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-
- FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD
-
- by Thomas Hardy, 1874
-
- From the Penguin edition, 1978
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
-
- DESCRIPTION OF FARMER OAK -- AN INCIDENT
-
-
- When Farmer Oak smiled, the corners of his mouth
- spread till they were within an unimportant distance of
- his ears, his eyes were reduced to chinks, and diverging
- wrinkles appeared round them, extending upon his
- countenance like the rays in a rudimentary sketch of
- the rising sun.
- His Christian name was Gabriel, and on working
- days he was a young man of sound judgment, easy
- motions, proper dress, and general good character. On
- Sundays he was a man of misty views, rather given to
- postponing, and hampered by his best clothes and
- umbrella: upon the whole, one who felt himself to
- occupy morally that vast middle space of Laodicean
- neutrality which lay between the Communion people
- of the parish and the drunken section, -- that is, he went
- to church, but yawned privately by the time the con-
- gegation reached the Nicene creed,- and thought of
- what there would be for dinner when he meant to be
- listening to the sermon. Or, to state his character as
- it stood in the scale of public opinion, when his friends
- and critics were in tantrums, he was considered rather a
- bad man; when they were pleased, he was rather a good
- man; when they were neither, he was a man whose
- moral colour was a kind of pepper-and-salt mixture.
- Since he lived six times as many working-days as
- Sundays, Oak's appearance in his old clothes was most
- peculiarly his own -- the mental picture formed by his
- neighbours in imagining him being always dressed in
- that way. He wore a low-crowned felt hat, spread out
- at the base by tight jamming upon the head for security
- in high winds, and a coat like Dr. Johnson's; his lower
- extremities being encased in ordinary leather leggings
- and boots emphatically large, affording to each foot a
- roomy apartment so constructed that any wearer might
- stand in a river all day long and know nothing of
- damp -- their maker being a conscientious man who
- endeavoured to compensate for any weakness in his cut
- by unstinted dimension and solidity.
- Mr. Oak carried about him, by way of watch,-
- what may be called a small silver clock; in other
- words, it was a watch as to shape and intention, and
- a small clock as to size. This instrument being several
- years older than Oak's grandfather, had the peculiarity
- of going either too fast or not at all. The smaller
- of its hands, too, occasionally slipped round on the
- pivot, and thus, though the minutes were told with
- precision, nobody could be quite certain of the hour
- they belonged to. The stopping peculiarity of his
- watch Oak remedied by thumps and shakes, and he
- escaped any evil consequences from the other two
- defects by constant comparisons with and observations
- of the sun and stars, and by pressing his face close
- to the glass of his neighbours' windows, till he could
- discern the hour marked by the green-faced timekeepers
- within. It may be mentioned that Oak's fob being
- difficult of access, by reason of its somewhat high
- situation in the waistband of his trousers (which also
- lay at a remote height under his waistcoat), the watch
- was as a necessity pulled out by throwing the body to
- one side, compressing the mouth and face to a mere
- mass of ruddy flesh on account of the exertion, and
- drawing up the watch by its chain, like a bucket from a
- well.
- But some thoughtfull persons, who had seen him
- walking across one of his fields on a certain December
- morning -- sunny and exceedingly mild -- might have
- regarded Gabriel Oak in other aspects than these. In
- his face one might notice that many of the hues and
- curves of youth had tarried on to manhood: there even
- remained in his remoter crannies some relics of the boy.
- His height and breadth would have been sufficient to
- make his presence imposing, had they been exhibited
- with due consideration. But there is a way some men
- have, rural and urban alike, for which the mind is more
- responsible than flesh and sinew: it is a way of curtail-
- ing their dimensions by their manner of showing them.
- And from a quiet modesty that would have become a
- vestal which seemed continually to impress upon him
- that he had no great claim on the world's room, Oak
- walked unassumingly and with a faintly perceptible
- bend, yet distinct from a bowing of the shoulders.
- This may be said to be a defect in an individual if he
- depends for his valuation more upon his appearance
- than upon his capacity to wear well, which Oak did not.
- He had just reached the time of life at which "young"
- is ceasing to be the prefix of "man" in speaking of one.
- He was at the brightest period of masculine growth,
- for his intellect and his emotions were clearly separated:
- he had passed the time during which the influence of
- youth indiscriminately mingles them in the character
- of impulse, and he had not yet arrived at the stage
- wherein they become united again, in the character of
- prejudice, by the influence of a wife and family. In
- short, he was twenty-eight, and a bachelor.
- The field he was in this morning sloped to a
- ridge called Norcombe Hill. Through a spur of this
- hill ran the highway between Emminster and Chalk-
- Newton. Casually glancing over the hedge, Oak saw
- coming down the incline before him an ornamental
- spring waggon, painted yellow and gaily marked,
- drawn by two horses, a waggoner walking alongside
- bearing a whip perpendicularly. The waggon was
- laden with household goods and window plants, and
- on the apex of the whole sat a woman, "young" and
- attractive. Gabriel had not beheld the sight for more
- than half a minute, when the vehicle was brought to a
- standstill just beneath his eyes.
- "The tailboard of the waggon is gone, Miss." said the
- waggoner.
- "Then I heard it fall." said the girl, in a soft, though
- not particularly low voice. "I heard a noise I could
- not account for when we were coming up the hill."
- "I'll run back."
- "Do." she answered.
- The sensible horses stood -- perfectly still, and the
- waggoner's steps sank fainter and fainter in the distance.
- The girl on the summit of the load sat motionless,
- surrounded by tables and chairs with their legs upwards,
- backed by an oak settle, and ornamented in front by
- pots of geraniums, myrtles, and cactuses, together with
- a caged canary -- all probably from the windows of the
- house just vacated. There was also a cat in a willow
- basket, from the partly-opened lid of which she gazed
- with half-closed eyes, and affectionately-surveyed the
- small birds around.
- The handsome girl waited for some time idly in her
- place, and the only sound heard in the stillness was the
- hopping of the canary up-and down the perches of its
- prison. Then she looked attentively downwards. It
- was not at the bird, nor at the cat; it was at an oblong
- package tied in paper, and lying between them. She
- turned her head to learn if the waggoner were coming.
- He was not yet in sight; and her-eyes crept back to
- the package, her thoughts seeming to run upon what
- was inside it. At length she drew the article into her
- lap, and untied the paper covering; a small swing
- looking-glass was disclosed, in which she proceeded to
- survey herself attentively. She parted her lips and
- smiled.
- It was a fine morning, and the sun lighted up to a
- scarlet glow the crimson jacket she wore, and painted
- a soft lustre upon her bright face and dark hair. The
- myrtles, geraniums, and cactuses packed around her
- were fresh and green, and at such a leafless season they
- invested the whole concern of horses, waggon, furniture,
- and girl with a peculiar vernal charm. What possessed
- her to indulge in such a performance in the sight of the
- sparrows, blackbirds, and unperceived farmer who were
- alone its spectators, -- whether the smile began as a
- factitious one, to test her capacity in that art, -- nobody
- knows; it ended certainly in a real smile. She blushed
- at herself, and seeing her reflection blush, blushed the
- more.
- The change from the customary spot and necessary
- occasion of such an act -- from the dressing hour in a
- bedroom to a time of travelling out of doors -- lent to
- the idle deed a novelty it did not intrinsically possess.
- The picture was a delicate one. Woman's prescriptive
- infirmity had stalked into the sunlight, which had
- clothed it in the freshness of an originality. A
- cynical inference was irresistible by Gabriel Oak as he
- regarded the scene, generous though he fain would have
- been. There was no necessity whatever for her looking
- in the glass. She did not adjust her hat, or pat her
- hair, or press a dimple into shape, or do one thing to
- signify that any such intention had been her motive in
- taking up the glass. She simply observed herself as a
- fair product of Nature in the feminine kind, her thoughts
- seeming to glide into far-off though likely dramas in
- which men would play a part -- vistas of probable
- triumphs -- the smiles being of a phase suggesting that
- hearts were imagined as lost and won. Still, this was
- but conjecture, and the whole series of actions was so
- idly put forth as to make it rash to assert that intention
- had any part in them at all.
- The waggoner's steps were heard returning. She
- put the glass in the paper, and the whole again into its
- place.
- When the waggon had passed on, Gabriel withdrew
- from his point of espial, and descending into the road,
- followed the vehicle to the turnpike-gate some way
- beyond the bottom of the hill, where the object of his
- contemplation now halted for the payment of toll. About
- twenty steps still remained between him and the gate,
- when he heard a dispute. lt was a difference con-
- cerning twopence between the persons with the waggon
- and the man at the toll-bar.
- "Mis'ess's niece is upon the top of the things, and
- she says that's enough that I've offered ye, you great
- miser, and she won't pay any more." These were the
- waggoner's words.
- "Very well; then mis'ess's niece can't pass." said the
- turnpike-keeper, closing the gate.
- Oak looked from one to the other of the disputants,
- and fell into a reverie. There was something in the
- tone of twopence remarkably insignificant. Threepence
- had a definite value as money -- it was an appreciable
- infringement on a day's wages, and, as such, a higgling
- matter; but twopence -- " Here." he said, stepping
- forward and handing twopence to the gatekeeper; "let
- the young woman pass." He looked up at her then;
- she heard his words, and looked down.
- Gabriel's features adhered throughout their form so
- exactly to the middle line between the beauty of St.
- John and the ugliness of Judas Iscariot, as represented
- in a window of the church he attended, that not a single
- lineament could be selected and called worthy either of
- distinction or notoriety. The redjacketed and dark-
- haired maiden seemed to think so too, for she carelessly
- glanced over him, and told her man to drive on. She
- might have looked her thanks to Gabriel on a minute
- scale, but she did not speak them; more probably she
- felt none, for in gaining her a passage he had lost her
- her point, and we know how women take a favour of
- that kind.
- The gatekeeper surveyed the retreating vehicle.
- "That's a handsome maid" he said to Oak
- "But she has her faults." said Gabriel.
- "True, farmer."
- "And the greatest of them is -- well, what it is
- always."
- "Beating people down? ay, 'tis so."
- "O no."
- "What, then?"
- Gabriel, perhaps a little piqued by the comely
- traveller's indifference, glanced back to where he had
- witnessed her performance over the hedge, and said,
- "Vanity."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
-
- NIGHT -- THE FLOCK -- AN INTERIOR -- ANOTHER INTERIOR
-
-
- IT was nearly midnight on the eve of St. Thomas's, the
- shortest day in the year. A desolating wind wandered
- from the north over the hill whereon Oak had watched
- the yellow waggon and its occupant in the sunshine of
- a few days earlier.
- Norcombe Hill -- not far from lonely Toller-Down
- -- was one of the spots which suggest to a passer-by
- that he is in the presence of a shape approaching the
- indestructible as nearly as any to be found on earth.
- It was a featureless convexity of chalk and soil -- an
- ordinary specimen of those smoothly-outlined protuber-
- ances of the globe which may remain undisturbed on
- some great day of confusion, when far grander heights
- and dizzy granite precipices topple down.
- The hill was covered on its northern side by an
- ancient and decaying plantation of beeches, whose
- upper verge formed a line over the crest, fringing its
- arched curve against the sky, like a mane. To-night
- these trees sheltered the southern slope from the keenest
- blasts, which smote the wood and floundered through
- it with a sound as of grumbling, or gushed over its
- crowning boughs in a weakened moan. The dry leaves
- in the ditch simmered and boiled in the same breezes,
- a tongue of air occasionally ferreting out a few, and
- sending them spinning across the grass. A group or
- two of the latest in date amongst the dead multitude
- had remained till this very mid-winter time on the twigs
- which bore them and in falling rattled against the trunks
- with smart taps:
- Between this half-wooded, half naked hill, and the
- vague still horizon that its summit indistinctly com-
- manded, was a mysterious sheet of fathomless shade
- -- the sounds from which suggested that what it con-
- cealed bore some reduced resemblance to features here.
- The thin grasses, more or less coating the hill, were
- touched by the wind in breezes of differing powers, and
- almost of differing natures -- one rubbing the blades
- heavily, another raking them piercingly, another brushing
- them like a soft broom. The instinctive act of human-
- kind was to stand and listen, and learn how the trees
- to each other in the regular antiphonies of a cathedral
- choir; how hedges and other shapes to leeward them
- caught the note, lowering it to the tenderest sob; and
- how the hurrying gust then plunged into the south, to
- be heard no more.
- The sky was clear -- remarkably clear -- and the
- twinkling of all the stars seemed to be but throbs of
- one body, timed by a common pulse. The North Star
- was directly in the wind's eye, and since evening the
- Bear had swung round it outwardly to the east, till he
- was now at a right angle with the meridian. A
- difference of colour in the stars -- oftener read of than
- seen in England-was really perceptible here. The
- sovereign brilliancy of Sirius pierced the eye with a steely
- glitter, the star called Capella was yellow, Aldebaran and
- Betelgueux shone with a fiery red.
- To persons standing alone on a hill during a clear
- midnight such as this, the roll of the world eastward is
- almost a palpable movement. The sensation may be
- caused by the panoramic glide of the stars past earthly
- objects, which is perceptible in a few minutes of still-
- ness, or by the better outlook upon space that a hill
- affords, or by the wind, or by the solitude; but whatever
- be its origin, the impression of riding along is vivid and
- abiding. The poetry of motion is a phrase much in
- use, and to enjoy the epic form of that gratification it
- is necessary to stand on a hill at a small hour of the
- night, and, having first expanded with a sense of differ-
- ence from the mass of civilised mankind, who are
- dreamwrapt and disregardful of all such proceedings at
- this time, long and quietly watch your stately progress
- through the stars. After such a nocturnal reconnoitre
- it is hard to get back to earth, and to believe that the
- consciousness of such majestic speeding is derived from
- a tiny human frame.
- Suddenly an unexpected series of sounds began to
- be heard in this place up against the sky. They had a
- clearness which was to be found nowhere in the wind,
- and a sequence which was to be found nowhere in
- nature. They were the notes of Farmer Oak's flute.
- The tune was not floating unhindered into the open
- air: it seemed muffled in some way, and was altogether
- too curtailed in power to spread high or wide. It came
- from the direction of a small dark object under the
- plantation hedge -- a shepherd's hut -- now presenting
- an outline to which an uninitiated person might have
- been puzzled to attach either meaning or use.
- The image as a whole was that of a small Noah's
- Ark on a small Ararat, allowing the traditionary outlines
- and general form of the Ark which are followed by toy-
- makers -- and by these means are established in men's
- imaginations among their firmest, because earliest im-
- pressions -- to pass as an approximate pattern. The
- hut stood on little wheels, which raised its floor about a
- foot from the ground. Such shepherds' huts are dragged
- into the fields when the lambing season comes on, to
- shelter the shepherd in his- enforced nightly attendance.
- It was only latterly that people had begun to call
- Gabriel "Farmer" Oak. During the twelvemonth pre-
- ceding this time he had been enabled by sustained
- efforts of industry and chronic good spirits to lease the
- small sheep farm of which Norcombe Hill was a portion,
- and stock it with two hundred sheep. Previously he
- had been a bailiff for a short time, and earlier still a
- shepherd only, having from his childhood assisted his
- father in tending the flocks of large proprietors, till old
- Gabriel sank to rest.
- This venture, unaided and alone, into the paths of
- farming as master and not as man, with an advance of
- sheep not yet paid for, was a critical juncture with
- Gabriel Oak, and he recognised his position clearly.
- The first movement in his new progress was the lambing
- of his ewes, and sheep having been his speciality from
- his "youth, he wisely refrained from deputing -- the task
- of tending them at this season to a hireling or a novice.
- The wind continued to beat-about the corners of the
- hut, but the flute-playing ceased. A rectangular space
- of light appeared in the side of the hut, and in the
- opening the outline of Farmer Oak's figure. He carried
- a lantern in his hand, and closing the door behind him,
- came forward and busied himself about this nook of the
- field for nearly twenty minutes, the lantern light appear-
- ing and disappearing here and there, and brightening
- him or darkening him as he stood before or behind it.
- Oak's motions, though they had a quiet-energy, were
- slow, and their deliberateness accorded well with his
- occupation. Fitness being the basis of beauty, nobody
- could-have denied that his steady swings and turns"
- in and- about the flock had elements of grace, Yet,
- although if occasion demanded he could do or think a
- thing with as mercurial a dash as can the men of towns
- who are more to the manner born, his special power,
- morally, physically, and mentally, was static, owing
- little or nothing to momentum as a rule.
- A close examination of the ground hereabout, even
- by the wan starlight only, revealed how a portion of
- what would have been casually called a wild slope had
- been appropriated by Farmer Oak for his great purpose
- this winter. Detached hurdles thatched with straw
- were stuck into the ground at various scattered points,
- amid and under which the whitish forms of his meek
- ewes moved and rustled. The ring of the sheep-bell,
- which had been silent during his absence, recommenced,
- in tones that had more mellowness than clearness, owing
- to an increasing growth of surrounding wool. This
- continued till Oak withdrew again from the flock. He
- -- returned to the hut, bringing in his arms a new-born
- lamb, consisting of four legs large enough for a full-
- grown sheep, united by a seemingly inconsiderable mem-
- brane about half the substance of the legs collectively,
- which constituted the animal's entire body just at present.
- The little speck of life he placed on a wisp of hay
- before the small stove, where a can of milk was simmer-
- ing. Oak extinguished the lantern by blowing into it
- and then pinching the snuff, the cot being lighted
- by a candle suspended by a twisted wire. A rather
- hard couch, formed of a few corn sacks thrown carelessly
- down, covered half the floor of this little habitation, and
- here the young man stretched himself along, loosened
- his woollen cravat, and closed his eyes. In about the
- time a person unaccustomed to bodily labour would have
- decided upon which side to lie, Farmer Oak was asleep.
- The inside of the hut, as it now presented itself, was
- cosy and alluring, and the scarlet handful of fire in
- addition to the candle, reflecting its own genial colour
- upon whatever it could reach, flung associations of
- enjoyment even over utensils and tools. In the corner
- stood the sheep-crook, and along a shelf at one side
- were ranged bottles and canisters of the simple prepara-
- tions pertaining to bovine surgery and physic; spirits of
- wine, turpentine, tar, magnesia, ginger, and castor-oil
- being the chief. On a triangular shelf across the corner
- stood bread, bacon, cheese, and a cup for ale or cider,
- which was supplied from a flagon beneath. Beside the
- provisions lay the flute whose notes had lately been
- called forth by the lonely watcher to beguile a tedious
- hour. The house was ventilated by two round holes,
- like the lights of a ship's cabin, with wood slides-
- The lamb, revived by the warmth began to bleat"
- instant meaning, as expected sounds will. Passing
- from the profoundest sleep to the most alert wakefulness
- with the same ease that had accompanied the reverse
- operation, he looked at his watch, found that the hour-
- hand had shifted again, put on his hat, took the lamb
- in his arms, and carried it into the darkness. After
- placing the little creature with its mother, he stood and
- carefully examined the sky, to ascertain the time of
- night from the altitudes of the stars.
- The Dog-star and Aldebaran, pointing to the restless
- Pleiades, were half-way up the Southern sky, and between
- them hung Orion, which gorgeous constellation never
- burnt more vividly than now, as it soared forth above
- the rim of the landscape. Castor and Pollux will
- the north-west; far away through the plantation Vega
- and Cassiopeia's chair stood daintily poised on the
- uppermost boughs. "One o'clock." said Gabriel.
- Being a man not without a frequent consciousness
- that there was some charm in this life he led, he stood
- still after looking at the sky as a useful instrument, and
- regarded it in an appreciative spirit, as a work of art
- superlatively beautiful. For a moment he seemed
- impressed with the speaking loneliness of the scene, or
- rather with the complete abstraction from all its compass
- of the sights and sounds of man. Human shapes,interferences,
- troubles, and joys were all as if they were not, and there
- seemed to be on the shaded hemisphere of the globe no sentient
- being save himself; he could fancy them all gone round to the sunny side.
- Occupied this, with eyes stretched afar, Oak gradually per-
- ceived that what he had previously taken to be a star low
- down behind the outskirts of the plantation was in reality no
- such thing. It was an artificial light, almost close at hand.
- To find themselves utterly alone at night where company
- is desirable and expected makes some people fearful; but a
- case more trying by far to the nerves is to discover some
- mysterious companionship when intuition, sensation, memory,
- analogy, testimony, probability, induction -- every kind of
- evidence in the logician's list -- have united to persuade con-
- sciousness that it is quite in isolation.
- Farmer Oak went towards the plantation and pushed
- through its lower boughs to the windy side. A dim mass under
- the slope reminded him that a shed occupied a place here,
- the site being a cutting into the slope of the hill, so that at
- its back part the roof was almost level with the ground. In
- front it was formed of board nailed to posts and covered with
- tar as a preservative. Through crevices in the roof and side
- spread streaks and spots of light, a combination of which made
- the radiance that had attracted him. Oak stepped up behind,
- where,leaning down upon the roof and putting his eye close
- to a hole, he could see into the interior clearly.
- The place contained two women and two cows. By the side
- of the latter a steaming bran-mash stood in a bucket. One
- of the women was past middle age. Her companion was ap-
- parently young and graceful; he could form no decided opinion
- upon her looks, her position being almost beneath his eye, so
- that he saw her in a bird's-eye view, as Milton's Satan first saw
- Paradise. She wore no bonnet or het, but had enveloped her-
- self in a large cloak, which was carelessly flung over her head
- as a covering.
- "There, now we'll go home," said the elder of the two, resting
- her knuckles upon her hips, and looking at their goings-on as
- a whole. "I do hope Daisy will fetch round again now. I have
- never been more frightened in my life, but I don't mind break-
- ing my rest if she recovers."
- The young woman, whose eyelids were apparently inclined
- to fall together on the smallest provocation of silence,yawned
- in sympathy.
- "I wish we were rich enough to pay a man to do these
- things," she said.
- "As we are not, we must do them ourselves," said the other;
- "for you must help me if you stay."
- "Well, my hat is gone, however," continued the younger. "It
- went over the hedge, I think. The idea of such a slight wind
- catching it."
- The cow standing erect was of the Devon breed, and was
- encased in a tight warm hide of rich Indian red, as absolutely
- uniform from eyes to tail as if the animal had been dipped in
- a dye of that colour, her long back being mathematically level.
- The other was spotted,grey and white. Beside her Oak now
- noticed a little calf about a day old, looking idiotically at
- the two women, which showed that it had not long been
- accustomed to the phenomenon of eyesight, and often turn-
- ing to the lantern, which it apparently mistook for the moon.
- inherited instinct having as yet had little time for correction
- by experience. Between the sheep and the cows Lucina had
- been busy on Norcombe hill lately.
- "I think we had better send for some oatmeal," said the
- "Yes, aunt; and I'll ride over for it as soon as it is light."
- "But there's no side-saddle."
- "I can ride on the other: trust me."
- Oak, upon hearing these remarks, became more
- curious to observe her features, but this prospect being
- denied him by the hooding effect of the cloak, and by his
- aerial position, he felt himself drawing upon his fancy
- for their details. In making even horizontal and clear
- inspections we colour and mould according to the warts
- within us whatever our eyes bring in. Had Gabriel
- been able from the first to get a distinct view of her -
- countenance, his estimate of it as very handsome or
- slightly so would have been as his soul required a
- divinity at the moment or was ready supplied with one.
- Having for some time known the want of a satisfactory
- form to fill an increasing void within him, his position
- moreover affording the widest scope for his fancy, he
- painted her a beauty.
- By one of those whimsical coincidences in which
- Nature, like a busy mother, seems to spare a moment
- from her unremitting labours to turn and make her
- children smile, the girl now dropped the cloak, and
- forth tumbled ropes of black hair over a red jacket.
- Oak knew her instantly as the heroine of the yellow
- waggon, myrtles, and looking-glass: prosily, as the
- woman who owed him twopence.
- They placed the calf beside its mother again, took
- up the lantern, and went out, the light sinking down
- the hill till it was no more than a nebula. Gabriel
- Oak returned to his flock.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
-
- A GIRL ON HORSEBACK -- CONVERSATION
-
-
- THE sluggish day began to break. Even its position
- terrestrially is one of the elements of a new interest,
- and for no particular reason save that the incident of
- the night had occurred there, Oak went again into
- the plantation. Lingering and musing here, he heard
- the steps of a horse at the foot of the hill, and soon
- there appeared in view an auburn pony with a girl on
- its back, ascending by the path leading past the cattle-
- shed. She was the young woman of the night before.
- Gabriel instantly thought of the hat she had mentioned
- as having lost in the wind; possibly she had come to
- look for it. He hastily scanned the ditch and after
- walking about ten yards along it, found the hat among the
- leaves. Gabriel took it in his hand and returned to his
- hut. Here he ensconced himself, and peeped through
- the loophole in the direction of the riders approach.
- She came up and looked around -- then on the other
- side of the hedge. Gabriel was about to advance and
- restore the missing article when an unexpected per-
- formance induced him to suspend the action for the
- present. The path, after passing the cowshed, bisected
- the plantation. It was not a bridle-path -- merely a
- pedestrian's track, and the boughs spread horizontally
- at a height not greater than seven feet above the ground,
- which made it impossible to ride erect beneath them.
- The girl, who wore no riding-habit, looked around for
- a moment, as if to assure herself that all humanity was
- out of view, then dexterously dropped backwards flat
- upon the pony's back, her head over its tail, her feet
- against its shoulders, and her eyes to the sky. The
- rapidity of her glide into this position was that of a
- kingfisher -- its noiselessness that of a hawk. Gabriel's
- eyes had scarcely been able to follow her. The tall lank
- pony seemed used to such doings, and ambled
- along unconcerned. Thus she passed under the level boughs.
- The performer seemed quite at home anywhere
- between a horse's head and its tail, and the necessity
- for this abnormal attitude having ceased with the
- passage of the plantation, she began to adopt another,
- even more obviously convenient than the first. She had
- no side-saddle, and it was very apparent that a firm
- seat upon the smooth leather beneath her was un-
- attainable sideways. Springing to her accustomed
- perpendicular like a bowed sapling, and satisfying her,
- self that nobody was in sight, she seated herself in the
- manner demanded by the saddle, though hardly expected
- of the woman, and trotted off in the direction of Tewnell
- Mill.
- Oak was amused, perhaps a little astonished, and
- hanging up the hat in his hut, went again among his
- ewes. An hour passed, the girl returned, properly
- seated now, with a bag of bran in front of her. On
- nearing the cattle-shed she was met by a boy bringing
- a milking-pail, who held the reins of the pony whilst
- she slid off. The boy led away the horse, leaving the
- pail with the young woman.
- Soon soft shirts alternating with loud shirts came
- in regular succession from within the shed, the obvious
- sounds of a person milking a cow. Gabriel took the
- lost hat in his hand, and waited beside the path she
- would follow in leaving the hill.
- She came, the pail in one hand, hanging against her
- knee. The left arm was extended as a balance, enough
- of it being shown bare to make Oak wish that the event
- ha happened in the summer, when the whole would
- have been revealed. There was a bright air and manner
- about her now, by which she seemed to imply that the
- desirability of her existence could not be questioned;
- and this rather saucy assumption failed in being offensive,
- because a beholder felt it to be, upon the whole, true.
- Like exceptional emphasis in the tone of a genius, that
- which would have made mediocrity ridiculous was an
- addition to recognised power. It was with some
- surprise that she saw Gabriel's face rising like the
- moon behind the hedge.
- The adjustment of the farmer's hazy conceptions of her
- charms to the portrait of herself she now presented
- him with was less a diminution than a difference. The
- starting-point selected by the judgment was. her height
- She seemed tall, but the pail was a small one, and the
- hedge diminutive; hence, making allowance for error
- by comparison with these, she could have been not
- above the height to be chosen by women as best. All
- features of consequence were severe and regular. It
- may have been observed by persons who go about the
- shires with eyes for beauty, that in Englishwoman a
- classically-formed face is seldom found to be united
- with a figure of the same pattern, the highly-finished
- features being generally too large for the remainder of
- the frame; that a graceful and proportionate figure of
- eight heads usually goes off into random facial curves.
- Without throwing a Nymphean tissue over a milkmaid,
- let it be said that here criticism checked itself as out
- of place, and looked at her proportions with a long
- consciousness of pleasure. From the contours of her
- figure in its upper part, she must have had a beautiful
- neck and shoulders; but since her infancy nobody had
- ever seen them. Had she been put into a low dress
- she would have run and thrust her head into a bush.
- Yet she was not a shy girl by any means; it was merely
- her instinct to draw the line dividing the seen from the
- unseen higher than they do it in towns.
- That the girl's thoughts hovered about her face
- and form as soon as she caught Oak's eyes conning the
- same page was natural, and almost certain. The self-
- consciousness shown would have been vanity if a little
- more pronounced, dignity if a little less. Rays of male
- vision seem to have a tickling effect upon virgin faces
- in rural districts; she brushed hers with her hand, as if
- Gabriel had been irritating its pink surface by actual
- touch, and the free air of her previous movements was
- reduced at the same time to a chastened phase of
- itself. Yet it was the man who blushed, the maid not
- at all.
- "I found a hat." said Oak.
- "It is mine." said she, and, from a sense of proportion,
- kept down to a small smile an inclination to laugh dis-
- tinctly: "it flew away last night."
- "One o'clock this morning?"
- "Well -- it was." She was surprised. "How did you know?"
- she said.
- "I was here."
- "You are Farmer Oak, are you not?"
- "That or thereabouts. I'm lately come to this place."
- "A large farm?" she inquired, casting her eyes round,
- and swinging back her hair, which was black in the
- shaded hollows of its mass; but it being now an hour
- past sunrise, the rays touched its prominent curves with
- a colour of their own.
- "No; not large. About a hundred." (In speaking
- of farms the word "acres" is omitted by the natives, by
- analogy to such old expressions as "a stag of ten.")
- "I wanted my hat this morning." she went on.
- "I had to ride to Tewnell Mill."
- "Yes you had."
- "How do you know?"
- "I saw you!"
- "Where?" she inquired, a misgiving bringing every
- muscle of her lineaments and frame to a standstill.
- "Here-going through the plantation, and all down
- the hill." said Farmer Oak, with an aspect excessively
- knowing with regard to some matter in his mind, as he
- gazed at a remote point in the direction named, and then
- turned back to meet his colloquist's eyes.
- A perception caused him to withdraw his own eyes
- from hers as suddenly as if he had been caught in a
- theft. Recollection of the strange antics she had
- indulged in when passing through the trees, was suc-
- ceeded in the girl by a nettled palpitation, and that by
- a hot face. It was a time to see a woman redden who
- was not given to reddening as a rule; not a point in
- the milkmaid but was of the deepest rose-colour. From
- the Maiden's Blush, through all varieties of the Provence
- down to the Crimson Tuscany, the countenance of Oak's
- acquaintance quickly graduated; whereupon he, in con-
- siderateness, turned away his head.
- The sympathetic man still looked the other way, and
- wondered when she would recover coolness sufficient to
- justify him in facing her again. He heard what seemed
- to be the flitting of a dead leaf upon the breeze, and
- looked. She had gone away.
- With an air between that of Tragedy and Comedy!
- Gabriel returned to his work.
- Five mornings and evenings passed. The young
- woman came regularly to milk the healthy cow or to
- attend to the sick one, but never allowed her vision to
- stray in the direction of Oak's person. His want of
- tact had deeply offended her -- not by seeing what he
- could not help, but by letting her know that he had
- seen it. For, as without law there is no sin, without
- eyes there is no indecorum; and she appeared to feel
- that Gabriel's espial had made her an indecorous woman
- without her own connivance. It was food for great regret
- with him; it was also a contretemps which touched into
- life a latent heat he had experienced in that direction.
- The acquaintanceship might, however, have ended in
- a slow forgetting, but for an incident which occurred at
- the end of the same week. One afternoon it began to
- freeze, and the frost increased with evening, which drew
- on like a stealthy tightening of bonds. It was a time
- when in cottages the breath of the sleepers freezes to
- the sheets; when round the drawing-room fire of a
- thick-walled mansion the sitters' backs are cold, even
- whilst their faces are all aglow. Many a small bird went
- to bed supperless that night among the bare boughs.
- As the milking-hour drew near, Oak kept his usual
- watch upon the cowshed. At last he felt cold, and
- shaking an extra quantity of bedding round the yearling
- ewes he entered the hut and heaped more fuel upon
- the stove. The wind came in at the bottom of the door,
- and to prevent it Oak laid a sack there and wheeled the
- cot round a little more to the south. Then the wind
- spouted in at a ventilating hole -- of which there was one
- on each side of the hut.
- Gabriel had always known that when the fire was
- lighted and the door closed one of these must be kept
- open -- that chosen being always on the side away from
- the wind. Closing the slide to windward, he turned to
- open the other; on second -- thoughts the farmer con-
- sidered that he would first sit down leaving both
- closed for a minute or two, till the temperature of the
- hut was a little raised. He sat down.
- His head began to ache in an unwonted manner, and,
- fancying himself weary by reason of the broken rests of
- the preceding nights, Oak decided to get up, open the
- slide, and then allow himself to fall asleep. He fell
- asleep, however, without having performed the necessary
- preliminary.
- How long he remained unconscious Gabriel never
- knew. During the first stages of his return to percep-
- tion peculiar deeds seemed to be in course of enactment.
- His dog was howling, his head was aching fearfully --
- somebody was pulling him about, hands were loosening
- his neckerchief.
- On opening his eyes he found that evening had sunk
- to dusk in a strange manner of unexpectedness. The
- young girl with the remarkably pleasant lips and white
- teeth was beside him. More than this -- astonishingly
- more -- his head was upon her lap, his face and neck
- were disagreeably wet, and her fingers were unbuttoning
- his collar.
- "Whatever is the matter?" said Oak, vacantly.
- She seemed to experience mirth, but of too insignifi-
- cant a kind to start enjoyment.
- "Nothing now', she answered, "since you are not
- dead It is a wonder you were not,suffocated in this
- hut of yours."
- "Ah, the hut!" murmured Gabriel. "I gave ten
- pounds for that hut. But I'll sell it, and sit under
- thatched hurdles as they did in old times, curl up
- to sleep in a lock of straw! It played me nearly the
- same trick the other day!" Gabriel, by way of emphasis,
- brought down his fist upon the floor.
- "It was not exactly the fault of the hut." she ob-
- served in a tone which showed her to be that novelty
- among women -- one who finished a thought before
- beginning the sentence which was to convey it. "You
- should I think, have considered, and not have been so
- foolish as to leave the slides closed."
- "Yes I suppose I should." said Oak, absently. He
- was endeavouring to catch and appreciate the sensation
- of being thus with her, his head upon her dress, before
- the event passed on into the heap of bygone things.
- He wished she knew his impressions; but he would as
- soon have thought of carrying an odour in a net as of
- attempting to convey the intangibilities of his feeling
- in the coarse meshes of language. So he remained
- silent.
- She made him sit up, and then Oak began wiping
- his face and shaking himself like a Samson. "How
- can I thank 'ee?" he said at last, gratefully, some of the
- natural rusty red having returned to his face. "Oh, never mind that."
- said the girl, smiling, and
- allowing her smile to hold good for Gabriel's next
- remark, whatever that might prove to be.
- "How did you find me?"
- "I heard your dog howling and scratching at the
- door of the hut when I came to the milking (it was so
- lucky, Daisy's milking is almost over for the season, and
- I shall not come here after this week or the next). The
- dog saw me, and jumped over to me, and laid hold of
- my skirt. I came across and looked round the hut the
- very first thing to see if the slides were closed. My
- uncle has a hut like this one, and I have heard him tell
- his shepherd not to go to sleep without leaving a slide
- open. I opened the door, and there you were like
- dead. I threw the milk over you, as there was no
- water, forgetting it was warm, and no use."
- "I wonder if I should have died?" Gabriel said, in a
- low voice, which was rather meant to travel back to
- himself than to her.
- "O no," the girl replied. She seemed to prefer a
- less tragic probability; to have saved a man from death
- involved talk that should harmonise with the dignity of
- such a deed -- and she shunned it.
- "I believe you saved my life, Miss -- -- I don't know
- your name. I know your aunt's, but not yours."
- "I would just as soon not tell it -- rather not. There
- is no reason either why I should, as you probably will
- never have much to do with me." "Still, I should like to know."
- "You can inquire at my aunt's -- she will tell you."
- "My name is Gabriel Oak."
- "And mine isn't. You seem fond of yours in
- speaking it so decisively, Gabriel Oak."
- "You see, it is the only one I shall ever have, and I
- must make the most of it."
- "I always think mine sounds odd and disagreeable."
- "I should think you might soon get a new one."
- "Mercy! -- how many opinions you keep about you
- concerning other people, Gabriel Oak."
- "Well Miss-excuse the words-I thought you
- would like them But I can't match you I know in
- napping out my mind upon my tongue. I never was
- very clever in my inside. But I thank you. Come
- give me your hand!"
- She hesitated, somewhat disconcerted at Oak's old-
- fashioned earnest conclusion. to a dialogue lightly
- carried on."Very well." she said, and gave him her
- hand, compressing her lips to a demure impassivity.
- He held it but an instant, and in his fear of being too
- demonstrative, swerved to the opposite extreme, touching
- her fingers with the lightness of a small-hearted person.
- "I am sorry." he said, the instant after.
- "What for?"
- "You may have it again if you like; there it is."
- She gave him her hand again.
- Oak held it longer this time -- indeed, curiously long.
- "How soft it is -- being winter time, too -- not chapped
- or rough or anything!" he said.
- "There -- that's long enough." said she, though with-
- out pulling it away "But I suppose you are thinking
- you would like to kiss it? You may if you want to."
- "I wasn't thinking of any such thing." said Gabriel,
- simply; "but I will"
- "That you won't!" She snatched back her hand.
- Gabriel felt himself guilty of another want of tact.
- "Now find out my name." she said, teasingly; and
- withdrew.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
-
- GABRIEL'S RESOLVE -- THE VISIT -- THE MISTAKE
-
-
- THE only superiority in women that is tolerable to the
- rival sex is, as a rule, that of the unconscious kind; but
- a superiority which recognizes itself may sometimes
- please by suggesting possibilities of capture to the
- subordinated man.
- This well-favoured and comely girl soon made appre-
- ciable inroads upon the emotional constitution of young
- Farmer Oak.
- Love, being an extremely exacting usurer (a sense of
- exorbitant profit, spiritually, by an exchange of hearts,
- being at the bottom of pure passions, as that of exorbi-
- tant profit, bodily or materially, is at the bottom of
- those of lower atmosphere), every morning Oak's feelings
- were as sensitive as the money-market in calculations
- upon his chances. His dog waited for his meals in a
- way so like that in which Oak waited for the girl's
- presence, that the farmer was quite struck with the
- resemblance, felt it lowering, and would not look at the
- dog. However, he continued to watch through the
- hedge for her regular coming, and thus his sentiments
- towards her were deepened without any corresponding
- effect being produced upon herself. Oak had nothing
- finished and ready to say as yet, and not being able
- to frame love phrases which end where they begin;
- passionate tales --
- -- Full of sound and fury
- -- signifying nothing --
- he said no word at all.
- By making inquiries he found that the girl's name
- was Bathsheba Everdene, and that the cow would go
- dry in about seven days. He dreaded the eight day.
- At last the eighth day came. The cow had ceased
- to give milk for that year, and Bathsheba Everdene
- came up the hill no more. Gabriel had reached a
- pitch of existence he never could have anticipated a
- short time before. He liked saying `Bathsheba' as a
- private enjoyment instead of whistling; turned over his
- taste to black hair, though he had sworn by brown ever
- since he was a boy, isolated himself till the space he
- filled in a possible strength in an actual weakness. Marriage
- transforms a distraction into a support, the power of
- which should be, and happily often is, in direct pro-
- portion to the degree of imbecility it supplants. Oak
- began now to see light in this direction, and said to
- himself, "I'll make her my wife, or upon my soul I shall
- be good for nothing!"
- All this while he was perplexing himself about an
- errand on which he might consistently visit the cottage
- of Bathsheba's aunt.
- He found his opportunity in the death of a ewe,
- mother of a living lamb. On a day which had a
- summer face and a winter constitution-a fine January
- morning, when there was just enough blue sky visible to
- make cheerfully-disposed people wish for more, and an
- occasional gleam of silvery sunshine, Oak put the lamb
- into a respectable Sunday basket, and stalked across the
- fields to the house of Mrs. Hurst, the aunt -- George,
- the dog walking behind, with a countenance of great
- concern at the serious turn pastoral affairs seemed to be
- taking.
- Gabriel had watched the blue wood-smoke curling
- from the chimney with strange meditation. At evening
- he had fancifully traced it down the chimney to the
- spot of its origin -- seen the hearth and Bathsheba
- beside it -- beside it in her out-door dress; for the
- clothes she had worn on the hill were by association
- equally with her person included in the compass of his
- affection; they seemed at this early time of his love a
- necessary ingredient of the sweet mixture called Bath-
- sheba Everdene.
- He had made a toilet of a nicely-adjusted kind -- of a
- nature between the carefully neat and the carelessly
- ornate -- of a degree between fine-market-day and wet-
- Sunday selection. He thoroughly cleaned his silver
- watch-chain with whiting, put new lacing straps to his
- boots, looked to the brass eyelet-holes, went to the
- inmost heart of the plantation for a new walking-stick,
- and trimmed it vigorously on his way back; took a new
- handkerchief from the bottom of his clothes-box, put
- on the light waistcoat patterned all over with sprigs
- of an elegant flower uniting the beauties of both rose
- and lily without the defects of either, and used all the
- hair-oil he possessed upon his usually dry, sandy, and
- inextricably curly hair, till he had deepened it to a
- splendidly novel colour, between that of guano and
- Roman cement, making it stick to his head like mace
- round a nutmeg, or wet seaweed round a boulder after
- the ebb.
- Nothing disturbed the stillness of the cottage save
- the chatter of a knot of sparrows on the eaves; one
- might fancy scandal and rumour to be no less the
- staple topic of these little coteries on roofs than of
- those under them. It seemed that the omen was an
- unpropitious one, for, as the rather untoward commence-
- ment of Oak's overtures, just as he arrived by the garden
- gate, he saw a cat inside, going into various arched shapes
- and fiendish convulsions at the sight of his dog George.
- The dog took no notice , for he had arrived at an age
- at which all superfluous barking was cynically avoided
- as a waste of breath -- in fact he never barked even
- at the sheep except to order, when it was done with
- an absolutely neutral countenance, as a sort of Com-
- mination-service, which, though offensive, had to be
- gone through once now and then to frighten the flock
- for their own good.
- A voice came from behind some laurel-bushes into
- which the cat had run:
- "Poor dear! Did a nasty brute of a dog want to
- kill it; -- did he poor dear!"
- "I beg your pardon." said Oak to the voice, "but
- George was walking on behind me with a temper as
- mild as milk."
- Almost before he had ceased speaking, Oak was
- seized with a misgiving as to whose ear was the recipient
- of his answer. Nobody appeared, and he heard the
- person retreat among the bushes.
- Gabriel meditated, and so deeply that he brought
- small furrows into his forehead by sheer force of
- reverie. Where the issue of an interview is as likely
- to be a vast change for the worse as for the better,
- any initial difference from expectation causes nipping
- sensations of failure. Oak went up to the door a little
- abashed: his mental rehearsal and the reality had had
- no common grounds of opening.
- Bathsheba's aunt was indoors. "Will you tell Miss
- Everdene that somebody would be glad to speak to
- her?" said Mr. Oak. (Calling one's self merely Some-
- body, without giving a name, is not to be taken as
- an example of the ill-breeding of the rural world: it
- springs from a refined modesty, of which townspeople,
- with their cards and announcements, have no notion
- whatever.)
- Bathsheba was out. The voice had evidently been
- hers.
- "Will you come in, Mr. Oak?"
- "Oh, thank 'ee, said Gabriel, following her to the
- fireplace. "I've brought a lamb for Miss Everdene.
- I thought she might like one to rear; girls do."
- "She might." said Mrs. Hurst, musingly; " though
- she's only a visitor here. If you will wait a minute,
- Bathsheba will be in."
- "Yes, I will wait." said Gabriel, sitting down. "The
- lamb isn't really the business I came about, Mrs. Hurst.
- In short, I was going to ask her if she'd like to be
- married."
- "And were you indeed?"
- "Yes. Because if she would, I should be very glad
- to marry her. D'ye know if she's got any other young
- man hanging about her at all?"
- "Let me think," said Mrs. Hurst, poking the fire
- superfluously.... "Yes -- bless you, ever so many young
- men. You see, Farmer Oak, she's so good-looking, and
- an excellent scholar besides -- she was going to be a
- governess once, you know, only she was too wild. Not
- that her young men ever come here -- but, Lord, in the
- nature of women, she must have a dozen!"
- "That's unfortunate." said Farmer Oak, contemplating
- a crack in the stone floor with sorrow. "I'm only an
- every-day sort of man, and my only chance was in being
- the first comer... , Well, there's no use in my waiting,
- for that was all I came about: so I'll take myself off
- home-along, Mrs. Hurst."
- When Gabriel had gone about two hundred yards along the
- down, he heard a "hoi-hoi!" uttered behind
- him, in a piping note of more treble quality than that
- in which the exclamation usually embodies itself when
- shouted across a field. He looked round, and saw a girl
- racing after him, waving a white handkerchief.
- Oak stood still -- and the runner drew nearer. It was
- Bathsheba Everdene. Gabriel's colour deepened: hers
- was already deep, not, as it appeared, from emotion,
- but from running.
- "Farmer Oak -- I -- " she said, pausing for want of
- breath pulling up in front of him with a slanted face
- and putting her hand to her side.
- "I have just called to see you," said Gabriel, pending
- her further speech.
- "Yes-I know that!" she said panting like a robin,
- her face red and moist from her exertions, like a peony
- petal before the sun dries off the dew. "I didn't know
- you had come to ask to have me, or I should have come
- in from the garden instantly. I ran after you to say --
- that my aunt made a mistake in sending you away from
- courting me -- -- -- "
- Gabriel expanded."I'm sorry to have made you
- run so fast, my dear." he said, with a grateful sense of
- favours to come. "Wait a bit till you've found your
- breath."
- "-- It was quite a mistake-aunt's telling you I had
- a young man "already."- Bathsheba went on. "I haven't
- a sweetheart at all -- and I never had one, and I thought
- that, as times go with women, it was such a pity to send
- you away thinking that I had several."
- "Really and truly I am glad to hear that!" said
- Farmer Oak, smiling one of his long special smiles, and
- blushing with gladness. He held out his hand to take
- hers, which, when she had eased her side by pressing
- it there, was prettily extended upon her bosom to still
- her loud-beating heart. Directly he seized it she put
- it behind her, so that it slipped through his fingers like
- an eel. "
- "I have a nice snug little farm." said Gabriel, with
- half a degree less assurance than when he had seized
- her hand.
- "Yes; you have."
- "A man has advanced me money to begin with, but
- still, it will soon be paid off and though I am only an
- every-day sort of man, I have got on a little since I was
- a boy." Gabriel uttered "a little" in a tone to-show
- her that it was the complacent form of "a great deal."
- e continued: " When we be married, I am quite sure
- I can work twice as hard as I do now."
- He went forward and stretched out his arm again.
- Bathsheba had overtaken him at a point beside which
- stood a low stunted holly bush, now laden with red
- berries. Seeing his advance take the form of an attitude
- threatening a possible enclosure, if not compression, of
- her person, she edged off round the bush.
- "Why, Farmer Oak." she said, over the top, looking
- at him with rounded eyes, "I never said I was going to
- marry you."
- "Well -- that is a tale!" said Oak, with dismay." To
- run after anybody like this, and then say you don't
- want him!"
- "What I meant to tell you was only this." she said
- eagerly, and yet half conscious of the absurdity of the
- position she had made for herself -- "that nobody has
- got me yet as a sweetheart, instead of my having a
- dozen, as my aunt said; I hate to be thought men's
- property in that way, though possibly I shall be had
- some day. Why, if I'd wanted you I shouldn't have
- run after you like this; 'twould have been the forwardest
- thing! But there was no harm in 'hurrying to correct
- a piece of false news that had been told you."
- "Oh, no -- no harm at all." But there is such a thing
- as being too generous in expressing a judgment impuls-
- ively, and Oak added with a more appreciative sense
- of all the circumstances -- "Well, I am not quite certain
- it was no harm."
- "Indeed, I hadn't time to think before starting
- whether I wanted to marry or not, for you'd have been
- gone over the hill."
- "Come." said Gabriel, freshening again; "think a
- minute or two. I'll wait a while, Miss Everdene. Will
- you marry me? Do, Bathsheba. I love you far more
- than common!"
- "I'll try to think." she observed, rather more timor-
- ously; "if I can think out of doors; my mind spreads
- away so."
- "But you can give a guess."
- "Then give me time." Bathsheba looked thought-
- fully into the distance, away from the direction in which
- Gabriel stood.
- "I can make you happy," said he to the back of her
- head, across the bush. "You shall have as piano in a
- year or two -- farmers' wives are getting to have pianos
- now -- and I'll practise up the flute right well to play
- with you in the evenings."
- "Yes; I should like that."
- "And have one of those little ten-pound" gigs for
- market -- and nice flowers, and birds -- cocks and hens
- I mean, because they be useful." continued Gabriel,
- feeling balanced between poetry and practicality.
- "I should like it very much."
- "And a frame for cucumbers -- like a gentleman and
- lady."
- Yes."
- "And when the wedding was over, we'd have it put
- in the newspaper list of marriages."
- "Dearly I should like that!"
- "And the babies in the births -- every man jack of
- "em! And at home by the fire, whenever you look up,
- there I shall be -- and whenever I look up there will
- be you."
- "Wait wait and don't be improper!"
- Her countenance fell, and she was silent awhile.
- He regarded the red berries between them over and
- over again, to such an extent, that holly seemed in
- his after life to be a cypher signifying a proposal of
- marriage. Bathsheba decisively turned to him.
- "No;" 'tis no use." she said. "I don't want to marry
- you."
- "Try."
- "I have tried hard all the time I've been thinking;
- for a marriage would be very nice in one sense.
- People would talk about me, and think I had won my
- battle, and I should feel triumphant, and all that,
- But a husband -- -- --
- "Well!"
- "Why, he'd always be there, as you say; whenever
- I looked up, there he'd be."
- "Of course he would -- I, that is."
- "Well, what I mean is that I shouldn't mind being
- a bride at a wedding, if I could be one without having
- a husband. But since a woman can't show off in that
- way by herself, I shan't marry -- at least yet."
- "That's a terrible wooden story."
- At this criticism of her statement Bathsheba made
- an addition to her dignity by a slight sweep away
- from him.
- "Upon my heart and soul, I don't know what a
- maid can say stupider than that." said Oak. "But
- dearest." he continued in a palliative voice, "don't be
- like it!" Oak sighed a deep honest sigh -- none the
- less so in that, being like the sigh of a pine plantation,
- it was rather noticeable as a disturbance of the atmo-
- sphere. "Why won't you have me?" he appealed,
- creeping round the holly to reach her side.
- "I cannot." she said, retreating.
- "But why?" he persisted, standing still at last in
- despair of ever reaching her, and facing over the
- bush.
- "Because I don't love you."
- "Yes, but -- -- "
- She contracted a yawn to an inoffensive smallness,
- so that it was hardly ill-mannered at all. "I don't love
- you." she said."
- "But I love you -- and, as for myself, I am content
- to be liked."
- "O Mr. Oak -- that's very fine! You'd get to despise me."
- "Never." said Mr Oak, so earnestly that he seemed
- to be coming, by the force of his words, straight
- through the bush and into her arms. "I shall do one
- thing in this life -- one thing certain -- that is, love you,
- and long for you, and keep wanting you till I die." His
- voice had a genuine pathos now, and his large brown
- hands perceptibly trembled.
- "It seems dreadfully wrong not to have you when
- you feel so much!" she said with a little distress, and
- looking hopelessly around for some means of escape
- from her moral dilemma. "H(ow I wish I hadn't run
- after you!" However she seemed to have a short cut
- for getting back to cheerfulness, and set her face to
- signify archness. "It wouldn't do, Mr Oak. I want
- somebody to tame me; I am too independent; and
- you would never be able to, I know."
- Oak cast his eyes down the field in a way implying
- that it was useless to attempt argument.
- "Mr. Oak." she said, with luminous distinctness and
- common sense, " you are better off than I. I have
- hardly a penny in the world -- I am staying with my
- aunt for my bare sustenance. I am better educated
- than you -- and I don't love you a bit: that's my side
- of the case. Now yours: you are a farmer just begin-
- ing; and you ought in common prudence, if you marry
- at all (which you should certainly not think of doing
- at present) to marry a woman with money, who would
- admiration.
- "That's the very thing I had been thinking myself!"
- he naively said.
- Farmer Oak had one-and-a-half Christian character-
- istics too many to succeed with Bathsheba: his humility,
- and a superfluous moiety of honesty. Bathsheba was
- decidedly disconcerted,
- "Well, then, why did you come and disturb me?"
- she said, almost angrily, if not quite, an enlarging red
- spot rising in each cheek.
- "I can't do what I think would be -- would be -- -- "
- "Right?"
- "No: wise."
- "You have made an admission now, Mr. Oak." she
- exclaimed, with even more hauteur, and rocking her
- head disdainfully. "After that, do you think I could
- marry you? Not if I know it."
- He broke in passionately. "But don't mistake me
- like that! Because I am open enough to own what
- every man in my shoes would have thought of, you
- make your colours come up your face, and get crabbed
- with me. That about your not being good enough for
- me is nonsense. You speak like a lady -- all the parish
- notice it, and your uncle at Weatherbury is, I have
- heerd, a large farmer -- much larger than ever I shall
- be. May I call in the evening, or will you walk along
- with me o' Sundays? I don't want you to make-up
- your mind at once, if you'd rather not."
- "No -- no -- I cannot. Don't press me any more --
- don't. I don't love you -- so 'twould be ridiculous,"
- he said, with a laugh.
- No man likes to see his emotions the sport of a
- merry-go-round of skittishness. "Very well." said Oak,
- firmly, with the bearing of one who was going to give "
- his days and nights to Ecclesiastes for ever. "Then
- I'll ask you no more."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
-
- DEPARTURE OF BATHSHEBA -- A PASTORAL TRAGEDY
-
-
- THE news which one day reached Gabriel, that Bath-
- sheba Everdene had left the neighbourhood, had an
- influence upon him which might have surprised any
- who never suspected that the more emphatic the renun-
- ciation the less absolute its character.
- It may have been observed that there is no regula
- path for getting out of love as there is for getting in.
- Some people look upon marriage as a short cut that way,
- but it has been known to fail. Separation, which was
- the means that chance offered to Gabriel Oak by
- Bathsheba's disappearance though effectual with people
- of certain humours is apt to idealise the removed object
- with others -- notably those whose affection, placid and
- regular as it may be flows deep and long. Oak belonged
- to the even-tempered order of humanity, and felt the
- secret fusion of himself in Bathsheba to be burning with
- a finer flame now that she was gone -- that was all.
- His incipient friendship with her aunt-had been
- nipped by the failure of his suit, and all that Oak learnt
- of Bathsheba's movements was done indirectly. It ap-
- peared that she had gone to a place called Weatherbury,
- more than twenty miles off, but in what capacity --
- whether as a visitor, or permanently, he could not
- discover.
- Gabriel had two dogs. George, the elder, exhibited
- an ebony-tipped nose, surrounded by a narrow margin
- of pink flesh, and a coat marked in random splotches
- approximating in colour to white and slaty grey; but the
- grey, after years of sun and rain, had been scorched and
- washed out of the more prominent locks, leaving them
- of a reddish-brown, as if the blue component of the grey
- had faded, like the indigo from the same kind of colour in
- Turner's pictures. In substance it had originally been
- hair, but long contact with sheep seemed to be turning
- it by degrees into wool of a poor quality and staple.
- This dog had originally belonged to a shepherd of
- inferior morals and dreadful temper, and the result was
- that George knew the exact degrees of condemnation
- signified by cursing and swearing of all descriptions
- better than the wickedest old man in the neighbourhood.
- Long experience had so precisely taught the animal the
- difference between such exclamations as "Come in!"
- and "D -- -- ye, come in!" that he knew to a hair's
- breadth the rate of trotting back from the ewes' tails
- that each call involved, if a staggerer with the sheep
- crook was to be escaped. Though old, he was clever
- and trustworthy still.
- The young dog, George's son, might possibly have
- been the image of his mother, for there was not much
- resemblance between him and George. He was learn-
- ing the sheep-keeping business, so as to follow on at
- the flock when the other should die, but had got no
- further than the rudiments as yet -- still finding an
- insuperable difficulty in distinguishing between doing a
- thing well enough and doing it too well. So earnest
- and yet so wrong-headed was this young dog (he had no,
- name in particular, and answered with perfect readiness
- to any pleasant interjection), that if sent behind the
- flock to help them on, he did it so thoroughly that he
- would have chased them across the whole county with
- the greatest pleasure if not called off or reminded when
- to step by the example of old George.
- Thus much for the dogs. On the further side of
- Norcombe Hill was a chalk-pit, from which chalk had
- been drawn for generations, and spread over adjacent
- farms. Two hedges converged upon it in the form of
- a V, but without quite meeting. The narrow opening
- left, which was immediately over the brow of the pit,
- was protected by a rough railing.
- One night, when Farmer Oak had returned to, his
- house, believing there would be no further necessity for
- his attendance on the down, he called as usual to the
- dogs, previously to shutting them up in the outhouse till
- next morning. Only one responded -- old George; the
- other-could not be found, either in the house, lane, or
- garden. - Gabriel then remembered that he had left the
- two dogs on the hill eating a dead lamb (a kind of meat
- he usually kept from them, except when other food-ran
- finished his meal, he went indoors to the luxury of a bed,
- which latterly he had only enjoyed on Sundays.
- It was a still, moist night. Just before dawn he was
- assisted in waking by the abnormal reverberation of
- familiar music. To the shepherd, the note of the sheep"
- chronic sound that only makes itself noticed by ceasing
- ever distant, that all is well in the fold. In the solemn
- This exceptional ringing may be caused in two ways --
- by the rapid feeding of the sheep bearing the bell, as
- when the flock breaks into new pasture, which gives it
- an intermittent rapidity, or by the sheep starting off in
- a run, when the sound has a regular palpitation. The
- experienced ear of Oak knew the sound he now heard
- to be caused by the running of the flock with great
- velocity.
- He jumped out of bed, dressed, tore down the lane
- through a foggy dawn, and ascended the hill. The
- forward ewes were kept apart from those among which
- the fall of lambs would be later, there being two hundred
- of the latter class in Gabriel's flock. These two hundred
- seemed to have absolutely vanished from the hill. There
- were the fifty with their lambs, enclosed at the other end
- as he had left them, but the rest, forming the bulk of
- the flock, were nowhere. Gabriel called at the top of
- his voice the shepherd's call.
- "Ovey, ovey, ovey!"
- Not a single bleat. He went to the hedge -- a gap
- had been broken through it, and in the gap were the
- footprints of the sheep. Rather surprised to find
- them break fence at this season, yet putting it down
- instantly to their great fondness for ivy in winter-time,
- of which a great deal grew in the plantation, he followed
- through the hedge. They were not in the plantation.
- He called again: the valleys and farthest hills resounded
- as when the sailors invoked the lost Hylas on the Mysian
- shore; but no sheep. He passed through the trees and
- along the ridge of the hill. On the extreme summit,
- where the ends of the two converging hedges of which
- we have spoken were stopped short by meeting the brow
- of the chalk-pit, he saw the younger dog standing against
- the sky -- dark and motionless as Napoleon at St.
- Helena.
- A horrible conviction darted through Oak. With
- a sensation of bodily faintness he advanced: at one
- point the rails were broken through, and there he saw
- the footprints of his ewes. The dog came up, licked
- his hand, and made signs implying that he expected
- some great reward for signal services rendered. Oak
- looked over the precipice. The ewes lay dead and dying
- at its foot -- a heap of two hundred mangled carcasses,
- representing in their condition just now at least two
- hundred more.
- Oak was an intensely humane man: indeed, his
- humanity often tore in pieces any politic intentions of
- his which bordered on strategy, and carried him on as
- by gravitation. A shadow in his life had always been
- that his flock ended in mutton -- that a day came and
- found every shepherd an arrant traitor to his defenseless
- sheep. His first feeling now was one of pity for the
- untimely fate of these gentle ewes and their unborn
- lambs.
- It was a second to remember another phase of the
- matter. The sheep were not insured. All the savings
- of a frugal life had been dispersed at a blow; his hopes
- of being an independent farmer were laid low -- possibly
- for ever. Gabriel's energies, patience, and industry had
- been so severely taxed during the years of his life between
- eighteen and eight-and-twenty, to reach his present stage
- of progress that no more seemed to be left in him. He
- hands.
- Stupors, however, do not last for ever, and Farmer
- Oak recovered from his. It was as remarkable as it was
- characteristic that the one sentence he uttered was in
- thankfulness: --
- "Thank God I am not married: what would she have
- done in the poverty now coming upon me!"
- Oak raised his head, and wondering what he could
- do listlessly surveyed the scene. By the outer margin
- of the Pit was an oval pond, and over it hung the
- attenuated skeleton of a chrome-yellow moon which
- had only a few days to last -- the morning star dogging
- her on the left hand. The pool glittered like a dead
- man's eye, and as the world awoke a breeze blew,
- shaking and elongating the reflection of the moon
- without breaking it, and turning the image of the star
- to a phosphoric streak upon the water. All this Oak
- saw and remembered.
- As far as could be learnt it appeared that the poor
- young dog, still under the impression that since he was
- kept for running after sheep, the more he ran after
- them the better, had at the end of his meal off the
- dead lamb, which may have given him additional energy
- and spirits, collected all the ewes into a corner, driven
- the timid creatures through the hedge, across the upper
- field, and by main force of worrying had given them
- momentum enough to break down a portion of the
- rotten railing, and so hurled them over the edge.
- George's son had done his work so thoroughly that
- he was considered too good a workman to live, and was,
- in fact, taken and tragically shot at twelve o'clock that
- same day -- another instance of the untoward fate which
- so often attends dogs and other philosophers who
- follow out a train of reasoning to its logical conclusion,
- and attempt perfectly consistent conduct in a world
- made up so largely of compromise.
- Gabriel's farm had been stocked by a dealer -- on the
- strength of Oak's promising look and character -- who
- was receiving a percentage from the farmer till such
- time as the advance should be cleared off Oak found-
- that the value of stock, plant, and implements which
- were really his own would be about sufficient to pay his
- debts, leaving himself a free man with the clothes he
- stood up in, and nothing more.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
-
- THE FAIR -- THE JOURNEY -- THE FIRE
-
-
- TWO months passed away. We are brought on to a
- day in February, on which was held the yearly statute
- or hiring fair in the county-town of Casterbridge.
- At one end of the street stood from two to three
- hundred blithe and hearty labourers waiting upon Chance
- -- all men of the stamp to whom labour suggests nothing
- worse than a wrestle with gravitation, and pleasure
- nothing better than a renunciation of the same among
- these, carters and waggoners were distinguished by
- having a piece of whip-cord twisted round their hats;
- thatchers wore a fragment of woven straw; shepherds
- held their sheep-crooks in their hands; and thus the
- situation required was known to the hirers at a
- glance.
- In the crowd was an athletic young fellow of some-
- what superior appearance to the rest -- in fact, his
- superiority was marked enough to lead several ruddy
- peasants standing by to speak to him inquiringly, as to
- a farmer, and to use `Sir' as a finishing word. His
- answer always was,
- "I am looking for a place myself -- a bailiff's. Do
- Ye know of anybody who wants one?"
- Gabriel was paler now. His eyes were more medi-
- tative, and his expression was more sad. He had
- passed through an ordeal of wretchedness which had
- given him more than it had taken away. He had sunk
- from his modest elevation as pastoral king into the very
- slime-pits of Siddim; but there was left to him a digni-
- fied calm he had never before known, and that indiffer-
- ence to fate which, though it often makes a villain of
- a man, is the basis of his sublimity when it does not.
- And thus the abasement had been exaltation, and the
- loss gain.
- In the morning a regiment of cavalry had left the
- town, and a sergeant and his party had been beating up
- for recruits through the four streets. As the end of the
- day drew on, and he found himself not hired, Gabriel
- almost wished that he had joined them, and gone off to
- serve his country. Weary of standing in the market-
- place, and not much minding the kind of work he
- turned his hand to, he decided to offer himself in some
- other capacity than that of bailiff.
- All the farmers seemed to be wanting shepherds.
- Sheep-tending was Gabriel's speciality. Turning down
- an obscure street and entering an obscurer lane, he went
- up to a smith's shop.
- "How long would it take you to make a shepherd's
- crook?"
- "Twenty minutes."
- "How much?"
- "Two shillings."
- He sat on a bench and the crook was made, a stem
- being given him into the bargain.
- He then went to a ready-made clothes' shop, the
- owner of which had a large rural connection. As the
- crook had absorbed most of Gabriel's money, he
- attempted, and carried out, an exchange of his overcoat
- for a shepherd's regulation smock-frock.
- This transaction having been completed, he again
- hurried off to the centre of the town, and stood on the
- kerb of the pavement, as a shepherd, crook in hand.
- Now that Oak had turned himself into a shepherd, it
- seemed that bailifs were most in demand. However, two
- or three farmers noticed him and drew near. Dialogues
- followed, more or lessin the subjoined for: --
- "Where do you come from?"
- "Norcombe."
- "That's a long way.
- "Fifteen miles."
- "Who's farm were you upon last?"
- "My own."
- This reply invariably operated like a rumour of
- cholera. The inquiring farmer would edge away and
- shake his head dubiously. Gabriel, like his dog, was
- too good to be trustworthy,. and he never made advance
- beyond this point.
- It is safer to accept any chance that offers itself, and
- extemporize a procedure to fit it, than to get a good
- shepherd, but had laid himself out for anything in the
- whole cycle of labour that was required in the fair. It
- grew dusk. Some merry men were whistling and
- singing by the corn-exchange. Gabriel's hand, which
- had lain for some time idle in his smock-frock pocket,
- touched his flute which he carried there. Here was
- an opportunity for putting his dearly bought wisdom
- into practice.
- He drew out his flute and began to play "Jockey to
- the Fair" in the style of a man who had never known
- moment's sorrow. Oak could pipe with Arcadian
- sweetness and the sound of the well-known notes
- cheered his own heart as well as those of the loungers.
- He played on with spirit, and in half an hour had
- earned in pence what was a small fortune to a destitute
- man.
- By making inquiries he learnt that there was another
- fair at Shottsford the next day.
- "How far is Shottsford?"
- "Ten miles t'other side of Weatherbury."
- Weatherbury! It was where Bathsheba had gone
- two months before. This information was like coming
- from night into noon.
- "How far is it to Weatherbury?"
- "Five or six miles."
- Bathsheba had probably left Weatherbury long before
- this time, but the place had enough interest attaching
- to it to lead Oak to choose Shottsford fair as his next
- field of inquiry, because it lay in the Weatherbury
- quarter. Moreover, the Weatherbury folk were by no
- means uninteresting intrinsically. If report spoke truly
- they were as hardy, merry, thriving, wicked a set as
- any in the whole county. Oak resolved to sleep at
- Weatherbury -- that -- night on his way to Shottsford,
- and struck out at once -- into the -- high road which had
- been recommended as the direct route to the village in
- question.
- The road stretched through water-meadows traversed
- by little brooks, whose quivering surfaces were braided
- along their centres, and folded into creases at the sides;
- or, where the flow was more rapid, the stream was pied
- with spots of white froth, which rode on in undisturbed
- serenity. On the higher levels the dead and dry carcasses
- of leaves tapped the ground as they bowled along helter-
- skelter upon the shoulders of the wind, and little birds
- in the hedges were rustling their feathers and tucking
- themselves in comfortably for the night, retaining their
- places if Oak kept moving, but flying away if he
- stopped to look at them. He passed by Yalbury-Wood
- where the game-birds were rising to their roosts, and
- heard the crack-voiced cock-pheasants "cu-uck, cuck,"
- and the wheezy whistle of the hens.
- By the time he had walked three or four miles every
- shape in the-landscape had assumed a uniform hue of
- blackness. He descended Yalbury Hill and could just
- discern ahead of him a waggon, drawn up under a great
- over-hanging tree by the roadside.
- On coming close, he found there were no horses
- attached to it, the spot being apparently quite deserted.
- The waggon, from its position, seemed to have been left
- there for the night, for beyond about half a truss of hay
- which was heaped in the bottom, it was quite empty.
- Gabriel sat down on the shafts of the vehicle and con-
- sidered his position. He calculated that he had walked
- a very fair proportion of the journey; and having been
- on foot since daybreak, he felt tempted to lie down upon
- the hay in the waggon instead of pushing on to the
- village of Weatherbury, and having to pay for a lodging.
- Eating his las slices of bread and ham, and drinking
- from the bottle of cider he had taken the precaution to
- bring with him, he got into the lonely waggon. Here
- he spread half of the hay as a bed, and, as well as he
- could in the darkness, pulled the other half over him
- by way of bed-clothes, covering himself entirely, and
- feeling, physically, as comfortable as ever he had been
- in his life. Inward melancholy it was impossible for
- a man like Oak, introspective far beyond his neighbours,
- to banish quite, whilst conning the present. untoward
- page of his history. So, thinking of his misfortunes,
- amorous and pastoral he fell asleep, shepherds enjoying,
- in common with sailors, the privilege of being able to
- summon the god instead of having to wait for him.
- On somewhat suddenly awaking after a sleep of
- whose length he had no idea, Oak found that the waggon
- was in motion. He was being carried along the road
- at a rate rather considerable for a vehicle without
- springs, and under circumstances of physical uneasiness,
- his head being dandled up and down on the bed of
- the waggon like a kettledrum-stick. He then dis-
- tinguished voices in conversation, coming from the
- forpart of the waggon. His concern at this dilemma
- (which would have been alarm, had he been a thriving
- man; but -- misfortune is a fine opiate to personal terror)
- led him to peer cautiously from the hay, and the first
- sight he beheld was the stars above him. Charles's
- Wain was getting towards a right angle with the Pole
- star, and Gabriel concluded that it must be about nine
- o'clock -- in other words, that he had slept two hours.
- This small astronomical calculation was made without
- any positive effort, and whilst he was stealthily turning
- to discover, if possible, into whose hands he had fallen.
- Two figures were dimly visible in front, sitting with
- their legs outside the waggon, one of whom was driving.
- Gabriel soon found that this was the waggoner, and it
- appeared they had come from Casterbridge fair, like
- himself.
- A conversation was in progress, which continued
- thus: --
- "Be as 'twill, she's a fine handsome body as far's
- looks be concerned. But that's only the skin of the
- woman, and these dandy cattle be as-proud as a lucifer
- in their insides."
- "Ay -- so 'a do seem, Billy Smallbury -- so 'a do seem."
- This utterance was very shaky by nature, and more so
- by circumstance, the jolting of the waggon not being-
- without its effect upon the speaker's larynx. It came
- "from the man who held the reins.
- "She's a very vain feymell -- so 'tis said here and
- there."
- "Ah, now. If so be 'tis like that, I can't look her in
- the face. Lord, no: not I -- heh-heh-heh! Such a shy
- man as I be!"
- "Yes -- she's very vain. 'Tis said that every night at
- going to bed she looks in the glass to put on her night-
- cap properly."
- "And not a married woman. Oh, the world!"
- "And 'a can play the peanner, so 'tis said. Can
- play so clever that 'a can make a psalm tune sound as
- well as the merriest loose song a man can wish for."
- "D'ye tell o't! A happy time for us, and I feel quite
- a new man! And how do she play?"
- "That I don't know, Master Poorgrass."
- On hearing these and other similar remarks, a wild
- thought flashed into Gabriel's mind that they might
- be speaking of Bathsheba. There were, however, no
- ground for retaining such a supposition, for the waggon,
- though going in the direction of Weatherbury, might be
- going beyond it, and the woman alluded to seemed to be
- the mistress of some estate. They were now apparently
- close upon Weatherbury and not to alarm the speakers
- unnecessarily, Gabriel slipped out of the waggon unseen.
- He turned to an opening in the hedge, which he
- found to be a gate, and mounting thereon, he sat
- meditating whether to seek a cheap lodging in the
- village, or to ensure a cheaper one by lying under
- some hay or corn-stack. The crunching jangle of the
- waggon died upon his ear. He was about to walk on,
- when he noticed on his left hand an unusual light --
- appearing about half a mile distant. Oak watched it,
- and the glow increased. Something was on fire.
- Gabriel again mounted the gate, and, leaping down
- on the other side upon what he found to be ploughed
- soil, made across the field in the exact direction of the
- fire. The blaze, enlarging in a double ratio by his
- approach and its own increase, showed him as he drew
- nearer the outlines of ricks beside it, lighted up to great
- distinctness. A rick-yard was the source of the fire.
- His weary face now began to be painted over with a
- rich orange glow, and the whole front of his smock-
- frock and gaiters was covered with a dancing shadow
- pattern of thorn-twigs -- the light reaching him through
- a leafless intervening hedge -- and the metallic curve of
- his sheep-crook shone silver-bright in the same abound-
- ing rays. He came up to the boundary fence, and
- stood to regain breath. It seemed as if the spot was
- unoccupied by a living soul.
- The fire was issuing from a long straw-stack, which
- was so far gone as to preclude a possibility of saving it.
- A rick burns differently from a house. As the wind
- blows the fire inwards, the portion in flames completely
- disappears like melting sugar, and the outline is lost
- to the eye. However, a hay or a wheat-rick, well put
- together, will resist combustion for a length of time, if
- it begins on the outside.
- This before Gabriel's eyes was a- rick of straw, loosely
- put together, and the flames darted into it with lightning
- swiftness. It glowed on the windward side, rising and
- falling in intensity, like the coal of a cigar. Then a
- superincumbent bundle rolled down, with a whisking
- noise; flames elongated, and bent themselves about
- with a quiet roar, but no crackle. Banks of smoke
- went off horizontally at the back like passing clouds,
- and behind these burned hidden pyres, illuminating
- the semi-transparent sheet of smoke to a lustrous yellow
- uniformity. Individual straws in the foreground were
- consumed in a creeping movement of ruddy heat, as
- if they were knots of red worms, and above shone
- imaginary fiery faces, tongues hanging from lips, glaring
- eyes, and other impish forms, from which at intervals
- sparks flew in clusters like birds from a nest,
- Oak suddenly ceased from being a mere spectator
- by discovering the case to be more serious than he had
- at first imagined. A scroll of smoke blew aside and
- revealed to him a wheat-rick in startling juxtaposition
- with the decaying one, and behind this a series of
- others, composing the main corn produce of the farm;
- so that instead of the straw-stack standing, as he had
- imagined comparatively isolated, there was a regular
- connection between it and the remaining stacks of the
- group.
- Gabriel leapt over the hedge, and saw that he was
- not alone. The first man he came to was running
- about in a great hurry, as if his thoughts were several
- yards in advance of his body, which they could never
- drag on fast enough.
- "O, man -- fire, fire! A good master and a. bad
- servant is fire, fire! -- I mane a bad servant and a good
- master O, Mark Clark -- come! And you, Billy
- Smallbury -- and you, Maryann Money -- and you, Jan
- Coggan, and Matthew there!" Other figures now
- appeared behind this shouting man and among the
- smoke, and Gabriel found that, far from being alone
- he was in a great company -- whose shadows danced
- merrily up and down, timed by the jigging of the
- flames, and not at all by their owners' movements.
- The assemblage -- belonging to that class of society
- which casts its thoughts into the form of feeling, and
- its feelings into the form of commotion -- set to work
- with a remarkable confusion of purpose.
- "Stop the draught under the wheat-rick!" cried
- Gabriel to those nearest to him. The corn stood on
- stone staddles, and between these, tongues of yellow
- hue from the burning straw licked and darted playfully.
- If the fire once got under this stack, all would be
- lost.
- "Get a tarpaulin -- quick!" said Gabriel.
- A rick-cloth was brought, and they hung it like a
- curtain across the channel. The flames immediately
- ceased to go under the bottom of the corn-stack, and
- stood up vertical.
- "Stand here with a bucket of water and keep the
- cloth wet." said Gabriel again.
- The flames, now driven upwards, began to attack
- the angles of the huge roof covering the wheat-stack.
- "A ladder." cried Gabriel.
- "The ladder was against the straw-rick and is burnt
- to a cinder." said a spectre-like form in the smoke.
- Oak seized the cut ends of the sheaves, as if he
- were going to engage in the operation of "reed-drawing,"
- and digging in his feet, and occasionally sticking in the
- stem of his sheep-crook, he clambered up the beetling
- face. He at once sat astride the very apex, and began
- with his crook to beat off the fiery fragments which had
- lodged thereon, shouting to the others to get him a
- bough and a ladder, and some water.
- Billy Smallbury -- one of the men who had been on
- the waggon -- by this time had found a ladder, which
- Mark Clark ascended, holding on beside Oak upon the
- thatch. The smoke at this corner was stifling, and
- Clark, a nimble fellow, having been handed a bucket
- of water, bathed Oak's face and sprinkled him generally,
- whilst Gabriel, now with a long beech-bough in one
- hand, in addition to his crook in the other, kept
- sweeping the stack and dislodging all fiery particles.
- On the ground the groups of villagers were still
- occupied in doing all they could to keep down the
- conflagration, which was not much. They were all
- tinged orange, and backed up by shadows of varying
- pattern. Round the corner of the largest stack, out
- of the direct rays of the fire, stood a pony, bearing a
- young woman on its back. By her side was another
- woman, on foot. These two seemed to keep at a
- distance from the fire, that the horse might not become
- restive.
- "He's a shepherd." said the woman on foot. "Yes --
- he is. See how his crook shines as he beats the rick
- with it. And his smock-frock is burnt in two holes, I
- declare! A fine young shepherd he is too, ma'am."
- "Whose shepherd is he?" said the equestrian in a
- clear voice.
- "Don't know, ma'am." "Don't any of the others know?"
- "Nobody at all -- I've asked 'em. Quite a stranger,
- they say."
- The young woman on the pony rode out from the
- shade and looked anxiously around.
- "Do you think the barn is safe?" she said.
- "D'ye think the barn is safe, Jan Coggan?" said
- the second woman, passing on the question to the
- nearest man in that direction.
- "Safe -now -- leastwise I think so. If this rick had
- gone the barn would have followed. 'Tis- that bold
- shepherd up there that have done the most good -- he
- sitting on the top o' rick, whizzing his great long-arms
- about like a windmill."
- "He does work hard." said the young woman on
- horseback, looking up at Gabriel through her thick
- woollen veil. "I wish he was shepherd here. Don't
- any of you know his name."
- "Never heard the man's name in my life, or seed
- his form afore."
- The fire began to get worsted, and Gabriel's elevated
- position being no longer required of him, he made as
- if to descend.
- "Maryann." said the girl on horseback, "go to him
- as he comes down, and say that the farmer wishes to
- thank him for the great service he has done."
- Maryann stalked off towards the rick and met
- Oak at the foot of the ladder. She delivered her
- message.
- "Where is your master the farmer?" asked Gabriel,
- kindling with the idea of getting employment that
- seemed to strike him now.
- "'Tisn't a master; 'tis a mistress, shepherd."
- "A woman farmer?"
- "Ay, 'a b'lieve, and a rich one too!" said a by-
- stander. "Lately 'a came here from a distance. Took
- on her uncle's farm, who died suddenly. Used to
- measure his money in half-pint cups. They say now
- that she've business in every bank in Casterbridge, and
- thinks no more of playing pitch-and-toss sovereign than
- you and I, do pitch-halfpenny -- not a bit in the world,
- shepherd."
- "That's she, back there upon the pony." said Mary-
- ann. "wi' her face a-covered up in that black cloth with
- holes in it."
- Oak, his features smudged, grimy, and undiscoverable
- from the smoke and heat, his smock-frock burnt-into
- holes and dripping with water, the ash stem of his sheep-
- crook charred six inches shorter, advansed with the
- humility stern adversity had thrust upon him up to
- the slight female form in the saddle. He lifted his
- hat with respect, and not without gallantry: stepping
- close to her hanging feet he said in a hesitating voice, --
- "Do you happen to want a shepherd, ma'am?"
- She lifted the wool veil tied round her face, and
- looked all astonishment. Gabriel and his cold-hearted
- darling, Bathsheba Everdene, were face to face.
- Bathsheba did not speak, and he mechanically
- repeated in an abashed and sad voice, --
- "Do you want a shepherd, ma'am?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
-
- RECOGNITION -- A TIMID GIRL
-
-
- BATHSHEBA withdrew into the shade. She scarcely
- knew whether most to be amused at the singularity of
- the meeting, or to be concerned at its awkwardness.
- There was room for a little pity, also for a very little
- exultation: the former at his position, the latter at her
- own. Embarrassed she was not, and she" remembered
- Gabriel's declaration of love to her at Norcombe only
- to think she had nearly forgotten it.
- "Yes," she murmured, putting on an air of dignity,
- and turning again to him with a little warmth of cheek;
- "I do want a shepherd. But -- -- "
- "He's the very man, ma'am." said one of the villagers,
- quietly.
- Conviction breeds conviction. "Ay, that 'a is." said
- a second, decisively.
- "The man, truly!" said a third, with heartiness."
- "He's all there!" said number four, fervidly."
- Then will you tell him to speak to the bailiff, said
- Bathsheba.
- All "was practical again now. A summer eve and
- loneliness would have been necessary to give the
- meeting its proper fulness of romance.
- the palpitation within his breast at discovering that this
- Ashtoreth of strange report was only a modification of
- Venus the well-known and admired, retired with him to
- talk over the necessary preliminaries of hiring.
- The fire before them wasted away. "Men." said
- Bathsheba, " you shall take a little refreshment after this
- extra work. Will you come to the house?"
- "We could knock in a bit and a drop a good deal
- freer, Miss, if so be ye'd send it to Warren's Malthouse,"
- replied the spokesman.
- Bathsheba then rode off into the darkness, and the
- men straggled on to the village in twos and threes -- Oak
- and the bailiff being left by the rick alone.
- "And now." said the bailiff, finally, "all is settled, I
- think, about your coming, and I am going home-along.
- Good-night to ye, shepherd."
- "Can you get me a lodging?" inquired Gabriel.
- "That I can't, indeed," he said, moving past Oak as
- a Christian edges past an offertory-plate when he does
- not mean to contribute. "If you follow on the road till
- you come to Warren's Malthouse, where they are all
- gone to have their snap of victuals, I daresay some of
- 'em will tell you of a place. Good-night to ye, shepherd."
- The bailiff who showed this nervous dread of loving
- his neighbour as himself, went up the hill, and Oak
- walked on to the village, still astonished at the ren-
- counter with Bathsheba, glad of his nearness to her, and
- perplexed at the rapidity with which the unpractised girl
- of Norcombe had developed into the supervising and cool
- woman here. But some women only require an emerg-
- ency to make them fit for one.
- Obliged, to some extent, to forgo dreaming in order
- to find the way, he reached the churchyard, and passed
- round it under the wall where several ancient trees grew.
- There was a wide margin of grass along here, and
- Gabriel's footsteps were deadened by its softness, even
- at this indurating period of the year. When abreast of
- a trunk which appeared to be the oldest of the old, he
- became aware that a figure was standing behind it.
- Gabriel did not pause in his walk, and in another
- moment he accidentally kicked a loose stone. The noise
- was enough to disturb the motionless stranger, who
- started and assumed a careless position.
- It was a slim girl, rather thinly clad.
- "Good-night to you." said Gabriel, heartily.
- "Good-night." said the girl to Gabriel.
- The voice was unexpectedly attractive; it was "the
- low and dulcet note suggestive of romance," common in
- descriptions, rare in experience.
- "I'll thank you to tell me if I'm in the way for
- Warren's Malthouse?" Gabriel resumed, primarily to gain
- the information, indirectly to get more of the music.
- "Quite right. It's at the bottom of the hill. And
- do you know -- --" The girl hesitated and then went
- on again. "Do you know how late they keep open
- the Buck's Head Inn?" She seemed" to be won by
- Gabriel's heartiness, as Gabriel had been won by her
- modulations.
- "I don't know where the Buck's Head is, or anything
- about it. Do you think of going there to-night?"
- "Yes -- --" The woman again paused. There was
- no necessity for any continuance of speech, and the fact
- that she did add more seemed to proceed from an
- unconscious desire to show unconcern by making a
- remark, which is noticeable in the ingenuous when they
- are acting by stealth. "You are not a Weatherbury man?"
- she said, timorously.
- "I am not. I am the new shepherd -- just arrived."
- "Only a shepherd -- and you seem almost a farmer by
- your ways."
- "Only a shepherd." Gabriel repeated, in a dull cadence
- of finality. "His thoughts were directed to the past, his
- eyes to the feet of the girl; and for the first time he
- saw lying there a bundle of some sort. She may have
- perceived the direction of his face, for she said
- coaxingly, --
- "You won't say anything in the parish about having
- seen me here, will you -- at least, not for a day or two?"
- "I won't if you wish me not to." said Oak.
- "Thank you, indeed." the other replied."I am
- rather poor, and I don't want people to know anything
- about me." Then she was silent and shivered.
- "You ought to have a cloak on such a cold night,"
- Gabriel observed. "I would advise 'ee to get indoors."
- "O no! Would you mind going on and leaving me?
- I thank you much for what you have told me."
- "I will go on." he said; adding hesitatingly, -- "Since
- you are not very well off, perhaps you would accept this
- trifle from me. It is only a shilling, but it is all I have
- to spare."
- "Yes, I will take it." said the stranger, gratefully.
- She extended her hand; Gabriel his. In feeling for
- each other's palm in the gloom before the money could
- be passed, a minute incident occurred which told much.
- Gabriel's fingers alighted on the young woman's wrist.
- It was beating with a throb of tragic intensity. He had
- frequently felt the same quick, hard beat in the femoral
- artery of -- his lambs when overdriven. It suggested a
- consumption too great of a vitality which, to judge from
- her figure and stature, was already too little.
- "What is the matter?"
- "Nothing."
- "But there is?"
- "No, no, no! Let your having seen me be a secret!"
- "Very well; I will. Good-night, again."
- "Good-night."
- The young girl remained motionless by the tree, and
- Gabriel descended into the village of Weatherbury, or
- Lower Longpuddle as it was sometimes called. He
- fancied that he had felt himself in the penumbra of a
- very deep sadness when touching that slight and fragile
- creature. But wisdom lies in moderating mere impres-
- sions, and Gabriel endeavoured to think little of this.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-
- THE MALTHOUSE -- THE CHAT -- NEWS
-
-
- WARREN'S Malthouse was enclosed by an old wall
- inwrapped with ivy, and though not much of the exterior
- was visible at this hour, the character and purposes of
- the building were clearly enough shown by its outline
- upon the sky. From the walls an overhanging thatched
- roof sloped up to a point in the centre, upon which rose
- a small wooden lantern, fitted with louvre-boards on all
- the four sides, and from these openings a mist was dimly
- perceived to be escaping into the night air. There was
- no window in front; but a square hole in the door was
- glazed with a single pane, through which red, comfortable
- rays now stretched out upon the ivied wall in front.
