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Maria Chapdelaine: A Tale of the Lake St. John Country

Chapter 22: CHAPTER XVI PLEDGED TO THE RACE
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About This Book

A young woman coming of age in a remote lakeside settlement confronts the seasonal rhythms, harsh labor, and religious rituals that shape family and community life. The narrative follows household routines, planting and harvest, the thaw of rivers, visits from itinerant workers, and the uneasy choices between remaining to safeguard ancestral land or leaving for a freer, uncertain life. Intimate domestic scenes and encounters with suitors illuminate themes of attachment to place, duty, resilience, and the moral and emotional decisions that will determine the household’s continuity into the next generation.




CHAPTER XVI

PLEDGED TO THE RACE

ESDRAS and Da'Be came down from the shanties in May, and their grieving brought freshly to the household the pain of bereavement. But the naked earth was lying ready for the seed, and mourning must not delay the season's labours.

Eutrope Gagnon was there one evening to pay them a visit, and a glance he stole at Maria's face perhaps told him of a change in her, for when, they were alone he put the question:—"Maria, do you still think of going away?"

Her eyes were lowered, as with a motion of her head she signified "No."

"Then ... I know well that this is no time to speak of such things, but if only you could say there would be a chance for me one day, then could I bear the waiting better."

And Maria answered him:—"Yes ... If you wish I will marry you as you asked me to ... In the spring—the spring after this spring now—when the men come back from the woods for the sowing."