TESS OF THE D’URBERVILLES
PART 7
Phase the Third: The Rally, XVI-XXIV
XVI
On a
thyme-scented, bird-hatching morning in May, between two and three years after
the return from Trantridge—silent, reconstructive years for Tess
Durbeyfield—she left her home for the second time.
Having
packed up her luggage so that it could be sent to her later, she started in a
hired trap for the little town of Stourcastle, through which it was necessary
to pass on her journey, now in a direction almost opposite to that of her first
adventuring. On the curve of the nearest hill she looked back regretfully at
Marlott and her father's house, although she had been so anxious to get away.
Her
kindred dwelling there would probably continue their daily lives as heretofore,
with no great diminution of pleasure in their consciousness, although she would
be far off, and they deprived of her smile. In a few days the children would
engage in their games as merrily as ever, without the sense of any gap left by
her departure. This leaving of the younger children she had decided to be for
the best; were she to remain they would probably gain less good by her precepts
than harm by her example.
She went
through Stourcastle without pausing and onward to a junction of highways, where
she could await a carrier's van that ran to the south-west; for the railways
which engirdled this interior tract of country had never yet struck across it.
While waiting, however, there came along a farmer in his spring cart, driving
approximately in the direction that she wished to pursue. Though he was a
stranger to her she accepted his offer of a seat beside him, ignoring that its
motive was a mere tribute to her countenance. He was going to Weatherbury, and
by accompanying him thither she could walk the remainder of the distance instead
of travelling in the van by way of Casterbridge.
Tess did
not stop at Weatherbury, after this long drive, further than to make a slight
nondescript meal at noon at a cottage to which the farmer recommended her.
Thence she started on foot, basket in hand, to reach the wide upland of heath
dividing this district from the low-lying meads of a further valley in which
the dairy stood that was the aim and end of her day's pilgrimage.
Tess had
never before visited this part of the country, and yet she felt akin to the
landscape. Not so very far to the left of her she could discern a dark patch in
the scenery, which inquiry confirmed her in supposing to be trees marking the
environs of Kingsbere—in the church of which parish the bones of her
ancestors—her useless ancestors—lay entombed.
She had no
admiration for them now; she almost hated them for the dance they had led her;
not a thing of all that had been theirs did she retain but the old seal and
spoon. "Pooh—I have as much of mother as father in me!" she said.
"All my prettiness comes from her, and she was only a dairymaid."
The
journey over the intervening uplands and lowlands of Egdon, when she reached
them, was a more troublesome walk than she had anticipated, the distance being
actually but a few miles. It was two hours, owing to sundry wrong turnings, ere
she found herself on a summit commanding the long-sought-for vale, the Valley
of the Great Dairies, the valley in which milk and butter grew to rankness, and
were produced more profusely, if less delicately, than at her home—the verdant
plain so well watered by the river Var or Froom.
It was
intrinsically different from the Vale of Little Dairies, Blackmoor Vale, which,
save during her disastrous sojourn at Trantridge, she had exclusively known
till now. The world was drawn to a larger pattern here. The enclosures numbered
fifty acres instead of ten, the farmsteads were more extended, the groups of
cattle formed tribes hereabout; there only families. These myriads of cows
stretching under her eyes from the far east to the far west outnumbered any she
had ever seen at one glance before. The green lea was speckled as thickly with
them as a canvas by Van Alsloot or Sallaert with burghers. The ripe hue of the
red and dun kine absorbed the evening sunlight, which the white-coated animals
returned to the eye in rays almost dazzling, even at the distant elevation on
which she stood.
The
bird's-eye perspective before her was not so luxuriantly beautiful, perhaps, as
that other one which she knew so well; yet it was more cheering. It lacked the
intensely blue atmosphere of the rival vale, and its heavy soils and scents;
the new air was clear, bracing, ethereal. The river itself, which nourished the
grass and cows of these renowned dairies, flowed not like the streams in
Blackmoor. Those were slow, silent, often turbid; flowing over beds of mud into
which the incautious wader might sink and vanish unawares. The Froom waters
were clear as the pure River of Life shown to the Evangelist, rapid as the
shadow of a cloud, with pebbly shallows that prattled to the sky all day long.