- Voices were to be heard inside.
- Oak's hand skimmed the surface of the door with
- fingers extended to an Elymas-the-Somerer pattern, till
- he found a leathern strap, which he pulled. This lifted
- a wooden latch, and the door swung open.
- The room inside was lighted only by the, ruddy glow
- from the kiln mouth, which shone over ,the floor with
- the streaming, horizontality of the setting sun, and threw
- upwards the shadows of all facial irregularities in those
- assembled around. The stone-flag floor was worn into
- a path from the doorway to the kiln, and into undula-
- tions everywhere. A curved settle of unplaned oak
- stretched along one side, and in a remote corner was a
- small bed and bedstead, the owner and frequent occupier
- of which was the maltster.
- This aged man was now sitting opposite the fire, his
- frosty white hair and beard overgrowing his gnarled
- figure like the grey moss and lichen upon a leafless
- apple-tree. He wore breeches and the laced-up shoes
- called ankle-jacks; he kept his eyes fixed upon the
- fire.
- Gabriel's nose was greeted by an atmosphere laden
- with the sweet smell of new malt. The conversation
- (which seemed to have been concerning the origin of the
- fire) immediately ceased, and every one ocularly criticised
- him to the degree expressed by contracting the flesh of
- their foreheads and looking at him with narrowed eye-
- lids, as if he had been a light too strong for their sight.
- Several exclaimed meditatively, after this operation had
- been completed: --
- "Oh, 'tis the new shepherd, 'a b'lieve."
- "We thought we heard a hand pawing about the
- door for the bobbin, but weren't sure 'twere not a dead
- leaf blowed across." said another. "Come in, shepherd;
- sure ye be welcome, though we don't know yer name."
- "Gabriel Oak, that's my name, neighbours."
- The ancient maltster sitting in the midst turned up
- this -- his turning being as the turning of a rusty
- crane.
- "That's never Gable Oak's grandson over at Nor-
- combe -- never!" he said, as a formula expressive of
- surprise, which nobody was supposed to take literally'.
- "My father and my grandfather were old men of the
- name of Gabriel." said the shepherd, placidly.
- "Thought I knowed the man's face as I seed him
- on the rick! -- thought I did! And where be ye trading
- o't to now, shepherd?"
- "I'm thinking of biding here." said Mr. Oak.
- "Knowed yer grandfather for years and years!"
- continued the maltster, the words coming forth of their
- own accord as if the momentum previously imparted
- had been sufficient.
- "Ah -- and did you!"
- "Knowed yer grandmother."
- "And her too!"
- "Likewise knowed yer father when he was a child.
- Why, my boy Jacob there and your father were sworn
- brothers -- that they were sure -- weren't ye, Jacob?"
- "Ay, sure." said his son, a young man about sixty-
- five, with a semi-bald head and one tooth in the left
- centre of his upper jaw, which made much of itself by
- standing prominent, like a milestone in a bank. "But
- "twas Joe had most to do with him. However, my son
- William must have knowed the very man afore us --
- didn't ye, Billy, afore ye left Norcombe?"
- "No, 'twas Andrew." said Jacob's son Billy, a child
- of forty, or thereabouts, who manifested the peculiarity
- of possessing a cheerful soul in a gloomy body, and
- whose whiskers were assuming a chinchilla shade here
- and there.
- "I can mind Andrew." said Oak, "as being a man in
- the place when I was quite a child."
- "Ay -- the other day I and my youngest daughter,
- Liddy, were over at my grandson's christening." continued
- Billy. "We were talking about this very family, and
- "twas only last Purification Day in this very world, when
- the use-money is gied away to the second-best poor
- folk, you know, shepherd, and I can mind the day
- because they all had to traypse up to the vestry -- yes,
- this very man's family."
- "Come, shepherd, and drink. 'Tis gape and
- swaller with us -- a drap of sommit, but not of much
- account." said the maltster, removing from the fire his
- eyes, which were vermilion-red and bleared by gazing
- into it for so many years. "Take up the God-forgive-
- me, Jacob. See if 'tis warm, Jacob."
- Jacob stooped to the God-forgive-me, which was a
- two-handled tall mug standing in the ashes, cracked
- and charred with heat: it was rather furred with ex-
- traneous matter about the outside, especially in the
- crevices of the handles, the innermost curves of which
- may not have seen daylight for several years by reason
- of this encrustation thereon -- formed of ashes accident-
- ally wetted with cider and baked hard; but to the mind
- of any sensible drinker the cup was no worse for that,
- being incontestably clean on the inside and about the
- rim. It may be observed that such a class of mug is
- called a God-forgive-me in Weatherbury and its vicinity
- for uncertain reasons; probably because its size makes
- any given toper feel ashamed of himself when he sees
- its bottom in drinking it empty.
- Jacob, on receiving the order to see if the liquor was
- warm enough, placidly dipped his forefinger into it by
- way of thermometer, and having pronounced it nearly
- of the proper degree, raised the cup and very civilly
- attempted to dust some of the ashes from the bottom
- with the skirt of his smock-frock, because Shepherd Oak
- was a stranger.
- "A clane cup for the shepherd." said the maltster
- commandingly.
- "No -- not at all," said Gabriel, in a reproving tone
- of considerateness. "I never fuss about dirt in its pure
- state, and when I know what sort it is." Taking the
- mug he drank an inch or more from the depth of its
- contents, and duly passed it to the next man.
- wouldn't think of giving such trouble to neighbours in
- washing up when there's so much work to be done in
- the world already." continued Oak in a moister tone,
- after recovering from the stoppage of breath which is
- occasioned by pulls at large mugs.
- "A right sensible man." said Jacob.
- "True, true; it can't be gainsaid!" observed a brisk
- young man -- Mark Clark by name, a genial and pleasant
- gentleman, whom to meet anywhere in your travels was
- to know, to know was to drink with, and to drink with
- was, unfortunately, to pay for.
- "And here's a mouthful of bread and bacon that
- mis'ess have sent, shepherd. The cider will go down
- better with a bit of victuals. Don't ye chaw quite close,
- shepherd, for I let the bacon fall in the road outside as
- I was bringing it along, and may be 'tis rather gritty.
- There, 'tis clane dirt; and we all know what that is,
- as you say, and you bain't a particular man we see,
- shepherd."
- "True, true -- not at all." said the friendly Oak.
- "Don't let your teeth quite meet, and you won't feel
- the sandiness at all. Ah! 'tis wonderful what can be
- done by contrivance!"
- "My own mind exactly, neighbour."
- "Ah, he's his grandfer's own grandson! -- his grandfer
- were just such a nice unparticular man!" said the maltster.
- "Drink, Henry Fray -- drink." magnanimously said
- Jan Coggan, a person who held Saint-Simonian notions
- of share and share alike where liquor was concerned, as
- the vessel showed signs of approaching him in its gradual
- revolution among them.
- Having at this moment reached the end of a wistful
- gaze into mid-air, Henry did not refuse. He was a man
- of more than middle age, with eyebrows high up in his
- forehead, who laid it down that the law of the world
- was bad, with a long-suffering look through his listeners
- at the world alluded to, as it presented itself to his
- imagination. He always signed his name "Henery" --
- strenuously insisting upon that spelling, and if any
- passing schoolmaster ventured to remark that the second
- "e" was superfluous and old-fashioned, he received the
- reply that "H-e-n-e-r-y" was the name he was christened
- and the name he would stick to -- in the tone of one
- to whom orthographical differences were matters which
- had a great deal to do with personal character.
- Mr. Jan Coggan, who had passed the cup to Henery,
- was a crimson man with a spacious countenance, and
- private glimmer in his eye, whose name had appeared
- on the marriage register of Weatherbury and neighbour-
- ing parishes as best man and chief witness in countless
- unions of the previous twenty years; he also very
- frequently filled the post of head godfather in baptisms
- of the subtly-jovial kind.
- "Come, Mark Clark -- come. Ther's plenty more
- in the barrel." said Jan.
- "Ay -- that I will, 'tis my only doctor." replied Mr.
- Clark, who, twenty years younger than Jan Coggan,
- revolved in the same orbit. He secreted mirth on all
- occasions for special discharge at popular parties.
- "Why, Joseph Poorgrass, ye han't had a drop!" said
- Mr. Coggan to a self-conscious man in the background,
- thrusting the cup towards him.
- "Such a modest man as he is!" said Jacob Smallbury.
- "Why, ye've hardly had strength of eye enough to look
- in our young mis'ess's face, so I hear, Joseph?"
- All looked at Joseph Poorgrass with pitying reproach.
- "No -- I've hardly looked at her at all." simpered
- Joseph, reducing his body smaller whilst talking,
- apparently from a meek sense of undue prominence.
- "And when I seed her, 'twas nothing but blushes with
- me!"
- "Poor feller." said Mr. Clark.
- "'Tis a curious nature for a man." said Jan Coggan.
- "Yes." continued Joseph Poorgrass -- his shyness,
- which was so painful as a defect, filling him with a
- mild complacency now that it was regarded as an
- interesting study. "'Twere blush, blush, blush with
- me every minute of the time, when she was speaking
- to me."
- "I believe ye, Joseph Poorgrass, for we all know ye
- to be a very bashful man."
- "'Tis a' awkward gift for a man, poor soul." said the
- maltster. "And ye have suffered from it a long time,
- we know."
- "Ay ever since I was a boy. Yes -- mother was
- concerned to her heart about it -- yes. But twas all
- nought."
- "Did ye ever go into the world to try and stop it,
- Joseph Poorgrass?"
- "Oh ay, tried all sorts o' company. They took me
- to Greenhill Fair, and into a great gay jerry-go-nimble
- show, where there were women-folk riding round --
- standing upon horses, with hardly anything on but their
- smocks; but it didn't cure me a morsel. And then I
- was put errand-man at the Women's Skittle Alley at the
- back of the Tailor's Arms in Casterbridge. 'Twas a
- horrible sinful situation, and a very curious place for a
- good man. I had to stand and look ba'dy people in
- the face from morning till night; but 'twas no use -- I
- was just as-bad as ever after all. Blushes hev been
- in the family for generations. There, 'tis a happy pro-
- vidence that I be no worse."
- "True." said Jacob Smallbury, deepening his thoughts
- to a profounder view of the subject. "'Tis a thought
- to look at, that ye might have been worse; but even
- as you be, 'tis a very bad affliction for 'ee, Joseph. For
- ye see, shepherd, though 'tis very well for a woman,
- dang it all, 'tis awkward for a man like him, poor
- feller?"
- "'Tis -- 'tis." said Gabriel, recovering from a medita-
- tion. "Yes, very awkward for the man."
- "Ay, and he's very timid, too." observed Jan Coggan.
- "Once he had been working late at Yalbury Bottom,
- and had had a drap of drink, and lost his way as he was
- coming home-along through Yalbury Wood, didn't ye,
- Master Poorgrass?"
- "No, no, no; not that story!" expostulated the
- modest man, forcing a laugh to bury his concern.
- "-- -- And so 'a lost himself quite." continued Mr
- Coggan, with an impassive face, implying that a true
- narrative, like time and tide, must run its course and
- would respect no man. "And as he was coming along
- in the middle of the night, much afeared, and not able
- to find his way out of the trees nohow, 'a cried out,
- "Man-a-lost! man-a-lost!" A owl in a tree happened
- to be crying "Whoo-whoo-whoo!" as owls do, you
- know, shepherd" (Gabriel nodded), " and Joseph, all
- in a tremble, said, " Joseph Poorgrass, of Weatherbury,
- sir!"
- "No, no, now -- that's too much!" said the timid
- man, becoming a man of brazen courage all of a sudden.
- "I didn't say sir. I'll tike my oath I didn't say " Joseph
- Poorgrass o' Weatherbury, sir." No, no; what's right
- is right, and I never said sir to the bird, knowing very
- well that no man of a gentleman's rank would be
- hollering there at that time o' night." Joseph Poor-
- grass of Weatherbury," -- that's every word I said, and
- I shouldn't ha' said that if 't hadn't been for Keeper
- Day's metheglin.... There, 'twas a merciful thing it
- ended where it did."
- The question of which was right being tacitly waived
- by the company, Jan went on meditatively: --
- "And he's the fearfullest man, bain't ye, Joseph?
- Ay, another time ye were lost by Lambing-Down Gate,
- weren't ye, Joseph?"
- "I was." replied Poorgrass, as if there were some
- conditions too serious even for modesty to remember
- itself under, this being one.
- "Yes; that were the middle of the night, too. The
- gate would not open, try how he would, and knowing
- there was the Devil's hand in it, he kneeled down."
- "Ay." said Joseph, acquiring confidence from the
- warmth of the fire, the cider, and a perception of the
- narrative capabilities of the experience alluded to.
- "My heart died within me, that time; but I kneeled
- down and said the Lord's Prayer, and then the Belie
- right through, and then the Ten Commandments, in
- earnest prayer. But no, the gate wouldn't open; and
- then I went on with Dearly Beloved Brethren, and,
- thinks I, this makes four, and 'tis all I know out of
- book, and if this don't do it nothing will, and I'm a
- lost man. Well, when I got to Saying After Me, I
- rose from my knees and found the gate would open
- -- yes, neighbours, the gate opened the same as ever."
- A meditation on the obvious inference was indulged
- in by all, and during its continuance each directed his
- vision into the ashpit, which glowed like a desert in
- the tropics under a vertical sun, shaping their eyes long
- and liny, partly because of the light, partly from the
- depth of the subject discussed.
- Gabriel broke the silence. "What sort of a place
- is this to live at, and what sort of a mis'ess is she to
- work under?" Gabriel's bosom thrilled gently as he
- thus slipped under the notice of the assembly the inner-
- most subject of his heart.
- "We d' know little of her -- nothing. She only
- showed herself a few days ago. Her uncle was took
- bad, and the doctor was called with his world-wide
- skill; but he couldn't save the man. As I take it,
- she's going to keep on the farm.
- "That's about the shape o't, 'a b'lieve." said Jan
- uncle was a very fair sort of man. Did ye know en,
- be under 'em as under one here and there. Her
- uncle was a very fair sort of man. Did ye know 'en,
- shepherd -- a bachelor-man?"
- "Not at all."
- "I used to go to his house a-courting my first wife,
- Charlotte, who was his dairymaid. Well, a very good-
- hearted man were Farmer Everdene, and I being a
- respectable young fellow was allowed to call and see
- her and drink as much ale as I liked, but not to carry
- away any -- outside my skin I mane of course."
- "Ay, ay, Jan Coggan; we know yer meaning."
- "And so you see 'twas beautiful ale, and I wished
- to value his kindness as much as I could, and not to
- be so ill-mannered as to drink only a thimbleful, which
- would have been insulting the man's generosity -- -- "
- "True, Master Coggan, 'twould so." corroborated
- Mark Clark.
- " -- -- And so I used to eat a lot of salt fish afore
- going, and then by the time I got there I were as dry
- as a lime-basket -- so thorough dry that that ale would
- slip down -- ah, 'twould slip down sweet! Happy
- times! heavenly times! Such lovely drunks as I
- used to have at that house! You can mind, Jacob?
- You used to go wi' me sometimes."
- "I can -- I can." said Jacob. "That one, too, that
- we had at Buck's Head on a White Monday was a
- pretty tipple."
- "'Twas. But for a wet of the better class, that
- brought you no nearer to the horned man than you were
- afore you begun, there was none like those in Farmer
- Everdene's kitchen. Not a single damn allowed; no,
- not a bare poor one, even at the most cheerful moment
- when all were blindest, though the good old word of
- sin thrown in here and there at such times is a great
- relief to a merry soul."
- "True." said the maltster. "Nater requires her
- swearing at the regular times, or she's not herself; and
- unholy exclamations is a necessity of life."
- "But Charlotte." continued Coggan -- "not a word of
- the sort would Charlotte allow, nor the smallest item of
- taking in vain.... Ay, poor Charlotte, I wonder if she
- had the good fortune to get into Heaven when 'a died!
- But 'a was never much in luck's way, and perhaps 'a
- went downwards after all, poor soul."
- "And did any of you know Miss Everdene's-father
- and mother?" inquired the shepherd, who found some
- difficulty in keeping the conversation in the desired
- channel.
- "I knew them a little." said Jacob Smallbury; "but
- they were townsfolk, and didn't live here. They've
- been dead for years. Father, what sort of people were
- mis'ess' father and mother?"
- "Well." said the maltster, "he wasn't much to look
- at; but she was a lovely woman. He was fond enough
- of her as his sweetheart."
- "Used to kiss her scores and long-hundreds o times,
- so 'twas said." observed Coggan.
- "He was very proud of her, too, when they were
- married, as I've been told." said the maltster.
- "Ay." said Coggan. "He admired her so much that
- he used to light the candle three time a night to look
- at her."
- "Boundless love; I shouldn't have supposed it in the
- universe!" murmered Joseph Poorgrass, who habitually
- spoke on a large scale in his moral reflections.
- "Well, to be sure." said Gabriel.
- "Oh, 'tis true enough. I knowed the man and
- woman both well. Levi Everdene -- that was the man's
- name, sure. "Man." saith I in my hurry, but he were
- of a higher circle of life than that -- 'a was a gentleman-
- tailor really, worth scores of pounds. And he became
- a very celebrated bankrupt two or three times."
- "Oh, I thought he was quite a common man!" said
- Joseph.
- "O no, no! That man failed for heaps of money;
- hundreds in gold and silver."
- The maltster being rather short of breath, Mr. Coggan,
- after absently scrutinising a coal which had fallen among
- the ashes, took up the narrative, with a private twirl of
- his eye: --
- "Well, now, you'd hardly believe it, but that man --
- husbands alive, after a while. Understand? 'a didn't
- want to be fickle, but he couldn't help it. The poor
- feller were faithful and true enough to her in his wish,
- but his heart would rove, do what he would. He spoke
- to me in real tribulation about it once. "Coggan,"
- he said, "I could never wish for a handsomer woman
- than I've got, but feeling she's ticketed as my lawful
- wife, I can't help my wicked heart wandering, do what
- I will." But at last I believe he cured it by making her
- take off her wedding-ring and calling her by her maiden
- name as they sat together after the shop was shut, and
- so 'a would get to fancy she was only his sweetheart, and
- not married to him at all. And as soon as he could
- thoroughly fancy he was doing wrong and committing
- the seventh, 'a got to like her as well as ever, and they
- lived on a perfect picture of mutel love."
- "Well, 'twas a most ungodly remedy." murmured
- Joseph Poorgrass; "but we ought to feel deep cheerful-
- ness that a happy Providence kept it from being any
- worse. You see, he might have gone the bad road and
- given his eyes to unlawfulness entirely -- yes, gross un-
- lawfulness, so to say it."
- "You see." said Billy Smallbury, "The man's will was
- to do right, sure enough, but his heart didn't chime in."
- "He got so much better, that he was quite godly
- in his later years, wasn't he, Jan?" said Joseph Poor-
- grass. "He got himself confirmed over again in a more
- serious way, and took to saying "Amen" almost as loud
- as the clerk, and he liked to copy comforting verses
- from the tombstones. He used, too, to hold the money-
- plate at Let Your Light so Shine, and stand godfather
- to poor little come-by-chance children; and he kept a
- missionary box upon his table to nab folks unawares
- when they called; yes, and he would-box the charity-
- boys' ears, if they laughed in church, till they could
- hardly stand upright, and do other deeds of piety
- natural to the saintly inclined."
- "Ay, at that time he thought of nothing but high
- things." added Billy Smallbury. "One day Parson Thirdly
- met him and said, "Good-Morning, Mister Everdene; 'tis
- a fine day!" "Amen" said Everdene, quite absent-
- like, thinking only of religion when he seed a parson-
- "Their daughter was not at all a pretty chile at that
- time." said Henery Fray. "Never should have. thought
- she'd have growed up such a handsome body as she is."
- "'Tis to be hoped her temper is as good as her face."
- "Well, yes; but the baily will have most to do with
- the business and ourselves. Ah!" Henery gazed into
- the ashpit, and smiled volumes of ironical knowledge.
- "A queer Christian, like the Devil's head in a cowl,
- "He is." said Henery, implying that irony must cease
- at a certain point. "Between we two, man and man, I
- believe that man would as soon tell a lie Sundays as
- working-days -- that I do so."
- "Good faith, you do talk!" said Gabriel.
- "True enough." said the man of bitter moods, looking
- round upon the company with the antithetic laughter
- that comes from a keener appreciation of the miseries
- of life than ordinary men are capable of. 'Ah, there's
- people of one sort, and people of another, but that man
- -- bless your souls!"
- Gabriel thought fit to change the subject. "You
- must be a very aged man, malter, to have sons growed
- mild and ancient" he remarked.
- "Father's so old that 'a can't mind his age, can ye,
- father?" interposed Jacob. "And he growled terrible
- crooked too, lately" Jacob continued, surveying his
- father's figure, which was rather more bowed than his own.
- "Really one may say that father there is three-double."
- "Crooked folk will last a long while." said the maltster,
- grimly, and not in the best humour.
- "Shepherd would like to hear the pedigree of yer
- life, father -- wouldn't ye, shepherd?
- "Ay that I should." said Gabriel with the heartiness
- of a man who had longed to hear it for several months.
- "What may your age be, malter?"
- The maltster cleared his throat in an exaggerated
- form for emphasis, and elongating his gaze to the
- remotest point of the ashpit! said, in the slow speech
- justifiable when the importance of a subject is so
- generally felt that any mannerism must be tolerated
- in getting at it, "Well, I don't mind the year I were
- born in, but perhaps I can reckon up the places I've
- lived at, and so get it that way. I bode at Upper Long-
- puddle across there" (nodding to the north) "till I were
- eleven. I bode seven at Kingsbere" (nodding to the
- east) "where I took to malting. I went therefrom to
- Norcombe, and malted there two-and-twenty years, and-
- two-and-twenty years I was there turnip-hoeing and
- harvesting. Ah, I knowed that old place, Norcombe,
- years afore you were thought of, Master Oak" (Oak smiled
- sincere belief in the fact). "Then I malted at Dur-
- nover four year, and four year turnip-hoeing; and
- I was fourteen times eleven months at Millpond St.
- Jude's" (nodding north-west-by-north). "Old Twills
- wouldn't hire me for more than eleven months at a
- time, to keep me from being chargeable to the parish
- if so be I was disabled. Then I was three year at
- Mellstock, and I've been here one-and-thirty year come
- Candlemas. How much is that?"
- "Hundred and seventeen." chuckled another old
- gentleman, given to mental arithmetic and little con-
- versation, who had hitherto sat unobserved in a corner.
- "Well, then, that's my age." said the maltster, em-
- phatically.
- "O no, father!" said Jacob. "Your turnip-hoeing
- were in the summer and your malting in the winter of
- the same years, and ye don't ought to count-both halves
- father."
- "Chok' it all! I lived through the summers, didn't
- I? That's my question. I suppose ye'll say next I be
- no age at all to speak of?"
- "Sure we shan't." said Gabriel, soothingly.
- "Ye be a very old aged person, malter." attested Jan
- must have a wonderful talented constitution to be able
- to live so long, mustn't he, neighbours?"
- "True, true; ye must, malter, wonderful," said the
- meeting unanimously.
- The maltster, being know pacified, was even generous
- enough to voluntarily disparage in a slight degree the
- virtue of having lived a great many years, by mentioning
- that the cup they were drinking out of was three years
- older than he.
- While the cup was being examined, the end of
- Gabriel Oak's flute became visible over his smock-frock
- I seed you blowing into a great flute by now at Caster-
- bridge?"
- "You did." said Gabriel, blushing faintly. "I've been
- in great trouble, neighbours, and was driven to it.
- take it careless-like, shepherd and your time will come
- tired?"
- "Neither drum nor trumpet have I heard since
- Christmas." said Jan Coggan. "Come, raise a tune,
- Master Oak!"
- "That I will." said Gabriel, pulling out his flute and
- putting it together. "A poor tool, neighbours; but
- such as I can do ye shall have and welcome."
- Oak then struck up "Jockey to the Fair." and played
- that sparkling melody three times through accenting the
- notes in the third round in a most artistic and lively
- manner by bending his body in small jerks and tapping
- with his foot to beat time.
- "He can blow the flute very well -- that 'a can." said
- a young married man, who having no individuality worth
- mentioning was known as "Susan Tall's husband." He
- continued, "I'd as lief as not be able to blow into a
- flute as well-as that."
- "He's a clever man, and 'tis a true comfort for us to
- have such a shepherd." murmured Joseph Poorgrass, in
- a soft cadence. "We ought to feel full o' thanksgiving
- that he's not a player of ba'dy songs 'instead of these
- merry tunes; for 'twould have been just as easy for God
- to have made the shepherd a loose low man -- a man of
- iniquity, so to speak it -- as what he is. Yes, for our wives"
- and daughters' sakes we should feel real thanks giving."
- "True, true, -- real thanksgiving!" dashed in Mark
- Clark conclusively, not feeling it to be of any conse-
- quence to his opinion that he had only heard about a
- word and three-quarters of what Joseph had said.
- "Yes." added Joseph, beginning to feel like a man in
- the Bible; "for evil do thrive so in these times that ye
- may be as much deceived in the cleanest shaved and
- whitest shirted man as in the raggedest tramp upon the
- turnpike, if I may term it so."
- "Ay, I can mind yer face now, shepherd." said
- Henery Fray, criticising Gabriel with misty eyes as he
- entered upon his second tune. "Yes -- now I see 'ee
- blowing into the flute I know 'ee to be the same man
- I see play at Casterbridge, for yer mouth were scrimped
- up and yer eyes a-staring out like a strangled man's --
- just as they be now."
- "'Tis a pity that playing the flute should make a man
- look such a scarecrow." observed Mr. Mark Clark, with
- additional criticism of Gabriel's countenance, the latter
- person jerking out, with the ghastly grimace required by
- the instrument, the chorus of "Dame Durden!
- "I hope you don't mind that young man's bad
- manners in naming your features?" whispered Joseph to
- Gabriel.
- "Not at all." said Mr. Oak.
- "For by nature ye be a very handsome man,
- shepherd." continued Joseph Poorgrass, with winning
- sauvity.
- "Ay, that ye be, shepard." said the company.
- "Thank you very much." said Oak, in the modest
- tone good manners demanded, thinking, however, that
- he would never let Bathsheba see him playing the
- flute; in this severe showing a discretion equal to that
- related to its sagacious inventress, the divine Minerva
- herself.
- "Ah, when I and my wife were married at Norcombe
- Church." said the old maltster, not pleased at finding
- himself left out of the subject "we were called the
- handsomest couple in the neighbourhood -- everybody
- said so."
- "Danged if ye bain't altered now, malter." said a voice
- with the vigour natural to the enunciation of a remark-
- ably evident truism. It came from the old man in the
- background, whose offensiveness and spiteful ways were
- barely atoned for by the occasional chuckle he con-
- tributed to general laughs.
- "O no, no." said Gabriel.
- "Don't ye play no more shepherd" said Susan Tall's
- husband, the young married man who had spoken once
- before. "I must be moving and when there's tunes
- going on I seem as if hung in wires. If I thought after
- I'd left that music was still playing, and I not there, I
- should be quite melancholy-like."
- "What's yer hurry then, Laban?" inquired Coggan.
- "You used to bide as late as the latest."
- "Well, ye see, neighbours, I was lately married to a
- woman, and she's my vocation now, and so ye see -- -- "
- The young man hated lamely.
- "New Lords new laws, as the saying is, I suppose,"
- remarked Coggan.
- "Ay, 'a b'lieve -- ha, ha!" said Susan Tall's husband,
- in a tone intended to imply his habitual reception of
- jokes without minding them at all. The young man
- then wished them good-night and withdrew.
- Henery Fray was the first to follow. Then Gabriel
- arose and went off with Jan Coggan, who had offered
- him a lodging. A few minutes later, when the remaining
- ones were on their legs and about to depart, Fray came
- back again in a hurry. Flourishing his finger ominously
- he threw a gaze teeming with tidings just -- where his eye
- alighted by accident, which happened to be in Joseph
- Poorgrass's face.
- "O -- what's the matter, what's the matter, Henery?"
- said Joseph, starting back.
- "What's a-brewing, Henrey?" asked Jacob and Mark
- Clark.
- "Baily Pennyways -- Baily Pennyways -- I said so; yes,
- I said so!"
- "What, found out stealing anything?"
- "Stealing it is. The news is, that after Miss
- Everdene got home she went out again to see all was
- safe, as she usually do, and coming in found Baily
- Pennyways creeping down the granary steps with half a
- a bushel of barley. She fleed at him like a cat -- never
- such a tomboy as she is -- of course I speak with closed
- doors?"
- "You do -- you do, Henery."
- "She fleed at him, and, to cut a long story short,
- he owned to having carried off five sack altogether, upon
- her promising not to persecute him. Well, he's turned
- out neck and crop, and my question is, who's going to
- be baily now?"
- The question was such a profound one that Henery
- was obliged to drink there and then from the large
- cup till the bottom was distinctly visible inside. Before
- he had replaced it on the table, in came the young man,
- Susan Tall's husband, in a still greater hurry.
- "Have ye heard the news that's all over parish?"
- "About Baily Pennyways?"
- "But besides that?"
- "No -- not a morsel of it!" they replied, looking into
- the very midst of Laban Tall as if to meet his words
- half-way down his throat.
- "What a night of horrors!" murmured Joseph Poor-
- grass, waving his hands spasmodically. "I've had the
- news-bell ringing in my left ear quite bad enough for a
- murder, and I've seen a magpie all alone!"
- "Fanny Robin -- Miss everdene's youngest servant --
- can't be found. They've been wanting to lock up the
- door these two hours, but she isn't come in. And they
- don't know what to do about going to hed for fear of
- locking her out. They wouldn't be so concerned if she
- hadn't been noticed in such low spirits these last few
- days, and Maryann d'think the beginning of a crowner's
- inquest has happened to the poor girl."
- "O -- 'tis burned -- 'tis burned!" came from Joseph
- Poorgrass's dry lips.
- "No -- 'tis drowned!" said Tall.
- "Or 'tis her father's razor!" suggested Billy Smallbury,
- with a vivid sense of detail.
- "Well -- Miss Everdene wants to speak to one or two
- of us before we go to bed. What with this trouble about
- the baily, and now about the girl, mis'ess is almost wild."
- They all hastened up the lane to the farmhouse,
- excepting the old maltster, whom neither news, fire,
- rain, nor thunder could draw from his hole. There, as
- the others' footsteps died away he sat down again and
- continued gazing as usual into the furnace with his red,
- bleared eyes.
- From the bedroom window above their heads Bath-
- sheba's head and shoulders, robed in mystic white, were
- dimly seen extended into the air.
- "Are any of my men among you?" she said anxiously.
- "Yes, ma'am, several." said Susan Tall's husband.
- "Tomorrow morning I wish two or three of you to
- make inquiries in the villages round if they have seen
- such a person as Fanny Robin. Do it quietly; there is
- no reason for alarm as yet. She must have left whilst
- we were all at the fire."
- "I beg yer pardon, but had she any young man court-
- ing her in the parish, ma'am?" asked Jacob Smallbury.
- "I don't know." said Bathsheba.
- "I've never heard of any such thing, ma'am." said
- two or three.
- "It is hardly likely, either." continued Bathsheba.
- "For any lover of hers might have come to the house if
- he had been a respectable lad. The most mysterious
- matter connected with her absence -- indeed, the only
- thing which gives me serious alarm -- is that she was
- seen to go out of the house by Maryann with only her
- indoor working gown on -- not even a bonnet."
- "And you mean, ma'am, excusing my words, that a
- young woman would hardly go to see her young man
- without dressing up." said Jacob, turning his mental
- vision upon past experiences. "That's true -- she would
- not, ma'am."
- "She had, I think, a bundle, though I couldn't see
- very well." said a female voice from another window,
- which seemed that of Maryann. "But she had no
- young man about here. Hers lives in Casterbridge, and
- I believe he's a soldier."
- "Do you know his name?" Bathsheba said.
- "No, mistress; she was very close about it."
- "Perhaps I might be able to find out if I went to
- Casterbridge barracks." said William Smallbury.
- "Very well; if she doesn't return tomorrow, mind
- you go there and try to discover which man it is, and
- see him. I feel more responsible than I should if she
- had had any friends or relations alive. I do hope she
- has come to no harm through a man of that kind....
- And then there's this disgraceful affair of the bailiff --
- but I can't speak of him now."
- Bathsheba had so many reasons for uneasiness that
- it seemed she did not think it worth while to dwell
- upon any particular one. "Do as I told you, then"
- she said in conclusion, closing the casement.
- "Ay, ay, mistress; we will." they replied, and moved
- away.
- That night at Coggan's, Gabriel Oak, beneath the
- screen of closed eyelids, was busy with fancies, and full
- of movement, like a river flowing rapidly under its ice.
- Night had always been the time at which he saw Bath-
- sheba most vividly, and through the slow hours of
- shadow he tenderly regarded her image now. It is
- rarely that the pleasures of the imagination will compen-
- sate for the pain of sleeplessness, but they possibly did
- with Oak to-night, for the delight of merely seeing her
- effaced for the time his perception of the great differ-
- ence between seeing and possessing.
- He also thought of Plans for fetching his few utensils
- and books from Norcombe. The Young Man's Best
- Companion, The Farrier's Sure Guide, The Veterinary
- Surgeon, Paradise Lost, The Pilgrim's Progress, Robinson
- Crusoe, Ash's Dictionary, the Walkingame's Arithmetic,
- constituted his library; and though a limited series, it was
- one from which he had acquired more sound informa-
- tion by diligent perusal than many a man of opportunities
- has done from a furlong of laden shelves.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
-
- THE HOMESTEAD -- A VISITOR -- HALF-CONFIDENCES
-
-
- By daylight, the Bower of Oak's new-found mistress,
- Bathsheba Everdene, presented itself as a hoary build-
- ing, of the early stage of Classic Renaissance as regards
- its architecture, and of 'a proportion which told at a
- glance that, as is so frequently the case, it had once
- been the memorial hall upon a small estate around it,
- now altogether effaced as a distinct property, and merged
- in the vast tract of a non-resident landlord, which com-
- prised several such modest demesnes.
- Fluted pilasters, worked from the solid stone,
- decorated its front, and above the roof the chimneys
- were panelled or columnar, some coped gables with
- finials and like features still retaining traces of their
- Gothic extraction. Soft Brown mosses, like faded
- velveteen, formed cushions upon the stone tiling, and
- tufts of the houseleek or sengreen sprouted from the
- eaves of the low surrounding buildings. A gravel walk
- leading from the door to the road in front was encrusted
- at the sides with more moss -- here it was a silver-green
- variety, the nut-brown of the gravel being visible to the
- width of only a foot or two in the centre. This circum-
- stance, and the generally sleepy air of the whole prospect
- here, together with the animated and contrasting state
- of the reverse facade, suggested to the imagination that
- on the adaptation of the building for farming purposes
- the vital principle' of the house had turned round inside
- its body to face the other way. Reversals of this kind,
- strange deformities, tremendous paralyses, are often seen
- to be inflicted by trade upon edifices -- either individual
- or in the aggregate as streets and towns -- which were
- originally planned for pleasure alone.
- Lively voices were heard this morning in the upper
- rooms, the main staircase to which was of hard oak, the
- balusters, heavy as bed-posts, being turned and moulded
- in the quaint fashion of their century, the handrail as
- stout as a parapet-top, and the stairs themselves con-
- tinually twisting round like a person trying to look over
- his shoulder. Going up, the floors above were found
- to have a very irregular surface, rising to ridges, sinking
- into valley; and being just then uncarpeted, the face
- of the boards was seen to be eaten into innumerable
- the opening and shutting of every door a tremble
- followed every bustling movement, and a creak accom-
- panied a walker about the house like a spirit, wherever-
- he went.
- In the room from which the conversation proceeded,
- Bathsheba and her servant-companion, Liddy Small-
- bury were to be discovered sitting upon the floor, and
- sorting a complication of papers, books, bottles, and
- rubbish spread out thereon -- remnants from the house-
- hold stores of the late occupier. Liddy, the maltster's
- great-granddaughter, was about Bathsheba's equal in
- age, and her face was a prominent advertisement of the
- features' might have lacked in form was amply made up
- for by perfection of hue, which at this winter-time was
- the softened ruddiness on a surface of high rotundity
- and, like the presentations of those great colourists, it
- was a face which kept well back from the boundary
- between comeliness and the ideal. Though elastic in
- nature she was less daring than Bathsheba, and occa-
- sionally showed some earnestness, which consisted half
- of genuine feeling, and half of mannerliness superadded
- by way of duty.
- Through a partly-opened door the noise of a scrubbing-
- brush led up to the charwoman, Maryann Money, a person
- who for a face had a circular disc, furrowed less by age
- than by long gazes of perplexity at distant objects. To
- think of her was to get good-humoured; to speak of
- her was to raise the image of a dried Normandy
- pippin.
- "Stop your scrubbing a moment." said Bathsheba
- through the door to her. "I hear something."
- Maryann suspended the brush.
- The tramp of a horse was apparent, approaching the
- front of the building. The paces slackened, turned in
- at the wicket, and, what was most unusual, came up
- the mossy path close to the door. The door was
- tapped with the end of a crop or stick.
- "What impertinence!" said Liddy, in a low voice.
- "To ride up the footpath like that! Why didn't he
- stop at the gate? Lord! 'Tis a gentleman! I see the
- top of his hat."
- "Be quiet!" said Bathsheba.
- The further expression of Liddy's concern was con-
- tinued by aspect instead of narrative.
- "Why doesn't Mrs. Coggan go to the door?" Bath-
- sheba continued.
- Rat-tat-tat-tat, resounded more decisively from Bath-
- sheba's oak.
- "Maryann, you go!" said she, fluttering under the
- onset of a crowd of romantic possibilities.
- "O ma'am -- see, here's a mess!"
- The argument was unanswerable after a glance at
- Maryann.
- "Liddy -- you must." said Bathsheba.
- Liddy held up her hands and arms, coated with dust
- from the rubbish they were sorting, and looked implor-
- ingly at her mistress.
- "There -- Mrs. Coggan is going!" said Bathsheba,
- exhaling her relief in the form of a long breath which
- had lain in her bosom a minute or more.
- The door opened, and a deep voice said --
- "Is Miss Everdene at home?"
- "I'll see, sir." said Mrs. Coggan, and in a minute
- appeared in the room.
- "Dear, what a thirtover place this world is!" con-
- tinued Mrs. Coggan (a wholesome-looking lady who
- had a voice for each class of remark according to the
- emotion involved; who could toss a pancake or twirl
- a mop with the accuracy of pure mathematics, and
- who at this moment showed hands shaggy with frag-
- ments of dough and arms encrusted with flour). "I
- am never up to my elbows, Miss, in making a pudding
- but one of two things do happen -- either my nose must
- needs begin tickling, and I can't live without scratching
- A woman's dress being a part of her countenance,
- and any disorder in the one being of the same nature
- with a malformation or wound in the other, Bathsheba
- said at once --
- "I can't see him in this state. Whatever shall I do?"
- Not-at-homes were hardly naturalized in Weatherbury
- farmhouses, so Liddy suggested -- "Say you're a fright
- with dust, and can't come down."
- "Yes -- that sounds very well." said Mrs. Coggan,
- critically.
- "Say I can't see him -- that will do."
- Mrs. Coggan went downstairs, and returned the
- answer as requested, adding, however, on her own
- responsibility, "Miss is dusting bottles, sir, and is quite
- a object -- that's why 'tis."
- "Oh, very well." said the deep voice." indifferently.
- "All I wanted to ask was, if anything had been heard
- of Fanny Robin?"
- "Nothing, sir -- but we may know to-night. William
- Smallbury is gone to Casterbridge, where her young
- man lives, as is supposed, and the other men be inquir-
- ing about everywhere."
- The horse's tramp then recommenced and -retreated,
- and the door closed.
- "Who is Mr. Boldwood?" said Bathsheba.
- "A gentleman-farmer at Little Weatherbury."
- "Married?"
- "No, miss."
- "How old is he?"
- "Forty, I should say -- very handsome -- rather stern-
- looking -- and rich."
- "What a bother this dusting is! I am always in
- some unfortunate plight or other," Bathsheba said,
- complainingly. "Why should he inquire about Fanny?"
- "Oh, because, as she had no friends in her childhood,
- he took her and put her to school, and got her her
- place here under your uncle. He's a very kind man
- that way, but Lord -- there!"
- "What?"
- "Never was such a hopeless man for a woman!
- He's been courted by sixes and sevens -- all the girls,
- gentle and simple, for miles round, have tried him. Jane
- Perkins worked at him for two months like a slave,
- and the two Miss Taylors spent a year upon him,
- and he cost Farmer Ives's daughter nights of tears
- and twenty pounds' worth of new clothes; but Lord --
- the money might as well have been thrown out of the
- window."
- A little boy came up at this moment and looked in
- upon them. This child was one of the Coggans who,
- with the Smallburys, were as common among the
- families of this district as the Avons and Derwents
- among our rivers. He always had a loosened tooth or
- a cut finger to show to particular friends, which he did
- with an air of being thereby elevated above the common
- herd of afflictionless humanity -- to which exhibition
- of congratulation as well as pity.
- "I've got a pen-nee!" said Master Coggan in a
- scanning measure.
- "Well -- who gave it you, Teddy?" said Liddy.
- "Mis-terr Bold-wood! He gave it to me for opening
- the gate."
- "What did he say?"
- "He said "Where are you going, my little man?'"
- and I said, "To Miss Everdene's please," and he said,
- "She is a staid woman, isn't she, my little man?" and
- I said, "Yes."
- "You naughty child! What did you say that for?"
- "Cause he gave me the penny!"
- "What a pucker everything is in!" said Bathsheba,
- discontentedly when the child had gone. 'Get away,
- thing! You ought to be married by this time, and not
- here troubling me!"
- "Ay, mistress -- so I did. But what between the poor
- men I won't have, and the rich men who won't have me,
- I stand as a pelicon in the wilderness!"
- "Did anybody ever want to marry you miss?" Liddy
- ventured to ask when they were again alone. "Lots of
- "em, i daresay.?"
- Bathsheba paused, as if about to refuse a reply, but
- the temptation to say yes, since it was really in her
- power was irresistible by aspiring virginity, in spite of
- her spleen at having been published as old.
- "A man wanted to once." she said, in a highly experi-
- enced tone and the image of Gabriel Oak, as the farmer,
- rose before her.
- "How nice it must seem!" said Liddy, with the fixed
- features of mental realization. "And you wouldn't have
- him?"
- "He wasn't quite good enough for me."
- "How sweet to be able to disdain, when most of us
- are glad to say, "Thank you!" I seem I hear it.
- "No, sir -- I'm your better." or "Kiss my foot, sir; my
- face is for mouths of consequence." And did you love
- him, miss?"
- "Oh, no. But I rather liked him."
- "Do you now?"
- "Of course not -- what footsteps are those I hear?"
- Liddy looked from a back window into the courtyard
- behind, which was now getting low-toned and dim with
- the earliest films of night. A crooked file of men was
- approaching the back door. The whole string of trailing
- individuals advanced in the completest balance of inten-
- tion, like the remarkable creatures known as Chain
- Salpae, which, distinctly organized in other respects, have
- one will common to a whole family. Some were, as
- usual, in snow-white smock-frocks of Russia duck, and
- some in whitey-brown ones of drabbet -- marked on the
- wrists, breasts, backs, and sleeves with honeycomb-work.
- Two or three women in pattens brought up the rear.
- "The Philistines be upon us." said Liddy, making her
- nose white against the glass.
- "Oh, very well. Maryann, go down and keep them
- in the kitchen till I am dressed, and then show them in
- to me in the hall."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
-
- HALF-AN-HOUR later Bathsheba, in finished dress,
-
-
- and followed by Liddy, entered the upper end of the old
- hall to find that her men had all deposited themselves on
- a long form and a settle at the lower extremity. She sat
- down at a table and opened the time-book, pen in her
- hand, with a canvas money-bag beside her. From this
- she poured a small heap of coin. Liddy chose a
- position at her elbow and began to sew, sometimes
- pausing and looking round, or with the air of a privileged
- person, taking up one of the half-sovereigns lying before
- her and surveying it merely as a work of art, while
- strictly preventing her countenance from expressing any
- wish to possess it as money.
- "Now before I begin, men." said Bathsheba, "I have
- two matters to speak of. The first is that the bailiff is
- dismissed for thieving, and that I have formed a resolu-
- tion to have no bailiff at all, but to manage everything
- with my own head and hands."
- The men breathed an audible breath of amazement.
- "The next matter is, have you heard anything of
- Fanny?"
- "Nothing, ma'am.
- "Have you done anything?"
- "I met Farmer Boldwood." said Jacob Smallbury, 'and
- I went with him and two of his men, and dragged New-
- mill Pond, but we found nothing."
- "And the new shepherd have been to Buck's Head,
- by Yalbury, thinking she had gone there, but nobody
- had seed her." said Laban Tall.
- "Hasn't William Smallbury been to Casterbridge?"
- "Yes, ma'am, but he's not yet come home. He
- promised to be back by six."
- "It wants a quarter to six at present." said Bathsheba,
- looking at her watch. "I daresay he'll be in directly.
- Well, now then" -- she looked into the book -- "Joseph
- Poorgrass, are you there?"
- "Yes, sir -- ma'am I mane." said the person addressed.
- "I be the personal name of Poorgrass."
- "And what are you?"
- "Nothing in my own eye. In the eye of other people
- -- well, I don't say it; though public thought will out."
- "What do you do on the farm?"
- "I do do carting things all the year, and in seed time I
- shoots the rooks and sparrows, and helps at pig-killing, sir."
- "How much to you?"
- "Please nine and ninepence and a good halfpenny
- where 'twas a bad one, sir -- ma'am I mane."
- "Quite correct. Now here are ten shillings in addi-
- tion as a small present, as I am a new comer."
- Bathsheba blushed slightly at the sense of being
- generous in public, and Henery Fray, who had drawn
- up towards her chair, lifted his eyebrows and fingers to
- express amazement on a small scale.
- "How much do I owe you -- that man in the corner --
- what's your name?" continued Bathsheba.
- "Matthew Moon, ma'am." said a singular framework of
- clothes with nothing of any consequence inside them,
- which advanced with the toes in no definite direction
- forwards, but turned in or out as they chanced to swing.
- "Matthew Mark, did you say? -- speak out -- I shall
- not hurt you." inquired the young farmer, kindly.
- "Matthew Moon mem" said Henery Fray, correct-
- ingly, from behind her chair, to which point he had
- edged himself.
- "Matthew Moon." murmured Bathsheba, turning her
- bright eyes to the book. "Ten and twopence halfpenny
- is the sum put down to you, I see?"
- "Yes, mis'ess." said Matthew, as the rustle of wind
- among dead leaves.
- "Here it is and ten shillings. Now -the next -- Andrew
- Randle, you are a new man, I hear. How come you to
- leave your last farm?"
- "P-p-p-p-p-pl-pl-pl-pl-l-l-l-l-ease, ma'am, p-p-p-p-pl-pl-
- pl-pl-please, ma'am-please'm-please'm -- -- "
- "'A's a stammering man, mem." said Henery Fray in
- an undertone, "and they turned him away because the
- only time he ever did speak plain he said his soul was
- his own, and other iniquities, to the squire. "A can cuss,
- mem, as well as you or I, but 'a can't speak a common
- speech to save his life."
- "Andrew Randle, here's yours -- finish thanking me
- in a day or two. Temperance Miller -- oh, here's another,
- Soberness -- both women I suppose?"
- "Yes'm. Here we be, 'a b'lieve." was echoed in shrill
- unison.
- "What have you been doing?"
- "Tending thrashing-machine and wimbling haybonds,
- and saying "Hoosh!" to the cocks and hens when they
- go upon your seeds and planting Early Flourballs and
- Thompson's Wonderfuls with a dibble."
- "Yes -- I see. Are they satisfactory women?" she
- inquired softly of Henery Fray.
- "O mem -- don't ask me! Yielding women?" as
- scarlet a pair as ever was!" groaned Henery under his
- breath.
- "Sit down.
- "Who, mem?"
- "Sit down,"
- Joseph Poorgrass, in the background twitched, and
- his lips became dry with fear of some terrible conse-
- quences, as he saw Bathsheba summarily speaking, and
- Henery slinking off to a corner.
- "Now the next. Laban Tall, you'll stay on working
- for me?"
- "For you or anybody that pays me well, ma'am,"
- replied the young married man.
- "True -- the man must live!" said a woman in the
- back quarter, who had just entered with clicking pattens.
- "What woman is that?" Bathsheba asked.
- "I be his lawful wife!" continued the voice with
- greater prominence of manner and tone. This lady
- called herself five-and-twenty, looked thirty, passed as
- thirty-five, and was forty. She was a woman who never,
- like some newly married, showed conjugal tenderness in
- public, perhaps because she had none to show.
- "Oh, you are." said Bathsheba. "Well, Laban, will
- you stay on?"
- "Yes, he'll stay, ma'am!" said again the shrill tongue
- of Laban's lawful wife.
- "Well, he can speak for himself, I suppose."
- "O Lord, not he, ma'am! A simple tool. Well
- enough, but a poor gawkhammer mortal." the wife replied
- "Heh-heh-heh!" laughed the married man with a
- hideous effort of appreciation, for he was as irrepressibly
- good-humoured under ghastly snubs as a parliamentary
- candidate on the hustings.
- The names remaining were called in the same
- manner.
- "Now I think I have done with you." said Bathsheba,
- closing the book and shaking back a stray twine of hair.
- "Has William Smallbury returned?"
- "No, ma'am."
- "The new shepherd will want a man under him,"
- suggested Henery Fray, trying to make himself official
- again by a sideway approach towards her chair.
- "Oh -- he will. Who can he have?"
- "Young Cain Ball is a very good lad." Henery said,
- "and Shepherd Oak don't mind his youth?" he added,
- turning with an apologetic smile to the shepherd, who
- had just appeared on the scene, and was now leaning
- against the doorpost with his arms folded.
- "No, I don't mind that." said Gabriel.
- "How did Cain come by such a name?" asked
- Bathsheba.
- "Oh you see, mem, his pore mother, not being a
- Scripture-read woman made a mistake at his christening,
- thinking 'twas Abel killed Cain, and called en Cain,
- but 'twas too late, for the name could never be got rid
- of in the parish. 'Tis very unfortunate for the boy."
- "It is rather unfortunate."
- "Yes. However, we soften it down as much as we
- can, and call him Cainey. Ah, pore widow-woman!
- she cried her heart out about it almost. She was
- brought up by a very heathen father and mother, who
- never sent her to church or school, and it shows how
- the sins of the parents are visited upon the children,
- mem."
- Mr. Fray here drew up his features to the mild degree
- of melancholy required when the persons involved in
- the given misfortune do not belong to your own family.
- "Very well then, Cainey Ball to be under-shepherd
- And you quite understand your duties? -- you I mean,
- Gabriel Oak?"
- "Quite well, I thank you Miss Everdene." said
- Shepard Oak from the doorpost. "If I don't, I'll
- inquire." Gabriel was rather staggered by the remark-
- able coolness of her manner. Certainly nobody without
- previous information would have dreamt that Oak and
- the handsome woman before whom he stood had ever
- been other than strangers. But perhaps her air was
- the inevitable result of the social rise which had advanced
- her from a cottage to a large house and fields. The
- case is not unexampled in high places. When, in the
- writings of the later poets, Jove and his family are found
- to have moved from their cramped quarters on the peak
- of Olympus into the wide sky above it, their words show
- a proportionate increase of arrogance and reserve.
- Footsteps were heard in the passage, combining in
- their character the qualities both of weight and measure,
- rather at the expense of velocity.
- (All.) "Here's Billy Smallbury come from Caster-
- bridge."
- "And what's the news?" said Bathsheba, as William,
- after marching to the middle of the hall, took a hand-
- kerchief from his hat and wiped his forehead from its
- centre to its remoter boundaries.
- "I should have been sooner, miss." he said, "if it
- hadn't been for the weather." He then stamped with
- each foot severely, and on looking down his boots were
- perceived to be clogged with snow.
- "Come at last, is it?" said Henery.
- "Well, what about Fanny?" said Bathsheba.
- "Well, ma'am, in round numbers, she's run away with
- the soldiers." said William.
- "No; not a steady girl like Fanny!"
- "I'll tell ye all particulars. When I got to Caster,
- bridge Barracks, they said, " The Eleventh Dragoon-
- Guards be gone away, and new troops have come."
- The Eleventh left last week for Melchester and onwards.
- The Route came from Government like a thief in the
- night, as is his nature to, and afore the Eleventh knew
- it almost, they were on the march. They passed near
- here."
- Gabriel had listened with interest. "I saw them go,"
- he said.
- "Yes." continued William," they pranced down the
- street playing "The Girl I Left Behind Me." so 'tis
- said, in glorious notes of triumph. Every looker-on's
- inside shook with the blows of the great drum to his
- deepest vitals, and there was not a dry eye throughout
- the town among the public-house people and the name-
- less women!"
- "But they're not gone to any war?"
- "No, ma'am; but they be gone to take the places
- of them who may, which is very close connected. And
- so I said to myself, Fanny's young man was one of the
- regiment, and she's gone after him. There, ma'am,
- that's it in black and white."
- Gabriel remained musing and said nothing, for he
- was in doubt.
- "Well, we are not likely to know more to-night, at
- any rate." said Bathsheba. "But one of you had better
- run across to Farmer Boldwood's and tell him that
- much."
- She then rose; but before retiring, addressed a few
- words to them with a pretty dignity, to which her
- mourning dress added a soberness that was hardly to
- be found in the words themselves.
- "Now mind, you have a mistress instead of a master
- I don't yet know my powers or my talents in farming;
- but I shall do my best, and if you serve me well, so
- shall I serve you. Don't any unfair ones among you
- (if there are any such, but I hope not) suppose that
- because I'm a woman I don't understand the difference
- between bad goings-on and good."
- (All.) "Nom!"
- (Liddy.) "Excellent well said."
- "I shall be up before you are awake; I shall be
- afield before you are up; and I shall have breakfasted
- before you are afield. In short, I shall astonish you all.
- (All.) "Yes'm!"
- "And so good-night."
- (All.) "Good-night, ma'am."
- Then this small-thesmothete stepped from the table,
- and surged out of the hall, her black silk dress licking
- up a few straws and dragging them along with a scratch-
- ing noise upon the floor. biddy, elevating her feelings
- to the occasion from a sense of grandeur, floated off
- behind Bathsheba with a milder dignity not entirely
- free from travesty, and the door was closed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
-
- OUTSIDE THE BARRACKS -- SNOW -- A MEETING
-
-
- FOR dreariness nothing could surpass a prospect in the
- outskirts of a certain town and military station, many
- miles north of Weatherbury, at a later hour on this
- same snowy evening -- if that may be called a prospect
- of which the chief constituent was darkness.
- It was a night when sorrow may come to the
- brightest without causing any great sense of incongruity:
- when, with impressible persons, love becomes solicitous-
- ness, hope sinks to misgiving, and faith to hope: when
- the exercise of memory does not stir feelings of regret
- at opportunities for ambition that have been passed by,
- and anticipation does not prompt to enterprise.
- The scene was a public path, bordered on the left
- hand by a river, behind which rose a high wall. On
- the right was a tract of land, partly meadow'and partly
- moor, reaching, at its remote verge, to a wide undulating
- uplan.
- The changes of the seasons are less obtrusive on
- spots of this kind than amid woodland scenery. Still,
- to a close observer, they are just as perceptible; the
- difference is that their media of manifestation are less
- trite and familiar than such well-known ones as the
- bursting of the buds or the fall of the leaf. Many are
- not so stealthy and gradual as we may be apt to
- imagine in considering the general torpidity of a moor
- or waste. Winter, in coming to the country hereabout,
- advanced in well-marked stages, wherein might have
- been successively observed the retreat of the snakes,
- the transformation of the ferns, the filling of the pools,
- a rising of fogs, the embrowning by frost, the collapse
- of the fungi, and an obliteration by snow.
- This climax of the series had been reached to-night on
- the aforesaid moor, and for the first time in the season
- its irregularities were forms without features; suggestive
- of anything, proclaiming nothing, and without more
- character than that of being the limit of something
- else -- the lowest layer of a firmament of snow. From
- this chaotic skyful of crowding flakes the mead and
- moor momentarily received additional clothing, only
- to appear momentarily more naked thereby. The vast
- arch of cloud above was strangely low, and formed as
- it were the roof of a large dark cavern, gradually sinking
- in upon its floor; for the instinctive thought was that
- the snow lining the heavens and that encrusting the
- earth would soon unite into one mass without any
- intervening stratum of air at all.
- We turn our attention to the left-hand characteristics;
- which were flatness in respect of the river, verticality
- in respect of the wall behind it, and darkness as to
- both. These features made up the mass. If anything
- could be darker than the sky, it was the wall, and if any
- thing could be gloomier than the wall it was the river
- beneath. The indistinct summit of the facade was
- notched and pronged by chimneys here and there, and
- upon its face were faintly signified the oblong shapes
- of windows, though only in the upper part. Below,
- down to the water's edge, the flat was unbroken by
- hole or projection.
- An indescribable succession of dull blows, perplexing
- in their regularity, sent their sound- with difficulty
- through the fluffy atmosphere. It was a neighbouring
- clock striking ten The bell was in the open air, and
- being overlaid with several inches of muffling snow, had
- lost its voice for the time.
- About this hour the snow abated: ten flakes fell
- where twenty had fallen, then one had the room of
- ten. Not long after a form moved by the brink of
- the river.
- By its outline upon the colourless background, a close
- observer might have seen that it was small. This was
- all that was positively discoverable, though it seemed
- human.
- The shape went slowly along, but without much
- exertion, for the snow, though sudden, was not as yet
- more than two inches deep. At this time some words
- were spoken aloud: --
- "One. Two. Three. Four. Five."
- Between each utterance the little shape advanced
- about half a dozen yards. It was evident now that
- the windows high in the wall were being counted.
- The word "Five" represented the fifth window from
- the end of the wall.
- Here the spot stopped, and dwindled smaller. The
- figure was stooping. Then a morsel of snow flew
- across the river towards the fifth window. It smacked
- against the wall at a point several yards from its mark.
- The throw was the idea of a man conjoined with the
- execution of a woman. No man who had ever seen bird,
- rabbit, or squirrel in his childhood, could possibly have
- thrown with such utter imbecility as was shown here.
- Another attempt, and another; till by degrees the
- wall must have become pimpled with the adhering
- lumps of snow At last one fragment struck the fifth
- window.
- The river would have been; seen by day to be of
- that deep smooth sort which races middle and sides
- with the same gliding precision, any irregularities of
- speed being immediately corrected by a small whirl-
- pool. Nothing was heard in reply to the signal but
- the gurgle and cluck of one of these invisible wheels --
- together with a few small sounds which a sad man
- would have called moans, and a happy man laughter --
- caused by the flapping of the waters against trifling
- objects in other parts of the stream.
- The window was struck again in the same manner.
- Then a noise was heard, apparently produced by
- the opening of the window. This was followed by a
- voice from the same quarter.
- "Who's there?"
- The tones were masculine, and not those of surprise.
- The high wall being that of a barrack, and marriage
- being looked upon with disfavour in the army, assigna-
- tions and communications had probably been made
- across the river before tonight.
- "Is it Sergeant Troy?" said the blurred spot in the
- snow, tremulously.
- This person was so much like a mere shade upon
- the earth, and the other speaker so much a part of
- the building, that one would have said the wall was
- holding a conversation with the snow.
- "Yes." came suspiciously from the shadow." What
- girl are you?"
- "O, Frank -- don't you know me?" said the spot.
- "Your wife, Fanny Robin."
- "Fanny!" said the wall, in utter astonishment.
- "Yes." said the girl, with a half-suppressed gasp of
- emotion.
- There was something in the woman's tone which is
- not that of the wife, and there was a mannerin the man
- which is rarely a husband's. The dialogue went on:
- "How did you come here?"
- "I asked which was your window. Forgive me!"
- "I did not expect you to-night. Indeed, I did not
- think you would come at all. It was a wonder you
- found me here. I am orderly to-morrow."
- "You said I was to come."
- "Well -- I said that you might."
- "Yes, I mean that I might. You are glad to see me,
- Frank?"
- "O yes -- of course."
- "Can you -- come to me!"
- My dear Fan, no! The bugle has sounded, the
- barrack gates are closed, and I have no leave. We are
- all of us as good as in the county gaol till to-morrow
- morning."
- "Then I shan't see you till then!" The words- were
- in a faltering tone of disappointment.
- "How did you get here from Weatherbury?"
- "I walked -- some part of the way -- the rest by the
- carriers."
- "I am surprised."
- "Yes -- so am I. And Frank, when will it be?"
- "What?"
- "That you promised."
- "I don't quite recollect."
- "O You do! Don't speak like that. It weighs me
- to the earth. It makes me say what ought to be said
- first by you."
- "Never mind -- say it."
- "O, must I? -- it is, when shall we be married,
- Frank?"
- "Oh, I " see. Well -- you have to get proper
- clothes."
- "I have money. Will it be by banns or license?"
- "Banns, I should think."
- "And we live in two parishes."
- "Do we? What then?"
- "My lodgings are in St. Mary's, and this is not. So
- they will have to be published in both."
- "Is that the law?"
- "Yes. O Frank -- you think me forward, I am
- afraid! Don't, dear Frank -- will you -- for I love you so.
- And you said lots of times you would marry me, and
- and -- I -- I -- I -- -- "
- "Don't cry, now! It is foolish. If i said so, of
- course I will."
- "And shall I put up the banns in my parish, and will
- you in yours?"
- "Yes"
- "To-morrow?"
- "Not tomorrow. We'll settle in a few days."
- "You have the permission of the officers?"
- "No, not yet."
- "O -- how is it? You said you almost had before
- you left Casterbridge."
- "The fact is, I forgot to ask. Your coming like this
- I'll go away now. Will you **qoDe,and seq be to-morroy
- is so sudden and unexpected."
- "Yes -- yes -- it is. It was wrong of me to worry you.
- I'll go away now. Will you come and see me to-morrow,
- at Mrs. Twills's, in North Street? I don't like to come
- to the Barracks. There are bad women about, and they
- think me one."
- "Quite,so. I'll come to you, my dean Good-night."
- "Good-night, Frank -- good-night!"
- And the noise was again heard of a window closing
- The little spot moved away. When she passed the
- corner a subdued exclamation was heard inside the
- wall.
- "Ho -- ho -- Sergeant -- ho -- ho!" An expostulation
- followed, but it was indistinct; and it became lost amid
- a low peal of laughter, which was hardly distinguishable
- from the gurgle of the tiny whirlpools outside.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
-
- FARMERS -- A RULE -- IN EXCEPTION
-
-
- THE first public evidence of Bathsheba's decision to
- be a farmer in her own person and by proxy no more
- was her appearance the following market-day in. the
- cornmarket at Casterbridge.
- The low though extensive hall, supported by beams
- and pillars, and latterly dignified by-the name of Corn Ex-
- change, was thronged with hot men who talked among
- each other in twos and threes, the speaker of the minute
- looking sideways into his auditor's face and concentrating
- his argument by a contraction of one eyelid during de-
- livery. The greater number carried in their hands
- ground-ash saplings, using them partly as walking-sticks
- and partly for poking up pigs, sheep, neighbours with
- their backs turned, and restful things in general, which
- seemed to require such treatment in the course of their
- peregrinations. During conversations each subjected
- his sapling to great varieties of usage -- bending it round
- his back, forming an"arch of it between his two hands,
- overweighting it on the ground till it reached nearly a
- semicircle; or perhaps it was hastily tucked under the
- arm whilst the sample-bag was pulled forth and a hand-
- ful of corn poured into the palm, which, after criticism,
- was flung upon the floor, an issue of events perfectly
- well known to half-a-dozen acute town-bred fowls which
- had as usual crept into the building unobserved, and
- waited the fulfilment of their anticipations with a high-
- stretched neck and oblique eye.
- Among these heavy yeomen a feminine figure glided,
- the single one of her sex that the room contained. She
- was prettily and even daintily dressed. She moved
- between them as a chaise between carts, was heard after
- them as a romance after sermons, was felt among them
- like a breeze among furnaces. It had required a little
- determination -- far more than she had at first imagined
- -- to take up a position here, for at her first entry the
- lumbering dialogues had ceased, nearly every face had
- been turned towards her, and those that were already
- turned rigidly fixed there.
- Two or three only of the farmers were personally
- known to Bathsheba, and to these she had made her
- way. But if she was to be the practical woman she had
- intended to show herself, business must be carried on,
- introductions or none, and she ultimately acquired con-
- fidence enough to speak and reply boldly to men merely
- known to her by hearsay. Bathsheba too had her
- sample-bags, and by degrees adopted the professional
- pour into the hand -- holding up the grains in her narrow
- palm for inspection, in perfect Casterbridge manner.
- Something in the exact arch of her upper unbroken
- row of teeth, and in the keenly pointed corners of her
- red mouth when, with parted lips, she somewhat
- defiantly turned up her face to argue a point with a
- tall man, suggested that there was potentiality enough
- in that lithe slip of humanity for alarming exploits of
- sex, and daring enough to carry them out. But her eyes
- had a softness -- invariably a softness -- which, had they
- not been dark, would have seemed mistiness; as they
- were, it lowered an expression that might have been
- piercing to simple clearness,
- Strange to say of a woman in full bloom and vigor,
- she always allowed her interlocutors to finish their state-
- ments before rejoining with hers. In arguing on prices,
- he held to her own firmly, as was natural in a dealer,
- and reduced theirs persistently, as was inevitable in a
- oman. But there was an elasticity in her firmness
- which removed it from obstinacy, as there was a naivete
- in her cheapening which saved it from meanness.
- Those of the farmers with whom she had no dealings
- by far the greater part) were continually asking each
- other, "Who is she?" The reply would be --
- "Farmer Everdene's niece; took on Weatherbury
- Upper Farm; turned away the baily, and swears she'll do
- everything herself."
- The other man would then shake his head.
- "Yes, 'tis a pity she's so headstrong." the first would
- say. "But we ought to be proud of her here -- she
- lightens up the old place. 'Tis such a shapely maid,
- however, that she'll soon get picked up."
- It would be ungallant to suggest that the novelty of
- her engagement in such an occupation had almost as
- much to do with the magnetism as had the beauty of
- her face and movements. However, the interest was
- general, and this Saturday's debut in the forum, whatever
- it may have been to Bathsheba as the buying and selling
- farmer, was unquestionably a triumph to her as the
- maiden. Indeed, the sensation was so pronounced that
- her instinct on two or three occasions was merely to
- walk as a queen among these gods of the fallow, like a
- little sister of a little Jove, and to neglect closing prices
- altogether.
- The numerous evidences of-her power to attract were
- only thrown into greater relief by a marked exception.
- Women seem to have eyes in their ribbons for such
- matters as these. Bathsheba, without looking within
- a right angle of him, was conscious of a black sheep
- among the flock.
- It perplexed her first. If there had been a respect-
- able minority on either side, the case would have been
- most natural. If nobody had regarded her, she would
- have -- taken the matter indifferently -- such cases had
- occurred. If everybody, this man included, she would
- have taken it as a matter of course -- people had done
- so before. But the smallness of the exception made the
- mystery.
- She soon knew thus much of the recusant's appear-
- ance. He was a gentlemanly man, with full and
- distinctly outlined Roman features, the prominences
- of which glowed in the sun with a bronze-like richness
- of tone. He was erect in attitude, and quiet in
- demeanour. One characteristic pre-eminently marked
- him -- dignity.
- Apparently he had some time ago reached that
- entrance to middle age at which a man's aspect naturally
- ceases to alter for the term of a dozen years or so; and,
- artificially, a woman't does likewise. Thirty-five and
- fifty were his limits of variation -- he might have been
- either, or anywhere between the two.
- It may be said that married men of forty are usually
- ready and generous enough to fling passing glances at
- any specimen of moderate beauty they may discern by
- the way. Probably, as with persons playing whist for
- love, the consciousness of a certain immunity under
- any circumstances from that worst possible ultimate,
- the having to pay, makes them unduly speculative.
- Bathsheba was convinced that this unmoved person
- was not a married man.
- When marketing was over, she rushed off to Liddy,
- who was waiting for her -- beside the yellowing in which
- they had driven to town. The horse was put in, and
- on they trotted Bathsheba's sugar, tea, and drapery
- parcels being packed behind, and expressing in some
- indescribable manner, by their colour, shape, and
- general lineaments, that they were that young lady-
- farmer's property, and the grocer's and drapers no
- more.
- "I've been through it, Liddy, and it is over. I shan't
- mind it again, for they will all have grown accustomed
- to seeing me there; but this morning it was as bad as
- being married -- eyes everywhere!"
- "I knowed it would. be." Liddy said "Men be such
- a terrible class of society to look at a body."
- "But there was one man who had more sense than
- to waste his time upon me." The information was put
- in this form that Liddy might not for a moment suppose
- her mistress was at all piqued. "A very good-looking
- man." she continued, "upright; about forty, I should
- think. Do you know at all who he could be?"
- Liddy couldn't think.
- "Can't you guess at all?" said Bathsheba with some
- disappointment.
- "I haven't a notion; besides, 'tis no difference, since
- he took less notice of you than any of the rest. Now,
- if he'd taken more, it would have mattered a great deal."
- Bathsheba was suffering from the reverse feeling just
- then, and they bowled along in silence. A low carriage,
- bowling along still more rapidly behind a horse of un-
- impeachable breed, overtook and passed them.
- "Why, there he is!" she said.
- Liddy looked. "That! That's Farmer Boldwood --
- of course 'tis -- the man you couldn't see the other day
- when he called."
- "Oh, Farmer Boldwood." murmured Bathsheba, and
- looked at him as he outstripped them. The farmer had
- never turned his head once, but with eyes fixed on the
- most advanced point along the road, passed as uncon-
- sciously and abstractedly as if Bathsheba and her charms
- were thin air.
- "He's an interesting man -- don't you think so?" she
- remarked.
- "O yes, very. Everybody owns it." replied Liddy.
- "I wonder why he is so wrapt up and indifferent, and
- seemingly so far away from all he sees around him,"
- "It is said -- but not known for certain -- that he met
- with some bitter disappointment when he was a young
- man and merry. A woman jilted him, they say."
- "People always say that -- and we know very well
- women scarcely ever jilt men; 'tis the men who jilt us.
- I expect it is simply his nature to be so reserved."
- "Simply his nature -- I expect so, miss -- nothing else
- in the world."
- "Still, 'tis more romantic to think he has been served
- cruelly, poor thing'! Perhaps, after all, he has! I
- "Depend upon it he has. O yes, miss, he has!
- feel he must have."
- "However, we are very apt to think extremes of
- people. I -- shouldn't wonder after all if it wasn't a
- little of both -- just between the two -- rather cruelly
- used and rather reserved."
- "O dear no, miss -- I can't think it between the
- two!"
- "That's most likely."
- "Well, yes, so it is. I am convinced it is most likely.
- You may -- take my word, miss, that that's what's the
- matter with him."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-
- SORTES SANCTORUM -- THE VALENTINE
-
-
- IT was Sunday afternoon in the farmhouse, on the
- thirteenth of February. Dinner being over, Bathsheba,
- for want of a better companion, had asked Liddy to
- come and sit with her. The mouldy pile was dreary
- in winter-time before the candles were lighted and the
- shutters closed; the atmosphere of the place seemed
- as old as the walls; every nook behind the furniture
- had a temperature of its own, for the fire was not
- kindled in this part of the house early in the day;
- and Bathsheba's new piano, which was an old one
- in other annals, looked particularly sloping and out
- of level on the warped floor before night threw a
- shade over its less prominent angles and hid the
- unpleasantness. Liddy, like a little brook, though
- shallow, was always rippling; her presence had not so
- much weight as to task thought, and yet enough to
- exercise it.
- On the table lay an old quarto Bible, bound in
- leather. Liddy looking at it said, --
- "Did you ever find out, miss, who you are going to
- marry by means of the Bible and key?,
- "Don't be so foolish, Liddy. As if such things
- could be."
- "Well, there's a good deal in it, all the same."
- "Nonsense, child."
- "And it makes your heart beat fearful. Some believe
- in it; some don't; I do."
- "Very well, let's try it." said Bathsheba, bounding
- from her seat with that total disregard of consistency
- which can be indulged in towards a dependent, and
- entering into the spirit of divination at once. "Go and
- get the front door key."
- Liddy fetched it. "I wish it wasn't Sunday." she
- said, on returning." Perhaps 'tis wrong."
- "What's right week days is right Sundays." replied her
- mistress in a tone which was a proof in itself.
- The book was opened -- the leaves, drab with age,
- being quite worn away at much-read verses by the fore"
- fingers "of unpractised readers in former days, where they
- were moved along under the line as an aid to the vision.
- The special verse in the Book of Ruth was sought out
- by Bathsheba, and the sublime words met her eye. They
- slightly thrilled and abashed her. It was Wisdom in
- the abstract facing Folly in the concrete. Folly in the
- concrete blushed, persisted in her intention, and placed
- the key on -the book. A rusty patch immediately upon
- the verse, caused by previous pressure of an iron
- substance thereon, told that this was not the first time
- the old volume had been used for the purpose.
- "Now keep steady, and be silent." said Bathsheba.
- The 'verse was repeated; the book turned round;
- Bathsheba blushed guiltily.
- "Who did you try?" said Liddy curiously.
- "I shall not tell you."
- "Did you notice Mr. Boldwood's doings in church
- this morning, miss?"Liddy continued, adumbrating by
- the remark the track her thoughts had taken.
- "No, indeed." said Bathsheba, with serene indifference
- "His pew is exactly opposite yours, miss."
- "I know it."
- "And you did not see his goings on!,"
- Certainly I did not, I tell you."
- Liddy assumed a smaller physiognomy, and shut
- her lips decisively.
- This move was unexpected, and proportionately dis
- concerting. "What did he do?" Bathsheba said perforce.
- "Didn't turn his head to look at you once all the
- service.
- "Why should he?" again demanded her mistress,
- wearing a nettled look. "I didn't ask him to.
- "Oh no. But everybody else was noticing you; and
- it was odd he didn't. There, 'tis like him. Rich and
- gentlemanly, what does he care?"
- Bathsheba dropped into a silence intended to ex-
- press that she had opinions on the matter too abstruse
- for Liddy's comprehension, rather than that she had
- nothing to say.
- "Dear me -- I had nearly forgotten the valentine
- I bought yesterday." she exclaimed at length.
- "Valentine! who for, miss?" said Liddy. "Farmer
- Boldwood?"
- It was the single name among all possible wrong
- ones that just at this moment seemed to Bathsheba
- more pertinent than the right.
- "Well, no. It is only for little Teddy Coggan.
- have promised him something, and this will be a pretty
- surprise for him. Liddy, you may as well bring me
- my desk and I'll direct it at once."
- Bathsheba took from her desk a gorgeously illumin-
- ated and embossed design in post-octavo, which had
- been "bought on the previous market-day at the chief
- stationer's in Casterbridge. In the centre was a small
- oval enclosure; this was left blank, that the sender
- might insert tender words more appropriate to the
- special occasion than any generalities by a printer
- could possibly be.
- "Here's a place for writing." said Bathsheba. "What
- shall I put?"
- "Something of this sort, I should think', returned
- Liddy promptly: --
- "The rose is red,
- The violet blue,
- Carnation's sweet,
- And so are you."
- "Yes, that shall be it. It just suits itself to a chubby-
- faced child like him." said Bathsheba. She inserted the
- words in a small though legible handwriting; enclosed
- the sheet in an envelope, and dipped her pen for the
- direction.
- "What fun it would be to send it to the stupid old
- Boldwood, and how he would wonder!" said the
- irrepressible Liddy, lifting her eyebrows, and indulging
- in an awful mirth on the verge of fear as she thought
- of the moral and social magnitude of the man contem-
- plated.
- Bathsheba paused to regard the idea at full length.
- Boldwood's had begun to be a troublesome image -- a
- species of Daniel in her kingdom who persisted in
- kneeling eastward when reason and common sense
- said that he might just as well follow suit with the
- rest, and afford her the official glance of admiration
- which cost nothing at all. She was far from being
- seriously concerned about his nonconformity. Still,
- it was faintly depressing that the most dignified and
- valuable man in the parish should withhold his eyes,
- and that a girl like Liddy should talk about it. So
- Liddy's idea was at first rather harassing than piquant.
- "No, I won't do that. He wouldn't see any humour
- in it."
- "He'd worry to death." said the persistent Liddy.
- "Really, I don't care particularly to send it to
- Teddy." remarked her mistress. "He's rather a naughty
- child sometimes."
- "Yes -- that he is."
- "Let's toss as men do." said Bathsheba, idly. "Now
- then, head, Boldwood; tail, Teddy. No, we won't toss
- money on a Sunday that would be tempting the devil
- indeed."
- "Toss this hymn-book; there can't be no sinfulness
- in that, miss."
- "Very well. Open, Boldwood -- shut, Teddy. No;
- it's more likely to fall open. Open, Teddy -- shut,
- Boldwood."
- The book went fluttering in the air and came down shut.
- Bathsheba, a small yawn upon her mouth, took the
- pen, and with off-hand serenity directed the missive to
- Boldwood.
- "Now light a candle, Liddy. Which seal shall we
- use? Here's a unicorn's head -- there's nothing in
- that. What's this? -- two doves -- no. It ought to be
- something extraordinary, ought it not, Liddy? Here's
- one with a motto -- I remember it is some funny one,
- but I can't read it. We'll try this, and if it doesn't
- do we'll have another."
- A large red seal was duly affixed. Bathsheba looked
- closely at the hot wax to discover the words.
- "Capital!" she exclaimed, throwing down the letter
- frolicsomely. "'Twould upset the solemnity of a parson
- The same evening the letter was sent, and was duly
- returned to Weatherbury again in the morning.
- Of love as a spectacle Bathsheba had a fair knowledge;
- but of love subjectively she knew nothing.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-
- EFFECT OF THE LETTER -- SUNRISE
-
-
- AT dusk, on the evening of St. Valentine's Day, Bold-
- wood sat down to supper as usual, by a beaming fire
- of aged logs. Upon the mantel-shelf before him was
- a time-piece, surmounted by a spread eagle, and upon
- the eagle's wings was the letter Bathsheba had sent.
- Here the bachelor's gaze was continually fastening
- itself, till the large red seal became as a blot of blood
- on the retina of his eye; and as he ate and drank he
- still read in fancy the words thereon, although they
- were too remote for his sight --
- "MARRY ME."
- The pert injunction was like those crystal substances
- which, colourless themselves, assume the tone of objects
- about them. Here, in the quiet of Boldwood's parlour,
- where everything that ,was not grave was extraneous,
- and where the atmosphere was that of a Puritan Sunday
- lasting all the week, the letter and its dictum changed"
- their tenor from the thoughtlessness of their origin to
- a deep solemnity, imbibed from their accessories
- now.
- Since the receipt of the missive in the morning,
- Boldwood had felt the symmetry of his existence to
- be slowly getting distorted in the direction of an ideal
- passion. The disturbance was as the first floating
- weed to Columbus -- the eontemptibly little suggesting
- possibilities of the infinitely great.
- The letter must have had an origin and a motive.
- That the latter was of the smallest magnitude com-
- patible with its existence at all, Boldwood, of course,
- did not know. And such an explanation did not
- strike him as a possibility even. It is foreign to a
- mystified condition of mind to realize of the mystifier
- that the processes of approving a course suggested by
- circumstance, and of striking out a course from inner
- impulse, would look the same in the result. The vast
- difference between starting a train of events, and direct-
- ing into a particular groove a series already started, is
- rarely apparent to the person confounded by the
- issue.
- When Boldwood went to bed he placed the valen-
- tine in the corner of the looking-glass. He was
- conscious of its presence, even when his back was
- turned upon it. It was the first time in Boldwood's
- life that such an event had occurred. The same
- fascination that caused him to think it an act which had
- a deliberate motive prevented him from regarding it as
- an impertinence. He looked again at the direction.
- The mysterious influences of night invested the writing
- with the presence of the unknown writer. Somebody's
- some woman's -- hand had travelled softly over the
- paper bearing his name; her unrevealed eyes had
- watched every curve as she formed it; her brain had
- seen him in imagination the while. Why should
- she have imagined him? Her mouth -- were the lips
- red or pale, plump or creased? -- had curved itself to a
- certain expression as the pen went on -- the corners had
- moved with all their natural tremulousness: what had
- been the expression?
- The vision of the woman writing, as a supplement to
- the words written, had no individuality. She was a
- misty shape, and well she might be, considering that
- her original was at that moment sound asleep and
- oblivious of all love and letter-writing under the sky.
- Whenever Boldwood dozed she took a form, and com-
- paratively ceased to be a vision: when he awoke there
- was the letter justifying the dream.
- The moon shone to-night, and its light was not of
- a customary kind. His window admitted only a
- reflection of its rays, and the pale sheen had that
- reversed direction which snow gives, coming upward
- and lighting up his ceiling in an unnatural way, casting
- shadows in strange places, and putting lights where
- shadows had used to be.
- The substance of the epistle had occupied him but
- little in comparison with the fact of its arrival. He
- suddenly wondered if anything more might be found in
- the envelope than what he had withdrawn. He jumped
- out of bed in the weird light, took the letter, pulled out
- the flimsy sheet, shook the envelope -- searched it.
- Nothing more was there. Boldwood looked, as he
- had a hundred times the preceding day, at the insistent red
- seal: "Marry me." he said aloud.
- The solemn and reserved yeoman again closed the
- letter, and stuck it in the frame of the glass. In doing
- so he caught sight of his reflected features, wan in
- expression, and insubstantial in form. He saw how
- closely compressed was his mouth, and that his eyes
- were wide-spread and vacant. Feeling uneasy and dis-
- satisfied with himself for this nervous excitability, he
- returned to bed.
- Then the dawn drew on. The full power of the
- clear heaven was not equal to that of a cloudy sky at
- noon, when Boldwood arose and dressed himself. He
- descended the stairs and went out towards the gate of
- a field to the east, leaning over which he paused and
- looked around.
- It was one of the usual slow sunrises of this time of
- the year, and the sky, pure violet in the zenith, was
- leaden to the northward, and murky to the east, where,
- over the snowy down or ewe-lease on Weatherbury
- Upper Farm, and apparently resting upon the ridge, the
- only half of the sun yet visible burnt rayless, like a red
- and flameless fire shining over a white hearthstone.
- The whole effect resembled a sunset as childhood
- resembles age.
- In other directions, the fields and sky were so much
- of one colour by the snow, that it was difficult in a
- hasty glance to tell whereabouts the horizon occurred;
- and in general there was here, too, that before-mentioned
- preternatural inversion of light and shade which attends
- the prospect when the garish brightness commonly in
- the sky is found on the earth, and the shades of earth
- are in the sky. Over the west hung the wasting moon,
- now dull and greenish-yellow, like tarnished brass.
- Boldwood was listlessly noting how the frost had
- hardened and glazed the surface of the snow, till it
- shone in the red eastern light wit-h the polish of marble;
- how, in some portions of the slope, withered grass-bents,
- encased in icicles, bristled through the smooth wan
- coverlet in the twisted and curved shapes of old
- Venetian glass; and how the footprints of a few birds,
- which had hopped over the snow whilst it lay in the
- state of a soft fleece, were now frozen to a short perma-
- nency. A half-muffled noise of light wheels interrupted
- him. Boldwood turned back into the road. It was
- the mail-cart -- a crazy, two-wheeled vehicle, hardly
- heavy enough to resist a puff of wind. The driver held
- out a letter. Boldwood seized it and opened it, ex-
- pecting another anonymous one -- so greatly are people's
- ideas of probability a mere sense that precedent will
- repeat itself.
- "I don't think it is for you, sir." said the man, when
- he saw Boldwood's action. "Though there is no name
- I think it is for your shepherd."
- Boldwood looked then at the address --
- To the New Shepherd,
- Weatherbury Farm,
- Near Casterbridge.
- "Oh -- what a mistake! -- it is not mine. Nor is it
- for my shepherd. It is for Miss Everdene's." You had
- better take it on to him -- Gabriel Oak -- and say I opened
- it in mistake."
- At this moment, on the ridge, up against the blazing
- sky, a figure was visible, like the black snuff in the
- midst of a candle-flame. Then it moved and began to
- bustle about vigorously from place to place, carrying
- square skeleton masses, which were riddled by the same
- rays. A small figure on all fours followed behind. The
- tall form was that of Gabriel Oak; the small one that
- of George; the articles in course of transit were hurdles.
- "Wait," said Boldwood." That's the man on the hill.
- I'll take the letter to him myself."
- To Boldwood it was now no longer merely a letter to
- I another man. It was an opportunity. Exhibiting a
- face pregnant with intention, he entered the snowy field.
- Gabriel, at that minute, descended the hill towards
- the right. The glow stretched down in this direction
- now, and touched the distant roof of Warren's Malthouse
- whither the shepherd was apparently bent: Boldwood
- followed at a distance.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
-
- THE scarlet and orange light outside the malthouse did
- not penetrate to its interior, which was, as usual, lighted
- by a rival glow of similar hue, radiating from the hearth.
- The maltster, after having lain down in his clothes
- for a few hours, was now sitting beside a three-legged
- table, breakfasting of bread and bacon. This was
- eaten on the plateless system, which is performed by
- placing a slice of bread upon the table, the meat flat
- upon the bread, a mustard plaster upon the meat, and
- a pinch of salt upon the whole, then cutting them
- vertically downwards with a large pocket-knife till wood
- is reached, when the severed lamp is impaled on the
- knife, elevated, and sent the proper way of food.
- The maltster's lack of teeth appeared not to sensibly
- diminish his powers as a mill. He had been without
- them for so many years that toothlessness was felt less
- to be a defect than hard gums an acquisition. Indeed,
- he seemed to approach the grave as a hyperbolic curve
- approaches a straight line -- less directly as he got nearer,
- till it was doubtful if he would ever reach it at all.
- In the ashpit was a heap of potatoes roasting, and a
- boiling pipkin of charred bread, called "coffee." for the
- benefit of whomsoever should call, for Warren's was a
- sort of clubhouse. used as an alternative to the in!
- "I say, says I, we get a fine day, and then down
- comes a snapper at night." was a remark now suddenly
- heard spreading into the malthouse from the door, which
- had been opened the previous moment. The form of
- Henery Fray advanced to the fire, stamping the snow
- from his boots when about half-way there. The speech
- and entry had not seemed to be at all an abrupt begin-
- ning to the maltster, introductory matter being often
- omitted in this neighbourhood, both from word and
- deed, and the maltster having the same latitude allowed
- him, did not hurry to reply. He picked up a fragment
- of cheese, by pecking upon it with his knife, as a butcher
- picks up skewers.
- Henery appeared in a drab kerseymere great-coat,
- buttoned over his smock-frock, the white skirts of the
- latter being visible to the distance of about a foot below
- the coat-tails, which, when you got used to the style of
- dress, looked natural enough, and even ornamental -- it
- certainly was comfortable.
