to Russia meant
       death; she knew, and yet she went back, devoted and exalted, to
       lay down her life for an illusion. So it seems, when one looks
       about the world, that faith and doubt are dry and inanimate forms
       until we pour forth our heart's blood, which vivifies them."
       She fell silent, and he started and touched softly the hem of her
       black skirt.
       "And the other?" he asked.
       "The other had a stranger and a longer story, but if you will
       listen I'll tell it to you. She was an Italian, of a very old and
       proud family, and as she possessed rare loveliness and charm, a
       marriage was arranged for her with a wealthy nobleman, who had
       fallen in love with her before she left her convent. She was a
       rebellious soul, it seems, for the day before her wedding, just
       after she had patiently tried on her veil and orange blossoms,
       she slipped into the dress of her waiting-maid and ran off with a
       music-teacher--a beggarly fanatic, they told me--a man of red
       republican views, who put dangerous ideas into the heads of the
       peasantry. From that moment, they said, her life was over; her
       family shut their doors upon her, and she fell finally so low as
       to be seen one evening singing in the public streets. Her story
       touched me when I heard it: it seemed a pitiable thing that a
       woman should be wrecked so hopelessly by a single moment of
       mistaken courage; and after months of searching I at last found
       the place she lived in, and went one May evening up the long
       winding staircase to her apartment--two clean, plain rooms which
       looked on a little balcony where there were pots of sweet basil
       and many pigeons. At my knock the door opened, and I knew her at
       once in the beautiful white face and hands of the woman who stood
       a little back in the shadow. Her forty years had not coarsened
       her as they do most Italian women, and her eyes still held the
       unshaken confidence of extreme youth. Her husband was sleeping in
       the next room, she said; he had but a few days more to live, and
       he had been steadily dying for a year. Then, at my gesture of
       sympathy, she shook her head and smiled.
       "I have had twenty years," she said, "and I have been perfectly
       happy. Think of that when so many women die without having even a
       single day of life. Why, but for the one instant of courage that
       saved me, I myself might have known the world only as a vegetable
       knows the garden in which it fattens. My soul has lived, and
       though I have been hungry and cold and poorly clad, I have never
       sunk to the level of what they would have made me. He is a
       dreamer," she finished gently, "and though his dreams were
       nourished upon air, and never came true except in our thoughts,
       still they have touched even the most common things with beauty."
       While she talked, he awoke and called her, and we went in to see
       him. He complained a little fretfully that his feet were cold,
       and she knelt down and warmed them in the shawl upon her bosom.
       The mark of death was on him, and I doubt if even in the fulness
       of his strength he were worthy of the passion he inspired--but
       that, after all, makes little difference. It was a great love,
       which is the next best thing to a great faith."
       As she ended, he raised his eyes slowly, catching the fervour of
       her glance.
       "It was more than that--it was a great deliverance," he said.
       Then, as she rose, he followed her from the graveyard, and they
       descended the low brown hill together. _
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LIST OF CHARACTERS
Book I- The Inheritance
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter I. The Man in the Field
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter II. The Owner of Blake Hall
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter III. Showing That a Little Culture Entails Great Care
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter IV. Of Human Nature in the Raw State
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter V. The Wreck of the Blakes
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter VI. Carraway Plays Courtier
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter VII. In Which a Stand Is Made
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter VIII. Treats of a Passion That Is Not Love
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter IX. Cynthia
   Book I- The Inheritance - Chapter X. Sentimental and Otherwise
Book II - The Temptation
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter I. The Romance That Might Have Been
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter II. The Romance That Was
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter III. Fletcher's Move and Christopher's Counterstroke
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter IV. A Gallant Deed That Leads to Evil
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter V. The Glimpse of a Bride
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter VI. Shows Fletcher in a New Light
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter VII. In Which Hero and Villain Appear as One
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter VIII. Between the Devil and the Deep Sea
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter IX. As the Twig Is Bent
   Book II - The Temptation - Chapter X. Powers of Darkness
Book III - The Revenge
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter I. In Which Tobacco Is Hero
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter II. Between Christopher and Will
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter III. Mrs. Blake Speaks Her Mind on Several Matters
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter IV. In Which Christopher Hesitates
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter V. The Happiness of Tucker
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter VI. The Wages of Folly
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter VII. The Toss of a Coin
   Book III - The Revenge - Chapter VIII. In Which Christopher Triumphs
Book IV - The Awakening
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter I. The Unforeseen
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter II. Maria Returns to the Hall
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter III. The Day Afterward
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter IV. The Meeting in the Night
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter V. Maria Stands on Christopher's Ground
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter VI. The Growing Light
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter VII. In which Carraway Speaks the Truth to Maria
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter VIII. Between Maria and Christopher
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter IX. Christopher Faces Himself
   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter X. By the Poplar Spring
Book V - The Ancient Law
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter I. Christopher Seeks an Escape
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter II. The Measure of Maria
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter III. Will's Ruin
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter IV. In Which Mrs. Blake's Eyes are Opened
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter V. Christopher Plants by Moonlight
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter VI. Treats of the Tragedy Which Wears a Comic Mask
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter VII. Will Faces Desperation and Stands at Bay
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter VIII. How Christopher Comes into His Revenge
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter IX. The Fulfilling of the Law
   Book V - The Ancient Law - Chapter X. The Wheel of Life