There the water-flower was the lily; the crow-foot here.
Either the
change in the quality of the air from heavy to light, or the sense of being
amid new scenes where there were no invidious eyes upon her, sent up her
spirits wonderfully. Her hopes mingled with the sunshine in an ideal
photosphere which surrounded her as she bounded along against the soft south
wind. She heard a pleasant voice in every breeze, and in every bird's note
seemed to lurk a joy.
Her face
had latterly changed with changing states of mind, continually fluctuating
between beauty and ordinariness, according as the thoughts were gay or grave.
One day she was pink and flawless; another pale and tragical. When she was pink
she was feeling less than when pale; her more perfect beauty accorded with her
less elevated mood; her more intense mood with her less perfect beauty. It was
her best face physically that was now set against the south wind.
The
irresistible, universal, automatic tendency to find sweet pleasure somewhere,
which pervades all life, from the meanest to the highest, had at length
mastered Tess. Being even now only a young woman of twenty, one who mentally
and sentimentally had not finished growing, it was impossible that any event
should have left upon her an impression that was not in time capable of
transmutation.
And thus
her spirits, and her thankfulness, and her hopes, rose higher and higher. She
tried several ballads, but found them inadequate; till, recollecting the
psalter that her eyes had so often wandered over of a Sunday morning before she
had eaten of the tree of knowledge, she chanted: "O ye Sun and Moon … O ye
Stars … ye Green Things upon the Earth … ye Fowls of the Air … Beasts and
Cattle … Children of Men … bless ye the Lord, praise Him and magnify Him
forever!"
She
suddenly stopped and murmured: "But perhaps I don't quite know the Lord as
yet."
And
probably the half-unconscious rhapsody was a Fetishistic utterance in a
Monotheistic setting; women whose chief companions are the forms and forces of
outdoor Nature retain in their souls far more of the Pagan fantasy of their
remote forefathers than of the systematized religion taught their race at later
date. However, Tess found at least approximate expression for her feelings in
the old Benedicite that she had lisped from infancy; and it was enough.
Such high contentment with such a slight initial performance as that of having
started towards a means of independent living was a part of the Durbeyfield
temperament. Tess really wished to walk uprightly, while her father did nothing
of the kind; but she resembled him in being content with immediate and small
achievements, and in having no mind for laborious effort towards such petty
social advancement as could alone be effected by a family so heavily
handicapped as the once powerful d'Urbervilles were now.
There was,
it might be said, the energy of her mother's unexpended family, as well as the
natural energy of Tess's years, rekindled after the experience which had so
overwhelmed her for the time. Let the truth be told—women do as a rule live
through such humiliations, and regain their spirits, and again look about them
with an interested eye. While there's life there's hope is a conviction not so
entirely unknown to the "betrayed" as some amiable theorists would
have us believe.
Tess
Durbeyfield, then, in good heart, and full of zest for life, descended the
Egdon slopes lower and lower towards the dairy of her pilgrimage.
The marked
difference, in the final particular, between the rival vales now showed itself.
The secret of Blackmoor was best discovered from the heights around; to read
aright the valley before her it was necessary to descend into its midst. When
Tess had accomplished this feat she found herself to be standing on a carpeted
level, which stretched to the east and west as far as the eye could reach.
The river
had stolen from the higher tracts and brought in particles to the vale all this
horizontal land; and now, exhausted, aged, and attenuated, lay serpentining
along through the midst of its former spoils.
Not quite
sure of her direction, Tess stood still upon the hemmed expanse of verdant
flatness, like a fly on a billiard-table of indefinite length, and of no more
consequence to the surroundings than that fly. The sole effect of her presence
upon the placid valley so far had been to excite the mind of a solitary heron,
which, after descending to the ground not far from her path, stood with neck
erect, looking at her.
