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The unabridged classic on MP3 audio, narrated by Anais 9000. Three playback speeds on one disk; etext edition included. Running time: 14.7 hours (slow), 13.4 hours (medium), 12.2 hours (fast).
Chapter I
The village stood on a wide plain, and around it rose the
mountains. They were green to their tops in summer, and in
winter white through their serried pines and drifting mists,
but at every season serious and beautiful, furrowed with
hollow shadows, and taking the light on masses and stretches
of iron-gray crag. The river swam through the plain in long
curves, and slipped away at last through an unseen pass to
the southward, tracing a score of miles in its course over
a space that measured but three or four. The plain was very
fertile, and its features, if few and of purely utilitarian
beauty, had a rich luxuriance, and there was a tropical riot
of vegetation when the sun of July beat on those northern
fields. They waved with corn and oats to the feet of the
mountains, and the potatoes covered a vast acreage with the
lines of their intense, coarse green; the meadows were deep
with English grass to the banks of the river, that, doubling
and returning upon itself, still marked its way with a dense
fringe of alders and white birches.
But winter was full half the year. The snow began at
Thanksgiving, and fell snow upon snow till Fast Day, thawing
between the storms, and packing harder and harder against
the break-up in the spring, when it covered the ground in
solid levels three feet high, and lay heaped in drifts,
that defied the sun far into May. When it did not snow, the
weather was keenly clear, and commonly very still. Then, the
landscape at noon had a stereoscopic glister under the high
sun that burned in a heaven without a cloud, and at setting
stained the sky and the white waste with freezing pink and
violet. On such days the farmers and lumbermen came in to the
village stores, and made a stiff and feeble stir about their
doorways, and the school children gave the street a little
life and color, as they went to and from the Academy in their
red and blue woolens. Four times a day the mill, the shrill
wheeze of whose saws had become part of the habitual silence,
blew its whistle for the hands to begin and leave off work,
in blasts that seemed to shatter themselves against the thin
air. But otherwise an arctic quiet prevailed.
Behind the black boles of the elms that swept the vista
of the street with the fine gray tracery of their boughs,
stood the houses, deep-sunken in the accumulating drifts,
through which each householder kept a path cut from his doorway
to the road, white and clean as if hewn out of marble. Some
cross streets straggled away east and west with the poorer
dwellings; but this, that followed the northward and southward
reach of the plain, was the main thoroughfare, and had its
own impressiveness, with those square white houses which they
build so large in Northern New England. They were all kept in
scrupulous repair, though here and there the frost and thaw of
many winters had heaved a fence out of plumb, and threatened
the poise of the monumental urns of painted pine on the
gate-posts. They had dark-green blinds, of a color harmonious
with that of the funereal evergreens in their dooryards; and
they themselves had taken the tone of the snowy landscape, as if
by the operation of some such law as blanches the fur-bearing
animals of the North. They seemed proper to its desolation,
while some houses of more modern taste, painted to a warmer
tone, looked, with their mansard roofs and jig-sawed piazzas
and balconies, intrusive and alien.
At one end of the street stood the Academy, with its classic
façade and its belfry; midway was the hotel, with the
stores, the printing-office, and the churches; and at the other
extreme, one of the square white mansions stood advanced from
the rank of the rest, at the top of a deep-plunging valley,
defining itself against the mountain beyond so sharply that
it seemed as if cut out of its dark, wooded side. It was
from the gate before this house, distinct in the pink light
which the sunset had left, that, on a Saturday evening in
February, a cutter, gay with red-lined robes, dashed away,
and came musically clashing down the street under the naked
elms. For the women who sat with their work at the windows
on either side of the way, hesitating whether to light their
lamps, and drawing nearer and nearer to the dead-line of the
outer cold for the latest glimmer of the day, the passage
of this ill-timed vehicle was a vexation little short of
grievous. Every movement on the street was precious to them,
and, with all the keenness of their starved curiosity, these
captives of the winter could not make out the people in the
cutter. Afterward it was a mortification to them that they
should not have thought at once of Bartley Hubbard and Marcia
Gaylord. They had seen him go up toward Squire Gaylord's
house half an hour before, and they now blamed themselves for
not reflecting that of course he was going to take Marcia over
to the church sociable at Lower Equity. Their identity being established, other little proofs
of it reproached the inquirers; but these perturbed spirits
were at peace, and the lamps were out in the houses (where the
smell of rats in the wainscot and of potatoes in the cellar
strengthened with the growing night), when Bartley and Marcia
drove back through the moonlit silence to her father's
door. Here, too, the windows were all dark, except for the
light that sparely glimmered through the parlor blinds; and
the young man slackened the pace of his horse, as if to still
the bells, some distance away from the gate.
The girl took the hand he offered her when he dismounted at
the gate, and, as she jumped from the cutter, "Won't
you come in?" she asked.
"I guess I can blanket my horse and stand him under
the wood-shed," answered the young man, going around to
the animal's head and leading him away.
When he returned to the door the girl opened it, as if she
had been listening for his step; and she now stood holding
it ajar for him to enter, and throwing the light upon the
threshold from the lamp, which she lifted high in the other
hand. The action brought her figure in relief, and revealed
the outline of her bust and shoulders, while the lamp flooded
with light the face she turned to him, and again averted for
a moment, as if startled at some noise behind her. She thus
showed a smooth, low forehead, lips and cheeks deeply red, a
softly rounded chin touched with a faint dimple, and in turn
a nose short and aquiline; her eyes were dark, and her dusky
hair flowed crinkling above her fine black brows, and vanished
down the curve of a lovely neck. There was a peculiar charm
in the form of her upper lip: it was exquisitely arched,
and at the corners it projected a little over the lower lip,
so that when she smiled it gave a piquant sweetness to her
mouth, with a certain demure innocence that qualified the
Roman pride of her profile. For the rest, her beauty was of
the kind that coming years would only ripen and enrich; at
thirty she would be even handsomer than at twenty, and be all
the more southern in her type for the paling of that northern
color in her cheeks. The young man who looked up at her from
the doorstep had a yellow mustache, shadowing either side of
his lip with a broad sweep, like a bird's wing; his chin,
deep-cut below his mouth, failed to come strenuously forward;
his cheeks were filled to an oval contour, and his face had
otherwise the regularity common to Americans; his eyes, a clouded gray, heavy-lidded and
long-lashed, were his most striking feature, and he gave her
beauty a deliberate look from them as he lightly stamped the
snow from his feet, and pulled the seal-skin gloves from his
long hands.
"Come in," she whispered, coloring with pleasure
under his gaze; and she made haste to shut the door after him,
with a luxurious impatience of the cold. She led the way into
the room from which she had come, and set down the lamp on
the corner of the piano, while he slipped off his overcoat
and swung it over the end of the sofa. They drew up chairs
to the stove, in which the smouldering fire, revived by the
opened draft, roared and snapped. It was midnight, as the
sharp strokes of a wooden clock declared from the kitchen,
and they were alone together, and all the other inmates of
the house were asleep. The situation, scarcely conceivable to
another civilization, is so common in ours, where youth commands
its fate and trusts solely to itself, that it may be said to
be characteristic of the New England civilization wherever
it keeps its simplicity. It was not stolen or clandestine;
it would have interested every one, but would have shocked no
one in the village if the whole village had known it; all that
a girl's parents ordinarily exacted was that [...]
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