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Roots of the Mountains, The
Chapter 52. Of The New Beginning Of Good Days In Silver-Dale
William Morris
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       _ CHAPTER LII. OF THE NEW BEGINNING OF GOOD DAYS IN SILVER-DALE
       On the third day there was high-tide and great joy amongst all men from end to end of the Dale; and the delivered thralls were feasted and made much of by the kindreds, so that they scarce knew how to believe their own five senses that told them the good tidings.
       For none strove to grieve them and torment them; what they would, that did they, and they had all things plenteously; since for all was there enough and to spare of goods stored up for the Dusky Men, as corn and wine and oil and spices, and raiment and silver. Horses were there also, and neat and sheep and swine in abundance. Withal there was the good and dear land; the waxing corn on the acres; the blossoming vines on the hillside; and about the orchards and alongside the ways, the plum-trees and cherry-trees and pear-trees that had cast their blossom and were overhung with little young fruit; and the fair apple-trees a-blossoming, and the chestnuts spreading their boughs from their twisted trunks over the green grass. And there was the goodly pasture for the horses and the neat, and the thymy hill-grass for the sheep; and beyond it all, the thicket of the great wood, with its unfailing store of goodly timber of ash and oak and holly and yoke-elm. There need no man lack unless man compelled him, and all was rich enough and wide enough for the waxing of a very great folk.
       Now, therefore, men betook them to what was their own before the coming of the Dusky Men; and though at first many of the delivered thrall-folk feasted somewhat above measure, and though there were some of them who were not very brisk at working on the earth for their livelihood; yet were the most part of them quick of wit and deft of hand, and they mostly fell to presently at their cunning, both of husbandry and handicraft. Moreover, they had great love of the kindreds, and especially of the Woodlanders, and strove to do all things that might pleasure them. And as for those who were dull and listless because of their many torments of the last ten years, they would at least fetch and carry willingly for them of the kindreds; and these last grudged them not meat and raiment and house-room, even if they wrought but little for it, because they called to mind the evil days of their thralldom, and bethought them how few are men's days upon the earth.
       Thus all things throve in Silver-dale, and the days wore on toward the summer, and the Yule-tide rest beyond it, and the years beyond and far beyond the winning of Silver-dale. _
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Chapter 1. Of Burgstead And Its Folk And Its Neighbours
Chapter 2. Of Face-Of-God And His Kindred
Chapter 3. They Talk Of Divers Matters In The Hall
Chapter 4. Face-Of-God Fareth To The Wood Again
Chapter 5. Face-Of-God Falls In With Menfolk On The Mountain
Chapter 6. Of Face-Of-God And Those Mountain-Dwellers
Chapter 7. Face-Of-God Talketh With The Friend On The Mountain
Chapter 8. Face-Of-God Cometh Home Again To Burgstead
Chapter 9. Those Brethren Fare To The Yewwood With The Bride
Chapter 10. New Tidings In The Dale
Chapter 11. Men Make Oath At Burgstead On The Holy Boar
Chapter 12. Stone-Face Telleth Concerning The Wood-Wights
Chapter 13. They Fare To The Hunting Of The Elk
Chapter 14. Concerning Face-Of-God And The Mountain
Chapter 15. Murder Amongst The Folk Of The Woodlanders
Chapter 16. The Bride Speaketh With Face-Of-God
Chapter 17. The Token Cometh From The Mountain
Chapter 18. Face-Of-God Talketh With The Friend In Shadowy Vale
Chapter 19. The Fair Woman Telleth Face-Of-God Of Her Kindred
Chapter 20. Those Two Together Hold The Ring Of The Earth-God
Chapter 21. Face-Of-God Looketh On The Dusky Men
Chapter 22. Face-Of-God Cometh Home To Burgstead
Chapter 23. Talk In The Hall Of The House Of The Face
Chapter 24. Face-Of-God Giveth That Token To The Bride
Chapter 25. Of The Gate-Thing At Burgstead
Chapter 26. The Ending Of The Gate-Thing
Chapter 27. Face-Of-God Leadeth A Band Through The Wood
Chapter 28. The Men Of Burgdale Meet The Runaways
Chapter 29. They Bring The Runaways To Burgstead
Chapter 30. Hall-Face Goeth Toward Rose-Dale
Chapter 31. Of The Weapon-Show Of The Men Of Burgdale...
Chapter 32. The Men Of Shadowy Vale...
Chapter 33. The Alderman Gives Gifts To Them Of Shadowy Vale
Chapter 34. The Chieftains Take Counsel In The Hall Of The Face
Chapter 35. Face-Of-God Talketh With The Sun-Beam
Chapter 36. Folk-Might Speaketh With The Bride
Chapter 37. Of The Folk-Mote Of The Dalesmen...
Chapter 38. Of The Great Folk-Mote: Atonements Given...
Chapter 39. Of The Great Folk-Mote...
Chapter 40. Of The Hosting In Shadowy Vale
Chapter 41. The Host Departeth From Shadowy Vale...
Chapter 42. The Host Cometh To The Edges Of Silver-Dale
Chapter 43. Face-Of-God Looketh On Silver-Dale: The Bowmen's Battle
Chapter 44. Of The Onslaught...
Chapter 45. Of Face-Of-God's Onslaught
Chapter 46. Men Meet In The Market Of Silver-Stead
Chapter 47. The Kindreds Win The Mote-House
Chapter 48. Men Sing In The Mote-House
Chapter 49. Dallach Fareth To Rose-Dale...
Chapter 50. Folk-Might Seeth The Bride And Speaketh With Her
Chapter 51. The Dead Borne To Bale: The Mote-House Re-Hallowed
Chapter 52. Of The New Beginning Of Good Days In Silver-Dale
Chapter 53. Of The Word Which Hall-Ward Of The Steer Had For Folk- Might
Chapter 54. Tidings Of Dallach: A Folk-Mote In Silver-Dale
Chapter 55. Departure From Silver-Dale
Chapter 56. Talk Upon The Wild-Wood Way
Chapter 57. How The Host Came Home Again
Chapter 58. How The Maiden Ward Was Held In Burgdale
Chapter 59. The Behest Of Face-Of-God To The Bride Accomplished...