Suddenly
there arose from all parts of the lowland a prolonged and repeated
call—"Waow! waow! waow!"
From the
furthest east to the furthest west the cries spread as if by contagion,
accompanied in some cases by the barking of a dog. It was not the expression of
the valley's consciousness that beautiful Tess had arrived, but the ordinary
announcement of milking-time—half-past four o'clock, when the dairymen set
about getting in the cows.
The red
and white herd nearest at hand, which had been phlegmatically waiting for the
call, now trooped towards the steading in the background, their great bags of
milk swinging under them as they walked. Tess followed slowly in their rear,
and entered the barton by the open gate through which they had entered before
her. Long thatched sheds stretched round the enclosure, their slopes encrusted
with vivid green moss, and their eaves supported by wooden posts rubbed to a
glossy smoothness by the flanks of infinite cows and calves of bygone years,
now passed to an oblivion almost inconceivable in its profundity. Between the
post were ranged the milchers, each exhibiting herself at the present moment to
a whimsical eye in the rear as a circle on two stalks, down the centre of which
a switch moved pendulum-wise; while the sun, lowering itself behind this
patient row, threw their shadows accurately inwards upon the wall. Thus it
threw shadows of these obscure and homely figures every evening with as much
care over each contour as if it had been the profile of a court beauty on a
palace wall; copied them as diligently as it had copied Olympian shapes on
marble façades long ago, or the outline of Alexander, Caesar, and the
Pharaohs.
They were the less restful cows that were stalled.
Those that would stand still of their own will were milked in the middle of the
yard, where many of such better behaved ones stood waiting now—all prime
milchers, such as were seldom seen out of this valley, and not always within
it; nourished by the succulent feed which the water-meads supplied at this
prime season of the year. Those of them that were spotted with white reflected
the sunshine in dazzling brilliancy, and the polished brass knobs of their
horns glittered with something of military display. Their large-veined udders
hung ponderous as sandbags, the teats sticking out like the legs of a gipsy's
crock; and as each animal lingered for her turn to arrive the milk oozed forth
and fell in drops to the ground.
XVII
The
dairymaids and men had flocked down from their cottages and out of the
dairy-house with the arrival of the cows from the meads; the maids walking in
pattens, not on account of the weather, but to keep their shoes above the mulch
of the barton. Each girl sat down on her three-legged stool, her face sideways,
her right cheek resting against the cow, and looked musingly along the animal's
flank at Tess as she approached. The male milkers, with hat-brims turned down,
resting flat on their foreheads and gazing on the ground, did not observe her.
One of these was a sturdy middle-aged man—whose long
white "pinner" was somewhat finer and cleaner than the wraps of the
others, and whose jacket underneath had a presentable marketing aspect—the
master-dairyman, of whom she was in quest, his double character as a working
milker and butter maker here during six days, and on the seventh as a man in
shining broad-cloth in his family pew at church, being so marked as to have
inspired a rhyme:
Dairyman Dick
All the week:—
On Sundays Mister Richard Crick.
All the week:—
On Sundays Mister Richard Crick.
Seeing Tess standing at gaze he went across to her.
The
majority of dairymen have a cross manner at milking time, but it happened that
Mr Crick was glad to get a new hand—for the days were busy ones now—and he
received her warmly; inquiring for her mother and the rest of the family—(though
this as a matter of form merely, for in reality he had not been aware of Mrs
Durbeyfield's existence till apprised of the fact by a brief business-letter
about Tess).
"Oh—ay,
as a lad I knowed your part o' the country very well," he said terminatively.
"Though I've never been there since. And a aged woman of ninety that use
to live nigh here, but is dead and gone long ago, told me that a family of some
such name as yours in Blackmoor Vale came originally from these parts, and that
'twere a old ancient race that had all but perished off the earth—though the
new generations didn't know it. But, Lord, I took no notice of the old woman's
ramblings, not I."
"Oh
no—it is nothing," said Tess.
Then the
talk was of business only.