- Matthew Moon, Joseph Poorgrass, and other carters
- and waggoners followed at his heels, with great lanterns
- dangling from their hands, which showed that they had
- just come from the cart-horse stables, where they had
- been busily engaged since four o'clock that morning.
- "And how is she getting on without a baily?" the
- maltster inquired.
- Henery shook his head, and smiled one of the bitter
- smiles, dragging all the flesh of his forehead into a
- corrugated heap in the centre.
- "She'll rue it -- surely, surely!" he said " Benjy
- Pennyways were not a true man or an honest baily --
- as big a betrayer as Judas Iscariot himself. But to think
- she can carr' on alone!" He allowed his head to swing
- laterally three or four times in silence. "Never in all my
- creeping up -- never!"
- This was recognized by all as the conclusion of some
- gloomy speech which had been expressed in thought
- alone during the shake of the head; Henery meanwhile
- retained several marks of despair upon his face, to
- imply that they would be required for use again directly
- he should go on speaking.
- "All will be ruined, and ourselves too, or there's no
- meat in gentlemen's houses!" said Mark Clark.
- "A headstrong maid, that's what she is -- and won't
- listen to no advice at all. Pride and vanity have ruined
- many a cobbler's dog. Dear, dear, when I think o' it,
- I sorrows like a man in travel!"
- "True, Henery, you do, I've heard ye." said Joseph
- Poorgrass in a voice of thorough attestation, and with
- a wire-drawn smile of misery.
- "'Twould do a martel man no harm to have what's
- under her bonnet." said Billy Smallbury, who had just
- entered, bearing his one tooth before him. "She can
- spaik real language, and must have some sense some-
- where. Do ye foller me?"
- "I do: but no baily -- I deserved that place." wailed
- Henery, signifying wasted genius by gazing blankly at
- visions of a high destiny apparently visible to him on
- Billy Smallbury's smock-frock. "There, 'twas to be, I
- suppose. Your lot is your lot, and Scripture is nothing;
- for if you do good you don't get rewarded according to
- your works, but be cheated in some mean way out of
- your recompense."
- "No, no; I don't agree with'ee there." said Mark
- Clark. God's a perfect gentleman in that respect."
- "Good works good pay, so to speak it." attested
- Joseph Poorgrass.
- A short pause ensued, and as a sort of entr'acte
- Henery turned and blew out the lanterns, which the
- increase of daylight rendered no longer necessary even
- in the malthouse, with its one pane of glass.
- "I wonder what a farmer-woman can want with a
- harpsichord, dulcimer, pianner, or whatever 'tis they d'call
- it?" said the maltster. "Liddy saith she've a new one."
- "Got a pianner?"
- "Ay. Seems her old uncle's things were not good
- enough for her. She've bought all but everything new.
- There's heavy chairs for the stout, weak and wiry ones
- for the slender; great watches, getting on to the size
- of clocks, to stand upon the chimbley-piece."
- Pictures, for the most part wonderful frames."
- "And long horse-hair settles for the drunk, with horse-
- hair pillows at each end." said Mr. Clark. "Likewise
- looking-glasses for the pretty, and lying books for the
- wicked."
- firm loud tread was now heard stamping outside;
- the door was opened about six inches, and somebody on
- the other side exclaimed --
- "Neighbours, have ye got room for a few new-born
- lambs?"Ay, sure, shepherd." said the conclave.
- The door was flung back till it kicked the wall and
- trembled from top to bottom with the blow. Mr.
- Oak appeared in the entry with a steaming face, hay-
- bands wound about his ankles to keep out the snow, a
- leather strap round his waist outside the smock-frock,
- and looking altogether an epitome of the world's health
- and vigour. Four lambs hung in various embarrassing
- attitudes over his shoulders, and the dog George, whom
- Gabriel had contrived to fetch from Norcombe, stalked
- solemnly behind.
- "Well, Shepherd Oak, and how's lambing this year,
- if I mid say it?" inquired Joseph Poorgrass.
- "Terrible trying," said Oak. "I've been wet through
- twice a-day, either in snow or rain, this last fortnight.
- Cainy and I haven't tined our eyes to-night."
- "A good few twins, too, I hear?"
- "Too many by half. Yes; 'tis a very queer lambing
- this year. We shan't have done by Lady Day."
- "And last year 'twer all over by Sexajessamine
- Sunday." Joseph remarked.
- "Bring on the rest Cain." said Gabriel, " and then run
- back to the ewes. I'll follow you soon."
- Cainy Ball -- a cheery-faced young lad, with a small
- circular orifice by way of mouth, advanced and deposited
- two others, and retired as he was bidden. Oak lowered
- the lambs from their unnatural elevation, wrapped them
- in hay, and placed them round the fire.
- "We've no lambing-hut here, as I used to have at
- Norcombe." said Gabriel, " and 'tis such a plague to bring
- the weakly ones to a house. If 'twasn't for your place
- here, malter, I don't know what I should do! this keen
- weather. And how is it with you to-day, malter?"
- "Oh, neither sick nor sorry, shepherd, but no
- younger."
- "Ay -- I understand."
- "Sit down, Shepherd Oak," continued the ancient man
- of malt. "And how was the old place at Norcombe,
- when ye went for your dog? I should like to see the
- old familiar spot; but faith, I shouldn't" know a soul
- there now."
- "I suppose you wouldn't. 'Tis altered very much."
- "Is it true that Dicky Hill's wooden cider-house is
- pulled down?"
- "O yes -- years ago, and Dicky's cottage just above it."
- "Well, to be sure!,
- "Yes; and Tompkins's old apple-tree is rooted that
- used to bear two hogsheads of cider; and no help from
- other trees."
- "Rooted? -- you don't say it! Ah! stirring times we
- live in -- stirring times."
- And you can mind the old well that used to be in
- the middle of the place? That's turned into a solid
- iron pump with a large stone trough, and all complete."
- "Dear, dear -- how the face of nations alter, and
- what we live to see nowadays! Yes -- and 'tis the same
- here. They've been talking but now of the mis'ess's
- strange doings."
- "What have you been saying about her?" inquired
- Oak, sharply turning to the rest, and getting very
- warm.
- "These middle-aged men have been pulling her over
- the coals for pride and vanity." said Mark Clark; "but
- I say, let her have rope enough. Bless her pretty face
- shouldn't I like to do so -- upon her cherry lips!"
- The gallant Mark Clark here made a peculiar and well
- known sound with his own.
- "Mark." said Gabriel, sternly, "now you mind this!
- none of that dalliance-talk -- that smack-and-coddle style
- of yours -- about Miss Everdene. I don't allow it. Do
- you hear? "
- "With all my heart, as I've got no chance." replied
- Mr. Clark, cordially.
- "I suppose you've been speaking against her?" said
- Oak, turning to Joseph Poorgrass with a very grim
- look.
- "No, no -- not a word I -- 'tis a real joyful thing that
- she's no worse, that's what I say." said Joseph, trembling
- and blushing with terror. "Matthew just said -- -- "
- "Matthew Moon, what have you been saying?" asked
- Oak.
- "I? Why ye know I wouldn't harm a worm -- no,
- not one underground worm?" said Matthew Moon,
- looking very uneasy.
- "Well, somebody has -- and look here, neighbours."
- Gabriel, though one of the quietest and most gentle
- men on earth, rose to the occasion, with martial
- promptness and vigour. "That's my fist." Here he
- placed his fist, rather smaller in size than a common
- loaf, in the mathemarical centre of the maltster's little
- table, and with it gave a bump or two thereon, as if
- to ensure that their eyes all thoroughly took in the
- idea of fistiness before he went further. "Now -- the
- first man in the parish that I hear prophesying bad of
- our mistress, why" (here the fist was raised and let fall
- as T'hor might have done with his hammer in assaying
- it) -- "he'll smell and taste that -- or I'm a Dutchman."
- All earnestly expressed by their features that their
- minds did not wander to Holland for a moment on
- account of this statement, but were deploring the
- difference which gave rise to the figure; and Mark
- Clark cried "Hear, hear; just what I should ha' said."
- The dog George looked up at the same time after the
- shepherd's menace, and though he understood English
- but imperfectly, began to growl.
- "Now, don't ye take on so, shepherd, and sit down!"
- said Henery, with a deprecating peacefulness equal to
- anything of the kind in Christianity.
- "We hear that ye be a extraordinary good and
- clever man, shepherd." said Joseph Poorgrass with
- considerable anxiety from behind the maltster's bed-
- stead whither he had retired for safety. "'Tis a great
- thing to be clever, I'm sure." he added, making move-
- ments associated with states of mind rather than body;
- "we wish we were, don't we, neighbours?"
- "Ay, that we do, sure." said Matthew Moon, with
- a small anxious laugh towards Oak, to show how very
- friendly disposed he was likewise.
- "Who's been telling you I'm clever?" said Oak.
- "'Tis blowed about from pillar to post quite common,"
- said Matthew. "We hear that ye can tell the time as
- well by the stars as we can by the sun and moon,
- shepherd."
- "Yes, I can do a little that way." said Gabriel, as a
- man of medium sentiments on the subject.
- names upon their waggons almost like copper-plate,
- with beautiful flourishes, and great long tails. A
- excellent fine thing for ye to be such a clever man,
- shepherd. Joseph Poorgrass used to prent to Farmer
- James Everdene's waggons before you came, and 'a
- could never mind which way to turn the J's and E's
- -- could ye, Joseph?" Joseph shook his head to express
- how absolute was the fact that he couldn't. "And so
- you used to do 'em the wrong way, like this, didn't ye,
- Joseph?" Matthew marked on the dusty floor with his
- whip-handle.
- "And how Farmer James would cuss, and call thee a
- fool, wouldn't he, Joseph, when 'a seed his name
- looking so inside-out-like?" continued Matthew Moon
- with feeling.
- "Ay -- 'a would." said Joseph, meekly. "But, you see,
- I wasn't so much to blame, for them J's and E's be
- such trying sons o' witches for the memory to mind
- whether they face backward or forward; and I always
- had such a forgetful memory, too."
- "'Tis a bad afiction for ye, being such a man of
- calamities in other ways."
- "Well, 'tis; but a happy Providence ordered that it
- should be no worse, and I feel my thanks. As to
- shepherd, there, I'm sure mis'ess ought to have made
- ye her baily -- such a fitting man for't as you be."
- "I don't mind owning that I expected it." said Oak,
- frankly." Indeed, I hoped for the place. At the same
- time, Miss Everdene has a right to be own baily if
- she choose -- and to keep me down to be a common
- shepherd only." Oak drew a slow breath, looked sadly
- into the bright ashpit, and seemed lost in thoughts not
- of the most hopeful hue.
- The genial warmth of the fire now began to stimulate
- the nearly lifeless lambs to bleat and move their limbs
- briskly upon the hay, and to recognize for the first time
- the fact that they were born. Their noise increased to a
- chorus of baas, upon which Oak pulled the milk-can from
- before the fire, and taking a small tea-pot from the pocket
- of his smock-frock, filled it with milk, and taught those of
- the helpless creatures which were not to be restored to
- their dams how to drink from the spout -- a trick they
- acquired with astonishing aptitude.
- "And she don't even let ye have the skins of the
- dead lambs, I hear?" resumed Joseph Poorgrass, his
- eyes lingering on the operations of Oak with the neces-
- sary melancholy.
- "I don't have them." said Gabriel.
- "Ye be very badly used, shepherd." hazarded Joseph
- again, in the hope of getting Oak as an ally in lamenta-
- tion after all. "I think she's took against ye -- that
- I do."
- "O no -- not at all." replied Gabriel, hastily, and a
- sigh escaped him, which the deprivation of lamb skins
- could hardly have caused.
- Before any further remark had been added a shade
- darkened the door, and Boldwood entered the malthouse,
- bestowing upon each a nod of a quality between friendli-
- ness and condescension.
- "Ah! Oak, I thought you were here." he said. "I
- met the mail-cart ten minutes ago, and a letter was put
- into my hand, which I opened without reading the
- address. I believe it is yours. You must excuse the
- accident please."
- "O yes -- not a bit of difference, Mr. Boldwood --
- not a bit." said Gabriel, readily. He had not a corre-
- spondent on earth, nor was there a possible letter coming
- to him whose contents the whole parish would not have
- been welcome to persue.
- Oak stepped aside, and read the following in an
- unknown hand: --
- "DEAR FRIEND, -- I do not know your name, but l think
- these few lines will reach you, which I wrote to thank you
- for your kindness to me the night I left Weatherbury in a
- reckless way. I also return the money I owe you, which
- you will excuse my not keeping as a gift. All has ended
- well, and I am happy to say I am going to be married to
- the young man who has courted me for some time -- Sergeant
- Troy, of the 11th Dragoon Guards, now quartered in this
- town. He would, I know, object to my having received
- anything except as a loan, being a man of great respecta-
- bility and high honour -- indeed, a nobleman by blood.
- "I should be much obliged to you if you would keep the
- contents of this letter a secret for the present, dear friend.
- We mean to surprise Weatherbury by coming there soon
- as husband and wife, though l blush to state it to one nearly
- a stranger. The sergeant grew up in Weatherbury. Thank-
- ing you again for your kindness,
- "I am, your sincere well-wisher,
- "FANNY ROBIN."
- "Have you read it, Mr. Boldwood?" said Gabriel;
- "if not, you had better do so. I know you are interested
- in Fanny Robin."
- Boldwood read the letter and looked grieved.
- "Fanny -- poor Fanny! the end she is so confident
- of has not yet come, she should remember -- and may
- never come. I see she gives no address."
- "What sort of a man is this Sergeant Troy?" said
- Gabriel.
- "H'm -- I'm afraid not one to build much hope upon
- in such a case as this." the farmer murmured, "though
- he's a clever fellow, and up to everything. A slight
- romance attaches to him, too. His mother was a French
- governess, and it seems that a secret attachment existed
- between her and the late Lord Severn. She was married
- to a poor medical man, and soon after an infant was
- horn; and while money was forthcoming all went on
- well. Unfortunately for her boy, his best friends died;
- and he got then a situation as second clerk at a lawyer's
- in Casterbridge. He stayed there for some time, and
- might have worked himself into a dignified position of
- some sort had he not indulged in the wild freak of
- enlisting. I have much doubt if ever little Fanny will
- surprise us in the way she mentions -- very much doubt
- A silly girl! -- silly girl!"
- The door was hurriedly burst open again, and in
- came running Cainy Ball out of breath, his mouth red
- and open, like the bell of a penny trumpet, from which
- he coughed with noisy vigour and great distension of face.
- "Now, Cain Ball." said Oak, sternly, "why will you
- run so fast and lose your breath so? I'm always telling
- you of it."
- "Oh -- I -- a puff of mee breath -- went -- the -- wrong
- way, please, Mister Oak, and made me cough -- hok --
- hok!"
- "Well -- what have you come for?"
- "I've run to tell ye." said the junior shepherd,
- supporting his exhausted youthful frame against the
- doorpost," that you must come directly'. Two more ewes
- have twinned -- that's what's the matter, Shepherd Oak."
- "Oh, that's it." said Oak, jumping up, and dimissing
- for the present his thoughts on poor Fanny. "You are
- a good boy to run and tell me, Cain, and you shall
- smell a large plum pudding some day as a treat. But,
- before we go, Cainy, bring the tarpot, and we'll mark
- this lot and have done with 'em."
- Oak took from his illimitable pockets a marking iron,
- dipped it into the pot, and imprintcd on the buttocks
- of the infant sheep the initials of her he delighted to
- muse on -- "B. E.." which signified to all the region
- round that henceforth the lambs belonged to Farmer
- Bathsheba Everdene, and to no one else.
- "Now, Cainy, shoulder your two, and off Good
- morning, Mr. Boldwood." The shepherd lifted the
- sixteen large legs and four small bodies he had himself
- brought, and vanished with them in the direction of
- the lambing field hard by -- their frames being now in a
- sleek and hopeful state, pleasantly contrasting with their
- death's-door plight of half an hour before.
- Boldwood followed him a little way up the field,
- hesitated, and turned back. He followed him again
- with a last resolve, annihilating return. On approaching
- the nook in which the fold was constructed, the farmer
- drew out-his pocket-book, unfastened-it, and allowed it
- to lie open on his hand. A letter was revealed -- Bath-
- sheba's.
- "I was going to ask you, Oak." he said, with unreal
- carelessness, "if you know whose writing this is? "
- Oak glanced into the book, and replied instantly,
- with a flushed face, " Miss Everdene's."
- Oak had coloured simply at the consciousness of
- sounding her name. He now felt a strangely distressing
- qualm from a new thought." The letter could of course
- be no other than anonymous, or the inquiry would not
- have been necessary.
- Boldwood mistook his confusion: sensitive persons
- are always ready with their "Is it I?" in preference to
- objective reasoning.
- "The question was perfectly fair." he returned -- and
- there was something incongruous in the serious earnest-
- ness with which he applied himself to an argument on
- a valentine. "You know it is always expected that
- privy inquiries will be made: that's where the -- fun
- lies." If the word "fun" had been "torture." it could
- not have been uttered with a more constrained and
- restless countenance than was Boldwood's then."
- Soon parting from Gabriel, the lonely and reserved
- man returned to his house to breakfast -- feeling twinges
- of shame and regret at having so far exposed his mood
- by those fevered questions to a stranger. He again
- placed the letter on the mantelpiece, and sat down to
- think of the circumstances attending it by the light of
- Gabriel's information.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-
- ALL SAINTS' AND ALL SOULS'
-
-
- ON a week-day morning a small congregation, con-
- sisting mainly of women and girls, rose from its knees
- in the mouldy nave of a church called All Saints', in
- the distant barrack-town before mentioned, at the end
- of a service without a sermon. They were about to
- disperse, when a smart footstep, entering the porch and
- coming up the central passage, arrested their attention.
- The step echoed with a ring unusual in a church; it
- was the clink of spurs. Everybody looked. A young
- cavalry soldier in a red uniform, with the three chevrons
- of a sergeant upon his sleeve, strode up the aisle, with
- an embarrassment which was only the more marked
- by the intense vigour of his step, and by the deter-
- mination upon his face to show none. A slight flush
- had mounted his cheek by the time he had run the
- gauntlet between these women; but, passing on through
- the chancel arch, he never paused till he came close
- to the altar railing. Here for a moment he stood
- alone.
- The officiating curate, who had not yet doffed his
- surplice, perceived the new-comer, and followed him
- to the communion-space. He whispered to the soldier,
- and then beckoned to the clerk, who in his turn
- whispered to an elderly woman, apparently his wife, and
- they also went up the chancel steps.
- "'Tis a wedding!" murmured some of the women,
- brightening. "Let's wait!"
- The majority again sat down.
- There was a creaking of machinery behind, and
- some of the young ones turned their heads. From the
- interior face of the west wall of the tower projected a
- little canopy with a quarter-jack and small bell beneath
- it, the automaton being driven by the same clock
- machinery that struck the large bell in the tower. Be-
- tween the tower and the church was a close screen, the
- door of which was kept shut during services, hiding
- this grotesque clockwork from sight. At present, how-
- ever, the door was open, and the egress of the jack, the
- blows on the bell, and the mannikin's retreat into.the
- nook again, were visible to many, and audible through-
- out the church.
- The jack had struck half-past eleven.
- "Where's the woman?" whispered some of the
- spectators.
- The young sergeant stood still with the abnormal
- rigidity of the old pillars around. He faced the south-
- east, and was as silent as he was still.
- The silence grew to be a noticeable thing as the
- minutes went on, and nobody else appeared, and not a
- soul moved. The rattle of the quarter-jack again from
- its niche, its blows for three-quarters, its fussy retreat,
- were almost painfully abrupt, and caused many of the
- congregation to start palpably.
- "I wonder where the woman is!" a voice whispered
- again.
- There began now that slight shifting of feet, that
- artificial coughing among several, which betrays a
- nervous suspense. At length there was a titter. But
- the soldier never moved. There he stood, his face to
- the south-east, upright as a column, his cap in his hand.
- The clock ticked on. The women threw off their
- nervousness, and titters and giggling became more
- frequent. Then came a dead silence. Every one was
- waiting for the end. Some persons may have noticed
- how extraordinarily the striking of quarters. seems to
- quicken the flight of time. It was hardly credible that
- the jack had not got wrong with the minutes when the
- rattle began again, the puppet emerged, and the four
- quarters were struck fitfully as before: One could al-
- most be positive that there was a malicious leer upon
- the hideous creature's face, and a mischievous delight
- in its twitchings. Then, followed the dull and remote
- resonance of the twelve heavy strokes in the tower
- above. The women were impressed, and there was no
- giggle this time.
- The clergyman glided into the vestry, and the clerk
- vanished. The sergeant had not yet turned; every
- woman in the church was waiting to see his face, and
- he appeared to know it. At last he did turn, and
- stalked resolutely down the nave, braving them all,
- with a compressed lip. Two bowed and toothless old
- almsmen then looked at each other and chuckled,
- innocently enough; but the sound had a strange weird
- effect in that place.
- Opposite to the church was a paved square, around
- which several overhanging wood buildings of old time
- cast a picturesque shade. The young man on leaving
- the door went to cross the square, when, in the middle,
- he met a little woman. The expression of her face,
- which had been one of intense anxiety, sank at the
- sight of his nearly to terror.
- "Well?" he said, in a suppressed passion, fixedly
- looking at her.
- "O, Frank -- I made a mistake! -- I thought that
- church with the spire was All Saints', and I was at the
- door at half-past eleven to a minute as you said.
- waited till a quarter to twelve, and found then that I
- was in All Souls'. But I wasn't much frightened, for
- I thought it could be to-morrow as well."
- "You fool, for so fooling me! But say no more."
- "Shall it be to-morrow, Frank?" she asked blankly.
- "To-morrow!" and he gave vent to a hoarse laugh.
- "I don't go through that experience again for some
- time, I warrant you!"
- "But after all." she expostulated in a trembling voice,
- "the mistake was not such a terrible thing! Now, dear
- Frank, when shall it be?"
- "Ah, when? God knows!" he said, with a light
- irony, and turning from her walked rapidly away.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-
- IN THE MARKET-PLACE
-
-
- ON Saturday Boldwood was in Casterbridge market
- house as usual, when the disturber of his dreams entered
- and became visible to him. Adam had awakened from
- his deep sleep, and behold! there was Eve. The
- farmer took courage, and for the first time really looked
- at her.
- Material causes and emotional effects are not to be
- arranged in regular equation. The result from capital
- employed in the production of any movement of a
- mental nature is sometimes as tremendous as the cause
- itself is absurdly minute. When women are in a freakish
- mood, their usual intuition, either from carelessness or
- inherent defect, seemingly fails to teach them this, and
- hence it was that Bathsheba was fated to be astonished
- today.
- Boldwood looked at her -- not slily, critically, or
- understandingly, but blankly at gaze, in the way a
- reaper looks up at a passing train -- as something foreign
- to his element, and but dimly understood. To Bold-
- wood women had been remote phenomena rather than
- necessary complements -- comets of such uncertain
- aspect, movement, and permanence, that whether
- their orbits were as geometrical, unchangeable, and
- as subject to laws as his own, or as absolutely erratic
- as they superficially appeared, he had not deemed it
- his duty to consider.
- He saw her black hair, her correct facial curves
- and profile, and the roundness of her chin and throat.
- He saw then the side of her eyelids, eyes, and lashes,
- and the shape of her ear. Next he noticed her figure,
- her skirt, and the very soles of her shoes.
- Boldwood thought her beautiful, but wondered
- whether he was right in his thought, for it seemed
- impossible that this romance in the flesh, if so sweet
- as he imagined, could have been going on long without
- creating a commotion of delight among men, and pro-
- voking more inquiry than Bathsheba had done, even
- though that was not a little. To the best of his judge-
- ment neither nature nor art could improve this perfect
- one of an imperfect many. His heart began to move
- within him. Boldwood, it must be remembered, though
- forty years of age, had never before inspected a woman
- with the very centre and force of his glance; they had
- struck upon all his senses at wide angles.
- Was she really beautiful? He could not assure
- himself that his opinion was true even now. He fur-
- tively said to a neighbour, "Is Miss Everdene considered
- handsome?"
- "O yes; she was a good deal noticed the first
- time she came, if you remember. A very handsome
- girl indeed."
- A man is never more credulous than in receiving
- favourable opinions on the beauty of a woman he is
- half, or quite, in love with; a mere child's word on the
- point has the weight of an R.A.'s. Boldwood was
- satisfied now.
- And this charming woman had in effect said to
- him, "Marry me." Why should she have done that
- strange thing? Boldwood's blindness to the difference
- between approving of what circumstances suggest, and
- originating what they do not suggest, was well matched
- by Bathsheba's insensibility to the possibly great issues
- of little beginnings.
- She was at this moment coolly dealing with a dashing
- young farmer, adding up accounts with him as indiffer-
- ently as if his face had been the pages of a ledger. It
- was evident that such a nature as his had no attraction
- for a woman of Bathsheba's taste. But Boldwood grew
- hot down to his hands with an incipient jealousy; he
- trod for the first time the threshold of "the injured
- lover's hell." His first impulse was to go and thrust
- himself between them. This could be done, but only
- in one way -- by asking to see a sample of her corn.
- Boldwood renounced the idea. He could not make
- the request; it was debasing loveliness to ask it to
- buy and sell, and jarred with his conceptions of her.
- All this time Bathsheba was conscious of having
- broken into that dignified stronghold at last. His
- eyes, she knew, were following her everywhere. This
- was a triumph; and had it come naturally, such a
- triumph would have been the sweeter to her for this
- piquing delay. But it had been brought about by
- misdirected ingenuity, and she valued it only as she
- valued an artificial flower or a wax fruit.
- Being a woman with some good sense in reasoning
- on subjects wherein her heart was not involved, Bath-
- sheba genuinely repented that a freak which had owed
- its existence as much to Liddy as to herself, should
- ever have been undertaken, to disturb the placidity of
- a man she respected too highly to deliberately tease.
- She that day nearly formed the intention of begging
- his pardon on the very next occasion of their meeting.
- The worst features of this arrangement were that, if
- he thought she ridiculed him, an apology would in-
- crease the offence by being disbelieved; and if he
- thought she wanted him to woo her, it would read
- like additional evidence of her forwardness.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-
- BOLDWOOD IN MEDITATION -- REGRET
-
-
- BOLDWOOD was tenant of what was called Little
- Weatherbury Farm, and his person was the nearest ap-
- proach to aristocracy that this remoter quarter of the
- parish could boast of. Genteel strangers, whose god
- was their town, who might happen to be compelled to
- linger about this nook for a day, heard the sound of
- light wheels, and prayed to see good society, to the
- degree of a solitary lord, or squire at the very least,
- but it was only Mr. Boldwood going out for the day.
- They heard the sound of wheels yet once more, and
- were re-animated to expectancy: it was only Mr. Bold-
- wood coming home again.
- His house stood recessed from the road, and the
- stables, which are to a farm what a fireplace is to a
- room, were behind, their lower portions being lost
- amid bushes of laurel. Inside the blue door, open
- half-way down, were to be seen at this time the backs
- and tails of half-a-dozen warm and contented horses
- standing in their stalls; and as thus viewed, they pre-
- sented alternations of roan and bay, in shapes like a
- Moorish arch, the tail being a streak down the midst
- of each. Over these, and lost to the eye gazing in
- from the outer light, the mouths of the same animals
- could be heard busily sustaining the above-named
- warmth and plumpness by quantities of oats and hay.
- The restless and shadowy figure of a colt wandered
- about a loose-box at the end, whilst the steady grind
- of all the eaters was occasionally diversified by the
- rattle of a rope or the stamp of a foot.
- Pacing up and down at the heels of the animals was
- Farmer Boldwood himself. This place was his almonry
- and cloister in one: here, after looking to the feeding
- of his four-footed dependants, the celibate would walk
- and meditate of an evening till the moon's rays streamed
- in through the cobwebbed windows, or total darkness
- enveloped the scene.
- His square-framed perpendicularity showed more fully
- now than in the crowd and bustle of the market-house.
- In this meditative walk his foot met the floor with heel
- and toe simultaneously, and his fine reddish-fleshed face
- was bent downwards just enough to render obscure the
- still mouth and the well-rounded though rather prominent
- and broad chin. A few clear and thread-like horizontal
- lines were the only interruption to the otherwise smooth
- surface of his large forehead.
- The phases of Boldwood's life were ordinary enough,
- but his was not an ordinary nature. That stillness,
- which struck casual observers more than anything else
- in his character and habit, and seemed so precisely
- like the rest of inanition, may have been the perfect
- balance of enormous antagonistic forces -- positives and
- negatives in fine adjustment. His equilibrium disturbed,
- he was in extremity at once. If an emotion possessed
- him at all, it ruled him; a feeling not mastering him
- was entirely latent. Stagnant or rapid, it was never
- slow. He was always hit mortally, or he was missed.
- He had no light and careless touches in his constitu-
- tion, either for good or for evil. Stern in the outlines of
- action, mild in the details, he was serious throughout all.
- He saw no absurd sides to the follies of life, and thus,
- though not quite companionable in the eyes of merry
- men and scoffers, and those to whom all things show
- life as a jest, he was not intolerable to the earnest and
- those acquainted with grief. Being a man -who read
- all the dramas of life seriously, if he failed to please
- when they were comedies, there was no frivolous treat-
- ment to reproach him for when they chanced to end
- tragically.
- Bathsheba was far from dreaming that the dark and
- silent shape upon which she had so carelessly thrown a
- seed was a hotbed of tropic intensity. Had she known
- Boldwood's moods, her blame would have been fearful,
- and the stain upon her heart ineradicable. Moreover,
- had she known her present power for good or evil over
- this man, she would have trembled at her responsibility.
- Luckily for her present, unluckily for her future tran-
- quillity, her understanding had not yet told her what
- Boldwood was. Nobody knew entirely; for though it
- was possible to form guesses concerning his wild capa-
- bilities from old floodmarks faintly visible, he had never
- been seen at the high tides which caused them.
- Farmer Boldwood came to the stable-door and looked
- forth across the level fields. Beyond the first enclosure
- was a hedge, and on the other side of this a meadow
- belonging to Bathsheba's farm.
- It was now early spring -- the time of going to grass
- with the sheep, when they have the first feed of the
- meadows, before these are laid up for mowing. The
- wind, which had been blowing east for several weeks,
- had veered to the southward, and the middle of spring
- had come abruptly -- almost without a beginning. It
- was that period in the vernal quarter when we map
- suppose the Dryads to be waking for the season. The
- vegetable world begins to move and swell and the saps
- to rise, till in the completest silence of lone gardens
- and trackless plantations, where- everything seems -help-
- less and still after the bond and slavery of frost, there
- are bustlings, strainings, united thrusts, and pulls-all-
- together, in comparison with which the powerful tugs of
- cranes and pulleys in a noisy city are but pigmy efforts.
- Boldwood, looking into the distant meadows, saw
- there three figures. They were those of Miss Everdene,
- Shepherd Oak, and Cainy Ball.
- When Bathsheba's figure shone upon the farmer's
- eyes it lighted him up as the moon lights up a great
- tower. A man's body is as the shell; or the tablet, of
- his soul, as he is reserved or ingenuous, overflowing or
- self-contained. There was a change in Boldwood's
- exterior from its former impassibleness; and his face
- showed that he was now living outside his defences
- for the first time, and with a fearful sense of exposure.
- It is the usual experience of strong natures when they
- love.
- At last he arrived at a conclusion. It was to go
- across and inquire boldly of her.
- The insulation of his heart by reserve during these
- many years, without a channel of any kind for disposable
- emotion, had worked its effect. It has been observed
- more than once that the causes of love are chiefly
- subjective, and Boldwood was a living testimony to
- the truth of the proposition. No mother existed to
- absorb his devotion, no sister for his tenderness, no
- idle ties for sense. He became surcharged with the
- compound, which was genuine lover's love.
- He approached the gate of the meadow. Beyond
- it the ground was melodious with ripples, and the sky
- with larks; the low bleating of the flock mingling with
- both. Mistress and man were engaged in the operation
- of making a lamb "take." which is performed whenever
- an ewe has lost her own offspring, one of the twins of
- another ewe being given her as a substitute. Gabriel
- had skinned the dead lamb, and was tying the skin
- over the body of the live lamb, in the customary manner,
- whilst Bathsheba was holding open a little pen of four
- hurdles, into which the Mother and foisted lamb were
- driven, where they would remain till the old sheep
- conceived an affection for the young one.
- Bathsheba looked up at the completion of the
- manouvre, and saw the farmer by the gate, where he
- was overhung by a willow tree in full bloom. Gabriel,
- to whom her face was as the uncertain glory of an April
- day, was ever regardful of its faintest changes, and
- instantly discerned thereon the mark of some influence
- from without, in the form of a keenly self-conscious
- reddening. He also turned and beheld Boldwood.
- At onee connecting these signs with the letter Bold-
- wood had shown him, Gabriel suspected her of some
- coquettish procedure begun by that means, and carried
- on since, he knew not how.
- Farmer Boldwood had read the pantomime denoting
- that they were aware of his presence, and the perception
- was as too much light turned upon his new sensibility.
- He was still in the road, and by moving on he hoped
- that neither would recognize that he had originally
- intended to enter the field. He passed by with an
- utter and overwhelming sensation of ignorance, shyness,
- and doubt. Perhaps in her manner there were signs
- that she wished to see him -- perhaps not -- he could not
- read a woman. The cabala of this erotic philosophy
- seemed to consist of the subtlest meanings expressed in
- misleading ways. Every turn, look, word, and accent
- contained a mystery quite distinct from its obvious
- import, and not one had ever been pondered by him
- until now.
- As for Bathsheba, she was not deceived into the
- belief that Farmer Boldwood had walked by on business
- or in idleness. She collected the probabilities of the
- case, and concluded that she was herself responsible for
- Boldwood's appearance there. It troubled her much
- to see what a great flame a little Wildfire was likely to
- kindle. Bathsheba was no schemer for marriage, nor
- was she deliberately a trifler with the affections of men,
- and a censor's experience on seeing an actual flirt after
- observing her would have been a feeling of surprise
- that Bathsheba could be so different from such a one,
- and yet so like what a flirt is supposed to be.
- She resolved never again, by look or by sign, to
- interrupt the steady flow of this man's life. But a
- resolution to avoid an evil is seldom framed till the evil
- is so far advanced as to make avoidance impossible.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-
- THE SHEEP-WASHING -- THE OFFER
-
-
- BOLDWOOD did eventually call upon her. She was
- not at home. "Of course not." he murmured. In con-
- templating Bathsheba as a woman, he had forgotten the
- accidents of her position as an agriculturist -- that being
- as much of a farmer, and as extensive a farmer, as
- himself, her probable whereabouts was out-of-doors at
- this time of the year. This, and the other oversights
- Boldwood was guilty of, were natural to the mood, and
- still more natural to the circumstances. The great aids
- to idealization in love were present here: occasional
- observation of her from a distance, and the absence of
- social intercourse with her -- visual familiarity, oral
- strangeness. The smaller human elements were kept
- out of sight; the pettinesses that enter so largely into
- all earthly living and doing were disguised by the
- accident of lover and loved-one not being on visiting
- terms; and there was hardly awakened a thought in
- Boldwood that sorry household realities appertained to
- her, or that she, like all others, had moments of
- commonplace, when to be least plainly seen was to be
- most prettily remembered. Thus a mild sort of
- apotheosis took place in his fancy, whilst she still lived
- and breathed within his own horizon, a troubled creature
- like himself.
- It was the end of May when the farmer determined
- to be no longer repulsed by trivialities or distracted by
- suspense. He had by this time grown used to being in
- love; the passion now startled him less even when it
- tortured him more, and he felt himself adequate to the
- situation. On inquiring for her at her house they had
- told him she was at the sheepwashing, and he went off
- to seek her there.
- The sheep-washing pool was a perfectly circular basin
- of brickwork in the meadows, full of the clearest water.
- To birds on the wing its glassy surface, reflecting the
- light sky, must have been visible for miles around as a
- glistening Cyclops' eye in a green face. The grass
- about the margin at this season was a sight to remember
- long -- in a minor sort of way. Its activity in sucking
- the moisture from the rich damp sod. was almost a pro-
- cess observable by the eye. The outskirts of this level
- water-meadow were diversified by rounded and hollow
- pastures, where just now every flower that was not a
- buttercup was a daisy. The river slid along noiselessly
- as a shade, the swelling reeds and sedge forming a
- flexible palisade upon its moist brink. To the north
- of the mead were trees, the leaves of which were new,
- soft, and moist, not yet having stiffened and darkened
- under summer sun and drought, their colour being
- yellow beside a green -- green beside a yellow.
- From the recesses of this knot of foliage the loud
- notes of three cuckoos were resounding through the
- still air.
- Boldwood went meditating down the slopes with his
- eyes on his boots, which the yellow pollen from the
- buttercups had bronzed in artistic gradations. A tribu-
- tary of the main stream flowed through the basin of the
- pool by an inlet and outlet at opposite points of its
- diameter. Shepherd Oak, Jan Coggan, Moon, Poor-
- grass, Cain Ball, and several others were assembled
- here, all dripping wet to the very roots of their hair,
- and Bathsheba was standing by in a new riding-habit --
- the most elegant she had ever worn -- the reins of her
- horse being looped over her arm. Flagons of cider
- were rolling about upon the green. The meek sheep
- were pushed into the pool by Coggan and Matthew
- Moon, who stood by the lower hatch, immersed to their
- waists; then Gabriel, who stood on the brink, thrust
- them under as they swam along, with an instrument
- like a crutch, formed for the purpose, and also for
- assisting the exhausted animals when the wool became
- saturated and they began to sink. They were let out
- against the stream, and through the upper opening, all
- impurities flowing away below. Cainy Ball and Joseph,
- who performed this latter operation, were if possible
- wetter than the rest; they resembled dolphins under a
- fountain, every protuberance and angle of their clothes
- dribbling forth a small rill.
- Boldwood came close and bade her good-morning, with
- such constraint that she could not but think he had
- stepped across to the washing for its own sake, hoping
- not to find her there; more, she fancied his brow severe
- and his eye slighting. Bathsheba immediately contrived
- to withdraw, and glided along by the river till she was
- a stone's throw off. She heard footsteps brushing the
- grass, and had a consciousness that love was encircling
- her like a perfume. Instead of turning or waiting,
- Bathsheba went further among the high sedges, but
- Boldwood seemed determined, and pressed on till they
- were completely past the bend of the river. Here,
- without being seen, they could hear the splashing and
- shouts of the washers above.
- "Miss Everdene!" said the farmer.
- She trembled, turned, and said "Good morning."
- His tone was so utterly removed from all she had
- expected as a beginning. It was lowness and quiet
- accentuated: an emphasis of deep meanings, their form,
- at the same time, being scarcely expressed. Silence
- has sometimes a remarkable power of showing itself as
- the disembodied soul of feeling wandering without its
- carcase, and it is then more impressive than speech.
- In the same way, to say a little is often to tell more
- than to say a great deal. Boldwood told everything in
- that word.
- As the consciousness expands on learning that what
- was fancied to be the rumble of wheels is the reverbera-
- tion of thunder, so did Bathsheba's at her intuitive
- conviction.
- "I feel -- almost too much -- to think." he said, with a
- solemn simplicity. "I have come to speak to you with-
- out preface. My life is not my own since I have beheld
- you clearly, Miss Everdene -- I come to make you an
- offer of marriage."
- Bathsheba tried to preserve an absolutely neutral
- countenance, and all the motion she made was that of
- closing lips which had previously been a little parted.
- "I am now forty-one years old." he went on. "I may
- have been called a confirmed bachelor, and I was a
- confirmed bachelor. I had never any views of myself
- as a husband in my earlier days, nor have I made any
- calculation on the subject since I have been older.
- But we all change, and my change, in this matter, came
- with seeing you. I have felt lately, more and more,
- that my present way of living is bad in every respect.
- Beyond all things, I want you as my wife."
- "I feel, Mr. Boldwood, that though I respect you
- much, I do not feel -- what would justify me to -- in
- accepting your offer." she stammered.
- This giving back of dignity for dignity seemed to
- open the sluices of feeling that Boldwood had as yet
- kept closed.
- "My life is a burden without you." he exclaimed, in
- a low voice. "I want you -- I want you to let me say
- I love you again and again!"
- Bathsheba answered nothing, and the mare upon
- her arm seemed so impressed that instead of cropping
- the herbage she looked up.
- "I think and hope you care enough for me to listen
- to what I have to tell!"
- Bathsheba's momentary impulse at hearing this was
- to ask why he thought that, till she remembered that,
- far from being a conceited assumption on Boldwood's
- part, it was but the natural conclusion of serious reflec-
- tion based on deceptive premises of her own offering.
- "I wish I could say courteous flatteries to you." the
- farmer continued in an easier tone, " and put my rugged
- feeling into a graceful shape: but I have neither power
- nor patience to learn such things. I want you for my
- wife -- so wildly that no other feeling can abide in me;
- but I should not have spoken out had I not been led
- to hope."
- The valentine again! O that valentine!" she
- said to herself, but not a word to him.
- "If you can love me say so, Miss Everdene. If not
- -- don't say no!"
- "Mr. Boldwood, it is painful to have to say I am
- surprised, so that I don't know how to answer you with
- propriety and respect -- but am only just able to speak
- out my feeling -- I mean my meaning; that I am afraid
- I can't marry you, much as I respect you. You are too
- dignified for me to suit you, sir."
- "But, Miss Everdene!"
- "I -- I didn't -- I know I ought never to have dreamt
- of sending that valentine -- forgive me, sir -- it was a
- wanton thing which no woman with any self-respect
- should have done. If you will only pardon my thought-
- lessness, I promise never to -- -- "
- "No, no, no. Don't say thoughtlessness! Make me
- think it was something more -- that it was a sort of
- prophetic instinct -- the beginning of a feeling that you
- would like me. You torture me to say it was done in
- thoughtlessness -- I never thought of it in that light, and
- I can't endure it. Ah! I wish I knew how to win you!
- but that I can't do -- I can only ask if I have already got
- you. If I have not, and it is not true that you have
- come unwittingly to me as I have to you, I can say no
- more."
- "I have not fallen in love with you, Mr. Boldwood --
- certainly I must say that." She allowed a very small
- smile to creep for the first time over her serious face in
- saying this, and the white row of upper teeth, and keenly-
- cut lips already noticed, suggested an idea of heartless-
- ness, which was immediately contradicted by the pleasant
- eyes.
- "But you will just think -- in kindness and conde-
- scension think -- if you cannot bear with me as a husband!
- I fear I am too old for you, but believe me I will take
- more care of you than would many a man of your own
- age. I will protect and cherish you with all my strength
- -- I will indeed! You shall have no cares -- be worried
- by no household affairs, and live quite at ease, Miss
- Everdene. The dairy superintendence shall be done by
- a man -- I can afford it will -- you shall never have so
- much as to look out of doors at haymaking time, or to
- think of weather in the harvest. I rather cling; to the
- chaise, because it is he same my poor father and mother
- drove, but if you don't like it I will sell it, and you shall
- have a pony-carriage of your own. I cannot say how
- far above every other idea and object on earth you seem
- to me -- nobody knows -- God only knows -- how much
- you are to me!"
- Bathsheba's heart was young, and it swelled with
- sympathy for the deep-natured man who spoke so
- simply.
- "Don't say it! don't! I cannot bear you to feel so
- much, and me to feel nothing. And I am afraid they
- will notice us, Mr. Boldwood. Will you let the matter
- rest now? I cannot think collectedly. I did not know
- you were going to say this to me. O, I am wicked to
- have made you suffer so!" She was frightened as well
- as agitated at his vehemence.
- "Say then, that you don't absolutely refuse. Do not
- quite refuse?"
- "I can do nothing. I cannot answer."I may speak to you again on the
- subject?"
- "Yes."
- "I may think of you?"
- "Yes, I suppose you may think of me."
- "And hope to obtain you?"
- "No -- do not hope! Let us go on."
- "I will call upon you again to-morrow."
- "No -- please not. Give me time."
- "Yes -- I will give you any time." he said earnestly and
- gratefully. "I am happier now."
- "No -- I beg you! Don't be happier if happiness
- only comes from my agreeing. Be neutral, Mr. Bold-
- wood! I must think."
- "I will wait." he said.
- And then she turned away. Boldwood dropped his
- gaze to the ground, and stood long like a man who did not
- know where he was. Realities then returned upon him
- like the pain of a wound received in an excitement
- which eclipses it, and he, too, then went on.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
-
- PERPLEXITY -- GRINDING THE SHEARS -- A QUARREL
-
-
- "HE is so disinterested and kind to offer me all that I
- can desire." Bathsheba mused.
- Yet Farmer Boldwood, whether by nature kind or
- the reverse to kind, did not exercise kindness, here.
- The rarest offerings of the purest loves are but a self-
- indulgence, and no generosity at all.
- Bathsheba, not being the least in love with him, was
- eventually able to look calmly at his offer. It was one
- which many women of her own station in the neighbour-
- hood, and not a few of higher rank, would have been
- wild to accept and proud to publish. In every point of
- view, ranging from politic to passionate, it was desirable
- that she, a lonely girl, should marry, and marry this
- earnest, well-to-do, and respected man. He was close
- to her doors: his standing was sufficient: his qualities
- were even supererogatory. Had she felt, which she did
- not, any wish whatever for the married state in the
- abstract, she could not reasonably have rejected him,
- being a woman who frequently appealed to her under,
- standing for deliverance from her whims. Boldwood as
- a means to marriage was unexceptionable: she esteemed
- and liked him, yet she did not want him. It appears
- that ordinary men take wives because possession is not
- possible without marriage, and that ordinary women
- accept husbands because marriage is not possible with,
- out possession; with totally differing aims the method is
- the same on both sides. But the understood incentive
- on the woman's part was wanting here. Besides, Bath-
- sheba's position as absolute mistress of a farm and house
- was a novel one, and the novelty had not yet begun to
- wear off.
- But a disquiet filled her which was somewhat to her
- credit, for it would have affected few. Beyond the men-
- tioned reasons with which she combated her objections,
- she had a strong feeling that, having been the one who
- began the game, she ought in honesty to accept the conse-
- quences. Still the reluctance remained. She said in the
- same breath that it would be ungenerous not to marry
- Boldwood, and that she couldn't do it to save her life.
- Bathsheba's was an impulsive nature under a delibera-
- tive aspect. An Elizabeth in brain and a Mary Stuart
- in spirit, she often performed actions of the greatest
- temerity with a manner of extreme discretion. Many of
- her thoughts were perfect syllogisms; unluckily they
- always remained thoughts. Only a few were irrational
- assumptions; but, unfortunately, they were the ones
- which most frequently grew into deeds.
- The next day to that of the declaration she found
- Gabriel Oak at the bottom of her garden, grinding his
- shears for the sheep-shearing. All the surrounding
- cottages were more or less scenes of the same operation;
- the scurr of whetting spread into the sky from all parts
- of the village as from an armury previous to a campaign.
- Peace and war kiss each other at their hours of prepara-
- tion -- sickles, scythes, shears, and pruning-hooks, ranking
- with swords, bayonets, and lances, in their common
- necessity for point and edge.
- Cainy Ball turned the handle of Gabriel's grindstone,
- his head performing a melancholy see-saw up and down
- with each turn of the wheel. Oak stood somewhat as
- Eros is represented when in the act of sharpening his
- arrows: his figure slightly bent, the weight of his body
- thrown over on the shears, and his head balanced side-
- ways, with a critical compression of the lips and contrac-
- tion of the eyelids to crown the attitude.
- His mistress came up and looked upon them in
- silence for a minute or two; then she said --
- "Cain, go to the lower mead and catch the bay mare.
- I'll turn the winch of the grindstone. I want to speak
- to you, Gabriel.
- Cain departed, and Bathsheba took the handle.
- Gabriel had glanced up in intense surprise, quelled its
- expression, and looked down again. Bathsheba turned
- the winch, and Gabriel applied the shears.
- The peculiar motion involved in turning a wheel
- has a wonderful tendency to benumb the mind. It
- is a sort of attenuated variety of Ixion's punishment,
- and contributes a dismal chapter to the history of
- heavy, and the body's centre of gravity seems to
- settle by degrees in a leaden lump somewhere be-
- tween the eyebrows and the crown. Bathsheba felt
- the unpleasant symptoms after two or three dozen
- turns.
- "Will you turn, Gabriel, and let me hold the shears?"
- she said. "My head is in a'whirl, and I can't talk.
- Gabriel turned. Bathsheba then began, with some
- awkwardness, allowing her thoughts to stray occasion-
- ally from her story to attend to the shears, which
- required a little nicety in sharpening.
- "I wanted to ask you if the men made any observa-
- tions on my going behind the sedge with Mr. Boldwood
- yesterday?"
- "Yes, they did." said Gabriel. "You don't hold
- the shears right, miss -- I knew you wouldn't know the
- way -- hold like this."
- He relinquished the winch, and inclosing her two
- hands completely in his own (taking each as we some-
- times slap a child's hand in teaching him to write),
- grasped the shears with her. "Incline the edge so,"
- he said.
- Hands and shears were inclined to suit the words,
- and held thus for a peculiarly long time by the in-
- structor as he spoke.
- "That will do." exclaimed Bathsheba. "Loose my
- hands. I won't have them held! Turn the winch."
- Gabriel freed her hands quietly, retired to his
- handle, and the grinding went on.
- "Did the men think it odd?" she said again.
- "Odd was not the idea, miss."
- "What did they say?"
- "That Farmer Boldwood's name and your own
- were likely to be flung over pulpit together before the
- year was out."
- "I thought so by the look of them! Why, there's
- nothing in it. A more foolish remark was never made,
- and I want you to contradict it! that's what I came for."
- Gabriel looked incredulous and sad, but between
- his moments of incredulity, relieved.
- "They must have heard our conversation." she
- continued.
- "Well, then, Bathsheba!" said Oak, stopping the
- handle, and gazing into her face with astonishment.
- "Miss Everdene, you mean," she said, with dignity.
- "I mean this, that if Mr. Boldwood really spoke of
- marriage, I bain't going to tell a story and say he
- didn't to please you. I have already tried to please
- you too much for my own good!"
- Bathsheba regarded him with round-eyed perplexity.
- She did not know whether to pity him for disappointed
- love of her, or to be angry with him for having got
- over it -- his tone being ambiguous.
- "I said I wanted you just to mention that it was
- not true I was going to be married to him." she mur-
- mured, with a slight decline in her assurance.
- "I can say that to them if you wish, Miss Everdene.
- And I could likewise give an opinion to 'ee on what
- you have done."
- "I daresay. But I don't want your opinion."I suppose not." said Gabriel
- bitterly, and going on
- with his turning, his words rising and falling in a
- regular swell and cadence as he stooped or rose with
- the winch, which directed them, according to his
- position, perpendicularly into the earth, or horizontally
- along the garden, his eyes being fixed on a leaf upon
- the ground.
- With Bathsheba a hastened act was a rash act;
- but, as does not always happen, time gained was
- prudence insured. It must be added, however, that
- time was very seldom gained. At this period the
- single opinion in the parish on herself and her doings
- that she valued as sounder than her own was Gabriel
- Oak's. And the outspoken honesty of his character
- was such- that on any subject even that of her love
- for, or marriage with, another man, the same disinter-
- estedness of opinion might be calculated on, and be
- had for the asking. Thoroughly convinced of the
- impossibility of his own suit, a high resolve constrained
- him not to injure that of another. This is a lover's
- most stoical virtue, as the lack of it is a lover's most
- venial sin. Knowing he would reply truly, she asked
- the question, painful as she must have known the sub-
- ject would be. Such is the selfishness of some charm-
- ing women. Perhaps it was some excuse for her thus
- torturing honesty to her own advantage, that she had
- absolutely no other sound judgment within easy reach.
- "Well, what is your opinion of my conduct." she
- said, quietly.
- "That it is unworthy of any thoughtful, and meek,
- and comely woman."
- In an instant Bathsheba's face coloured with the
- angry crimson of a danby sunset. But she forbore
- to utter this feeling, and the reticence of her tongue
- only made the loquacity of her face the more notice-
- able.
- The next thing Gabriel did was to make a mistake.
- "Perhaps you don't like the rudeness of my repri-
- manding you, for I know it is rudeness; but I thought
- it would do good."
- She instantly replied sarcastically --
- "On the contrary, my opinion of you is so low, that
- I see in your abuse the praise of discerning people!"
- "I am glad you don't mind it, for I said it honestly
- and with every serious meaning."
- "I see. But, unfortunately, when you try not to
- speak in jest you are amusing -- just as when you wish
- to avoid seriousness you sometimes say a sensible word
- It was a hard hit, but Bathsheba had unmistakably
- lost her temper, and on that account Gabriel had
- never in his life kept his own better. He said nothing.
- She then broke out --
- "I may ask, I suppose, where in particular my
- unworthiness lies? In my not marrying you, perhaps!
- "Not by any means." said Gabriel quietly. "I have
- long given up thinking of that matter."Or wishing it, I suppose." she
- said; and it was
- apparent that she expected an unhesitating denial of
- this supposition.
- Whatever Gabriel felt, he coolly echoed her words --
- "Or wishing it either."
- A woman may be treated with a bitterness which
- is sweet to her, and with a rudeness which is not
- offensive. Bathsheba would have submitted to an
- indignant chastisement for her levity had Gabriel pro-
- tested that he was loving her at the same time; the
- impetuosity of passion unrequited is bearable, even if
- it stings and anathematizes there is a triumph in the
- humiliation, and a tenderness in the strife. This was
- what she had been expecting, and what she had not
- got. To be lectured because the lecturer saw her in
- the cold morning light of open-shuttered disillusion
- was exasperating. He had not finished, either. He
- continued in a more agitated voice: --
- "My opinion is (since you ask it) that you are
- greatly to blame for playing pranks upon a man like
- Mr. Boldwood, merely as a pastime. Leading on a
- man you don't care for is not a praiseworthy action.
- And even, Miss Everdene, if you seriously inclined
- towards him, you might have let him find it out in
- some way of true loving-kindness, and not by sending
- him a valentine's letter."
- Bathsheba laid down the shears.
- "I cannot allow any man to -- to criticise my private
- Conduct!" she exclaimed. "Nor will I for a minute.
- So you'll please leave the farm at the end of the week!"
- It may have been a peculiarity -- at any rate it was
- a fact -- that when Bathsheba was swayed by an emotion
- of an earthly sort her lower lip trembled: when by a
- refined emotion, her upper or heavenward one. Her
- nether lip quivered now.
- "Very well, so I will." said Gabriel calmly. He had
- been held to her by a beautiful thread which it pained
- him to spoil by breaking, rather than by a chain he
- could not break. "I should be even better pleased to
- go at once." he added.
- "Go at once then, in Heaven's name!" said she,her
- eyes flashing at his, though never meeting them.
- "Don't let me see your face any more."
- "Very well, Miss Everdene -- so it shall be."
- And he took his shears and went away from her in
- placid dignity, as Moses left the presence of Pharaoh.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-
- TROUBLES IN THE FOLD -- A MESSAGE
-
-
- GABRIEL OAK had ceased to feed the Weatherbury
- flock for about four-and-twenty hours, when on Sunday
- afternoon the elderly gentlemen Joseph Poorgrass,
- Matthew Moon, Fray, and half-a-dozen others, came
- running up to the house of the mistress of the Upper
- Farm.
- "Whatever is the matter, men?" she said, meeting
- them at the door just as she was coming out on her
- way to church, and ceasing in a moment from the close
- compression of her two red lips, with which she had
- accompanied the exertion of pulling on a tight glove.
- "Sixty!" said Joseph Poorgrass.
- "Seventy!" said Moon.
- "Fifty-nine!" said Susan Tall's husband.
- "-- Sheep have broke fence." said Fray.
- "-- And got into a field of young clover." said Tall.
- "-- Young clover!" said Moon.
- "-- Clover!" said Joseph Poorgrass.
- "And they be getting blasted." said Henery Fray.
- "That they be." said Joseph.
- "And will all die as dead as nits, if they bain't got
- out and cured!"said Tall.
- Joseph's countenance was drawn into lines and
- puckers by his concern. Fray's forehead was wrinkled
- both perpendicularly and crosswise, after the pattern of
- a portcullis, expressive of a double despair. Laban
- Tall's lips were thin, and his face were rigid. Matthew's
- jaws sank, and his eyes turned whichever way the
- strongest muscle happened to pull them.
- "Yes." said Joseph, "and I was sitting at home,
- looking for Ephesians, and says I to myself, "'Tis
- nothing but Corinthians and Thessalonians in this
- danged Testament." when who should come in but
- Henery there: "Joseph," he said, "the sheep have
- With Bathsheba it was a moment when thought was
- blasted theirselves -- "
- With Bathsheba it was a moment when thought was
- speech and speech exclamation. Moreover, she had
- hardly recovered her equanimity since the disturbance
- which she had suffered from Oak's remarks.
- "That's enought -- that's enough! -- oh, you fools!"
- she cried, throwing the parasol and Prayer-book into
- the passage, and running out of doors in the direction
- signified. "To come to me, and not go and get them
- out directly! Oh, the stupid numskulls!"
- Her eyes were at their darkest and brightest now.
- Bathsheba's beauty belonged rather to the demonian
- than to the angelic school, she never looked so well as
- when she was angry -- and particularly when the effect
- was heightened by a rather dashing velvet dress, care-
- fully put on before a glass.
- All the ancient men ran in a jumbled throng after
- her to the clover-field, Joseph sinking down in the
- midst when about half-way, like an individual withering
- in a world which was more and more insupportable.
- Having once received the stimulus that her presence
- always gave them they went round among the sheep
- with a will. The majority of the afflicted animals were
- lying down, and could not be stirred. These were
- bodily lifted out, and the others driven into the adjoining
- field. Here, after the lapse of a few minutes, several
- more fell down, and lay helpless and livid as the rest.
- Bathsheba, with a sad, bursting heart, looked at these
- primest specimens of her prime flock as they rolled
- there --
- Swoln with wind and the rank mist they drew.
- Many of them foamed at the mouth, their breathing
- being quick and short, whilst the bodies of all were
- fearfully distended.
- "O, what can I do, what can I do!" said Bathsheba,
- helplessly. "Sheep are such unfortunate animals! --
- there's always something happening to them! I never
- knew a flock pass a year without getting into some scrape
- or other."
- "There's only one way of saving them." said Tall.
- "What way? Tell me quick!"
- "They must be pierced in the side with a thing made
- on purpose."
- "Can you do it? Can I?"
- "No, ma'am. We can't, nor you neither. It must
- be done in a particular spot. If ye go to the right or
- left but an inch you stab the ewe and kill her. Not
- even a shepherd can do it, as a rule."
- "Then they must die." she said, in a resigned tone.
- "Only one man in the neighbourhood knows the way,"
- said Joseph, now just come up. "He could cure 'em
- all if he were here."
- "Who is he? Let's get him!"
- "Shepherd Oak," said Matthew. "Ah, he's a clever
- man in talents!"
- "Ah, that he is so!" said Joseph Poorgrass.
- "True -- he's the man." said Laban Tall.
- "How dare you name that man in my presence!" she
- said excitedly. "I told you never to allude to him, nor
- shall you if you stay with me. Ah!" she added, brighten-
- ing, "Farmer Boldwood knows!"
- "O no, ma'am" said Matthew. "Two of his store
- ewes got into some vetches t'other day, and were just
- like these. He sent a man on horseback here post-haste
- for Gable, and Gable went and saved 'em, Farmer
- Boldwood hev got the thing they do it with. 'Tis a
- holler pipe, with a sharp pricker inside. Isn't it,
- Joseph?"
- "Ay -- a holler pipe." echoed Joseph. "That's what
- 'tis."
- "Ay, sure -- that's the machine." chimed in Henery
- Fray, reflectively, with an Oriental indifference to the
- flight of time.
- "Well," burst out Bathsheba, "don't stand there with
- your "ayes" and your "sures" talking at me! Get
- somebody to cure the sheep instantly!"
- All then stalked or in consternation, to get some-
- body as directed, without any idea of who it was to be.
- In a minute they had vanished through the gate, and
- she stood alone with the dying flock.
- "Never will I send for him never!" she said firmly.
- One of the ewes here contracted its muscles horribly,
- extended itself, and jumped high into the air. The
- leap was an astonishing one. The ewe fell heavily, and
- lay still.
- Bathsheba went up to it. The sheep was dead.
- "O, what shall I do -- what shall I do!" she again
- exclaimed, wringing her hands. "I won't send for him.
- No, I won't!"
- The most vigorous expression of a resolution does
- not always coincide with the greatest vigour of the
- resolution itself. It is often flung out as a sort of prop
- to support a decaying conviction which, whilst strong,
- required no enunciation to prove it so. The "No, I
- won't" of Bathsheba meant virtually, "I think I must."
- She followed her assistants through the gate, and
- lifted her hand to one of them. Laban answered to her
- signal.
- "Where is Oak staying?"
- "Across the valley at Nest Cottage!"
- "Jump on the bay mare, and ride across, and say he
- must return instantly -- that I say so."
- Tall scrambled off to the field, and in two minutes
- was on Poll, the bay, bare-backed, and with only a
- halter by way of rein. He diminished down the
- hill.
- Bathsheba watched. So did all the rest. Tall
- cantered along the bridle-path through Sixteen Acres,
- Sheeplands, Middle Field The Flats, Cappel's Piece,
- shrank almost to a point, crossed the bridge, and
- ascended from the valley through Springmead and
- Whitepits on the other side. The cottage to which
- Gabriel had retired before taking his final departure
- from the locality was visible as a white spot on the
- opposite hill, backed by blue firs. Bathsheba walked
- up and down. The men entered the field and
- endeavoured to ease the anguish of the dumb creatures
- by rubbing them. Nothing availed.
- Bathsheba continued walking. The horse was seen
- descending the hill, and the wearisome series had to be
- repeated in reverse order: Whitepits, Springmead,
- Cappel's Piece, The Flats, Middle Field, Sheeplands,
- Sixteen Acres. She hoped Tall had had presence of
- mind enough to give the mare up to Gabriel, and return
- himself on foot. The rider neared them. It was Tall.
- "O, what folly!" said Bathsheba.
- Gabriel was not visible anywhere.
- "Perhaps he is already gone!" she said.
- Tall came into the inclosure, and leapt off, his face
- tragic as Morton's after the battle of Shrewsbury.
- "Well?" said Bathsheba, unwilling to believe that
- her verbal lettre-de-cachet could possibly have miscarried.
- "He says beggars mustn't be choosers." replied Laban.
- "What!" said the young farmer, opening her eyes
- and drawing in her breath for an outburst. Joseph
- Poorgrass retired a few steps behind a hurdle.
- "He says he shall not come unless you request en
- to come civilly and in a proper manner, as becomes any
- "woman begging a favour."
- "Oh, oh, that's his answer! Where does he get his
- airs? Who am I, then, to be treated like that? Shall
- I beg to a man who has begged to me?"
- Another of the flock sprang into the air, and fell
- dead.
- The men looked grave, as if they suppressed opinion.
- Bathsheba turned aside, her eyes full of tears. The
- strait she was in through pride and shrewishness could
- not be disguised longer: she burst out crying bitterly;
- they all saw it; and she attempted no further concealment.
- "I wouldn't cry about it, miss." said William Small-
- bury, compassionately. "Why not ask him softer like?
- I'm sure he'd come then. Gable is a true man in that
- way."
- Bathsheba checked her grief and wiped her eyes.
- "O, it is a wicked cruelty to me -- it is -- it is!" she
- murmured. "And he drives me to do what I wouldn't;
- yes, he does! -- Tall, come indoors."
- After this collapse, not very dignified for the head
- of an establishment, she went into the house, Tall at
- her heels. Here she sat down and hastily scribbled a
- note between the small convulsive sobs of convalescence
- which follow a fit of crying as a ground-swell follows a
- storm. The note was none the less polite for being
- written in a hurry. She held it at a distance, was
- about to fold it, then added these words at the
- bottom: --
- "Do not desert me, Gabriel!"
- She looked a little redder in refolding it, and closed
- her lips, as if thereby to suspend till too late the action
- of conscience in examining whether such strategy were
- justifiable. The note was despatched as the message
- had been, and Bathsheba waited indoors for the result.
- It was an anxious quarter of an hour that intervened
- between the messenger's departure and the sound of the
- horse's tramp again outside. She- could not watch this
- time, but, leaning over the old bureau at which she had
- written the letter, closed her eyes, as if to keep out both
- hope and fear.
- The case, however, was a promising one. Gabriel
- was not angry: he was simply neutral, although her first
- command had been so haughty. Such imperiousness
- would have damned a little less beauty; and on the
- other hand, such beauty would have redeemed a little
- less imperiousness.
- She went out when the horse was heard, and looked
- up. A mounted figure passed between her and the
- sky, and drew on towards the field of sheep, the rider
- turning his face in receding. Gabriel looked at her.
- It was a moment when a woman's eyes and tongue tell
- distinctly opposite tales. Bathsheba looked full of
- gratitude, and she said: --
- "O, Gabriel, how could you serve me so unkindly!"
- Such a tenderly-shaped reproach for his previous
- delay was the one speech in the language that he could
- pardon for not being commendation of his readiness
- now.
- Gabriel murmured a confused reply, and hastened
- on. She knew from the look which sentence in her
- note had brought him. Bathsheba followed to the
- field.
- Gabriel was already among the turgid, prostrate forms.
- He had flung off his coat, rolled up his shirt-sleeves,
- and taken from his pocket the instrument of salvation.
- It was a small tube or trochar, with a lance passing
- down the inside; and Gabriel began to use it with a
- dexterity that would have graced a hospital surgeon.
- Passing his hand over the sheep's left flank, and
- selecting the proper point, he punctured the skin and
- rumen with the lance as it stood in the tube; then he
- suddenly withdrew the lance, retaining the tube in its
- place. A current of air rushed up the tube, forcible
- enough to have extinguished a candle held at the
- orifice.
- It has been said that mere ease after torment is de-
- light for a time; and the countenances of these poor
- creatures expressed it now. Forty-nine operations were
- successfully performed. Owing to the great hurry
- necessitated by the far-gone state of some of the flock,
- Gabriel missed his aim in one case, and in one only --
- striking wide of the mark, and inflicting a mortal blow
- at once upon the suffering ewe. Four had died; three
- recovered without an operation. The total number of
- sheep which had thus strayed and injured themselves
- so dangerously was fifty-seven.
- When the love-led man had ceased from his labours,
- Bathsheba came and looked him in the face.
- "Gabriel, will you stay on with me?" she, said,
- smiling winningly, and not troubling to bring her lips
- quite together again at the end, because there was going
- to be another smile soon.
- "I will." said Gabriel.
- And she smiled on him again.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-
- THE GREAT BARN AND THE SHEEP-SHEARERS
-
-
- MEN thin away to insignificance and oblivion quite as
- often by not making the most of good spirits when they
- have them as by lacking good spirits when they are
- indispensable. Gabriel lately, for the first time since
- his prostration by misfortune, had been independent in
- thought and vigorous in action to a marked extent --
- conditions which, powerless without an opportunity as
- an opportunity without them is barren, would have
- given him a sure lift upwards when the favourable-con-
- junction should have occurred. But this incurable
- loitering beside Bathsheba Everdene stole his time
- ruinously. The spring tides were going by without
- floating him off, and the neap might soon come which
- could not.
- It was the first day of June, and the sheep-shearing
- season culminated, the landscape, even to the leanest
- pasture, being all health and colour. Every green was
- young, every pore was open, and every stalk was swollen
- with racing currents of juice. God was palpably present
- in the country, and the devil had gone with the world
- to town. Flossy catkins of the later kinds, fern-sprouts
- like bishops' croziers, the square-headed moschatel, the
- odd cuckoo-pint, -- like an apoplectic saint in a niche
- of malachite, -- snow-white ladies'-smocks, the toothwort,
- approximating to human flesh, the enchanter's night-
- shade, and the black-petaled doleful-bells, were among
- the quainter objects of the vegetable world in and about
- Weatherbury at this teeming time; and of the animal,
- the metamorphosed figures of Mr. Jan Coggan, the
- master-shearer; the second and third shearers, who
- travelled in the exercise of their calling, and do not re-
- quire definition by name; Henery Fray the fourth
- shearer, Susan Tall's husband the fifth, Joseph Poorgrass
- the sixth, young Cain Ball as assistant-shearer, and
- Gabriel Oak as general supervisor. None of these were
- clothed to any extent worth mentioning, each appearing
- to have hit in the matter of raiment the decent mean
- between a high and low caste Hindoo. An angularity
- of lineament, and a fixity of facial machinery in general,
- proclaimed that serious work was the order of the day.
- They sheared in the great barn, called for the nonce
- the Shearing-barn, which on ground-plan resembled a
- church with transepts. It not only emulated the form
- of the neighbouring church of the parish, but vied with
- it in antiquity. Whether the barn had ever formed one
- of a group of conventual buildings nobody seemed to be
- aware; no trace of such surroundings remained. The
- vast porches at the sides, lofty enough to admit a waggon
- laden to its highest with corn in the sheaf, were spanned
- by heavy-pointed arches of stone, broadly and boldly cut,
- whose very simplicity was the origin of a grandeur not
- apparent in erections where more ornament has been
- attempted. The dusky, filmed, chestnut roof, braced
- and tied in by huge collars, curves, and diagonals, was
- far nobler in design, because more wealthy in material,
- than nine-tenths of those in our modern churches.
- Along each side wall was a range of striding buttresses,
- throwing deep shadows on the spaces between them,
- which were perforated by lancet openings, combining
- in their proportions the precise requirements both of
- beauty and ventilation.
- One could say about this barn, what could hardly
- be said of either the church or the castle, akin to it in
- age and style, that the purpose which had dictated its
- original erection was the same with that to which it
- was still applied. Unlike and superior to either of
- those two typical remnants of mediaevalism, the old
- barn embodied practices which had suffered no mutila-
- tion at the hands of time. Here at least the spirit of
- the ancient builders was at one with the spirit of the
- modern beholder. Standing before this abraded pile,
- the eye regarded its present usage, the mind-dwelt upon
- its past history, with a satisfied sense of functional
- continuity throughout -- a feeling almost of gratitude,
- and quite of pride, at the permanence of the idea
- which had heaped it up. The fact that four centuries
- had neither proved it to be founded on a mistake,
- inspired any hatred of its purpose, nor given rise to
- any reaction that had battered it down, invested this
- simple grey effort of old minds with a repose, if not a
- grandeur, which a too curious reflection was apt to
- disturb in its ecclesiastical and military compeers. For
- once medievalism and modernism had a common stand-
- point. The lanccolate windows, the time-eaten arch-
- stones and chamfers, the orientation of the axis, the
- misty chestnut work of the rafters, referred to no exploded
- fortifying art or worn-out religious creed. The defence
- and salvation of the body by daily bread is still a study,
- a religion, and a desire.
- To-day the large side doors were thrown open
- towards the sun to admit a bountiful light to the
- immediate spot of the shearers' operations, which was
- the wood threshing-floor in the centre, formed of thick
- oak, black with age and polished by the beating of flails
- for many generations, till it had grown as slippery and
- as rich in hue as the state-room floors of an Elizabethan
- mansion. Here the shearers knelt, the sun slanting in
- upon their bleached shirts, tanned arms, and the polished
- shears they flourished, causing these to bristle with a
- thousand rays strong enough to blind a weak-eyed man.
- Beneath them a captive sheep lay panting, quickening
- its pants as misgiving merged in terror, till it quivered
- like the hot landscape outside.
- This picture of to-day in its frame of four hundred
- years ago did not produce that marked contrast between
- ancient and modern which is implied by the contrast
- of date. In comparison with cities, Weatherbury was
- immutable. The citizen's Then is the rustic's Now.
- In London, twenty or thirty-years ago are old times;
- in Paris ten years, or five; in Weatherbury three or
- four score years were included in the mere present,
- and nothing less than a century set a mark on its
- face or tone. Five decades hardly modified the cut of
- a gaiter, the embroidery of a smock-frock, by the breadth
- of a hair. Ten generations failed to alter the turn of
- a single phrase. In these Wessex nooks the busy out-
- sider's ancient times are only old; his old times are still
- new; his present is futurity.
- So the barn was natural to the shearers, and the
- shearers were in harmony with the barn.
- The spacious ends of the building, answering ecclesi-
- astically to nave and chancel extremities, were fenced
- off with hurdles, the sheep being all collected in a crowd
- within these two enclosures; and in one angle a catching-
- pen was formed, in which three or four sheep were
- continuously kept ready for the shearers to seize without
- loss of time. In the background, mellowed by tawny
- shade, were the three women, Maryann Money, and
- Temperance and Soberness Miller, gathering up the
- fleeces and twisting ropes of wool with a wimble for
- tying them round. They were indifferently well assisted
- by the old maltster, who, when the malting season from
- October to April had passed, made himself useful upon
- any of the bordering farmsteads.
- "Behind all was Bathsheba, carefully watching the
- men to see that there was no cutting or wounding
- through carelessness, and that the animals were shorn
- close. Gabriel, who flitted and hovered under her
- bright eyes like a moth, did not shear continuously,
- half his time being spent in attending to the others
- and selecting the sheep for them. At the present
- moment he was engaged in handing round a mug of
- mild liquor, supplied from a barrel in the corner,
- and cut pieces of bread and cheese.
- Bathsheba, after throwing a glance here, a caution
- there, and lecturing one of the younger operators who
- had allowed his last finished sheep to go off among
- the flock without re-stamping it with her initials, came
- again to Gabriel, as he put down the luncheon to drag
- a frightened ewe to his shear-station, flinging it over
- upon its back with a dexterous twist of the arm
- He lopped off the tresses about its head, and opened
- up the neck and collar, his mistress quietly looking
- on:
- "She blushes at the insult." murmured Bathsheba,
- watching the pink flush which arose and overspread
- the neck and shoulders of the ewe where they were
- left bare by the clicking shears -- a flush which was
- enviable, for its delicacy, by many queens of coteries,
- and would have been creditable, for its promptness, to
- any woman in the world.
- Poor Gabriel's soul was fed with a luxury of content
- by having her over him, her eyes critically regarding
- his skilful shears, which apparently were going to gather
- up a piece of the flesh at every close, and yet never did
- so. Like Guildenstern, Oak was happy in that he was
- not over happy. He had no wish to converse with her:
- that his bright lady and himself formed one group,
- exclusively their own, and containing no others in the
- world, was enough.
- So the chatter was all on her side. There is a
- loquacity that tells nothing, which was Bathsheba's;
- and there is a silence which says much: that was
- Gabriel's. Full of this dim and temperate bliss, he
- went on to fling the ewe over upon her other side,
- covering her head with his knee, gradually running
- the shears line after line round her dewlap; thence
- about her flank and back, and finishing over the tail.
- "Well done, and done quickly!" said Bathsheba,
- looking at her watch as the last snip resounded.
- "How long, miss?" said Gabriel, wiping his brow.
- "Three-and-twenty minutes and a half since you took
- the first lock from its forehead. It is the first time that
- I have ever seen one done in less than half an hour."
- The clean, sleek creature arose from its fleece -- how
- perfectly like Aphrodite rising from the foam should
- have been seen to be realized -- looking startled and
- shy at the loss of its garment, which lay on the floor
- in one soft cloud, united throughout, the portion visible
- being the inner surface only, which, never before exposed,
- was white as snow, and without flaw or blemish of the
- minutest kind.
- "Cain Ball!"
- "Yes, Mister Oak; here I be!"
- Cainy now runs forward with the tar-pot. "B. E." is
- newly stamped upon the shorn skin, and away the simple
- dam leaps, panting, over the board into the shirtless
- flock outside. Then up comes Maryann; throws the
- loose locks into the middle of the fleece, rolls it up,
- and carries it into the background as three-and-a-half
- pounds of unadulterated warmth for the winter enjoy-
- ment of persons unknown and far away, who will,
- however, never experience the superlative comfort
- derivable from the wool as it here exists, new and pure
- -- before the unctuousness of its nature whilst in a
- living state has dried, stiffened, and been washed out
- -- rendering it just now as superior to anything woollen
- as cream is superior to milk-and-water.
- But heartless circumstance could not leave entire
- Gabriel's happiness of this morning. The rams, old
- ewes, and two-shear ewes had duly undergone their
- stripping, and the men were proceeding with the shear-
- lings and hogs, when Oak's belief that she was going to
- stand pleasantly by and time him through another
- performance was painfully interrupted by Farmer Bold-
- wood's appearance in the extremest corner of the barn.
- Nobody seemed to have perceived his entry, but there
- he certainly was. Boldwood always carried with him a
- social atmosphere of his own, which everybody felt who
- came near him; and the talk, which Bathsheba's
- presence had somewhat suppressed, was now totally
- suspended.
- He crossed over towards Bathsheba, who turned to
- greet him with a carriage of perfect ease. He spoke to
- her in low tones, and she instinctively modulated her
- own to the same pitch, and her voice ultimately even
- caught the inflection of his. She was far from having
- a wish to appear mysteriously connected with him; but
- woman at the impressionable age gravitates to the larger
- body not only in her choice of words, which is apparent
- every day, but even in her shades of tone and humour,
- when the influence is great.
- What they conversed about was not audible to
- Gabriel, who was too independent to get near, though
- too concerned to disregard. The issue of their dialogue
- was the taking of her hand by the courteous farmer to
- help her over the spreading-board into the bright June
- sunlight outside. Standing beside the sheep already
- shorn, they went on talking again. Concerning the
- flock? Apparently not. Gabriel theorized, not without
- truth, that in quiet discussion of any matter within reach
- of the speakers' eyes, these are usually fixed upon it.
- Bathsheba demurely regarded a contemptible straw lying
- upon the ground, in a way which suggested less ovine
- criticism than womanly embarrassment. She became
- more or less red in the cheek, the blood wavering in
- uncertain flux and reflux over the sensitive space between
- ebb and flood. Gabriel sheared on, constrained and
- sad.
- She left Boldwood's side, and he walked up and
- down alone for nearly a quarter of an hour. Then she
- reappeared in her new riding-habit of myrtle-green, which
- fitted her to the waist as a rind fits its fruit; and young
- Bob Coggan led -on -her mare, Boldwood fetching his
- own horse from the tree under which it had been tied.
- Oak's eyes could not forsake them; and in en-
- deavouring to continue his shearing at the same time
- that he watched Boldwood's manner, he snipped the
- sheep in the groin. The animal plunged; Bathsheba
- instantly gazed towards it, and saw the blood.
- "O, Gabriel!" she exclaimed, with severe remon-
- strance you who are so strict with the other men -- see
- what you are doing yourself!"
- To an outsider there was not much to complain of
- in this remark; but to Oak, who "knew Bathsheba to be
- well aware that she herself was the cause of the poor
- ewe's wound, because she had wounded the ewe's shearer
- in a -- still more vital part, it had a sting which the abiding
- sense of his inferiority to both herself and Boldwood was
- not calculated to heal. But a manly resolve to recognize
- boldly that he had no longer a lover's interest in her,
- helped him occasionally to conceal a feeling.
- "Bottle!" he shouted, in an unmoved voice of routine.
- Cainy Ball ran up, the wound was anointed, and the
- shearing continued.
- Boldwood gently tossed Bathsheba into the saddle,
- and before they turned away she again spoke out to Oak
- with the same dominative and tantalizing graciousness.
- "I am going now to see Mr. Boldwood's Leicesters.
- Take my place in the barn, Gabriel, and keep the men
- carefully to their work."
- The horses' heads were put about, and they trotted
- away.
- Boldwood's deep attachment was a matter of great
- interest among all around him; but, after having been
- pointed out for so many years as the perfect exemplar
- of thriving bachelorship, his lapse was an anticlimax
- somewhat resembling that of St. John Long's death by
- consumption in the midst of his proofs that it was not
- a fatal disease.
- "That means matrimony." said Temperance Miller,
- following them out of sight with her eyes.
- "I reckon that's the size o't." said Coggan, working
- along without looking up.
- "Well, better wed over the mixen than over the moor,"
- said Laban Tall, turning his sheep.
- Henery Fray spoke, exhibiting miserable eyes at the
- same time: "I don't see why a maid should take a
- husband when she's bold enough to fight her own
- battles, and don't want a home; for 'tis keeping another
- woman out. But let it be, for 'tis a pity he and she
- should trouble two houses."
- As usual with decided characters, Bathsheba invari-
- ably provoked the criticism of individuals like Henery
- Fray. Her emblazoned fault was to be too pronounced
- in her objections, and not sufficiently overt in her
- likings. We learn that it is not the rays which bodies
- absorb, but those which they reject, that give them the
- colours they are known by; and win the same way people
- are specialized by their dislikes and antagonisms, whilst
- their goodwill is looked upon as no attribute at all.
- Henery continued in a more complaisant mood: "I
- once hinted my mind to her on a few things, as nearly
- as a battered frame dared to do so to such a froward
- piece. You all know, neighbours, what a man I be,
- and how I come down with my powerful words when
- my pride is boiling wi' scarn?"
- "We do, we do, Henery."
- "So I said, " Mistress Everdene, there's places empty,
- and there's gifted men willing; but the spite -- no. not
- the spite -- I didn't say spite -- "but the villainy of the
- contrarikind." I said (meaning womankind), " keeps 'em
- out." That wasn't too strong for her, say?"
- "Passably well put."
- "Yes; and I would have said it, had death and
- salvation overtook me for it. Such is my spirit when I
- have a mind."
- "A true man, and proud as a lucifer."
- "You see the artfulness? Why, 'twas about being
- baily really; but I didn't put it so plain that she could
- understand my meaning, so I could lay it on all the
- stronger. That was my depth! ... However, let her
- marry an she will. Perhaps 'tis high time. I believe
- Farmer Boldwood kissed her behind the spear-bed at the
- sheep-washing t'other day -- that I do."
- "What a lie!" said Gabriel.
- "Ah, neighbour Oak -- how'st know?" said, Henery,
- mildly.
- "Because she told me all that passed." said Oak, with
- a pharisaical sense that he was not as other shearers in
- this matter.
- "Ye have a right to believe it." said Henery, with
- dudgeon; "a very true right. But I mid see a little
- distance into things! To be long-headed enough for a
- baily's place is a poor mere trifle -- yet a trifle more than
- nothing. However, I look round upon life quite cool.
- Do you heed me, neighbours? My words, though made
- as simple as I can, mid be rather deep for some heads."
- "O yes, Henery, we quite heed ye."
- "A strange old piece, goodmen -- whirled about from
- here to yonder, as if I were nothing! A little warped,
- too. But I have my depths; ha, and even my great
- depths! I might gird at a certain shepherd, brain to
- brain. But no -- O no!"
- "A strange old piece, ye say!" interposed the maltster,
- in a querulous voice. "At the same time ye be no old
- man worth naming -- no old man at all. Yer teeth
- bain't half gone yet; and what's a old man's standing
- if se be his teeth bain't gone? Weren't I stale in
- wedlock afore ye were out of arms? 'Tis a poor thing
- to be sixty, when there's people far past four-score -- a
- boast'weak as water."
- It was the unvaying custom in Weatherbury to
- sink minor differences when the maltster had to be
- pacified.
- "Weak as-water! yes." said Jan Coggan.- "Malter,
- we feel ye to be a wonderful veteran man, and nobody
- can gainsay it."
- "Nobody." said Joseph Poorgrass. "Ye be a very
- rare old spectacle, malter, and we all admire ye for that
- gift. "
- "Ay, and as a young man, when my senses were in
- prosperity, I was likewise liked by a good-few who
- knowed me." said the maltster.
- "'Ithout doubt you was -- 'ithout doubt."
- The bent and hoary 'man was satisfied, and so
- apparently was Henery Frag. That matters should
- continue pleasant Maryann spoke, who, what with her
- brown complexion, and the working wrapper of rusty
- linsey, had at present the mellow hue of an old sketch
- in oils -- notably some of Nicholas Poussin's: --
- "Do anybody know of a crooked man, or a lame, or
- any second-hand fellow at all that would do for poor
- me?" said Maryann. "A perfect one I don't expect to
- at my time of life. If I could hear of such a thing
- twould do me more good than toast and ale."
- Coggan furnished a suitable reply. Oak went on
- with his shearing, and said not another word. Pestilent
- moods had come, and teased away his quiet. Bathsheba
- had shown indications of anointing him above his
- fellows by installing him as the bailiff that the farm
- imperatively required. He did not covet the post
- relatively to the farm: in relation to herself, as beloved
- by him and unmarried to another, he had coveted it.
- His readings of her seemed now to be vapoury and
- indistinct. His lecture to her was, he thought, one of
- the absurdest mistakes. Far from coquetting with
- Boldwood, she had trifled with himself in thus feigning
- that she had trifled with another. He was inwardly
- convinced that, in accordance with the anticipations of
- his easy-going and worse-educated comrades, that day
- would see Boldwood the accepted husband of Miss
- Everdene. Gabriel at this time of his life had out-
- grown the instinctive dislike which every Christian
- boy has for reading the Bible, perusing it now quite
- frequently, and he inwardly said, "I find more bitter
- than death the woman whose heart is snares and
- nets!" This was mere exclamation -- the froth of the
- storm. He adored Bathsheba just the same.
- "We workfolk shall have some lordly- junketing
- to-night." said Cainy Ball, casting forth his thoughts in
- a new direction. "This morning I see'em making the
- great puddens in the milking-pails -- lumps of fat as big
- as yer thumb, Mister Oak! I've never seed such
- splendid large knobs of fat before in the days of my
- life -- they never used to be bigger then a horse-bean.
- And there was a great black crock upon the brandish
- with his legs a-sticking out, but I don't know what was
- in within."
- "And there's two bushels of biffins for apple-pies,"
- said Maryann.
- "Well, I hope to do my duty by it all." said Joseph
- Poorgrass, in a pleasant, masticating manner of anticipa-
- tion. "Yes; victuals and drink is a cheerful thing,
- and gives nerves to the nerveless, if the form of words
- may be used. 'Tis the gospel of the body, without
- which we perish, so to speak it."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-
- EVENTIDE -- A SECOND DECLARATION
-
-
- FOR the shearing-supper a long table was placed on the
- grass-plot beside the house, the end of the table being
- thrust over the sill of the wide parlour window and a
- foot or two into the room. Miss Everdene sat inside
- the window, facing down the table. She was thus at
- the head without mingling with the men.
- This evening Bathsheba was unusually excited, her
- red cheeks and lips contrasting lustrously with the mazy
- skeins of her shadowy hair. She seemed to expect
- assistance, and the seat at the bottom of the table was
- at her request left vacant until after they had begun
- and the duties appertaining to that end, which he did
- with great readiness.
- At this moment Mr. Boldwood came in at the gate,
- and crossed the green to Bathsheba at the window.
- He apologized for his lateness: his arrival was evidently
- by arrangement.
- "Gabriel." said she, " will you move again, please,
- and let Mr. Boldwood come there?"
- Oak moved in silence back to his original seat.
