Calvin Baker - Dominion

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Dominion: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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With Calvin Baker’s first novel,
, he was named a “Notable First Novelist” by Time magazine. Since his second novel,
, Baker has continued to be acclaimed by the major media from the
to
. Now, with Dominion, Baker has written a lush, incantatory novel about three generations of an African American family in the years leading up to the Revolutionary War. Dominion tells the story of the Merian family who, at the close of the seventeenth century, settle in the wilderness of the Carolinas. Jasper is the patriarch, freed from bondage, who manages against all odds to build a thriving estate with his new wife and two sons — one enslaved, the other free. For one hundred years, the Merian family struggles against the natural (and occasionally supernatural) world, colonial politics, the injustices of slavery, the Revolutionary War and questions of fidelity and the heart. Footed in both myth and modernity, Calvin Baker crafts a rich, intricate and moving novel, with meditations on God, responsibility, and familial legacies. While masterfully incorporating elements of the world’s oldest and greatest stories, the end result is a bold contemplation of the origins of America.

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Despite their different styles, the two men were dead even in the counting when they rose the last morning of the harvest.

It was an hour ahead of the sun when they came to the communal table, where all the men ate before heading into the fields. That morning, in place of hominy, the table was piled high with bacon and biscuits for each of them to take and eat his fill, but instead of feeding their own gnawing hunger all the others held back and let Sam and Angus in front of them — even the men who herded the cattle or worked the rice deferred.

Magnus and Caleum, who always ate with the men on the final day of the cropping, were the only others seated at the table besides the two contestants.

“I looked at the ledger this morning,” said Magnus, who always loved being among the men in the fields at that time of year. “This looks to be the best reaping we had all decade, if we gather just a bit more.”

“How far short are we?” asked Caleum.

“Only a couple hundred pounds off four years ago.”

“I remember that year. It would be something to outdo.”

“It sure would, and if it happens I think I might just make the harvest prize double,” Magnus went on, looking at Caleum but speaking so all could hear. “What would you think of that, Sam?”

From his side of the table Sam stopped chewing and looked toward Magnus. If he had heard the same thing only a month before he would have thought Magnus was funning him, but now he thought only of the gold and let another coin settle beside the first in his mind’s eye. “I think we better get to reaping.”

Dawn had broken by then and stood rosy and mysterious at the edge of the horizon. As it spread, it grew bright and golden, touching everything at Stonehouses evenly and portending well for the final gathering of the year.

After breakfast the men all stood from where they sat and looked out at the neat, even rows of plants, which were nearly bare from earlier pickings — except the tender leaves at their tips that are always last to ripen.

Angus Carson looked out over the rows, thought of the new prize, and said to one of his men, “It’s not so much a doubling the old one as it is that I’m going to whup his arse twice now.”

The two rivals then started at opposite sides of a single row; they could have looked each other in the eyes over the tops of the plants, if they had so chosen. Each man’s hand went out and each retrieved a leaf, being careful not to harm it, then stacked it in a cart that went alongside each of them to keep the new leaf from getting bruised; nor did they look up from their work.

By the time they were halfway down the row, both men were covered with sweat and each forgot about the other. They concentrated on the bright green plants and thought about the weight of gold that would rest in his hand at the end of the day.

Nor did they stop to eat at lunchtime, but merely called to have water brought out to them. By three in the afternoon the heat of August was unbearable, and no one would have been surprised to see them both fall down from exhaustion. They kept at their work, though, determined to have both prize and the honor that would go with it.

At six o’clock everyone else came in from the fields, and the plants themselves stood bare — save the final two rows, which were still divided between the two, but no longer evenly as before. While Angus Carson started at the top of one, Sam Day was already midway down the other.

Angus, drenched in sweat, saw him in the far distance and began to quicken his pace, though where he found the energy and stamina no one could tell, but as he looked at Sam’s back he hated all he saw and worked as if moving through the plants quickly would bring him closer to annihilating the object of his ire. As he worked his rage grew, until he found himself inventing new categories of it to indulge his intemperate passion. I hate the African, he began. I have always hated his tongue, his dress, his manner. Nay, he has no manners. I detest men who eat their corn in rows instead of columns, he added, until he could truthfully say the problem with the world was Africans who ate their corn lengthwise instead of going all the way round as was proper.

Sam in his row could sense Angus gaining, but from pride refused to turn around and look. Nor did he have the energy to spare. He willed his hands to keep moving, though they were already cut and bleeding from his efforts.

A gold coin for Sam Day, he said to himself to heal the pain, and the other I’ll spend just on Effie.

He could see the last tobacco leaf at the end of the row and willed himself to keep moving. He thought of the freedom he would gain with it — to be master and overlord of his self unbound. He thought of the land he would buy and the house he would put up there. He thought of the crops he would grow, one field just for the herbs he used in the practice of his religion and medicine. He thought of the first home he lost and what it would be never to stand in danger of losing so again.

When he reached the last plant he heard a great cry go up as he put his black hand out to clasp it. He broke the stem and lifted the wide leaf, feeling victorious and expansive. As he turned to stack it with the others, though, he saw Angus Carson there, smiling in the periphery of his vision. The cheers belonged all to Angus’s men and those of Sam’s who had turned their sentiments toward the winner of the race — as some men inevitably do after a contest has been decided — but it was false noise as the winner was he who harvested the most weight, not who was fastest.

As he sat down and rested, his woman, Effie, came over and kissed him on the cheek, proud that he had done so well. Sam, feeling only his defeat, brushed her kisses away.

The curers came round then to collect the last of the leaf, weighing it, and working quickly to string it all onto poles. On the giant scale the leaves crested and ebbed, before finally coming to rest as the balance groaned, then settled. The results were impossible to tell beforehand, for everyone except Angus and Sam themselves, as the contest was nearly dead even according to the scales. Both men had gathered near twelve stones in weight, but Angus had pulled a dozen and one.

Sam sat down on his haunches in the dirt and took a long drink of water from a dipper. As he looked up, he saw a shadow looming over him. It was Angus Carson, and he moved quickly, lest Carson kick him where he sat.

“You’re a hell of a man for one who never did this work before,” was all Angus said, extending his big maw of a hand.

Sam did not want to accept his defeat again, but he shook anyway, though he did not speak.

By then the evening sun had all but disappeared from the horizon, and there was little left of its light except the last red-golden rays. The men added to this the light of bonfires, which they had set up all around the camp to mark the end of their taskwork. Magnus watched it all from astride his favorite horse, who was called Annabel, as he had watched the harvest all day long. He dismounted then when the results were settled and called for silence as he reached in his pocket for the coins.

“Angus, you proved yourself once again to be the best worker of all my men and, I would wager, equal to any in the entire colony.”

He gave him his prize, which Angus measured in his palm with relief and satisfaction before slipping one into each of his pockets for safety.

“The contest this year was better than any other, though, and it would be a shame if that went unacknowledged,” Magnus went on, going into his purse again. “Sam, this is yours,” he concluded, “for making a show that in any other year, or on any other farm, would have won you two.” He then handed Sam a single glittering gold coin, which seemed to him as he received it to slip through the light like a fish through a stream of water.

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