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Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields, The
Book IV - The Awakening   Book IV - The Awakening - Chapter IX. Christopher Faces Himself
Ellen Glasgow
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       _ When she had gone through the gate and across the little patch of
       trodden grass into the sunken road, Christopher took up the ropes
       and with a quick jerk of the buried ploughshare began his
       plodding walk over the turned-up sod. The furrow was short, but
       when he reached the end of it he paused from sheer exhaustion and
       stood wiping the heavy moisture from his brow. The scene through
       which he had just passed had left him quivering in every nerve,
       as if he had been engaged in some terrible struggle against
       physical odds. All at once he became aware that the afternoon was
       too oppressive for field work, and, unhitching the horses from
       the plough, he led them slowly back to the stable beyond the
       house. As he went, it seemed to him that he had grown middle-aged
       within the hour; his youth had departed as mysteriously as his
       strength.
       A little later, Tucker, who was sitting on the end of a big log
       at the woodpile, looked up in surprise from the anthill he was
       watching.
       "Quit work early, eh, Christopher?"
       "Yes; I've given out," replied Christopher, stopping beside him
       and picking up the axe which lay in a scattered pile of chips.
       "It's the spring weather, I reckon, but I'm not fit for a tougher
       job than chopping wood."
       "Well, I'd leave that off just now, if I were you."
       Raising the axe, Christopher swung it lightly over his shoulder;
       then, lowering it with a nerveless movement, he tossed it
       impatiently on the ground.
       "A queer thing happened just now, Uncle Tucker," he said, "a
       thing you'll hardly believe even when I tell you. I had a visit
       from Mrs. Wyndham, and she came to say--" he stammered and broke
       off abruptly.
       "Mrs. Wyndham?" repeated Tucker. "She's Bill Fletcher's
       granddaughter, isn't she?"
       "Maria Fletcher--you may have seen her when she lived here, five
       or six years ago."
       Tucker shook his head.
       "Bless your heart, my boy, I haven't seen a woman except Lucy and
       the girls for twenty-five years. But why did she come, I wonder?"
       "That's the strange part, and you won't understand it until you
       see her. She came because she had just heard--some one had told
       her--about Fletcher's old rascality."
       "You don't say so!" exclaimed Tucker beneath his breath. He gave
       a long whistle and sat smiling at the little red anthill. "And
       did she actually proffer an apology?" he inquired.
       "An amendment, rather. The Hall will come to her at Fletcher's
       death, and she walked over to say quite coolly that she wanted to
       give it back to us. Think of that! To part with such a home for
       the sake of mere right and justice."
       "It is something to think about," assented Tucker, "and to think
       hard about, too--and yet I cut my teeth on the theory that women
       have no sense of honour. Now, that is pure, foolish, strait-laced
       honour, and nothing else."
       "Nothing else," repeated Christopher softly; "and if you'll
       believe it, she cried--she really cried when I told her I
       couldn't take it. Oh, she's wonderful!" he burst out suddenly,
       all his awkward reserve dropping from him. "You can't be with her
       ten minutes without feeling how good she is--good all through,
       with a big goodness that isn't in the least like the little
       prudishness of other women--"
       He checked himself hastily, but not before Tucker had glanced up
       with his pleasant smile.
       "Well, my boy, I don't misunderstand you. I never knew a man yet
       to begin a love affair with a panegyric on virtue. She's an
       estimable woman, I dare say, and I presume she's plain."
       "Plain!" gasped Christopher. "Why, she's beautiful--at least, you
       think so when you see her smile."
       "So she smiled through her tears, eh?"
       Christopher started angrily. "Can you sit there on that log and
       laugh at such a thing?" he demanded.
       "Come, come," protested Tucker, "an honest laugh never turned a
       sweet deed sour since the world began--and that was more than
       sweet; it was fine. I'd like to know that woman, Christopher."
       "You could never know her--no man could. She's all clear and
       bright on the surface, but all mystery beneath."
       "Ah, that's it; you see, there was never a fascinating woman yet
       who was easy to understand. Wasn't it that shrewd old gallant,
       Bolivar Blake, who said that in love an ounce of mystery was
       worth a pound of morality?"
       "It's like him: he said a lot of nonsense," commented
       Christopher. "But to think," he added after a moment, "that she
       should be Bill Fletcher's granddaughter!"
       "Well, I knew her mother," returned Tucker, "and she was as
       honest, God-fearing a body as ever trod this earth. She stood out
       against Fletcher to the last, you know, and worked hard for her
       living while that scamp, her husband, drank them both to death.
       There are some people who are born with a downright genius for
       honesty, and this girl may be one of them."
       "I don't know--I don't know," said Christopher, in a voice which
       had grown spiritless. Then after an instant in which he stared
       blankly down at Tucker's ant-hill, he turned hurriedly away and
       followed the little straggling path to the barn door.
       >From the restlessness that pricked in his limbs there was no
       escape, and after entering the barn he came out again and went
       down into the pasture to the long bench beside the poplar spring.
       Here, while the faint shadows of the young leaves played over
       him, he sat with his head bent forward and his hands dropped
       listlessly between his knees.
       Around him there was the tender green of the spring meadows,
       divided by a little brook where the willows shone pure silver
       under the April wind. Near at hand a catbird sang in short,
       tripping notes, and in the clump of briars by the spring a rabbit
       sat alert for the first sound. So motionless was Christopher that
       he seemed, sitting there by the pale gray body of a poplar,
       almost to become a part of the tree against which he leaned--to
       lose, for the time at least, his share in the moving animal life
       around him.
       At first there was mere blankness in his mind--an absence of
       light and colour in which his thoughts were suddenly blotted out;
       then, as the wind raised the hair upon his brow, he lifted his
       eyes from the ground, and with the movement it seemed as if his
       life ran backward to its beginning and he saw himself not as he
       was to-day, but as he might have been in a period of time which
       had no being.
       Before him were his knotted and blistered hands, his long limbs
       outstretched in their coarse clothes, but in the vision beyond
       the little spring he walked proudly with his rightful heritage
       upon him--a Blake by force of blood and circumstance. The world
       lay before him--bright, alluring, a thing of enchanting promise,
       and it was as if he looked for the first time upon the
       possibilities contained in this life upon the earth. For an
       instant the glow lasted--the beauty dwelt upon the vision, and he
       beheld, clear and radiant, the happiness which might have been
       his own; then it grew dark again, and he faced the brutal truth
       in all its nakedness; he knew himself for what he was--a man
       debased by ignorance and passion to the level of the beasts. He
       had sold his birthright for a requital, which had sickened him
       even in the moment of fulfilment.
       To do him justice, now that the time had come for an
       acknowledgment he felt no temptation to evade the judgment of his
       own mind, nor to cheat himself with the belief that the boy was
       marked for ruin before he saw him--that Will had worked out, in
       vicious weakness, his own end. It was not the weakness, after
       all, that he had played upon--it was rather the excitable passion
       and the whimpering fears of the hereditary drunkard. He
       remembered now the long days that he had given to his revenge,
       the nights when he had tossed sleepless while he planned a
       widening of the breach with Fletcher. That, at least was his
       work, and his alone--the bitter hatred, more cruel than death,
       with which the two now stood apart and snarled. It was a human
       life that he had taken in his hand--he saw that now in his first
       moment of awakening--a life that he had destroyed as deliberately
       as if he had struck it dead before him. Day by day, step by step,
       silent, unswerving, devilish, he had kept about his purpose, and
       now at the last he had only to sit still and watch his triumph.
       With a sob, he bowed his head in his clasped hands, and so shut
       out the light. _
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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