- The gentleman-farmer was dressed in cheerful style,
- in a new coat and white waistcoat, quite contrasting
- with his usual sober suits of grey. Inwardy, too, he
- was blithe, and consequently chatty to an exceptional
- degree. So also was Bathsheba now that he had come,
- though the uninvited presence of Pennyways, the bailiff
- who had been dismissed for theft, disturbed her equan-
- imity for a while.
- Supper being ended, Coggan began on his own
- private account, without reference to listeners: --
- l've lost my love and l care not,
- I've lost my love, and l care not;
- I shall soon have another
- That's better than t'other!
- I've lost my love, and I care not.
- This lyric, when concluded, was received with a
- silently appreciative gaze at the table, implying that the
- performance, like a work by those established authors
- who are independent of notices in the papers, was a
- well-known delight which required no applause.
- "Now, Master Poorgrass, your song!" said Coggan.
- "I be all but in liquor, and the gift is wanting in
- me." said Joseph, diminishing himself.
- "Nonsense; wou'st never be so ungrateful, Joseph --
- never!" said Coggan, expressing hurt feelings by an
- inflection of voice. "And mistress is looking hard at
- ye, as much as to say, "Sing at once, Joseph Poor-
- grass."
- "Faith, so she is; well, I must suffer it! ... Just
- eye my features, and see if the tell-tale blood overheats
- me much, neighbours?"
- "No, yer blushes be quite reasonable." said Coggan.
- "I always tries to keep my colours from rising when
- a beauty's eyes get fixed on me." said Joseph, differently;
- "but if so be 'tis willed they do, they must."
- "Now, Joseph, your song, please." said Bathsheba,
- from the window.
- "Well, really, ma'am." he replied, in a yielding tone,
- "I don't know what to say. It would be a poor plain
- ballet of my own composure."
- Hear, hear!" said the supper-party.
- Poorgrass, thus assured, trilled forth a flickering yet
- commendable piece of sentiment, the tune of which
- consisted of the key-note and another, the latter being
- the sound chiefly dwelt upon. This was so successful
- that he rashly plunged into a second in the same
- breath, after a few false starts: --
- I sow'-ed th'-e
- I sow'-ed
- I sow'-ed the'-e seeds' of love',
- I-it was' all' i'-in the'-e spring',
- I-in A'-pril', Ma'-ay, a'-nd sun'-ny' June',
- When sma'-all bi'-irds they' do' sing.
- "Well put out of hand." said Coggan, at the end of the
- verse. `They do sing' was a very taking paragraph."
- "Ay; and there was a pretty place at "seeds of
- love." and 'twas well heaved out. Though "love " is
- a nasty high corner when a man's voice is getting
- crazed. Next verse, Master Poorgrass."
- But during this rendering young Bob Coggan ex-
- hibited one of those anomalies which will afflict little
- people when other persons are particularly serious: in
- trying to check his laughter, he pushed down his throat
- as much of the tablecloth as he could get hold of, when,
- after continuing hermetically sealed for a short time, his
- mirth burst out through his nose. Joseph perceived it,
- and with hectic cheeks of indignation instantly ceased
- singing. Coggan boxed Bob's ears immediately.
- "Go on, Joseph -- go on, and never mind the young
- scamp." said Coggan. "'Tis a very catching ballet.
- Now then again -- the next bar; I'll help ye to flourish
- up the shrill notes where yer wind is rather wheezy: --
- O the wi'-il-lo'-ow tree' will' twist',
- And the wil'-low' tre'-ee wi'ill twine'.
- But the singer could not be set going again. Bob
- Coggan was sent home for his ill manners, and tran-
- quility was restored by Jacob Smallbury, who volunteered
- a ballad as inclusive and interminable as that with which
- the worthy toper old Silenus amused on a similar occasion
- the swains Chromis and Mnasylus, and other jolly dogs
- of his day.
- It was still the beaming time of evening, though
- night was stealthily making itself visible low down upon
- the ground, the western lines of light taking the earth
- without alighting upon it to any extent, or illuminating
- the dead levels at all. The sun had crept round the
- tree as a last effort before death, and then began to
- sink, the shearers' lower parts becoming steeped in
- embrowning twilight, whilst their heads and shoulders
- were still enjoying day, touched with a yellow of self-
- sustained brilliancy that seemed inherent rather than
- acquired.
- The sun went down in an ochreous mist; but they
- sat, and talked on, and grew as merry as the gods in
- Homer's heaven. Bathsheba still remained enthroned
- inside the window, and occupied herself in knitting,
- from which she sometimes looked up to view the fading
- scene outside. The slow twilight expanded and enveloped
- them completely before the signs of moving were shown.
- Gabriel suddenly missed Farmer Boldwood from his
- place at the bottom of the table. How long he had
- been gone Oak did not know; but he had apparently
- withdrawn into the encircling dusk. Whilst he was
- thinking of this, Liddy brought candles into the back
- part of the room overlooking the shearers, and their
- lively new flames shone down the table and over the
- men, and dispersed among the green shadows behind.
- Bathsheba's form, still in its original position, was now
- again distinct between their eyes and the light, which
- revealed that Boldwood had gone inside the room, and
- was sitting near her.
- Next came the question of the evening. Would Miss
- Everdene sing to them the song she always sang so
- charmingly -- " The Banks of Allan Water" -- before they
- went home?
- After a moment's consideration Bathsheba assented,
- beckoning to Gabriel, who hastened up into the coveted
- atmosphere.
- "Have you brought your flute? " she whispered.
- "Yes, miss."
- "Play to my singing, then."
- She stood up in the window-opening, facing the
- men, the candles behind her, Gabriel on her right hand,
- immediately outside the sash-frame. Boldwood had
- drawn up on her left, within the room. Her singing
- was soft and rather tremulous at first, but it soon swelled
- to a steady clearness. Subsequent events caused one
- of the verses to be remembered for many months, and
- even years, by more than one of those who were gathered
- there: --
- For his bride a soldier sought her,
- And a winning tongue had he:
- On the banks of Allan Water
- None was gay as she!
- In addition to the dulcet piping of Gabriel's flute,
- Boldwood supplied a bass in his customary profound
- voice, uttering his notes so softly, however, as to abstain
- entirely from making anything like an ordinary duet of
- the song; they rather formed a rich unexplored shadow,
- which threw her tones into relief. The shearers reclined
- against each other as at suppers in the early ages of the
- world, and so silent and absorbed were they that her
- breathing could almost be heard between the bars; and
- at the end of the ballad, when the last tone loitered on
- to an inexpressible close, there arose that buzz of
- pleasure which is the attar of applause.
- It is scarcely necessary to state that Gabriel could
- not avoid noting the farmer's bearing to-night towards
- their entertainer. Yet there was nothing exceptional in
- his actions beyond what appertained to his time of
- performing them. It was when the rest were all looking
- away that Boldwood observed her; when they regarded
- her he turned aside; when they thanked or praised he
- was silent; when they were inattentive he murmured
- his thanks. The meaning lay in the difference between
- actions, none of which had any meaning of itself;
- and the necessity of being jealous, which lovers are
- troubled with, did not lead Oak to underestimate these
- signs.
- Bathsheba then wished them good-night, withdrew
- from the window, and retired to the back part of the
- room, Boldwood thereupon closing the sash and the
- shutters, and remaining inside with her. Oak wandered
- away under the quiet and scented trees. Recovering
- from the softer impressions produced by Bathsheba's
- voice, the shearers rose to leave, Coggan turning to
- Pennyways as he pushed back the bench to pass out: --
- "I like to give praise where praise is due, and the
- man deserves it -- that 'a do so." he remarked, looking at
- the worthy thief, as if he were the masterpiece of some
- world-renowned artist.
- "I'm sure I should never have believed it if we hadn't
- proved it, so to allude," hiccupped Joseph Poorgrass, "that
- every cup, every one of the best knives and forks, and
- every empty bottle be in their place as perfect now as
- at the beginning, and not one stole at all.
- "I'm sure I don't deserve half the praise you give
- me." said the virtuous thief, grimly.
- "Well, I'll say this for Pennyways." added Coggan,
- "that whenever he do really make up his mind to do a
- noble thing in the shape of a good action, as I could
- see by his face he. did to-night afore sitting down, he's
- generally able to carry it out. Yes, I'm proud to say.
- neighbours, that he's stole nothing at all.
- "Well." -- 'tis an honest deed, and we thank ye for it,
- Pennyways." said Joseph; to which opinion the remainder
- of the company subscribed unanimously.
- At this time of departure, when nothing more was
- visible of the inside of the parlour than a thin and still
- chink of light between the shutters, a passionate scene
- was in course of enactment there."
- Miss Everdene and Boldwood were alone. Her
- cheeks had lost a great deal of their healthful fire from
- the very seriousness of her position; but her eye was
- bright with the excitement of a triumph -- though it was
- a triumph which had rather been contemplated than
- desired.
- She was standing behind a low arm-chair, from which
- she had just risen, and he was kneeling in it -- inclining
- himself over its back towards her, and holding her hand
- in both his own. His body moved restlessly, and it was
- with what Keats daintily calls a too happy happiness.
- This unwonted abstraction by love of all dignity from
- a man of whom it had ever seemed the chief component,
- was, in its distressing incongruity, a pain to her which
- quenched much of the pleasure she derived from the
- proof that she was idolized.
- "I will try to love you." she was saying, in a trembling
- voice quite unlike her usual self-confidence. "And if I
- can believe in any way that I shall make you a good
- wife I shall indeed be willing to marry you. But, Mr.
- Boldwood, hesitation on so high a matter is honourable
- in any woman, and I don't want to give a solemn
- promise to-night. I would rather ask you to wait a few
- weeks till I can see my situation better."But you have every reason to
- believe that then -- -- "
- "I have every reason to hope that at the end of the five or
- six weeks, between this time and harvest, that
- you say you are going to be away from home, I shall be
- able to promise to be your wife." she said, firmly. "But
- remember this distinctly, I don't promise yet."
- "It is enough I don't ask more. I can wait on
- those dear words. And now, Miss Everdene, good-
- night!"
- "Good-night." she said, graciously -- almost tenderly;
- and Boldwood withdrew with a serene smile.
- Bathsheba knew more of him now; he had entirely
- bared his heart before her, even until he had almost
- worn in her eyes the sorry look of a grand bird without
- the feathers that make it grand. She had been awe-
- struck at her past temerity, and was struggling to make
- amends without thinking whether the sin quite deserved
- the penalty she was schooling herself to pay. To have
- brought all this about her ears was terrible; but after a
- while the situation was not without a fearful joy. The
- facility with which even the most timid woman some-
- times acquire a relish for the dreadful when that is
- amalgamated with a little triumph, is marvellous.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-
- THE SAME NIGHT -- THE FIR PLANTATION
-
-
- AMONG the multifarious duties which Bathsheba had
- voluntarily imposed upon herself by dispensing with the
- services of a bailiff, was the particular one of looking
- round the homestead before going to bed, to see that
- all was right and safe for the night. Gabriel had almost
- constantly preceded her in this tour every evening,
- watching her affairs as carefully as any specially appointed
- officer of surveillance could have done; but this tender
- devotion was to a great extent unknown to his mistress,
- and as much as was known was somewhat thanklessly
- received. Women are never tired of bewailing man's
- fickleness in love, but they only seem to snub his con-
- stancy.
- As watching is best done invisibly, she usually carried
- a dark lantern in her hand, and every now and then
- turned on the light to examine nooks and corners with
- the coolness of a metropolitan policeman. This cool-
- ness may have owed its existence not so much to her
- fearlessness of expected danger as to her freedom from
- the suspicion of any; her worst anticipated discovery
- being that a horse might not be well bedded, the fowls
- not all in, or a door not closed.
- This night the buildings were inspected as usual,
- and she went round to the farm paddock. Here the
- only sounds disturbing the stillness were steady munch-
- ings of many mouths, and stentorian breathings from all
- but invisible noses, ending in snores and puffs like the
- blowing of bellows slowly. Then the munching would
- recommence, when the lively imagination might assist
- the eye to discern a group of pink-white nostrils, shaped
- as caverns, and very clammy and humid on their sur-
- faces, not exactly pleasant to the touch until one got
- used to them; the mouths beneath having a great
- partiality for closing upon any loose end of Bathsheba's
- apparel which came within reach of their tongues.
- Above each of these a still keener vision suggested a
- brown forehead and two staring though not unfriendly
- eyes, and above all a pair of whitish crescent-shaped
- horns like two particularly new moons, an occasional
- stolid " moo!" proclaiming beyond the shade of a doubt
- that these phenomena were the features and persons of
- Daisy, Whitefoot, Bonny-lass, Jolly-O, Spot, Twinkle-eye,
- etc., etc. -- the respectable dairy of Devon cows belonging
- to Bathsheba aforesaid.
- Her way back to the house was by a path through a
- young plantation of tapering firs, which had been planted
- some years earlier to shelter the premises from the north
- wind. By reason of the density of the interwoven foliage
- overhead, it was gloomy there at cloudless noontide,
- twilight in the evening, dark as midnight at dusk, and
- black as the ninth plague of Egypt at midnight. To
- describe the spot is to call it a vast, low, naturally formed
- hall, the plumy ceiling of which was supported by slender
- pillars of living wood, the floor being covered with a soft
- dun carpet of dead spikelets and mildewed cones, with
- a tuft of grass-blades here and there.
- This bit of the path was always the crux of the
- night's ramble, though, before starting, her apprehen-
- sions of danger were not vivid enough to lead her to
- take a companion. Slipping along here covertly as
- Time, Bathsheba fancied she could hear footsteps enter-
- ing the track at the opposite end. It was certainly a
- rustle of footsteps. Her own instantly fell as gently as
- snowflakes. She reassured herself by a remembrance
- that the path was public, and that the traveller was
- probably some villager returning home; regetting, at
- the same time, that the meeting should be about to
- occur in the darkest point of her route, even though
- only just outside her own door.
- The noise approached, came close, and a figure was
- apparently on the point of gliding past her when some-
- thing tugged at her skirt and pinned it forcibly to the
- ground. The instantaneous check nearly threw Bath-
- sheba off her balance. In recovering she struck against
- warm clothes and buttons.
- "A rum start, upon my soul!" said a masculine voice,
- a foot or so above her head. "Have I hurt you, mate?"
- "No." said Bathsheba, attempting to shrink a way.
- "We have got hitched together somehow, I think."
- "Yes."
- "Are you a woman?"
- "Yes."
- "A lady, I should have said."
- "It doesn't matter."
- "I am a man."
- "Oh!"
- Bathsheba softly tugged again, but to no purpose.
- "Is that a dark lantern you have? I fancy so." said
- the man.
- "Yes."
- "If you'll allow me I'll open it, and set you free."
- A hand seized the lantern, the door was opened, the
- rays burst out from their prison, and Bathsheba beheld
- her position with astonishment.
- The man to whom she was hooked was brilliant in
- brass and scarlet. He was a soldier. His sudden
- appearance was to darkness what the sound of a trumpet
- is to silense. Gloom, the genius loci at all times hitherto,
- was now totally overthrown, less by the lantern-light
- than by what the lantern lighted. The contrast of this
- revelation with her anticipations of some sinister figure
- in sombre garb was so great that it had upon her the
- effect of a fairy transformation.
- It was immediately apparent that the military man's
- spur had become entangled in the gimp which decorated
- the skirt of her dress. He caught a view of her face.
- "I'll unfasten you in one moment, miss." he said,
- with new-born gallantry.
- "O no -- I can do it, thank you." she hastily replied,
- and stooped for the performance.
- The unfastening was not such a trifling affair. The
- rowel of the spur had so wound itself among the gimp
- cords in those few moments, that separation was likely
- to be a matter of time.
- He too stooped, and the lantern standing on the
- ground betwixt them threw the gleam from its open side
- among the fir-tree needles and the blades of long damp
- grass with the effect of a large glowworm. It radiated
- upwards into their faces, and sent over half the planta-
- tion gigantic shadows of both man and woman, each
- dusky shape becoming distorted and mangled upon the
- tree-trunks till it wasted to nothing.
- He looked hard into her eyes when she raised them
- for a moment; Bathsheba looked down again, for his
- gaze was too strong to be received point-blank with her
- own. But she had obliquely noticed that he was young
- and slim, and that he wore three chevrons upon his
- sleeve.
- Bathsheba pulled again.
- "You are a prisoner, miss; it is no use blinking the
- matter." said the soldier, drily. "I must cut your dress
- if you are in such a hurry."
- "Yes -- please do!" she exclaimed, helplessly. "
- "It wouldn't be necessary if you could wait a
- moment," and he unwound a cord from the little
- wheel. She withdrew her own hand, but, whether by
- accident or design, he touched it. Bathsheba was
- vexed; she hardly knew why.
- His unravelling went on, but it nevertheless seemed
- coming to no end. She looked at him again.
- "Thank you for the sight of such a beautiful face!"
- said the young sergeant, without ceremony.
- She coloured with embarrassment. "'Twas un-
- willingly shown." she replied, stiffly, and with as much
- dignity -- which was very little -- as she could infuse into
- a position of captivity
- "I like you the better for that incivility, miss." he
- said.
- "I should have liked -- I wish -- you had never shown
- yourself to me by intruding here!" She pulled again,
- and the gathers of her dress began to give way like
- liliputian musketry.
- "I deserve the chastisement your words give me.
- But why should such a fair and dutiful girl have such
- an aversion to her father's sex?"
- "Go on your way, please."
- "What, Beauty, and drag you after me? Do but
- look; I never saw such a tangle!"
- "O, 'tis shameful of you; you have been making
- it worse on purpose to keep me here -- you have!"
- "Indeed, I don't think so." said the sergeant, with a
- merry twinkle.
- "I tell you you have!" she exclaimed, in high
- temper. I insist upon undoing it. Now, allow me!"
- "Certainly, miss; I am not of steel." He added a
- sigh which had as much archness in it as a sigh could
- possess without losing its nature altogether. "I am
- thankful for beauty, even when 'tis thrown to me like
- a bone to a dog. These moments will be over too
- soon!"
- She closed her lips in a determined silence.
- Bathsheba was revolving in her mind whether by a
- bold and desperate rush she could free herself at the
- risk of leaving her skirt bodily behind her. The
- thought was too dreadful. The dress -- which she had
- put on to appear stately at the supper -- was the head
- and front of her wardrobe; not another in her stock
- became her so well. What woman in Bathsheba's
- position, not naturally timid, and within call of her
- retainers, would have bought escape from a dashing
- soldier at so dear a price?
- "All in good time; it will soon be done, I perceive,"
- said her cool friend.
- "This trifling provokes, and -- and -- -- "
- "Not too cruel!"
- "-- Insults me!"
- "It is done in order that I may have the pleasure
- of apologizing to so charming a woman, which I
- straightway do most humbly, madam." he said, bowing
- low.
- Bathsheba really knew not what to say.
- "I've seen a good many women in my time,
- continued the young man in a murmur, and more
- thoughtfully than hitherto, critically regarding her bent
- head at the same time; "but I've never seen a woman
- so beautiful as you. Take it or leave it -- be offended
- or like it -- I don't care."
- "Who are you, then, who can so well afford to
- despise opinion?"
- "No stranger. Sergeant Troy. I am staying in
- this place. -- There! it is undone at last, you see.
- Your light fingers were more eager than mine. I wish it
- had been the knot of knots, which there's no untying!"
- This was worse and worse. She started up, and so
- did he. How to decently get away from him -- that
- was her difficulty now. She sidled off inch by inch,
- the lantern in her hand, till she could see the redness
- of his coat no longer.
- "Ah, Beauty; good-bye!" he said.
- She made no reply, and, reaching a distance of
- twenty or thirty yards, turned about, and ran indoors.
- Liddy had just retired to rest. In ascending to her
- own chamber, Bathsheba opened the girl's door an
- inch or two, and, panting, said --
- "Liddy, is any soldier staying in the village --
- sergeant somebody -- rather gentlemanly for a sergeant,
- and good looking -- a red coat with blue facings?"
- "No, miss ... No, I say; but really it might be
- Sergeant Troy home on furlough, though I have not
- seen him. He was here once in that way when the
- regiment was at Casterbridge."
- "Yes; that's the name. Had he a moustache -- no
- whiskers or beard?"
- "He had."
- "What kind of a person is he?"
- "O! miss -- I blush to name it -- a gay man! But
- I know him to be very quick and trim, who might have
- made his thousands, like a squire. Such a clever
- young dandy as he is! He's a doctor's son by name,
- which is a great deal; and he's an earl's son by
- nature!"
- "Which is a great deal more. Fancy! Is it true?"
- "Yes. And, he was brought up so well, and sent to
- Casterbridge Grammar School for years and years.
- Learnt all languages while he was there; and it was
- said he got on so far that he could take down Chinese
- in shorthand; but that I don't answer for, as it was
- only reported. However, he wasted his gifted lot,
- and listed a soldier; but even then he rose to be a
- sergeant without trying at all. Ah! such a blessing it
- is to be high-born; nobility of blood will shine out even
- in the ranks and files. And is he really come home,
- miss?"
- "I believe so. Good-night, Liddy."
- After all, how could a cheerful wearer of skirts
- be permanently offended with the man? There are
- occasions when girls like Bathsheba will put up with
- a great deal of unconventional behaviour. When they
- want to be praised, which is often, when they want to
- be mastered, which is sometimes; and when they want
- no nonsense, which is seldom. Just now the first
- feeling was in the ascendant with Bathsheba, with a dash
- of the second. Moreover, by chance or by devilry, the
- ministrant was antecedently made interesting by being
- a handsome stranger who had evidently seen better
- days.
- So she could not clearly decide whether it was her
- opinion that he had insulted her or not. "
- "Was ever anything so odd!" she at last exclaimed
- to herself, in her own room. "And was ever anything
- so meanly done as what I did do to sulk away like that
- from a man who was only civil and kind!" Clearly she
- did not think his barefaced praise of her person an
- insult now.
- It was a fatal omission of Boldwood's that he had
- never once told her she was beautiful.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
-
-
- THE NEW ACQUAINTANCE DESCRIBED
-
-
- IDIOSYNCRASY and vicissitude had combined to
- stamp Sergeant Troy as an exceptional being.
- He was a man to whom memories were an in-
- cumbrance, and anticipations a superfluity. Simply
- feeling, considering, and caring for what was before his
- eyes, he was vulnerable only in the present. His out-
- look upon time was as a transient flash of the eye now
- and then: that projection of consciousness into days
- gone by and to come, which makes the past a synonym
- for the pathetic and the future a word for circum-
- spection, was foreign to Troy. With him the past
- was yesterday; the future, to-morrow; never, the day
- after.
- On this account he might, in certain lights, have
- been regarded as one of the most fortunate of his
- order. For it may be argued with great plausibility
- that reminiscence is less an endowment than a disease,
- and that expectation in its only comfortable form -- that
- of absolute faith -- is practically an impossibility; whilst
- in the form of hope and the secondary compounds,
- patience, impatience, resolve, curiosity, it is a constant
- fluctuation between pleasure and pain.
- Sergeant Troy, being entirely innocent of the
- practice of expectation, was never disappointed. To
- set against this negative gain there may have been
- some positive losses from a certain narrowing of the
- higher tastes and sensations which it entailed. But
- limitation of the capacity is never recognized as a loss
- by the loser therefrom: in this attribute moral or
- aesthetic poverty contrasts plausibly with material, since
- those who suffer do not mind it, whilst those who mind
- it soon cease to suffer. It is not a denial of anything
- to have been always without it, and what Troy had
- never enjoyed he did not miss; but, being fully
- conscious that what sober people missed he enjoyed,
- his capacity, though really less, seemed greater than
- theirs.
- He was moderately truthful towards men, but to
- women lied like a Cretan -- a system of ethics above all
- others calculated to win popularity at the first flush of
- admission into lively society; and the possibility of the
- favour gained being transitory had reference only to
- the future.
- He never passed the line which divides the spruce
- vices from the ugly; and hence, though his morals had
- hardly been applauded, disapproval of them" had fre-
- quently been tempered with a smile. This treatment
- had led to his becoming a sort of regrater of other
- men's gallantries, to his own aggrandizement as a
- Corinthian, rather than to the moral profit of his
- hearers.
- His reason and his propensities had seldom any
- reciprocating influence, having separated by mutual
- consent long ago: thence it sometimes happened that,
- while his intentions were as honourable as could be
- wished, any particular deed formed a dark background
- which threw them into fine relief. The sergeant's
- vicious phases being the offspring of impulse, and
- his virtuous phases of cool meditation, the latter
- had a modest tendency to be oftener heard of than
- seen.
- Troy was full of activity, but his activities were less of
- a locomotive than a vegetative nature; and, never being
- based upon any original choice of foundation or direc-
- tion, they were exercised on whatever object chance
- might place in their way. Hence, whilst he sometimes
- reached the brilliant in speech because that -was
- spontaneous, he fell below the commonplace in action,
- from inability to guide incipient effort. He had a
- quick comprehension and considerable force of char-
- acter; but, being without the power to combine them,
- the comprehension became engaged with trivialities
- whilst waiting for the will to direct it, and the force
- wasted itself in useless grooves through unheeding the
- comprehension.
- He was a fairly well-educated man for one of middle
- class -- exceptionally well educated for a common soldier.
- He spoke fluently and unceasingly. He could in this
- way be one thing and seem another: for instance, he
- could speak of love and think of dinner; call on the
- intend to owe.
- The wondrous power of flattery in passados at woman
- is a perception so universal as to be remarked upon by
- many people almost as automatically as they repeat a
- proverb, or say that they are Christians and the like,
- without thinking much of the enormous corollaries
- which spring from the proposition. Still less is it acted
- upon for the good of the complemental being alluded
- to. With the majority such an opinion is shelved with
- all those trite aphorisms which require some catastrophe
- to bring their tremendous meanings thoroughly home.
- When expressed with some amount of reflectiveness it
- seems co-ordinate with a belief that this flattery must
- be reasonable to be effective. It is to the credit of
- men that few attempt to settle the question by experi-
- ment, and it is for their happiness, perhaps, that accident
- has never settled it for them. Nevertheless, that a
- male dissembler who by deluging her with untenable
- fictions charms the female wisely, may acquire powers
- reaching to the extremity of perdition, is a truth taught
- to many by unsought and wringing occurrences. And
- some profess to have attained to the same knowledge
- by experiment as aforesaid, and jauntily continue their
- indulgence in such experiments with terrible effect.
- Sergeant Troy was one.
- He had been known to observe casually that in
- dealing with womankind the only alternative to flattery
- was cursing and swearing. There was no third method.
- "Treat them fairly, and you are a lost man." he would
- say.
- This philosopher's public appearance in Weatherbury
- promptly followed his arrival there. A week or two
- after the shearing, Bathsheba, feeling a nameless relief
- of spirits on account of Boldwood's absence, approached
- her hayfields and looked over the hedge towards the
- haymakers. They consisted in about equal proportions
- of gnarled and flexuous forms, the former being the
- men, the latter the women, who wore tilt bonnets
- covered with nankeen, which hung in a curtain upon
- their shoulders. Coggan and Mark Clark were mowing
- in a less forward meadow, Clark humming a tune to
- the strokes of his scythe, to which Jan made no attempt
- to keep time with his. In the first mead they were
- already loading hay, the women raking it into cocks
- and windrows, and the men tossing it upon the
- waggon.
- From behind the waggon a bright scarlet spot
- emerged, and went on loading unconcernedly with the
- rest. It was the gallant sergeant, who had come hay-
- making for pleasure; and nobody could deny that he
- was doing the mistress of the farm real knight-service
- by this voluntary contribution of his labour at a busy
- time.
- As soon as she had entered the field Troy saw her,
- and sticking his pitchfork into the ground and picking
- up his crop or cane, he came forward. Bathsheba
- blushed with half-angry embarrassment, and adjusted
- her eyes as well as her feet to the direct line of her
- path.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
-
- SCENE ON THE VERGE OF THE HAY-MEAD
-
-
- "AH, Miss Everdene!" said the sergeant, touching his
- diminutive cap. "Little did I think it was you I was
- speaking to the other night. And yet, if I had reflected,
- the "Queen of the Corn-market" (truth is truth at any
- hour of the day or night, and I heard you so named in
- Casterbridge yesterday), the "Queen of the Corn-market."
- I say, could be no other woman. I step across now to
- beg your forgiveness a thousand times for having been
- led by my feelings to express myself too strongly for a
- stranger. To be sure I am no stranger to the place --
- I am Sergeant Troy, as I told you, and I have assisted
- your uncle in these fields no end of times when I was a
- lad. I have been doing the same for you today."
- "I suppose I must thank you for that, Sergeant
- Troy." said the Queen of the Corn-market, in an in-
- differently grateful tone.
- The sergeant looked hurt and sad. "Indeed you
- must not, Miss Everdene." he said. "Why could you
- think such a thing necessary?"
- "I am glad it is not."
- "Why? if I may ask without offence."
- "Because I don't much want to thank you for any"
- thing."
- "I am afraid I have made a hole with my tongue
- that my heart will never mend. O these intolerable
- times: that ill-luck should follow a man for honestly
- telling a woman she is beautiful! 'Twas the most I
- said -- you must own that; and the least I could say --
- that I own myself."
- "There is some talk I could do without more easily
- than money."
- "Indeed. That remark is a sort of digression."
- "No. It means that I would rather have your room
- than your company."
- "And I would rather have curses from you than
- kisses from any other woman; so I'll stay here."
- Bathsheba was absolutely speechless. And yet she
- could not help feeling that the assistance he was render-
- ing forbade a harsh repulse.
- "Well." continued Troy, "I suppose there is a praise
- which is rudeness, and that may be mine. At the
- same time there is a treatment which is injustice, and
- that may be yours. Because a plain blunt man, who
- has never been taught concealment, speaks out his
- mind without exactly intending it, he's to be snapped
- off like the son of a sinner."
- "Indeed there's no such case between us." she said,
- turning away. "I don't allow strangers to be bold and
- impudent -- even in praise of me."
- "Ah -- it is not the fact but the method which offends
- you." he said, carelessly. "But I have the sad satis-
- faction of knowing that my words, whether pleasing or
- offensive, are unmistakably true. Would you have had
- me look at you, and tell my acquaintance that you are
- quite a common-place woman, to save you the embar-
- rassment of being stared at if they come near you?
- Not I. I couldn't tell any such ridiculous lie about
- a beauty to encourage a single woman in England in
- too excessive a modesty."
- "It is all pretence -- what you are saying!" exclaimed
- Bathsheba, laughing in spite of herself at the sergeant's
- sly method. "You have a rare invention, Sergeant
- Troy. Why couldn't you have passed by me that
- night, and said nothing? -- that was all I meant to
- reproach you for."
- "Because I wasn't going to. Half the pleasure of
- a feeling lies in being able to express it on the spur of
- the moment, and I let out mine. It would have been
- just the same if you had been the reverse person -- ugly
- and old -- I should have exclaimed about it in the same
- way. "
- "How long is it since you have been so afflicted with
- strong feeling, then?"
- "Oh, ever since I was big enough to know loveliness
- from deformity."
- "'Tis to be hoped your sense of the difference you
- speak of doesn't stop at faces, but extends to morals as
- well. "
- "I won't speak of morals or religion -- my own or
- anybody else's. Though perhaps I should have been a
- very good Christian if you pretty women hadn't made
- me an idolater."
- Bathsheba moved on to hide the irrepressible dimp-
- lings of merriment. Troy followed, whirling his crop.
- "But -- Miss Everdene -- you do forgive me?"
- "Hardly. "
- "Why?"
- "You say such things."
- "I said you were beautiful, and I'll say so still; for,
- by -- so you are! The most beautiful ever I saw, or
- may I fall dead this instant! Why, upon my -- -- "
- "Don't -- don't! I won't listen to you -- you are so
- profane!" she said, in a restless state between distress
- at hearing him and a penchant to hear more.
- "I again say you are a most fascinating woman.
- There's nothing remarkable in my saying so, is there?
- I'm sure the fact is evident enough. Miss Everdene,
- my opinion may be too forcibly let out to please you,
- and, for the matter of that, too insignificant to convince
- you, but surely it is honest, and why can't it be ex-
- cused? "
- "Because it -- it isn't a correct one." she femininely
- murmured.
- "O, fie -- fie-! Am I any worse for breaking the
- third of that Terrible Ten than you for breaking the
- ninth?"
- "Well, it doesn't seem quite true to me that I am
- fascinating." she replied evasively.
- "Not so to you: then I say with all respect that, if
- so, it is owing to your modesty, Miss Everdene. But
- surely you must have been told by everybody of what
- everybody notices? and you should take their words
- for it."
- "They don't say so exactly."
- "O yes, they must!"
- "Well, I mean to my face, as you do." she went on,
- allowing herself to be further lured into a conversation
- that intention had rigorously forbidden.
- "But you know they think so?"
- "No -- that is -- I certainly have heard Liddy say
- they do, but -- --" She paused.
- Capitulation -- that was the purport of the simple
- reply, guarded as it was -- capitulation, unknown to her-
- self. Never did a fragile tailless sentence convey a
- more perfect meaning. The careless sergeant smiled
- within himself, and probably too the devil smiled from
- a loop-hole in Tophet, for the moment was the turning-
- point of a career. Her tone and mien signified beyond
- mistake that the seed which was to lift the foundation
- had taken root in the chink: the remainder was a mere
- question of time and natural changes.
- "There the truth comes out!" said the soldier, in
- reply. "Never tell me that a young lady can live in a
- buzz of admiration without knowing something about it.
- Ah." well, Miss Everdene, you are -- pardon my blunt
- way -- you are rather an injury to our race than other-
- wise.
- "How -- indeed?" she said, opening her eyes.
- "O, it is true enough. I may as well be hung for
- a sheep as a lamb (an old country saying, not of much
- account, but it will do for a rough soldier), and so I
- will speak my mind, regardless of your pleasure, and
- without hoping or intending to get your pardon. Why,
- Miss Everdene, it is in this manner that your good
- looks may do more. harm than good in the world."
- The sergeant looked down the mead in critical abstrac-
- ion. "Probably some one man on an average falls in"
- love, with each ordinary woman. She can marry him:
- he is content, and leads a useful life. Such women as
- you a hundred men always covet -- your eyes will be-
- witch scores on scores into an unavailing fancy for you
- you can only marry one of that many. Out of these
- say twenty will endeavour to. drown the bitterness of
- espised love in drink; twenty more will mope away
- their lives without a wish or attempt to make a mark in
- he world, because they have no ambition apart from
- their attachment to you; twenty more -- the susceptible
- person myself possibly among them -- will be always
- draggling after you, getting where they may just see
- you, doing desperate things. Men are such constant
- fools! The rest may try to get over their passion with
- more or less success. But all these men will be
- saddened. And not only those ninety-nine men, but
- the ninety-nine women they might have married are
- saddened with them. There's my tale. That's why I
- say that a woman so charming as yourself, Miss Ever-
- dene, is hardly a blessing to her race."
- The handsome sergeant's features were during this
- speech as rigid and stern as John Knox's in addressing
- his gay young queen.
- Seeing she made no reply, he said, "Do you read
- French?"
- "No; I began, but when I got to the verbs, father
- died." she said simply.
- "I do -- when I have an opportunity, which latterly
- has not been often (my mother was a Parisienne) -- and
- there's a proverb they have, Qui aime bien chatie bien
- -- "He chastens who loves well." Do you understand
- me?
- "Ah!" she replied, and there was even a little tremu-
- lousness in the usually cool girl's voice; "if you can
- only fight half as winningly as you can talk, you are
- able to make a pleasure of a bayonet wound!" And
- then poor Bathsheba instantly perceived her slip in
- making this admission: in hastily trying to retrieve it,
- she went from bad to worse. "Don't, however, suppose
- that I derive any pleasure from what you tell me."
- "I know you do not -- I know it perfectly." said Troy,
- with much hearty conviction on the exterior of his face:
- and altering the expression to moodiness; "when a
- dozen men arfe ready to speak tenderly to you, and
- give the admiration you deserve without adding the
- warning you need, it stands to reason that my poor
- rough-and-ready mixture of praise and blame cannot
- convey much pleasure. Fool as I may be, I am not so
- conceited as to suppose that!"
- "I think you -- are conceited, nevertheless." said
- Bathsheba, looking askance at a reed she was fitfully
- pulling with one hand, having lately grown feverish
- under the soldier's system of procedure -- not because
- the nature of his cajolery was entirely unperceived, but
- because its vigour was overwhelming.
- "I would not own it to anybody else -- nor do I
- exactly to you. Still, there might have been some self-
- conceit in my foolish supposition the other night. I
- knew that what I said in admiration might be an
- opinion too often forced upon you to give any pleasure
- but I certainly did think that the kindness of your
- nature might prevent you judging an uncontrolled
- tongue harshly -- which you have done -- and thinking
- badly of me and wounding me this morning, when I
- am working hard to save your hay."
- "Well, you need not think more of that: perhaps you
- did not mean to be rude to me by speaking out your
- mind: indeed, I believe you did not." said the shrewd
- woman, in painfully innocent earnest. "And I thank
- you for giving help here. But -- but mind you don't
- speak to me again in that way, or in any other, unless
- I speak to you."
- "O, Miss Bathsheba! That is to hard!"
- "No, it isn't. Why is it?"
- "You will never speak to me; for I shall not be
- here long. I am soon going back again to the miser-
- able monotony of drill -- and perhaps our regiment will
- be ordered out soon. And yet you take away the one
- little ewe-lamb of pleasure that I have in this dull life
- of mine. Well, perhaps generosity is not a woman's
- most marked characteristic."
- "When are you going from here?" she asked, with
- some interest.
- "In a month."
- "But how can it give you pleasure to speak to me?"
- "Can you ask Miss Everdene -- knowing as you do
- -- what my offence is based on?"
- "I you do care so much for a silly trifle of that
- kind, then, I don't mind doing it." she uncertainly and
- doubtingly answered. "But you can't really care for a
- word from me? you only say so -- I think you only
- say so."
- "that's unjust -- but I won't repeat the remark. I
- am too gratified to get such a mark of your friendship
- at any price to cavil at the tone. I do Miss Everdene,
- care for it. You may think a man foolish to want a
- mere word -- just a good morning. Perhaps he is -- I
- don't know. But you have never been a man looking
- upon a woman, and that woman yourself."
- "Well."
- "Then you know nothing of what such an experience
- is like -- and Heaven forbid that you ever should!"
- "Nonsense, flatterer! What is it like? I am
- interested in knowing."
- "Put shortly, it is not being able to think, hear, or
- look in any direction except one without wretchedness,
- nor there without torture."
- "Ah, sergeant, it won't do -- you are pretending!" she
- said, shaking her head." Your words are too dashing
- to be true."
- "I am not, upon the honour of a soldier"
- "But why is it so? -- Of course I ask for mere pas-
- time."
- Because you are so distracting -- and I am so
- distracted. "
- "You look like it."
- "I am indeed."
- "Why, you only saw me the other night!"
- "That makes no difference. The lightning works in-
- stantaneously. I loved you then, at once -- as I do now."
- Bathsheba surveyed him curiously, from the feet
- upward, as high as she liked to venture her glance,
- which was not quite so high as his eyes.
- "You cannot and you don"t." she said demurely.
- "There is-no such sudden feeling in people. I won't
- listen to you any longer. Hear me, I wish I knew what
- o'clock it is -- I am going -- I have wasted too much time
- here already!"
- The sergeant looked at his watch and told her.
- "What, haven't you a watch, miss?" he inquired.
- "I have not just at present -- I am about to get a
- new one."
- "No. You shall be given one. Yes -- you shall.
- A gift, Miss Everdene -- a gift."
- And before she knew what the young -- man was
- intending, a heavy gold watch was in her hand.
- "It is an unusually good one for a man like me to
- possess." he quietly said. "That watch has a history.
- Press the spring and open the back."
- She did so.
- "What do you see?"
- "A crest and a motto."
- "A coronet with five points, and beneath, Cedit amor
- rebus -- "Love yields to circumstance." It's the motto
- of the Earls of Severn. That watch belonged to the
- last lord, and was given to my mother's husband, a
- medical man, for his use till I came of age, when it was
- to be given to me. It was all the fortune that ever I
- inherited. That watch has regulated imperial interests
- in its time -- the stately ceremonial, the courtly assigna-
- tion, pompous travels, and lordly sleeps. Now it is
- yours.
- "But, Sergeant Troy, I cannot take this -- I cannot!"
- she exclaimed, with round-eyed wonder. "A gold watch!
- What are you doing? Don't be such a dissembler!"
- The sergeant retreated to avoid receiving back his
- gift, which she held out persistently towards him.
- Bathsheba followed as he retired.
- "Keep it -- do, Miss Everdene -- keep it!" said the
- erratic child of impulse. "The fact of your possessing
- it makes it worth ten times as much to me. A more
- plebeian one will answer my purpose just as well, and
- the pleasure of knowing whose heart my old one beats
- against -- well, I won't speak of that. It is in far
- worthier hands than ever it has been in before."
- "But indeed I can't have it!" she said, in a perfect
- simmer of distress. "O, how can you do such a thing;
- that is if you really mean it! Give me your dead
- father's watch, and such a valuable one! You should
- not be so reckless, indeed, Sergeant Troy!"
- "I loved my father: good; but better, I love you
- more. That's how I can do it." said the sergeant, with
- an intonation of such exquisite fidelity to nature that it.
- was evidently not all acted now. Her beauty, which,
- whilst it had been quiescent, he had praised in jest,
- had in its animated phases moved him to earnest; and
- though his seriousness was less than she imagined, it
- was probably more than he imagined himself.
- Bathsheba was brimming with agitated bewilderment,
- and she said, in half-suspicious accents of feeling, "Can
- it be! O, how can it be, that you care for me, and
- so suddenly,! You have seen so little of me: I may
- not be really so -- so nice-looking as I seem to you.
- Please, do take it; O, do! I cannot and will not have
- it. Believe me, your generosity is too great. I have
- never done you a single kindness, and why should you
- be so kind to me?"
- A factitious reply had been again upon his lips, but
- it was again suspended, and he looked at her with an
- arrested eye. The truth was, that as she now stood --
- excited, wild, and honest as the day -- her alluring
- beauty bore out so fully the epithets he had bestowed
- upon it that he was quite startled at his temerity in
- advancing them as false. He said mechanically, "Ah,
- why?" and continued to look at her.
- "And my workfolk see me following you about the
- field, and are wondering. O, this is dreadful!" she
- went on, unconscious of the transmutation she was
- effecting.
- "I did not quite mean you to accept it at first, for it
- as my one poor patent of nobility." he broke out,
- bluntly; "but, upon my soul, I wish you would now.
- Without any shamming, come! Don't deny me the
- happiness of wearing it for my sake? But you are too
- lovely even to care to be kind as others are."
- "No, no; don"t say so! I have reasons for reserve
- which I cannot explain."
- "bet it be, then, let it be." he said, receiving back
- the watch at last; "I must be leaving you now. And
- will you speak to me for these few weeks of my stay?"
- "Indeed I will. Yet, I don't know if I will! O,
- why did you come and disturb me so!"
- "Perhaps in setting a gin, I have caught myself.
- Such things have happened. Well, will you let me
- work in your fields?" he coaxed.
- "Yes, I suppose so; if it is any pleasure to you."
- "Miss Everdene, I thank you.
- "No, no."
- "Good-bye!"
- The sergeant brought his hand to the cap on the
- slope of his head, saluted, and returned to the distant
- group of haymakers.
- Bathsheba could not face the haymakers now. Her
- heart erratically flitting hither and thither from per-
- plexed excitement, hot, and almost tearful, she retreated
- homeward, murmuring, O, what have I done! What
- does it mean! I wish I knew how much of it was
- true!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
-
- HIVING THE BEES
-
-
- THE Weatherbury bees were late in their swarming this
- year. It was in the latter part of June, and the day after
- the interview with Troy in the hayfield, that Bathsheba
- was standing in her garden, watching a swarm in the
- air and guessing their probable settling place. Not only
- were they late this year, but unruly. Sometimes through-
- out a whole season all the swarms would alight on the
- lowest attainable bough -- such as part of a currant-bush
- or espalier apple-tree; next year they would, with just
- the same unanimity, make straight off to the uppermost
- member of some tall, gaunt costard, or quarrenden,
- and there defy all invaders who did not come armed
- with ladders and staves to take them.
- This was the case at present. Bathsheba's eyes,
- shaded by one hand, were following the ascending
- multitude against the unexplorable stretch of blue till
- they ultimately halted by one of the unwieldy trees
- spoken of. A process somewhat analogous to that of
- alleged formations of the universe, time and times ago,
- was observable. The bustling swarm had swept the sky
- in a scattered and uniform haze, which now thickened to
- a nebulous centre: this glided on to a bough and grew
- still denser, till it formed a solid black spot upon the
- light.
- The men and women being all busily engaged in
- saving the hay -- even Liddy had left the house for the
- purpose of lending a hand -- Bathsheba resolved to hive
- the bees herself, if possible. She had dressed the hive
- with herbs and honey, fetched a ladder, brush, and
- crook, made herself impregnable with armour of leather
- gloves, straw hat, and large gauze veil -- once green but
- now faded to snuff colour -- and ascended a dozen rungs
- of the ladder. At once she heard, not ten yards off,
- a voice that was beginning to have a strange power in
- agitating her.
- "Miss Everdene, let me assist you; you should not
- attempt such a thing alone."
- Troy was just opening the garden gate.
- Bathsheba flung down the brush, crook, and empty
- hive, pulled the skirt of her dress tightly round her
- ankles in a tremendous flurry, and as well as she could
- slid down the ladder. By the time she reached the
- bottom Troy was there also, and he stooped to pick
- up the hive.
- "How fortunate I am to have dropped in at this
- moment!" exclaimed the sergeant.
- She found her voice in a minute. "What! and will
- you shake them in for me?" she asked, in what, for a
- defiant girl, was a faltering way; though, for a timid
- girl, it would have seemed a brave way enough.
- "Will I!" said Troy. "Why, of course I will. How
- blooming you are to-day!" Troy flung down his cane
- and put his foot on the ladder to ascend.
- "But you must have on the veil and gloves, or you'll
- be stung fearfully!"
- "Ah, yes. I must put on the veil and gloves. Will
- you kindly show me how to fix them properly?"
- "And you must have the broad-brimmed hat, too, for
- your cap has no brim to keep the veil off, and they'd
- reach your face."
- "The broad-brimmed hat, too, by all means."
- So a whimsical fate ordered that her hat should be
- taken off -- veil and all attached -- and placed upon his
- head, Troy tossing his own into a gooseberry bush.
- Then the veil had to be tied at its lower edge round
- his collar and the gloves put on him.
- He looked such an extraordinary object in this guise
- that, flurried as she was, she could not avoid laughing
- outright. It was the removal of yet another stake from
- the palisade of cold manners which had kept him off
- Bathsheba looked on from the ground whilst he was
- busy sweeping and shaking the bees from the tree,
- holding up the hive with the other hand for them to
- fall into. She made use of an unobserved minute
- whilst his attention was absorbed in the operation to
- arrange her plumes a little. He came down holding
- the hive at arm's length, behind which trailed a cloud
- of bees.
- "Upon my life." said Troy, through the veil," holding
- up this hive makes one's arm ache worse than a week
- of sword-exercise." When the manoeuvre was complete
- he approached her. "Would you be good enough to
- untie me and let me out? I am nearly stifled inside
- this silk cage."
- To hide her embarrassment during the unwonted
- process of untying the string about his neck, she said: --
- "I have never seen that you spoke of."
- "What?"
- "The sword-exercise."
- "Ah! would you like to?" said Troy.
- Bathsheba hesitated. She had heard wondrous
- reports from time to time by dwellers in Weatherbury,
- who had by chance sojourned awhile in Casterbridge,
- near the barracks, of this strange and glorious perform-
- ance, *tlie sword-exercise. Men and boys who had
- peeped through chinks or over walls into the barrack-
- yard returned with accounts of its being the most
- flashing affair conceivable; accoutrements and weapons
- glistening like stars-here,there,around-yet all by rule
- and compass. So she said mildly what she felt strongly.
- "Yes; I should like to see it very much."
- "And so you shall; you shall see me go through it."
- "No! How?"
- "Let me consider."
- "Not with a walking-stick -- I don't care to see that.
- lt must be a real sword."
- "Yes, I know; and I have no sword here; but I
- think I could get one by the evening. Now, will you
- do this?"
- "O no, indeed!" said Bathsheba, blushing." Thank
- you very much, but I couldn't on any account.
- "Surely you might? Nobody would know."
- She shook her head, but with a weakened negation.
- "If I were to." she said, "I must bring Liddy too. Might
- I not?"
- Troy looked far away. "I don't see why you want
- to bring her." he said coldly.
- An unconscious look of assent in Bathsheba's eyes
- betrayed that something more than his coldness had
- made her also feel that Liddy Would be superfluous in
- the suggested scene. She had felt it, even whilst making
- the proposal.
- "Well, I won't bring Liddy -- and I'll come. But
- only for a very short time." she added; "a very short
- time."
- "It will not take five minutes." said Troy.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-
-
- THE HOLLOW AMID THE FERNS
-
-
- THE hill opposite Bathsheba's dwelling extended, a
- mile off, into an uncultivated tract of land, dotted at
- this season with tall thickets of brake fern, plump and
- diaphanous from recent rapid growth, and radiant in
- hues of clear and untainted green.
- At eight o'clock this midsummer evening, whilst the
- bristling ball of gold in the west still swept the tips of
- the ferns with its long, luxuriant rays, a soft brushing-
- by of garments might have been heard among them,
- and Bathsheba appeared in their midst, their soft,
- feathery arms caressing her up to her shoulders. She
- paused, turned, went back over the hill and half-way
- to her own door, whence she cast a farewell glance upon
- the spot she had just left, having resolved not to remain
- near the place after all.
- She saw a dim spot of artificial red moving round
- the shoulder of the rise. It disappeared on the other
- side.
- She waited one minute -- two minutes -- thought of
- Troy's disappointment at her non-fulfilment of a promised
- engagement, till she again ran along the field, clambered
- over the bank, and followed the original direction. She
- was now literally trembling and panting at this her
- temerity in such an errant undertaking; her breath
- came and went quickly, and her eyes shone with an in-
- frequent light. Yet go she must. She reached the
- verge of a pit in the middle of the ferns. Troy stood
- in the bottom, looking up towards her.
- "I heard you rustling through the fern before I saw
- you." he said, coming up and giving her his hand to help
- her down the slope.
- The pit was a saucer-shaped concave, naturally
- formed, with a top diameter of about thirty feet, and
- shallow enough to allow the sunshine to reach their
- heads. Standing in the centre, the sky overhead was
- met by a circular horizon of fern: this grew nearly to
- the bottom of the slope and then abruptly ceased. The
- middle within the belt of verdure was floored with a
- thick flossy carpet of moss and grass intermingled, so
- yielding that the foot was half-buried within it.
- "Now." said Troy, producing the sword, which, as he
- raised it into the sunlight, gleamed a sort of greeting,
- like a living thing, "first, we have four right and four
- left cuts; four right and four left thrusts. Infantry cuts
- and guards are more interesting than ours, to my mind;
- but they are not so swashing. They have seven cuts
- and three thrusts. So much as a preliminary. Well,
- next, our cut one is as if you were sowing your corn --
- so." Bathsheba saw a sort of rainbow, upside down in
- the air, and Troy's arm was still again. "Cut two, as if
- you were hedging -- so. Three, as if you were reaping
- -- so." Four, as if you were threshing -- in that way.
- "Then the same on the left. The thrusts are these: one,
- two, three, four, right; one, two, three, four, left." He
- repeated them. "Have 'em again?" he said. "One,
- two -- -- "
- She hurriedly interrupted: "I'd rather not; though
- I don't mind your twos and fours; but your ones and
- threes are terrible!"
- "Very well. I'll let you off the ones and threes.
- Next, cuts, points and guards altogether." Troy duly
- exhibited them. "Then there's pursuing practice, in
- this way." He gave the movements as before. "There,
- those are the stereotyped forms. The infantry have
- two most diabolical upward cuts, which we are too
- humane to use. Like this -- three, four."
- "How murderous and bloodthirsty!"
- "They are rather deathy. Now I'll be more inter-
- esting, and let you see some loose play -- giving all the
- cuts and points, infantry and cavalry, quicker than
- lightning, and as promiscuously -- with just enough rule
- to regulate instinct and yet not to fetter it. You are
- my antagonist, with this difference from real warfare,
- that I shall miss you every time by one hair's breadth,
- or perhaps two. Mind you don't flinch, whatever you
- do."
- I'll be sure not to!" she said invincibly.
- He pointed to about a yard in front of him.
- Bathsheba's adventurous spirit was beginning to find
- some grains of relish in these highly novel proceedings.
- She took up her position as directed, facing Troy.
- "Now just to learn whether you have pluck enough
- to let me do what I wish, I'll give you a preliminary
- test."
- He flourished the sword by way of introduction
- number two, and the next thing of which she was
- conscious was that the point and blade of the sword
- were darting with a gleam towards her left side, just
- above her hip; then of their reappearance on her right
- side, emerging as it were from between her ribs, having
- apparently passed through her body. The third item
- of consciousness was that of seeing the same sword,
- perfectly clean and free from blood held vertically in
- Troy's hand (in the position technically called "recover
- swords"). All was as quick as electricity.
- "Oh!" she cried out in affright, pressing her hand to
- her side." Have you run me through? -- no, you have
- not! Whatever have you done!"
- "I have not touched you." said Troy, quietly. "It
- was mere sleight of hand. The sword passed behind
- you. Now you are not afraid, are you? Because if
- you are l can't perform. I give my word that l will
- not only not hurt you, but not once touch you."
- "I don't think I am afraid. You are quite sure you
- will not hurt me?"
- "Quite sure."
- "Is the sWord very sharp?"
- "O no -- only stand as still as a statue. Now!"
- In an instant the atmosphere was transformed to
- Bathsheba's eyes. Beams of light caught from the low
- sun's rays, above, around, in front of her, well-nigh shut
- out earth and heaven -- all emitted in the marvellous
- evolutions of Troy's reflecting blade, which seemed
- everywhere at once, and yet nowherre specially. These
- circling gleams were accompanied by a keen rush that
- was almost a whistling -- also springing from all sides of
- her at once. In short, she was enclosed in a firmament
- of light, and of sharp hisses, resembling a sky-full of
- meteors close at hand.
- Never since the broadsword became the national
- weapon had there been more dexterity shown in its
- management than by the hands of Sergeant Troy, and
- never had he been in such splendid temper for the
- performance as now in the evening sunshine among the
- ferns with Bathsheba. It may safely be asserted with
- respect to the closeness of his cuts, that had it been
- possible for the edge of the sword to leave in the air a
- permanent substance wherever it flew past, the space
- left untouched would have been almost a mould of
- Bathsheba's figure.
- Behind the luminous streams of this aurora militaris,
- she could see the hue of Troy's sword arm, spread in a
- scarlet haze over the space covered by its motions, like
- a twanged harpstring, and behind all Troy himself,
- mostly facing her; sometimes, to show the rear cuts,
- half turned away, his eye nevertheless always keenly
- measuring her breadth and outline, and his lips tightly
- closed in sustained effort. Next, his movements lapsed
- slower, and she could see them individually. The
- hissing of the sword had ceased, and he stopped
- entirely.
- "That outer loose lock of hair wants tidying, he
- said, before she had moved or spoken. "Wait: I'll do
- it for you."
- An arc of silver shone on her right side: the sword
- had descended. The lock droped to the ground.
- "Bravely borne!" said Troy. "You didn't flinch a
- shade's thickness. Wonderful in a woman!"
- "It was because I didn't expect it. O, you have
- spoilt my hair!"
- "Only once more."
- "No -- no! I am afraid of you -- indeed I am!" she
- cried.
- "I won't touch you at all -- not even your hair. I
- am only going to kill that caterpillar settling on you.
- Now: still!"
- It appeared that a caterpillar had come from the
- fern and chosen the front of her bodice as his resting
- place. She saw the point glisten towards her bosom,
- and seemingly enter it. Bathsheba closed her eyes in
- the full persuasion that she was killed at last. How-
- ever, feeling just as usual, she opened them again.
- "There it is, look." said the sargeant, holding his
- sword before her eyes.
- The caterpillar was spitted upon its point.
- "Why, it is magic!" said Bathsheba, amazed.
- "O no -- dexterity. I merely gave point to your
- bosom where the caterpillar was, and instead of running
- you through checked the extension a thousandth of an
- inch short of your surface."
- "But how could you chop off a curl of my hair with
- a sword that has no edge?"
- "No edge! This sword will shave like a razor.
- Look here."
- He touched the palm of his hand with the blade,
- and then, lifting it, showed her a thin shaving of scarf-
- skin dangling therefrom.
- "But you said before beginning that it was blunt and
- couldn't cut me!"
- "That was to get you to stand still, and so make sure
- of your safety. The risk of injuring you through your
- moving was too great not to force me to tell you a
- fib to escape it."
- She shuddered. "I have been within an inch of my
- life, and didn't know it!"
- "More precisely speaking, you have been within half
- an inch of being pared alive two hundred and ninety-five
- tinies."
- "Cruel, cruel, 'tis of you!"
- "You have been perfectly safe, nevertheless. My
- sword never errs." And Troy returned the weapon to
- the scabbard.
- Bathsheba, overcome by a hundred tumultuous feel-
- ings resulting from the scene, abstractedly sat down on
- a tuft of heather.
- "I must leave you now." said Troy, softly. "And I'll
- venture to take and keep this in remembrance of you."
- She saw him stoop to the grass, pick up the winding
- lock which he had severed from her manifold tresses,
- twist it round his fingers, unfasten a button in the breast
- of his coat, and carefully put it inside. She felt power-
- less to withstand or deny him. He was altogether too
- much for her, and Bathsheba seemed as one who, facing
- a reviving wind, finds it blow so strongly that it stops
- the breath.
- He drew near and said, "I must be leaving you."
- He drew nearer still. A minute later and she saw his
- scarlet form disappear amid the ferny thicket, almost in
- a flash, like a brand swiftly waved.
- That minute's interval had brought the blood beating
- into her face, set her stinging as if aflame to the very
- hollows of her feet, and enlarged emotion to a compass
- which quite swamped thought. It had brought upon
- her a stroke resulting, as did that of Moses in Horeh, in
- a liquid stream -- here a stream of tears. She felt like
- one who has sinned a great sin.
- The circumstance had been the gentle dip of Troy's
- mouth downwards upon her own. He had kissed her.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX
-
-
-
- PARTICULARS OF A TWILIGHT WALK
-
-
- WE now see the element of folly distinctly mingling
- with the many varying particulars which made up the
- character of Bathsheba Everdene. It was almost foreign
- to her intrinsic nature. Introduced as lymph on the
- dart of Eros, it eventually permeated and coloured
- her whole constitution. Bathsheba, though she had too
- much understanding to be entirely governed by her
- womanliness, had too much womanliness to use her
- understanding to the best advantage. Perhaps in no
- minor point does woman astonish her helpmate more
- than in the strange power she possesses of believing
- cajoleries that she knows to be false -- except, indeed, in
- that of being utterly sceptical on strictures that she
- knows to be true.
- Bathsheba loved Troy in the way that only self-reliant
- women love when they abandon their self-reliance.
- When a strong woman recklessly throws away her
- strength she is worse than a weak woman who has never
- had any strength to throw away. One source of her
- inadequacy is the novelty of the occasion. She has
- never had practice in making the best of such a
- condition. Weakness is doubly weak by being new.
- Bathsheba was not conscious of guile in this matter.
- Though in one sense a woman of the world, it was, after
- all, that world of daylight coteries and green carpets
- wherein cattle form the passing crowd and winds the
- busy hum; where a quiet family of rabbits or hares lives
- on the other side of your party-wall, where your neigh-
- bour is everybody in the tything, and where calculation
- formulated self-indulgence of bad, nothing at all. Had
- her utmost thoughts in this direction been distinctly
- worded (and by herself they never were), they would
- only have amounted to such a matter as that she felt
- her impulses to be pleasanter guides than her discretion .
- Her love was entire as a child's, and though warm as
- summer it was fresh as spring. Her culpability lay in
- her making no attempt to control feeling by subtle and
- careful inquiry into consciences. She could show others
- the steep and thorny way, but 'reck'd not her own rede,"
- And Troy's deformities lay deep down from a
- woman's vision, whilst his embellishments were upon
- the very surface; thus contrasting with homely Oak,
- whose defects were patent to the blindest, and whose
- vertues were as metals in a mine.
- The difference between love and respect was mark-
- edly shown in her conduct. Bathsheba had spoken of
- her interest in Boldwood with the greatest freedom to
- Liddy, but she had only communed with her own heart
- concerning "Troy".
- All this infatuation Gabriel saw, and was troubled
- thereby from the time of his daily journey a-field to the
- time of his return, and on to the small hours of many a
- night. That he was not beloved had hitherto been his
- great that Bathsheba was getting into the toils
- was now a sorrow greater than the first, and one which
- nearly obscured it. It was a result which paralleled
- the oft-quoted observation of Hippocrates concerning
- physical pains.
- That is a noble though perhaps an unpromising love
- which not even the fear of breeding aversion in the
- bosom of the one beloved can deter from combating his
- or her errors. Oak determined to speak to his mistress.
- He would base his appeal on what he considered her
- unfair treatment of Farmer Boldwood, now absent from
- home.
- An opportunity occurred one evening when she had
- gone for a short walk by a path through the neighbour-
- ing cornfields. It was dusk when Oak, who had not
- been far a-field that day, took the same path and met
- her returning, quite pensively, as he thought.
- The wheat was now tall, and the path was narrow;
- thus the way was quite a sunken groove between the
- embowing thicket on either side. Two persons could
- not walk abreast without damaging the crop, and Oak
- stood aside to let her pass.
- "Oh, is it Gabriel?" she said. "You are taking a
- walk too. Good-night."
- "I thought I would come to meet you, as it is rather
- late," said Oak, turning and following at her heels when
- she had brushed somewhat quickly by him.
- "Thank you, indeed, but I am not very fearful."
- "O no; but there are bad characters about."
- "I never meet them."
- Now Oak, with marvellous ingenuity, had been going
- to introduce the gallant sergeant through the channel of
- "bad characters." But all at once the scheme broke
- down, it suddenly occurring to him that this was rather a
- clumsy way, and too barefaced to begin with. He tried
- another preamble.
- "And as the man who would naturally come to meet
- you is away from home, too -- I mean Farmer Boldwood
- -- why, thinks I, I'll go." he said.
- "Ah, yes." She walked on without turning her head,
- and for many steps nothing further was heard from her
- quarter than the rustle of her dress against the heavy
- corn-ears. Then she resumed rather tartly --
- "I don't quite understand what you meant by saying
- that Mr. Boldwood would naturally come to meet me."
- I meant on account of the wedding which they say
- is likely to take place between you and him, miss. For-
- give my speaking plainly."
- "They say what is not true." she returned quickly.
- No marriage is likely to take place between us."
- Gabriel now put forth his unobscured opinion, for
- the moment had come. "Well, Miss Everdene." he
- said, "putting aside what people say, I never in my life
- saw any courting if his is not a courting of you."
- Bathsheba would probably have terminated the con-
- versation there and then by flatly forbidding the subject,
- had not her conscious weakness of position allured her
- to palter and argue in endeavours to better it.
- "Since this subject has been mentioned." she said
- very emphatically, "I am glad of the opportunity of
- clearing up a mistake which is very common and very
- provoking. I didn't definitely promise Mr. Boldwood
- anything. I have never cared for him. I respect him,
- and he has urged me to marry him. But I have given
- him no distinct answer. As soon as he returns I shall
- do so; and the answer will be that I cannot think of
- marrying him."
- "People are full of mistakes, seemingly."
- "They are."
- The other day they said you were trifling with him,
- and you almost proved that you were not; lately they
- have said that you be not, and you straightway begin
- to show -- -- "
- That I am, I suppose you mean."
- "Well, I hope they speak the truth."
- They do, but wrongly applied. I don't trifle with
- him; but then, I have nothing to do with him."
- Oak was unfortunately led on to speak of Boldwood's
- rival in a wrong tone to her after all. "I wish you had
- never met that young Sergeant Troy, miss." he sighed.
-
- Bathsheba's steps became faintly spasmodic. "Why?"
- she asked.
- "He is not good enough for 'ee."
- "Did any one tell you to speak to me like this?"
- "Nobody at all."
- "Then it appears to me that Sergeant Troy does not
- concern us here." she said, intractably." Yet I must say
- that Sergeant Troy is an educated man, and quite worthy
- of any woman. He is well born."
- "His being higher in learning and birth than the
- ruck o' soldiers is anything but a proof of his worth. It
- show's his course to be down'ard."
- "I cannot see what this has to do with our conversa-
- tion. Mr. Troy's course is not by any means downward;
- and his superiority IS a proof of his worth!"
- "I believe him to have no conscience at all. And I
- cannot help begging you, miss, to have nothing to do
- with him. Listen to me this once -- only this once!
- I don't say he's such a bad man as I have fancied -- I
- pray to God he is not. But since we don't exactly
- know what he is, why not behave as if he MIGHT be bad,
- simply for your own safety? Don't trust him, mistress;
- I ask you not to trust him so."
- "Why, pray?"
- "I like soldiers, but this one I do not like." he said,
- sturdily. "His cleverness in his calling may have
- tempted him astray, and what is mirth to the neighbours
- is ruin to the woman. When he tries to talk to 'ee again,
- why not turn away with a short "Good day," and when
- you see him coming one way, turn the other. When
- he says anything laughable, fail to see the point
- and don't smile, and speak of him before those who will
- report your talk as "that fantastical man." or " that
- Sergeant What's-his-name." "That man of a family
- that has come to the dogs." Don't be unmannerly
- towards en, but harmless-uncivil, and so get rid of the
- man."
- No Christmas robin detained by a window-pane ever
- pulsed as did Bathsheba now.
- I say -- I say again -- that it doesn't become you to
- talk about him. Why he should be mentioned passes
- me quite . she exclaimed desperately. "I know this,
- th-th-that he is a thoroughly conscientious man -- blunt
- sometimes even to rudeness -- but always speaking his
- mind about you plain to your face!"
- "Oh."
- "He is as good as anybody in this parish! He is
- very particular, too, about going to church -- yes, he
- is!"
- "I am afraid nobody saw him there. I never
- did certainly."
- "The reason of that is." she said eagerly, " that he goes
- in privately by the old tower door, just when the service
- commences, and sits at the back of the gallery. He
- told me so."
- This supreme instance of Troy's goodness fell upon
- Gabriel ears like the thirteenth stroke of crazy clock.
- It was not only received with utter incredulity as re-
- garded itself, but threw a doubt on all the assurances
- that had preceded it.
- Oak was grieved to find how entirely she trusted him.
- He brimmed with deep feeling as he replied in a steady
- voice, the steadiness of which was spoilt by the palpable-
- ness of his great effort to keep it so: --
- "You know, mistress, that I love you, and shall love
- you always. I only mention this to bring to your mind
- that at any rate I would wish to do you no harm:
- beyond that I put it aside. I have lost in the race for
- money and good things, and I am not such a fool as to
- pretend to 'ee now I am poor, and you have got alto-
- gether above me. But Bathsheba, dear mistress, this
- I beg you to consider -- that, both to keep yourself well
- honoured among the workfolk, and in common generosity
- to an honourable man who loves you as well as I, you
- PARTICULARS OF A TWILIGHT WALK
- should be more discreet in your bearing towards this
- soldier."
- "Don't, don't, don't!" she exclaimed, in a choking
- voice.
- "Are ye not more to me than my own affairs, and
- even life!" he went on. "Come, listen to me! I am
- six years older than you, and Mr. Boldwood is ten years
- older than I, and consider -- I do beg of 'ee to consider
- before it is too late -- how safe you would be in his
- hands!"
- Oak's allusion to his own love for her lessened, to
- some extent, her anger at his interference; but she
- could not really forgive him for letting his wish to marry
- her be eclipsed by his wish to do her good, any more
- than for his slighting treatment of Troy.
- "I wish you to go elsewhere." she commanded, a
- paleness of face invisible to the eye being suggested by
- the trembling words. "Do not remain on this farm any
- longer. I don't want you -- I beg you to go!"
- "That's nonsense." said Oak, calmly. "This is the
- second time you have pretended to dismiss me; and
- what's the use o' it?"
- "Pretended! You shall go, sir -- your lecturing I
- will not hear! I am mistress here."
- "Go, indeed -- what folly will you say next? Treating
- me like Dick, Tom and Harry when you know that a
- short time ago my position was as good as yours! Upon
- my life, Bathsheba, it is too barefaced. You know, too,
- that I can't go without putting things in such a strait as
- you wouldn't get out of I can't tell when. Unless, indeed,
- you'll promise to have an understanding man as bailiff,
- or manager, or something. I'll go at once if you'll
- promise that."
- "I shall have no bailiff; I shall continue to be my
- own manager." she said decisively.
- "Very well, then; you should be thankful to me for
- biding. How would the farm go on with nobody to
- mind it but a woman? But mind this, I don't wish
- "ee to feel you owe me anything. Not I. What I do,
- I do. Sometimes I say I should be as glad as a bird to
- leave the place -- for don't suppose I'm content to be a
- nobody. I was made for better things. However, I
- don't like to see your concerns going to ruin, as they
- must if you keep in this mind.... I hate taking my
- own measure so plain, but, upon my life, your provok-
- ing ways make a man say what he wouldn't dream of
- at other times! I own to being rather interfering. But
- you know well enough how it is, and who she is that I
- like too well, and feel too much like a fool about to be
- civil to her!"
- It is more than probable that she privately and un-
- consciously respected him a little for this grim fidelity,
- which had been shown in his tone even more than in
- his words. At any rate she murmured something to the
- effect that he might stay if he wished. She said more
- distinctly, " Will you leave me alone now? I don't
- order it as a mistress -- I ask it as a woman, and I
- expect you not to be so uncourteous as to refuse."
- "Certainly I will, Miss Everdene." said Gabriel, gently.
- He wondered that the request should have come at this
- moment, for the strife was over, and they were on a
- most desolate hill, far from every human habitation, and
- the hour was getting late. He stood still and allowed
- her to get far ahead of him till he could only see her
- form upon the sky.
- A distressing explanation of this anxiety to be rid of
- him at that point now ensued. A figure apparently rose
- from the earth beside her. The shape beyond all doubt
- was Troy's. Oak would not be even a possible listener,
- and at once turned back till a good two hundred yards
- were between the lovers and himself.
- Gabriel went home by way of the churchyard. In
- passing the tower he thought of what she had said about
- the sergeant's virtuous habit of entering the church un-
- PARTICULARS OF A TWILIGHT WALK
- perceived at the beginning of service. Believing that
- the little gallery door alluded to was quite disused, he
- ascended the external flight of steps at the top of which
- it stood, and examined it. The pale lustre yet hanging
- in the north-western heaven was sufficient to show that
- a sprig of ivy had grown from the wall across the door
- to a length of more than a foot, delicately tying the
- panel to the stone jamb. It was a decisive proof that
- the door had not been opened at least since Troy came
- back to Weatherbury.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX
-
-
-
- HOT CHEEKS AND TEARFUL EYES
-
-
- HALF an hour later Bathsheba entered her own house.
- There burnt upon her face when she met the light of
- the candles the flush and excitement which were little
- less than chronic with her now. The farewell words of
- Troy, who had accompanied her to the very door, still
- lingered in her ears. He had bidden her adieu for two
- days, which were so he stated, to be spent at Bath in
- visiting some friends. He had also kissed her a second
- time.
- It is only fair to Bathsheba to explain here a little
- fact which did not come to light till a long time after-
- wards: that Troy's presentation of himself so aptly at
- the roadside this evening was not by any distinctly pre-
- concerted arrangement. He had hinted -- she had
- forbidden; and it was only on the chance of his still
- coming that she had dismissed Oak, fearing a meeting
- between them just then.
- She now sank down into a chair, wild and perturbed
- by all these new and fevering sequences. Then she
- jumped up with a manner of decision, and fetched her
- desk from a side table.
- In three minutes, without pause or modification, she
- had written a letter to Boldwood, at his address beyond
- Casterbridge, saying mildly but firmly that she had well
- considered the whole subject he had brought before her
- and kindly given her time to decide upon; that her
- final decision was that she could not marry him. She
- had expressed to Oak an intention to wait till Boldwood
- came home before communicating to him her conclusive
- reply. But Bathsheba found that she could not wait.
- It was impossible to send this letter till the next day;
- yet to quell her uneasiness by getting it out of her hands,
- and so, as it were, setting the act in motion at once, she
- arose to take it to any one of the women who might be
- in the kitchen.
- She paused in the passage. A dialogue was going
- on in the kitchen, and Bathsheba and Troy were the
- subject of it.
- "If he marry her, she'll gie up farming."
- "Twill be a gallant life, but may bring some trouble
- between the mirth -- so say I."
- "Well, I wish I had half such a husband."
- Bathsheba had too much sense to mind seriously
- what her servitors said about her; but too much womanly
- redundance of speech to leave alone what was said till
- it died the natural death of unminded things. She
- burst in upon them.
- "Who are you speaking of?" she asked.
- There was a pause before anybody replied. At last
- Liddy said frankly," What was passing was a bit of a
- word about yourself, miss."
- "I thought so! Maryann and Liddy and Temper-
- ance -- now I forbid you to suppose such things. You
- know I don't care the least for Mr. Troy -- not I. Every-
- body knows how much I hate him. -- Yes." repeated the
- froward young person, "HATE him!"
- "We know you do, miss." said Liddy; "and so do we
- all."
- "I hate him too." said Maryann.
- "Maryann -- O you perjured woman! How can you
- speak that wicked story!" said Bathsheba, excitedly.
- "You admired him from your heart only this morning
- in the very world, you did. Yes, Maryann, you know it!"
- "Yes, miss, but so did you. He is a wild scamp
- now, and you are right to hate him."
- "He's NOT a wild scamp! How dare you to my face!
- I have no right to hate him, nor you, nor anybody.
- But I am a silly woman! What is it to me what he is?
- You know it is nothing. I don't care for him; I don"t
- mean to defend his good name, not I. Mind this, if
- any of you say a word against him you'll be dismissed
- instantly!"
- She flung down the letter and surged back into the
- parlour, with a big heart and tearful eyes, Liddy following
- her.
- "O miss!" said mild Liddy, looking pitifully into
- Bathsheba's face. "I am sorry we mistook you so!
- did think you cared for him; but I see you don't now."
- "Shut the door, Liddy."
- Liddy closed the door, and went on: " People always
- say such foolery, miss. I'll make answer hencefor'ard,
- "Of course a lady like Miss Everdene can't love him;"
- I'll say it out in plain black and white."
- Bathsheba burst out: "O Liddy, are you such a
- simpleton? Can't you read riddles? Can't you see?
- Are you a woman yourself?"
- Liddy's clear eyes rounded with wonderment.
- "Yes; you must be a blind thing, Liddy!" she said,
- in reckless abandonment and grief. "O, I love him
- to very distraction and misery and agony! Don't be
- frightened at me, though perhaps I am enough to frighten
- any innocent woman. Come closer -- closer." She put
- her arms round Liddy's neck. "I must let it out to
- somebody; it is wearing me away! Don't you yet know
- enough of me to see through that miserable denial of
- mine? O God, what a lie it was! Heaven and my
- Love forgive me. And don't you know that a woman
- who loves at all thinks nothing of perjury when it is
- balanced against her love? There, go out of the room;
- I want to be quite alone."
- Liddy went towards the door.
- "Liddy, come here. Solemnly swear to me that he's
- not a fast man; that it is all lies they say about him!"
- "Put, miss, how can I say he is not if -- -- "
- "You graceless girl! How can you have the cruel
- heart to repeat what they say? Unfeeling thing that
- you are.... But I'LL see if you or anybody else in the
- village, or town either, dare do such a thing!" She
- started off, pacing from fireplace to door, and back
- again.
- "No, miss. I don't -- I know it is not true!" said
- Liddy, frightened at Bathsheba's unwonted vehemence.
- I suppose you only agree with me like that to please
- me. But, Liddy, he CANNOT BE had, as is said. Do you
- hear? "
- "Yes, miss, yes."
- "And you don't believe he is?"
- "I don't know what to say, miss." said Liddy, be-
- ginning to cry. "If I say No, you don"t believe me;
- and if I say Yes, you rage at me!"
- "Say you don't believe it -- say you don't!"
- "I don't believe him to be so had as they make out."
- "He is not had at all.... My poor life and heart,
- how weak I am!" she moaned, in a relaxed, desultory
- way, heedless of Liddy's presence. "O, how I wish I
- had never seen him! Loving is misery for women
- always. I shall never forgive God for making me a
- woman, and dearly am I beginning to pay for the honour
- of owning a pretty face." She freshened and turned to
- Liddy suddenly. "Mind this, Lydia Smallbury, if you
- repeat anywhere a single word of what l have said to
- you inside this closed door, I'll never trust you, or love
- you, or have you with me a moment longer -- not a
- moment!"
- "I don't want to repeat anything." said Liddy, with
- womanly dignity of a diminutive order; "but I don't
- wish to stay with you. And, if you please, I'll go at the
- end of the harvest, or this week, or to-day.... I don't
- see that I deserve to be put upon and stormed at for
- nothing!" concluded the small woman, bigly.
- "No, no, Liddy; you must stay!" said Bathsheba,
- dropping from haughtiness to entreaty with capricious
- inconsequence. "You must not notice my being in a
- taking just now. You are not as a servant -- you are a
- companion to me. Dear, dear -- I don't know what I
- am doing since this miserable ache o'! my heart has
- weighted and worn upon me so! What shall I come
- to! I suppose I shall get further and further into
- troubles. I wonder sometimes if I am doomed to die
- in the Union. I am friendless enough, God knows!"
- "I won't notice anything, nor will I leave you!" sobbed
- Liddy, impulsively putting up her lips to Bathsheba's,
- and kissing her.
- Then Bathsheba kissed Liddy, and all was smooth
- again.
- "I don't often cry, do I, Lidd? but you have made
- tears come into my eyes." she said, a smile shining
- through the moisture. "Try to think him a good man,
- won't you, dear Liddy?"
- "I will, miss, indeed."
- "He is a sort of steady man in a wild way, you know.
- way. I am afraid that's how I am. And promise me
- to keep my secret -- do, Liddy! And do not let them
- know that I have been crying about him, because it will
- be dreadful for me, and no good to him, poor thing!"Death's head himself
- shan't wring it from me, mistress,
- if I've a mind to keep anything; and I'll always be your
- friend." replied Liddy, emphatically, at the same time
- bringing a few more tears into her own eyes, not from
- any particular necessity, but from an artistic sense of
- making herself in keeping with the remainder of the
- picture, which seems to influence women at such times.
- "I think God likes us to be good friends, don't you?"
- "Indeed I do."
- "And, dear miss, you won"t harry me and storm at
- me, will you? because you seem to swell so tall as a
- lion then, and it frightens me! Do you know, I fancy
- you would be a match for any man when you are in one
- O' your takings."
- "Never! do you?" said Bathsheba, slightly laughing,
- though somewhat seriously alarmed by this Amazonian
- picture of herself. "I hope I am not a bold sort of
- maid -- mannish?" she continued with some anxiety.
- "O no, not mannish; but so almighty womanish
- that 'tis getting on that way sometimes. Ah! miss." she
- said, after having drawn her breath very sadly in and
- sent it very sadly out, "I wish I had half your failing
- that way. 'Tis a great protection to a poor maid in
- these illegit'mate days!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI
-
-
-
- BLAME -- FURY
-
-
- THE next evening Bathsheba, with the idea of getting
- out of the way of Mr. Boldwood in the event of his
- returning to answer her note in person, proceeded to
- fulfil an engagement made with Liddy some few hours
- earlier. Bathsheba's companion, as a gage of their
- reconciliation, had been granted a week's holiday to
- visit her sister, who was married to a thriving hurdler
- and cattle-crib-maker living in a delightful labyrinth of
- hazel copse not far beyond Yalbury. The arrangement
- was that Miss Everdene should honour them by coming
- there for a day or two to inspect some ingenious con-
- trivances which this man of the woods had introduced
- into his wares.
- Leaving her instructions with Gabriel and Maryann,
- that they were to see everything carefully locked up for
- the night, she went out of the house just at the close of
- a timely thunder-shower, which had refined the air, and
- daintily bathed the coat of the land, though all beneath
- was dry as ever. Freshness was exhaled in an essence
- from the varied contours of bank and hollow, as if the
- earth breathed maiden breath; and the pleased birds
- were hymning to the scene. Before her, among the
- clouds, there was a contrast in the shape of lairs of
- fierce light which showed themselves in the neighbour-
- hood of a hidden sun, lingering on to the farthest north-
- west corner of the heavens that this midsummer season
- allowed.
- She had walked nearly two miles of her journey,
- watching how the day was retreating, and thinking how
- the time of deeds was quietly melting into the time of
- thought, to give place in its turn to the time of prayer
- and sleep, when she beheld advancing over Yalbury hill
- the very man she sought so anxiously to elude. Boldwood
- was stepping on, not with that quiet tread of reserved
- strength which was his customary gait, in which he
- always seemed to be balancing two thoughts. His
- manner was stunned and sluggish now.
- Boldwood had for the first time been awakened to
- woman's privileges in tergiversation even when it involves
- another person's possible blight. That Bathsheba was
- a firm and positive girl, far less inconsequent than her
- fellows, had been the very lung of his hope; for he had
- held that these qualities would lead her to adhere to a
- straight course for consistency's sake, and accept him,
- though her fancy might not flood him with the iridescent
- hues of uncritical love. But the argument now came
- back as sorry gleams from a broken mirror. The dis-
- covery was no less a scourge than a surprise.
- He came on looking upon the ground, and did not
- see Bathsheba till they were less than a stone's throw
- apart. He looked up at the sound of her pit-pat, and
- his changed appearance sufficiently denoted to her the
- depth and strength of the feelings paralyzed by her
- letter.
- "Oh; is it you, Mr. Boldwood?" she faltered, a guilty
- warmth pulsing in her face.
- Those who have the power of reproaching in silence
- may find it a means more effective than words. There
- are accents in the eye which are not on the tongue, and
- more tales come from pale lips than can enter an ear.
- It is both the grandeur and the pain of the remoter
- moods that they avoid the pathway of sound. Bold-
- wood's look was unanswerable.
- Seeing she turned a little aside, he said, "What, are
- you afraid of me?"
- Why should you say that?" said Bathsheba.
- "I fancied you looked so." said he. "And it is most
- strange, because of its contrast with my feeling for you.
- She regained self-possession, fixed her eyes calmly,
- and waited.
- "You know what that feeling is." continued Boldwood,
- deliberately. "A thing strong as death. No dismissal
- by a hasty letter affects that."
- "I wish you did not feel so strongly about me." she
- murmured. "It is generous of you, and more than I
- deserve, but I must not hear it now."
- "Hear it? What do you think I have to say, then?
- I am not to marry you, and that's enough. Your letter
- was excellently plain. I want you to hear nothing --
- not I."
- Bathsheba was unable to direct her will into any
- definite groove for freeing herself from this fearfully
- and was moving on. Boldwood walked up to her heavily
- and dully.
- "Bathsheba -- darling -- is it final indeed?"
- "Indeed it is."
- "O, Bathsheba -- have pity upon me!" Boldwood
- burst out. "God's sake, yes -- I am come to that low,
- lowest stage -- to ask a woman for pity! Still, she is
- you -- she is you."
- Bathsheba commanded herself well. But she could
- hardly get a clear voice for what came instinctively to
- her lips: "There is little honour to the woman in that
- speech." It was only whispered, for something unutter-
- ably mournful no less than distressing in this spectacle
- of a man showing himself to be so entirely the vane of a
- passion enervated the feminine instinct for punctilios.
- "I am beyond myself about this, and am mad." he
- said. "I am no stoic at all to he supplicating here; but
- I do supplicate to you. I wish you knew what is in
- me of devotion to you; but it is impossible, that. In
- bare human mercy to a lonely man, don't throw me off
- now!"
- "I don't throw you off -- indeed, how can I? I never
- had you." In her noon-clear sense that she had never
- loved him she forgot for a moment her thoughtless angle
- on that day in February.
- "But there was a time when you turned to me,
- before I thought of you! I don't reproach you, for
- even now I feel that the ignorant and cold darkness
- that I should have lived in if you had not attracted me
- by that letter -- valentine you call it -- would have been
- worse than my knowledge of you, though it has brought
- this misery. But, I say, there was a time when I knew
- nothing of you, and cared nothing for you, and yet you
- drew me on. And if you say you gave me no en-
- couragement, I cannot but contradict you."
- "What you call encouragement was the childish
- game of an idle minute. I have bitterly repented of it
- -- ay, bitterly, and in tears. Can you still go on re-
- minding me?"
- "I don't accuse you of it -- I deplore it. I took for
- earnest what you insist was jest, and now this that I
- pray to be jest you say is awful, wretched earnest. Our
- moods meet at wrong places. I wish your feeling was
- more like mine, or my feeling more like yours! O,
- could I but have foreseen the torture that trifling trick
- was going to lead me into, how I should have cursed
- you; but only having been able to see it since, I cannot
- do that, for I love you too well! But it is weak, idle
- drivelling to go on like this.... Bathsheba, you are
- the first woman of any shade or nature that I have ever
- looked at to love, and it is the having been so near
- claiming you for my own that makes this denial so hard
- to bear. How nearly you promised me! But I don't
- speak now to move your heart, and make you grieve
- because of my pain; it is no use, that. I must bear it;
- my pain would get no less by paining you."
- "But I do pity you -- deeply -- O so deeply!" she
- earnestly said.
- "Do no such thing -- do no such thing. Your dear
- love, Bathsheba, is such a vast thing beside your pity,
- that the loss of your pity as well as your love is no great
- addition to my sorrow, nor does the gain of your pity
- make it sensibly less. O sweet -- how dearly you
- spoke to me behind the spear-bed at the washing-pool,
- and in the barn at the shearing, and that dearest last
- time in the evening at your home! Where are your
- pleasant words all gone -- your earnest hope to be able
- to love me? Where is your firm conviction that you
- would get to care for me very much? Really forgotten?
- -- really?"
- She checked emotion, looked him quietly and clearly
- in the face, and said in her low, firm voice, " Mr. Bold-
- wood, I promised you nothing. Would you have had
- me a woman of clay when you paid me that furthest,
- highest compliment a man can pay a woman -- telling
- her he loves her? I was bound to show some feeling,
- if l would not be a graceless shrew. Yet each of those
- pleasures was just for the day -- the day just for the
- pleasure. How was I to know that what is a pastime
- to all other men was death to you? Have reason, do,
- and think more kindly of me!"
- "Well, never mind arguing -- never mind. One
- thing is sure: you were all but mine, and now you are
- not nearly mine. Everything is changed, and that by
- you alone, remember. You were nothing to me once,
- and I was contented; you are now nothing to me again,
- and how different the second nothing is from the first!
- Would to God you had never taken me up, since it was
- only to throw me down!"