"You
can milk 'em clean, my maidy? I don't want my cows going azew at this time o'
year."
She
reassured him on that point, and he surveyed her up and down. She had been
staying indoors a good deal, and her complexion had grown delicate.
"Quite
sure you can stand it? 'Tis comfortable enough here for rough folk; but we
don't live in a cowcumber frame."
She
declared that she could stand it, and her zest and willingness seemed to win
him over.
"Well,
I suppose you'll want a dish o' tay, or victuals of some sort, hey? Not yet? Well,
do as ye like about it. But faith, if 'twas I, I should be as dry as a kex wi'
travelling so far."
"I'll
begin milking now, to get my hand in," said Tess.
She drank
a little milk as temporary refreshment—to the surprise—indeed, slight
contempt—of Dairyman Crick, to whose mind it had apparently never occurred that
milk was good as a beverage.
"Oh,
if ye can swaller that, be it so," he said indifferently, while holding up
the pail that she sipped from. "'Tis what I hain't touched for years—not
I. Rot the stuff; it would lie in my innerds like lead. You can try your hand
upon she," he pursued, nodding to the nearest cow. "Not but what she
do milk rather hard. We've hard ones and we've easy ones, like other folks.
However, you'll find out that soon enough."
When Tess
had changed her bonnet for a hood, and was really on her stool under the cow,
and the milk was squirting from her fists into the pail, she appeared to feel
that she really had laid a new foundation for her future. The conviction bred
serenity, her pulse slowed, and she was able to look about her.
The
milkers formed quite a little battalion of men and maids, the men operating on
the hard-teated animals, the maids on the kindlier natures. It was a large
dairy. There were nearly a hundred milchers under Crick's management, all told;
and of the herd the master-dairyman milked six or eight with his own hands,
unless away from home. These were the cows that milked hardest of all; for his
journey-milkmen being more or less casually hired, he would not entrust this
half-dozen to their treatment, lest, from indifference, they should not milk
them fully; nor to the maids, lest they should fail in the same way for lack of
finger-grip; with the result that in course of time the cows would "go
azew"—that is, dry up. It was not the loss for the moment that made slack
milking so serious, but that with the decline of demand there came decline, and
ultimately cessation, of supply.
After Tess
had settled down to her cow there was for a time no talk in the barton, and not
a sound interfered with the purr of the milk-jets into the numerous pails,
except a momentary exclamation to one or other of the beasts requesting her to
turn round or stand still. The only movements were those of the milkers' hands
up and down, and the swing of the cows' tails. Thus they all worked on,
encompassed by the vast flat mead which extended to either slope of the
valley—a level landscape compounded of old landscapes long forgotten, and, no
doubt, differing in character very greatly from the landscape they composed
now.
"To
my thinking," said the dairyman, rising suddenly from a cow he had just
finished off, snatching up his three-legged stool in one hand and the pail in
the other, and moving on to the next hard-yielder in his vicinity, "to my
thinking, the cows don't gie down their milk to-day as usual. Upon my life, if
Winker do begin keeping back like this, she'll not be worth going under by
midsummer."
"'Tis
because there's a new hand come among us," said Jonathan Kail. "I've
noticed such things afore."
"To
be sure. It may be so. I didn't think o't."
"I've
been told that it goes up into their horns at such times," said a
dairymaid.
"Well,
as to going up into their horns," replied Dairyman Crick dubiously, as
though even witchcraft might be limited by anatomical possibilities, "I
couldn't say; I certainly could not. But as nott cows will keep it back as well
as the horned ones, I don't quite agree to it. Do ye know that riddle about the
nott cows, Jonathan? Why do nott cows give less milk in a year than
horned?"
"I
don't!" interposed the milkmaid, "Why do they?"
"Because
there bain't so many of 'em," said the dairyman. "Howsomever, these
gam'sters do certainly keep back their milk to-day. Folks, we must lift up a
stave or two—that's the only cure for't."
