The Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields

audiobook

The Deliverance: A Romance of the Virginia Tobacco Fields

by Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow

EN·~12 hours·45 chapters

Chapters

45 total
1

CHAPTER I. The Man in the Field

18:43
2

CHAPTER II. The Owner of Blake Hall

10:43
3

CHAPTER III. Showing that a Little Culture Entails Great Care

15:58
4

CHAPTER IV. Of Human Nature in the Raw State

16:38
5

CHAPTER V. The Wreck of the Blakes

25:34
6

CHAPTER VI. Carraway Plays Courtier

15:16
7

CHAPTER VII. In Which a Stand is Made

20:35
8

"HERE LIES ALL THAT IS MORTAL OF CHRISTOPHER BLAKE, WHO DIED IN THE HOPE OF A JOYFUL RESURRECTION, APRIL 12, 1786, AGED 70 YEARS. INTO THY HANDS, O LORD, I COMMIT MY SPIRIT."

29:32
9

CHAPTER X. Sentimental and Otherwise

33:34
10

CHAPTER II. The Romance that Was

11:47

Description

A weary stagecoach rolls through the sticky June mud of Virginia’s tobacco fields, carrying a scholarly‑looking lawyer whose recent war‑scarred fortunes have thrust him into the province’s new social order. He is greeted by the earthy humor of the local driver, Sol Peterkin, and a stern matron whose sharp gaze hints at hidden judgments. Their banter, set against the languid rhythm of the countryside, paints a vivid picture of a community still adjusting to the aftermath of conflict.

Amid the fragrant rows of tobacco and the slow‑moving landscape, the story begins to explore the subtle tensions between old Southern traditions and the emerging realities of a changing world. As the lawyer’s journey unfolds, he encounters the resilient laborers, lingering superstitions, and a quiet longing that suggests deeper connections may blossom in this sun‑baked terrain. The opening promises a thoughtful romance rooted in the everyday lives of those who tend the fields.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~12 hours (731K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2000-11-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow

Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow

1873–1945

A sharp-eyed chronicler of the American South, she wrote novels that pushed past nostalgia and looked closely at class, gender, and social change. Her fiction brought realism and wit to Virginia life, and it earned her the 1942 Pulitzer Prize for In This Our Life.

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