- Bathsheba, in spite of her mettle, began to feel un-
- mistakable signs that she was inherently the weaker
- vessel. She strove miserably against this feminity
- which would insist upon supplying unbidden emotions
- in stronger and stronger current. She had tried to
- elude agitation by fixing her mind on the trees, sky, any
- trivial object before her eyes, whilst his reproaches fell,
- but ingenuity could not save her now.
- "I did not take you up -- surely I did not!" she
- answered as heroically as she could. "But don't be in
- this mood with me. I can endure being told I am in
- the wrong, if you will only tell it me gently! O sir,
- will you not kindly forgive me, and look at it
- cheerfully?"
- "Cheerfully! Can a man fooled to utter heart-
- burning find a reason for being merry> If I have lost,
- how can I be as if I had won? Heavens you must be
- heartless quite! Had I known what a fearfully bitter
- sweet this was to be, how would I have avoided you,
- and never seen you, and been deaf of you. I tell you
- all this, but what do you care! You don't care."
- She returned silent and weak denials to his charges,
- and swayed her head desperately, as if to thrust away
- the words as they came showering about her ears from
- the lips of the trembling man in the climax of life, with
- his bronzed Roman face and fine frame.
- "Dearest, dearest, I am wavering even now between
- the two opposites of recklessly renouncing you, and
- labouring humbly for you again. Forget that you have
- said No, and let it be as it was! Say, Bathsheba, that
- you only wrote that refusal to me in fun -- come, say it
- to me!"
- "It would be untrue, and painful to both of us. You
- overrate my capacity for love. I don't possess half
- the warmth of nature you believe me to have. An un-
- protected childhood in a cold world has beaten gentle-
- ness out of me."
- He immediately said with more resentment: "That
- may be true, somewhat; but ah, Miss Everdene, it won't
- do as a reason! You are not the cold woman you
- would have me believe. No, no! It isn't because you
- have no feeling in you that you don't love me. You
- naturally would have me think so -- you would hide from
- that you have a burning heart like mine. You have
- love enough, but it is turned into a new channel. I
- know where."
- The swift music of her heart became hubbub now,
- and she throbbed to extremity. He was coming to
- Troy. He did then know what had occurred! And
- the name fell from his lips the next moment.
- "Why did Troy not leave my treasure alone?" he
- asked, fiercely. "When I had no thought of injuring
- him, why did he force himself upon your notice!
- Before he worried you your inclination was to have me;
- when next I should have come to you your answer
- would have been Yes. Can you deny it -- I ask, can
- you deny it?"
- She delayed the reply, but was to honest to with
- hold it." I cannot." she whispered.
- "I know you cannot. But he stole in in my absence
- and robbed me. Why did't he win you away before,
- when nobody would have been grieved? -- when nobody
- would have been set tale-bearing. Now the people
- sneer at me -- the very hills and sky seem to laugh at
- me till I blush shamefuly for my folly. I have lost my
- respect, my good name, my standing -- lost it, never to
- get it again. Go and marry your man -- go on!"
- "O sir -- Mr. Boldwood!"
- "You may as well. I have no further claim upon you.
- As for me, I had better go somewhere alone, and hide --
- and pray. I loved a woman once. I am now ashamed.
- When I am dead they'll say, Miserable love-sick man
- that he was. Heaven -- heaven -- if I had got jilted
- secretly, and the dishonour not known, and my position
- kept! But no matter, it is gone, and the woman not
- gained. Shame upon him -- shame!"
- His unreasonable anger terrified her, and she glided
- from him, without obviously moving, as she said, "I am
- only a girl -- do not speak to me so!"
- "All the time you knew -- how very well you knew --
- that your new freak was my misery. Dazzled by brass
- and scarlet -- O, Bathsheba -- this is woman's folly
- indeed!"
- She fired up at once. "You are taking too much
- upon yourself!" she said, vehemently. "Everybody is
- upon me -- everybody. It is unmanly to attack a
- woman so! I have nobody in the world to fight my
- battles for me; but no mercy is shown. Yet if a
- thousand of you sneer and say things against me, I WILL
- NOT be put down!"
- "You'll chatter with him doubtless about me. Say to
- him, "Boldwood would have died for me." Yes, and
- you have given way to him, knowing him to be not the
- man for you. He has kissed you -- claimed you as his.
- Do you hear -- he has kissed you. Deny it!"
- The most tragic woman is cowed by a tragic man,
- and although Boldwood was, in vehemence and glow,
- nearly her own self rendered into another sex,
- Bathsheba's cheek quivered. She gasped," Leave me,
- sir -- leave me! I am nothing to you. Let me go on!"
- "Deny that he has kissed you."
- "I shall not."
- "Ha -- then he has!" came hoarsely from the farmer.
- "He has," she said, slowly, and, in spite of her fear,
- defiantly. "I am not ashamed to speak the truth."
- "Then curse him; and curse him!" said Boldwood,
- breaking into a whispered fury." Whilst I would have
- given worlds to touch your hand, you have let a rake come
- in without right or ceremony and -- kiss you! Heaven's
- mercy -- kiss you! ... Ah, a time of his life shall come
- when he will have to repent, and think wretchedly of
- the pain he has caused another man; and then may he
- ache, and wish, and curse, and yearn -- as I do now!"
- "Don't, don't, O, don't pray down evil upon him!"
- she implored in a miserable cry. "Anything but that --
- anything. O, be kind to him, sir, for I love him true ."
- Boldwood's ideas had reached that point of fusion at
- which outline and consistency entirely disappear. The
- impending night appeared to concentrate in his eye.
- He did not hear her at all now.
- "I'll punish him -- by my soul, that will I! I'll meet
- him, soldier or no, and I'll horsewhip the untimely
- stripling for this reckless theft of my one delight. If he
- were a hundred men I'd horsewhip him -- --" He
- dropped his voice suddenly and unnaturally. "Bath-
- sheba, sweet, lost coquette, pardon me! I've been
- blaming you, threatening you, behaving like a churl to
- you, when he's the greatest sinner. He stole your dear
- heart away with his unfathomable lies! ... lt is a
- fortunate thing for him that he's gone back to his
- regiment -- that he's away up the country, and not here!
- I hope he may not return here just yet. I pray God
- he may not come into my sight, for I may be tempted
- beyond myself. O, Bathsheba, keep him away -- yes,
- keep him away from me!"
- For a moment Boldwood stood so inertly after this
- that his soul seemed to have been entirely exhaled with
- the breath of his passionate words. He turned his face
- away, and withdrew, and his form was soon covered over
- by the twilight as his footsteps mixed in with the low
- hiss of the leafy trees.
- Bathsheba, who had been standing motionless as a
- model all this latter time, flung her hands to her face,
- and wildly attempted to ponder on the exhibition which
- had just passed away. Such astounding wells of fevered
- feeling in a still man like Mr. Boldwood were incompre-
- hensible, dreadful. Instead of being a man trained to
- repression he was -- what she had seen him.
- The force of the farmer's threats lay in their relation to a
- circumstance known at present only to herself: her lover was
- coming back to Weatherby in the course of the very next
- day or two. Troy had not returned to his distant barracks as
- Boldwood and others supposed, but had merely gone to visit
- some acquaintance in Bath, and had yet a week or more
- remaining to his furlough.
- She felt wretchedly certain that if he revisited her just at
- this nick of time, and came into contact with Boldwood,a
- fierce quarrel would be the consequence. She panted with
- solicitude when she thought of possible injury to Troy. The
- least spark would kindle the farmer's swift feelings of rage
- and jealousy; he would lose his self-mastery as he had this
- evening; Troy's blitheness might become aggressive; it might
- take the direction of derision, and Boldwood's anger might
- then take the direction of revenge.
- With almost a morbid dread of being thought a gushing
- girl, this guileless woman too well concealed from the world
- under a manner of carelessness the warm depths of her strong
- emotions. But now there was no reserve. In fer
- her distraction, instead of advancing further she
- walked up and down, beating
- the air with her fingers, pressing on her brow, and sobbing
- brokenly to herself. Then she sat down on a heap of stones by
- the wayside to think. There she remained long. Above the
- dark margin of the earth appeared foreshores and promontor-
- ies of coppery cloud,bounding a green and pellucid expanse
- in the western sky. Amaranthine glosses came over them then,
- and the unresting world wheeled her round to a contrasting
- prospect eastward, in the shape of indecisive and palpitating
- stars. She gazed upon their silent throes amid the shades of
- space, but realised none at all. Her troubled spirit was far
- away with Troy.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII
-
-
-
- NIGHT -- HORSES TRAMPING
-
-
- THE village of Weatherbury was quiet as the graveyard
- in its midst, and the living were lying well nigh as still
- as the dead. The church clock struck eleven. The
- air was so empty of other sounds that the whirr of the
- clock-work immediately before the strokes was distinct,
- and so was also the click of the same at their close.
- The notes flew forth with the usual blind obtuseness
- of inanimate things -- flapping and rebounding among
- walls, undulating against the scattered clouds, spreading
- through their interstices into unexplored miles of space.
- Bathsheba's crannied and mouldy halls were to-night
- occupied only by Maryann, Liddy being, as was stated,
- with her sister, whom Bathsheba had set out to visit.
- A few minutes after eleven had struck, Maryann turned
- in her bed with a sense of being disturbed. She was
- totally unconscious of the nature of the interruption to
- her sleep. It led to a dream, and the dream to an
- awakening, with an uneasy sensation that something
- had happened. She left her bed and looked out of
- the window. The paddock abutted on this end of the
- building, and in the paddock she could just discern by
- the uncertain gray a moving figure approaching the
- horse that was feeding there. The figure seized the
- horse by the forelock, and led it to the corner of the
- field. Here she could see some object which circum-
- stances proved to be a vehicle for after a few minutes
- the horse down the road, mingled with the sound of
- light wheels.
- Two varieties only of humanity could have entered
- the paddock with the ghostlike glide of that mysterious
- figure. They were a woman and a gipsy man. A woman
- was out of the question in such an occupation at this
- hour, and the comer could be no less than a thief, who
- might probably have known the weakness of the house-
- hold on this particular night, and have chosen it on
- that account for his daring attempt. Moreover, to
- raise suspicion to conviction itself, there were gipsies in!
- Weatherbury Bottom.
- Maryann, who had been afraid to shout in the robber's
- presence, having seen him depart had no fear. She
- hastily slipped on her clothes, stumped down the dis-
- jointed staircase with its hundred creaks, ran to Coggan's,
- the nearest house, and raised an alarm. Coggan called
- Gabriel, who now again lodged in his house as at first,
- and together they went to the paddock. Beyond all
- doubt the horse was gone.
- "Hark!" said Gabriel.
- They listened. Distinct upon the stagnant air came
- the sounds of a trotting horse passing up Longpuddle
- Lane -- just beyond the gipsies' encampment in Weather-
- bury Bottom.
- "That's our Dainty-i'll swear to her step." said Jan.
- "Mighty me! Won't mis'ess storm and call us stupids
- wen she comes back!" moaned Maryann. "How I
- wish it had happened when she was at home, and none
- of us had been answerable!"
- "We must ride after." said Gabriel, decisively.
- be responsible to Miss Everdene for what we do. Yes,
- we'll follow. "
- "Faith, I don't see how." said Coggan. "All our
- horses are too heavy for that trick except little Poppet,
- and what's she between two of us?-if we only had that
- pair over the hedge we might do something."
- "Which pair?"
- "Mr Boldwood's Tidy and Moll."
- "Then wait here till I come hither again." said Gabriel.
- He ran down the hill towards Farmer Boldwood's.
- "Farmer Boldwood is not at home." said Maryann.
- "All the better." said Coggan. "I know what he's
- gone for."
- Less than five minutes brought up Oak again, running
- at the same pace, with two halters dangling from his hand.
- "Where did you find 'em?" said Coggan, turning
- round and leaping upon the hedge without waiting for
- an answer.
- "Under the eaves. I knew where they were kept,"
- said Gabriel, following him. "Coggan, you can ride
- bare-backed? there's no time to look for saddles."
- "Like a hero!" said Jan.
- "Maryann, you go to hed." Gabriel shouted to her
- from the top of the hedge.
- Springing down into Boldwood's pastures, each
- pocketed his halter to hide it from the horses, who,
- seeing the men empty-handed, docilely allowed them-
- selves to he seized by the mane, when the halters
- were dexterously slipped on. Having neither bit nor
- bridle, Oak and Coggan extemporized the former by
- passing the rope in each case through the animal's
- mouth and looping it on the other side. Oak vaulted
- astride, and Coggan clambered up by aid of the hank,
- when they ascended to the gate and galloped off in the
- direction taken by Bathsheha's horse and the robber.
- Whose vehicle the horse had been harnessed to was a
- matter of some uncertainty.
- Weatherbury Bottom was reached in three or four
- minutes. They scanned the shady green patch by the
- roadside. The gipsies were gone.
- "The villains!" said Gabriel. "Which way have they
- gone, I wonder?"
- "Straight on, as sure as God made little apples,"
- said Jan.
- "Very well; we are better mounted, and must over-
- discovered. The road-metal grew softer and more
- rain had wetted its surface to a somewhat plastic, but
- not muddy state. They came to cross-roads. Coggan
- suddenly pulled up Moll and slipped off.
- "What's the matter?" said Gabriel.
- "We must try to track 'em, since we can't hear 'em,"
- said Jan, fumbling in his pockets. He struck a light,
- and held the match to the ground. The rain had been
- heavier here, and all foot and horse tracks made previous
- to the storm had been abraded and blurred by the drops,
- and they were now so many little scoops of water, which
- reflected the flame of the match like eyes. One set of
- tracks was fresh and had no water in them; one pair of
- ruts was also empty, and not small canals, like the others.
- The footprints forming this recent impression were full
- of information as to pace; they were in equidistant pairs,
- three or four feet apart, the right and left foot of each
- pair being exactly opposite one another.
- "Straight on!" Jan exclaimed. "Tracks like that
- mean a stiff gallop. No wonder we don't hear him.
- And the horse is harnessed -- look at the ruts. Ay,
- "How do you know?"
- "Old Jimmy Harris only shoed her last week, and
- I'd swear to his make among ten thousand."
- "The rest of the gipsies must ha" gone on earlier,
- or some other way." said Oak. "You saw there were
- no other tracks?"
- "True." They rode along silently for a long weary
- time. Coggan carried an old pinchbeck repeater which
- he had inherited from some genius in his family; and
- it now struck one. He lighted another match, and ex-
- amined the ground again.
- "'Tis a canter now." he said, throwing away the light.
- "A twisty, rickety pace for a gig. The fact is, they over-
- drove her at starting, we shall catch 'em yet."
- Again they hastened on, and entered Blackmore
- Vale. Coggan's watch struck one. When they looked
- again the hoof-marks were so spaced as to form a sort
- of zigzag if united, like the lamps along a street.
- "That's a trot, I know." said Gabriel.
- "Only a trot now." said Coggan, cheerfully. "We
- shall overtake him in time."
- They pushed rapidly on for yet two or three miles.
- "Ah! a moment." said Jan. "Let's see how she was
- driven up this hill. "Twill help us." A light was
- promptly struck upon his gaiters as before, and the ex-
- amination made,
- "Hurrah!" said Coggan. "She walked up here --
- and well she might. We shall get them in two miles,
- for a crown."
- They rode three, and listened. No sound was to be
- heard save a millpond trickling hoarsely through a
- hatch, and suggesting gloomy possibilities of drowning
- by jumping in. Gabriel dismounted when they came
- to a turning. The tracks were absolutely the only guide
- as to the direction that they now had, and great caution
- was necessary to avoid confusing them with some others
- which had made their appearance lately.
- "What does this mean? -- though I guess." said
- Gabriel, looking up at Coggan as he moved the match
- over the ground about the turning. Coggan, who, no
- less than the panting horses, had latterly shown signs
- of weariness, again scrutinized the mystic characters.
- This time only three were of the regular horseshoe
- shape. Every fourth was a dot.
- He screwed up his face and emitted a long
- "Whew-w-w!"
- "Lame." said Oak.
- "Yes Dainty is lamed; the near-foot-afore." said
- Coggan slowly staring still at the footprints.
- "We'll push on." said Gabriel, remounting his humid
- steed.
- Although the road along its greater part had been as
- good as any turnpike-road in the country, it was nomin-
- ally only a byway. The last turning had brought them
- into the high road leading to Bath. Coggan recollected
- himself.
- "We shall have him now!" he exclaimed.
- "Where?"
- "Sherton Turnpike. The keeper of that gate is the
- sleepiest man between here and London -- Dan Randall.
- that's his name -- knowed en for years, when he was at
- Casterbridge gate. Between the lameness and the gate
- 'tis a done job."
- 'Twas said until, against a shady background of foliage,
- five white bars were visible, crossing their route a little
- way ahead.
- "Hush -- we are almost close!" said Gabriel.
- "Amble on upon the grass." said Coggan.
- The white bars were blotted out in the midst by a
- dark shape in front of them. The silence of this lonely
- time was pierced by an exclamation from that quarter.
- "Hoy-a-hoy! Gate!"
- It appeared that there had been a previous call which
- they had not noticed, for on their close approach the
- door of the turnpike-house opened, and the keeper
- came out half-dressed, with a candle in his hand. The
- rays illumined the whole group.
- "Keep the gate close!" shouted Gabriel. "He has
- stolen the horse!"
- Who?" said the turnpike-man.
- Gabriel looked at the driver of the gig, and saw a
- woman -- Bathsheba, his mistress.
- On hearing his voice she had turned her face away
- from the light. Coggan had, however, caught sight of
- her in the meanwhile.
- "Why, 'tis mistress-i'll take my oath!" he said,
- amazed.
- Bathsheba it certainly was, and she had by this time
- done the trick she could do so well in crises not of love,
- namely, mask a surprise by coolness of manner.
- "Well, Gabriel." she inquired quietly," where are you
- going?"
- "We thought -- --" began Gabriel.
- "Bath." she said, taking for her own
- use the assurance that Gabriel lacked. "An important
- matter made it necessary for me to give up my visit to
- liddy, and go off at once. What, then, were you
- following me?"
- "We thought the horse was stole."
- "Well-what a thing! How very foolish of you not
- to know that I had taken the trap and horse. I could
- neither wake Maryann nor get into the house, though
- I hammered for ten minutes against her window-sill.
- Fortunately, I could get the key of the coach-house, so
- I troubled no one further. Didn't you think it might
- be me?"
- "Why should we, miss?"
- "Perhaps not Why, those are never Farmer Bold-
- wood's horses! Goodness mercy! what have you been
- doing bringing trouble upon me in this way? What!
- mustn't a lady move an inch from her door without being
- dogged like a thief?"
- "But how was we to know, if you left no account of
- your doings?" expostulated Coggan, "and ladies don't
- drive at these hours, miss, as a jineral rule of society."
- "I did leave an account -- and you would have seen
- it in the morning. I wrote in chalk on the coach-house
- doors that I had come back for the horse and gig, and
- driven off; that I could arouse nobody, and should
- return soon."
- "But you'll consider, ma'am, that we couldn't see
- that till it got daylight."
- "True." she said, and though vexed at first she had
- too much sense to blame them long or seriously for a
- devotion to her that was as valuable as it was rare.
- She added with a very pretty grace," Well, I really thank
- you heartily for taking all this trouble; but I wish you
- had borrowed anybody's horses but Mr. Boldwood's."
- "Dainty is lame, miss." said Coggan. "Can ye go
- on?"
- "lt was only a stone in her shoe. I got down and
- pulled it out a hundred yards back. I can manage
- very well, thank you. I shall be in Bath by daylight.
- Will you now return, please?"
- She turned her head -- the gateman's candle
- shimmering upon her quick, clear eyes as she did so --
- passed through the gate, and was soon wrapped in the
- embowering shades of mysterious summer boughs.
- Coggan and Gabriel put about their horses, and, fanned
- by the velvety air of this July night, retraced the road
- by which they had come.
- "A strange vagary, this of hers, isn't it, Oak?" said
- Coggan, curiously.
- "Yes." said Gabriel, shortly.
- "She won't be in Bath by no daylight!"
- "Coggan, suppose we keep this night's work as quiet
- as we can?"
- "I am of one and the same mind."
- "Very well. We shall be home by three o'clock or
- so, and can creep into the parish like lambs."
- Bathsheba's perturbed meditations by the roadside
- had ultimately evolved a conclusion that there were only
- two remedies for the present desperate state of affairs.
- The first was merely to keep Troy away from Weather-
- bury till Boldwood's indignation had cooled; the second
- to listen to Oak's entreaties, and Boldwood's denuncia-
- tions, and give up Troy altogether.
- Alas! Could she give up this new love -- induce
- him to renounce her by saying she did not like him --
- could no more speak to him, and beg him, for her good,
- to end his furlough in Bath, and see her and Weather-
- bury no more?
- It was a picture full of misery, but for a while she
- contemplated it firmly, allowing herself, nevertheless,
- as girls will, to dwell upon the happy life she would
- have enjoyed had Troy been Boldwood, and the path
- of love the path of duty -- inflicting upon herself gratuit-
- ous tortures by imagining him the lover of another
- woman after forgetting her; for she had penetrated
- Troy's nature so far as to estimate his tendencies pretty
- accurately, hut unfortunately loved him no less in
- thinking that he might soon cease to love her -- indeed,
- considerably more.
- She jumped to her feet. She would see him at once.
- Yes, she would implore him by word of mouth to assist
- her in this dilemma. A letter to keep him away could
- not reach him in time, even if he should be disposed to
- listen to it.
- Was Bathsheba altogether blind to the obvious fact
- that the support of a lover's arms is not of a kind best
- calculated to assist a resolve to renounce him? Or was
- she sophistically sensible, with a thrill of pleasure, that
- by adopting this course for getting rid of him she was
- ensuring a meeting with him, at any rate, once more?
- It was now dark, and the hour must have been nearly
- ten. The only way to accomplish her purpose was to
- give up her idea of visiting Liddy at Yalbury, return to
- Weatherbury Farm, put the horse into the gig, and drive
- at once to Bath. The scheme seemed at first impossible:
- the journey was a fearfully heavy one, even for a strong
- horse, at her own estimate; and she much underrated
- the distance. It was most venturesome for a woman,
- at night, and alone.
- But could she go on to Liddy's and leave things to
- take their course? No, no; anything but that. Bath-
- sheba was full of a stimulating turbulence, beside which
- caution vainly prayed for a hearing. she turned back
- towards the village.
- Her walk was slow, for she wished not to enter
- Weatherbury till the cottagers were in bed, and, par-
- ticularly, till Boldwood was secure. Her plan was now
- to drive to Bath during the night, see Sergeant Troy in
- the morning before he set out to come to her, bid him
- farewell, and dismiss him: then to rest the horse
- thoroughly (herself to weep the while, she thought),
- starting early the next morning on her return journey.
- By this arrangement she could trot Dainty gently all
- the day, reach Liddy at Yalbury in the evening, and
- come home to Weatherbury with her whenever they
- chose -- so nobody would know she had been to Bath
- at all.
- Such was Bathsheba's scheme. But in her topo-
- graphical ignorance as a late comer to the place, she
- misreckoned the distance of her journey as not much
- more than half what it really was. Her idea, however,
- she proceeded to carry out, with what initial success we
- have already seen.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-
-
- IN THE SUN -- A HARBINGER
-
-
- A WEEK passed, and there were no tidings of Bath-
- sheba; nor was there any explanation of her Gilpin's
- rig.
- Then a note came for Maryann, stating that the
- business which had called her mistress to Bath still
- detained her there; but that she hoped to return
- in the course of another week.
- Another week passed. The oat-harvest began, and
- all the men were a-field under a monochromatic Lammas
- sky, amid the trembling air and short shadows of noon.
- Indoors nothing was to be heard save the droning of
- blue-bottle flies; out-of-doors the whetting of scythes
- and the hiss of tressy oat-ears rubbing together as their
- perpendicular stalks of amber-yellow fell heavily to each
- swath. Every drop of moisture not in the men's bottles
- and flagons in the form of cider was raining as perspira-
- tion from their foreheads and cheeks. Drought was
- everywhere else.
- They were about to withdraw for a while into the
- charitable shade of a tree in the fence, when Coggan
- saw a figure in a blue coat and brass buttons running
- to them across the field.
- "I wonder who that is?" he said.
- "I hope nothing is wrong about mistress." said
- Maryann, who with some other women was tying the
- bundles (oats being always sheafed on this farm), "but
- an unlucky token came to me indoors this morning.
- l went to unlock the door and dropped the key, and it
- fell upon the stone floor and broke into two pieces.
- Breaking a key is a dreadful bodement. I wish mis'ess
- was home."
- "'Tis Cain Ball." said Gabriel, pausing from whetting
- his reaphook.
- Oak was not bound by his agreement to assist in the
- corn-field; but the harvest month is an anxious time for
- a farmer, and the corn was Bathsheba's, so he lent a
- hand.
- "He's dressed up in his best clothes." said Matthew
- Moon. "He hev been away from home for a few days,
- since he's had that felon upon his finger; for 'a said,
- since I can't work I'll have a hollerday."
- "A good time for one -- a excellent time." said Joseph
- Poorgrass, straightening his back; for he, like some of
- the others, had a way of resting a while from his labour
- on such hot days for reasons preternaturally small; of
- which Cain Pall's advent on a week-day in his Sunday-
- clothes was one of the first magnitude. "Twas a bad leg
- allowed me to read the Pilgrim's Progress, and Mark
- Clark learnt AliFours in a whitlow."
- "Ay, and my father put his arm out of joint to have
- time to go courting." said Jan Coggan, in an eclipsing
- tone, wiping his face with his shirt-sleeve and thrusting
- back his hat upon the nape of his neck.
- By this time Cainy was nearing the group of harvesters,
- and was perceived to be carrying a large slice of bread
- and ham in one hand, from which he took mouthfuls
- as he ran, the other being wrapped in a bandage.
- When he came close, his mouth assumed the bell shape,
- and he began to cough violently.
- "Now, Cainy!" said Gabriel, sternly. "How many
- more times must I tell you to keep from running so fast
- when you be eating? You'll choke yourself some day,
- that's what you'll do, Cain Ball."
- "Hok-hok-hok!" replied Cain. "A crumb of my
- victuals went the wrong way -- hok-hok!, That's what
- 'tis, Mister Oak! And I've been visiting to Bath
- because I had a felon on my thumb; yes, and l've
- seen -- ahok-hok!"
- Directly Cain mentioned Bath, they all threw down
- their hooks and forks and drew round him. Un-
- fortunately the erratic crumb did not improve his
- narrative powers, and a supplementary hindrance was
- that of a sneeze, jerking from his pocket his rather large
- watch, which dangled in front of the young man
- pendulum-wise.
- "Yes." he continued, directing his thoughts to Bath
- and letting his eyes follow, "l've seed the world at last
- -- yes -- and I've seed our mis'ess -- ahok-hok-hok!"
- "Bother the boy!" said Gabriel." Something is
- always going the wrong way down your throat, so that
- you can't tell what's necessary to be told."
- "Ahok! there! Please, Mister Oak, a gnat have
- just fleed into my stomach and brought the cough on
- again!"
- "Yes, that's just it. Your mouth is always open, you
- young rascal!"
- "'Tis terrible bad to have a gnat fly down yer throat,
- pore boy!" said Matthew Moon.
- "Well, at Bath you saw -- --" prompted Gabriel.
- "I saw our mistress." continued the junior shepherd,
- "and a sojer, walking along. And bymeby they got
- closer and closer, and then they went arm-in-crook, like
- courting complete -- hok-hok! like courting complete --
- hok! -- courting complete -- -- " Losing the thread of his
- narrative at this point simultaneously with his loss of
- breath, their informant looked up and down the field
- apparently for some clue to it. "Well, I see our mis'ess
- and a soldier -- a-ha-a-wk!"
- "Damn the boy!" said Gabriel.
- "'Tis only my manner, Mister Oak, if ye'll excuse it,"
- said Cain Ball, looking reproachfully at Oak, with eyes
- drenched in their own dew.
- !Here's some cider for him -- that'll cure his throat,"
- said Jan Coggan, lifting a flagon of cider, pulling out
- the cork, and applying the hole to Cainy's mouth;
- Joseph Poorgrass in the meantime beginning to think
- apprehensively of the serious consequences that would
- follow Cainy Ball's strangulation in his cough, and the
- history of his Bath adventures dying with him.
- "For my poor self, I always say "please God" afore
- I do anything." said Joseph, in an unboastful voice; "and
- so should you, Cain Ball. "'Tis a great safeguard, and
- might perhaps save you from being choked to death
- some day."
- Mr. Coggan poured the liquor with unstinted liber-
- ality at the suffering Cain's circular mouth; half of it
- running down the side of the flagon, and half of what
- reached his mouth running down outside his throat,
- and half of what ran in going the wrong way, and being
- coughed and sneezed around the persons of the gathered
- reapers in the form of a cider fog, which for a moment
- hung in the sunny air like a small exhalation.
- "There's a great clumsy sneeze! Why can't ye have
- better manners, you young dog!" said Coggan, with-
- drawing the flagon.
- "The cider went up my nose!" cried Cainy, as soon
- as he could speak; "and now 'tis gone down my neck,
- and into my poor dumb felon, and over my shiny
- buttons and all my best cloze!"
- "The poor lad's cough is terrible unfortunate." said
- Matthew Moon. "And a great history on hand, too.
- Bump his back, shepherd."
- "'Tis my nater." mourned Cain. "Mother says I
- always was so excitable when my feelings were worked
- up to a point!"
- "True, true." said Joseph Poorgrass. "The Balls
- were always a very excitable family. I knowed the
- boy's grandfather -- a truly nervous and modest man,
- even to genteel refinery. 'Twas blush, blush with him,
- almost as much as 'tis with me -- not but that 'tis a
- fault in me!"
- "Not at all, Master Poorgrass." said Coggan. "'Tis
- a very noble quality in ye."
- "Heh-heh! well, I wish to noise nothing abroad --
- nothing at all." murmured Poorgrass, diffidently. "But
- we be born to things -- that's true. Yet I would rather
- my trifle were hid; though, perhaps, a high nater is a
- little high, and at my birth all things were possible to
- my Maker, and he may have begrudged no gifts....
- But under your bushel, Joseph! under your bushel with
- "ee! A strange desire, neighbours, this desire to hide,
- and no praise due. Yet there is a Sermon on the
- Mount with a calendar of the blessed at the head, and
- certain meek men may be named therein."
- "Cainy's grandfather was a very clever man." said
- Matthew Moon. "Invented a' apple-tree out of his own
- head, which is called by his name to this day -- the Early
- Ball. You know 'em, Jan? A Quarrenden grafted on
- a Tom Putt, and a Rathe-ripe upon top o' that again.
- "'Tis trew 'a used to bide about in a public-house wi' a
- woman in a way he had no business to by rights, but
- there -- 'a were a clever man in the sense of the term."
- "Now then." said Gabriel, impatiently, " what did you
- see, Cain?"
- "I seed our mis'ess go into a sort of a park place,
- where there's seats, and shrubs and flowers, arm-in-crook
- with a sojer." continued Cainy, firmly, and with a dim
- sense that his words were very effective as regarded
- Gabriel's emotions. "And I think the sojer was
- Sergeant Troy. And they sat there together for more
- than half-an-hour, talking moving things, and she once
- was crying a'most to death. And when they came out
- her eyes were shining and she was as white as a lily;
- and they looked into one another's faces, as far-gone
- friendly as a man and woman can be."
- Gabriel's features seemed to get thinner. "Well,
- what did you see besides?"
- "Oh, all sorts."
- "White as a lily? You are sure 'twas she?
- "Yes."
- "Well, what besides?"
- "Great glass windows to the shops, and great clouds
- in the sky, full of rain, and old wooden trees in the
- country round."
- "You stun-poll! What will ye say next?" said
- Coggan.
- "Let en alone." interposed Joseph Poorgrass. "The
- boy's meaning is that the sky and the earth in the
- kingdom of Bath is not altogether different from ours
- here. 'Tis for our good to gain knowledge of strange
- cities, and as such the boy's words should be suffered,
- so to speak it."
- "And the people of Bath." continued Cain, "never
- need to light their fires except as a luxury, for the
- water springs up out of the earth ready boiled for
- use."
- "'Tis true as the light." testified Matthew Moon." I've
- heard other navigators say the same thing."
- "They drink nothing else there." said Cain," and seem
- to enjoy it, to see how they swaller it down."
- "Well, it seems a barbarian practice enough to us,
- but I daresay the natives think nothing o' it." said
- Matthew.
- "And don't victuals spring up as well as drink?"
- asked Coggan, twirling his eye.
- "No-i own to a blot there in Bath -- a true blot.
- God didn't provide 'em with victuals as well as (-
- and 'twas a drawback I couldn't get over at all."
- "Well, 'tis a curious place, to say the least." observed
- Moon; "and it must be a curious people that live
- therein. "
- "Miss Everdene and the soldier were walking about
- together, you say?" said Gabriel, returning to the
- group.
- "Ay, and she wore a beautiful gold-colour silk
- gown, trimmed with black lace, that would have stood
- alone 'ithout legs inside if required. 'Twas a very
- winsome sight; and her hair was brushed splendid.
- And when the sun shone upon the bright gown and his
- red coat -- my! how handsome they looked. You
- could see 'em all the length of the street."
- "And what then?" murmured Gabriel.
- "And then I went into Griffin's to hae my boots
- hobbed, and then I went to Riggs's batty-cake shop,
- and asked 'em for a penneth of the cheapest and nicest
- stales, that were all but blue-mouldy, but not quite.
- And whilst I was chawing 'em down I walked on and
- seed a clock with a face as big as a baking trendle -- -- "
- "But that's nothing to do with mistress!"
- "I'm coming to that, if you'll leave me alone, Mister
- Oak!" remonstrated Cainy. "If you excites me,
- perhaps you'll bring on my cough, and then I shan't be
- able to tell ye nothing."
- "Yes-let him tell it his own way." said Coggan.
- Gabriel settled into a despairing attitude of patience,
- and Cainy went on: --
- "And there were great large houses, and more
- people all the week long than at Weatherbury club-
- walking on White Tuesdays. And I went to grand
- churches and chapels. And how the parson would pray!
- Yes; he would kneel down and put up his hands
- together, and make the holy gold rings on his fingers
- gleam and twinkle in yer eyes, that he'd earned
- by praying so excellent well! -- Ah yes, I wish I lived
- there."
- "Our poor Parson Thirdly can't get no money to
- buy such rings." said Matthew Moon, thoughtfully.
- "And as good a man as ever walked. I don't believe
- poor Thirdly have a single one, even of humblest tin or
- copper. Such a great ornament as they'd be to him on
- a dull afternoon, when he's up in the pulpit lighted by
- the wax candles! But 'tis impossible, poor man. Ah,
- to think how unequal things be."
- "Perhaps he's made of different stuff than to wear
- "em." said Gabriel, grimly." Well, that's enough of this.
- Go on, Cainy -- quick."
- "Oh -- and the new style of parsons wear moustaches
- and long beards." continued the illustrious traveller,
- "and look like Moses and Aaron complete, and make
- we fokes in the congregation feel all over like the
- children of Israel."
- "A very right feeling -- very." said Joseph Poorgrass.
- "And there's two religions going on in the nation
- now -- High Church and High Chapel. And, thinks I,
- I'll play fair; so I went to High Church in the morning,
- and High Chapel in the afternoon."
- "A right and proper boy." said Joseph Poorgrass.
- "Well, at High Church they pray singing, and worship
- all the colours of the rainbow; and at High Chapel they
- pray preaching, and worship drab and whitewash only.
- And then-i didn't see no more of Miss Everdene at
- all."
- "Why didn't you say so afore, then?" exclaimed Oak,
- with much disappointment.
- "Ah." said Matthew Moon, 'she'll wish her cake
- dough if so be she's over intimate with that man."
- "She's not over intimate with him." said Gabriel,
- indignantly.
- "She would know better." said Coggan. "Our
- mis'ess has too much sense under they knots of black
- hair to do such a mad thing."
- "You see, he's not a coarse, ignorant man, for he
- was well brought up." said Matthew, dubiously. "'Twas
- only wildness that made him a soldier, and maids rather
- like your man of sin."
- "Now, Cain Ball." said Gabriel restlessly, "can you
- swear in the most awful form that the woman you saw
- was Miss Everdene?"
- "Cain Ball, you be no longer a babe and suckling,"
- said Joseph in the sepulchral tone the circumstances
- demanded, "and you know what taking an oath is.
- 'Tis a horrible testament mind ye, which you say and
- seal with your blood-stone, and the prophet Matthew
- tells us that on whomsoever it shall fall it will grind
- him to powder. Now, before all the work-folk here
- assembled, can you swear to your words as the shep-
- herd asks ye?"
- "Please no, Mister Oak!" said Cainy, looking from
- one to the other with great uneasiness at the spiritual
- magnitude of the position. "I don't mind saying 'tis
- true, but I don't like to say 'tis damn true, if that's
- what you mane."
- "Cain, Cain, how can you!" asked Joseph sternly.
- "You be asked to swear in a holy manner, and you
- swear like wicked Shimei, the son of Gera, who cursed
- as he came. Young man, fie!"
- "No, I don't! 'Tis you want to squander a pore
- boy's soul, Joseph Poorgrass -- that's what 'tis!" said
- Cain, beginning to cry. "All I mane is that in common
- truth 'twas Miss Everdene and Sergeant Troy, but in
- the horrible so-help-me truth that ye want to make of
- it perhaps 'twas somebody else!"
- "There's no getting at the rights of it." said Gabriel,
- turning to his work.
- "Cain Ball, you'll come to a bit of bread!" groaned
- Joseph Poorgrass.
- Then the reapers' hooks were flourished again, and
- the old sounds went on. Gabriel, without making any
- pretence of being lively, did nothing to show that he
- was particularly dull. However, Coggan knew pretty
- nearly how the land lay, and when they were in a nook
- together he said --
- "Don't take on about her, Gabriel. What difference
- does it make whose sweetheart she is, since she can't be
- yours?"
- "That's the very thing I say to myself." said Gabriel.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-
-
- HOME AGAIN -- A TRICKSTER
-
-
- THAT same evening at dusk Gabriel was leaning over
- Coggan's garden-gate, taking an up-and-down survey
- before retiring to rest.
- A vehicle of some kind was softly creeping along
- the grassy margin of the lane. From it spread the
- tones of two women talking. The tones were natural
- and not at all suppressed. Oak instantly knew the
- voices to he those of Bathsheba and Liddy.
- The carriage came opposite and passed by. It was
- Miss Everdene's gig, and Liddy and her mistress were
- the only occupants of the seat. Liddy was asking
- questions about the city of Bath, and her companion
- was answering them listlessly and unconcernedly. Both
- Bathsheba and the horse seemed weary.
- The exquisite relief of finding that she was here
- again, safe and sound, overpowered all reflection, and
- Oak could only luxuriate in the sense of it. All grave
- reports were forgotten.
- He lingered and lingered on, till there was no
- difference between the eastern and western expanses
- of sky, and the timid hares began to limp courageously
- round the dim hillocks. Gabriel might have been
- there an additional half-hour when a dark form walked
- slowly by. "Good-night, Gabriel." the passer said.
- It was Boldwood. "Good-night, sir." said Gabriel.
- Boldwood likewise vanished up the road, and Oak
- shortly afterwards turned indoors to bed.
- Farmer Boldwood went on towards Miss Everdene's
- house. He reached the front, and approaching the
- entrance, saw a light in the parlour. The blind was
- not drawn down, and inside the room was Bathsheba,
- looking over some papers or letters. Her back was
- towards Boldwood. He went to the door, knocked,
- and waited with tense muscles and an aching brow.
- Boldwood had not been outside his garden since
- his meeting with Bathsheba in the road to Yalbury.
- Silent and alone, he had remained in moody medita-
- tion on woman's ways, deeming as essentials of the
- whole sex the accidents of the single one of their
- number he had ever closely beheld. By degrees a
- more charitable temper had pervaded him, and this
- was the reason of his sally to-night. He had come to
- apologize and beg forgiveness of Bathsheba with some-
- thing like a sense of shame at his violence, having but
- just now learnt that she had returned -- only from a
- visit to Liddy, as he supposed, the Bath escapade
- being quite unknown to him.
- He inquired for Miss Everdene. Liddy's manner
- was odd, but he did not notice it. She went in, leaving
- him standing there, and in her absence the blind of the
- room containing Bathsheba was pulled down. Bold-
- wood augured ill from that sign. Liddy came out.
- "My mistress cannot see you, sir." she said.
- The farmer instantly went out by the gate. He
- as unforgiven -- that was the issue of it all. He had
- seen her who was to him simultaneously a delight and
- a torture, sitting in the room he had shared with her
- as a peculiarly privileged guest only a little earlier in
- he summer, and she had denied him an entrance
- there now.
- Boldwood did not hurry homeward. It was ten
- o'clock at least, when, walking deliberately through the
- lower part of Weatherbury, he heard the carrier's spring
- van entering the village. The van ran to and from a
- town in a northern direction, and it was owned and
- driven by a Weatherbury man, at the door of whose
- house it now pulled up. The lamp fixed to the head
- of the hood illuminated a scarlet and gilded form, who
- was the first to alight.
- "Ah!" said Boldwood to himself, "come to see her
- again."
- Troy entered the carrier's house, which had been
- the place of his lodging on his last visit to his native
- place. Boldwood was moved by a sudden determina-
- tion. He hastened home. In ten minutes he was
- back again, and made as if he were going to call upon
- Troy at the carrier's. But as he approached, some
- one opened the door and came out. He heard this
- person say " Good-night" to the inmates, and the voice
- was Troy's. "This was strange, coming so immediately
- after his arrival. Boldwood, however, hastened up
- to him. Troy had what appeared to be a carpet-bag
- in his hand -- the same that he had brought with him.
- It seemed as if he were going to leave again this very
- night.
- Troy turned up the hill and quickened his pace.
- Boldwood stepped forward.
- "Sergeant Troy?"
- "Yes-i'm Sergeant Troy."
- "Just arrived from up the country, I think?"Just arrived from Bath."
- "I am William Boldwood."
- "Indeed."
- The tone in which this word was uttered was all
- that had been wanted to bring Boldwood to the
- point.
- "I wish to speak a word with you." he said.
- "What about?"
- "About her who lives just ahead there -- and about
- a woman you have wronged."
- "I wonder at your impertinence." said Troy, moving
- on.
- "Now look here." said Boldwood, standing in front
- of him, " wonder or not, you are going to hold a conver-
- sation with me."
- Troy heard the dull determination in Boldwood's
- voice, looked at his stalwart frame, then at the thick
- cudgel he carried in his hand. He remembered it was
- past ten o'clock. It seemed worth while to be civil to
- Boldwood.
- "Very well, I'll listen with pleasure." said Troy,
- placing his bag on the ground, "only speak low, for
- somebody or other may overhear us in the farmhouse
- there."
- "Well then -- I know a good deal concerning your
- Fanny Robin's attachment to you. I may say, too, that
- I believe I am the only person in the village, excepting
- Gabriel Oak, who does know it. You ought to marry
- her."
- "I suppose I ought. Indeed, l wish to, but I
- cannot."
- "Why?"
- Troy was about to utter something hastily; he then
- checked himself and said, "I am too poor." His voice
- was changed. Previously it had had a devil-may-care
- tone. It was the voice of a trickster now.
- Boldwood's present mood was not critical enough to
- notice tones. He continued, "I may as well speak
- plainly; and understand, I don't wish to enter into the
- questions of right or wrong, woman's honour and shame,
- or to express any opinion on your conduct. I intend a
- business transaction with you."
- "I see." said Troy. "Suppose we sit down here."
- An old tree trunk lay under the hedge immediately
- opposite, and they sat down.
- The tone in which this word was uttered was all
- Troy heard the dull determination in Boldwood's
- voice, looked at his stalwart frame, then at the thick
- plainly; and understand, I don't wish to enter into the
- "I was engaged to be married to Miss Everdene,"
- said Boldwood, "but you came and -- -- "
- "Not engaged." said Troy.
- "As good as engaged."
- "If I had not turned up she might have become en-
- gaged to you."
- "Hang might!"Would, then."
- "If you had not come I should certainly -- yes,
- certainly -- have been accepted by this time. If you had
- not seen her you might have been married to Fanny.
- Well, there's too much difference between Miss Ever-
- dene's station and your own for this flirtation with her
- ever to benefit you by ending in marriage. So all I ask
- is, don't molest her any more. Marry Fanny.
- make it worth your while."
- "How will you?"
- "I'll pay you well now, I'll settle a sum of money
- upon her, and I'll see that you don't suffer from poverty
- in the future. I'll put it clearly. Bathsheba is only
- playing with you: you are too poor for her as I said;
- so give up wasting your time about a great match you'll
- never make for a moderate and rightful match you may
- make to-morrow; take up your carpet-bag, turn about,
- leave Weatherbury now, this night, and you shall take
- fifty pounds with you. Fanny shall have fifty to enable
- her to prepare for the wedding, when you have told me
- where she is living, and she shall have five hundred
- paid down on her wedding-day."
- In making this statement Boldwood's voice revealed
- only too clearly a consciousness of the weakness of his
- position, his aims, and his method. His manner had
- lapsed quite from that of the firm and dignified Bold-
- wood of former times; and such a scheme as he had
- now engaged in he would have condemned as childishly
- imbecile only a few months ago. We discern a grand
- force in the lover which he lacks whilst a free man; but
- there is a breadth of vision in the free man which in
- the lover we vainly seek. Where there is much bias
- there must be some narrowness, and love, though added
- emotion, is subtracted capacity. Boldwood exemplified
- this to an abnormal degree: he knew nothing of Fanny
- Robin's circumstances or whereabouts, he knew nothing
- of Troy's possibilities, yet that was what he said.
- "I like Fanny best." said Troy; "and if, as you say,
- Miss Everdene is out of my reach, why I have all to
- gain by accepting your money, and marrying Fan. But
- she's only a servant."
- "Never mind -- do you agree to my arrangement?"
- "I do."
- "Ah!" said Boldwood, in a more elastic voice. "O,
- Troy, if you like her best, why then did you step in here
- and injure my happiness?"
- "I love Fanny best now." said Troy. "But
- Bathsh -- -- Miss Everdene inflamed me, and displaced
- Fanny for a time. It is over now."
- "Why should it be over so soon? And why then
- did you come here again?"
- "There are weighty reasons. Fifty pounds at once,
- you said!"
- "I did." said Boldwood, " and here they are -- fifty
- sovereigns." He handed Troy a small packet.
- "You have everything ready -- it seems that you
- calculated on my accepting them." said the sergeant,
- taking the packet.
- "I thought you might accept them." said Boldwood.
- "You've only my word that the programme shall be
- adhered to, whilst I at any rate have fifty pounds."
- "l had thought of that, and l have considered that
- if I can't appeal to your honour I can trust to your --
- well, shrewdness we'll call it -- not to lose five hundred
- pounds in prospect, and also make a bitter enemy of a
- man who is willing to be an extremely useful friend."
- "Stop, listen!" said Troy in a whisper.
- A light pit-pat was audible upon the road just above
- them.
- "By George -- 'tis she." he continued. "I must go
- on and meet her."
- "She -- who?"
- "Bathsheba."
- "Bathsheba -- out alone at this time o' night!" said
- Boldwood in amazement, and starting up." Why must
- you meet her?"
- "She was expecting me to-night -- and I must now
- speak to her, and wish her good-bye, according to your
- wish. "
- "I don't see the necessity of speaking."
- "It can do no harm -- and she'll be wandering about
- looking for me if I don't. You shall hear all I say to her.
- It will help you in your love-making when I am gone."
- "Your tone is mocking."
- "O no. And remember this, if she does not know
- what has become of me, she will think more about me
- than if I tell her flatly I have come to give her up."
- "Will you confine your words to that one point? --
- Shall I hear every word you say?"
- "Every word. Now sit still there, and hold my"
- carpet bag for me, and mark what you hear."
- The light footstep came closer, halting occasionally,
- as if the walker listened for a sound. Troy whistled a
- double note in a soft, fluty tone.
- "Come to that, is it!" murmured Boldwood, uneasily.
- "You promised silence." said Troy.
- "I promise again."
- Troy stepped forward.
- "Frank, dearest, is that you?" The tones were
- Bathsheba's.
- "O God!" said Boldwood.
- "Yes." said Troy to her.
- "How late you are." she continued, tenderly. "Did
- you come by the carrier? I listened and heard his
- wheels entering the village, but it was some time ago,
- and I had almost given you up, Frank."
- "I was sure to come." said Frank. "You knew I
- should, did you not?"
- "Well, I thought you would." she said, playfully;
- "and, Frank, it is so lucky! There's not a soul in my
- house but me to-night. I've packed them all off so
- nobody on earth will know of your visit to your lady's
- bower. Liddy wanted to go to her grandfather's to
- tell him about her holiday, and I said she might stay
- with them till to-morrow -- when you'll be gone again."
- "Capital." said Troy." But, dear me, I. had better
- go back for my bag, because my slippers and brush and
- comb are in it; you run home whilst I fetch it, and I'll
- promise to be in your parlour in ten minutes."
- "Yes." She turned and tripped up the hill again.
- During the progress of this dialogue there was a
- nervous twitching of Boldwood's tightly closed lips, and
- his face became bathed in a clammy dew. He now
- started forward towards Troy. Troy turned to him and
- took up the bag.
- "Shall I tell her I have come to give her up and
- cannot marry her?" said the soldier, mockingly.
- "No, no; wait a minute. I want to say more to
- you -- more to you!" said Boldwood, in a hoarse whisper.
- "Now." said Troy," you see my dilemma. Perhaps
- I am a bad man -- the victim of my impulses -- led away
- to do what I ought to leave undone. I can't, however,
- marry them both. And I have two reasons for- choosing
- Fanny. First, I like her best upon the whole, and
- second, you make it worth my while."
- At the same instant Boldwood sprang upon him, and
- held him by the neck. Troy felt Boldwood's grasp slowly
- tightening. The move was absolutely unexpected.
- "A moment." he gasped. "You are injuring her you
- love!"
- "Well, what do you mean?" said the farmer.
- Give me breath." said Troy.
- Boldwood loosened his hand, saying, "By Heaven,
- I've a mind to kill you!"
- "And ruin her."
- "Save her."
- "Oh, how can she be saved now, unless I marry her?"
- Boldwood groaned. He reluctantly released the
- soldier, and flung him back against the hedge. "Devil,
- you torture me!" said he.
- Troy rebounded like a ball, and was about to make
- a dash at the farmer; but he checked himself, saying
- lightly --
- "It is not worth while to measure my strength with
- you. Indeed it is a barbarous way of settling a quarrel.
- I shall shortly leave the army because of the same
- conviction. Now after that revelation of how the land
- lies with Bathsheba, 'twould be a mistake to kill me,
- would it not?"
- "'Twould be a mistake to kill you." repeated Boldwood,
- mechanically, with a bowed head.
- "Better kill yourself."
- "Far better."
- "I'm glad you see it."
- "Troy, make her your wife, and don't act upon what
- I arranged just now. The alternative is dreadful, but
- take Bathsheba; I give her up! She must love you
- indeed to sell soul and body to you so utterly as she
- has done. Wretched woman -- deluded woman -- you
- are, Bathsheba!"
- "But about Fanny?"
- "Bathsheba is a woman well to do." continued Bold-
- wood, in nervous anxiety, and, Troy, she will make a
- good wife; and, indeed, she is worth your hastening
- on your marriage with her! "
- "But she has a will-not to say a temper, and I shall
- be a mere slave to her. I could do anything with poor
- Fanny Robin."
- "Troy." said Boldwood, imploringly," I'll do anything
- for you, only don't desert her; pray don't desert her,
- Troy."
- "Which, poor Fanny?"
- "No; Bathsheba Everdene. Love her best! Love
- her tenderly! How shall I get you to see how advan-
- tageous it will be to you to secure her at once?"
- "I don't wish to secure her in any new way."
- Boldwood's arm moved spasmodically towards Troy's
- person again. He repressed the instinct, and his form
- drooped as with pain.
- Troy went on --
- "I shall soon purchase my discharge, and then -- -- "
- "But I wish you to hasten on this marriage! It will
- be better for you both. You love each other, and you
- must let me help you to do it."
- "How?"
- "Why, by settling the five hundred on Bathsheba
- instead of Fanny, to enable you to marry at once.
- No; she wouldn't have it of me. I'll pay it down to
- you on the wedding-day."
- Troy paused in secret amazement at Boldwood's
- wild infatuation. He carelessly said, "And am I to
- have anything now?"
- "Yes, if you wish to. But I have not much additional
- money with me. I did not expect this; but all I have
- is yours."
- Boldwood, more like a somnambulist than a wakeful
- man, pulled out the large canvas bag he carried by way
- of a purse, and searched it.
- "I have twenty-one pounds more with me." he said.
- "Two notes and a sovereign. But before I leave you
- I must have a paper signed -- -- "
- "Pay me the money, and we'll go straight to her
- parlour, and make any arrangement you please to secure
- my compliance with your wishes. But she must know
- nothing of this cash business."
- "Nothing, nothing." said Boldwood, hastily. "Here
- is the sum, and if you'll come to my house we'll write
- out the agreement for the remainder, and the terms
- also."
- "First we'll call upon her."
- "But why? Come with me to-night, and go with
- me to-morrow to the surrogate's."
- "But she must be consulted; at any rate informed."
- "Very well; go on."
- They went up the hill to Bathsheba's house. When
- they stood at the entrance, Troy said, "Wait here a
- moment." Opening the door, he glided inside, leaving
- the door ajar.
- Boldwood waited. In two minutes a light appeared
- in the passage. Boldwood then saw that the chain
- had been fastened across the door. Troy appeared
- inside, carrying a bedroom candlestick.
- "What, did you think I should break in?" said
- Boldwood, contemptuously.
- "Oh, no, it is merely my humour to secure things.
- Will you read this a moment? I'll hold the light."
- Troy handed a folded newspaper through the slit
- between door and doorpost, and put the candle close.
- "That's the paragraph." he said, placing his finger on
- a line.
- Boldwood looked and read --
- "MARRIAGES.
- "On the 17th inst., at St. Ambrose's Church, Bath,
- by the Rev. G. Mincing, B.A., Francis Troy, only son
- of the late Edward Troy, Esq., H.D., of Weatherbury,
- and sergeant with Dragoon Guards, to Bathsheba, only
- surviving daughter of the late Mr, John Everdene, of
- Casterbridge."
- "This may be called Fort meeting Feeble, hey,
- Boldwood?" said Troy. A low gurgle of derisive
- laughter followed the words.
- The paper fell from Boldwood's hands. Troy
- continued --
- "Fifty pounds to marry Fanny, Good. Twenty--
- one pounds not to marry Fanny, but Bathsheba. Good.
- Finale: already Bathsheba's husband. Now, Boldwood,
- yours is the ridiculous fate which always attends inter-
- ference between a man and his wife. And another
- word. Bad as I am, I am not such a villain as to
- make the marriage or misery of any woman a matter
- of huckster and sale. Fanny has long ago left me.
- don't know where she is. I have searched everywhere.
- Another word yet. You say you love Bathsheba; yet
- on the merest apparent evidence you instantly believe
- in her dishonour. A fig for such love! Now that I've
- taught you a lesson, take your money back again."
- "I will not; I will not!" said Boldwood, in a hiss.
- "Anyhow I won't have it." said Troy, contemptuously.
- He wrapped the packet of gold in the notes, and threw
- the whole into the road.
- Boldwood shook his clenched fist at him. "You
- juggler of Satan! You black hound! But I'll punish
- you yet; mark me, I'll punish you yet!"
- Another peal of laughter. Troy then closed the
- door, and locked himself in.
- Throughout the whole of that night Boldwood's dark
- downs of Weatherbury like an unhappy Shade in the
- Mournful Fields by Acheron.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXV
-
-
-
- AT AN UPPER WINDOW
-
-
- IT was very early the next morning -- a time of sun and
- dew. The confused beginnings of many birds' songs
- spread into the healthy air, and the wan blue of the
- heaven was here and there coated with thin webs of
- incorporeal cloud which were of no effect in obscuring
- day. All the lights in the scene were yellow as to
- colour, and all the shadows were attenuated as to form.
- The creeping plants about the old manor-house were
- bowed with rows of heavy water drops, which had upon
- objects behind them the effect of minute lenses of high
- magnifying power.
- Just before the clock struck five Gabriel Oak and
- Coggan passed the village cross, and went on together
- to the fields. They were yet barely in view of their
- mistress's house, when Oak fancied he saw the opening
- of a casement in one of the upper windows. The two
- men were at this moment partially screened by an elder
- bush, now beginning to be enriched with black bunches
- of fruit, and they paused before emerging from its
- shade.
- A handsome man leaned idly from the lattice. He
- looked east and then west, in the manner of one who
- makes a first morning survey. The man was Sergeant
- Troy. His red jacket was loosely thrown on, but not
- buttoned, and he had altogether the relaxed bearing of
- a soldier taking his ease.
- Coggan spoke first, looking quietly at the window.
- "She has married him!" he said.
- Gabriel had previously beheld the sight, and he now
- stood with his back turned, making no reply.
- "I fancied we should know something to-day." con-
- tinued Coggan. "I heard wheels pass my door just
- after dark -- you were out somewhere."He glanced
- round upon Gabriel. "Good heavens above us, Oak,
- how white your face is; you look like a corpse!"
- "Do I?" said Oak, with a faint smile.
- "Lean on the gate: I'll wait a bit."
- "All right, all right."
- They stood by the gate awhile, Gabriel listlessly
- staring at the ground. His mind sped into the future,
- and saw there enacted in years of leisure the scenes o
- repentance that would ensue from this work of haste
- That they were married he had instantly decided. Why
- had it been so mysteriously managed? It had become
- known that she had had a fearful journey to Bath, owing
- to her miscalculating the distance: that the horse had
- broken down, and that she had been more than two
- days getting there. It was not Bathsheba's way to do
- things furtively. With all her faults, she was candour
- itself. Could she have been entrapped? The union
- was not only an unutterable grief to him: it amazed
- him, notwithstanding that he had passed the preceding
- week in a suspicion that such might be the issue of
- Troy's meeting her away from home. Her quiet return
- with liddy had to some extent dispersed the dread.
- Just as that imperceptible motion which appears like
- stillness is infinitely divided in its properties from stili
- ness itself, so had his hope undistinguishable from
- despair differed from despair indeed.
- In a few minutes they moved on again towards the
- house. The sergeant still looked from the window.
- "Morning, comrades!" he shouted, in a cheery voice,
- when they came up.
- Coggan replied to the greeting. "Bain't ye going to
- answer the man?" he then said to Gabriel. "I'd say
- good morning -- you needn't spend a hapenny of meaning
- upon it, and yet keep the man civil."
- Gabriel soon decided too that, since the deed was
- done, to put the best face upon the matter would be the
- greatest kindness to her he loved.
- "Good morning, Sergeant Troy." he returned, in a
- ghastly voice.
- "A rambling, gloomy house this." said Troy, smiling.
- "Why -- they may not be married!" suggested Coggan.
- "Perhaps she's not there."
- Gabriel shook his head. The soldier turned a little
- towards the east, and the sun kindled his scarlet coat
- to an orange glow.
- "But it is a nice old house." responded Gabriel.
- "Yes -- I suppose so; but I feel like new wine in an
- old bottle here. My notion is that sash-windows should
- be put throughout, and these old wainscoted walls
- brightened up a bit; or the oak cleared quite away, and
- the walls papered."
- "It would be a pity, I think."
- Well, no. A philosopher once said in my hearing
- that the old builders, who worked when art was a living
- thing, had no respect for the work of builders who went
- before them, but pulled down and altered as they
- thought fit; and why shouldn't we?"'Creation and
- preservation don't do well together." says he, "and a
- million of antiquarians can't invent a style." My mind
- exactly. I am for making this place more modern, that
- we may be cheerful whilst we can."
- The military man turned and surveyed the interior
- of the room, to assist his ideas of improvement in this
- direction. Gabriel and Coggan began to move on.
- "Oh, Coggan." said Troy, as if inspired by a recollec-
- tion" do you know if insanity has ever appeared in Mr.
- Boldwood's family?"
- Jan reflected for a moment.
- "I once heard that an uncle of his was queer in his
- head, but I don't know the rights o't." he said.
- "It is of no importance." said Troy, lightly. "Well,
- I shall be down in the fields with you some time this
- week; but I have a few matters to attend to first. So
- good-day to you. We shall, of course, keep on just as
- friendly terms as usual. I'm not a proud man: nobody
- is ever able to say that of Sergeant Troy. However,
- what is must be, and here's half-a-crown to drink my
- health, men."
- Troy threw the coin dexterously across the front plot
- and over the fence towards Gabriel, who shunned it in
- its fall, his face turning to an angry red. Coggan
- twirled his eye, edged forward, and caught the money
- in its ricochet upon the road.
- "very well-you keep it, Coggan." said Gabriel with
- disdain and almost fiercely. "As for me, I'll do with-
- out gifts from him!"
- "Don't show it too much." said Coggan, musingly.
- "For if he's married to her, mark my words, he'll buy
- his discharge and be our master here. Therefore 'tis
- well to say `Friend' outwardly, though you say
- `Troublehouse' within."
- "Well-perhaps it is best to be silent; but I can't
- go further than that. I can't flatter, and if my place
- here is only to be kept by smoothing him down, my
- place must be lost."
- A horseman, whom they had for some time seen in
- the distance, now appeared close beside them.
- "There's Mr. Boldwood." said Oak." I wonder what
- Troy meant by his question."
- Coggan and Oak nodded respectfully to the farmer,
- just checked their paces to discover if they were wanted,
- and finding they were not stood back to let him pass on.
- The only signs of the terrible sorrow Boldwood had
- been combating through the night, and was combating
- now, were the want of colour in his well-defined face,
- the enlarged appearance of the veins in his forehead
- and temples, and the sharper lines about his mouth.
- The horse bore him away, and the very step of the
- animal seemed significant of dogged despair. Gabriel, for
- a minute, rose above his own grief in noticing Boldwood's.
- He saw the square figure sitting erect upon the horse,
- the head turned to neither side, the elbows steady by
- the hips, the brim of the hat level and undisturbed in
- its onward glide, until the keen edges of Boldwood's
- shape sank by degrees over the hill. To one who knew
- the man and his story there was something more striking
- in this immobility than in a collapse. The clash of
- discord between mood and matter here was forced
- painfully home to the heart; and, as in laughter there are
- more dreadful phases than in tears, so was there in the
- steadiness of this agonized man an expression deeper
- than a cry.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-
-
- WEALTH IN JEOPARDY -- THE REVEL
-
-
- ONE night, at the end of August, when Bathsheba's
- experiences as a married woman were still new, and
- when the weather was yet dry and sultry, a man stood
- motionless in the stockyard of Weatherbury Upper
- Farm, looking at the moon and sky.
- The night had a sinister aspect. A heated breeze
- from the south slowly fanned the summits of lofty
- objects, and in the sky dashes of buoyant cloud were
- sailing in a course at right angles to that of another
- stratum, neither of them in the direction of the breeze
- below. The moon, as seen through these films, had
- a lurid metallic look. The fields were sallow with the
- impure light, and all were tinged in monochrome, as
- if beheld through stained glass. The same evening
- the sheep had trailed homeward head to tail, the
- behaviour of the rooks had been confused, and the
- horses had moved with timidity and caution.
- Thunder was imminent, and, taking some secondary
- appearances into consideration, it was likely to be
- followed by one of the lengthened rains which mark
- the close of dry weather for the season. Before twelve
- hours had passed a harvest atmosphere would be a
- bygone thing.
- Oak gazed with misgiving at eight naked and un-
- protected ricks, massive and heavy with the rich
- produce of one-half the farm for that year. He went
- on to the barn.
- This was the night which had been selected by
- Sergeant Troy -- ruling now in the room of his wife --
- for giving the harvest supper and dance. As Oak
- approached the building the sound of violins and a
- tambourine, and the regular jigging of many feet, grew
- more distinct. He came close to the large doors, one
- of which stood slightly ajar, and looked in.
- The central space, together with the recess at one
- end, was emptied of all incumbrances, and this area,
- covering about two-thirds of the whole, was appropriated
- for the gathering, the remaining end, which was piled
- to the ceiling with oats, being screened off with sail-
- cloth. Tufts and garlands of green foliage decorated
- the walls, beams, and extemporized chandeliers, and
- immediately opposite to Oak a rostrum had been
- erected, bearing a table and chairs. Here sat three
- fiddlers, and beside them stood a frantic man with his
- hair on end, perspiration streaming down his cheeks,
- and a tambourine quivering in his hand.
- The dance ended, and on the black oak floor in the
- midst a new row of couples formed for another.
- "Now, ma'am, and no offence I hope, I ask what
- dance you would like next?" said the first violin.
- "Really, it makes no difference." said the clear voice
- of Bathsheba, who stood at the inner end of the build-
- ing, observing the scene from behind a table covered
- with cups and viands. Troy was lolling beside her.
- "Then." said the fiddler, "I'll venture to name that
- the right and proper thing is "The Soldier's Joy" --
- there being a gallant soldier married into the farm --
- hey, my sonnies, and gentlemen all?"
- "It shall be "The Soldier's Joy," exclaimed a
- chorus.
- "Thanks for the compliment." said the sergeant
- gaily, taking Bathsheba by the hand and leading her
- to the top of the dance. "For though I have pur-
- chased my discharge from Her Most Gracious Majesty's
- regiment of cavalry the 11th Dragoon Guards, to attend
- to the new duties awaiting me here, I shall continue a
- soldier in spirit and feeling as long as I live."
- So the dance began. As to the merits of "The
- Soldier's Joy." there cannot be, and never were, two
- opinions. It has been observed in the musical circles
- of Weatherbury and its vicinity that this melody, at
- the end of three-quarters of an hour of thunderous
- footing, still possesses more stimulative properties for
- the heel and toe than the majority of other dances at
- their first opening. "The Soldier's Joy" has, too, an
- additional charm, in being so admirably adapted to
- the tambourine aforesaid -- no mean instrument in the
- hands of a performer who understands the proper
- convulsions, spasms, St. vitus's dances, and fearful
- frenzies necessary when exhibiting its tones in their
- highest perfection.
- The immortal tune ended, a fine DD rolling forth
- from the bass-viol with the sonorousness of a cannonade,
- and Gabriel delayed his entry no longer. He avoided
- Bathsheba, and got as near as possible to the platform,
- where Sergeant Troy was now seated, drinking brandy-
- and-water, though the others drank without exception
- cider and ale. Gabriel could not easily thrust himself
- within speaking distance of the sergeant, and he sent
- a message, asking him to come down for a moment.
- "The sergeant said he could not attend.
- "Will you tell him, then." said Gabriel, "that I only
- stepped ath'art to say that a heavy rain is sure to fall
- soon, and that something should be done to protect
- the ricks?"
- "M. Troy says it will not rain." returned the
- messenger, "and he cannot stop to talk to you about
- such fidgets."
- In Juxtaposition with Troy, Oak had a melancholy
- tendency to look like a candle beside gas, and ill at
- ease, he went out again, thinking he would go home;
- for, under the circumstances, he had no heart for the
- scene in the barn. At the door he paused for a
- moment: Troy was speaking.
- "Friends, it is not only the harvest home that we
- are celebrating to-night; but this is also a Wedding
- Feast. A short time ago I had the happiness to lead
- to the altar this lady, your mistress, and not until now
- have we been able to give any public flourish to the
- event in Weatherbury. That it may be thoroughly
- well done, and that every man may go happy to bed,
- I have ordered to be brought here some bottles of
- brandy and kettles of hot water. A treble-strong
- goblet will he handed round to each guest."
- Bathsheba put her hand upon his arm, and, with
- upturned pale face, said imploringly," No -- don't give
- it to them -- pray don't, Frank! It will only do them
- harm: they have had enough of everything."
- "True -- we don't wish for no more, thank ye." said
- one or two.
- "Pooh!" said the sergeant contemptuously, and
- raised his voice as if lighted up by a new idea.
- "Friends." he said," we'll send the women-folk home!
- 'Tis time they were in bed. Then we cockbirds will
- have a jolly carouse to ourselves! If any of the men
- show the white feather, let them look elsewhere for a
- winter's work."
- Bathsheba indignantly left the barn, followed by
- all the women and children. The musicians, not
- looking upon themselves as "company." slipped quietly
- away to their spring waggon and put in the horse.
- Thus Troy and the men on the farm were left sole
- occupants of the place. Oak, not to appear unneces-
- sarily disagreeable, stayed a little while; then he, too,
- arose and quietly took his departure, followed by a
- friendly oath from the sergeant for not staying to a
- second round of grog.
- Gabriel proceeded towards his home. In approach-
- ing the door, his toe kicked something which felt and
- sounded soft, leathery, and distended, like a boxing-
- glove. It was a large toad humbly travelling across
- the path. Oak took it up, thinking it might be better
- to kill the creature to save it from pain; but finding
- it uninjured, he placed it again among the grass. He
- knew what this direct message from the Great Mother
- meant. And soon came another.
- When he struck a light indoors there appeared upon
- the table a thin glistening streak, as if a brush of varnish
- had been lightly dragged across it. Oak's eyes followed
- the serpentine sheen to the other side, where it led up
- to a huge brown garden-slug, which had come indoors
- to-night for reasons of its own. It was Nature's second
- way of hinting to him that he was to prepare for foul
- weather.
- Oak sat down meditating for nearly an hour.
- During this time two black spiders, of the kind common
- in thatched houses, promenaded the ceiling, ultimately
- dropping to the floor. This reminded him that if there
- was one class of manifestation on this matter that he
- thoroughly understood, it was the instincts of sheep.
- He left the room, ran across two or three fields towards
- the flock, got upon a hedge, and looked over among
- them.
- They were crowded close together on the other side
- around some furze bushes, and the first peculiarity ob-
- servable was that, on the sudden appearance of Oak's
- head over the fence, they did not stir or run away.
- They had now a terror of something greater than their
- terror of man. But this was not the most noteworthy
- feature: they were all grouped in such a way that their
- tails, without a single exception, were towards that half
- of the horizon from which the storm threatened. There
- was an inner circle closely huddled, and outside these
- they radiated wider apart, the pattern formed by the
- flock as a whole not being unlike a vandyked lace
- collar, to which the clump of furze-bushes stood in the
- position of a wearer's neck.
- opinion. He knew now that he was right, and that
- Troy was wrong. Every voice in nature was unanimous
- in bespeaking change. But two distinct translations
- attached to these dumb expressions. Apparently there
- was to be a thunder-storm, and afterwards a cold con-
- tinuous rain. The creeping things seemed to know all
- about the later rain, hut little of the interpolated
- thunder-storm; whilst the sheep knew all about the
- thunder-storm and nothing of the later rain.
- This complication of weathers being uncommon,
- was all the more to be feared. Oak returned to the
- stack-yard. All was silent here, and the conical tips of
- the ricks jutted darkly into the sky. There were five
- wheat-ricks in this yard, and three stacks of barley.
- The wheat when threshed would average about thirty
- quarters to each stack; the barley, at least forty. Their
- value to Bathsheba, and indeed to anybody, Oak
- mentally estimated by the following simple calcula-
- tion: --
- 5 x 30 = 150 quarters= 500 L.
- 3 x 40=120 quarters= 250 L.
- Total . . 750 L.
- Seven hundred and fifty pounds in the divinest form
- that money can wear -- that of necessary food for man
- and beast: should the risk be run of deteriorating this
- bulk of corn to less than half its value, because of the
- instability of a woman?"Never, if I can prevent it!"
- said Gabriel.
- Such was the argument that Oak set outwardly before
- him. But man, even to himself, is a palimpsest, having
- an ostensible writing, and another beneath the lines.
- It is possible that there was this golden legend under
- the utilitarian one: "I will help to my last effort the
- woman I have loved so dearly."
- He went back to the barn to endeavour to obtain
- assistance for covering the ricks that very night. All
- was silent within, and he would have passed on in the
- belief that the party had broken up, had not a dim
- light, yellow as saffron by contrast with the greenish
- whiteness outside, streamed through a knot-hole in the
- folding doors.
- Gabriel looked in. An unusual picture met his eye.
- The candles suspended among the evergreens had
- burnt down to their sockets, and in some cases the
- leaves tied about them were scorched. Many of the
- lights had quite gone out, others smoked and stank,
- grease dropping from them upon the floor. Here,
- under the table, and leaning against forms and chairs
- in every conceivable attitude except the perpendicular,!"
- were the wretched persons of all the work-folk, the hair
- of their heads at such low levels being suggestive of
- mops and brooms. In the midst of these shone red
- and distinct the figure of Sergeant Troy, leaning back
- in a chair. Coggan was on his back, with his mouth
- open, huzzing forth snores, as were several others; the
- united breathings of the horizonal assemblage forming
- a subdued roar like London from a distance. Joseph
- Poorgrass was curled round in the fashion of a hedge-
- hog, apparently in attempts to present the least possible
- portion of his surface to the air; and behind him was
- dimly visible an unimportant remnant of William Small-
- bury. The glasses and cups still stood upon the table,
- a water-jug being overturned, from which a small rill,
- after tracing its course with marvellous precision down
- the centre of the long table, fell into the neck of the
- unconscious Mark Clark, in a steady, monotonous drip,
- like the dripping of a stalactite in a cave.
- Gabriel glanced hopelessly at the group, which, with
- one or two exceptions, composed all the able-bodied
- men upon the farm. He saw at once that if the ricks
- were to be saved that night, or even the next morning,
- he must save them with his own hands.
- A faint "ting-ting" resounded from under Coggan's
- waistcoat. It was Coggan's watch striking the hour of
- two.
- Oak went to the recumbent form of Matthew Moon,
- who usually undertook the rough thatching of the home-
- stead, and shook him. The shaking was without effect.
- Gabriel shouted in his ear, "where's your thatching-
- beetle and rick-stick and spars?"
- "Under the staddles." said Moon, mechanically, with
- the unconscious promptness of a medium.
- Gabriel let go his head, and it dropped upon the
- floor like a bowl. He then went to Susan Tall's
- husband.
- "where's the key of the granary?"
- No answer. The question was repeated, with the
- same result. To be shouted to at night was evidently
- less of a novelty to Susan Tall's husband than to
- Matthew Moon. Oak flung down Tall's head into the
- corner again and turned away.
- To be just, the men were not greatly to blame for
- this painful and demoralizing termination to the
- evening's entertainment. Sergeant Troy had so strenu-
- ously insisted, glass in hand, that drinking should be
- the bond of their union, that those who wished to refuse
- hardly liked to be so unmannerly under the circum-
- stances. Having from their youth up been entirely un-
- accustomed to any liquor stronger than cider or mild
- ale, it was no wonder that they had succumbed, one
- and all, with extraordinary uniformity, after the lapse of
- about an hour.
- Gabriel was greatly depressed. This debauch boded
- ill for that wilful and fascinating mistress whom the
- faithful man even now felt within him as the embodi-
- ment of all that was sweet and bright and hopeless.
- He put out the expiring lights, that the barn might
- not be endangered, closed the door upon the men in
- their deep and oblivious sleep, and went again into the
- lone night. A hot breeze, as if breathed from the
- parted lips of some dragon about to swallow the globe,
- fanned him from the south, while directly opposite in
- the north rose a grim misshapen body of cloud, in the
- very teeth of the wind. So unnaturally did it rise that
- one could fancy it to be lifted by machinery from below.
- Meanwhile the faint cloudlets had flown back into the
- south-east corner of the sky, as if in terror of the large
- cloud, like a young brood gazed in upon by some
- monster.
- Going on to the village, Oak flung a small stone
- against the window of Laban Tall's bedroom, expecting
- Susan to open it; but nobody stirred. He went round
- to the back door, which had been left unfastened for
- Laban's entry, and passed in to the foot of the stair-
- case.
- "Mrs. Tall, I've come for the key of the granary,
- to get at the rick-cloths." said Oak, in a stentorian
- voice.
- "Is that you?" said Mrs. Susan Tall, half awake.
- "Yes." said Gabriel.
- "Come along to bed, do, you drawlatching rogue --
- keeping a body awake like this ."
- "It isn't Laban -- 'tis Gabriel Oak. I want the key
- of the granary."
- "Gabriel. what in the name of fortune did you
- pretend to be Laban for?"
- "I didn't. I thought you meant -- -- "
- "Yes you did! what do you want here?"
- "The key of the granary."
- "Take it then. 'Tis on the nail. People coming
- disturbing women at this time of night ought -- -- "
- Gabriel took the key, without waiting to hear the
- conclusion of the tirade. Ten minutes later his lonely
- figure might have been seen dragging four large water-
- proof coverings across the yard, and soon two of these
- heaps of treasure in grain were covered snug -- two cloths
- to each. Two hundred pounds were secured. Three
- wheat-stacks remained open, and there were no more
- cloths. Oak looked under the staddles and found a
- fork. He mounted the third pile of wealth and began
- operating, adopting the plan of sloping the upper
- sheaves one over the other; and, in addition, filling
- the interstices with the material of some untied sheaves.
- So far all was well. By this hurried contrivance
- Bathsheba's property in wheat was safe for at any rate
- a week or two, provided always that there was not
- much wind.
- Next came the barley. This it was only possible to
- protect by systematic thatching. Time went on, and
- the moon vanished not to reappear. It was the
- farewell of the ambassador previous to war. The
- night had a haggard look, like a sick thing; and there
- came finally an utter expiration of air from the whole
- heaven in the form of a slow breeze, which might have
- been likened to a death. And now nothing was heard
- in the yard but the dull thuds of the beetle which drove
- in the spars, and the rustle of thatch in the intervals.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII
-
-
-
- THE STORM -- THE TWO TOGETHER
-
-
- A LIGHT flapped over the scene, as if reflected from
- phosphorescent wings crossing the sky, and a rumble
- filled the air. It was the first move of the approaching
- storm.
- The second peal was noisy, with comparatively little
- visible lightning. Gabriel saw a candle shining in Bath-
- sheba's bedroom, and soon a shadow swept to and fro
- upon the blind.
- Then there came a third flash. Manoeuvres of a
- most extraordinary kind were going on in the vast
- firmamental hollows overhead. The lightning now was
- the colour of silver, and gleamed in the heavens like a
- mailed army. Rumbles became rattles. Gabriel from
- his elevated position could see over the landscape at
- least half-a-dozen miles in front. Every hedge, bush,
- and tree was distinct as in a line engraving. In a
- paddock in the same direction was a herd of heifers,
- and the forms of these were visible at this moment in
- the act of galloping about in the wildest and maddest
- confusion, flinging their heels and tails high into the air,
- their heads to earth. A poplar in the immediate fore-
- ground was like an ink stroke on burnished tin. Then
- the picture vanished, leaving the darkness so intense
- that Gabriel worked entirely by feeling with his hands.
- He had stuck his ricking-rod, or poniard, as it was
- indifferently called -- a long iron lance, polished by
- handling -- into the stack, used to support the sheaves
- instead of the support called a groom used on houses,
- A blue light appeared in the zenith, and in some in-
- describable manner flickered down near the top of the
- rod. It was the fourth of the larger flashes. A moment
- later and there was a smack -- smart, clear, and short,
- Gabriel felt his position to be anything but a safe one,
- and he resolved to descend.
- Not a drop of rain had fallen as yet. He wiped his
- weary brow, and looked again at the black forms of
- the unprotected stacks. Was his life so valuable to
- him after all? What were his prospects that he
- should be so chary of running risk, when important
- and urgent labour could not be carried on without
- such risk? He resolved to stick to the stack. How-
- ever, he took a precaution. Under the staddles was
- a long tethering chain, used to prevent the escape of
- errant horses. This he carried up the ladder, and
- sticking his rod through the clog at one end, allowed
- the other end of the chain to trail upon the ground
- The spike attached to it he drove in. Under the
- shadow of this extemporized lightning-conductor he
- felt himself comparatively safe.
- Before Oak had laid his hands upon his tools again
- out leapt the fifth flash, with the spring of a serpent
- and the shout of a fiend. It was green as an
- emerald, and the reverberation was stunning. What
- was this the light revealed to him? In the open
- ground before him, as he looked over the ridge of
- the rick, was a dark and apparently female form.
- Could it be that of the only venturesome woman in
- the parish -- Bathsheba? The form moved on a step:
- then he could see no more.
- "Is that you, ma'am?" said Gabriel to the darkness.
- "Who is there?" said the voice of Bathsheba,
- "Gabriel. I am on the rick, thatching."
- "O, Gabriel! -- and are you? I have come about
- them. The weather awoke me, and I thought of the
- corn. I am so distressed about it -- can we save it any-
- how? I cannot find my husband. Is he with you?"
- He is not here."
- "Do you know where he is?"
- "Asleep in the barn."
- "He promised that the stacks should be seen to,
- and now they are all neglected! Can I do anything
- to help? Liddy is afraid to come out. Fancy finding
- you here at such an hour! Surely I can do something?"
- "You can bring up some reed-sheaves to me, one by
- one, ma'am; if you are not afraid to come up the ladder
- in the dark." said Gabriel. "Every moment is precious
- now, and that would save a good deal of time. It is
- not very dark when the lightning has been gone a bit."
- "I'll do anything!" she said, resolutely. She instantly
- took a sheaf upon her shoulder, clambered up close to
- his heels, placed it behind the rod, and descended for
- another. At her third ascent the rick suddenly brightened
- with the brazen glare of shining majolica -- every knot
- in every straw was visible. On the slope in front of him
- appeared two human shapes, black as jet. The rick
- lost its sheen -- the shapes vanished. Gabriel turned his
- head. It had been the sixth flash which had come from
- the east behind him, and the two dark forms on the
- slope had been the shadows of himself and Bathsheba.
- Then came the peal. It hardly was credible that
- such a heavenly light could be the parent of such a
- diabolical sound.
- "How terrible!" she exclaimed, and clutched him by
- the sleeve. Gabriel turned, and steadied her on her
- aerial perch by holding her arm. At the same moment,
- while he was still reversed in his attitude, there was
- more light, and he saw, as it were, a copy of the tall
- poplar tree on the hill drawn in black on the wall of
- the barn. It was the shadow of that tree, thrown across
- by a secondary flash in the west.
- The next flare came. Bathsheba was on the ground
- now, shouldering another sheaf, and she bore its dazzle
- without flinching -- thunder and ali-and again ascended
- with the load. There was then a silence everywhere
- for four or five minutes, and the crunch of the spars,
- as Gabriel hastily drove them in, could again be distinctly
- heard. He thought the crisis of the storm had passed.
- But there came a burst of light.
- "Hold on!" said Gabriel, taking the sheaf from her
- shoulder, and grasping her arm again.
- Heaven opened then, indeed. The flash was almost
- too novel for its inexpressibly dangerous nature to be
- at once realized, and they could only comprehend the
- magnificence of its beauty. It sprang from east, west,
- north, south, and was a perfect dance of death. The
- forms of skeletons appeared in the air, shaped with
- blue fire for bones -- dancing, leaping, striding, racing
- around, and mingling altogether in unparalleled con-
- fusion. With these were intertwined undulating snakes of
- green, and behind these was a broad mass of lesser light.
- Simultaneously came from every part of the tumbling
- sky what may be called a shout; since, though no shout
- ever came near it, it was more of the nature of a shout
- than of anything else earthly. In the meantime one of
- the grisly forms had alighted upon the point of Gabriel's
- rod, to run invisibly down it, down the chain, and into
- the earth. Gabriel was almost blinded, and he could
- feel Bathsheba's warm arm tremble in his hand -- a
- sensation novel and thrilling enough; but love, life,
- everything human, seemed small and trifling in such
- close juxtaposition with an infuriated universe.
- Oak had hardly time to gather up these impressions
- into a thought, and to see how strangely the red feather
- of her hat shone in this light, when the tall tree on the
- hill before mentioned seemed on fire to a white heat,
- and a new one among these terrible voices mingled with
- the last crash of those preceding. It was a stupefying
- blast, harsh and pitiless, and it fell upon their ears in a
- dead, flat blow, without that reverberation which lends
- the tones of a drum to more distant thunder. By the
- lustre reflected from every part of the earth and from the
- wide domical scoop above it, he saw that the tree was
- sliced down the whole length of its tall, straight stem, a
- huge riband of bark being apparently flung off. The
- other portion remained erect, and revealed the bared
- surface as a strip of white down the front. The
- lightning had struck the tree. A sulphurous smell
- filled the air; then all was silent, and black as a cave
- in Hinnom.
- "We had a narrow escape!" said Gabriel, hurriedly.
- "You had better go down."
- Bathsheba said nothing; but he could distinctly hear
- her rhythmical pants, and the recurrent rustle of the
- sheaf beside her in response to her frightened pulsations.
- She descended the ladder, and, on second thoughts, he
- followed her. The darkness was now impenetrable by
- the sharpest vision. They both stood still at the
- bottom, side by side. Bathsheba appeared to think
- only of the weather -- Oak thought only of her just then.
- At last he said --
- "The storm seems to have passed now, at any
- rate."
- "I think so too." said Bathsheba. "Though there
- are multitudes of gleams, look!"
- The sky was now filled with an incessant light,
- frequent repetition melting into complete continuity, as
- an unbroken sound results from the successive strokes
- on a gong.
- "Nothing serious." said he. "I cannot understand
- no rain falling. But Heaven be praised, it is all the
- better for us. I am now going up again."
- "Gabriel, you are kinder than I deserve! I will stay
- and help you yet. O, why are not some of the others
- here!"
- "They would have been here if they could." said Oak,
- in a hesitating way.
- "O, I know it all -- all." she said, adding slowly:
- "They are all asleep in the barn, in a drunken sleep, and
- my husband among them. That's it, is it not? Don't
- think I am a timid woman and can't endure things."
- "I am not certain." said Gabriel. "I will go and see,"
- He crossed to the barn, leaving her there alone. He
- looked through the chinks of the door. All was in
- total darkness, as he had left it, and there still arose, as
- at the former time, the steady buzz of many snores.
- He felt a zephyr curling about his cheek, and turned.
- It was Bathsheba's breath -- she had followed him, and
- was looking into the same chink.
- He endeavoured to put off the immediate and pain-
- ful subject of their thoughts by remarking gently, "If
- you'll come back again, miss -- ma'am, and hand up a
- few more; it would save much time."
- Then Oak went back again, ascended to the top,
- stepped off the ladder for greater expedition, and went
- on thatching. She followed, but without a sheaf
- "Gabriel." she said, in a strange and impressive voice.
- Oak looked up at her. She had not spoken since
- he left the barn. The soft and continual shimmer of
- the dying lightning showed a marble face high against
- the black sky of the opposite quarter. Bathsheba was
- sitting almost on the apex of the stack, her feet gathered
- up beneath her, and resting on the top round of the
- ladder.
- "Yes, mistress." he said.
- "I suppose you thought that when I galloped away
- to Bath that night it was on purpose to be married?"
- "I did at last -- not at first." he answered, somewhat
- surprised at the abruptness with which this new subject
- was broached.
- "And others thought so, too?"
- "Yes."
- "And you blamed me for it?"
- "Well-a little."