Songs were
often resorted to in dairies hereabout as an enticement to the cows when they
showed signs of withholding their usual yield; and the band of milkers at this
request burst into melody—in purely business-like tones, it is true, and with
no great spontaneity; the result, according to their own belief, being a
decided improvement during the song's continuance. When they had gone through
fourteen or fifteen verses of a cheerful ballad about a murderer who was afraid
to go to bed in the dark because he saw certain brimstone flames around him,
one of the male milkers said—
"I
wish singing on the stoop didn't use up so much of a man's wind! You should get
your harp, sir; not but what a fiddle is best."
Tess, who
had given ear to this, thought the words were addressed to the dairyman, but
she was wrong. A reply, in the shape of "Why?" came as it were out of
the belly of a dun cow in the stalls; it had been spoken by a milker behind the
animal, whom she had not hitherto perceived.
"Oh
yes; there's nothing like a fiddle," said the dairyman. "Though I do
think that bulls are more moved by a tune than cows—at least that's my
experience. Once there was an old aged man over at Mellstock—William Dewy by
name—one of the family that used to do a good deal of business as tranters over
there—Jonathan, do ye mind?—I knowed the man by sight as well as I know my own
brother, in a manner of speaking. Well, this man was a coming home along from a
wedding, where he had been playing his fiddle, one fine moonlight night, and
for shortness' sake he took a cut across Forty-acres, a field lying that way,
where a bull was out to grass. The bull seed William, and took after him, horns
aground, begad; and though William runned his best, and hadn't much
drink in him (considering 'twas a wedding, and the folks well off), he found
he'd never reach the fence and get over in time to save himself. Well, as a
last thought, he pulled out his fiddle as he runned, and struck up a jig,
turning to the bull, and backing towards the corner. The bull softened down,
and stood still, looking hard at William Dewy, who fiddled on and on; till a
sort of a smile stole over the bull's face. But no sooner did William stop his
playing and turn to get over hedge than the bull would stop his smiling and
lower his horns towards the seat of William's breeches. Well, William had to
turn about and play on, willy-nilly; and 'twas only three o'clock in the world,
and 'a knowed that nobody would come that way for hours, and he so leery and
tired that 'a didn't know what to do. When he had scraped till about four
o'clock he felt that he verily would have to give over soon, and he said to
himself, 'There's only this last tune between me and eternal welfare! Heaven
save me, or I'm a done man.' Well, then he called to mind how he'd seen the
cattle kneel o' Christmas Eves in the dead o' night. It was not Christmas Eve
then, but it came into his head to play a trick upon the bull. So he broke into
the 'Tivity Hymm, just as at Christmas carol-singing; when, lo and behold, down
went the bull on his bended knees, in his ignorance, just as if 'twere the true
'Tivity night and hour. As soon as his horned friend were down, William turned,
clinked off like a long-dog, and jumped safe over hedge, before the praying
bull had got on his feet again to take after him. William used to say that he'd
seen a man look a fool a good many times, but never such a fool as that bull
looked when he found his pious feelings had been played upon, and 'twas not
Christmas Eve. ᡖ
Yes, William Dewy, that was the man's name; and I can tell you to a foot
where's he a-lying in Mellstock Churchyard at this very moment—just between the
second yew-tree and the north aisle."
"It's
a curious story; it carries us back to medieval times, when faith was a living
thing!"
The
remark, singular for a dairy-yard, was murmured by the voice behind the dun
cow; but as nobody understood the reference, no notice was taken, except that
the narrator seemed to think it might imply scepticism as to his tale.
"Well,
'tis quite true, sir, whether or no. I knowed the man well."
"Oh
yes; I have no doubt of it," said the person behind the dun cow.
Tess's
attention was thus attracted to the dairyman's interlocutor, of whom she could
see but the merest patch, owing to his burying his head so persistently in the
flank of the milcher. She could not understand why he should be addressed as
"sir" even by the dairyman himself. But no explanation was
discernible; he remained under the cow long enough to have milked three,
uttering a private ejaculation now and then, as if he could not get on.
