Barren GroundDoubleday, Page & Company, 1925 - 509 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 98
Page 4
... ain't jest wild stuff . It's a kind of fate , " old Matthew Fairlamb used to say . Thirty years ago , modern methods of farming , even methods that were modern in the benighted eighteen- nineties , had not penetrated to this thinly ...
... ain't jest wild stuff . It's a kind of fate , " old Matthew Fairlamb used to say . Thirty years ago , modern methods of farming , even methods that were modern in the benighted eighteen- nineties , had not penetrated to this thinly ...
Page 14
... ain't seen you about here fur a couple of weeks . " With her gaze still on the distance , Dorinda answered impatiently , " No , Ma had one of her bad spells , and I had to help out at home . But no matter how sick she is she never gives ...
... ain't seen you about here fur a couple of weeks . " With her gaze still on the distance , Dorinda answered impatiently , " No , Ma had one of her bad spells , and I had to help out at home . But no matter how sick she is she never gives ...
Page 15
... ain't got a mo ' restful belief . " Then , as he ob → served her intent gaze , he inquired suspiciously . “ You don ... ain't that , " returned the old man , " I was just thinkin ' he might give me a lift on the way . It ain't more'n ...
... ain't got a mo ' restful belief . " Then , as he ob → served her intent gaze , he inquired suspiciously . “ You don ... ain't that , " returned the old man , " I was just thinkin ' he might give me a lift on the way . It ain't more'n ...
Page 16
... ain't dead yit . I've known some hard drinkers to have long lives , an ' thar ain't nothin ' more wearin ' on the young than settin ' down an ' waitin ' fur old folks to die . Young Jason is a pleasant - mannered boy , though he looks a ...
... ain't dead yit . I've known some hard drinkers to have long lives , an ' thar ain't nothin ' more wearin ' on the young than settin ' down an ' waitin ' fur old folks to die . Young Jason is a pleasant - mannered boy , though he looks a ...
Page 17
Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow. " My eyes ain't all they used to be , and my legs ain't fur behind ' em . Remember me to yo ' Ma , honey , and tell her I'll be lookin ' over jest as soon as the mud holes dry up . " " Yes , I'll tell her ...
Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow. " My eyes ain't all they used to be , and my legs ain't fur behind ' em . Remember me to yo ' Ma , honey , and tell her I'll be lookin ' over jest as soon as the mud holes dry up . " " Yes , I'll tell her ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
afternoon ain't Appleseed ashen light asked Aunt Mehitable Beersheba beneath better blue broomsedge buggy colour cows dairy dark door Dorinda dress eggnog everything eyes face Faraday farmers father feel felt fields Five Oaks Fluvanna gaze Geneva girl glanced gone Green Acres grey hair hands happiness heard heart James Ellgood Jason John Abner John Calvin Josiah Kettledrum knew laughed light lips lived looked marriage married milk mind minute Miss Seena morning mother Nathan never night Nimrod Oakley Old Farm pasture Pedlar's Mill pine poorhouse porch reckon remember replied rinda road Rose Emily Rufus scuppernong grapes seemed shadow shook her head smile sound stood stopped supper tell Texanna thar There's things thought told trees turned voice waiting walked watched Wigfall window woman wonder woods young
Popular passages
Page 60 - Care for the dying, Snatch them in pity from sin and the grave; Weep o'er the erring one, Lift up the fallen, Tell them of Jesus, the mighty to save.
Page 508 - In that hour of memory the work of thirty years was nothing. Time was nothing. Reality was nothing. Success, achievement, victory over fate, all these things were nothing beside that imperishable illusion. Love was the onlv thing that made life desirable, and love was irrevocably lost to her.
Page 180 - The vein of iron in her nature would never bend, would never break, would never melt completely in any furnace" (p. 133) ; "Deep down in her, beneath the rough texture of experience, her essential self was still superior to her folly and ignorance .... Yes, she was not broken. She could never be broken while the vein of iron held in her soul
Page 268 - ... open window and the harp-shaped pine, which towered, dark as night, against the morning blue of the sky.31 When she tried to close the shutters he speaks, "No, I like to see the big pine." As Dorinda takes hold of her new responsibility on the farm, she makes the symbolism of the pine quite explicit: She knew that the place was more to her than soil to be cultivated; that it was the birthplace and burial ground of hopes, desires, and disappointments. The old feeling that the land thought and...
Page 460 - And she saw now that the strong impulses which had once wrecked her happiness were the forces that had enabled her to rebuild her life out of the ruins.
Page 509 - The storm and the hag-ridden dreams of the night were over, and the land which she had forgotten was waiting to take her back to its heart. Endurance. Fortitude. The spirit of the land was flowing into her, and her own spirit, strengthened and refreshed, was flowing out again toward life.
Page 509 - The spirit of the land was flowing into her, and her own spirit, strengthened and refreshed, was flowing out again toward life. This was the permanent self, she knew. This was what remained to her after the years had taken their bloom. She would find happiness again. Not the happiness for which she had once longed, but the serenity of mind which is above the conflict of frustrated desires.
Page 459 - After all, it was not religion; it was not philosophy; it was nothing outside her own being which had delivered her from evil. The vein of iron which had supported her through adversity was merely the instinct older than herself, stronger than circumstances, deeper than the shifting surface of emotion; the instinct that had said, "I will not be broken.
Page 104 - Yes, whatever happened, she resolved passionately, no man was going to spoil her life ! She could live without Jason ; she could live without any man. The shadows of her great-aunts, Dorinda and Abigail, demented victims of love, stretched, black and sinister, across the generations. In her recoil from the hereditary frailty, she revolted, with characteristic energy, to the opposite extreme of frigid disdain.
Page 403 - held fast by circumstances as by invisible wires of steel".42 When she remembers her last moments with Nathan, she speculates on her fate: Yet it seemed to her that it was always the little things not the big ones, that influenced destiny; the fortuitous occurrence instead of the memorable occasion. The incident of his going was apparently as trivial as her meeting with Jason in the road, as the failure of her aim when the gun had gone off, as the particular place and moment when she had fallen down...