- "I thought so. Now, I care a little for your good
- opinion, and I want to explain something-i have
- longed to do it ever since I returned, and you looked so
- gravely at me. For if I were to die -- and I may die
- soon -- it would be dreadful that you should always think
- mistakenly of me. Now, listen."
- Gabriel ceased his rustling.
- "I went to Bath that night in the full intention of
- breaking off my engagement to Mr. Troy. It was owing
- to circumstances which occurred after I got there that
- -- that we were married. Now, do you see the matter
- in a new light?"
- "I do -- somewhat."
- "I must, I suppose, say more, now that I have
- begun. And perhaps it's no harm, for you are certainly
- under no delusion that I ever loved you, or that I can
- have any object in speaking, more than that object I
- have mentioned. Well, I was alone in a strange city,
- and the horse was lame. And at last I didn't know
- what to do. I saw, when it was too late, that scandal
- might seize hold of me for meeting him alone in that
- way. But I was coming away, when he suddenly said
- he had that day seen a woman more beautiful than I,
- and that his constancy could not be counted on unless
- I at once became his.... And I was grieved and
- troubled -- --" She cleared her voice, and waited a
- moment, as if to gather breath. "And then, between
- jealousy and distraction, I married him!" she whispered
- with desperate impetuosity.
- Gabriel made no reply.
- "He was not to blame, for it was perfectly true about
- -- about his seeing somebody else." she quickly added.
- "And now I don't wish for a single remark from you
- upon the subject -- indeed, I forbid it. I only wanted
- you to know that misunderstood bit of my history before
- a time comes when you could never know it. -- You want
- some more sheaves?"
- She went down the ladder, and the work proceeded.
- Gabriel soon perceived a languor in the movements of
- his mistress up and down, and he said to her, gently as
- a mother --
- "I think you had better go indoors now, you are
- tired. I can finish the rest alone. If the wind does
- not change the rain is likely to keep off."
- "If I am useless I will go." said Bathsheba, in a
- flagging cadence. "But O, if your life should be lost!"
- "You are not useless; but I would rather not tire
- you longer. You have done well."
- "And you better!" she said, gratefully.! Thank you
- for your devotion, a thousand times, Gabriel! Good-
- night-i know you are doing your very best for me."
- She diminished in the gloom, and vanished, and he
- heard the latch of the gate fall as she passed through.
- He worked in a reverie now, musing upon her story, and
- upon the contradictoriness of that feminine heart which
- had caused her to speak more warmly to him to-night
- than she ever had done whilst unmarried and free to
- speak as warmly as she chose.
- He was disturbed in his meditation by a grating
- noise from the coach-house. It was the vane on the
- roof turning round, and this change in the wind was the
- signal for a disastrous rain.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
-
-
-
- RAIN -- ONE SOLITARY MEETS ANOTHER
-
-
- IT was now five o'clock, and the dawn was promising
- to break in hues of drab and ash.
- The air changed its temperature and stirred itself
- more vigorously. Cool breezes coursed in transparent
- eddies round Oak's face. The wind shifted yet a point
- or two and blew stronger. In ten minutes every wind
- of heaven seemed to be roaming at large. Some of the
- thatching on the wheat-stacks was now whirled fantas-
- tically aloft, and had to be replaced and weighted with
- some rails that lay near at hand. This done, Oak slaved
- away again at the barley. A huge drop of rain smote
- his face, the wind snarled round every corner, the trees
- rocked to the bases of their trunks, and the twigs clashed
- in strife. Driving in spars at any point and on any
- system, inch by inch he covered more and more safely
- from ruin this distracting impersonation of seven hundred
- pounds. "The rain came on in earnest, and Oak soon felt
- the water to be tracking cold and clammy routes down
- his back. Ultimately he was reduced well-nigh to a
- homogeneous sop, and the dyes of his clothes trickled
- down and stood in a pool at the foot of the ladder.
- The rain stretched obliquely through the dull atmo-
- sphere in liquid spines, unbroken in continuity between
- their beginnings in the clouds and their points in him.
- Oak suddenly remembered that eight months before
- this time he had been fighting against fire in the same
- spot as desperately as he was fighting against water
- now -- and for a futile love of the same woman. As for
- her -- -- But Oak was generous and true, and dis-
- missed his reflections.
- It was about seven o'clock in the dark leaden
- morning when Gabriel came down from the last stack,
- and thankfully exclaimed, "It is done!" He was
- drenched, weary, and sad, and yet not so sad as drenched
- and weary, for he was cheered by a sense of success in
- a good cause.
- Faint sounds came from the barn, and he looked
- that way. Figures stepped singly and in pairs through
- the doors -- all walking awkwardly, and abashed, save
- the foremost, who wore a red jacket, and advanced
- with his hands in his pockets, whistling. The others
- shambled after with a conscience-stricken air: the whole
- procession was not unlike Flaxman's group of the suitors
- tottering on towards the infernal regions under the
- conduct of Mercury. The gnarled shapes passed into
- the village, Troy, their leader, entering the farmhouse.
- Not a single one of them had turned his face to the
- ricks, or apparently bestowed one thought upon their
- condition.
- Soon Oak too went homeward, by a different route
- from theirs. In front of him against the wet glazed
- surface of the lane he saw a person walking yet more
- slowly than himself under an umbrella. The man
- turned and plainly started; he was Boldwood.
- "How are you this morning, sir?" said Oak.
- "Yes, it is a wet day. -- Oh, I am well, very well, I
- thank you; quite well."
- "I am glad to hear it, sir."
- Boldwood seemed to awake to the present by degrees.
- "You look tired and ill, Oak." he said then, desultorily
- regarding his companion.
- "I am tired. You look strangely altered, sir."
- "I? Not a bit of it: I am well enough. What put
- that into your head?"
- "I thought you didn't look quite so topping as you
- used to, that was all."
- "Indeed, then you are mistaken." said Boldwood,
- shortly. "Nothing hurts me. My constitution is an
- iron one."
- "I've been working hard to get our ricks covered,
- and was barely in time. Never had such a struggle in
- my life.... Yours of course are safe, sir."
- "O yes." Boldwood added, after an interval of
- silence: " What did you ask, Oak?"
- "Your ricks are all covered before this time?"
- "No."
- "At any rate, the large ones upon the stone staddles?"
- "They are not."
- "Them under the hedge?"
- "No. I forgot to tell the thatcher to set about it."
- "Nor the little one by the stile?"Nor the little one by the stile. I
- overlooked the
- ricks this year."
- "Then not a tenth of your corn will come to measure,
- sir."
- "Possibly not.
- "Overlooked them." repeated Gabriel slowly to him-
- self. It is difficult to describe the intensely dramatic
- effect that announcement had upon Oak at such a
- moment. All the night he had been feeling that the
- neglect he was labouring to repair was abnormal and
- isolated -- the only instance of the kind within the circuit
- of the county. Yet at this very time, within the same
- parish, a greater waste had been going on, uncomplained
- of and disregarded. A few months earlier Boldwood's
- forgetting his husbandry would have been as preposter-
- ous an idea as a sailor forgetting he was in a ship. Oak
- was just thinking that whatever he himself might have
- suffered from Bathsheba's marriage, here was a man
- who had suffered more, when Boldwood spoke in a
- changed voice -- that of one who yearned to make a
- confidence and relieve his heart by an outpouring.
- "Oak, you know as well as I that things have gone
- wrong with me lately. I may as well own it. I was
- going to get a little settled in life; but in some way my
- plan has come to nothing."
- "I thought my mistress would have married you,"
- said Gabriel, not knowing enough of the full depths of
- Boldwood's love to keep silence on the farmer's account,
- and determined not to evade discipline by doing so on
- his own. "However, it is so sometimes, and nothing
- happens that we expect." he added, with the repose of
- a man whom misfortune had inured rather than sub-
- dued.
- "I daresay I am a joke about the parish." said Bold-
- wood, as if the subject came irresistibly to his tongue,
- and with a miserable lightness meant to express his
- indifference.
- "O no -- I don't think that."
- -- But the real truth of the matter is that there was
- not, as some fancy, any jilting on -- her part. No
- engagement ever existed between me and Miss Ever-
- dene. People say so, but it is untrue: she never
- promised me!" Boldwood stood still now and turned
- his wild face to Oak. "O, Gabriel." he continued, "I
- am weak and foolish, and I don't know what, and I
- can't fend off my miserable grief! ... I had some faint
- belief in the mercy of God till I lost that woman. Yes,
- He prepared a gourd to shade me, and like the prophet
- I thanked Him and was glad. But the next day He
- prepared a worm to smite the gourd and wither it; and
- I feel it is better to die than to live!"
- A silence followed. Boldwood aroused himself from
- the momentary mood of confidence into which he had
- drifted, and walked on again, resuming his usual reserve,
- "No, Gabriel." he resumed, with a carelessness which
- was like the smile on the countenance of a skull: "it
- was made more of by other people than ever it was by
- us. I do feel a little regret occasionally, but no woman
- ever had power over me for any length of time. Well,
- good morning; I can trust you not to mention to others
- what has passed between us two here."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX
-
-
-
- COMING HOME -- A CRY
-
-
- ON the turnpike road, between Casterbridge and
- Weatherbury, and about three miles from the former
- which pervade the highways of this undulating part of
- South Wessex. I returning from market it is usual
- for the farmers and other gig-gentry to alight at the
- bottom and walk up.
- One Saturday evening in the month of October
- Bathsheba's vehicle was duly creeping up this incline.
- She was sitting listlessly in the second seat of the gig,
- whilst walking beside her in farmer's marketing suit
- of unusually fashionable cut was an erect, well-made
- young man. Though on foot, he held the reins and
- whip, and occasionally aimed light cuts at the horse's
- ear with the end of the lash, as a recreation. This
- man was her husband, formerly Sergeant Troy, who,
- having bought his discharge with Bathsheba's money,
- was gradually transforming himself into a farmer of a
- spirited and very modern school. People of unalter-
- able ideas still insisted upon calling him "Sergeant"
- hen they met him, which was in some degree owing
- to his having still retained the well-shaped moustache
- of his military days, and the soldierly bearing insepar-
- able from his form and training.
- "Yes, if it hadn't been for that wretched rain I
- should have cleared two hundred as easy as looking,
- my love." he was saying. "Don't you see, it altered
- all the chances? To speak like a book I once read,
- wet weather is the narrative, and fine days are the
- episodes, of our country's history; now, isn't that
- true?"
- "But the time of year is come for changeable weather."
- "Well, yes. The fact is, these autumn races are the
- ruin of everybody. Never did I see such a day as 'twas!
- 'Tis a wild open place, just out of Budmouth, and a
- drab sea rolled in towards us like liquid misery. Wind
- and rain -- good Lord! Dark? Why, 'twas as black
- as my hat before the last race was run. 'Twas five
- o'clock, and you couldn't see the horses till they were
- almost in, leave alone colours. The ground was as
- heavy as lead, and all judgment from a fellow's experi-
- ence went for nothing. Horses, riders, people, were
- all blown about like ships at sea. Three booths were
- blown over, and the wretched folk inside crawled out
- upon their hands and knees; and in the next field
- were as many as a dozen hats at one time. Aye,
- Pimpernel regularly stuck fast, when about sixty yards
- off, and when I saw Policy stepping on, it did knock
- my heart against the lining of my ribs, I assure you,
- my love!"
- "And you mean, Frank." said Bathsheba, sadly --
- her voice was painfully lowered from the fulness and
- vivacity of the previous summer -- "that you have lost
- more than a hundred pounds in a month by this
- dreadful horse-racing? O, Frank, it is cruel; it is
- foolish of you to take away my money so. We shall
- have to leave the farm; that will be the end of it!"
- "Humbug about cruel. Now, there 'tis again --
- turn on the waterworks; that's just like you."
- "But you'll promise me not to go to Budmouth
- second meeting, won't you?" she implored. Bathsheba
- was at the full depth for tears, but she maintained a
- dry eye.
- "I don't see why I should; in fact, if it turns out to
- be a fine day, I was thinking of taking you."
- "Never, never! I'll go a hundred miles the other
- way first. I hate the sound of the very word!"
- "But the question of going to see the race or staying
- at home has very little to do with the matter. Bets are
- all booked safely enough before the race begins, you
- may depend. Whether it is a bad race for me or a
- good one, will have very little to do with our going
- there next Monday."
- "But you don't mean to say that you have risked
- anything on this one too!" she exclaimed, with an
- agonized look.
- "There now, don't you be a little fool. Wait till you
- are told. Why, Bathsheba, you have lost all the pluck
- and sauciness you formerly had, and upon my life if I
- had known what a chicken-hearted creature you were
- under all your boldness, I'd never have-i know what."
- A flash of indignation might have been seen in
- Bathsheba's dark eyes as she looked resolutely ahead
- after this reply. They moved on without further
- speech, some early-withered leaves from the trees which
- hooded the road at this spot occasionally spinning
- downward across their path to the earth.
- A woman appeared on the brow of the hill. The
- ridge was in a cutting, so that she was very near the
- husband and wife before she became visible. Troy had
- turned towards the gig to remount, and whilst putting
- his foot on the step-the woman passed behind him.
- Though the overshadowing trees and the approach
- of eventide enveloped them in gloom, Bathsheba could
- see plainly enough to discern the extreme poverty of
- the woman's garb, and the sadness of her face.
- "Please, sir, do you know at what time Casterbridge
- Union-house closes at night?"
- The woman said these words to Troy over his
- shoulder.
- Troy started visibly at the sound of the voice; yet
- he seemed to recover presence of mind sufficient to
- prevent himself from giving way to his impulse to
- suddenly turn and face her. He said, slowly --
- "I don't know."
- The woman, on hearing him speak, quickly looked
- up, examined the side of his face, and recognized the
- soldier under the yeoman's garb. Her face was drawn
- into an expression which had gladness and agony both
- among its elements. She uttered an hysterical cry,
- and fell down.
- "O, poor thing!" exclaimed Bathsheba, instantly
- preparing to alight.
- "Stay where you are, and attend to the horse!"
- said Troy, peremptorily throwing her the reins and
- the whip. "Walk the horse to the top: I'll see to
- the woman."
- "But I -- "
- "Do you hear? Clk -- Poppet!"
- The horse, gig, and Bathsheba moved on.
- "How on earth did you come here? I thought
- you were miles away, or dead! Why didn't you
- write to me?" said Troy to the woman, in a strangely
- gentle, yet hurried voice, as he lifted her up.
- "I feared to."
- "Have you any money?"
- "None."
- "Good Heaven -- I wish I had more to give you!
- Here's -- wretched -- the merest trifle. It is every
- farthing I have left. I have none but what my wife
- gives me, you know, and I can't ask her now."
- he woman made no answer.
- "I have only another moment." continued Troy;
- "and now listen. Where are you going to-night?
- Casterbridge Union?"
- "Yes; I thought to go there."
- "You shan't go there; yet, wait. Yes, perhaps for
- to-night; I can do nothing better -- worse luck! Sleep
- there to-night, and stay there to-morrow. Monday is
- the first free day I have; and on Monday morning,
- at ten exactly, meet me on Grey's Bridge just out of the
- town. I'll bring all the money I can muster. You
- shan't want-i'll see that, Fanny; then I'll get you a
- lodging somewhere. Good-bye till then. I am a brute
- -- but good-bye!"
- After advancing the distance which completed the
- ascent of the hill, Bathsheba turned her head. The
- woman was upon her feet, and Bathsheba saw her
- withdrawing from Troy, and going feebly down the
- hill by the third milestone from Casterbridge. Troy
- then came on towards his wife, stepped into the gig,
- took the reins from her hand, and without making any
- observation whipped the horse into a trot. He was
- rather agitated.
- "Do you know who that woman was?" said Bath-
- sheba, looking searchingly into his face.
- "I do." he said, looking boldly back into hers.
- "I thought you did." said she, with angry hauteur,
- and still regarding him. "Who is she?"
- He suddenly seemed to think that frankness would
- benefit neither of the women.
- "Nothing to either of us." he said. "I know her
- by sight."
- "What is her name?"
- "How should I know her name?"
- "I think you do."
- "Think if you will, and be -- -- " The sentence was
- completed by a smart cut of the whip round Poppet's
- flank, which caused the animal to start forward at a
- wild pace. No more was said.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XL
-
-
-
- ON CASTERBRIDGE HIGHWAY
-
-
- FOR a considerable time the woman walked on. Her
- steps became feebler, and she strained her eyes to look
- afar upon the naked road, now indistinct amid the
- penumbrae of night. At length her onward walk
- dwindled to the merest totter, and she opened a gate
- within which was a haystack. Underneath this she sat
- down and presently slept.
- When the woman awoke it was to find herself in the
- depths of a moonless and starless night. A heavy un-
- broken crust of cloud stretched across the sky, shutting
- out every speck of heaven; and a distant halo which
- hung over the town of Casterbridge was visible against
- the black concave, the luminosity appearing the
- brighter by its great contrast with the circumscribing
- darkness. Towards this weak, soft glow the woman
- turned her eyes.
- "If I could only get there!" she said. "Meet him
- the day after to-morrow: God help me! Perhaps I
- shall be in my grave before then."
- A manor-house clock from the far depths of shadow
- struck the hour, one, in a small, attenuated tone. After
- midnight the voice of a clock seems to lose in breadth
- as much as in length, and to diminish its sonorousness
- to a thin falsetto.
- Afterwards a light -- two lights -- arose from the re-
- mote shade, and grew larger. A carriage rolled along
- the toad, and passed the gate. It probably contained
- some late diners-out. The beams from one lamp shone
- for a moment upon the crouching woman, and threw
- her face into vivid relieff. The face was young in the
- groundwork, old in the finish; the general contours
- were flexuous and childlike, but the finer lineaments
- had begun to be sharp and thin.
- The pedestrian stood up, apparently with revived
- determination, and looked around. The road appeared
- to be familiar to her, and she carefully scanned the fence
- as she slowly walked along. Presently there became
- visible a dim white shape; it was another milestone.
- She drew her fingers across its face to feel the marks.
- "Two more!" she said.
- She leant against the stone as a means of rest for a
- short interval, then bestirred herself, and again pursued
- her way. For a slight distance she bore up bravely,
- afterwards flagging as before. This was beside a lone
- copsewood, wherein heaps of white chips strewn upon
- the leafy ground showed that woodmen had been
- faggoting and making hurdles during the day. Now
- there was not a rustle, not a breeze, not the faintest
- clash of twigs to keep her company. The woman
- looked over the gate, opened it, and went in. Close
- to the entrance stood a row of faggots, bound and un-
- bound, together with stakes of all sizes.
- For a few seconds the wayfarer stood with that tense
- stillness which signifies itself to be not the end but
- merely the suspension, of a previous motion. Her
- attitude was that of a person who listens, either to the
- external world of sound, or to the imagined discourse of
- thought. A close criticism might have detected signs
- proving that she was intent on the latter alternative.
- Moreover, as was shown by what followed, she was
- oddly exercising the faculty of invention upon the spe-
- ciality of the clever Jacquet Droz, the designer of auto-
- matic substitutes for human limbs.
- By the aid of the Casterbridge aurora, and by feeling
- with her hands, the woman selected two sticks from the
- heaps. These sticks were nearly straight to the height
- of three or four feet, where each branched into a fork
- like the letter Y. She sat down, snapped off the small
- upper twigs, and carried the remainder with her into
- the road. She placed one of these forks under each
- arm as a crutch, tested them, timidly threw her whole
- weight upon them -- so little that it was -- and swung
- herself forward. The girl had made for herself a
- material aid.
- The crutches answered well. The pat of her feet,
- and the tap of her sticks upon the highway, were all the
- sounds that came from the traveller now. She had
- passed the last milestone by a good long distance, and
- began to look wistfully towards the bank as if calculating
- upon another milestone soon. The crutches, though
- so very useful, had their limits of power. Mechanism
- only transfers labour, being powerless to supersede it,
- and the original amount of exertion was not cleared
- away; it was thrown into the body and arms. She was
- exhausted, and each swing forward became fainter. At
- last she swayed sideways, and fell.
- Here she lay, a shapeless heap, for ten minutes and
- more. The morning wind began to boom dully over
- the flats, and to move afresh dead leaves which had
- lain still since yesterday. The woman desperately
- turned round upon her knees, and next rose to her
- feet. Steadying herself by the help of one crutch, she
- essayed a step, then another, then a third, using the
- crutches now as walking-sticks only. Thus she pro-
- gressed till descending Mellstock Hill another milestone
- appeared, and soon the beginning of an iron-railed fence
- came into view. She staggered across to the first post,
- clung to it, and looked around.
- The Casterbridge lights were now individually visible,
- It was getting towards morning, and vehicles might be
- hoped for, if not expected soon. She listened. There
- was not a sound of life save that acme and sublimation
- of all dismal sounds, the hark of a fox, its three hollow
- notes being rendered at intervals of a minute with the
- precision of a funeral bell.
- "Less than a mile!" the woman murmured. "No;
- more." she added, after a pause. "The mile is to the
- county hall, and my resting-place is on the other side
- Casterbridge. A little over a mile, and there I am!"
- After an interval she again spoke. "Five or six steps to
- a yard -- six perhaps. I have to go seventeen hundred
- yards. A hundred times six, six hundred. Seventeen
- times that. O pity me, Lord!"
- Holding to the rails, she advanced, thrusting one
- hand forward upon the rail, then the other, then leaning
- over it whilst she dragged her feet on beneath.
- This woman was not given to soliloquy; but ex-
- tremity of feeling lessens the individuality of the weak,
- as it increases that of the strong. She said again in the
- same tone, "I'll believe that the end lies five posts for-
- ward, and no further, and so get strength to pass them."
- This was a practical application of the principle that
- a half-feigned and fictitious faith is better than no faith
- at all.
- She passed five posts and held on to the fifth.
- "I'll pass five more by believing my longed-for spot
- is at the next fifth. I can do it."
- she passed five more.
- "It lies only five further."
- She passed five more.
- "But it is five further."
- She passed them.
- "That stone bridge is the end of my journey." she
- said, when the bridge over the Froom was in view.
- She crawled to the bridge. During the effort each
- breath of the woman went into the air as if never to
- return again.
- "Now for the truth of the matter." she said, sitting
- down. "The truth is, that I have less than half a mile."
- Self-beguilement with what she had known all the time
- to be false had given her strength to come over half
- a mile that she would have been powerless to face in
- the lump. The artifice showed that the woman, by
- some mysterious intuition, had grasped the paradoxical
- truth that blindness may operate more vigorously than
- prescience, and the short-sighted effect more than the
- far-seeing; that limitation, and not comprehensiveness,
- is needed for striking a blow.
- The half-mile stood now before the sick and weary
- woman like a stolid Juggernaut. It was an impassive
- King of her world. The road here ran across Durnover
- Moor, open to the road on either side. She surveyed
- the wide space, the lights, herself, sighed, and lay down
- against a guard-stone of the bridge.
- Never was ingenuity exercised so sorely as the
- traveller here exercised hers. Every conceivable aid,
- method, stratagem, mechanism, by which these last
- desperate eight hundred yards could be overpassed by a
- human being unperceived, was revolved in her busy
- brain, and dismissed as impracticable. She thought of
- sticks, wheels, crawling -- she even thought of rolling.
- But the exertion demanded by either of these latter two
- was greater than to walk erect. The faculty of con-
- trivance was worn out, Hopelessness had come at
- last.
- "No further!" she whispered, and closed her eyes.
- From the stripe of shadow on the opposite side of
- the bridge a portion of shade seemed to detach itself
- and move into isolation upon the pale white of the road.
- It glided noiselessly towards the recumbent woman.
- She became conscious of something touching her
- hand; it was softness and it was warmth. She
- opened her eye's, and the substance touched her face.
- A dog was licking her cheek.
- He was huge, heavy, and quiet creature, standing
- darkly against the low horizon, and at least two feet
- higher than the present position of her eyes. Whether
- Newfoundland, mastiff, bloodhound, or what not, it was
- impossible to say. He seemed to be of too strange and
- mysterious a nature to belong to any variety among those
- of popular nomenclature. Being thus assignable to no
- breed, he was the ideal embodiment of canine greatness
- -- a generalization from what was common to all. Night,
- in its sad, solemn, and benevolent aspect, apart from its
- stealthy and cruel side, was personified in this form
- Darkness endows the small and ordinary ones among
- mankind with poetical power, and even the suffering
- woman threw her idea into figure.
- In her reclining position she looked up to him just
- as in earlier times she had, when standing, looked up
- to a man. The animal, who was as homeless as she,
- respectfully withdrew a step or two when the woman
- moved, and, seeing that she did not repulse him, he
- licked her hand again.
- A thought moved within her like lightning. "Perhaps
- I can make use of him -- I might do it then!"
- She pointed in the direction of Casterbridge, and
- the dog seemed to misunderstand: he trotted on. Then,
- finding she could not follow, he came back and whined.
- The ultimate and saddest singularity of woman's effort
- and invention was reached when, with a quickened breath-
- ing, she rose to a stooping posture, and, resting her two
- little arms upon the shoulders of the dog, leant firmly
- thereon, and murmured stimulating words. Whilst she
- sorrowed in her heart she cheered with her voice, and
- what was stranger than that the strong should need
- encouragement from the weak was that cheerfulness
- should be so well stimulated by such utter dejection.
- Her friend moved forward slowly, and she with small
- mincing steps moved forward beside him, half her
- weight being thrown upon the animal. Sometimes
- she sank as she had sunk from walking erect, from
- the crutches, from the rails. The dog, who now
- thoroughly understood her desire and her incapacity,
- was frantic in his distress on these occasions; he would
- tug at her dress and run forward. She always called
- him back, and it was now to be observed that the
- woman listened for human sounds only to avoid them.
- It was evident that she had an object in keeping her
- presence on the road and her forlorn state unknown.
- Their progress was necessarily very slow. They
- reached the bottom of the town, and the Casterbridge
- lamps lay before them like fallen Pleiads as they turned
- to the left into the dense shade of a deserted avenue of
- chestnuts, and so skirted the borough. Thus the town
- was passed, and the goal was reached.
- On this much-desired spot outside the town rose a
- picturesque building. Originally it had been a mere
- case to hold people. The shell had been so thin, so
- devoid of excrescence, and so closely drawn over the
- accommodation granted, that the grim character of
- what was beneath showed through it, as the shape of
- a body is visible under a winding-sheet.
- Then Nature, as if offended, lent a hand. Masses
- of ivy grew up, completely covering the walls, till the
- place looked like an abbey; and it was discovered that
- the view from the front, over the Casterbridge chimneys,
- was one of the most magnificent in the county. A
- neighbouring earl once said that he would give up a
- year's rental to have at his own door the view enjoyed
- by the inmates from theirs -- and very probably the
- inmates would have given up the view for his year's
- rental.
- This stone edifice consisted of a central mass and
- two wings, whereon stood as sentinels a few slim
- chimneys, now gurgling sorrowfully to the slow wind.
- In the wall was a gate, and by the gate a bellpull
- formed of a hanging wire. The woman raised herself
- as high as possible upon her knees, and could just
- reach the handle. She moved it and fell forwards in
- a bowed attitude, her face upon her bosom.
- It was getting on towards six o'clock, and sounds of
- movement were to be heard inside the building which
- was the haven of rest to this wearied soul. A little door
- by the large one was opened, and a man appeared inside.
- He discerned the panting heap of clothes, went back
- for a light, and came again. He entered a second
- time, and returned with two women.
- These lifted the prostrate figure and assisted her in
- through the doorway. The man then closed the door.
- How did she get here?" said one of the women.
- "The Lord knows." said the other.
- There is a dog outside," murmured the overcome
- traveller. "Where is he gone? He helped me."
- I stoned him away." said the man.
- The little procession then moved forward -- the man
- in front bearing the light, the two bony women next,
- supporting between them the small and supple one.
- Thus they entered the house and disappeared.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLI
-
-
-
- SUSPICION -- FANNY IS SENT FOR
-
-
- BATHSHEBA said very little to her husband all that
- evening of their return from market, and he was not
- disposed to say much to her. He exhibited the un-
- pleasant combination of a restless condition with a
- silent tongue. The next day, which was Sunday, passed
- nearly in the same manner as regarded their taciturnity,
- Bathsheba going to church both morning and afternoon.
- This was the day before the Budmouth races. In the
- evening Troy said, suddenly --
- "Bathsheba, could you let me have twenty pounds?"
- Her countenance instantly sank." Twenty pounds?
- she said.
- "The fact is, I want it badly." The anxiety upon
- Troy's face was unusual and very marked. lt was a
- culmination of the mood he had been in all the day.
- "Ah! for those races to-morrow."
- Troy for the moment made no reply. Her mistake
- had its advantages to a man who shrank from having
- his mind inspected as he did now. "Well, suppose I
- do want it for races?" he said, at last.
- "O, Frank!" Bathsheba replied, and there was such
- a volume of entreaty in the words. "Only such a few
- weeks ago you said that I was far sweeter than all your
- other pleasures put together, and that you would give
- them all up for me; and now, won't you give up this
- one, which is more a worry than a pleasure? Do,
- Frank. Come, let me fascinate you by all I can do
- -- by pretty words and pretty looks, and everything I
- can think of -- to stay at home. Say yes to your wife --
- say yes!"
- The tenderest and softest phases of Bathsheba's
- nature were prominent now -- advanced impulsively for
- his acceptance, without any of the disguises and defences
- which the wariness of her character when she was cool
- too frequently threw over them. Few men could have
- resisted the arch yet dignified entreaty of the beautiful
- face, thrown a little back and sideways in the well
- known attitude that expresses more than the words it
- accompanies, and which seems to have been designed
- for these special occasions. Had the woman not been
- his wife, Troy would have succumbed instantly; as it
- was, he thought he would not deceive her longer.
- "The money is not wanted for racing debts at all,"
- he said.
- "What is it for?" she asked. "You worry me a great
- deal by these mysterious responsibilities, Frank."
- Troy hesitated. He did not now love her enough
- to allow himself to be carried too far by her ways. Yet
- it was necessary to be civil. "You wrong me by such
- a suspicious manner, he said. "Such strait-waistcoating
- as you treat me to is not becoming in you at so early a
- date."
- "I think that I have a right to grumble a little if I
- pay." she said, with features between a smile and a
- pout.
- Exactly; and, the former being done, suppose we
- proceed to the latter. Bathsheba, fun is all very well,
- but don't go too far, or you may have cause to regret
- something."
- She reddened. "I do that already." she said, quickly
- "What do you regret?"
- SUSPICION
- "That my romance has come to an end."
- "All romances end at marriage."
- "I wish you wouldn't talk like that. You grieve me
- to my soul by being smart at my expense."
- "You are dull enough at mine. I believe you hate
- me."
- "Not you -- only your faults. I do hate them."
- "'Twould be much more becoming if you set your-
- self to cure them. Come, let's strike a balance with
- the twenty pounds, and be friends."
- She gave a sigh of resignation. "I have about that
- sum here for household expenses. If you must have it,
- take it."
- "Very good. Thank you. I expect I shall have
- gone away before you are in to breakfast to-morrow."
- "And must you go? Ah! there was a time, Frank,
- when it would have taken a good many promises to
- other people to drag you away from me. You used to
- call me darling, then. But it doesn't matter to you how
- my days are passed now."
- "I must go, in spite of sentiment." Troy, as he
- spoke, looked at his watch, and, apparently actuated by
- NON LUCENDO principles, opened the case at the back,
- revealing, snugly stowed within it, a small coil of hair.
- Bathsheba's eyes had been accidentally lifted at that
- moment, and she saw the action and saw the hair. She
- flushed in pain and surprise, and some words escaped
- her before she had thought whether or not it was wise
- to utter them. "A woman's curl of hair!" she said.
- "O, Frank, whose is that?"
- Troy had instantly closed his watch. He carelessly
- replied, as one who cloaked some feelings that the sight
- had stirred." Why, yours, of course. Whose should it
- be? I had quite forgotten that I had it."
- "What a dreadful fib, Frank!"
- "I tell you I had forgotten it!" he said, loudly.
- "I don't mean that -- it was yellow hair."
- "Nonsense."
- "That's insulting me. I know it was yellow. Now
- whose was it? I want to know."
- "Very well I'll tell you, so make no more ado. It
- is the hair of a young woman I was going to marry
- before I knew you."
- "You ought to tell me her name, then."
- "I cannot do that."
- "Is she married yet?"
- "No."
- "Is she alive?"
- "Yes."
- "Is she pretty?"
- "Yes."
- "It is wonderful how she can be, poor thing, under
- such an awful affliction!"
- "Affliction -- what affliction?" he inquired, quickly.
- "Having hair of that dreadful colour."
- "Oh -- ho-i like that!" said Troy, recovering him-
- self. "Why, her hair has been admired by everybody
- who has seen her since she has worn it loose, which has
- not been long. It is beautiful hair. People used to
- turn their heads to look at it, poor girl!"
- "Pooh! that's nothing -- that's nothing!" she ex-
- claimed, in incipient accents of pique. "If I cared for
- your love as much as I used to I could say people had
- turned to look at mine."
- "Bathsheba, don't be so fitful and jealous. You
- knew what married life would be like, and shouldn't
- have entered it if you feared these contingencies."
- Troy had by this time driven her to bitterness: her
- heart was big in her throat, and the ducts to her eyes
- were painfully full. Ashamed as she was to show
- emotion, at last she burst out: --
- "This is all I get for loving you so well! Ah! when
- I married you your life was dearer to me than my own.
- I would have died for you -- how truly I can say that I
- would have died for you! And now you sneer at my
- foolishness in marrying you. O! is it kind to me to
- throw my mistake in my face? Whatever opinion you
- may have of my wisdom, you should not tell me of it so
- mercilessly, now that I am in your power."
- "I can't help how things fall out." said Troy; "upon
- my heart, women will be the death of me!"
- "Well you shouldn't keep people's hair. You'll
- burn it, won't you, Frank?"
- Frank went on as if he had not heard her. "There
- are considerations even before my consideration for you;
- reparations to be made -- ties you know nothing of If
- you repent of marrying, so do I."
- Trembling now, she put her hand upon his arm,
- saying, in mingled tones of wretchedness and coaxing,
- "I only repent it if you don't love me better than any
- woman in the world! I don't otherwise, Frank. You
- don't repent because you already love somebody better
- than you love me, do you?"
- "I don't know. Why do you say that?"
- "You won't burn that curl. You like the woman
- who owns that pretty hair -- yes; it is pretty -- more
- beautiful than my miserable black mane! Well, it is
- no use; I can't help being ugly. You must like her
- best, if you will!"
- "Until to-day, when I took it from a drawer, I have
- never looked upon that bit of hair for several months --
- that I am ready to swear."
- "But just now you said "ties;" and then -- that
- woman we met?"
- "'Twas the meeting with her that reminded me of
- the hair."
- "Is it hers, then?"
- "Yes. There, now that you have wormed it out of
- me, I hope you are content."
- "And what are the ties?"
- "Oh! that meant nothing -- a mere jest."
- "A mere jest!" she said, in mournful astonishment.
- "Can you jest when I am so wretchedly in earnest?
- Tell me the truth, Frank. I am not a fool, you know,
- although I am a woman, and have my woman's moments.
- Come! treat me fairly." she said, looking honestly and
- fearlessly into his face. "I don't want much; bare
- justice -- that's all! Ah! once I felt I could be content
- with nothing less than the highest homage from the
- husband I should choose. Now, anything short of
- cruelty will content me. Yes! the independent and
- spirited Bathsheba is come to this!"
- "For Heaven's sake don't be so desperate!"Troy
- said, snappishly, rising as he did so, and leaving the
- room.
- Directly he had gone, Bathsheba burst into great
- sobs -- dry-eyed sobs, which cut as they came, without
- any softening by tears. But she determined to repress
- all evidences of feeling. She was conquered; but she
- would never own it as long as she lived. Her pride
- was indeed brought low by despairing discoveries of her
- spoliation by marriage with a less pure nature than her
- own. She chafed to and fro in rebelliousness, like a
- caged leopard; her whole soul was in arms, and the
- blood fired her face. Until she had met Troy, Bath-
- sheba had been proud of her position as a woman; it
- had been a glory to her to know that her lips had been
- touched by no man's on earth -- that her waist had
- never been encircled by a lover's arm. She hated
- herself now. In those earlier days she had always
- nourished a secret contempt for girls who were the
- slaves of the first goodlooking young fellow who should
- choose to salute them. She had never taken kindly to
- the idea of marriage in the abstract as did the majority
- of women she saw about her. In the turmoil of her
- anxiety for her lover she had agreed to marry him; but
- the perception that had accompanied her happiest hours
- on this account was rather that of self-sacrifice than of
- promotion and honour. Although she scarcely knew
- the divinity's name, Diana was the goddess whom
- Bathsheba instinctively adored. That she had never,
- by look, word, or sign, encouraged a man to approach
- her -- that she had felt herself sufficient to herself, and
- had in the independence of her girlish heart fancied
- there was a certain degradation in renouncing the
- simplicity of a maiden existence to become the humbler
- half of an indifferent matrimonial whole -- were facts
- now bitterly remembered. O, if she had never
- stooped to folly of this kind, respectable as it was, and
- could only stand again, as she had stood on the hill at
- Norcombe, and dare Troy or any other man to pollute
- a hair of her head by his interference!
- The next morning she rose earlier than usual, and
- had the horse saddled for her ride round the farm in
- the customary way. When she came in at half-past
- eight -- their usual hour for breakfasting -- she was in-
- formed that her husband had risen, taken his breakfast,
- and driven off to Casterbridge with the gig and Poppet.
- After breakfast she was cool and collected -- quite
- herself in fact -- and she rambled to the gate, intending
- to walk to another quarter of the farm, which she still
- personally superintended as well as her duties in the
- house would permit, continually, however, finding her-
- self preceded in forethought by Gabriel Oak, for whom
- she began to entertain the genuine friendship of a sister.
- Of course, she sometimes thought of him in the light of
- an old lover, and had momentary imaginings of what
- life with him as a husband would have been like; also
- of life with Boldwood under the same conditions. But
- Bathsheba, though she could feel, was not much given
- to futile dreaming, and her musings under this head
- were short and entirely confined to the times when
- Troy's neglect was more than ordinarily evident.
- She saw coming up the road a man like Mr. Boldwood.
- It was Mr. Boldwood. Bathsheba blushed painfully,
- and watched. The farmer stopped when still a long
- way off, and held up his hand to Gabriel Oak, who was
- in a footpath across the field. The two men then
- approached each other and seemed to engage in
- earnest conversation.
- Thus they continued for a long time. Joseph Poor-
- grass now passed near them, wheeling a barrow of apples
- up the hill to Bathsheba's residence. Boldwood and
- Gabriel called to him, spoke to him for a few minutes,
- and then all three parted, Joseph immediately coming
- up the hill with his barrow.
- Bathsheba, who had seen this pantomime with some
- surprise, experienced great relief when Boldwood turned
- back again. "Well, what's the message, Joseph?" she
- said.
- He set down his barrow, and, putting upon himself
- the refined aspect that a conversation with a lady re-
- quired, spoke to Bathsheba over the gate.
- "You'll never see Fanny Robin no more -- use nor
- principal -- ma'am."
- "Why?"
- "Because she's dead in the Union."
- "Fanny dead -- never!"
- "Yes, ma'am."
- "What did she die from?"
- "I don't know for certain; but I should be inclined
- to think it was from general weakness of constitution.
- She was such a limber maid that 'a could stand no
- hardship, even when I knowed her, and 'a went like a
- candle-snoff, so 'tis said. She was took bad in the
- morning, and, being quite feeble and worn out, she
- died in the evening. She belongs by law to our parish;
- and Mr. Boldwood is going to send a waggon at three
- this afternoon to fetch her home here and bury her."
- "Indeed I shall not let Mr. Boldwood do any such
- thing-i shall do it! Fanny was my uncle's servant,
- and, although I only knew her for a couple of days,
- FANNY IS SENT FOR
- she belongs to me. How very, very sad this is! --
- the idea of Fanny being in a workhouse." Bathsheba
- had begun to know what suffering was, and she spoke
- with real feeling.... "Send across to Mr. Boldwood's,
- and say that Mrs. Troy will take upon herself the duty
- of fetching an old servant of the family.... We
- ought not to put her in a waggon; we'll get a hearse."
- "There will hardly be time, ma'am, will there?"
- "Perhaps not." she said, musingly. "When did you
- say we must be at the door -- three o'clock?"
- "Three o'clock this afternoon, ma'am, so to speak it."
- "Very well-you go with it. A pretty waggon is
- better than an ugly hearse, after all. Joseph, have the
- new spring waggon with the blue body and red wheels,
- and wash it very clean. And, Joseph -- -- "
- "Yes, ma'am."
- "Carry with you some evergreens and flowers to put
- upon her coffin -- indeed, gather a great many, and
- completely bury her in them. Get some boughs of
- laurustinus, and variegated box, and yew, and boy'siove;
- ay, and some hunches of chrysanthemum. And let old
- Pleasant draw her, because she knew him so well."I will, ma'am. I ought
- to have said that the
- Union, in the form of four labouring men, will meet me
- when I gets to our churchyard gate, and take her and
- bury her according to the rites of the Board of Guardians,
- as by law ordained."
- "Dear me -- Casterbridge Union -- and is Fanny come
- to this?" said Bathsheba, musing. "I wish I had known
- of it sooner. I thought she was far away. How long
- has she lived there?"
- "On'y been there a day or two."
- "Oh! -- then she has not been staying there as a
- regular inmate?"
- "No. She first went to live in a garrison-town t'other
- side o' Wessex, and since then she's been picking up a
- living at seampstering in Melchester for several months,
- at the house of a very respectable widow-woman who
- takes in work of that sort. She only got handy the
- Union-house on Sunday morning 'a b'lieve, and 'tis sup-
- posed here and there that she had traipsed every step
- of the way from Melchester. Why she left her place,
- I can't say, for I don't know; and as to a lie, why, I
- wouldn't tell it. That's the short of the story, ma'am."
- "Ah-h!"
- No gem ever flashed from a rosy ray to a white one
- more rapidly than changed the young wife's counten-
- ance whilst this word came from her in a long-drawn
- breath. "Did she walk along our turnpike-road?" she
- said, in a suddenly restless and eager voice.
- "I believe she did.... Ma'am, shall I call Liddy?
- You bain't well, ma'am, surely? You look like a lily --
- so pale and fainty!"
- "No; don't call her; it is nothing. When did she
- pass Weatherbury?"
- "Last Saturday night."
- "That will do, Joseph; now you may go."
- Certainly, ma'am."
- "Joseph, come hither a moment. What was the
- colour of Fanny Robin's hair?"
- "Really, mistress, now that 'tis put to me so judge-
- and-jury like, I can't call to mind, if ye'll believe me!"
- "Never mind; go on and do what I told you. Stop
- -- well no, go on."
- She turned herself away from him, that he might no
- longer notice the mood which had set its sign so visibly
- upon her, and went indoors with a distressing sense of
- faintness and a beating brow. About an hour after, she
- heard the noise of the waggon and went out, still with a
- painful consciousness of her bewildered and troubled
- look. Joseph, dressed in his best suit of clothes, was
- putting in the horse to start. The shrubs and flowers
- were all piled in the waggon, as she had directed
- Bathsheba hardly saw them now.
- "Whose sweetheart did you say, Joseph?"
- "I don't know, ma'am."
- "Are you quite sure?"
- "Yes, ma'am, quite sure."Sure of what?"
- "I'm sure that all I know is that she arrived in the
- morning and died in the evening without further parley.
- What Oak and Mr. Boldwood told me was only these
- few words. `Little Fanny Robin is dead, Joseph,'
- Gabriel said, looking in my face in his steady old way.
- I was very sorry, and I said, `Ah! -- and how did she
- come to die?' `Well, she's dead in Casterhridge
- Union,' he said, `and perhaps 'tisn't much matter
- about how she came to die. She reached the Union
- early Sunday morning, and died in the afternoon -- that's
- clear enough.' Then I asked what she'd been doing
- lately, and Mr. Boldwood turned round to me then, and
- left off spitting a thistle with the end of his stick. He
- told me about her having lived by seampstering in
- Melchester, as I mentioned to you, and that she walked
- therefrom at the end of last week, passing near here
- Saturday night in the dusk. They then said I had
- better just name a hint of her death to you, and away
- they went. Her death might have been brought on by
- biding in the night wind, you know, ma'am; for people
- used to say she'd go off in a decline: she used to cough
- a good deal in winter time. However, 'tisn't much
- odds to us about that now, for 'tis all over."
- "Have you heard a different story at all?' She
- looked at him so intently that Joseph's eyes quailed.
- "Not a word, mistress, I assure 'ee!" he said.
- "Hardly anybody in the parish knows the news yet."
- "I wonder why Gabriel didn't bring the message to
- me himself. He mostly makes a point of seeing me
- upon the most trifling errand." These words were
- merely murmured, and she was looking upon the ground.
- "Perhaps he was busy, ma'am." Joseph suggested.
- "And sometimes he seems to suffer from things upon
- his mind, connected with the time when he was better
- off than 'a is now. 'A's rather a curious item, but a
- very understanding shepherd, and learned in books."
- "Did anything seem upon his mind whilst he was
- speaking to you about this?"
- "I cannot but say that there did, ma'am. He was
- terrible down, and so was Farmer Boldwood."
- "Thank you, Joseph. That will do. Go on now,
- or you'll be late."
- Bathsheba, still unhappy, went indoors again. In
- the course of the afternoon she said to Liddy, Who had
- been informed of the occurrence, " What was the colour
- of poor Fanny Robin's hair? Do you know? I cannot
- recollect-i only saw her for a day or two."
- "It was light, ma'am; but she wore it rather short,
- and packed away under her cap, so that you would
- hardly notice it. But I have seen her let it down when
- she was going to bed, and it looked beautiful then.
- Real golden hair."
- "Her young man was a soldier, was he not?"
- "Yes. In the same regiment as Mr. Troy. He says
- he knew him very well."What, Mr. Troy says so? How came he to say
- that?"
- "One day I just named it to him, and asked him if
- he knew Fanny's young man. He said, "O yes, he
- knew the young man as well as he knew himself, and
- that there wasn't a man in the regiment he liked
- better."
- "Ah! Said that, did he?"
- "Yes; and he said there was a strong likeness be-
- tween himself and the other young man, so that some-
- times people mistook them -- -- "
- "Liddy, for Heaven's sake stop your talking!" said
- Bathsheba, with the nervous petulance that comes from
- worrying perceptions.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLII
-
-
-
- JOSEPH AND HIS BURDEN
-
-
- A WALL bounded the site of Casterbridge Union-
- house, except along a portion of the end. Here a high
- gable stood prominent, and it was covered like the front
- with a mat of ivy. In this gable was no window,
- chimney, ornament, or protuberance of any kind. The
- single feature appertaining to it, beyond the expanse of
- dark green leaves, was a small door.
- The situation of the door was peculiar. The sill
- was three or four feet above the ground, and for a
- moment one was at a loss for an explanation of this
- exceptional altitude, till ruts immediately beneath sug-
- gested that the door was used solely for the passage of
- articles and persons to and from the level of a vehicle
- standing on the outside. Upon the whole, the door
- seemed to advertise itself as a species of Traitor's Gate
- translated to another sphere. That entry and exit
- hereby was only at rare intervals became apparent on
- noting that tufts of grass were allowed to flourish undis-
- turbed in the chinks of the sill.
- As the clock over the South-street Alms-house pointed
- to five minutes to three, a blue spring waggon, picked
- out with red, and containing boughs and flowers, passed
- the end of the street, and up towards this side of the
- building. Whilst the chimes were yet stammering out
- a shattered form of "Malbrook." Joseph Poorgrass rang
- the bell, and received directions to back his waggon
- against the high door under the gable. The door then
- opened, and a plain elm coffin was slowly thrust forth,
- and laid by two men in fustian along the middle of the
- vehicle.
- One of the men then stepped up beside it, took from
- his pocket a lump of chalk, and wrote upon the cover
- the name and a few other words in a large scrawling
- hand. (We believe that they do these things more
- tenderly now, and provide a plate.) He covered the
- whole with a black cloth, threadbare, but decent, the
- tailboard of the waggon was returned to its place, one
- of the men handed a certificate of registry to Poorgrass,
- and both entered the door, closing it behind them.
- Their connection with her, short as it had been, was
- over for ever.
- Joseph then placed the flowers as enjoined, and the
- evergreens around the flowers, till it was difficult to
- divine what the waggon contained; he smacked his
- whip, and the rather pleasing funeral car crept down
- the hill, and along the road to Weatherbury.
- The afternoon drew on apace, and, looking to the
- right towards the sea as he walked beside the horse, Poor-
- grass saw strange clouds and scrolls of mist rolling over
- the long ridges which girt the landscape in that quarter.
- They came in yet greater volumes, and indolently crept
- across the intervening valleys, and around the withered
- papery flags of the moor and river brinks. Then their
- dank spongy forms closed in upon the sky. It was
- a sudden overgrowth of atmospheric fungi which had
- their roots in the neighbouring sea, and by the time
- that horse, man, and corpse entered Yalbury Great
- Wood, these silent workings of an invisible hand had
- reached them, and they were completely enveloped,
- this being the first arrival of the autumn fogs, and the
- first fog of the series.
- The air was as an eye suddenly struck blind. The
- waggon and its load rolled no longer on the horizontal
- division between clearness and opacity, but were
- imbedded in an elastic body of a monotonous pallor
- throughout. There was no perceptible motion in the
- air, not a visible drop of water fell upon a leaf of the
- beeches, birches, and firs composing the wood on either
- side. The trees stood in an attitude of intentness, as if
- they waited longingly for a wind to come and rock
- them. A startling quiet overhung all surrounding things
- -- so completely, that the crunching of the waggon-
- wheels was as a great noise, and small rustles, which
- had never obtained a hearing except by night, were dis-
- tinctly individualized.
- Joseph Poorgrass looked round upon his sad burden
- as it loomed faintly through the flowering laurustinus,
- then at the unfathomable gloom amid the high trees on
- each hand, indistinct, shadowless, and spectrelike in
- their monochrome of grey. He felt anything but cheer-
- ful, and wished he had the company even of a child or
- dog. Stopping the home, he listened. Not a footstep
- or wheel was audible anywhere around, and the dead
- silence was broken only by a heavy particle falling from
- a tree through the evergreens and alighting with a smart
- rap upon the coffin of poor Fanny. The fog had by
- this time saturated the trees, and this was the first
- dropping of water from the overbrimming leaves. The
- hollow echo of its fall reminded the waggoner painfully
- of the grim Leveller. Then hard by came down another
- drop, then two or three. Presently there was a continual
- tapping of these heavy drops upon the dead leaves, the
- road, and the travellers. The nearer boughs were beaded
- with the mist to the greyness of aged men, and the rusty-
- red leaves of the beeches were hung with similar drops,
- like diamonds on auburn hair.
- At the roadside hamlet called Roy-Town, just beyond
- this wood, was the old inn Buck's Head. It was about
- a mile and a half from Weatherbury, and in the meridian
- times of stage-coach travelling had been the place
- where many coaches changed and kept their relays
- of horses. All the old stabling was now pulled down,
- and little remained besides the habitable inn itself,
- which, standing a little way back from the road, sig-
- nified its existence to people far up and down the
- highway by a sign hanging from the horizontal bough
- of an elm on the opposite side of the way.
- Travellers -- for the variety TOURIST had hardly
- developed into a distinct species at this date -- some-
- times said in passing, when they cast their eyes up to
- the sign-bearing tree, that artists were fond of repre-
- senting the signboard hanging thus, but that they
- themselves had never before noticed so perfect an
- instance in actual working order. It was near this tree
- that the waggon was standing into which Gabriel Oak
- crept on his first journey to Weatherbury; but, owing
- to the darkness, the sign and the inn had been un-
- observed.
- The manners of the inn were of the old-established
- type. Indeed, in the minds of its frequenters they
- existed as unalterable formulae: E.G. --
- Rap with the bottom of your pint for more liquor.
- For tobacco, shout.
- In calling for the girl in waiting, say, "Maid!"
- Ditto for the landlady, "Old Soul!" etc., etc.
- It was a relief to Joseph's heart when the friendly
- signboard came in view, and, stopping his horse
- immediately beneath it, he proceeded to fulfil an
- intention made a long time before. His spirits were
- oozing out of him quite. He turned the horse's head
- to the green bank, and entered the hostel for a mug
- of ale.
- Going down into the kitchen of the inn, the floor
- of which was a step below the passage, which in its
- turn was a step below the road outside, what should
- Joseph see to gladden his eyes but two copper-coloured
- discs, in the form of the countenances of Mr. Jan
- Coggan and Mr. Mark Clark. These owners of the
- two most appreciative throats in the neighbourhood,
- within the pale of respectability, were now sitting face
- to face over a threelegged circular table, having an
- iron rim to keep cups and pots from being accidentally
- elbowed off; they might have been said to resemble
- the setting sun and the full moon shining VIS-A-VIS
- across the globe.
- "Why, 'tis neighbour Poorgrass!" said Mark Clark.
- "I'm sure your face don't praise your mistress's table,
- Joseph."
- "I've had a very pale companion for the last four
- miles." said Joseph, indulging in a shudder toned
- down by resignation. "And to speak the truth, 'twas
- beginning to tell upon me. I assure ye, I ha'n't seed
- the colour of victuals or drink since breakfast time
- this morning, and that was no more than a dew-bit
- afield."
- "Then drink, Joseph, and don't restrain yourself!"
- said Coggan, handing him a hooped mug three-
- quarters full.
- Joseph drank for a moderately long time, then for
- a longer time, saying, as he lowered the jug, "'Tis
- pretty drinking -- very pretty drinking, and is more
- than cheerful on my melancholy errand, so to speak it."
- "True, drink is a pleasant delight." said Jan, as one
- who repeated a truism so familiar to his brain that he
- hardly noticed its passage over his tongue; and,
- lifting the cup, Coggan tilted his head gradually
- backwards, with closed eyes, that his expectant soul
- might not be diverted for one instant from its bliss
- by irrelevant surroundings.
- "Well, I must be on again." said Poorgrass. "Not
- but that I should like another nip with ye; but the
- parish might lose confidence in me if I was seed
- here."
- "Where be ye trading o't to to-day, then, Joseph?"
- "Back to Weatherbury. I've got poor little Fanny
- Robin in my waggon outside, and I must be at the
- churchyard gates at a quarter to five with her."
- "Ay-i've heard of it. And so she's nailed up in
- parish boards after all, and nobody to pay the bell
- shilling and the grave half-crown."
- "The parish pays the grave half-crown, but not the
- bell shilling, because the bell's a luxery: but 'a can
- hardly do without the grave, poor body. However, I
- expect our mistress will pay all."
- "A pretty maid as ever I see! But what's yer hurry,
- Joseph? The pore woman's dead, and you can't bring
- her to life, and you may as well sit down comfortable,
- and finish another with us."
- "I don't mind taking just the least thimbleful ye
- can dream of more with ye, sonnies. But only a few
- minutes, because 'tis as 'tis."
- "Of course, you'll have another drop. A man's
- twice the man afterwards. You feel so warm and
- glorious, and you whop and slap at your work without
- any trouble, and everything goes on like sticks a-
- breaking. Too much liquor is bad, and leads us to
- that horned man in the smoky house; but after all,
- many people haven't the gift of enjoying a wet, and
- since we be highly favoured with a power that way,
- we should make the most o't."True." said Mark Clark. "'Tis a talent the
- Lord
- has mercifully bestowed upon us, and we ought not
- to neglect it. But, what with the parsons and clerks
- and schoolpeople and serious tea-parties, the merry
- old ways of good life have gone to the dogs -- upon
- my carcase, they have!"
- "Well, really, I must be onward again now." said
- Joseph.
- "Now, now, Joseph; nonsense! The poor woman
- is dead, isn't she, and what's your hurry?"
- "Well, I hope Providence won't be in a way with
- me for my doings." said Joseph, again sitting down.
- "I've been troubled with weak moments lately, 'tis
- true. I've been drinky once this month already, and
- I did not go to church a-Sunday, and I dropped a
- curse or two yesterday; so I don't want to go too far
- for my safety. Your next world is your next world,
- and not to be squandered offhand."
- "I believe ye to be a chapelmember, Joseph. That
- I do."
- "Oh, no, no! I don't go so far as that."
- "For my part." said Coggan, "I'm staunch Church
- of England."
- "Ay, and faith, so be I." said Mark Clark.
- "I won't say much for myself; I don't wish to,"
- Coggan continued, with that tendency to talk on
- principles which is characteristic of the barley-corn.
- "But I've never changed a single doctrine: I've stuck
- like a plaster to the old faith I was born in. Yes;
- there's this to be said for the Church, a man can
- belong to the Church and bide in his cheerful old
- inn, and never trouble or worry his mind about
- doctrines at all. But to be a meetinger, you must
- go to chapel in all winds and weathers, and make
- yerself as frantic as a skit. Not but that chapel
- members be clever chaps enough in their way. They
- can lift up beautiful prayers out of their own heads, all
- about their families and shipwrecks in the newspaper."
- "They can -- they can." said Mark Clark, with cor-
- roborative feeling; "but we Churchmen, you see, must
- have it all printed aforehand, or, dang it all, we should
- no more know what to say to a great gaffer like the
- Lord than babes unborn,"
- "Chapelfolk be more hand-in-glove with them above
- than we." said Joseph, thoughtfully.
- "Yes." said Coggan. "We know very well that if
- anybody do go to heaven, they will. They've worked
- hard for it, and they deserve to have it, such as 'tis.
- I bain't such a fool as to pretend that we who stick
- to the Church have the same chance as they, because
- we know we have not. But I hate a feller who'll
- change his old ancient doctrines for the sake of getting
- to heaven. I'd as soon turn king's-evidence for the
- few pounds you get. Why, neighbours, when every
- one of my taties were frosted, our Parson Thirdly
- were the man who gave me a sack for seed, though
- he hardly had one for his own use, and no money to
- buy 'em. If it hadn't been for him, I shouldn't hae
- had a tatie to put in my garden. D'ye think I'd
- turn after that? No, I'll stick to my side; and if we
- be in the wrong, so be it: I'll fall with the fallen!"
- "Well said -- very well said." observed Joseph. --
- "However, folks, I must be moving now: upon my life
- I must. Pa'son Thirdly will be waiting at the church
- gates, and there's the woman a-biding outside in the
- waggon."
- "Joseph Poorgrass, don't be so miserable! Pa'son
- Thirdly won't mind. He's a generous man; he's found
- me in tracts for years, and I've consumed a good many
- in the course of a long and shady life; but he's never
- been the man to cry out at the expense. Sit down."
- The longer Joseph Poorgrass remained, the less his
- spirit was troubled by the duties which devolved upon
- him this afternoon. The minutes glided by uncounted,
- until the evening shades began perceptibly to deepen,
- and the eyes of the three were but sparkling points
- on the surface of darkness. Coggan's repeater struck
- six from his pocket in the usual still small tones.
- At that moment hasty steps were heard in the entry,
- and the door opened to admit the figure of Gabriel Oak,
- followed by the maid of the inn bearing a candle. He
- stared sternly at the one lengthy and two round faces
- of the sitters, which confronted him with the expressions
- of a fiddle and a couple of warming-pans. Joseph Poor-
- grass blinked, and shrank several inches into the back-
- ground.
- "Upon my soul, I'm ashamed of you; 'tis disgraceful,
- Joseph, disgraceful!" said Gabriel, indignantly. "Coggan,
- you call yourself a man, and don't know better than this."
- Coggan looked up indefinitely at Oak, one or other
- of his eyes occasionally opening and closing of its own
- accord, as if it were not a member, but a dozy individual
- with a distinct personality.
- "Don't take on so, shepherd!" said Mark Clark,
- looking reproachfully at the candle, which appeared
- to possess special features of interest for his eyes.
- "Nobody can hurt a dead woman." at length said
- Coggan, with the precision of a machine. "All that
- could be done for her is done -- she's beyond us: and
- why should a man put himself in a tearing hurry for
- lifeless clay that can neither feel nor see, and don't
- know what you do with her at all? If she'd been
- alive, I would have been the first to help her. If she
- now wanted victuals and drink, I'd pay for it, money
- down. But she's dead, and no speed of ours will
- bring her to life. The woman's past us -- time spent
- upon her is throwed away: why should we hurry to
- do what's not required? Drink, shepherd, and be
- friends, for to-morrow we may be like her."
- "We may." added Mark Clark, emphatically, at once
- drinking himself, to run no further risk of losing his
- chance by the event alluded to, Jan meanwhile merging
- his additional thoughts of to-morrow in a song: --
- To-mor-row, to-mor-row!
- And while peace and plen-ty I find at my board,
- With a heart free from sick-ness and sor-row,
- With my friends will I share what to-day may af-ford,
- And let them spread the ta-ble to-mor-row.
- To-mor -- row', to-mor --
- "Do hold thy horning, Jan!" said Oak; and turning
- upon Poorgrass, " as for you, Joseph, who do your wicked
- deeds in such confoundedly holy ways, you are as drunk
- as you can stand."
- "No, Shepherd Oak, no! Listen to reason, shepherd.
- All that's the matter with me is the affliction called a
- multiplying eye, and that's how it is I look double to
- you-i mean, you look double to me."
- A multiplying eye is a very bad thing." said Mark
- Clark.
- "It always comes on when I have been in a public --
- house a little time." said Joseph Poorgrass, meekly.
- "Yes; I see two of every sort, as if I were some holy
- man living in the times of King Noah and entering
- into the ark.... Y-y-y-yes." he added, becoming much
- affected by the picture of himself as a person thrown
- away, and shedding tears; "I feel too good for England:
- I ought to have lived in Genesis by rights, like the other
- men of sacrifice, and then I shouldn't have b-b-been
- called a d-d-drunkard in such a way!"
- "I wish you'd show yourself a man of spirit, and not
- sit whining there!"
- "Show myself a man of spirit? ... Ah, well! let
- me take the name of drunkard humbly-iet me be a
- man of contrite knees-iet it be! l know that I always
- do say "Please God" afore I do anything, from my
- getting up to my going down of the same, and I be
- willing to take as much disgrace as there is in that
- holy act. Hah, yes! ... But not a man of spirit?
- Have I ever allowed the toe of pride to be lifted
- against my hinder parts without groaning manfully that
- I question the right to do so? I inquire that query
- boldly?"
- "We can't say that you have, Hero Poorgrass,"
- admitted Jan.
- "Never have I allowed such treatment to pass un-
- questioned! Yet the shepherd says in the face of that
- rich testimony that I be not a man of spirit! Well,
- let it pass by, and death is a kind friend!"
- Gabriel, seeing that neither of the three was in a fit
- state to Cake charge of the waggon for the remainder of
- the journey, made no reply, but, closing the door again
- upon them, went across to where the vehicle stood, now
- getting indistinct in the fog and gloom of this mildewy
- time. He pulled the horse's head from the large patch
- of turf it had eaten bare, readjusted the boughs over
- the coffin, and drove along through the unwholesome
- night.
- It had gradually become rumoured in the village
- that the body to be brought and buried that day was
- all that was left of the unfortunate Fanny Robin who
- had followed the Eleventh from Casterbridge through
- Melchester and onwards. But, thanks to Boldwood's
- reticence and Oak's generosity, the lover she had followed
- had never been individualized as Troy. Gabriel hoped
- that the whole truth of the matter might not be published
- till at any rate the girl had been in her grave for a few
- days, when the interposing barriers of earth and time,
- and a sense that the events had been somewhat shut
- into oblivion, would deaden the sting that revelation and
- invidious remark would have for Bathsheba just now.
- By the time that Gabriel reached the old manor-
- house, her residence, which lay in his way to the church,
- it was quite dark. A man came from the gate and said
- through the fog, which hung between them like blown
- flour --
- "Is that Poorgrass with the corpse?"
- Gabriel recognized the voice as that of the parson.
- "The corpse is here, sir." said Gabriel.
- "I have just been to inquire of Mrs. Troy if she could
- tell me the reason of the delay. I am afraid it is too
- late now for the funeral to be performed with proper
- decency. Have you the registrar's certificate?"
- "No." said Gabriel. "I expect Poorgrass has that;
- and he's at the Buck's Head. I forgot to ask him
- for it."
- "Then that settles the matter. We'll put off the
- funeral till to-morrow morning. The body may be
- brought on to the church, or it may be left here at
- the farm and fetched by the bearers in the morning.
- They waited more than an hour, and have now gone
- home."
- Gabriel had his reasons for thinking the latter a
- most objectionable plan, notwithstanding that Fanny
- had been an inmate of the farm-house for several years
- in the lifetime of Bathsheba's uncle. Visions of several
- unhappy contingencies which might arise from this delay
- flitted before him. But his will was not law, and he
- went indoors to inquire of his mistress what were her
- wishes on the subject. He found her in an unusual
- mood: her eyes as she looked up to him were suspicious
- and perplexed as with some antecedent thought. Troy
- had not yet returned. At first Bathsheba assented with
- a mien of indifference to his proposition that they should
- go on to the church at once with their burden; but
- immediately afterwards, following Gabriel to the gate,
- she swerved to the extreme of solicitousness on Fanny's
- account, and desired that the girl might be brought into
- the house. Oak argued upon the convenience of leaving
- her in the waggon, just as she lay now, with her flowers
- and green leaves about her, merely wheeling the vehicle
- into the coach-house till the morning, but to no purpose,
- "It is unkind and unchristian." she said, "to leave the
- poor thing in a coach-house all night."
- Very well, then." said the parson. "And I will
- arrange that the funeral shall take place early to-
- morrow. Perhaps Mrs. Troy is right in feeling that we
- cannot treat a dead fellow-creature too thoughtfully
- We must remember that though she may have erred
- grievously in leaving her home, she is still our sister:
- and it is to be believed that God's uncovenanted
- mercies are extended towards her, and that she is a
- member of the flock of Christ."
- The parson's words spread into the heavy air with a
- sad yet unperturbed cadence, and Gabriel shed an
- honest tear. Bathsheba seemed unmoved. Mr.
- Thirdly then left them, and Gabriel lighted a lantern.
- Fetching three other men to assist him, they bore the
- unconscious truant indoors, placing the coffin on two
- benches in the middle of a little sitting-room next the
- hall, as Bathsheba directed.
- Every one except Gabriel Oak then left the room.
- He still indecisively lingered beside the body. He was
- deeply troubled at the wretchedly ironical aspect that
- circumstances were putting on with regard to Troy's
- wife, and at his own powerlessness to counteract them,
- (n spite of his careful manoeuvring all this day, the very
- worst event that could in any way have happened in
- connection with the burial had happened now. Oak
- imagined a terrible discovery resulting from this after-
- noon's work that might cast over Bathsheba's life a shade
- which the interposition of many lapsing years might but
- indifferently lighten, and which nothing at all might
- altogether remove.
- Suddenly, as in a last attempt to save Bathsheba
- from, at any rate, immediate anguish, he looked again,
- as he had looked before, at the chalk writing upon the
- coffinlid. The scrawl was this simple one, " Fanny
- Robin and child." Gabriel took his handkerchief and
- carefully rubbed out the two latter words, leaving visible
- the inscription "Fanny Robin" only. He then left the
- room, and went out quietly by the front door.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIII
-
-
-
- FANNY'S REVENGE
-
-
- "DO you want me any longer ma'am? " inquired Liddy,
- at a later hour the same evening, standing by the door
- with a chamber candlestick in her hand and addressing
- Bathsheba, who sat cheerless and alone in the large
- parlour beside the first fire of the season.
- "No more to-night, Liddy."
- "I'll sit up for master if you like, ma'am. I am not
- at all afraid of Fanny, if I may sit in my own room and
- have a candle. She was such a childlike, nesh young
- thing that her spirit couldn't appear to anybody if it
- tried, I'm quite sure."
- "O no, no! You go to bed. I'll sit up for him
- myself till twelve o'clock, and if he has not arrived by
- that time, I shall give him up and go to bed too."
- It is half-past ten now."
- "Oh! is it?"
- Why don't you sit upstairs, ma'am?"
- "Why don't I?" said Bathsheba, desultorily. "It
- isn't worth while -- there's a fire here, Liddy." She
- suddenly exclaimed in an impulsive and excited whisper,
- Have you heard anything strange said of Fanny?"
- The words had no sooner escaped her than an expres-
- sion of unutterable regret crossed her face, and she
- burst into tears.
- "No -- not a word!" said Liddy, looking at the
- weeping woman with astonishment. "What is it makes
- you cry so, ma'am; has anything hurt you?" She came
- to Bathsheba's side with a face full of sympathy.
- "No, Liddy-i don't want you any more. I can
- hardly say why I have taken to crying lately: I never
- used to cry. Good-night."
- Liddy then left the parlour and closed the door.
- Bathsheba was lonely and miserable now; not lone-
- lier actually than she had been before her marriage;
- but her loneliness then was to that of the present time
- as the solitude of a mountain is to the solitude of a
- cave. And within the last day or two had come these
- disquieting thoughts about her husband's past. Her
- wayward sentiment that evening concerning Fanny's
- temporary resting-place had been the result of a strange
- complication of impulses in Bathsheba's bosom. Per-
- haps it would be more accurately described as a
- determined rebellion against her prejudices, a revulsion
- from a lower instinct of uncharitableness, which would
- have withheld all sympathy from the dead woman, be-
- cause in life she had preceded Bathsheba in the atten-
- tions of a man whom Bathsheba had by no means
- ceased from loving, though her love was sick to death
- just now with the gravity of a further misgiving.
- In five or ten minutes there was another tap at the
- door. Liddy reappeared, and coming in a little way
- stood hesitating, until at length she said,!Maryann has
- just heard something very strange, but I know it isn't
- true. And we shall be sure to know the rights of it in
- a day or two."
- "What is it?"
- "Oh, nothing connected with you or us, ma'am. It
- is about Fanny. That same thing you have heard."
- "I have heard nothing."
- "I mean that a wicked story is got to Weatherbury
- within this last hour -- that -- --" Liddy came close to
- her mistress and whispered the remainder of the sentence
- slowly into her ear, inclining her head as she spoke in
- the direction of the room where Fanny lay.
- Bathsheba trembled from head to foot.
- "I don't believe it!" she said, excitedly. "And
- there's only one name written on the coffin-cover."
- "Nor I, ma'am. And a good many others don't;
- for we should surely have been told more about it if it
- had been true -- don't you think so, ma'am?"
- "We might or we might not."
- Bathsheba turned and looked into the fire, that
- Liddy might not see her face. Finding that her mistress
- was going to say no more, Liddy glided out, closed the
- door softly, and went to bed.
- Bathsheba's face, as she continued looking into the
- fire that evening, might have excited solicitousness on
- her account even among those who loved her least.
- The sadness of Fanny Robin's fate did not make Bath-
- sheba's glorious, although she was the Esther to this
- poor Vashti, and their fates might be supposed to stand
- in some respects as contrasts to each other. When
- Liddy came into the room a second time the beautiful
- eyes which met hers had worn a listless, weary look-
- When she went out after telling the story they had ex-
- pressed wretchedness in full activity. Her simple
- country nature, fed on old-fashioned principles, was
- troubled by that which would have troubled a woman
- of the world very little, both Fanny and her child, if she
- had one, being dead.
- Bathsheba had grounds for conjecturing a connection
- between her own history and the dimly suspected
- tragedy of Fanny's end which Oak and Boldwood never
- for a moment credited her with possessing. The
- meeting with the lonely woman on the previous Saturday
- night had been unwitnessed and unspoken of. Oak
- may have had the best of intentions in withholding for
- as many days as possible the details of what had
- happened to Fanny; but had he known that Bathsheba's
- perceptions had already been exercised in the matter,
- he would have done nothing to lengthen the minutes of
- suspense she was now undergoing, when the certainty
- which must terminate it would be the worst fact suspected
- after all.
- She suddenly felt a longing desire to speak to some
- one stronger than herself, and so get strength to sustain
- her surmised position with dignity and her lurking
- doubts with stoicism. Where could she find such a
- friend? nowhere in the house. She was by far the
- coolest of the women under her roof. Patience and
- suspension of judgement for a few hours were what she
- wanted to learn, and there was nobody to teach her.
- Might she but go to Gabriel Oak! -- but that could not
- be. What a way Oak had, she thought, of enduring
- things. Boldwood, who seemed so much deeper and
- higher and stronger in feeling than Gabriel, had not
- yet learnt, any more than she herself, the simple
- lesson which Oak showed a mastery of by every turn
- and look he gave -- that among the multitude of interests
- by which he was surrounded, those which affected his
- personal wellbeing were not the most absorbing and
- important in his eyes. Oak meditatively looked upon
- the horizon of circumstances without any special regard
- to his own standpoint in the midst. That was how
- she would wish to be. But then Oak was not racked
- by incertitude upon the inmost matter of his bosom, as
- she was at this moment. Oak knew all about Fanny
- that he wished to know -- she felt convinced of that.
- If she were to go to him now at once and say no more
- than these few words,!What is the truth of the story?"
- he would feel bound in honour to tell her. It would
- be an inexpressible relief. No further speech would
- need to be uttered. He knew her so well that no
- eccentricity of behaviour in her would alarm him.
- She flung a cloak round her, went to the door and
- opened it. Every blade, every twig was still. The air
- was yet thick with moisture, though somewhat less dense
- than during the afternoon, and a steady smack of drops
- upon the fallen leaves under the boughs was almost
- musical in its soothing regularity. lt seemed better to
- be out of the house than within it, and Bathsheba closed
- the door, and walked slowly down the lane till she came
- opposite to Gabriel's cottage, where he now lived alone,
- having left Coggan's house through being pinched for
- room. There was a light in one window only', and that
- was downstairs. The shutters were not closed, nor was
- any blind or curtain drawn over the window, neither
- robbery nor observation being a contingency which could
- do much injury to the occupant of the domicile. Yes,
- it was Gabriel himself who was sitting up: he was reading,
- From her standing-place in the road she could see him
- plainly, sitting quite still, his light curly head upon his
- hand, and only occasionally looking up to snuff the
- candle which stood beside him. At length he looked
- at the clock, seemed surprised at the lateness of the
- hour, closed his book, and arose. He was going to bed,
- she knew, and if she tapped it must be done at once.
- Alas for her resolve! She felt she could not do it,
- Not for worlds now could she give a hint about her
- misery to him, much less ask him plainly for information
- on the cause of Fanny's death. She must suspect, and
- guess, and chafe, and bear it all alone.
- Like a homeless wanderer she lingered by the bank,
- as if lulled and fascinated by the atmosphere of content
- which seemed to spread from that little dwelling, and
- was so sadly lacking in her own. Gabriel appeared in
- an upper room, placed his light in the window-bench,
- and then -- knelt down to pray. The contrast of the
- picture with her rebellious and agitated existence at this
- same time was too much for her to bear to look upon
- longer. It was not for her to make a truce with
- trouble by any such means. She must tread her giddy
- distracting measure to its last note, as she had begun it.
- With a swollen heart she went again up the lane, and
- entered her own door.
- More fevered now by a reaction from the first feelings
- which Oak's example had raised in her, she paused in
- the hall, looking at the door of the room wherein Fanny
- lay. She locked her fingers, threw back her head, and
- strained her hot hands rigidly across her forehead, saying,
- with a hysterical sob, "Would to God you would speak
- and tell me your secret, Fanny! . , . O, I hope, hope
- it is not true that there are two of you! ... If I could
- only look in upon you for one little minute, I should
- know all!"
- A few moments passed, and she added, slowly, "And
- I will"
- Bathsheba in after times could never gauge the mood
- which carried her through the actions following this
- murmured resolution on this memorable evening of her
- life. She went to the lumber-closet for a screw-driver.
- At the end of a short though undefined time she found
- herself in the small room, quivering with emotion, a mist
- before her eyes, and an excruciating pulsation in her
- brain, standing beside the uncovered coffin of the girl
- whose conjectured end had so entirely engrossed her, and
- saying to herself in a husky voice as she gazed within --
- "It was best to know the worst, and I know it now!"
- She was conscious of having brought about this
- situation by a series of actions done as by one in an
- extravagant dream; of following that idea as to method,
- which had burst upon her in the hall with glaring
- obviousness, by gliding to the top of the stairs, assuring
- herself by listening to the heavy breathing of her maids
- that they were asleep, gliding down again, turning the
- handle of the door within which the young girl lay, and
- deliberately setting herself to do what, if she had antici-
- pated any such undertaking at night and alone, would
- have horrified her, but which, when done, was not so
- dreadful as was the conclusive proof of her husband's
- conduct which came with knowing beyond doubt the
- last chapter of Fanny's story.
- Bathsheba's head sank upon her bosom, and the
- breath which had been bated in suspense, curiosity, and
- interest, was exhaled now in the form of a whispered
- wail: "Oh-h-h!" she said, and the silent room added
- length to her moan.
- Her tears fell fast beside the unconscious pair in the
- coffin: tears of a complicated origin, of a nature inde-
- scribable, almost indefinable except as other than those
- of simple sorrow. Assuredly their wonted fires must
- have lived in Fanny's ashes when events were so shaped
- as to chariot her hither in this natural, unobtrusive, yet
- effectual manner. The one feat alone -- that of dying --
- by which a mean condition could be resolved into a
- grand one, Fanny had achieved. And to that had
- destiny subjoined this rencounter to-night, which had,
- in Bathsheba's wild imagining, turned her companion's
- failure to success, her humiliation to triumph, her luck-
- lessness to ascendency; et had thrown over herself a
- garish light of mockery, and set upon all things about
- her an ironical smile.
- Fanny's face was framed in by that yellow hair of
- hers; and there was no longer much room for doubt as
- to the origin of the curl owned by Troy. In Bath-
- sheba's heated fancy the innocent white countenance
- expressed a dim triumphant consciousness of the pain
- she was retaliating for her pain with all the merciless
- rigour of the Mosaic law: "Burning for burning; wound
- for wound: strife for strife.
- Bathsheba indulged in contemplations of escape from
- her position by immediate death, which thought she,
- though it was an inconvenient and awful way, had limits
- to its inconvenience and awfulness that could not be
- overpassed; whilst the shames of life were measureless.
- Yet even this scheme of extinction by death was out
- tamely copying her rival's method without the reasons
- which had glorified it in her rival's case. She glided
- rapidly up and down the room, as was mostly her habit
- hen excited, her hands hanging clasped in front of her,
- as she thought and in part expressed in broken words:
- O, I hate her, yet I don't mean that I hate her, for
- it is grievous and wicked; and yet I hate her a little!
- yes, my flesh insists upon hating her, whether my spirit
- is willing or no!... If she had only lived, I could
- ave been angry and cruel towards her with some justifi-
- cation; but to be vindictive towards a poor dead woman
- recoils upon myself. O God, have mercy,! I am
- miserable at all this!"
- Bathsheba became at this moment so terrified at her
- own state of mind that she looked around for some sort
- of refuge from herself. The vision of Oak kneeling
- down that night recurred to her, and with the imitative
- instinct which animates women she seized upon the idea,
- resolved to kneel, and, if possible, pray. Gabriel had
- prayed; so would she.
- She knelt beside the coffin, covered her face with her
- hands, and for a time the room was silent as a tomb.
- whether from a purely mechanical, or from any other
- cause, when Bathsheba arose it was with a quieted spirit,
- and a regret for the antagonistic instincts which had
- seized upon her just before.
- In her desire to make atonement she took flowers
- from a vase by the window, and began laying them
- around the dead girl's head. Bathsheba knew no other
- way of showing kindness to persons departed than by
- giving them flowers. She knew not how long she
- remained engaged thus. She forgot time, life, where
- she was, what she was doing. A slamming together of
- the coach-house doors in the yard brought her to her-
- self again. An instant after, the front door opened and
- closed, steps crossed the hall, and her husband appeared
- at the entrance to the room, looking in upon her.
- He beheld it all by degrees, stared in stupefaction at
- the scene, as if he thought it an illusion raised by some
- fiendish
- incantation. Bathsheba, pallid as a corpse on
- end, gazed back at him in the same wild way.
- So little are instinctive guesses the fruit of a legitimate
- induction, that at this moment, as he stood with the
- door in his hand, Troy never once thought of Fanny in
- connection with what he saw. His first confused idea
- was that somebody in the house had died.
- "Well -- what?" said Troy, blankly.
- "I must go! I must go!" said Bathsheba, to herself
- more than to him. She came with a dilated eye towards
- the door, to push past him.
- "What's the matter, in God's name? who's dead?"
- said Troy.
- "I cannot say; let me go out. I want air!" she
- continued.
- "But no; stay, I insist!" He seized her hand, and
- then volition seemed to leave her, and she went off into
- a state of passivity. He, still holding her, came up the
- room, and thus, hand in hand, Troy and Bathsheba
- approached the coffin's side.
- The candle was standing on a bureau close by them,
- and the light slanted down, distinctly enkindling the
- cold features of both mother and babe. Troy looked
- in, dropped his wife's hand, knowledge of it all came
- over him in a lurid sheen, and he stood still.
- So still he remained that he could be imagined to
- have left in him no motive power whatever. The
- clashes of feeling in all directions confounded one
- another, produced a neutrality, and there was motion in
- none.
- "Do you know her?" said Bathsheba, in a small
- enclosed echo, as from the interior of a cell.
- "I do." said Troy.
- "Is it she?"
- "It is."
- He had originally stood perfectly erect. And now,
- in the wellnigh congealed immobility of his frame
- could be discerned an incipient movement, as in the
- darkest night may be discerned light after a while.
- He was gradually sinking forwards. The lines of his
- features softened, and dismay modulated to illimitable
- sadness. Bathsheba was regarding him from the other
- side, still with parted lips and distracted eyes. Capacity
- for intense feeling is proportionate to the general
- intensity of the nature ,and perhaps in all Fanny's
- sufferings, much greater relatively to her strength, there
- never was a time she suffered in an absolute sense
- what Bathsheba suffered now.
- What Troy did was to sink upon his knees with
- an indefinable union of remorse and reverence upon
- his face, and, bending over Fanny Robin, gently kissed
- her, as one would kiss an infant asleep to avoid
- awakening it.
- At the sight and sound of that, to her, unendurable
- act, Bathsheba sprang towards him. All the strong
- feelings which had been scattered over her existence
- since she knew what feeling was, seemed gathered
- together into one pulsation now. The revulsion from
- her indignant mood a little earlier, when she had
- meditated upon compromised honour, forestalment,
- eclipse in maternity by another, was violent and entire.
- All that was forgotten in the simple and still strong
- attachment of wife to husband. She had sighed for
- her self-completeness then, and now she cried aloud
- against the severance of the union she had deplored.
- She flung her arms round Troy's neck, exclaiming wildly
- from the deepest deep of her heart --
- "Don't -- don't kiss them! O, Frank, I can"t bear
- it-i can't! I love you better than she did: kiss me
- too, Frank -- kiss me! You will, Frank, kiss me too!"
- There was something so abnormal and startling in
- the childlike pain and simplicity of this appeal from a
- woman of Bathsheba's calibre and independence, that
- Troy, loosening her tightly clasped arms from his neck,
- looked at her in bewilderment. It was such and unex-
- pected revelation of all women being alike at heart, even
- those so different in their accessories as Fanny and this
- one beside him, that Troy could hardly seem to believe
- her to be his proud wife Bathsheba. Fanny's own
- spirit seemed to be animating her frame. But this was
- the mood of a few instants only. When the momentary
- "I will not kiss you!" he said pushing her away.
- Had the wife now but gone no further. Yet,
- perhaps. under the harrowing circumstances, to speak
- out was the one wrong act which can be better under-
- stood, if not forgiven in her, than the right and politic
- one, her rival being now but a corpse. All the feeling
- she had been betrayed into showing she drew back to
- herself again by a strenuous effort of self-command.
- "What have you to say as your reason?" she asked
- her bitter voice being strangely low -- quite that of
- another woman now.
- "I have to say that I have been a bad, black-hearted
- man." he answered.
- less than she."
- "Ah! don't taunt me, madam. This woman is more
- to me, dead as she is, than ever you were, or are, or can
- be. If Satan had not tempted me with that face of
- yours, and those cursed coquetries, I should have
- He turned to Fanny then. "But never mind, darling,
- wife!"
- At these words there arose from Bathsheba's lips a
- long, low cry of measureless despair and indignation,
- such a wail of anguish as had never before been heard
- within those old-inhabited walls. It was the product*
- of her union with Troy.
- "If she's -- that, -- what -- am I?" she added, as a
- continuation of the same cry, and sobbing pitifully:
- and the rarity with her of such abandonment only made
- the condition more dire.
- "You are nothing to me -- nothing." said Troy,
- heartlessly. "A ceremony before a priest doesn't make
- a marriage. I am not morally yours."
- A vehement impulse to flee from him, to run from
- this place, hide, and escape his words at any price, not
- stopping short of death itself, mastered Bathsheba now.
- She waited not an instant, but turned to the door and
- ran out.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIV
-
-
-
- UNDER A TREE -- REACTION
-
-
- BATHSHEBA went along the dark road, neither know-
- ing nor caring about the direction or issue of her flight.
- The first time that she definitely noticed her position
- was when she reached a gate leading into a thicket over-
- hung by some large oak and beech trees. On looking
- into the place, it occurred to her that she had seen it
- by daylight on some previous occasion, and that what
- appeared like an impassable thicket was in reality a
- brake of fern now withering fast. She could think of
- nothing better to do with her palpitating self than to go
- in here and hide; and entering, she lighted on a spot
- sheltered from the damp fog by a reclining trunk, where
- she sank down upon a tangled couch of fronds and
- stems. She mechanically pulled some armfuls round
- her to keep off the breezes, and closed her eyes.
- Whether she slept or not that night Bathsheba was
- not clearly aware. But it was with a freshened exist-
- ence and a cooler brain that, a long time afterwards, she
- became conscious of some interesting proceedings which
- were going on in the trees above her head and around.
- A coarse-throated chatter was the first sound.
- It was a sparrow just waking.
- Next: "Chee-weeze-weeze-weeze!" from another
- retreat.
- It was a finch.
- Third: "Tink-tink-tink-tink-a-chink!" from the hedge,
- It was a robin.
- "Chuck-chuck-chuck!" overhead.
- A squirrel.
- Then, from the road, "With my ra-ta-ta, and my
- rum-tum-tum!"
- It was a ploughboy. Presently he came opposite,
- and she believed from his voice that he was one of
- the boys on her own farm. He was followed by a
- shambling tramp of heavy feet, and looking through
- the ferns Bathsheba could just discern in the wan light
- of daybreak a team of her own horses. They stopped
- to drink at a pond on the other side of the way'. She
- watched them flouncing into the pool, drinking, tossing
- up their heads, drinking again, the water dribbling
- from their lips in silver threads. There was another
- flounce, and they came out of the pond, and turned
- back again towards the farm.
- She looked further around. Day was just dawning,
- and beside its cool air and colours her heated actions
- and resolves of the night stood out in lurid contrast.
- She perceived that in her lap, and clinging to her
- hair, were red and yellow leaves which had come
- down from the tree and settled silently upon her
- during her partial sleep. Bathsheba shook her dress to
- get rid of them, when multitudes of the same family lying
- round about her rose and fluttered away in the breeze
- thus created, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing."