"Take
it gentle, sir; take it gentle," said the dairyman. "'Tis knack, not
strength, that does it."
"So I
find," said the other, standing up at last and stretching his arms.
"I think I have finished her, however, though she made my fingers
ache."
Tess could
then see him at full length. He wore the ordinary white pinner and leather
leggings of a dairy-farmer when milking, and his boots were clogged with the
mulch of the yard; but this was all his local livery. Beneath it was something
educated, reserved, subtle, sad, differing.
But the
details of his aspect were temporarily thrust aside by the discovery that he
was one whom she had seen before. Such vicissitudes had Tess passed through
since that time that for a moment she could not remember where she had met him;
and then it flashed upon her that he was the pedestrian who had joined in the
club-dance at Marlott—the passing stranger who had come she knew not whence,
had danced with others but not with her, and slightingly left her, and gone on
his way with his friends.
The flood
of memories brought back by this revival of an incident anterior to her
troubles produced a momentary dismay lest, recognizing her also, he should by
some means discover her story. But it passed away when she found no sign of
remembrance in him. She saw by degrees that since their first and only
encounter his mobile face had grown more thoughtful, and had acquired a young
man's shapely moustache and beard—the latter of the palest straw colour where
it began upon his cheeks, and deepening to a warm brown farther from its root.
Under his linen milking-pinner he wore a dark velveteen jacket, cord breeches
and gaiters, and a starched white shirt. Without the milking-gear nobody could
have guessed what he was. He might with equal probability have been an
eccentric landowner or a gentlemanly ploughman. That he was but a novice at
dairy work she had realized in a moment, from the time he had spent upon the
milking of one cow.
Meanwhile
many of the milkmaids had said to one another of the newcomer, "How pretty
she is!" with something of real generosity and admiration, though with a
half hope that the auditors would qualify the assertion—which, strictly
speaking, they might have done, prettiness being an inexact definition of what
struck the eye in Tess. When the milking was finished for the evening they
straggled indoors, where Mrs Crick, the dairyman's wife—who was too respectable
to go out milking herself, and wore a hot stuff gown in warm weather because
the dairymaids wore prints—was giving an eye to the leads and things.
Only two
or three of the maids, Tess learnt, slept in the dairy-house besides herself,
most of the helpers going to their homes. She saw nothing at supper-time of the
superior milker who had commented on the story, and asked no questions about
him, the remainder of the evening being occupied in arranging her place in the
bed-chamber. It was a large room over the milk-house, some thirty feet long;
the sleeping-cots of the other three indoor milkmaids being in the same
apartment. They were blooming young women, and, except one, rather older than
herself. By bedtime Tess was thoroughly tired, and fell asleep immediately.
But one of
the girls, who occupied an adjoining bed, was more wakeful than Tess, and would
insist upon relating to the latter various particulars of the homestead into
which she had just entered. The girl's whispered words mingled with the shades,
and, to Tess's drowsy mind, they seemed to be generated by the darkness in
which they floated.
"Mr
Angel Clare—he that is learning milking, and that plays the harp—never says
much to us. He is a pa'son's son, and is too much taken up wi' his own thoughts
to notice girls. He is the dairyman's pupil—learning farming in all its
branches. He has learnt sheep-farming at another place, and he's now mastering
dairy-work. … Yes, he is quite the gentleman-born. His father is the Reverent
Mr Clare at Emminster—a good many miles from here."
"Oh—I
have heard of him," said her companion, now awake. "A very earnest
clergyman, is he not?"
"Yes—that
he is—the earnestest man in all Wessex, they say—the last of the old Low Church
sort, they tell me—for all about here be what they call High. All his sons,
except our Mr Clare, be made pa'sons too."
Tess had not at this hour the curiosity to ask why the
present Mr Clare was not made a parson like his brethren, and gradually fell
asleep again, the words of her informant coming to her along with the smell of
the cheeses in the adjoining cheeseloft, and the measured dripping of the whey
from the wrings downstairs.
To be continued