- There was an opening towards the east, and the
- glow from the as yet unrisen sun attracted her eyes
- thither. From her feet, and between the beautiful
- yellowing ferns with their feathery arms, the ground
- sloped downwards to a hollow, in which was a species
- of swamp, dotted with fungi. A morning mist hung
- over it now -- a fulsome yet magnificent silvery veil,
- full of light from the sun, yet semi-opaque -- the hedge
- behind it being in some measure hidden by its hazy
- luminousness. Up the sides of this depression grew
- sheaves of the common rush, and here and there a
- peculiar species of flag, the blades of which glistened
- in the emerging sun, like scythes. But the general
- aspect of the swamp was malignant. From its moist
- and poisonous coat seemed to be exhaled the essences
- of evil things in the earth, and in the waters under
- the earth. The fungi grew in all manner of positions
- from rotting leaves and tree stumps, some exhibiting
- to her listless gaze their clammy tops, others their
- oozing gills. Some were marked with great splotches,
- red as arterial blood, others were saffron yellow, and
- others tall and attenuated, with stems like macaroni.
- Some were leathery and of richest browns. The
- hollow seemed a nursery of pestilences small and
- great, in the immediate neighbourhood of comfort
- and health, and Bathsheba arose with a tremor at the
- thought of having passed the night on the brink of
- so dismal a place.
- "There were now other footsteps to be heard along
- the road. Bathsheba's nerves were still unstrung:
- she crouched down out of sight again, and the pedes-
- trian came into view. He was a schoolboy, with a
- bag slung over his shoulder containing his dinner,
- and a hook in his hand. He paused by the gate,
- and, without looking up, continued murmuring words
- in tones quite loud enough to reach her ears.
- "O Lord, O Lord, O Lord, O Lord, O Lord": --
- that I know out o' book. "Give us, give us, give us,
- give us, give us": -- that I know. "Grace that, grace that,
- grace that, grace that": -- that I know." Other words
- followed to the same effect. The boy was of the
- dunce class apparently; the book was a psalter, and
- this was his way of learning the collect. In the worst
- attacks of trouble there appears to be always a super-
- ficial film of consciousness which is left disengaged
- and open to the notice of trifles, and Bathsheba was
- faintly amused at the boy's method, till he too passed on.
- By this time stupor had given place to anxiety, and
- anxiety began to make room for hunger and thirst.
- A form now appeared upon the rise on the other side
- of the swamp, half-hidden by the mist, and came
- towards Bathsheba. The woman -- for it was a woman
- -- approached with her face askance, as if looking
- earnestly on all sides of her. When she got a little
- further round to the left, and drew nearer, Bathsheba
- could see the newcomer's profile against the sunny
- sky', and knew the wavy sweep from forehead to chin,
- with neither angle nor decisive line anywhere about
- it, to be the familiar contour of Liddy Smallbury.
- Bathsheba's heart bounded with gratitude in the
- thought that she was not altogether deserted, and she
- jumped up. "O, Liddy!" she said, or attempted to say;
- but the words had only been framed by her lips; there
- came no sound. She had lost her voice by exposure
- to the clogged atmosphere all these hours of night.
- "O, ma'am! I am so glad I have found you." said
- the girl, as soon as she saw Bathsheba.
- "You can't come across." Bathsheba said in a whisper,
- which she vainly endeavoured to make loud enough to
- reach Liddy's ears. Liddy, not knowing this, stepped
- down upon the swamp, saying, as she did so, "It will
- bear me up, I think."
- Bathsheba never forgot that transient little picture
- of Liddy crossing the swamp to her there in the
- morning light. Iridescent bubbles of dank subter-
- ranean breath rose from the sweating sod beside the
- waiting maid's feet as she trod, hissing as they burst
- and expanded away to join the vapoury firmament above.
- Liddy did not sink, as Bathsheba had anticipated.
- She landed safely on the other side, and looked up
- at the beautiful though pale and weary face of her
- young mistress.
- "Poor thing!" said Liddy, with tears in her eyes,
- Do hearten yourself up a little, ma'am. However
- did -- -- "
- "I can't speak above a whisper -- my voice is gone
- for the present." said Bathsheba, hurriedly." I suppose
- the damp air from that hollow has taken it away
- Liddy, don't question me, mind. Who sent you --
- anybody?"
- "Nobody. I thought, when I found you were not
- at home, that something cruel had happened. I fancy
- I heard his voice late last night; and so, knowing
- something was wrong -- -- "
- "Is he at home?"
- "No; he left just before I came out."
- "Is Fanny taken away?"
- "Not yet. She will soon be -- at nine o'clock."
- "we won't go home at present, then. Suppose we
- walk about in this wood?"
- Liddy, without exactly understanding everything, or
- anything, in this episode, assented, and they walked
- together further among the trees.
- "But you had better come in, ma'am, and have
- something to eat. You will die of a chill!"
- "I shall not come indoors yet -- perhaps never."
- "Shall I get you something to eat, and something
- else to put over your head besides that little shawl?"
- "If you will, Liddy."
- Liddy vanished, and at the end of twenty minutes
- returned with a cloak, hat, some slices of bread and
- butter, a tea-cup, and some hot tea in a little china jug
- "Is Fanny gone?" said Bathsheba.
- "No." said her companion, pouring out the tea.
- Bathsheba wrapped herself up and ate and drank
- sparingly. Her voice was then a little clearer, and
- trifling colour returned to her face. "Now we'll walk
- about again." she said.
- They wandered about the wood for nearly two
- hours, Bathsheba replying in monosyllables to Liddy's
- prattle, for her mind ran on one subject, and one only.
- She interrupted with --
- "l wonder if Fanny is gone by this time?"
- "I will go and see."
- She came back with the information that the
- men were just taking away the corpse; that Bathsheba
- had been inquired for; that she had replied to the
- effect that her mistress was unwell and could not be
- seen.
- "Then they think I am in my bedroom?"
- "Yes." Liddy then ventured to add:" You said
- when I first found you that you might never go home
- again -- you didn't mean it, ma'am?"
- "No; I've altered my mind. It is only women with
- no pride in them who run away from their husbands.
- There is one position worse than that of being found
- dead in your husband's house from his ill usage, and
- that is, to be found alive through having gone away to
- The house of somebody else. I've thought of it all this
- morning, and I've chosen my course. A runaway wife
- is an encumbrance to everybody, a burden to herself and
- a byword -- all of which make up a heap of misery
- greater than any that comes by staying at home --
- though this may include the trifling items of insult,
- beating, and starvation. Liddy, if ever you marry --
- God forbid that you ever should! -- you'll find yourself
- in a fearful situation; but mind this, don't you flinch.
- Stand your ground, and be cut to pieces. That's
- what I'm going to do."
- "O, mistress, don't talk so!" said Liddy,-taking her
- hand; "but I knew you had too much sense to bide
- away. May I ask what dreadful thing it is that has
- happened between you and him?"
- "You may ask; but I may not tell."
- In about ten minutes they returned to the house by
- a circuitous route, entering at the rear. Bathsheba
- glided up the back stairs to a disused attic, and her
- companion followed.
- "Liddy." she said, with a lighter heart, for youth and
- hope had begun to reassert themselves;" you are to be
- my confidante for the present -- somebody must be -- and
- I choose you. Well, I shall take up my abode here for
- a while. Will you get a fire lighted, put down a piece
- of carpet, and help me to make the place comfortable.
- Afterwards, I want you and Maryann to bring up that
- little stump bedstead in the small room, and the be
- belonging to it, and a table, and some other things.
- What shall I do to pass the heavy time away?"
- "Hemming handkerchiefs is a very good thing." said
- Liddy.
- "O no, no! I hate needlework-i always did."
- "knitting?"
- "And that, too."
- "You might finish your sampler. Only the carna-
- tions and peacocks want filling in; and then it could
- be framed and glazed, and hung beside your aunt"
- ma'am."
- "Samplers are out of date -- horribly countrified. No
- Liddy, I'll read. Bring up some books -- not new ones.
- I haven't heart to read anything new."
- "Some of your uncle's old ones, ma'am?"
- "Yes. Some of those we stowed away in boxes." A
- faint gleam of humour passed over her face as she said:
- "Bring Beaumont and Fletcher's Maid's Tragedy, and
- the Mourning Bride, and let me see -- Night Thoughts,
- and the Vanity of Human Wishes."
- "And that story of the black man, who murdered his
- wife Desdemona? It is a nice dismal one that would
- suit you excellent just now."
- "Now, Liddy, you've been looking into my book
- without telling me; and I said you were not to! How
- do you know it would suit me? It wouldn't suit me a
- all."
- "But if the others do -- -- "
- "No, they don't; and I won't read dismal books.
- Why should I read dismal books, indeed? Bring me
- Love in a Village, and Maid of the Mill, and Doctor
- Syntax, and some volumes of the Spectator."
- All that day Bathsheba and Liddy lived in the attic
- in a state of barricade; a precaution which proved to be
- needless as against Troy, for he did not appear in the
- neighbourhood or trouble them at all. Bathsheba sat
- at the window till sunset, sometimes attempting to read,
- at other times watching every movement outside without
- much purpose, and listening without much interest to
- every sound.
- The sun went down almost blood-red that night, and
- a livid cloud received its rays in the east. Up against
- this dark background the west front of the church
- tower -- the only part of the edifice visible from the
- farm-house windows -- rose distinct and lustrous, the
- vane upon the summit bristling with rays. Hereabouts,
- at six o'clock, the young men of the village gathered,
- as was their custom, for a game of Prisoners' base. The
- spot had been consecrated to this ancient diversion from
- time immemorial, the old stocks conveniently forming
- a base facing the boundary of the churchyard, in front
- of which the ground was trodden hard and bare as a
- pavement by the players. She could see the brown
- and black heads of the young lads darting about right
- and left, their white shirt-sleeves gleaming in the sun;
- whilst occasionally a shout and a peal of hearty laughter
- varied the stillness of the evening air. They continued
- playing for a quarter of an hour or so, when the game
- concluded abruptly, and the players leapt over the wall
- and vanished round to the other side behind a yew-tree,
- which was also half behind a beech, now spreading in
- one mass of golden foliage, on which the branches
- traced black lines.
- "Why did the base-players finish their game so
- suddenly?" Bathsheba inquired, the next time that
- Liddy entered the room.
- "I think 'twas because two men came just then from
- Casterbridge and began putting up grand carved
- tombstone." said Liddy. "The lads went to see whose
- it was."
- "Do you know?" Bathsheba asked.
- "I don't." said Liddy.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLV
-
-
-
- TROY'S ROMANTICISM
-
-
- WHEN Troy's wife had left the house at the previous
- midnight his first act was to cover the dead from sight.
- This done he ascended the stairs, and throwing himself
- down upon the bed dressed as he was, he waited miser-
- ably for the morning.
- Fate had dealt grimly with him through the last four-
- and-twenty hours. His day had been spent in a way
- which varied very materially from his intentions regard-
- ing it. There is always an inertia to be overcome in
- striking out a new line of conduct -- not more in our-
- selves, it seems, than in circumscribing events, which
- appear as if leagued together to allow no novelties in
- the way of amelioration.
- Twenty pounds having been secured from Bathsheba,
- he had managed to add to the sum every farthing he
- could muster on his own account, which had been seven
- pounds ten. With this money, twenty-seven pounds ten
- in all, he had hastily driven from the gate that morning
- to keep his appointment with Fanny Robin.
- On reaching Casterbridge he left the horse and trap
- at an inn, and at five minutes before ten came back to
- the bridge at the lower end of the town, and sat himself
- upon the parapet. The clocks struck the hour, and no
- Fanny appeared. In fact, at that moment she was being
- robed in her grave-clothes by two attendants at the
- Union poorhouse -- the first and last tiring-women the
- gentle creature had ever been honoured with. The
- quarter went, the half hour. A rush of recollection
- came upon Troy as he waited: this was the second
- time she had broken a serious engagement with him
- In anger he vowed it should be the last, and at eleven
- o'clock, when he had lingered and watched the stone
- of the bridge till he knew every lichen upon their face
- and heard the chink of the ripples underneath till they
- oppressed him, he jumped from his seat, went to the inn
- for his gig, and in a bitter mood of indifference con-
- cerning the past, and recklessness about the future,
- drove on to Budmouth races.
- He reached the race-course at two o'clock, and re-
- mained either there or in the town till nine, But
- Fanny's image, as it had appeared to him in the sombre
- shadows of that Saturday evening, returned to his mind,
- backed up by Bathsheba's reproaches. He vowed he
- would not bet, and he kept his vow, for on leaving the
- town at nine o'clock in the evening he had diminish
- his cash only to the extent of a few shillings.
- He trotted slowly homeward, and it was now that
- was struck for the first time with a thought that Fanny
- had been really prevented by illness from keeping her
- promise. This time she could have made no mistake
- He regretted that he had not remained in Casterbridge
- and made inquiries. Reaching home he quietly un-
- harnessed the horse and came indoors, as we have seen,
- to the fearful shock that awaited him.
- As soon as it grew light enough to distinguish objects,
- Troy arose from the coverlet of the bed, and in a mood
- of absolute indifference to Bathsheba's whereabouts, a
- almost oblivious of her existence, he stalked downstairs
- and left the house by the back door. His walk was
- towards the churchyard, entering which he searched
- around till he found a newly dug unoccupied grave --
- the grave dug the day before for Fanny. The position
- of this having been marked, he hastened on to Caster-
- bridge, only pausing
- whereon he had last seen Fanny alive.
- Reaching the town, Troy descended into a side
- street and entered a pair of gates surmounted by a board
- bearing the words, "Lester, stone and marble mason."
- Within were lying about stones of all sizes and designs,
- inscribed as being sacred to the memory of unnamed
- persons who had not yet died.
- Troy was so unlike himself now in look, word, and
- deed, that the want of likeness was perceptible even to
- his own consciousness. His method of engaging himself
- in this business of purchasing a tomb was that of an
- absolutely unpractised man. He could not bring him-
- self to consider, calculate, or economize. He waywardly
- wished for something, and he set about obtaining it like
- a child in a nursery. 'I want a good tomb." he said to
- the man who stood in a little office within the yard.
- "I want as good a one as you can give me for twenty-
- seven pounds,"
- It was all the money he possessed.
- "That sum to include everything?"
- "Everything. Cutting the name, carriage to Weather-
- bury, and erection. And I want it now at once ."
- "We could not get anything special worked this
- week.
- "If you would like one of these in stock it could be
- got ready immediately."
- "Very well." said Troy, impatiently. "Let's see what
- you have."
- "The best I have in stock is this one," said the stone-
- cutter, going into a shed." Here's a marble headstone
- beautifully crocketed, with medallions beneath of typical
- subjects; here's the footstone after the same pattern,
- and here's the coping to enclose the- grave. The
- slabs are the best of their kind, and I can warrant them
- "Well, I could add the name, and put it up at
- visitor who wore not a shred of mourning. Troy then
- settled the account and went away. In the afternoon
- almost done. He waited in the yard till the tomb was
- way to Weatherbury, giving directions to the two men
- the grave of the person named in the inscription.
- bridge. He carried rather a heavy basket upon his
- occasionally at bridges and gates, whereon he deposited
- returning in the darkness, the men and the waggon
- the work was done, and, on being assured that it was,
- Troy entered Weatherbury churchyard about ten
- had marked the vacant grave early in the morning. It
- extent from the view of passers along the road -- a spot
- and bushes of alder, but now it was cleared and made
- the ground elsewhere.
- Here now stood the tomb as the men had stated, snow-
- white and shapely in the gloom, consisting of head and
- foot-stone, and enclosing border of marble-work uniting
- them. In the midst was mould, suitable for plants.
- Troy deposited his basket beside the tomb, and
- vanished for a few minutes. When he returned he
- carried a spade and a lantern, the light of which he
- directed for a few moments upon the marble, whilst he
- read the inscription. He hung his lantern on the lowest
- bough of the yew-tree, and took from his basket flower-
- roots of several varieties. There were bundles of snow-
- drop, hyacinth and crocus bulbs, violets and double
- daisies, which were to bloom in early spring, and of
- carnations, pinks, picotees, lilies of the valley, forget-me-
- not, summer's-farewell, meadow-saffron and others, for
- the later seasons of the year.
- Troy laid these out upon the grass, and with an im-
- passive face set to work to plant them. The snowdrops
- were arranged in a line on the outside of the coping,
- the remainder within the enclosure of the grave. The
- crocuses and hyacinths were to grow in rows; some of
- the summer flowers he placed over her head and feet,
- the lilies and forget-me-nots over her heart. The
- remainder were dispersed in the spaces between these.
- Troy, in his prostration at this time, had no percep-
- tion that in the futility of these romantic doings, dictated
- by a remorseful reaction from previous indifference, there
- was any element of absurdity. Deriving his idiosyn-
- crasies from both sides of the Channel, he showed at
- such junctures as the present the inelasticity of the
- Englishman, together with that blindness to the line
- where sentiment verges on mawkishness, characteristic
- of the French.
- lt was a cloudy, muggy, and very dark night, and
- the rays from Troy's lantern spread into the two old
- yews with a strange illuminating power, flickering, as it
- seemed, up to the black ceiling of cloud above. He
- felt a large drop of rain upon the back of his hand, and
- presently one came and entered one of the holes of the
- lantern, whereupon the candle sputtered and went out-
- Troy was weary and it being now not far from midnight,
- and the rain threatening to increase, he resolved to leave
- the finishing touches of his labour until the day should
- break. He groped along the wall and over the graves
- in the dark till he found himself round at the north side.
- Here he entered the porch, and, reclining upon the
- bench within, fell asleep.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVI
-
-
-
- THE GURGOYLE: ITS DOINGS
-
-
- THE tower of Weatherbury Church was a square
- erection of fourteenth-century date, having two stone
- gurgoyles on each of the four faces of its parapet. Of
- these eight carved protuberances only two at this time
- continued to serve the purpose of their erection -- that
- of spouting the water from the lead roof within. One
- mouth in each front had been closed by bygone church-
- wardens as superfluous, and two others were broken
- away and choked -- a matter not of much consequence
- to the wellbeing of the tower, for the two mouths which
- still remained open and active were gaping enough to do
- all the work.
- It has been sometimes argued that there is no truer
- criterion of the vitality of any given art-period than the
- power of the master-spirits of that time in grotesque;
- and certainly in the instance of Gothic art there is no
- disputing the proposition. Weatherbury tower was a
- somewhat early instance of the use of an ornamental
- parapet in parish as distinct from cathedral churches,
- and the gurgoyles, which are the necessary correlatives
- of a parapet, were exceptionally prominent -- of the
- boldest cut that the hand could shape, and of the most
- original design that a human brain could conceive.
- There was, so to speak, that symmetry in their distortion
- which is less the characteristic of British than of
- Continental grotesques of the period. All the eight
- were different from each other. A beholder was con-
- vinced that nothing on earth could be more hideous
- than those he saw on the north side until he went
- round to the south. Of the two on this latter face, only
- that at the south-eastern corner concerns the story. It
- was too human to be called like a dragon, too impish
- to be like a man, too animal to be like a fiend, and not
- enough like a bird to be called a griffin. This horrible
- stone entity was fashioned as if covered with a wrinkled
- hide; it had short, erect ears, eyes starting from their
- sockets, and its fingers and hands were seizing the
- corners of its mouth, which they thus seemed to pull
- open to give free passage to the water it vomited. The
- lower row of teeth was quite washed away, though the
- upper still remained. Here and thus, jutting a couple
- of feet from the wall against which its feet rested as a
- support, the creature had for four hundred years
- laughed at the surrounding landscape, voicelessly in
- dry weather, and in wet with a gurgling and snorting
- sound.
- Troy slept on in the porch, and the rain increased
- outside. Presently the gurgoyle spat. In due time a
- small stream began to trickle through the seventy feet
- of aerial space between its mouth and the ground, which
- the water-drops smote like duckshot in their accelerated
- velocity. The stream thickened in substance, and in-
- creased in power, gradually spouting further and yet
- further from the side of the tower. When the rain fell
- in a steady and ceaseless torrent the stream dashed
- downward in volumes.
- We follow its course to the ground at this point of
- time. The end of the liquid parabola has come forward
- from the wall, has advanced over the plinth mouldings,
- over a heap of stones, over the marble border, into the
- midst of Fanny Robin's grave.
- The force of the stream had, until very lately, been
- received upon some loose stones spread thereabout,
- which had acted as a shield to the soil under the onset.
- These during the summer had been cleared from the
- ground, and there was now nothing to resist the down-
- fall but the bare earth. For several years the stream
- had not spouted so far from the tower as it was doing
- on this night, and such a contingency had been over-
- looked. Sometimes this obscure corner received no
- inhabitant for the space of two or three years, and
- then it was usually but a pauper, a poacher, or other
- sinner of undignified sins.
- The persistent torrent from the gurgoyle's jaws
- directed all its vengeance into the grave. The rich
- tawny mould was stirred into motion, and boiled like
- chocolate. The water accumulated and washed deeper
- down, and the roar of the pool thus formed spread into
- the night as the head and chief among other noises of
- the kind created by the deluging rain. The flowers so
- carefully planted by Fanny's repentant lover began to
- move and writhe in their bed. The winter-violets
- turned slowly upside down, and became a mere mat of
- mud. Soon the snowdrop and other bulbs danced in
- the boiling mass like ingredients in a cauldron. Plants
- of the tufted species were loosened, rose to the surface,
- and floated of.
- Troy did not awake from his comfortless sleep till it
- was broad day. Not having been in bed for two nights
- his shoulders felt stiff his feet tender, and his head
- heavy. He remembered his position, arose, shivered,
- took the spade, and again went out.
- The rain had quite ceased, and the sun was shining
- through the green, brown, and yellow leaves, now
- sparkling and varnished by the raindrops to the bright-
- ness of similar effects in the landscapes of Ruysdael and
- Hobbema, and full of all those infinite beauties that
- arise from the union of water and colour with high
- lights. The air was rendered so transparent by the
- heavy fall of rain that the autumn hues of the middle
- distance were as rich as those near at hand, and the
- remote fields intercepted by the angle of the tower ap-
- peared in the same plane as the tower itself.
- He entered the gravel path which would take him
- behind the tower. The path, instead of being stony as
- it had been the night before, was browned over with a
- thin coating of mud. At one place in the path he saw
- a tuft of stringy roots washed white and clean as a
- bundle of tendons. He picked it up -- surely it could
- not be one of the primroses he had planted? He saw
- a bulb, another, and another as he advanced. Beyond
- doubt they were the crocuses. With a face of perplexed
- dismay Troy turned the corner and then beheld the
- wreck the stream had made.
- The pool upon the grave had soaked away into the
- ground, and in its place was a hollow. The disturbed
- earth was washed over the grass and pathway in the
- guise of the brown mud he had already seen, and it
- spotted the marble tombstone with the same stains.
- Nearly all the flowers were washed clean out of the
- ground, and they lay, roots upwards, on the spots whither
- they had been splashed by the stream.
- Troy's brow became heavily contracted. He set his
- teeth closely, and his compressed lips moved as those of
- one in great pain. This singular accident, by a strange
- confluence of emotions in him, was felt as the sharpest
- sting of all. Troy's face was very expressive, and any
- observer who had seen him now would hardly have
- believed him to be a man who had laughed, and sung,
- and poured love-trifles into a woman's ear. To curse
- his miserable lot was at first his impulse, but even that
- lowest stage of rebellion needed an activity whose
- absence was necessarily antecedent to the existence of the
- morbid misery which wrung him. The sight, coming
- as it did, superimposed upon the other dark scenery of
- the previous days, formed a sort of climax to the whole
- panorama, and it was more than he could endure.
- Sanguine by nature, Troy had a power of eluding
- grief by simply adjourning it. He could put off the
- consideration of any particular spectre till the matter
- had become old and softened by time. The planting
- of flowers on Fanny's grave had been perhaps but a
- species of elusion of the primary grief, and now it was
- as if his intention had been known and circumvented.
- Almost for the first time in his life, Troy, as he stood
- by this dismantled grave, wished himself another man.
- lt is seldom that a person with much animal spirit does
- not feel that the fact of his life being his own is the one
- qualification which singles it out as a more hopeful life
- than that of others who may actually resemble him in
- every particular. Troy had felt, in his transient way,
- hundreds of times, that he could not envy other people
- their condition, because the possession of that condition
- would have necessitated a different personality, when he
- desired no other than his own. He had not minded
- the peculiarities of his birth, the vicissitudes of his life,
- the meteorlike uncertainty of all that related to him,
- because these appertained to the hero of his story,
- without whom there would have been no story at all for
- him; and it seemed to be only in the nature of things
- that matters would right themselves at some proper date
- and wind up well. This very morning the illusion
- completed its disappearance, and, as it were, all of a
- sudden, Troy hated himself. The suddenness was
- probably more apparent than real. A coral reef which
- just comes short of the ocean surface is no more to the
- horizon than if it had never been begun, and the mere
- finishing stroke is what often appears to create an event
- which has long been potentially an accomplished thing.
- He stood and mediated -- a miserable man. Whither
- should he go? " He that is accursed, let him be accursed
- still." was the pitiless anathema written in this spoliated
- effort of his new-born solicitousness. A man who has
- spent his primal strength in journeying in one direction
- has not much spirit left for reversing his course. Troy
- had, since yesterday, faintly reversed his; but the merest
- opposition had disheartened him. To turn about would
- have been hard enough under the greatest providential
- encouragement; but to find that Providence, far from
- helping him into a new course, or showing any wish
- that he might adopt one, actually jeered his first trembling
- and critical attempt in that kind, was more than nature
- could bear.
- He slowly withdrew from the grave. He did not
- attempt to fill up the hole, replace the flowers, or do
- anything at all. He simply threw up his cards and
- forswore his game for that time and always. Going out
- of the churchyard silently and unobserved -- none of the
- villagers having yet risen -- he passed down some fields
- at the back, and emerged just as secretly upon the high
- road. Shortly afterwards he had gone from the village.
- Meanwhile, Bathsheba remained a voluntary prisoner
- in the attic. The door was kept locked, except during
- the entries and exits of Liddy, for whom a bed had
- been arranged in a small adjoining room. The light
- of Troy's lantern in the churchyard was noticed about
- ten o'clock by the maid-servant, who casually glanced
- from the window in that direction whilst taking her
- supper, and she called Bathsheba's attention to it.
- They looked curiously at the phenomenon for a time,
- until Liddy was sent to bed.
- bathsheba did not sleep very heavily that night.
- When her attendant was unconscious and softly breath-
- ing in the next room, the mistress of the house was
- still looking out of the window at the faint gleam
- spreading from among the trees -- not in a steady shine,
- but blinking like a revolving coastlight, though this
- appearance failed to suggest to her that a person was
- passing and repassing in front of it. Bathsheba sat
- here till it began to rain, and the light vanished, when
- she withdrew to lie restlessly in her bed and re-enact
- in a worn mind the lurid scene of yesternight.
- Almost before the first faint sign of dawn appeared
- she arose again, and opened the window to obtain a full
- breathing of the new morning air, the panes being now
- wet with trembling tears left by the night rain, each
- one rounded with a pale lustre caught from primrose-
- hued slashes through a cloud low down in the awaken-
- ing sky. From the trees came the sound of steady
- dripping upon the drifted leaves under them, and from
- the direction of the church she could hear another noise
- -- peculiar, and not intermittent like the rest, the purl
- of water falling into a pool.
- Liddy knocked at eight o'clock, and Bathsheba un-
- locked the door.
- "What a heavy rain we've had in the night, ma'am!"
- said Liddy, when her inquiries about breakfast had been
- made.
- "Yes, very heavy."
- "Did you hear the strange noise from the church
- yard?"
- "I heard one strange noise. I've been thinking it
- must have been the water from the tower spouts."
- "Well, that's what the shepherd was saying, ma'am.
- He's now gone on to see."
- "Oh! Gabriel has been here this morning!"
- "Only just looked in in passing -- quite in his old way,
- which I thought he had left off lately. But the tower
- spouts used to spatter on the stones, and we are puzzled,
- for this was like the boiling of a pot."
- Not being able to read, think, or work, Bathsheba asked
- Liddy to stay and breakfast with her. The tongue of the
- more childish woman still ran upon recent events. "Are
- you going across to the church, ma'am?" she asked.
- "Not that I know of." said Bathsheba.
- "I thought you might like to go and see where they
- have put Fanny. The trees hide the place from your
- window."
- Bathsheba had all sorts of dreads about meeting her
- husband. "Has Mr. Troy been in to-night?" she said
- "No, ma'am; I think he's gone to Budmouth.
- Budmouth! The sound of the word carried with
- it a much diminished perspective of him and his deeds;
- there were thirteen miles interval betwixt them now.
- She hated questioning Liddy about her husband's
- movements, and indeed had hitherto sedulously avoided
- doing so; but now all the house knew that there had
- been some dreadful disagreement between them, and
- it was futile to attempt disguise. Bathsheba had
- reached a stage at which people cease to have any
- appreciative regard for public opinion.
- "What makes you think he has gone there?" she said.
- "Laban Tall saw him on the Budmouth road this
- morning before breakfast."
- Bathsheba was momentarily relieved of that wayward
- heaviness of the past twenty-four hours which had
- quenched the vitality of youth in her without sub-
- stituting the philosophy of maturer years, and the
- resolved to go out and walk a little way. So when
- breakfast was over, she put on her bonnet, and took
- a direction towards the church. It was nine o'clock,
- and the men having returned to work again from their
- first meal, she was not likely to meet many of them in
- the road. Knowing that Fanny had been laid in the
- reprobates' quarter of the graveyard, called in the parish
- "behind church." which was invisible from the road, it
- was impossible to resist the impulse to enter and look
- upon a spot which, from nameless feelings, she at the
- same time dreaded to see. She had been unable to
- overcome an impression that some connection existed
- between her rival and the light through the trees.
- Bathsheba skirted the buttress, and beheld the hole
- and the tomb, its delicately veined surface splashed and
- stained just as Troy had seen it and left it two hours
- earlier. On the other side of the scene stood Gabriel.
- His eyes, too, were fixed on the tomb, and her arrival
- having been noiseless, she had not as yet attracted his
- attention. Bathsheba did not at once perceive that the
- grand tomb and the disturbed grave were Fanny's, and
- she looked on both sides and around for some humbler
- mound, earthed up and clodded in the usual way. Then
- her eye followed Oak's, and she read the words with
- which the inscription opened: --
- "Erected by Francis Troy in Beloved Memory of
- Fanny Robin."
- Oak saw her, and his first act was to gaze inquiringly
- and learn how she received this knowledge of the
- authorship of the work, which to himself had caused
- considerable astonishment. But such discoveries did
- not much affect her now. Emotional convulsions seemed
- to have become the commonplaces of her history, and
- she bade him good morning, and asked him to fill in
- the hole with the spade which was standing by. Whilst
- Oak was doing as she desired, Bathsheba collected the
- flowers, and began planting them with that sympathetic
- manipulation of roots and leaves which is so conspicuous
- in a woman's gardening, and which flowers seem to
- understand and thrive upon. She requested Oak to
- get the churchwardens to turn the leadwork at the
- mouth of the gurgoyle that hung gaping down upon
- them, that by this means the stream might be directed
- sideways, and a repetition of the accident prevented.
- Finally, with the superfluous magnanimity of a woman
- whose narrower instincts have brought down bitterness
- upon her instead of love, she wiped the mud spots from
- the tomb as if she rather liked its words than otherwise,
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVII
-
-
-
- ADVENTURES BY THE SHORE
-
-
- TROY wandered along towards the south. A composite
- feeling, made up of disgust with the, to him, humdrum
- tediousness of a farmer's life, gloomily images of her who
- lay in the churchyard, remorse, and a general averseness
- to his wife's society, impelled him to seek a home in any
- place on earth save Weatherbury. The sad accessories
- of Fanny's end confronted him as vivid pictures which
- threatened to be indelible, and made life in Bathsheba's
- house intolerable. At three in the afternoon he found
- himself at the foot of a slope more than a mile in length,
- which ran to the ridge of a range of hills lying parallel
- with the shore, and forming a monotonous barrier between
- the basin of cultivated country inland and the wilder
- scenery of the coast. Up the hill stretched a road
- nearly straight and perfectly white, the two sides
- approaching each other in a gradual taper till they
- met the sky at the top about two miles off. Through-
- out the length of this narrow and irksome inclined plane
- not a sign of life was visible on this garish afternoon
- Troy toiled up the road with a languor and depression
- greater than any he had experienced for many a day
- and year before. The air was warm and muggy, and
- the top seemed to recede as he approached.
- At last he reached the summit, and a wide and
- novel prospect burst upon him with an effect almost like
- that of the Pacific upon Balboa's gaze. The broad
- steely sea, marked only by faint lines, which had a
- semblance of being etched thereon to a degree not deep
- enough to disturb its general evenness, stretched the
- whole width of his front and round to the right, where,
- near the town and port of Budmouth, the sun bristled
- down upon it, and banished all colour, to substitute in
- its place a clear oily polish. Nothing moved in sky,
- land, or sea, except a frill of milkwhite foam along the
- nearer angles of the shore, shreds of which licked the
- contiguous stones like tongues.
- He descended and came to a small basin of sea
- enclosed by the cliffs. Troy's nature freshened within
- him; he thought he would rest and bathe here before
- going farther. He undressed and plunged in. Inside
- the cove the water was uninteresting to a swimmer,
- being smooth as a pond, and to get a little of the ocean
- swell, Troy presently swam between the two projecting
- spurs of rock which formed the pillars of Hercules to
- this miniature Mediterranean. Unfortunately for Troy
- a current unknown to him existed outside, which, un-
- important to craft of any burden, was awkward for a
- swimmer who might be taken in it unawares. Troy
- found himself carried to the left and then round in a
- swoop out to sea.
- He now recollected the place and its sinister
- character. Many bathers had there prayed for a dry
- death from time to time, and, like Gonzalo also, had
- been unanswered; and Troy began to deem it possible
- that he might be added to their number. Not a boat
- of any kind was at present within sight, but far in the
- distance Budmouth lay upon the sea, as it were quietly
- regarding his efforts, and beside the town the harbour
- showed its position by a dim meshwork of ropes and
- spars. After wellnigh exhausting himself in attempts
- to get back to the mouth of the cove, in his weakness
- swimming several inches deeper than was his wont,
- keeping up his breathing entirely by his nostrils, turning
- upon his back a dozen times over, swimming EN PAPILLON
- and so on, Troy resolved as a last resource to tread
- water at a slight incline, and so endeavour to reach the
- shore at any point, merely giving himself a gentle
- impetus inwards whilst carried on in the general direc-
- tion of the tide. This, necessarily a slow process, he
- found to be not altogether so difficult, and though there
- was no choice of a landing-place -- the objects on shore
- passing by him in a sad and slow procession -- he per-
- ceptibly approached the extremity of a spit of land yet
- further to the right, now well defined against the sunny
- portion of the horizon. While the swimmer's eye's were
- fixed upon the spit as his only means of salvation on
- this side of the Unknown, a moving object broke the
- outline of the extremity, and immediately a ship's boat
- appeared manned with several sailor lads, her bows
- towards the sea.
- All Troy's vigour spasmodically revived to prolong
- the struggle yet a little further. Swimming with his
- right arm, he held up his left to hail them, splashing
- upon the waves, and shouting with all his might. From
- the position of the setting sun his white form was
- distinctly visible upon the now deep-hued bosom of the
- sea to the east of the boat, and the men saw him at
- once. Backing their oars and putting the boat about,
- they pulled towards him with a will, and in five or six
- minutes from the time of his first halloo, two of the
- sailors hauled him in over the stern.
- They formed part of a brig's crew, and had come
- ashore for sand. Lending him what little clothing they
- could spare among them as a slight protection against
- late they made again towards the roadstead where their
- And now night drooped slowly upon the wide watery
- levels in front; and at no great distance from them,
- where the shoreline curved round, and formed a long
- riband of shade upon the horizon, a series of points of
- yellow light began to start into existence, denoting the
- spot to be the site of Budmouth, where the lamps were
- being lighted along the parade. The cluck of their
- oars was the only sound of any distinctness upon the
- sea, and as they laboured amid the thickening shades
- the lamplights grew larger, each appearing to send a
- flaming sword deep down into the waves before it, until
- there arose, among other dim shapes of the kind, the
- form of the vessel for which they were bound.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVIII
-
-
-
- DOUBTS ARISE -- DOUBTS LINGER
-
-
- BATHSHEBA underwent the enlargement of her
- Husband's absence from hours to days with a slight
- feeling of surprise, and a slight feeling of relief; yet
- neither sensation rose at any time far above the level
- commonly designated as indifference. She belonged to
- him: the certainties of that position were so well defined,
- and the reasonable probabilities of its issue so bounded
- that she could not speculate on contingencies. Taking
- no further interest in herself as a splendid woman, she
- acquired the indifferent feelings of an outsider in contem-
- plating her probable fate as a singular wretch; for Bath-
- sheba drew herself and her future in colours that no
- reality could exceed for darkness. Her original vigorous
- pride of youth had sickened, and with it had declined
- all her anxieties about coming years, since anxiety
- recognizes a better and a worse alternative, and Bath-
- sheba had made up her mind that alternatives on any
- noteworthy scale had ceased for her. Soon, or later --
- and that not very late -- her husband would be home
- again. And then the days of their tenancy of the
- Upper Farm would be numbered. There had origin-
- ally been shown by the agent to the estate some distrust
- of Bathsheba's tenure as James Everdene's successor,
- on the score of her sex, and her youth, and her beauty;
- but the peculiar nature of her uncle's will, his own
- frequent testimony before his death to her cleverness
- in such a pursuit, and her vigorous marshalling of the
- numerous flocks and herds which came suddenly into
- her hands before negotiations were concluded, had won
- confidence in her powers, and no further objections had
- been raised. She had latterly been in great doubt as
- to what the legal effects of her marriage would be upon
- her position; but no notice had been taken as yet of
- her change of name, and only one point was clear -- that
- in the event of her own or her husband's inability to
- meet the agent at the forthcoming January rent-day,
- very little consideration would be shown, and, for that
- matter, very little would be deserved. Once out of the
- farm, the approach of poverty would be sure.
- Hence Bathsheba lived in a perception that her
- purposes were broken of. She was not a woman who
- could hope on without good materials for the process,
- differing thus from the less far-Sighted and energetic,
- though more petted ones of the sex, with whom hope
- goes on as a sort of clockwork which the merest food
- and shelter are sufficient to wind up; and perceiving
- clearly that her mistake had been a fatal one, she
- accepted her position, and waited coldly for the end.
- The first Saturday after Troy's departure she went
- to Casterbridge alone, a journey she had not before
- taken since her marriage. On this Saturday Bathsheba
- was passing slowly on foot through the crowd of rural
- business-men gathered as usual in front of the market-
- house, who were as usual gazed upon by the burghers
- with feelings that those healthy lives were dearly paid
- for by exclusion from possible aldermanship, when a
- man, who had apparently been following her, said some
- words to another on her left hand. Bathsheba's ears
- were keen as those of any wild animal, and she dis-
- tinctly heard what the speaker said, though her back
- was towards him
- "I am looking for Mrs. Troy. Is that she there?"
- "Yes; that's the young lady, I believe." said the
- the person addressed.
- "I have some awkward news to break to her. Her
- husband is drowned."
- As if endowed with the spirit of prophecy, Bathsheba
- gasped out, "No, it is not true; it cannot be true!"
- Then she said and heard no more. The ice of self-
- command which had latterly gathered over her was
- broken, and the currents burst forth again, and over
- whelmed her. A darkness came into her eyes, and she
- fell.
- But not to the ground. A gloomy man, who had
- been observing her from under the portico of the old
- corn-exchange when she passed through the group
- without, stepped quickly to her side at the moment of
- her exclamation, and caught her in his arms as she sank
- down.
- "What is it?" said Boldwood, looking up at the
- bringer of the big news, as he supported her.
- "Her husband was drowned this week while bathing
- in Lulwind Cove. A coastguardsman found his clothes,
- and brought them into Budmouth yesterday."
- Thereupon a strange fire lighted up Boldwood's eye,
- and his face flushed with the suppressed excitement of
- an unutterable thought. Everybody's glance was now
- centred upon him and the unconscious Bathsheba. He
- lifted her bodily off the ground, and smoothed down
- the folds of her dress as a child might have taken a
- storm-beaten bird and arranged its ruffled plumes, and
- bore her along the pavement to the King's Arms Inn.
- Here he passed with her under the archway into a
- private room; and by the time he had deposited -- so
- lothly -- the precious burden upon a sofa, Bathsheba had
- opened her eyes. Remembering all that had occurred,
- she murmured, "I want to go home!"
- Boldwood left the room. He stood for a moment in
- the passage to recover his senses. The experience had
- been too much for his consciousness to keep up with,
- and now that he had grasped it it had gone again. For
- those few heavenly, golden moments she had been in his
- arms. What did it matter about her not knowing it? She
- had been close to his breast; he had been close to hers.
- He started onward again, and sending a woman to
- her, went out to ascertain all the facts of the case.
- These appeared to be limited to what he had already
- heard. He then ordered her horse to be put into the
- gig, and when all was ready returned to inform her.
- He found that, though still pale and unwell, she had in
- the meantime sent for the Budmouth man who brought
- the tidings, and learnt from him all there was to know.
- Being hardly in a condition to drive home as she
- had driven to town, Boldwood, with every delicacy of
- manner and feeling, offered to get her a driver, or to
- give her a seat in his phaeton, which was more com-
- fortable than her own conveyance. These proposals
- Bathsheba gently declined, and the farmer at once de-
- parted.
- About half-an-hour later she invigorated herself by
- an effort, and took her seat and the reins as usual-in
- external appearance much as if nothing had happened.
- She went out of the town by a tortuous back street, and
- drove slowly along, unconscious of the road and the
- scene. The first shades of evening were showing them-
- selves when Bathsheba reached home, where, silently
- alighting and leaving the horse in the hands of the boy,
- she proceeded at once upstairs. Liddy met her on the
- landing. The news had preceded Bathsheba to Weather-
- bury by half-an-hour, and Liddy looked inquiringly into
- her mistress's face. Bathsheba had nothing to say.
- She entered her bedroom and sat by the window, and
- thought and thought till night enveloped her, and the
- extreme lines only of her shape were visible. Somebody
- came to the door, knocked, and opened it.
- "Well, what is it, Liddy?" she said.
- "I was thinking there must be something got for you
- to wear." said Liddy, with hesitation.
- "What do you mean?"
- "Mourning."
- "No, no, no." said Bathsheba, hurriedly.
- "But I suppose there must be something done for
- poor -- -- "
- "Not at present, I think. It is not necessary."
- "Why not, ma'am?"
- "Because he's still alive."
- "How do you know that?" said Liddy, amazed.
- "I don't know it. But wouldn't it have been different,
- or shouldn't I have heard more, or wouldn't they have
- found him, Liddy? -- or-i don't know how it is, but
- death would have been different from how this is. I am
- perfectly convinced that he is still alive!"
- Bathsheba remained firm in this opinion till Monday,
- when two circumstances conjoined to shake it. The
- first was a short paragraph in the local newspaper, which,
- beyond making by a methodizing pen formidable pre-
- sumptive evidence of Troy's death by drowning, con-
- tained the important testimony of a young Mr. Barker,
- M.D., of Budmouth, who spoke to being an eyewitness
- of the accident, in a letter to the editor. In this he
- stated that he was passing over the cliff on the remoter
- side of the cove just as the sun was setting. At that
- time he saw a bather carried along in the current outside
- the mouth of the cove, and guessed in an instant that
- there was but a poor chance for him unless he should
- be possessed of unusual muscular powers. He drifted
- behind a projection of the coast, and Mr. Barker followed
- along the shore in the same direction. But by the time
- that he could reach an elevation sufficiently great to
- command a view of the sea beyond, dusk had set in, and
- nothing further was to be seen.
- The other circumstance was the arrival of his clothes,
- when it became necessary for her to examine and identify
- them -- though this had virtually been done long before
- by those who inspected the letters in his pockets. It
- was so evident to her in the midst of her agitation that
- Troy had undressed in the full conviction of dressing
- again almost immediately, that the notion that anything
- but death could have prevented him was a perverse one
- to entertain.
- Then Bathsheba said to herself that others were
- assured in their opinion; strange that she should not
- be. A strange reflection occurred to her, causing her
- face to flush. Suppose that Troy had followed Fanny
- into another world. Had he done this intentionally, yet
- contrived to make his death appear like an accident?
- Nevertheless, this thought of how the apparent might
- differ from the real-made vivid by her bygone jealousy
- of Fanny, and the remorse he had shown that night
- -- did not blind her to the perception of a likelier
- difference, less tragic, but to herself far more disastrous.
- When alone late that evening beside a small fire, and
- much calmed down, Bathsheba took Troy's watch into
- her hand, which had been restored to her with the rest
- of the articles belonging to him. She opened the case
- as he had opened it before her a week ago. There was
- the little coil of pale hair which had been as the fuze to
- this great explosion.
- "He was hers and she was his; they should be gone
- together." she said. "I am nothing to either of them,
- and why should I keep her hair?" She took it in her
- hand, and held it over the fire." No-i'll not burn it
- -i'll keep it in memory of her, poor thing!" she added,
- snatching back her hand.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIX
-
-
-
- OAK'S ADVANCEMENT -- A GREAT HOPE
-
-
- THE later autumn and the winter drew on apace,
- and the leaves lay thick upon the turf of the glades
- and the mosses of the woods. Bathsheba, having
- previously been living in a state of suspended feeling
- which was not suspense, now lived in a mood of
- quietude which was not precisely peacefulness. While
- she had known him to be alive she could have thought
- of his death with equanimity; but now that it might be
- she had lost him, she regretted that he was not hers
- still. She kept the farm going, raked in her profits
- without caring keenly about them, and expended
- money on ventures because she had done so in bygone
- days, which, though not long gone by, seemed infinitely
- removed from her present. She looked back upon that
- past over a great gulf, as if she were now a dead person,
- having the faculty of meditation still left in her, by
- means of which, like the mouldering gentlefolk of the
- poet's story, she could sit and ponder what a gift life
- used to be.
- However, one excellent result of her general apathy
- was the long-delayed installation of Oak as bailiff; but
- he having virtually exercised that function for a long
- time already, the change, beyond the substantial in-
- crease of wages it brought, was little more than a
- nominal one addressed to the outside world.
- Boldwood lived secluded and inactive. Much of
- his wheat and all his barley of that season had been
- spoilt by the rain. It sprouted, grew into intricate
- mats, and was ultimately thrown to the pigs in armfuls.
- The strange neglect which had produced this ruin
- and waste became the subject of whispered talk among
- all the people round; and it was elicited from one of
- Boldwood's men that forgetfulness had nothing to do
- with it, for he had been reminded of the danger to
- his corn as many times and as persistently as inferiors
- dared to do. The sight of the pigs turning in disgust
- from the rotten ears seemed to arouse Boldwood, and
- he one evening sent for Oak. Whether it was sug-
- gested by Bathsheba's recent act of promotion or not,
- the farmer proposed at the interview that Gabriel
- should undertake the superintendence of the Lower
- Farm as well as of Bathsheba's, because of the necessity
- Boldwood felt for such aid, and the impossibility of
- discovering a more trustworthy man. Gabriel's malig-
- nant star was assuredly setting fast.
- Bathsheba, when she learnt of this proposal-for
- Oak was obliged to consult her -- at first languidly
- objected. She considered that the two farms together
- were too extensive for the observation of one man.
- Boldwood, who was apparently determined by personal
- rather than commercial reasons, suggested that Oak
- should be furnished with a horse for his sole use,
- when the plan would present no difficulty, the two
- farms lying side by side. Boldwood did not directly
- communicate with her during these negotiations, only
- speaking to Oak, who was the go-between throughout.
- All was harmoniously arranged at last, and we now
- see Oak mounted on a strong cob, and daily trotting
- the length breadth of about two thousand acres
- in a cheerful spirit of surveillance, as if the crops
- belonged to him -- the actual mistress of the one-half
- and the master of the other, sitting in their respective
- homes in gloomy and sad seclusion.
- Out of this there arose, during the spring succeeding,
- a talk in the parish that Gabriel Oak was feathering his
- nest fast.
- "Whatever d'ye think." said Susan Tall," Gable Oak
- is coming it quite the dand. He now wears shining
- boots with hardly a hob in 'em, two or three times
- a-week, and a tall hat a-Sundays, and 'a hardly knows
- the name of smockfrock. When I see people strut
- enough to he cut up into bantam cocks, I stand
- dormant with wonder, and says no more!"
- It was eventually known that Gabriel, though paid
- a fixed wage by Bathsheba independent of the fluctua-
- tions of agricultural profits, had made an engagement
- with Boldwood by which Oak was to receive a share
- of the receipts -- a small share certainly, yet it was
- money of a higher quality than mere wages, and
- capable of expansion in a way that wages were not.
- Some were beginning to consider Oak a "near" man,
- for though his condition had thus far improved, he
- lived in no better style than before, occupying the
- same cottage, paring his own potatoes, mending his
- stockings, and sometimes even making his bed with
- his own hands. But as Oak was not only provokingly
- indifferent to public opinion, but a man who clung
- persistently to old habits and usages, simply because
- they were old, there was room for doubt as to his
- motives.
- A great hope had latterly germinated in Boldwood,
- whose unreasoning devotion to Bathsheba could only
- be characterized as a fond madness which neither
- time nor circumstance, evil nor good report, could
- weaken or destroy. This fevered hope had grown up
- again like a grain of mustard-seed during the quiet
- which followed the hasty conjecture that Troy was
- drowned. He nourished it fearfully, and almost
- shunned the contemplation of it in earnest, lest facts
- should reveal the wildness of the dream. Bathsheba
- having at last been persuaded to wear mourning, her
- appearance as she entered the church in that guise
- was in itself a weekly addition to his faith that a
- time was coming -- very far off perhaps, yet surely
- nearing -- when his waiting on events should have
- its reward. How long he might have to wait he had
- not yet closely considered. what he would try to
- recognize was that the severe schooling she had been
- subjected to had made Bathsheba much more con-
- siderate than she had formerly been of the feelings of
- others, and he trusted that, should she be willing at
- any time in the future to marry any man at all, that
- man would be himself. There was a substratum of
- good feeling in her: her self-reproach for the injury
- she had thoughtlessly done him might be depended
- upon now to a much greater extent than before her
- infatuation and disappointment. It would be possible
- to approach her by the channel of her good nature,
- and to suggest a friendly businesslike compact between
- them for fulfilment at some future day, keeping the
- passionate side of his desire entirely out of her sight.
- Such was Boldwood's hope.
- To the eyes of the middle-aged, Bathsheba was
- perhaps additionally charming just now. Her exuber-
- ance of spirit was pruned down; the original phantom
- of delight had shown herself to be not too bright for
- human nature's daily food, and she had been able to
- enter this second poetical phase without losing much
- of the first in the process.
- Bathsheba's return from a two months' visit to her
- old aunt at Norcombe afforded the impassioned and
- yearning farmer a pretext for inquiring directly after
- her -- now possibly in the ninth month of her
- widowhood -- and endeavouring to get a notion of her
- middle of the haymaking, and Boldwood contrived to
- "I am glad to see you out of doors, Lydia." he said
- She simpered, and wondered in her heart why he
- "I hope Mrs. Troy is quite well after her long
- the coldest-hearted neighbour could scarcely say less
- "She is quite well, sir.
- "Yes, cheerful.
- "Fearful, did you say?"
- "O no. I merely said she was cheerful."
- "Tells you all her affairs?"
- "No, sir.
- "Some of them?"
- "Yes, sir.
- "Mrs Troy puts much confidence in you, Lydia,
- and very wisely, perhaps."
- "She do, sir. I've been with her all through her
- troubles, and was with her at the time of Mr. Troy's
- going and all. And if she were to marry again I
- expect I should bide with her."
- "She promises that you shall -- quite natural." said
- the strategic lover, throbbing throughout him at the
- presumption which Liddy's words appeared to warrant
- -- that his darling had thought of re-marriage.
- "No -- she doesn't promise it exactly. I merely
- judge on my own account.
- "Yes, yes, I understand. When she alludes to the
- possibility of marrying again, you conclude -- -- "
- "She never do allude to it, sir." said Liddy, thinking
- how very stupid Mr. Boldwood was getting.
- "Of course not." he returned hastily, his hope falling
- again." You needn't take quite such long reaches with
- your rake, Lydia -- short and quick ones are best. Well,
- perhaps, as she is absolute mistress again now, it is wise
- of her to resolve never to give up her freedom."
- "My mistress did certainly once say, though not
- seriously, that she supposed she might marry again at
- the end of seven years from last year, if she cared to
- risk Mr. Troy's coming back and claiming her."
- "Ah, six years from the present time. Said that she
- might. She might marry at once in every reasonable
- person's opinion, whatever the lawyers may say to the
- contrary."
- "Have you been to ask them?" said Liddy, innocently.
- "Not I." said Boldwood, growing red." Liddy, you
- needn't stay here a minute later than you wish, so Mr,
- Oak says. I am now going on a little farther. Good"
- afternoon."
- He went away vexed with himself, and ashamed of
- having for this one time in his life done anything which
- could be called underhand. Poor Boldwood had no
- more skill in finesse than a battering-ram, and he was
- uneasy with a sense of having made himself to appear
- stupid and, what was worse, mean. But he had, after
- all, lighted upon one fact by way of repayment. It was
- a singularly fresh and fascinating fact, and though not
- without its sadness it was pertinent and real. In little
- more than six years from this time Bathsheba might
- certainly marry him. There was something definite in
- that hope, for admitting that there might have been no
- deep thought in her words to Liddy about marriage,
- they showed at least her creed on the matter.
- This pleasant notion was now continually in his mind.
- Six years were a long time, but how much shorter than
- never, the idea he had for so long been obliged to
- endure! Jacob had served twice seven years for
- Rachel: what were six for such a woman as this? He
- tried to like the notion of waiting for her better than
- that of winning her at once. Boldwood felt his love
- to be so deep and strong and eternal, that it was pos-
- sible she had never yet known its full volume, and this
- patience in delay would afford him an opportunity of
- giving sweet proof on the point. He would annihilate
- the six years of his life as if they were minutes -- so little
- did he value his time on earth beside her love. He
- would let her see, all those six years of intangible ether-
- eal courtship, how little care he had for anything but as
- it bore upon the consummation.
- Meanwhile the early and the late summer brought
- round the week in which Greenhill Fair was held.
- This fair was frequently attended by the folk of Weather-
- bury.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER L
-
-
-
- THE SHEEP FAIR -- TROY TOUCHES HIS WIFE'S HAND
-
-
- GREENHILL was the Nijni Novgorod of South
- Wessex; and the busiest, merriest, noisiest day of the
- whole statute number was the day of the sheep fair.
- This yearly gathering was upon the summit of a hill
- which retained in good preservation the remains of an
- ancient earthwork, consisting of a huge rampart and
- entrenchment of an oval form encircling the top of
- the hill, though somewhat broken down here and there.
- To each of the two chief openings on opposite sides a
- winding road ascended, and the level green space of
- ten or fifteen acres enclosed by the bank was the
- site of the fair. A few permanent erections dotted the
- spot, but the majority of visitors patronized canvas alone
- for resting and feeding under during the time of their
- sojourn here.
- Shepherds who attended with their flocks from long
- distances started from home two or three days, or even
- a week, before the fair, driving their charges a few miles
- each day -- not more than ten or twelve -- and resting
- them at night in hired fields by the wayside at pre-
- viously chosen points, where they fed, having fasted since
- morning. The shepherd of each flock marched behind,
- a bundle containing his kit for the week strapped upon
- his shoulders, and in his hand his crook, which he used
- as the staff of his pilgrimage. Several of the sheep
- would get worn and lame, and occasionally a lambing
- occurred on the road. To meet these contingencies,
- there was frequently provided, to accompany the flocks
- from the remoter points, a pony and waggon into which
- the weakly ones were taken for the remainder of the
- journey.
- The Weatherbury Farms, however, were no such
- long distance from the hill, and those arrangements
- were not necessary in their case. But the large united
- flocks of Bathsheba and Farmer Boldwood formed a
- valuable and imposing multitude which demanded much
- attention, and on this account Gabriel, in addition to
- Boldwood's shepherd and Cain Ball, accompanied them
- along the way, through the decayed old town of Kings-
- bere, and upward to the plateau, -- old George the dog
- of course behind them.
- When the autumn sun slanted over Greenhill this
- morning and lighted the dewy flat upon its crest, nebu-
- lous clouds of dust were to be seen floating between
- the pairs of hedges which streaked the wide prospect
- around in all directions. These gradually converged
- upon the base of the hill, and the flocks became
- individually visible, climbing the serpentine ways which
- led to the top. Thus, in a slow procession, they entered
- the opening to which the roads tended, multitude after
- multitude, horned and hornless -- blue flocks and red
- flocks, buff flocks and brown flocks, even green and
- salmon-tinted flocks, according to the fancy of the
- colourist and custom of the farm. Men were shouting,
- dogs were barking, with greatest animation, but the
- thronging travellers in so long a journey had grown
- nearly indifferent to such terrors, though they still
- bleated piteously at the unwontedness of their experi-
- ences, a tall shepherd rising here and there in the midst
- of them, like a gigantic idol amid a crowd of prostrate
- devotees.
- The great mass of sheep in the fair consisted of
- South Downs and the old Wessex horned breeds, to
- the latter class Bathsheba's and Farmer Boldwood's
- mainly belonged. These filed in about nine o'clock,
- their vermiculated horns lopping gracefully on each side
- of their cheeks in geometrically perfect spirals, a small
- pink and white ear nestling under each horn. Before
- and behind came other varieties, perfect leopards as to
- the full rich substance of their coats, and only lacking the
- spots. There were also a few of the Oxfordshire breed,
- whose wool was beginning to curl like a child's flaxen
- hair, though surpassed in this respect by the effeminate
- Leicesters, which were in turn less curly than the Cots-
- wolds. But the most picturesque by far was a small
- flock of Exmoors, which chanced to be there this year.
- Their pied faces and legs, dark and heavy horns, tresses
- of wool hanging round their swarthy foreheads, quite
- relieved the monotony of the flocks in that quarter.
- All these bleating, panting, and weary thousands had
- entered and were penned before the morning had far
- advanced, the dog belonging to each flock being tied to
- the corner of the pen containing it. Alleys for pedes-
- trians intersected the pens, which soon became crowded
- with buyers and sellers from far and near.
- In another part of the hill an altogether different
- scene began to force itself upon the eye towards mid-
- day. A circular tent, of exceptional newness and size,
- was in course of erection here. As the day drew on,
- the flocks began to change hands, lightening the shep-
- herd's responsibilities; and they turned their attention
- to this tent and inquired of a man at work there, whose
- soul seemed concentrated on tying a bothering knot in
- no time, what was going on.
- "The Royal Hippodrome Performance of Turpin's
- Ride to York and the Death of Black Bess." replied the
- man promptly, without turning his eyes or leaving off
- trying.
- As soon as the tent was completed the band struck
- up highly stimulating harmonies, and the announce-
- ment was publicly made, Black Bess standing in a con-
- spicuous position on the outside, as a living proof, If
- proof were wanted, of the truth of the oracular utterances
- from the stage over which the people were to enter.
- These were so convinced by such genuine appeals to
- heart and understanding both that they soon began to
- crowd in abundantly, among the foremost being visible
- Jan Coggan and Joseph Poorgrass, who were holiday
- keeping here to-day,
- "'That's the great ruffen pushing me!" screamed a
- woman in front of Jan over her shoulder at him when
- the rush was at its fiercest.
- "How can I help pushing ye when the folk behind
- push me?" said Coggan, in a deprecating tone, turning
- without turning his body, which was jammed as in a vice.
- There was a silence; then the drums and trumpets
- again sent forth their echoing notes. The crowd was
- again ecstasied, and gave another lurch in which Coggan
- and Poorgrass were again thrust by those behind upon
- the women in front.
- "O that helpless feymels should be at the mercy of
- she swayed like a reed shaken by the wind.
- Now." said Coggan, appealing in an earnest voice
- to the public at large as it stood clustered about his
- shoulder-blades. "Did ye ever hear such onreasonable
- woman as that? Upon my carcase, neighbours, if I
- could only get out of this cheesewring, the damn women
- might eat the show for me!"
- "Don't ye lose yer temper, Jan!" implored Joseph
- Poorgrass, in a whisper." They might get their men to
- murder us, for I think by the shine of their eyes that
- they be a sinful form of womankind."
- Jan held his tongue, as if he had no objection to be
- pacified to please a friend, and they gradually reached
- the foot of the ladder, Poorgrass being flattened like a
- jumping-jack, and the sixpence, for admission, which he
- had got ready half-an-hour earlier, having become so
- reeking hot in the tight squeeze of his excited hand that
- the woman in spangles, brazen rings set with glass
- diamonds, and with chalked face and shoulders, who
- took the money of him, hastily dropped it again from
- a fear that some trick had been played to burn her
- fingers. So they all entered, and the cloth of the
- tent, to the eyes of an observer on the outside, became
- bulged into innumerable pimples such as we observe on
- a sack of potatoes, caused by the various human heads,
- backs, and elbows at high pressure within.
- At the rear of the large tent there were two small
- dressing-tents. One of these, alloted to the male per-
- formers, was partitioned into halves by a cloth; and in
- one of the divisions there was sitting on the grass, pull
- ing on a pair of jack-boots, a young man whom we
- instantly recognise as Sergeant Troy.
- Troy's appearance in this position may be briefly
- accounted for. The brig aboard which he was taken in
- Budmouth Roads was about to start on a voyage, though
- somewhat short of hands. Troy read the articles and
- joined, but before they sailed a boat was despatched
- across the bay to Lulwind cove; as he had half expected,
- his clothes were gone. He ultimately worked his passage
- to the United States, where he made a precarious living
- in various towns as Professor of Gymnastics, Sword
- Exercise, Fencing, and Pugilism. A few months were
- sufficient to give him a distaste for this kind of life.
- There was a certain animal form of refinement in his
- nature; and however pleasant a strange condition might
- be whilst privations were easily warded off, it was dis-
- advantageously coarse when money was short. There
- was ever present, too, the idea that he could claim a
- home and its comforts did he but chose to return to
- England and Weatherbury Farm. Whether Bathsheba
- thought him dead was a frequent subject of curious
- conjecture. To England he did return at last; but the
- but the fact of drawing nearer to Weatherbury abstracted its
- fascinations, and his intention to enter his old groove at
- the place became modified. It was with gloom he con-
- sidered on landing at Liverpool that if he were to go home
- his reception would be of a kind very unpleasant to con-
- template; for what Troy had in the way of emotion was
- an occasional fitful sentiment which sometimes caused
- him as much inconvenience as emotion of a strong and
- healthy kind. Bathsheba was not a women to be made
- a fool of, or a woman to suffer in silence; and how
- could he endure existence with a spirited wife to whom
- at first entering he would be beholden for food and
- lodging? Moreover, it was not at all unlikely that his
- wife would fail at her farming, if she had not already
- done so; and he would then become liable for her
- maintenance: and what a life such a future of poverty
- with her would be, the spectre of Fanny constantly be-
- tween them, harrowing his temper and embittering her
- words! Thus, for reasons touching on distaste, regret,
- and shame commingled, he put off his return from day
- to day, and would have decided to put it off altogether
- if he could have found anywhere else the ready-made
- establishment which existed for him there.
- At this time -- the July preceding the September in
- which we find at Greenhill Fair -- he fell in with a
- travelling circus which was performing in the outskirts of
- a northern town. Troy introduced himself to the
- manager by taming a restive horse of the troupe, hitting
- a suspended apple with pistol-- bullet fired from the
- animal's back when in full gallop, and other feats. For
- his merits in these -- all more or less based upon his ex-
- periences as a dragoon-guardsman -- Troy was taken into
- the company, and the play of Turpin was prepared with
- a view to his personation of the chief character. Troy
- was not greatly elated by the appreciative spirit in which
- he was undoubtedly treated, but he thought the engage-
- ment might afford him a few weeks for consideration.
- It was thus carelessly, and without having formed any
- definite plan for the future, that Troy found himself
- at Greenhill Fair with the rest of the company on this
- day.
- And now the mild autumn sun got lower, and in
- front of the pavilion the following incident had taken
- place. Bathsheba -- who was driven to the fair that day
- by her odd man Poorgrass -- had, like every one else,
- read or heard the announcement that Mr. Francis, the
- Great Cosmopolitan Equestrian and Roughrider, would
- enact the part of Turpin, and she was not yet too old
- and careworn to be without a little curiosity to see him.
- This particular show was by far the largest and grandest
- in the fair, a horde of little shows grouping themselves
- under its shade like chickens around a hen. The crowd
- had passed in, and Boldwood, who had been watching
- all the day for an opportunity of speaking to her, seeing
- her comparatively isolated, came up to her side.
- "I hope the sheep have done well to-day, Mrs. Troy?"
- he said, nervously.
- "O yes, thank you." said Bathsheba, colour springing
- up in the centre of her cheeks. "I was fortunate
- enough to sell them all just as we got upon the hill, so
- we hadn't to pen at all."
- "And now you are entirely at leisure?"
- "Yes, except that I have to see one more dealer in
- two hours' time: otherwise I should be going home.
- He was looking at this large tent and the announcement.
- Have you ever seen the play of "Turpin's Ride to
- York?" Turpin was a real man, was he not?"
- "O yes, perfectly true -- all of it. Indeed, I think
- I've heard Jan Coggan say that a relation of his knew
- Tom King, Turpin's friend, quite well."
- "Coggan is rather given to strange stories connected
- with his relations, we must remember. I hope they
- can all be believed."
- "Yes, yes; we know Coggan. But Turpin is true
- enough. You have never seen it played, I suppose?"
- "Never. I was not allowed to go into these places
- when I was young. Hark! What's that prancing?
- How they shout!"
- "Black Bess just started off, I suppose. Am I right
- in supposing you would like to see the performance,
- Mrs. Troy? Please excuse my mistake, if it is one;
- but if you would like to, I'll get a seat for you with
- pleasure." Perceiving that she hesitated, he added, "I
- myself shall not stay to see it: I've seen it before."
- Now Bathsheba did care a little to see the show, and
- had only withheld her feet from the ladder because she
- feared to go in alone. She had been hoping that Oak
- might appear, whose assistance in such cases was always
- accepted as an inalienable right, but Oak was nowhere
- to be seen; and hence it was that she said, "Then if
- you will just look in first, to see if there's room, I think
- I will go in for a minute or two."
- And so a short time after this Bathsheba appeared
- in the tent with Boldwood at her elbow, who, taking
- her to a "reserved" seat, again withdrew.
- This feature consisted of one raised bench in very
- conspicuous part of the circle, covered with red cloth,
- and floored with a piece of carpet, and Bathsheba
- immediately found, to her confusion, that she was the
- single reserved individual in the tent, the rest of the
- crowded spectators, one and all, standing on their legs
- on the borders of the arena, where they got twice as
- good a view of the performance for half the money.
- Hence as many eyes were turned upon her, enthroned
- alone in this place of honour, against a scarlet back-
- ground, as upon the ponies and clown who were
- engaged in preliminary exploits in the centre, Turpin
- not having yet appeared. Once there, Bathsheba was
- forced to make the best of it and remain: she sat
- down, spreading her skirts with some dignity over the
- unoccupied space on each side of her, and giving a
- new and feminine aspect to the pavilion. In a few
- minutes she noticed the fat red nape of Coggan's neck
- among those standing just below her, and Joseph Poor-
- grass's saintly profile a little further on.
- The interior was shadowy with a peculiar shade.
- The strange luminous semi-opacities of fine autumn
- afternoons and eves intensified into Rembrandt effects
- the few yellow sunbeams which came through holes
- and divisions in the canvas, and spirted like jets of
- gold-dust across the dusky blue atmosphere of haze
- pervading the tent, until they alighted on inner surfaces
- of cloth opposite, and shone like little lamps suspended
- there.
- Troy, on peeping from his dressing-tent through a
- slit for a reconnoitre before entering, saw his unconscious
- wife on high before him as described, sitting as queen
- of the tournament. He started back in utter confusion,
- for although his disguise effectually concealed his person-
- ality, he instantly felt that she would be sure to recognize
- his voice. He had several times during the day thought
- of the possibility of some Weatherbury person or other
- appearing and recognizing him; but he had taken the
- risk carelessly. If they see me, let them, he had said.
- But here was Bathsheba in her own person; and the
- reality of the scene was so much intenser than any of
- his prefigurings that he felt he had not half enough
- considered the point.
- She looked so charming and fair that his cool mood
- about Weatherbury people was changed. He had not
- expected her to exercise this power over him in the
- twinkling of an eye. Should he go on, and care nothing?
- He could not bring himself to do that. Beyond a politic
- wish to remain unknown, there suddenly arose in him
- now a sense of shame at the possibility that his
- attractive young wife, who already despised him, should
- despise him more by discovering him in so mean a
- condition after so long a time. He actually blushed
- at the thought, and was vexed beyond measure that
- his sentiments of dislike towards Weatherbury should
- have led him to dally about the country in this way.
- But Troy was never more clever than when absolutely
- at his wit's end. He hastily thrust aside the curtain
- dividing his own little dressing space from that of the
- manager and proprietor, who now appeared as the
- individual called Tom King as far down as his waist, and
- as the aforesaid respectable manager thence to his toes.
- "Here's the devil to pay!" said Troy.
- "How's that?"
- "Why, there's a blackguard creditor in the tent I don't
- want to see, who'll discover me and nab me as sure as
- Satan if I open my mouth. What's to be done?"
- You must appear now, I think."
- "I can't."
- But the play must proceed."
- "Do you give out that Turpin has got a bad cold,
- and can't speak his part, but that he'll perform it just
- the same without speaking."
- The proprietor shook his head.
- "Anyhow, play or no play, I won't open my mouth,
- said Troy, firmly.
- "Very well, then let me see. I tell you how we'll
- manage." said the other, who perhaps felt it would be
- extremely awkward to offend his leading man just at
- this time. "I won't tell 'em anything about your
- keeping silence; go on with the piece and say nothing,
- doing what you can by a judicious wink now and then,
- and a few indomitable nods in the heroic places, you
- know. They'll never find out that the speeches are
- omitted."
- This seemed feasible enough, for Turpin's speeches
- were not many or long, the fascination of the piece
- lying entirely in the action; and accordingly the play
- began, and at the appointed time Black Bess leapt
- into the grassy circle amid the plaudits of the spectators.
- At the turnpike scene, where Bess and Turpin are hotly
- pursued at midnight by the officers, and half-awake
- gatekeeper in his tasselled nightcap denies that any
- horseman has passed, Coggan uttered a broad-chested
- "Well done!" which could be heard all over the fair
- above the bleating, and Poorgrass smiled delightedly
- with a nice sense of dramatic contrast between our
- hero, who coolly leaps the gate, and halting justice in
- the form of his enemies, who must needs pull up
- cumbersomely and wait to be let through. At the
- death of Tom King, he could not refrain from seizing
- Coggan by the hand, and whispering, with tears in his
- eyes, "Of course he's not really shot, Jan -- only
- seemingly!" And when the last sad scene came on,
- and the body of the gallant and faithful Bess had to
- be carried out on a shutter by twelve volunteers from
- among the spectators, nothing could restrain Poorgrass
- from lending a hand, exclaiming, as he asked Jan to
- join him, "Twill be something to tell of at Warren's in
- future years, Jan, and hand down to our children." For
- many a year in Weatherbury, Joseph told, with the air
- of a man who had had experiences in his time, that he
- touched with his own hand the hoof of Bess as she lay
- upon the board upon his shoulder. If, as some thinkers
- hold, immortality consists in being enshrined in others"
- memories, then did Black Bess become immortal that
- day if she never had done so before.
- Meanwhile Troy had added a few touches to his
- ordinary make-up for the character, the more effectually
- to disguise himself, and though he had felt faint qualms
- on first entering, the metamorphosis effected by judici-
- ously "lining" his face with a wire rendered him safe from
- the eyes of Bathsheba and her men. Nevertheless, he
- was relieved when it was got through.
- There a second performance in the evening, and
- the tent was lighted up. Troy had taken his part very
- quietly this time, venturing to introduce a few speeches
- on occasion; and was just concluding it when, whilst
- standing at the edge of the circle contiguous to the first
- row of spectators, he observed within a yard of him the
- eye of a man darted keenly into his side features. Troy
- hastily shifted his position, after having recognized in
- sworn enemy, who still hung about the outskirts of
- At first Troy resolved to take no notice and abide
- by circumstances. That he had been recognized by
- this man was highly probable; yet there was room for
- a doubt. Then the great objection he had felt to
- allowing news of his proximity to precede him to
- Weatherbury in the event of his return, based on a
- feeling that knowledge of his present occupation would
- discredit him still further in his wife's eyes, returned
- in full force. Moreover, should he resolve not to
- return at all, a tale of his being alive and being in
- the neighbourhood would be awkward; and he was
- anxious to acquire a knowledge of his wife's temporal
- affairs before deciding which to do.
- In this dilemma Troy at once went out to recon-
- noitre. It occurred to him that to find Pennyways, and
- make a friend of him if possible, would be a very wise
- act. He had put on a thick beard borrowed from the
- establishment, and this he wandered about the fair-
- field. It was now almost dark, and respectable people
- were getting their carts and gigs ready to go home
- The largest refreshment booth in the fair was provided
- by an innkeeper from a neighbouring town. This was
- considered an unexceptionable place for obtaining the
- necessary food and rest: Host Trencher (as he was
- jauntily called by the local newspaper) being a sub-
- stantial man of high repute for catering through all the
- county round. The tent was divided into first and
- second-class compartments, and at the end of the first-
- class division was a yet further enclosure for the most
- exclusive, fenced of from the body of the tent by a
- luncheon-bar, behind which the host himself stood
- bustling about in white apron and shirt-sleeves, and look-
- ing as if he had never lived anywhere but under canvas
- all his life. In these penetralia were chairs and a table,
- which, on candles being lighted, made quite a cozy and
- luxurious show, with an urn, plated tea and coffee pots,
- china teacups, and plum cakes.
- Troy stood at the entrance to the booth, where a
- gipsy-woman was frying pancakes over a little fire of
- sticks and selling them at a penny a-piece, and looked
- over the heads of the people within. He could see
- nothing of Pennyways, but he soon discerned Bathsheba
- through an opening into the reserved space at the
- further end. Troy thereupon retreated, went round the
- tent into the darkness, and listened. He could hear
- Bathsheba's voice immediately inside the canvas; she
- was conversing with a man. A warmth overspread his
- face: surely she was not so unprincipled as to flirt in
- a fair! He wondered if, then, she reckoned upon his
- death as an absolute certainty. To get at the root of
- the matter, Troy took a penknife from his pocket and
- softly made two little cuts crosswise in the cloth, which,
- by folding back the corners left a hole the size of a
- wafer. Close to this he placed his face, withdrawing
- it again in a movement of surprise; for his eye had
- been within twelve inches of the top of Bathsheba's
- head. lt was too near to be convenient. He made
- another hole a little to one side and lower down, in a
- shaded place beside her chair, from which it was easy
- and safe to survey her by looking horizontally'.
- Troy took in the scene completely now. She was
- leaning back, sipping a cup of tea that she held in her
- hand, and the owner of the male voice was Boldwood,
- who had apparently just brought the cup to her,
- Bathsheba, being in a negligent mood, leant so idly
- against the canvas that it was pressed to the shape of
- her shoulder, and she was, in fact, as good as in Troy's
- arms; and he was obliged to keep his breast carefully
- backward that she might not feel its warmth through the
- cloth as he gazed in.
- Troy found unexpected chords of feeling to be stirred
- again within him as they had been stirred earlier in the
- day. She was handsome as ever, and she was his. It
- was some minutes before he could counteract his sudden
- wish to go in, and claim her. Then he thought how
- the proud girl who had always looked down upon him
- even whilst it was to love him, would hate him on dis-
- covering him to be a strolling player. Were he to make
- himself known, that chapter of his life must at all risks
- be kept for ever from her and from the Weatherbury
- people, or his name would be a byword throughout the
- parish. He would be nicknamed "Turpin" as long as
- he lived. Assuredly before he could claim her these few
- past months of his existence must be entirely blotted out.
- "Shall I get you another cup before you start,
- ma'am?" said Farmer Boldwood.
- I thank you," said Bathsheba. "But I must be going
- at once. It was great neglect in that man to keep me
- waiting here till so late. I should have gone two hours
- ago, if it had not been for him. I had no idea of
- coming in here; but there's nothing so refreshing as a
- cup of tea, though I should never have got one if you
- hadn't helped me."
- Troy scrutinized her cheek as lit by the candles,
- and watched each varying shade thereon, and the
- white shell-like sinuosities of her little ear. She took
- out her purse and was insisting to Boldwood on paying
- for her tea for herself, when at this moment Pennyways
- entered the tent. Troy trembled: here was his scheme
- for respectability endangered at once. He was about
- to leave his hole of espial, attempt to follow Pennyways,
- and find out if the ex-bailiff had recognized him, when
- he was arrested by the conversation, and found he was
- too late.
- "Excuse me, ma'am." said Pennyways; "I've some
- private information for your ear alone."
- I cannot hear it now." she said, coldly. That
- Bathsheba could not endure this man was evident; in
- fact, he was continually coming to her with some tale
- or other, by which he might creep into favour at the
- expense of persons maligned.
- "I'll write it down." said Pennyways, confidently. He
- stooped over the table, pulled a leaf from a warped
- pocket-book, and wrote upon the paper, in a round
- hand --
- "YOUR husband is here. I've seen him. Who's the fool
- now?"
- This he folded small, and handed towards her.
- Bathsheba would not read it; she would not even put
- out her hand to take it. Pennyways, then, with a laugh
- of derision, tossed it into her lap, and, turning away,
- left her.
- From the words and action of Pennyways, Troy,
- though he had not been able to see what the ex-bailiff
- wrote, had not a moment's doubt that the note referred
- to him. Nothing that he could think of could be done
- to check the exposure. "Curse my luck!" he whispered,
- and added imprecations which rustled in the gloom like
- a pestilent wind. Meanwhile Boldwood said, taking up
- the note from her lap --
- "Don't you wish to read it, Mrs. Troy? If not,
- I'll destroy it."
- "Oh, well." said Bathsheba, carelessly, "perhaps it is
- unjust not to read it; but I can guess what it is about.
- He wants me to recommend him, or it is to tell me of
- some little scandal or another connected with my work-
- people. He's always doing that."
- Bathsheba held the note in her right hand. Bold-
- wood handed towards her a plate of cut bread-and-
- butter; when, in order to take a slice, she put the note
- into her left hand, where she was still holding the purse,
- and then allowed her hand to drop beside her close to
- the canvas. The moment had come for saving his game,
- and Troy impulsively felt that he would play the card,
- For yet another time he looked at the fair hand, and
- saw the pink finger-tips, and the blue veins of the
- wrist, encircled by a bracelet of coral chippings which
- she wore: how familiar it all was to him! Then, with
- the lightning action in which he was such an adept, he
- noiselessly slipped his hand under the bottom of the
- tent-cloth, which was far from being pinned tightly down,
- lifted it a little way, keeping his eye to the hole,
- snatched the note from her fingers, dropped the canvas,
- and ran away in the gloom towards the bank and ditch,
- smiling at the scream of astonishment which burst from
- her. Troy then slid down on the outside of the rampart,
- hastened round in the bottom of the entrenchment to
- a distance of a hundred yards, ascended again, and
- crossed boldly in a slow walk towards the front entrance
- of the tent. His object was now to get to Pennyways,
- and prevent a repetition of the announcement until
- such time as he should choose.
- Troy reached the tent door, and standing among the
- groups there gathered, looked anxiously for Pennyways,
- evidently not wishing to make himself prominent by
- inquiring for him. One or two men were speaking of
- a daring attempt that had just been made to rob a
- young lady by lifting the canvas of the tent beside her.
- It was supposed that the rogue had imagined a slip of
- paper which she held in her hand to he a bank note,
- for he had seized it, and made off with it, leaving her
- purse behind. His chagrin and disappointment at dis-
- covering its worthlessness would be a good joke, it was
- said. However, the occurrence seemed to have become
- known to few, for it had not interrupted a fiddler, who
- had lately begun playing by the door of the tent, nor
- the four bowed old men with grim countenances and
- walking-sticks in hand, who were dancing "Major
- Malley's Reel" to the tune. Behind these stood
- Pennyways. Troy glided up to him, beckoned, and
- whispered a few words; and with a mutual glance of
- concurrence the two men went into the night together.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LI
-
-
-
- BATHSHEBA TALKS WITH HER OUTRIDER
-
-
- THE arrangement for getting back again to Weather-
- bury had been that Oak should take the place of Poor-
- grass in Bathsheba's conveyance and drive her home,
- it being discovered late in the afternoon that Joseph
- was suffering from his old complaint, a multiplying eye,
- and was, therefore, hardly trustworthy as coachman and
- protector to a woman. But Oak had found himself so
- occupied, and was full of so many cares relative to
- those portions of Boldwood's flocks that were not
- disposed of, that Bathsheba, without telling Oak or
- anybody, resolved to drive home herself, as she had
- many times done from Casterbridge Market, and trust
- to her good angel for performing the journey un-
- molested. But having fallen in with Farmer Boldwood
- accidentally (on her part at least) at the refreshment-
- tent, she found it impossible to refuse his offer to ride
- on horseback beside her as escort. It had grown
- twilight before she was aware, but Boldwood assured
- her that there was no cause for uneasiness, as the
- moon would be up in half-an-hour.
- Immediately after the incident in the tent, she had
- risen to go -- now absolutely alarmed and really grateful
- for her old lover's protection -- though regretting Gabriel's
- absence, whose company she would have much preferred,
- as being more proper as well as more pleasant, since he
- was her own managing-man and servant. This, how-
- ever, could not be helped; she would not, on any
- consideration, treat Boldwood harshly, having once
- already illused him, and the moon having risen, and
- the gig being ready, she drove across the hilltop in
- the wending way's which led downwards -- to oblivious
- obscurity, as it seemed, for the moon and the hill it
- flooded with light were in appearance on a level, the
- rest of the world lying as a vast shady concave between
- them. Boldwood mounted his horse, and followed in
- close attendance behind. Thus they descended into
- the lowlands, and the sounds of those left on the
- hill came like voices from the sky, and the lights were
- as those of a camp in heaven. They soon passed the
- merry stragglers in the immediate vicinity of the hill,
- traversed Kingsbere, and got upon the high road.
- The keen instincts of Bathsheba had perceived that
- the farmer's staunch devotion to herself was still un-
- diminished, and she sympathized deeply. The sight
- had quite depressed her this evening; had reminded
- her of her folly; she wished anew, as she had wished
- many months ago, for some means of making repara-
- tion for her fault. Hence her pity for the man who
- so persistently loved on to his own injury and per-
- manent gloom had betrayed Bathsheba into an injudi-
- cious considerateness of manner, which appeared
- almost like tenderness, and gave new vigour to the
- exquisite dream of a Jacob's seven years service in
- poor Boldwood's mind.
- He soon found an excuse for advancing from his
- position in the rear, and rode close by her side. They
- had gone two or three miles in the moonlight, speaking
- desultorily across the wheel of her gig concerning the
- fair, farming, Oak's usefulness to them both, and other
- indifferent subjects, when Boldwood said suddenly
- and simply --
- "Mrs. Troy, you will marry again some day?"
- This point-blank query unmistakably confused her,
- it was not till a minute or more had elapsed that
- she said, "I have not seriously thought of any such
- subject."
- "I quite understand that. Yet your late husband
- has been dead nearly one year, and -- "
- "You forget that his death was never absolutely
- proved, and may not have taken place; so that I may
- not be really a widow." she said, catching at the straw of
- escape that the fact afforded
- "Not absolutely proved, perhaps, but it was proved
- circumstantially. A man saw him drowning, too. No
- reasonable person has any doubt of his death; nor
- have you, ma'am, I should imagine.
- "O yes I have, or I should have acted differently,"
- she said, gently. "From the first, I have had a strange
- uaccountable feeling that he could not have perished,
- but I have been able to explain that in several ways
- since. Even were I half persuaded that I shall see
- him no more, I am far from thinking of marriage with
- another. I should be very contemptible to indulge in
- such a thought."
- They were silent now awhile, and having struck into
- an unfrequented track across a common, the creaks of
- Boldwood's saddle and gig springs were all the
- sounds to be heard. Boldwood ended the pause.
- "Do you remember when I carried you fainting in
- my arms into the King's Arms, in Casterbridge? Every
- dog has his day: that was mine."
- "I know-I know it all." she said, hurriedly.
- "I, for one, shall never cease regretting that events
- so fell out as to deny you to me."
- "I, too, am very sorry." she said, and then checked
- herself. "I mean, you know, I am sorry you thought
- I -- "
- "I have always this dreary pleasure in thinking over
- those past times with you -- that I was something to
- you before HE was anything, and that you belonged
- ALMOST to me. But, of course, that's nothing. You
- never liked me."
- "I did; and respected you, too."Do you now?"
- "Yes."
- "Which?"
- "How do you mean which?"
- "Do you like me, or do you respect me?"
- "I don't know -- at least, I cannot tell you. It is
- difficult for a woman to define her feelings in language
- which is chiefly made by men to express theirs. My
- treatment of you was thoughtless, inexcusable, wicked!
- I shall eternally regret it. If there had been anything
- I could have done to make amends I would most
- gladly have done it -- there was nothing on earth I so
- longed to do as to repair the error. But that was not
- possible."
- "Don't blame yourself -- you were not so far in the
- wrong as you suppose. Bathsheba, suppose you had
- real complete proof that you are what, in fact, you are
- -- a widow -- would you repair the old wrong to me by
- marrying me?"
- "I cannot say. I shouldn't yet, at any rate."
- "But you might at some future time of your life?"
- "O yes, I might at some time."
- "Well, then, do you know that without further proof
- of any kind you may marry again in about six years
- from the present -- subject to nobody's objection or
- blame?"
- "O yes." she said, quickly. "I know all that. But
- don't talk of it -- seven or six years -- where may we all
- be by that time?"
- "They will soon glide by, and it will seem an
- astonishingly short time to look back upon when they
- are past -- much less than to look forward to now."
- "Yes, yes; I have found that in my own experience."
- "Now listen once more." Boldwood pleaded. "If I
- wait that time, will you marry me? You own that you
- owe me amends -- let that be your way of making them."
- "But, Mr. Boldwood -- six years -- "
- "Do you want to be the wife of any other man?"
- "No indeed! I mean, that I don't like to talk
- about this matter now. Perhaps it is not proper, and
- I ought not to allow it. Let us drop it. My husband
- may be living, as I said."
- "Of course, I'll drop the subject if you wish. But
- propriety has nothing to do with reasons. I am a
- middle-aged man, willing to protect you for the
- remainder of our lives. On your side, at least, there
- is no passion or blamable haste -- on mine, perhaps,
- there is. But I can't help seeing that if you choose
- from a feeling of pity, and, as you say, a wish to make
- amends, to make a bargain with me for a far-ahead
- time -- an agreement which will set all things right
- and make me happy, late though it may be -- there is
- no fault to be found with you as a woman. Hadn't
- I the first place beside you? Haven't you been
- almost mine once already? Surely you can say to
- me as much as this, you will have me back again
- should circumstances permit? Now, pray speak! O
- Bathsheba, promise -- it is only a little promise -- that
- if you marry again, you will marry me!"
- His tone was so excited that she almost feared him
- at this moment, even whilst she sympathized. It was
- a simple physical fear -- the weak of the strong; there
- no emotional aversion or inner repugnance. She
- said, with some distress in her voice, for she remembered
- vividly his outburst on the Yalbury Road, and shrank
- from a repetition of his anger: --
- "I will never marry another man whilst you wish me
- to be your wife, whatever comes -- but to say more -- you
- have taken me so by surprise -- "
- "But let it stand in these simple words -- that in six
- years' time you will be my wife? Unexpected accidents
- we'll not mention, because those, of course, must be
- given way to. Now, this time I know you will keep
- your word."
- "That's why I hesitate to give it."
- "But do give it! Remember the past, and be kind."
- She breathed; and then said mournfully: "O what
- shall I do? I don't love you, and I much fear that I
- never shall love you as much as a woman ought to love
- a husband. If you, sir, know that, and I can yet give
- you happiness by a mere promise to marry at the end of
- six years, if my husband should not come back, it is a
- great honour to me. And if you value such an act of
- friendship from a woman who doesn't esteem her-
- self as she did, and has little love left, why it
- will -- "
- "Promise!"
- " -- Consider, if I cannot promise soon."
- "But soon is perhaps never?"
- "O no, it is not! I mean soon. Christmas, we'll
- say."
- "Christmas!" He said nothing further till he
- added: "Well, I'll say no more to you about it till that
- time."
- Bathsheba was in a very peculiar state of mind,
- which showed how entirely the soul is the slave of the
- body, the ethereal spirit dependent for its quality upon
- the tangible flesh and blood. It is hardly too much to
- say that she felt coerced by a force stronger than her
- own will, not only into the act of promising upon this
- singularly remote and vague matter, but into the emo-
- tion of fancying that she ought to promise. When the
- weeks intervening between the night of this conversa-
- tion and Christmas day began perceptibly to diminish,
- her anxiety and perplexity increased.
- One day she was led by an accident into an oddly
- confidential dialogue with Gabriel about her difficulty
- It afforded her a little relief -- of a dull and cheerless
- kind. They were auditing accounts, and something
- occurred in the course of their labours which led Oak
- to say, speaking of Boldwood, " He'll never forget you,
- ma'am, never."
- Then out came her trouble before she was aware;
- and she told him how she had again got into the toils;
- what Boldwood had asked her, and how he was ex-
- pecting her assent. "The most mournful reason of all
- for my agreeing to it." she said sadly, "and the true
- reason why I think to do so for good or for evil, is this
- -- it is a thing I have not breathed to a living soul as
- yet-i believe that if I don't give my word, he'll go out
- of his mind."
- "Really, do ye?" said Gabriel, gravely.
- "I believe this." she continued, with reckless frank-
- ness; "and Heaven knows I say it in a spirit the very
- reverse of vain, for I am grieved and troubled to my
- soul about it-i believe I hold that man's future in my
- hand. His career depends entirely upon my treatment
- of him. O Gabriel, I tremble at my responsibility, for
- it is terrible!"
- "Well, I think this much, ma'am, as I told you years
- ago." said Oak, "that his life is a total blank whenever
- he isn't hoping for 'ee; but I can't suppose-i hope
- that nothing so dreadful hangs on to it as you fancy.
- His natural manner has always been dark and strange,
- you know. But since the case is so sad and oddlike,
- why don't ye give the conditional promise? I think I
- would."
- "But is it right? Some rash acts of my past life
- have taught me that a watched woman must have very
- much circumspection to retain only a very little credit,
- and I do want and long to be discreet in this! And
- six years -- why we may all be in our graves by that
- BATHSHEBA TALKS WITH OAK
- time, even if Mr. Troy does not come back again, which
- he may not impossibly do! Such thoughts give a sort
- of absurdity to the scheme. Now, isn't it preposterous,
- Gabriel? However he came to dream of it, I cannot think.
- But is it wrong? You know -- you are older than I."
- "Eight years older, ma'am."
- "Yes, eight years -- and is it wrong?"
- "Perhaps it would be an uncommon agreement for a
- man and woman to make: I don't see anything really
- wrong about it." said Oak, slowly. "In fact the very
- thing that makes it doubtful if you ought to marry en
- under any condition, that is, your not caring about him
- -- for I may suppose -- -- "
- "Yes, you may suppose that love is wanting." she
- said shortly. "Love is an utterly bygone, sorry, worn-
- out, miserable thing with me -- for him or any one else."
- "Well, your want of love seems to me the one thing
- that takes away harm from such an agreement with him.
- If wild heat had to do wi' it, making ye long to over-
- come the awkwardness about your husband's vanishing,
- it mid be wrong; but a cold-hearted agreement to oblige
- a man seems different, somehow. The real sin, ma'am
- in my mind, lies in thinking of ever wedding wi' a man
- you don't love honest and true."
- "That I'm willing to pay the penalty of." said Bath-
- sheba, firmly. "You know, Gabriel, this is what I can-
- not get off my conscience -- that I once seriously injured
- him in sheer idleness. If I had never played a trick
- upon him, he would never have wanted to marry me.
- O if I could only pay some heavy damages in money
- to him for the harm I did, and so get the sin off my
- soul that way!.. Well, there's the debt, which can
- only be discharged in one way, and I believe I am
- bound to do it if it honestly lies in my power, without
- any consideration of my own future at all. When a
- rake gambles away his expectations, the fact that it is
- an inconvenient debt doesn't make him the less liable.
- I've been a rake, and the single point I ask you is, con-
- sidering that my own scruples, and the fact that in the
- eye of the law my husband is only missing, will keep
- any man from marrying me until seven years have
- passed -- am I free to entertain such an idea, even
- though 'tis a sort of penance -- for it will be that? I
- hate the act of marriage under such circumstances, and
- the class of women I should seem to belong to by doing
- it!"
- "It seems to me that all depends upon whe'r you
- think, as everybody else do, that your husband is
- dead."
- "I shall get to, I suppose, because I cannot help
- feeling what would have brought him back long before
- this time if he had lived."
- "Well, then, in religious sense you will be as free
- to THINK o' marrying again as any real widow of one
- year's standing. But why don't ye ask Mr. Thirdly's
- advice on how to treat Mr. Boldwood?"
- "No. When I want a broad-minded opinion for
- general enlightenment, distinct from special advice, I
- never go to a man who deals in the subject pro-
- fessionally. So I like the parson's opinion on law, the
- lawyer's on doctoring, the doctor's on business, and my
- business-man's -- that is, yours -- on morals."
- "And on love -- -- "
- "My own."
- "I'm afraid there's a hitch in that argument." said
- Oak, with a grave smile.
- She did not reply at once, and then saying, "Good
- evening Mr. Oak." went away.
- She had spoken frankly, and neither asked nor ex-
- pected any reply from Gabriel more satisfactory than
- that she had obtained. Yet in the centremost parts of
- her complicated heart there existed at this minute a
- little pang of disappointment, for a reason she would
- not allow herself to recognize. Oak had not once
- wished her free that he might marry her himself -- had
- not once said, "I could wait for you as well as he."
- That was the insect sting. Not that she would have
- listened to any such hypothesis. O no -- for wasn't
- she saying all the time that such thoughts of the future
- were improper, and wasn't Gabriel far too poor a man
- to speak sentiment to her? Yet he might have just
- hinted about that old love of his, and asked, in a playful
- off-hand way, if he might speak of it. It would have
- seemed pretty and sweet, if no more; and then she
- would have shown how kind and inoffensive a woman's
- "No" can sometimes be. But to give such cool advice
- -- the very advice she had asked for -- it ruffled our
- heroine all the afternoon.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LII
-
-
-
- CONVERGING COURSES
-
-
- I
- CHRISTMAS-EVE came, and a party that Boldwood
- was to give in the evening was the great subject of talk
- in Weatherbury. It was not that the rarity of Christmas
- parties in the parish made this one a wonder, but that
- Boldwood should be the giver. The announcement
- had had an abnormal and incongruous sound, as if one
- should hear of croquet-playing in a cathedral aisle, or
- that some much-respected judge was going upon the
- stage. That the party was intended to be a truly jovial
- one there was no room for doubt. A large bough of
- mistletoe had been brought from the woods that day, and
- suspended in the hall of the bachelor's home. Holly
- and ivy had followed in armfuls. From six that morning
- till past noon the huge wood fire in the kitchen roared
- and sparkled at its highest, the kettle, the saucepan, and
- the threelegged pot appearing in the midst of the flames
- like Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego; moreover,
- roasting and basting operations were continually
- carried on in front of the genial blaze.
- As it grew later the fire was made up in the large
- long hall into which the staircase descended, and all
- encumbrances were cleared out for dancing. The log
- which was to form the back-brand of the evening fire
- was the uncleft trunk of a tree, so unwieldy that it could
- be neither brought nor rolled to its place; and accord-
- ingly two men were to be observed dragging and heaving
- it in by chains and levers as the hour of assembly drew
- near.
- II
- In spite of all this, the spirit of revelry was wanting
- In the atmosphere of the house. Such a thing had
- never been attempted before by its owner, and it was
- now done as by a wrench. Intended gaieties would
- insist upon appearing like solemn grandeurs, the organ-
- ization of the whole effort was carried out coldly, by
- hirelings, and a shadow seemed to move about the
- rooms, saying that the proceedings were unnatural to
- the place and the lone man who lived therein, and hence
- not good.
- Bathsheba was at this time in her room, dressing for
- the event. She had called for candles, and Liddy
- entered and placed one on each side of her mistress's
- glass.
- "Don't go away, Liddy." said Bathsheba, almost
- timidly." I am foolishly agitated-i cannot tell why.
- I wish I had not been obliged to go to this dance; but
- there's no escaping now. I have not spoken to Mr.
- Boldwood since the autumn, when I promised to see
- him at Christmas on business, but I had no idea there
- was to be anything of this kind."
- "But I would go now." said Liddy, who was going
- with her; for Boldwood had been indiscriminate in his
- invitations.
- "Yes, I shall make my appearance, of course." said
- Bathsheba." But I am THE CAUSE of the party, and that
- upsets me! -- Don't tell, Liddy."
- "O no, ma'am, You the cause of it, ma'am?"
- "Yes. I am the reason of the party-i. If it had
- not been for me, there would never have been one. I
- can't explain any more -- there's no more to be explained.
- I wish I had never seen Weatherbury."
- "That's wicked of you -- to wish to be worse off than
- you are."
- "No, Liddy. I have never been free from trouble
- since I have lived here, and this party is likely to bring
- me more. Now, fetch my black silk dress, and see how
- it sits upon me."
- "But you will leave off that, surely, ma'am? You
- have been a widowlady fourteen months, and ought to
- brighten up a little on such a night as this."
- "Is it necessary? No; I will appear as usual, for if
- I were to wear any light dress people would say things
- about me, and I should seem to he rejoicing when I am
- solemn all the time. The party doesn't suit me a bit;
- but never mind, stay and help to finish me off."
- III
- Boldwood was dressing also at this hour. A tailor
- from Casterbridge was with him, assisting him in the
- operation of trying on a new coat that had just been
- brought home.
- Never had Boldwood been so fastidious, unreasonable
- about the fit, and generally difficult to please. The
- tailor walked round and round him, tugged at the waist,
- pulled the sleeve, pressed out the collar, and for the
- first time in his experience Boldwood was not bored-
- Times had been when the farmer had exclaimed against
- all such niceties as childish, but now no philosophic or
- hasty rebuke whatever was provoked by this man for
- attaching as much importance to a crease in the coat
- as to an earthquake in South America. Boldwood at
- last expressed himself nearly satisfied, and paid the bill,
- the tailor passing out of the door just as Oak came in
- to report progress for the day.
- "Oh, Oak." said Boldwood. "I shall of course see
- you here to-night. Make yourself merry. I am deter-
- mined that neither expense nor trouble shall be spared."
- "I'll try to be here, sir, though perhaps it may not
- be very early." said Gabriel, quietly. "I am glad indeed
- to see such a change in 'ee from what it used to be."
- "Yes-i must own it-i am bright to-night: cheerful
- and more than cheerful-so much so that I am almost
- sad again with the sense that all of it is passing away.
- And sometimes, when I am excessively hopeful and
- blithe, a trouble is looming in the distance: so that I
- often get to look upon gloom in me with content, and
- to fear a happy mood. Still this may be absurd-i feel
- that it is absurd. Perhaps my day is dawning at last."
- "I hope it 'ill be a long and a fair one."
- "Thank you -- thank you. Yet perhaps my cheerful
- mess rests on a slender hope. And yet I trust my hope.
- It is faith, not hope. I think this time I reckon with
- my host. -- Oak, my hands are a little shaky, or some-
- thing; I can't tie this neckerchief properly. Perhaps
- you will tie it for me. The fact is, I have not been well
- lately, you know."
- "I am sorry to hear that, sir."
- "Oh, it's nothing. I want it done as well as you can,
- please. Is there any late knot in fashion, Oak?"
- "I don't know, sir." said Oak. His tone had sunk to
- sadness.
- Boldwood approached Gabriel, and as Oak tied the
- neckerchief the farmer went on feverishly --
- "Does a woman keep her promise, Gabriel?"
- "If it is not inconvenient to her she may."
- "-- Or rather an implied promise."
- "I won't answer for her implying." said Oak, with
- faint bitterness. "That's a word as full o' holes as a
- sieve with them."
- Oak, don't talk like that. You have got quite
- cynical lately -- how is it? We seem to have shifted our
- positions: I have become the young and hopeful man,
- and you the old and unbelieving one. However, does
- a woman keep a promise, not to marry, but to enter on
- an engagement to marry at some time? Now you
- know women better than I -- tell me."
- "I am afeard you honour my understanding too much.
- However, she may keep such a promise, if it is made
- with an honest meaning to repair a wrong."
- "It has not gone far yet, but I think it will soon --
- yes, I know it will." he said, in an impulsive whisper.
- "I have pressed her upon the subject, and she inclines
- to be kind to me, and to think of me as a husband at
- a long future time, and that's enough for me. How
- can I expect more? She has a notion that a woman
- should not marry within seven years of her husband's
- disappearance -- that her own self shouldn't, I mean --
- because his body was not found. It may be merely
- this legal reason which influences her, or it may be a
- religious one, but she is reluctant to talk on the point-
- Yet she has promised -- implied -- that she will ratify an
- engagement to-night."
- "Seven years." murmured Oak.
- "No, no -- it's no such thing!" he said, with im-
- patience. Five years, nine months, and a few days.
- Fifteen months nearly have passed since he vanished,
- and is there anything so wonderful in an engagement of
- little more than five years?"
- "It seems long in a forward view. Don't build too
- much upon such promises, sir. Remember, you have
- once be'n deceived. Her meaning may be good; but
- there -- she's young yet."
- "Deceived? Never!" said Boldwood, vehemently.
- "She never promised me at that first time, and hence
- she did not break her promise! If she promises me,
- she'll marry me, Bathsheba is a woman to her word."
- IV
- Troy was sitting in a corner of The White Hart
- tavern at Casterbridge, smoking and drinking a steaming
- mixture from a glass. A knock was given at the door,
- and Pennyways entered.
- "Well, have you seen him?" Troy inquired, pointing
- to a chair.
- "Boldwood?"
- "No -- Lawyer Long."
- "He wadn' at home. I went there first, too."
- "That's a nuisance."
- "'Tis rather, I suppose."
- "Yet I don't see that, because a man appears to be
- drowned and was not, he should be liable for anything.
- I shan't ask any lawyer -- not I."
- "But that's not it, exactly. If a man changes his
- name and so forth, and takes steps to deceive the world
- and his own wife, he's a cheat, and that in the eye of
- the law is ayless a rogue, and that is ayless a lammocken
- vagabond; and that's a punishable situation."
- "Ha-ha! Well done, Pennyways." Troy had laughed,
- but it was with some anxiety that he said, "Now, what
- I want to know is this, do you think there's really
- anything going on between her and Boldwood? Upon
- my soul, I should never have believed it! How she.
- must detest me! Have you found out whether she
- has encouraged him?"
- "I haen't been able to learn. There's a deal of
- feeling on his side seemingly, but I don't answer for
- her. I didn't know a word about any such thing till
- yesterday, and all I heard then was that she was gwine
- to the party at his house to-night. This is the first
- time she has ever gone there, they say. And they say
- that she've not so much as spoke to him since they were
- at Greenhill Fair: but what can folk believe o't? How-
- ever, she's not fond of him -- quite offish and quite care
- less, I know."
- "I'm not so sure of that.... She's a handsome
- woman, Pennyways, is she not? Own that you never
- saw a finer or more splendid creature in your life.
- Upon my honour, when I set eyes upon her that day
- I wondered what I could have been made of to be able
- to leave her by herself so long. And then I was
- hampered with that bothering show, which I'm free of
- at last, thank the stars." He smoked on awhile, and
- then added, "How did she look when you passed by
- yesterday?"
- "Oh, she took no great heed of me, ye may well
- fancy; but she looked well enough, far's I know. Just
- flashed her haughty eyes upon my poor scram body, and
- then let them go past me to what was yond, much as if
- I'd been no more than a leafless tree. She had just got
- off her mare to look at the last wring-down of cider for
- the year; she had been riding, and so her colours were
- up and her breath rather quick, so that her bosom
- plimmed and feli-plimmed and feli-every time plain
- to my eye. Ay, and there were the fellers round her
- wringing down the cheese and bustling about and
- saying, Ware o' the pommy, ma'am: 'twill spoil yer
- gown. "Never mind me," says she. Then Gabe
- brought her some of the new cider, and she must
- needs go drinking it through a strawmote, and not in
- a nateral way at all. "Liddy," says she, "bring indoors
- a few gallons, and I'll make some cider-wine." Sergeant,
- I was no more to her than a morsel of scroffin the fuel
- house!"
- "I must go and find her out at once -- O yes, I see
- that-i must go. Oak is head man still, isn't he?"
- "Yes, 'a b'lieve. And at Little Weatherbury Farm
- too. He manages everything."
- "Twill puzzle him to manage her, or any other man
- of his compass!"
- "I don't know about that. She can't do without
- him, and knowing it well he's pretty independent.
- And she've a few soft corners to her mind, though
- I've never been able to get into one, the devil's in't!"
- "Ah baily she's a notch above you, and you must
- own it: a higher class of animal-a finer tissue. How-
- ever, stick to me, and neither this haughty goddess,
- dashing piece of womanhood, Juno-wife of mine (Juno
- was a goddess, you know), nor anybody else shall hurt
- you. But all this wants looking into, I perceive.
- What with one thing and another, I see that my work
- is well cut out for me."
- V
- "How do I look to-night, Liddy?" said Bathsheba,
- giving a final adjustment to her dress before leaving the
- glass.
- "I never saw you look so well before. Yes-i'll tell
- you when you looked like it -- that night, a year and a
- half ago, when you came in so wildlike, and scolded us
- for making remarks about you and Mr. Troy."
- "Everybody will think that I am setting myself to
- captivate Mr. Boldwood, I suppose." she murmured.
- "At least they'll say so. Can't my hair be brushed
- down a little flatter? I dread going -- yet I dread the
- risk of wounding him by staying away."Anyhow, ma'am, you can't well be
- dressed plainer
- than you are, unless you go in sackcloth at once. 'Tis
- your excitement is what makes you look so noticeable
- to-night."
- "I don't know what's the matter, I feel wretched at
- one time, and buoyant at another. I wish I could have
- continued quite alone as I have been for the last year
- or so, with no hopes and no fears, and no pleasure and
- no grief.
- "Now just suppose Mr. Boldwood should ask you
- -- only just suppose it -- to run away with him, what
- would you do, ma'am?"
- "Liddy -- none of that." said Bathsheba, gravely.
- "Mind, I won't hear joking on any such matter. Do
- you hear?"
- "I beg pardon, ma'am. But knowing what rum
- things we women be, I just said -- however, I won't
- speak of it again."
- "No marrying for me yet for many a year; if ever,
- "twill be for reasons very, very different from those you
- think, or others will believe! Now get my cloak, for it
- is time to go."
- VI
- "Oak, said Boldwood, "before you go I want to
- mention what has been passing in my mind lately --
- that little arrangement we made about your share in the
- farm I mean. That share is small, too small, consider-
- ing how little I attend to business now, and how much
- time and thought you give to it. Well, since the world
- is brightening for me, I want to show my sense of it
- by increasing your proportion in the partnership. I'll
- make a memorandum of the arrangement which struck
- me as likely to be convenient, for I haven't time to talk
- about it now; and then we'll discuss it at our leisure.
- My intention is ultimately to retire from the manage-
- ment altogether, and until you can take all the expendi-
- ture upon your shoulders, I'll be a sleeping partner in
- the stock. Then, if I marry her -- and I hope-i feel I
- shall, why -- -- "
- "Pray don't speak of it, sir." said Oak, hastily. "We
- don't know what may happen. So many upsets may
- befall 'ee. There's many a slip, as they say -- and I
- would advise you-i know you'll pardon me this once --
- not to be TOO SURE."
- "I know, I know. But the feeling I have about in-
- creasing your share is on account of what I know of you
- Oak, I have learnt a little about your secret: your
- interest in her is more than that of bailiff for an em-
- ployer. But you have behaved like a man, and I, as a
- sort of successful rival-successful partly through your
- goodness of heart -- should like definitely to show my
- sense of your friendship under what must have been a
- great pain to you."
- "O that's not necessary, thank 'ee." said Oak,
- hurriedly. "I must get used to such as that; other
- men have, and so shall I."
- Oak then left him. He was uneasy on Boldwood's
- account, for he saw anew that this constant passion
- of the farmer made him not the man he once had
- been.
- As Boldwood continued awhile in his room alone --
- ready and dressed to receive his company -- the mood of
- anxiety about his appearance seemed to pass away, and
- to be succeeded by a deep solemnity. He looked out
- of the window, and regarded the dim outline of the trees
- upon the sky, and the twilight deepening to darkness.
- Then he went to a locked closet, and took from
- a locked drawer therein a small circular case the size of
- a pillbox, and was about to put it into his pocket. But
- he lingered to open the cover and take a momentary
- glance inside. It contained a woman's finger-ring, set
- all the way round with small diamonds, and from its
- appearance had evidently been recently purchased.
- Boldwood's eyes dwelt upon its many sparkles a long
- time, though that its material aspect concerned him
- little was plain from his manner and mien, which were
- those of a mind following out the presumed thread of
- that jewel's future history.
- The noise of wheels at the front of the house became
- audible. Boldwood closed the box, stowed it away
- carefully in his pocket, and went out upon the landing.
- The old man who was his indoor factotum came at the
- same moment to the foot of the stairs.
- "They be coming, sir -- lots of 'em -- a-foot and a-
- driving!"
- "I was coming down this moment. Those wheels I
- heard -- is it Mrs. Troy?"
- "No, sir -- 'tis not she yet."
- A reserved and sombre expression had returned to
- Boldwood's face again, but it poorly cloaked his feel-
- ings when he pronounced Bathsheba's name; and his
- feverish anxiety continued to show its existence by a
- galloping motion of his fingers upon the side of his thigh
- as he went down the stairs.
- VII
- "How does this cover me?" said Troy to Pennyways,
- "Nobody would recognize me now, I'm sure."
- He was buttoning on a heavy grey overcoat of
- Noachian cut, with cape and high collar, the latter being
- erect and rigid, like a girdling wall, and nearly reaching
- to the verge of travelling cap which was pulled down
- over his ears.
- Pennyways snuffed the candle, and then looked up
- and deliberately inspected Troy
- "You've made up your mind to go then?" he
- said.
- "Made up my mind? Yes; of course I have."
- "Why not write to her? 'Tis a very queer corner
- that you have got into, sergeant. You see all these things
- will come to light if you go back, and they won't sound
- well at all. Faith, if I was you I'd even bide as you be
- -- a single man of the name of Francis. A good wife is
- good, but the best wife is not so good as no wife at all.
- Now that's my outspoke mind, and I've been called a
- long-headed feller here and there."
- "All nonsense!" said Troy, angrily. "There she is
- with plenty of money, and a house and farm, and
- horses, and comfort, and here am I living from hand to
- mouth -- a needy adventurer. Besides, it is no use
- talking now; it is too late, and I am glad of it; I've been
- seen and recognized here this very afternoon. I should
- have gone back to her the day after the fair, if it hadn't
- been for you talking about the law, and rubbish about
- getting a separation; and I don't put it off any longer.
- What the deuce put it into my head to run away at all,
- I can't think! Humbugging sentiment -- that's what it
- was. But what man on earth was to know that his wife
- would be in such a hurry to get rid of his name!"
- "I should have known it. She's bad enough for
- anything."
- "Pennyways, mind who you are talking to."
- "Well, sergeant, all I say is this, that if I were you I'd
- go abroad again where I came from -- 'tisn't too late to do
- it now. I wouldn't stir up the business and get a bad
- name for the sake of living with her -- for all that about
- your play-acting is sure to come out, you know, although
- you think otherwise. My eyes and limbs, there'll be a
- racket if you go back just now -- in the middle of Bold-
- wood's Christmasing!"
- "H'm, yes. I expect I shall not be a very welcome
- guest if he has her there." said the sergeant, with a slight
- laugh. "A sort of Alonzo the Brave; and when I go in
- the guests will sit in silence and fear, and all laughter
- and pleasure will be hushed, and the lights in the
- chamber burn blue, and the worms -- Ugh, horrible! --
- Ring for some more brandy, Pennyways, I felt an
- awful shudder just then! Well, what is there besides?
- A stick-i must have a walking-stick."
- Pennyways now felt himself to be in something of a
- difficulty, for should Bathsheba and Troy become recon-
- ciled it would be necessary to regain her good opinion
- if he would secure the patronage of her husband. I
- sometimes think she likes you yet, and is a good woman
- at bottom." he said, as a saving sentence. "But there's
- no telling to a certainty from a body's outside. Well,
- you'll do as you like about going, of course, sergeant,
- and as for me, I'll do as you tell me."
- "Now, let me see what the time is." said Troy, after
- emptying his glass in one draught as he stood. 'Half-
- past six o'clock. I shall not hurry along the road, and
- shall be there then before nine."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIII
-
-
-
- CONCURRITUR -- HORAE MOMENTO
-
-
- OUTSIDE the front of Boldwood's house a group of
- men stood in the dark, with their faces towards the door,
- which occasionally opened and closed for the passage of
- some guest or servant, when a golden rod of light would
- stripe the ground for the moment and vanish again,
- leaving nothing outside but the glowworm shine of the
- pale lamp amid the evergreens over the door.
- "He was seen in Casterbridge this afternoon -- so the
- boy said." one of them remarked in a whisper. "And l
- for one believe it. His body was never found, you know."
- "'Tis a strange story." said the next. "You may
- depend upon't that she knows nothing about it."
- "Not a word."
- "Perhaps he don't mean that she shall." said another
- man.
- "If he's alive and here in the neighbourhood, he
- means mischief." said the first. "Poor young thing:
- I do pity her, if 'tis true. He'll drag her to the dogs."
- "O no; he'll settle down quiet enough." said one
- disposed to take a more hopeful view of the case.
- "What a fool she must have been ever to have had
- anything to do with the man! She is so self-willed and
- independent too, that one is more minded to say it
- serves her right than pity her."
- "No, no. I don't hold with 'ee there. She was no
- otherwise than a girl mind, and how could she tell what
- the man was made of? If 'tis really true, 'tis too hard
- a punishment, and more than she ought to hae. -- Hullo,
- who's that?" This was to some footsteps that were
- heard approaching.
- "William Smallbury." said a dim figure in the shades,
- coming up and joining them. "Dark as a hedge, to-
- night, isn't it? I all but missed the plank over the river
- ath'art there in the bottom -- never did such a thing
- before in my life. Be ye any of Boldwood's workfolk?"
- He peered into their faces.
- "Yes -- all o' us. We met here a few minutes ago."
- "Oh, I hear now -- that's Sam Samway: thought I
- knowed the voice, too. Going in?"
- "Presently. But I say, William." Samway whispered,
- "have ye heard this strange tale?"
- "What -- that about Sergeant Troy being seen, d'ye
- mean, souls?" said Smallbury, also lowering his voice.
- "Ay: in Casterbridge."
- "Yes, I have. Laban Tall named a hint of it to me
- but now -- but I don't think it. Hark, here Laban
- comes himself, 'a b'lieve." A footstep drew near.
- "Laban?"
- "Yes, 'tis I." said Tall.
- "Have ye heard any more about that?"
- "No." said Tall, joining the group. "And I'm in-
- clined to think we'd better keep quiet. If so be 'tis not
- true, 'twill flurry her, and do her much harm to repeat
- it; and if so be 'tis true, 'twill do no good to forestall
- her time o' trouble. God send that it mid be a lie, for
- though Henery Fray and some of 'em do speak against
- her, she's never been anything but fair to me. She's
- hot and hasty, but she's a brave girl who'll never tell a
- lie however much the truth may harm her, and I've no
- cause to wish her evil."
- "She never do tell women's little lies, that's true; and
- 'tis a thing that can be said of very few. Ay, all the
- harm she thinks she says to yer face: there's nothing
- underhand wi' her."
- They stood silent then, every man busied with his
- own thoughts, during which interval sounds of merri-
- ment could be heard within. Then the front door again
- opened, the rays streamed out, the wellknown form of
- Boldwood was seen in the rectangular area of light, the
- door closed, and Boldwood walked slowly down the path.
- "'Tis master." one of the men whispered, as he neared
- them. "We'd better stand quiet -- he'll go in again
- directly. He would think it unseemly o' us to be
- loitering here.
- Boldwood came on, and passed by the men without
- seeing them, they being under the bushes on the grass.
- He paused, leant over the gate, and breathed a long
- breath. They heard low words come from him.
- "I hope to God she'll come, or this night will be
- nothing but misery to me! O my darling, my darling,
- why do you keep me in suspense like this?"
- He said this to himself, and they all distinctly heard
- it. Boldwood remained silent after that, and the noise
- from indoors was again just audible, until, a few minutes
- later, light wheels could be distinguished coming down
- the hill. They drew nearer, and ceased at the gate.
- Boldwood hastened back to the door, and opened it;
- and the light shone upon Bathsheba coming up the
- path.
- Boldwood compressed his emotion to mere welcome:
- the men marked her light laugh and apology as she met
- him: he took her into the house; and the door closed
- again.
- "Gracious heaven, I didn't know it was like that with
- him!" said one of the men. "I thought that fancy of
- his was over long ago.
- "You don't know much of master, if you thought
- that." said Samway.
- "I wouldn't he should know we heard what 'a said
- for the world." remarked a third.
- "I wish we had told of the report at once." the first
- uneasily continued. "More harm may come of this than
- we know of. Poor Mr. Boldwood, it will, be hard upon
- en. I wish Troy was in -- -- Well, God forgive me
- for such a wish! A scoundrel to play a poor wife such
- tricks. Nothing has prospered in Weatherbury since he
- came here. And now I've no heart to go in. Let's
- look into Warren's for a few minutes first, shall us,
- neighbours?"
- Samway, Tall, and Smallbury agreed to go to Warren's,
- and went out at the gate, the remaining ones entering
- the house. The three soon drew near the malt-house,
- approaching it from the adjoining orchard, and not by
- way of the street. The pane of glass was illuminated
- as usual. Smallbury was a little in advance of the rest
- when, pausing, he turned suddenly to his companions
- and said, "Hist! See there."
- The light from the pane was now perceived to be
- shining not upon the ivied wall as usual, but upon some
- object close to the glass. It was a human face.
- "Let's come closer." whispered Samway; and they
- approached on tiptoe. There was no disbelieving the
- report any longer. Troy's face was almost close to the
- pane, and he was looking in. Not only was he looking in,
- but he appeared to have been arrested by a conversation
- which was in progress in the malt-house, the voices of
- the interlocutors being those of Oak and the maltster.
- "The spree is all in her honour, isn't it -- hey?" said
- the old man. "Although he made believe 'tis only
- keeping up o' Christmas?"
- "I cannot say." replied Oak.
- "O 'tis true enough, faith. I cannot understand
- Farmer Boldwood being such a fool at his time of life
- as to ho and hanker after thik woman in the way 'a do,
- and she not care a bit about en."
- The men, after recognizing Troy's features, withdrew
- across the orchard as quietly as they had come. The
- air was big with Bathsheba's fortunes to-night: every
- word everywhere concerned her. When they were quite
- out of earshot all by one instinct paused.
- "It gave me quite a turn -- his face." said Tall,
- breathing.
- "And so it did me." said Samway. "What's to be
- done?"
- "I don't see that 'tis any business of ours." Smallbury
- murmured dubiously.
- "But it is! 'Tis a thing which is everybody's business,
- said Samway. "We know very well that master's on a
- wrong tack, and that she's quite in the dark, and we
- should let 'em know at once. Laban, you know her
- best -- you'd better go and ask to speak to her."
- "I bain't fit for any such thing." said Laban, nervously.
- "I should think William ought to do it if anybody. He's
- oldest."
- "I shall have nothing to do with it." said Smallbury.
- "'Tis a ticklish business altogether. Why, he'll go on
- to her himself in a few minutes, ye'll see."
- "We don't know that he will. Come, Laban."
- "Very well, if I must I must, I suppose." Tall reluct-
- antly answered. "What must I say?"
- "Just ask to see master."
- "O no; I shan't speak to Mr. Boldwood. If I tell
- anybody, 'twill be mistress."
- "Very well." said Samway.
- Laban then went to the door. When he opened it
- the hum of bustle rolled out as a wave upon a still
- strand -- the assemblage being immediately inside the
- hall-and was deadened to a murmur as he closed it
- again. Each man waited intently, and looked around at
- the dark tree tops gently rocking against the sky and
- occasionally shivering in a slight wind, as if he took
- interest in the scene, which neither did. One of them
- began walking up and down, and then came to where
- he started from and stopped again, with a sense that
- walking was thing not worth doing now.
- "I should think Laban must have seen mistress by
- this time." said Smallbury, breaking the silence. "Per-
- haps she won't come and speak to him."
- The door opened. Tall appeared, and joined them
- "Well?" said both.
- "I didn't like to ask for her after all." Laban faltered
- out. "They were all in such a stir, trying to put a little
- spirit into the party. Somehow the fun seems to hang
- fire, though everything's there that a heart can desire,
- and I couldn't for my soul interfere and throw damp
- upon it -- if 'twas to save my life, I couldn't!"
- "I suppose we had better all go in together." said
- Samway, gloomily. "Perhaps I may have a chance of
- saying a word to master."
- So the men entered the hall, which was the room
- selected and arranged for the gathering because of its
- size. The younger men and maids were at last just
- beginning to dance. Bathsheba had been perplexed
- how to act, for she was not much more than a slim
- young maid herself, and the weight of stateliness sat
- heavy upon her. Sometimes she thought she ought
- not to have come under any circumstances; then she
- considered what cold unkindness that would have been,
- and finally resolved upon the middle course of staying
- for about an hour only, and gliding off unobserved,
- having from the first made up her mind that she could
- on no account dance, sing, or take any active part in
- the proceedings.
- Her allotted hour having been passed in chatting
- and looking on, Bathsheba told Liddy not to hurry her-
- self, and went to the small parlour to prepare for
- departure, which, like the hall, was decorated with holly
- and ivy, and well lighted up.
- Nobody was in the room, but she had hardly
- been there a moment when the master of the house
- entered.
- "Mrs. Troy -- you are not going?" he said. "We've
- hardly begun!"
- "If you'll excuse me, I should like to go now." Her
- manner was restive, for she remembered her promise,
- and imagined what he was about to say. "But as it is
- not late." she added, "I can walk home, and leave my
- man and Liddy to come when they choose."
- "I've been trying to get an opportunity of speaking
- to you." said Boldwood. "You know perhaps what I
- long to say?"
- Bathsheba silently looked on the floor.
- "You do give it?" he said, eagerly.
- "What?" she whispered.
- "Now, that's evasion! Why, the promise. I don't
- want to intrude upon you at all, or to let it become
- known to anybody. But do give your word! A
- mere business compact, you know, between two people
- who are beyond the influence of passion." Boldwood
- knew how false this picture was as regarded himself;
- but he had proved that it was the only tone in which
- she would allow him to approach her. "A promise to
- marry me at the end of five years and three-quarters.
- You owe it to me!"
- "I feel that I do." said Bathsheba; "that is, if you
- demand it. But I am a changed woman -- an unhappy
- woman -- and not -- not -- -- "
- "You are still a very beautiful woman, said Boldwood.
- Honesty and pure conviction suggested the remark,
- unaccompanied by any perception that it might have
- been adopted by blunt flattery to soothe and win her.
- However, it had not much effect now, for for she said,
- in a passionless murmur which was in itself a proof of
- her words: "I have no feeling in the matter at all.
- And I don't at all know what is right to do in my
- diddicult position, and I have nobody to advise me. But
- I give my promise, if I must. I give it as the rendering of
- a debt, conditionally, of course, on my being a widow."
- "You'll marry me between five and six years hence?"
- "Don't press me too hard. I'll marry nobody
- else."
- "But surely you will name the time, or there's nothing
- in the promise at all?"
- O, I don't know, pray let me go!" she said, her
- bosom beginning to rise. "I am afraid what to do!
- want to be just to you, and to be that seems to be wrong-
- ing myself, and perhaps it is breaking the commandments.
- There is considerable doubt of his death, and then it
- is dreadful; let me ask a solicitor, Mr. Boldwood, if I
- ought or no!"
- "Say the words, dear one, and the subject shall be
- dismissed; a blissful loving intimacy of six years, and
- then marriage -- O Bathsheba, say them!" he begged in
- a husky voice, unable to sustain the forms of mere
- friendship any longer. "Promise yourself to me; I
- deserve it, indeed I do, for I have loved you more than
- anybody in the world! And if I said hasty words and
- showed uncalled-for heat of manner towards you, believe
- me, dear, I did not mean to distress you; I was in
- agony, Bathsheba, and I did not know what I said.
- You wouldn't let a dog suffer what I have suffered,
- could you but know it! Sometimes I shrink from your
- knowing what I have felt for you, and sometimes I am
- distressed that all of it you never will know. Be
- gracious, and give up a little to me, when I would give
- up my life for you!"
- The trimmings of her dress, as they quivered against
- the light, showed how agitated she was, and at last she
- burst out crying. 'And you'll not -- press me -- about
- anything more -- if I say in five or six years?" she
- sobbed, when she had power to frame the words.
- "Yes, then I'll leave it to time."
- "Very well. If he does not return, I'll marry you
- in six years from this day, if we both live." she said
- solemnly.
- "And you'll take this as a token from me."
- Boldwood had come close to her side, and now he
- clasped one of her hands in both his own, and lifted it
- to his breast.
- "What is it? Oh I cannot wear a ring!" she ex-
- claimed, on seeing what he held; "besides, I wouldn't
- have a soul know that it's an engagement! Perhaps it
- is improper? Besides, we are not engaged in the usual
- sense, are we? Don't insist, Mr. Boldwood -- don't!"
- In her trouble at not being able to get her hand away
- from him at once, she stamped passionately on the floor
- with one foot, and tears crowded to her eyes again.
- "It means simply a pledge -- no sentiment -- the seal
- of a practical compact." he said more quietly, but still
- retaining her hand in his firm grasp. "Come, now!"
- And Boldwood slipped the ring on her finger.
- "I cannot wear it." she said, weeping as if her heart
- would break. "You frighten me, almost. So wild a
- scheme! Please let me go home!"
- "Only to-night: wear it just to-night, to please me!"
- Bathsheba sat down in a chair, and buried her face
- in her handkerchief, though Boldwood kept her hand
- yet. At length she said, in a sort of hopeless whisper --
- "Very well, then, I will to-night, if you wish it so
- earnestly. Now loosen my hand; I will, indeed I will
- wear it to-night."
- "And it shall be the beginning of a pleasant secret
- courtship of six years, with a wedding at the end?"
- "It must be, I suppose, since you will have it so!"
- she said, fairly beaten into non-resistance.
- Boldwood pressed her hand, and allowed it to drop
- in her lap. "I am happy now." he said. "God bless
- you!"
- He left the room, and when he thought she might
- be sufficiently composed sent one of the maids to her
- Bathsheba cloaked the effects of the late scene as she
- best could, followed the girl, and in a few moments
- came downstairs with her hat and cloak on, ready to go.
- To get to the door it was necessary to pass through the
- hall, and before doing so she paused on the bottom of
- the staircase which descended into one corner, to take
- a last look at the gathering.
- There was no music or dancing in progress just now.
- At the lower end, which had been arranged for the work-
- folk specially, a group conversed in whispers, and with
- clouded looks. Boldwood was standing by the fireplace,
- and he, too, though so absorbed in visions arising from
- her promise that he scarcely saw anything, seemed at
- that moment to have observed their peculiar manner,
- and their looks askance.
- "What is it you are in doubt about, men?" he said.
- One of them turned and replied uneasily: "It was
- something Laban heard of, that's all, sir."
- "News? Anybody married or engaged, born or
- dead?" inquired the farmer, gaily. "Tell it to us, Tall.
- One would think from your looks and mysterious ways
- that it was something very dreadful indeed."
- "O no, sir, nobody is dead." said Tall.
- "I wish somebody was." said Samway, in a whisper.
- "What do you say, Samway?" asked Boldwood, some-
- what sharply. "If you have anything to say, speak out;
- if not, get up another dance."
- "Mrs. Troy has come downstairs." said Samway to
- Tall. "If you want to tell her, you had better do it now."
- "Do you know what they mean?" the farmer asked
- Bathsheba, across the room.
- "I don't in the least," said Bathsheba.
- There was a smart rapping at the door. One of
- the men opened it instantly, and went outside.
- "Mrs. Troy is wanted." he said, on returning.
- "Quite ready." said Bathsheba. "Though I didn't
- tell them to send."
- "It is a stranger, ma'am." said the man by the door.
- "A stranger?" she said.
- "Ask him to come in." said Boldwood.
- The message was given, and Troy, wrapped up to
- his eyes as we have seen him, stood in the doorway.
- There was an unearthly silence, all looking towards
- the newcomer. Those who had just learnt that he
- was in the neighbourhood recognized him instantly;
- those who did not were perplexed. Nobody noted
- Bathsheba. She was leaning on the stairs. Her brow
- had heavily contracted; her whole face was pallid, her
- lips apart, her eyes rigidly staring at their visitor.
- Boldwood was among those who did not notice that
- he was Troy. "Come in, come in!" he repeated,
- cheerfully, "and drain a Christmas beaker with us,
- stranger!"
- Troy next advanced into the middle of the room,
- took off his cap, turned down his coat-collar, and looked
- Boldwood in the face. Even then Boldwood did not
- recognize that the impersonator of Heaven's persistent
- irony towards him, who had once before broken in
- upon his bliss, scourged him, and snatched his delight
- away, had come to do these things a second time.
- Troy began to laugh a mechanical laugh: Boldwood
- recognized him now.
- Troy turned to Bathsheba. The poor girl's wretched-
- ness at this time was beyond all fancy or narration.
- She had sunk down on the lowest stair; and there
- she sat, her mouth blue and dry, and her dark eyes
- fixed vacantly upon him, as if she wondered whether it
- were not all a terrible illusion.
- Then Troy spoke. "Bathsheba, I come here for
- you!"
- She made no reply.
- "Come home with me: come!
- Bathsheba moved her feet a little, but did not rise.
- Troy went across to her.
- "Come, madam, do you hear what I say?" he said,
- peremptorily.
- A strange voice came from the fireplace -- a voice
- sounding far off and confined, as if from a dungeon.
- Hardly a soul in the assembly recognized the thin tones
- to be those of Boldwood. Sudden dispaire had trans-
- formed him.
- "Bathsheba, go with your husband!"
- Nevertheless, she did not move. The truth was
- that Bathsheba was beyond the pale of activity -- and
- yet not in a swoon. She was in a state of mental GUTTA
- SERENA; her mind was for the minute totally deprived of
- light at the same time no obscuration was apparent
- from without.
- Troy stretched out his hand to pull her her towards him,
- when she quickly shrank back. This visible dread of
- him seemed to irritate Troy, and he seized her arm and
- pulled it sharply. Whether his grasp pinched her, or
- whether his mere touch was the 'cause, was never known,
- but at the moment of his seizure she writhed, and gave
- a quick, low scream.
- The scream had been heard but a few seconds When
- it was followed by sudden deafening report that
- echoed through the room and stupefied them all. The
- oak partition shook with the concussion, and the place
- was filled with grey smoke.
- In bewilderment they turned their eyes to Boldwood.
- at his back, as stood before the fireplace, was a gun-
- rack, as is usual in farmhouses, constructed to hold two
- guns. When Bathsheba had cried out in her husband's
- grasp, Boldwood's face of gnashing despair had changed.
- The veins had swollen, and a frenzied look had gleamed
- in his eye. He had turned quickly, taken one of the
- guns, cocked it, and at once discharged it at Troy.
- Troy fell. The distance apart of the two men was
- so small that the charge of shot did not spread in the
- least, but passed like a bullet into his body. He uttered
- a long guttural sigh -- there was a contraction -- an exten-
- sion -- then his muscles relaxed, and he lay still.
- Boldwood was seen through the smoke to be now
- again engaged with the gun. It was double-barrelled,
- and he had, meanwhile, in some way fastened his hand-
- kerchief to the trigger, and with his foot on the other
- end was in the act of turning the second barrel upon
- himself. Samway his man was the first to see this, and
- in the midst of the general horror darted up to him.
- Boldwood had already twitched the handkerchief, and
- the gun exploded a second time, sending its contents,
- by a timely blow from Samway, into the beam which
- crossed the ceiling.
- "Well, it makes no difference!" Boldwood gasped.
- "There is another way for me to die."
- Then he broke from Samway, crossed the room to
- Bathsheba, and kissed her hand. He put on his hat,
- opened the door, and went into the darkness, nobody
- thinking of preventing him.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIV
-
-
-
- AFTER THE SHOCK
-
-
- BOLDWOOD passed into the high road and turned
- in the direction of Casterbridge. Here he walked at
- an even, steady pace over Yalbury Hill, along the dead
- level beyond, mounted Mellstock Hill, and between
- eleven and twelve o'clock crossed the Moor into the town.
- The streets were nearly deserted now, and the waving
- lamp-flames only lighted up rows of grey shop-shutters,
- and strips of white paving upon which his step echoed
- as his passed along. He turned to the right, and halted
- before an archway of heavy stonework, which was closed
- by an iron studded pair of doors. This was the entrance
- to the gaol, and over it a lamp was fixed, the light en-
- abling the wretched traveller to find a bellpull.
- The small wicket at last opened, and a porter
- appeared. Boldwood stepped forward, and said some-
- thing in a low tone, when, after a delay, another man
- came. Boldwood entered, and the door was closed
- behind him, and he walked the world no more.
- Long before this time Weatherbury had been
- thoroughly aroused, and the wild deed which had ter-
- minated Boldwood's merrymaking became known to
- all. Of those out of the house Oak was one of the
- first to hear of the catastrophe, and when he entered
- the room, which was about five minutes after Boldwood's
- exit, the scene was terrible. All the female guests were
- huddled aghast against the walls like sheep in a storm,
- and the men were bewildered as to what to do. As for
- Bathsheba, she had changed. She was sitting on the
- floor beside the body of Troy, his head pillowed in her
- lap, where she had herself lifted it. With one hand she
- held her handkerchief to his breast and covered the
- wound, though scarcely a single drop of blood had
- flowed, and with the other she tightly clasped one of
- his. The household convulsion had made her herself
- again. The temporary coma had ceased, and activity
- had come with the necessity for it. Deeds of endur-
- ance, which seem ordinary in philosophy, are rare in
- conduct, and Bathsheba was astonishing all around her
- now, for her philosophy was her conduct, and she
- seldom thought practicable what she did not practise.
- She was of the stuff of which great men's mothers
- are made. She was indispensable to high generation,
- hated at tea parties, feared in shops, and loved at crises.
- Troy recumbent in his wife's lap formed now the sole
- spectacle in the middle of the spacious room.
- "Gabriel." she said, automatically, when he entered,
- turning up a face of which only the wellknown lines
- remained to tell him it was hers, all else in the picture
- having faded quite. "Ride to Casterbridge instantly
- for a surgeon. It is, I believe, useless, but go. Mr.
- Boldwood has shot my husband."
- Her statement of the fact in such quiet and simple
- words came with more force than a tragic declamation,
- and had somewhat the effect of setting the distorted
- images in each mind present into proper focus. Oak,
- almost before he had comprehended anything beyond
- the briefest abstract of the event, hurried out of the
- room, saddled a horse and rode away. Not till he had
- ridden more than a mile did it occur to him that he
- would have done better by sending some other man
- on this errand, remaining himself in the house. What
- had become of Boldwood? He should have been
- looked after. Was he mad -- had there been a quarrel?
- Then how had Troy got there? Where had he come
- from? How did this remarkable reappearance effect
- itself when he was supposed by many to be at the
- bottom of the sea? Oak had in some slight measure
- been prepared for the presence of Troy by hearing a
- rumour of his return just before entering Boldwood's
- house; but before he had weighed that information, this
- fatal event had been superimposed. However, it was too
- late now to think of sending another messenger, and
- he rode on, in the excitement of these self-inquiries
- not discerning, when about three miles from Caster-
- bridge, a square-figured pedestrian passing along
- under the dark hedge in the same direction as his
- own.
- The miles necessary to be traversed, and other
- hindrances incidental to the lateness of the hour and
- the darkness of the night, delayed the arrival of Mr,
- Aldritch, the surgeon; and more than three hours
- passed between the time at which the shot was fired
- and that of his entering the house. Oak was addition-
- ally detained in Casterbridge through having to give
- notice to the authorities of what had happened; and
- he then found that Boldwood had also entered the
- town, and delivered himself up.
- In the meantime the surgeon, having hastened into
- the hall at Boldwood's, found it in darkness and quite
- deserted. He went on to the back of the house,
- where he discovered in the kitchen an old man, of
- whom he made inquiries.
- "She's had him took away to her own house, sir,"
- said his informant.
- "Who has?" said the doctor.
- "Mrs. Troy. 'A was quite dead, sir."
- This was astonishing information. "She had no
- right to do that." said the doctor. "There will have
- to be an inquest, and she should have waited to know
- what to do."
- "Yes, sir; it was hinted to her that she had better
- wait till the law was known. But she said law was
- nothing to her, and she wouldn't let her dear husband's
- corpse bide neglected for folks to stare at for all the
- crowners in England."
- Mr. Aldritch drove at once back again up the
- hill to Bathsheba's. The first person he met was
- poor Liddy, who seemed literally to have dwindled
- smaller in these few latter hours. "What has been
- done?" he said.
- "I don't know, sir." said Liddy, with suspended
- breath. "My mistress has done it all."
- "Where is she?"
- "Upstairs with him, sir. When he was brought
- home and taken upstairs, she said she wanted no
- further help from the men. And then she called me,
- and made me fill the bath, and after that told me I
- had better go and lie down because I looked so ill.
- Then she locked herself into the room alone with him,
- and would not let a nurse come in, or anybody at all.
- But I thought I'd wait in the next room in case she
- should want me. I heard her moving about inside
- for more than an hour, but she only came out once,
- and that was for more candles, because hers had burnt
- down into the socket. She said we were to let her
- know when you or Mr. Thirdly came, sir."
- Oak entered with the parson at this moment, and
- they all went upstairs together, preceded by Liddy
- Smallbury. Everything was silent as the grave when
- they paused on the landing. Liddy knocked, and
- Bathsheba's dress was heard rustling across the room:
- the key turned in the lock, and she opened the door.
- Her looks were calm and nearly rigid, like a slightly
- animated bust of Melpomene.
- "Oh, Mr. Aldritch, you have come at last." she
- murmured from her lips merely, and threw back the
- door. "Ah, and Mr. Thirdly. Well, all is done, and
- anybody in the world may see him now." She then
- passed by him, crossed the landing, and entered
- another room.
- Looking into the chamber of death she had vacated
- they saw by the light of the candles which were on the
- drawers a tall straight shape lying at the further end
- of the bedroom, wrapped in white. Everything around
- was quite orderly. The doctor went in, and after a
- few minutes returned to the landing again, where
- Oak and the parson still waited.
- "It is all done, indeed, as she says." remarked Mr.
- Aldritch, in a subdued voice. "The body has been
- undressed and properly laid out in grave clothes.
- Gracious Heaven -- this mere girl! She must have the
- nerve of a stoic!"
- "The heart of a wife merely." floated in a whisper
- about the ears of the three, and turning they saw
- Bathsheba in the midst of them. Then, as if at that
- instant to prove that her fortitude had been more of
- will than of spontaneity, she silently sank down between
- them and was a shapeless heap of drapery on the floor.
- The simple consciousness that superhuman strain was
- no longer required had at once put a period to her
- power to continue it.
- They took her away into a further room, and the
- medical attendance which had been useless in Troy's
- case was invaluable in Bathsheba's, who fell into a
- series of fainting-fits that had a serious aspect for a
- time. The sufferer was got to bed, and Oak, finding
- from the bulletins that nothing really dreadful was to
- be apprehended on her score, left the house. Liddy
- kept watch in Bathsheba's chamber, where she heard
- her mistress, moaning in whispers through the dull
- slow hours of that wretched night: "O it is my fault
- -- how can I live! O Heaven, how can I live!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LV
-
-
-
- THE MARCH FOLLOWING -- "BATHSHEBA BOLDWOOD"
-
-
- WE pass rapidly on into the month of March, to a
- breezy day without sunshine, frost, or dew. On Yai*-
- bury Hill, about midway between Weatherbury and
- Casterbridge, where the turnpike road passes over
- the crest, a numerous concourse of people had
- gathered, the eyes of the greater number being fre-
- quently stretched afar in a northerly direction. The
- groups consisted of a throng of idlers, a party of
- javelin-men, and two trumpeters, and in the midst
- were carriages, one of which contained the high
- sheriff. With the idlers, many of whom had mounted
- to the top of a cutting formed for the road, were several
- Weatherbury men and boys -- among others Poorgrass,
- Coggan, and Cain Ball.
- At the end of half-an-hour a faint dust was seen in
- the expected quarter, and shortly after a travelling-
- carriage, bringing one of the two judges on the Western
- Circuit, came up the hill and halted on the top. The
- judge changed carriages whilst a flourish was blown
- by the big-cheeked trumpeters, and a procession being
- formed of the vehicles and javelin-men, they all pro-
- ceeded towards the town, excepting the Weatherbury
- men, who as soon as they had seen the judge move
- off returned home again to their work.
- "Joseph, I seed you squeezing close to the carriage,"
- said Coggan, as they walked. "Did ye notice my lord
- judge's face?"
- "I did." said Poorgrass. "I looked hard at en, as
- if I would read his very soul; and there was mercy
- in his eyes -- or to speak with the exact truth required
- of us at this solemn time, in the eye that was towards
- me."
- "Well, I hope for the best." said Coggan, though
- bad that must be. However, I shan't go to the trial,
- and I'd advise the rest of ye that bain't wanted to bide
- away. 'Twill disturb his mind more than anything to
- see us there staring at him as if he were a show."
- "The very thing I said this morning." observed Joseph,
- "Justice is come to weigh him in the balances," I said
- in my reflectious way, "and if he's found wanting, so
- be it unto him," and a bystander said "Hear, hear,
- A man who can talk like that ought to be heard."
- But I don't like dwelling upon it, for my few words
- are my few words, and not much; though the speech
- of some men is rumoured abroad as though by nature
- formed for such."
- "So 'tis, Joseph. And now, neighbours, as I said,
- every man bide at home."
- The resolution was adhered to; and all waited
- anxiously for the news next day. Their suspense
- was diverted, however, by a discovery which was made
- in the afternoon, throwing more light on Boldwood's
- conduct and condition than any details which had
- preceded it.
- That he had been from the time of Greenhill Fair
- until the fatal Christmas Eve in excited and unusual
- moods was known to those who had been intimate
- with him; but nobody imagined that there had shown
- in him unequivocal symptoms of the mental derange-
- ment which Bathsheba and Oak, alone of all others
- and at different times, had momentarily suspected.
- In a locked closet was now discovered an extraordinary
- collection of articles. There were several sets of ladies"
- dresses in the piece, of sundry expensive materials;
- silks and satins, poplins and velvets, all of colours
- which from Bathsheba's style of dress might have been
- judged to be her favourites. There were two muffs,
- sable and ermine. Above all there was a case of
- jewellery, containing four heavy gold bracelets and
- several lockets and rings, all of fine quality and manu-
- facture. These things had been bought in Bath and
- other towns from time to time, and brought home by
- stealth. They were all carefully packed in paper, and
- each package was labelled " Bathsheba Boldwood." a
- date being subjoined six years in advance in every
- instance.
- These somewhat pathetic evidences of a mind crazed
- with care and love were the subject of discourse in
- Warren's malt-house when Oak entered from Caster-
- bridge with tidings of the kiln glow shone upon
- it, told the tale sufficiently well. Boldwood, as every
- one supposed he would do, had pleaded guilty, and
- had been sentenced to death.
- The conviction that Boldwood had not been morally
- responsible for his later acts now became general. Facts
- elicited previous to the trial had pointed strongly in the
- same direction, but they had not been of sufficient weight
- to lead to an order for an examination into the state
- of Boldwood's mind. It was astonishing, now that a
- presumption of insanity was raised, how many collateral
- circumstances were remembered to which a condition
- of mental disease seemed to afford the only explanation
- -- among others, the unprecedented neglect of his corn
- stacks in the previous summer.
- A petition was addressed to the Home Secretary,
- advancing the circumstances which appeared to justify
- a request for a reconsideration of the sentence. It was
- not "numerously signed" by the inhabitants of Caster-
- bridge, as is usual in such cases, for Boldwood had
- never made many friends over the counter. The shops
- thought it very natural that a man who, by importing
- direct from the producer, had daringly set aside the
- first great principle of provincial existence, namely
- that God made country villages to supply customers
- to county towns, should have confused ideas about
- the Decalogue. The prompters were a few merciful
- men who had perhaps too feelingly considered the
- facts latterly unearthed, and the result was that evidence
- was taken which it was hoped might remove the crime
- in a moral point of view, out of the category of wilful
- murder, and lead it to be regarded as a sheer outcome
- of madness.
- The upshot of the petition was waited for in Weather-
- bury with solicitous interest. The execution had been
- fixed for eight o'clock on a Saturday morning about a
- fortnight after the sentence was passed, and up to
- Friday afternoon no answer had been received. At
- that time Gabriel came from Casterbridge Gaol, whither
- he had been to wish Boldwood good-bye, and turned
- down a by-street to avoid the town. When past the last
- house he heard a hammering, and lifting his bowed
- head he looked back for a moment. Over the chimneys
- he could see the upper part of the gaol entrance, rich
- and glowing in the afternoon sun, and some moving
- figures were there. They were carpenters lifting a post
- into a vertical position within the parapet. He with-
- drew his eyes quickly, and hastened on.
- It was dark when he reached home, and half the
- village was out to meet him.
- "No tidings." Gabriel said, wearily. "And I'm afraid
- there's no hope. I've been with him more than two
- hours."
- "Do ye think he REALLY was out of his mind when he
- did it?" said Smallbury.
- "I can't honestly say that I do." Oak replied. "How-
- ever, that we can talk of another time. Has there been
- any change in mistress this afternoon?"
- "None at all."
- "Is she downstairs?"
- "No. And getting on so nicely as she was too.
- She's but very little better now again than she was at
- Christmas. She keeps on asking if you be come, and
- if there's news, till one's wearied out wi' answering her.
- Shall I go and say you've come?"
- "No." said Oak. "There's a chance yet; but I
- couldn't stay in town any longer -- after seeing him too,
- So Laban -- Laban is here, isn't he?"
- "Yes." said Tall.
- "What I've arranged is, that you shall ride to town
- the last thing to-night; leave here about nine, and wait
- a while there, getting home about twelve. If nothing
- has been received by eleven to-night, they say there's
- no chance at all."
- "I do so hope his life will be spared." said Liddy.
- "If it is not, she'll go out of her mind too. Poor thing;
- her sufferings have been dreadful; she deserves any-
- body's pity."
- "Is she altered much?" said Coggan.
- "If you haven't seen poor mistress since Christmas,
- you wouldn't know her." said Liddy. "Her eyes are so
- miserable that she's not the same woman. Only two
- years ago she was a romping girl, and now she's this!"
- Laban departed as directed, and at eleven o'clock
- that night several of the villagers strolled along the
- road to Casterbridge and awaited his arrival-among
- them Oak, and nearly all the rest of Bathsheba's men.
- Gabriel's anxiety was great that Boldwood might be
- saved, even though in his conscience he felt that he
- ought to die; for there had been qualities in the farmer
- which Oak loved. At last, when they all were weary
- the tramp of a horse was heard in the distance --
- First dead, as if on turf it trode,
- Then, clattering on the village road
- In other pace than forth he yode.
- "We shall soon know now, one way or other." said
- Coggan, and they all stepped down from the bank on
- which they had been standing into the road, and the
- rider pranced into the midst of them.
- "Is that you, Laban?" said Gabriel.
- "Yes -- 'tis come. He's not to die. 'Tis confine-
- ment during her Majesty's pleasure."
- "Hurrah!" said Coggan, with a swelling heart. "God's
- above the devil yet!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVI
-
-
-
- BEAUTY IN LONELINESS -- AFTER ALL
-
-
- BATHSHEBA revived with the spring. The utter
- prostration that had followed the low fever from which
- she had suffered diminished perceptibly when all un-
- certainty upon every subject had come to an end.
- But she remained alone now for the greater part of
- her time, and stayed in the house, or at furthest went
- into the garden. She shunned every one, even Liddy,
- and could be brought to make no confidences, and to
- ask for no sympathy.
- As the summer drew on she passed more of her time
- in the open air, and began to examine into farming
- matters from sheer necessity, though she never rode
- out or personally superintended as at former times.
- One Friday evening in August she walked a little way
- along the road and entered the village for the first time
- since the sombre event of the preceding Christmas.
- None of the old colour had as yet come to her cheek,
- and its absolute paleness was heightened by the jet black
- of her gown, till it appeared preternatural. When she
- reached a little shop at the other end of the place,
- which stood nearly opposite to the churchyard, Bath-
- sheba heard singing inside the church, and she knew
- that the singers were practising. She crossed the road,
- opened the gate, and entered the graveyard, the high
- sills of the church windows effectually screening her
- from the eyes of those gathered within. Her stealthy
- walk was to the nook wherein Troy had worked at
- planting flowers upon Fanny Robin's grave, and she
- came to the marble tombstone.
- A motion of satisfaction enlivened her face as she
- read the complete inscription. First came the words of
- Troy himself: --
- ERECTED BY FRANCIS TROY
- IN BELOVED MEMORY OF
- FANNY ROBIN,
- WHO DIED OCTOBER 9, 18 -- ,
- AGED 20 YEARS.
- Underneath this was now inscribed in new letters: --
- IN THE SAME GRAVE LIE
- THE REMAINS OF THE AFORESAID
- FRANCIS TROY,
- WHO DIED DECEMBER 24TH, 18 -- ,
- Whilst she stood and read and meditated the tones of
- the organ began again in the church, and she went
- with the same light step round to the porch and listened.
- The door was closed, and the choir was learning a new
- hymn. Bathsheba was stirred by emotions which
- latterly she had assumed to be altogether dead within
- her. The little attenuated voices of the children
- brought to her ear in destinct utterance the words they
- sang without thought or comprehension --
- Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
- Lead Thou me on.
- Bathsheba's feeling was always to some extent de-
- pendent upon her whim, as is the case with many other
- women. Something big came into her throat and an
- uprising to her eyes -- and she thought that she would
- allow the imminent tears to flow if they wished. They
- did flow and plenteously, and one fell upon the stone
- bench beside her. Once that she had begun to cry for
- she hardly knew what, she could not leave off for crowd-
- ing thoughts she knew too well. She would have given
- anything in the world to be, as those children were, un-
- concerned at the meaning of their words, because too
- innocent to feel the necessity for any such expression.
- All the impassioned scenes of her brief expenence
- seemed to revive with added emotion at that moment,
- and those scenes which had been without emotion
- during enactment had emotion then. Yet grief came
- to her rather as a luxury than as the scourge of former
- times.
- Owing to Bathsheba's face being buried in her hands
- she did not notice a form which came quietly into the
- porch, and on seeing her, first moved as if to retreat,
- then paused and regarded her. Bathsheba did not raise
- her head for some time, and when she looked round
- her face was wet, and her eyes drowned and dim. "Mr.
- Oak." exclaimed she, disconcerted, " how long have you
- been here?"
- "A few minutes, ma'am." said Oak, respectfully.
- "Are you going in?" said Bathsheba; and there came
- from within the church as from a prompter --
- l loved the garish day, and, spite of fears,
- pride ruled my will: remember not past years.
- "I was." said Gabriel. "I am one of the bass singers,
- you know. I have sung bass for several months.
- "Indeed: I wasn't aware of that. I'll leave you, then."
- which I have loved long since, and lost awhile,
- sang the children.
- "Don't let me drive you away, mistress. I think I
- won't go in to-night."
- "O no -- you don't drive me away.
- Then they stood in a state of some embarrassment
- Bathsheba trying to wipe her dreadfully drenched and
- inflamed face without his noticing her. At length Oak
- said, I've not seen you-i mean spoken to you -- since
- ever so long, have I?" But he feared to bring distress-
- ing memories back, and interrupted himself with: "Were
- you going into church?"
- "No." she said. I came to see the tombstone
- privately -- to see if they had cut the inscription as I
- wished Mr. Oak, you needn't mind speaking to me, if
- you wish to, on the matter which is in both our minds
- at this moment."
- "And have they done it as you wished?" said Oak.
- "Yes. Come and see it, if you have not already."
- So together they went and read the tomb. "Eight
- months ago!" Gabriel murmured when he saw the date.
- "It seems like yesterday to me."
- And to me as if it were years ago-long years, and
- I had been dead between. And now I am going home,
- Mr. Oak."
- Oak walked after her. "I wanted to name a small
- matter to you as soon as I could." he said, with hesitation.
- "Merrily about business, and I think I may just mention it
- now, if you'll allow me."
- "O yes, certainly."
- It is that I may soon have to give up the manage-
- ment of your farm, Mrs. Troy. The fact is, I am think-
- ing of leaving England -- not yet, you know -- next
- spring. "
- "Leaving England!" she said, in surprise and
- genuine disappointment." Why, Gabriel, what are you
- going to do that for?"
- "Well, I've thought it best." Oak stammered out.
- "California is the spot I've had in my mind to try."
- "But it is understood everywhere that you are going
- to take poor Mr. Boldwood's farm on your own account."
- "I've had the refusal o' it 'tis true; but nothing is
- settled yet, and I have reasons for giving up. I shall
- finish out my year there as manager for the trustees,
- but no more."
- "And what shall I do without you? Oh, Gabriel, I
- don't think you ought to go away. You've been with
- me so long -- through bright times and dark times -- such
- old friends that as we are -- that it seems unkind almost. I
- had fancied that if you leased the other farm as master,
- you might still give a helping look across at mine. And
- now going away!"
- "I would have willingly."
- "Yet now that I am more helpless than ever you go
- away!"
- "Yes, that's the ill fortune o' it." said Gabriel, in a
- distressed tone. "And it is because of that very help-
- lessness that I feel bound to go. Good afternoon,
- ma'am" he concluded, in evident anxiety to get
- away, and at once went out of the churchyard by a
- path she could follow on no pretence whatever.
- Bathsheba went home, her mind occupied with a
- new trouble, which being rather harassing than deadly
- was calculated to do good by diverting her from the
- chronic gloom of her life. She was set thinking a great
- deal about Oak and of his which to shun her; and there
- occurred to Bathsheba several incidents of latter in-
- tercourse with him, which, trivial when singly viewed
- amounted together to a perceptible disinclination for
- her society. It broke upon her at length as a great
- pain that her last old disciple was about to forsake her
- and flee. He who had believed in her and argued on
- her side when all the rest of the world was against her,
- had at last like the others become weary and neglectful
- of the old cause, and was leaving her to fight her battles
- alone.
- Three weeks went on, and more evidence of his
- want of interest in her was forthcoming. She noticed
- that instead of entering the small parlour or office
- where the farm accounts were kept, and waiting, or
- leaving a memorandum as he had hitherto done during
- her seclusion, Oak never came at all when she was likely
- to be there, only entering at unseasonable hours when
- her presence in that part of the house was least to be
- expected. Whenever he wanted directions he sent a
- message, or note with neither heading nor signature, to
- which she was obliged to reply in the same off-hand
- style. Poor Bathsheba began to suffer now from the
- most torturing sting of ali-a sensation that she was
- despised.
- The autumn wore away gloomily enough amid these
- melancholy conjectures, and Christmas-day came, com-
- pleting a year of her legal widowhood, and two years
- and a quarter of her life alone. On examining her
- heart it appeared beyond measure strange that the sub-
- ject of which the season might have been supposed
- suggestive -- the event in the hall at Boldwood's -- was
- not agitating her at all; but instead, an agonizing con-
- viction that everybody abjured her -- for what she could
- not tell -- and that Oak was the ringleader of the
- recusants. Coming out of church that day she looked
- round in hope that Oak, whose bass voice she had
- heard rolling out from the gallery overhead in a most
- unconcerned manner, might chance to linger in her path
- in the old way. There he was, as usual, coming down
- the path behind her. But on seeing Bathsheba turn, he
- looked aside, and as soon as he got beyond the gate,
- and there was the barest excuse for a divergence, he
- made one, and vanished.
- The next morning brought the culminating stroke;
- she had been expecting it long. It was a formal notice
- by letter from him that he should not renew his engage-
- ment with her for the following Lady-day.
- Bathsheba actually sat and cried over this letter most
- bitterly. She was aggrieved and wounded that the
- possession of hopeless love from Gabriel, which she had
- AFTER ALL
- grown to regard as her inalienable right for life, should
- have been withdrawn just at his own pleasure in this
- way. She was bewildered too by the prospect of having
- to rely on her own resources again: it seemed to herself
- that she never could again acquire energy sufficient to
- go to market, barter, and sell. Since Troy's death Oak
- had attended all sales and fairs for her, transacting her
- business at the same time with his own. What should
- she do now? Her life was becoming a desolation.
- So desolate was Bathsheba this evening, that in an
- absolute hunger for pity and sympathy, and miserable in
- that she appeared to have outlived the only true friend-
- ship she had ever owned, she put on her bonnet and
- cloak and went down to Oak's house just after sunset,
- guided on her way by the pale primrose rays of a
- crescent moon a few days old.
- A lively firelight shone from the window, but nobody
- was visible in the room. She tapped nervously, and
- then thought it doubtful if it were right for a single
- woman to call upon a bachelor who lived alone, although
- he was her manager, and she might be supposed to call
- on business without any real impropriety. Gabriel
- opened the door, and the moon shone upon his fore-
- haad.
- "Mr. Oak." said Bathsheba, faintly.
- "Yes; I am Mr. Oak." said Gabriel. "Who have I
- the honour -- O how stupid of me, not to know you,
- mistress!"
- "I shall not be your mistress much longer, shall I
- Gabriel?" she said, in pathetic tones.
- "Well, no. I suppose -- But come in, ma'am. Oh --
- and I'll get a light." Oak replied, with some awkwardness.
- "No; not on my account."
- "It is so seldom that I get a lady visitor that I'm
- afraid I haven't proper accommodation. Will you sit
- down, please? Here's a chair, and there's one, too.
- I am sorry that my chairs all have wood seats, and are
- rather hard, but I was thinking of getting some new
- ones." Oak placed two or three for her.
- "They are quite easy enough for me."
- So down she sat, and down sat he, the fire dancing
- in their faces, and upon the old furniture
- all a-sheenen
- Wi' long years o' handlen,
- that formed Oak's array of household possessions, which
- sent back a dancing reflection in reply. It was very
- odd to these two persons, who knew each other passing
- well, that the mere circumstance of their meeting in a
- new place and in a new way should make them so
- awkward and constrained. In the fields, or at her house,
- there had never been any embarrassment; but now that
- Oak had become the entertainer their lives seemed to be
- moved back again to the days when they were strangers.
- "You'll think it strange that I have come, but -- "
- "O no; not at all."
- "But I thought -- Gabriel, I have been uneasy in the
- belief that I have offended you, and that you are going
- away on that account. It grieved me very much and
- I couldn't help coming."
- "Offended me! As if you could do that, Bathsheba!"
- "Haven't I?" she asked, gladly. "But, what are you
- going away for else?"
- "I am not going to emigrate, you know; I wasn't
- aware that you would wish me not to when I told 'ee or I
- shouldn't ha' thought of doing it." he said, simply. "I
- have arranged for Little Weatherbury Farm and shall
- have it in my own hands at Lady-day. You know I've
- had a share in it for some time. Still, that wouldn't
- prevent my attending to your business as before, hadn't
- it been that things have been said about us."
- "What?" said Bathsheba, in surprise. "Things said
- about you and me! What are they?"
- "I cannot tell you."
- "It would be wiser if you were to, I think. You have
- played the part of mentor to me many times, and I don't
- see why you should fear to do it now."
- "It is nothing that you have done, this time. The
- top and tail o't is this -- that I am sniffing about here,
- and waiting for poor Boldwood's farm, with a thought
- of getting you some day."
- "Getting me! What does that mean?"
- "Marrying o' 'ee, in plain British. You asked me to
- tell, so you mustn't blame me."
- Bathsheba did not look quite so alarmed as if a
- cannon had been discharged by her ear, which was what
- Oak had expected. "Marrying me! I didn't know it
- was that you meant." she said, quietly. "Such a thing
- as that is too absurd -- too soon -- to think of, by far!"
- "Yes; of course, it is too absurd. I don't desire any
- such thing; I should think that was plain enough by
- this time. Surely, surely you be the last person in the
- world I think of marrying. It is too absurd, as you say
- "Too -- s-s-soon" were the words I used."
- "I must beg your pardon for correcting you, but you
- said, "too absurd," and so do I."
- "I beg your pardon too! she returned, with tears
- in her eyes. ""Too soon" was what I said. But it
- doesn't matter a bit -- not at ali-but I only meant,
- "too soon" Indeed, I didn't, Mr. Oak, and you must
- believe me!"
- Gabriel looked her long in the face, but the firelight
- being faint there was not much to be seen. "Bathsheba,"
- he said, tenderly and in surprise, and coming closer:
- "if I only knew one thing -- whether you would allow me
- to love you and win you, and marry you after ali-if I
- only knew that!"
- "But you never will know." she murmured.
- "Why?"
- "Because you never ask.
- "Oh -- Oh!" said Gabriel, with a low laugh of joyous-
- ness. "My own dear -- "
- "You ought not to have sent me that harsh letter
- this morning." she interrupted. "It shows you didn't
- care a bit about me, and were ready to desert me like
- all the rest of them! It was very cruel of you, consider-
- ing I was the first sweetheart that you ever had, and
- you were the first I ever had; and I shall not forget it!"
- "Now, Bathsheba, was ever anybody so provoking
- he said, laughing. "You know it was purely that I, as
- an unmarried man, carrying on a business for you as a
- very taking young woman, had a proper hard part to
- play -- more particular that people knew I had a sort
- of feeling for'ee; and I fancied, from the way we were
- mentioned together, that it might injure your good name.
- Nobody knows the heat and fret I have been caused
- by it."
- "And was that all?"
- "All."
- "Oh, how glad I am I came!" she exclaimed, thank-
- fully, as she rose from her seat. "I have thought so
- much more of you since I fancied you did not want
- even to see me again. But I must be going now, or I
- shall be missed. Why Gabriel." she said, with a slight
- laugh, as they went to the door, "it seems exactly as if
- I had come courting you -- how dreadful!"
- "And quite right too." said Oak. "I've danced at
- your skittish heels, my beautiful Bathsheba, for many a
- long mile, and many a long day; and it is hard to be-
- grudge me this one visit."
- He accompanied her up the hill, explaining to her
- the details of his forthcoming tenure of the other farm.
- They spoke very little of their mutual feeling; pretty
- phrases and warm expressions being probably un-
- necessary between such tried friends. Theirs was that
- substantial affection which arises (if any arises at all)
- when the two who are thrown together begin first by
- knowing the rougher sides of each other's character,
- and not the best till further on, the romance growing
- up in the interstices of a mass of hard prosaic reality.
- This good-fellowship -- CAMARADERIE -- usually occurring
- through similarity of pursuits, is unfortunately seldom
- superadded to love between the sexes, because men and
- women associate, not in their labours, but in their
- pleasures merely. Where, however, happy circumstance
- permits its development, the compounded feeling proves
- itself to be the only love which is strong as death -- that
- love which many waters cannot quench, nor the floods
- drown, beside which the passion usually called by the
- name is evanescent as steam.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVII
-
-
-
- A FOGGY NIGHT AND MORNING -- CONCLUSION
-
-
- "THE most private, secret, plainest wedding that it is
- possible to have."
- Those had been Bathsheba's words to Oak one
- evening, some time after the event of the preceding
- chapter, and he meditated a full hour by the clock upon
- how to carry out her wishes to the letter.
- "A licence -- O yes, it must be a licence." he said
- to himself at last. "Very well, then; first, a license."
- On a dark night, a few days later, Oak came with
- mysterious steps from the surrogate's door, in Caster-
- bridge. On the way home he heard a heavy tread in
- front of him, and, overtaking the man, found him to be
- Coggan. They walked together into the village until
- they came to a little lane behind the church, leading
- down to the cottage of Laban Tall, who had lately been
- installed as clerk of the parish, and was yet in mortal
- terror at church on Sundays when he heard his lone
- voice among certain hard words of the Psalms, whither
- no man ventured to follow him.
- "Well, good-night, Coggan." said Oak, "I'm going
- down this way."
- "Oh!" said Coggan, surprised; "what's going on to-
- night then, make so bold Mr. Oak?"
- It seemed rather ungenerous not to tell Coggan,
- under the circumstances, for Coggan had been true as
- steel all through the time of Gabriel's unhappiness about
- Bathsheba, and Gabriel said, " You can keep a secret,
- Coggan?"
- "You've proved me, and you know."
- "Yes, I have, and I do know. Well, then, mistress
- and I mean to get married to-morrow morning."
- "Heaven's high tower! And yet I've thought of
- such a thing from time to time; true, I have. But
- keeping it so close! Well, there, 'tis no consarn of
- amine, and I wish 'ee joy o' her."
- "Thank you, Coggan. But I assure 'ee that this
- great hush is not what I wished for at all, or what
- either of us would have wished if it hadn't been for
- certain things that would make a gay wedding seem
- hardly the thing. Bathsheba has a great wish that all
- the parish shall not be in church, looking at her -- she's
- shylike and nervous about it, in fact -- so I be doing
- this to humour her."
- "Ay, I see: quite right, too, I suppose I must say.
- And you be now going down to the clerk."
- "Yes; you may as well come with me."
- "I am afeard your labour in keeping it close will be
- throwed away." said Coggan, as they walked along.
- "Labe Tall's old woman will horn it all over parish in
- half-an-hour. "
- "So she will, upon my life; I never thought of
- that." said Oak, pausing. "Yet I must tell him to-
- night, I suppose, for he's working so far off, and leaves
- early."
- "I'll tell 'ee how we could tackle her." said Coggan.
- "I'll knock and ask to speak to Laban outside the door,
- you standing in the background. Then he'll come out,
- and you can tell yer tale. She'll never guess what I
- want en for; and I'll make up a few words about the
- farm-work, as a blind."
- This scheme was considered feasible; and Coggan
- advanced boldly, and rapped at Mrs. Tall's door. Mrs.
- Tall herself opened it.
- "I wanted to have a word with Laban."
- "He's not at home, and won't be this side of eleven
- o'clock. He've been forced to go over to Yalbury since
- shutting out work. I shall do quite as well."
- "I hardly think you will. Stop a moment;" and
- Coggan stepped round the corner of the porch to consult
- Oak.
- "Who's t'other man, then?" said Mrs. Tall.
- "Only a friend." said Coggan.
- "Say he's wanted to meet mistress near church-hatch
- to-morrow morning at ten." said Oak, in a whisper.
- "That he must come without fail, and wear his best
- clothes."
- "The clothes will floor us as safe as houses!" said Coggan.
- "It can't be helped said Oak. "Tell her."
- So Coggan delivered the message. "Mind, het or
- wet, blow or snow, he must come, added Jan. "'Tis
- very particular, indeed. The fact is, 'tis to witness her
- sign some law-work about taking shares wi' another
- farmer for a long span o' years. There, that's what 'tis,
- and now I've told 'ee, Mother Tall, in a way I shouldn't
- ha' done if I hadn't loved 'ee so hopeless well."
- Coggan retired before she could ask any further;
- and next they called at the vicar's in a manner which
- excited no curiosity at all. Then Gabriel went home,
- and prepared for the morrow.
- "Liddy." said Bathsheba, on going to bed that night,
- "I want you to call me at seven o'clock to-morrow, In
- case I shouldn't wake."
- "But you always do wake afore then, ma'am."
- "Yes, but I have something important to do, which
- I'll tell you of when the time comes, and it's best to
- make sure."
- CONCLUSION
- Bathsheba, however, awoke voluntarily at four, nor
- could she by any contrivance get to sleep again. About
- six, being quite positive that her watch had stopped
- during the night, she could wait no longer. She went
- and tapped at Liddy's door, and after some labour awoke
- her.
- "But I thought it was I who had to call you?" said
- the bewildered Liddy. "And it isn't six yet."
- Indeed it is; how can you tell such a story, Liddy?
- I know it must be ever so much past seven. Come to
- my room as soon as you can; I want you to give my
- hair a good brushing."
- When Liddy came to Bathsheba's room her mistress
- was already waiting. Liddy could not understand
- this extraordinary promptness. "Whatever IS going on,
- ma'am?" she said.
- "Well, I'll tell you." said Bathsheba, with a mischiev-
- ous smile in her bright eyes. "Farmer Oak is coming
- here to dine with me to-day!"
- "Farmer Oak -- and nobody else? -- you two alone?"
- "Yes."
- "But is it safe, ma'am, after what's been said?" asked
- her companion, dubiously. "A woman's good name is
- such a perishable article that -- -- "
- Bathsheba laughed with a flushed cheek, and
- whispered in Liddy's ear, although there was nobody
- present. Then Liddy stared and exclaimed, " Souls
- alive, what news! It makes my heart go quite
- bumpity-bump"
- "It makes mine rather furious, too." said Bathsheba.
- "However, there's no getting out of it now!"
- It was a damp disagreeable morning. Nevertheless,
- at twenty minutes to ten o'clock, Oak came out of his
- house, and
- Went up the hill side
- With that sort of stride
- A man puts out when walking in search of a bride,
- and knocked Bathsheba's door. Ten minutes later
- a large and a smaller umbrella might have been seen
- moving from the same door, and through the mist along
- the road to the church. The distance was not more
- than a quarter of a mile, and these two sensible persons
- deemed it unnecessary to drive. An observer must have
- been very close indeed to discover that the forms under
- the umbrellas were those of Oak and Bathsheba, arm-in-
- arm for the first time in their lives, Oak in a greatcoat
- extending to his knees, and Bathsheba in a cloak that
- reached her clogs. Yet, though so plainly dressed
- there was a certain rejuvenated appearance about her: --
- As though a rose should shut and be a bud again.
- Repose had again incarnadined her cheeks; and having,
- at Gabriel's request, arranged her hair this morning as
- she had worn it years ago on Norcombe Hill, she seemed
- in his eyes remarkably like a girl of that fascinating
- dream, which, considering that she was now only three
- or four-and-twenty, was perhaps not very wonderful. In
- the church were Tall, Liddy, and the parson, and in a
- remarkably short space of time the deed was done.
- The two sat down very quietly to tea in Bathsheba's
- parlour in the evening of the same day, for it had been
- arranged that Farmer Oak should go there to live, since
- he had as yet neither money, house, nor furniture worthy
- of the name, though he was on a sure way towards them,
- whilst Bathsheba was, comparatively, in a plethora of all
- three.
- Just as Bathsheba was pouring out a cup of tea,
- their ears were greeted by the firing of a cannon,
- followed by what seemed like a tremendous blowing of
- trumpets, in the front of the house.
- "There!" said Oak, laughing, "I knew those fellows
- were up to something, by the look on their face; "
- Oak took up the light and went into the porch,
- followed by Bathsheba with a shawl over her head. The
- rays fell upon a group of male figures gathered upon the
- gravel in front, who, when they saw the newly-married
- couple in the porch, set up a loud "Hurrah!" and at
- the same moment bang again went the cannon in the
- background, followed by a hideous clang of music from
- a drum, tambourine, clarionet, serpent, hautboy, tenor-
- viol, and double-bass -- the only remaining relics of the
- true and original Weatherbury band -- venerable worm-
- eaten instruments, which had celebrated in their own
- persons the victories of Marlhorough, under the fingers
- of the forefathers of those who played them now. The
- performers came forward, and marched up to the
- front.
- "Those bright boys, Mark Clark and Jan, are at the
- bottom of all this." said Oak. "Come in, souls, and
- have something to eat and drink wi' me and my wife."
- "Not to-night." said Mr. Clark, with evident self-
- denial. "Thank ye all the same; but we'll call at a
- more seemly time. However, we couldn't think of
- letting the day pass without a note of admiration of
- some sort. If ye could send a drop of som'at down to
- Warren's, why so it is. Here's long life and happiness
- to neighbour Oak and his comely bride!"
- "Thank ye; thank ye all." said Gabriel. "A bit and
- a drop shall be sent to Warren's for ye at once. I had
- a thought that we might very likely get a salute of some
- sort from our old friends, and I was saying so to my
- wife but now."
- "Faith." said Coggan, in a critical tone, turning to his
- companions, "the man hev learnt to say "my wife"
- in a wonderful naterel way, considering how very youth-
- ful he is in wedlock as yet -- hey, neighbours all?"
- "I never heerd a skilful old married feller of twenty
- years" standing pipe "my wife" in a more used note
- than 'a did." said Jacob Smallbury. "It might have been
- a little more true to nater if't had been spoke a little
- chillier, but that wasn't to be expected just now.
- "That improvement will come wi' time." said Jan,
- twirling his eye.
- Then Oak laughed, and Bathsheba smiled (for she
- never laughed readily now), and their friends turned to
- go.
- "Yes; I suppose that's the size o't." said Joseph
- Poorgrass with a cheerful sigh as they moved away;
- "and I wish him joy o' her; though I were once or
- twice upon saying to-day with holy Hosea, in my
- scripture manner, which is my second nature. "Ephraim
- is joined to idols: let him alone." But since 'tis as 'tis
- why, it might have been worse, and I feel my thanks
- accordingly."
-
- THE END