TESS
OF THE D’URBERVILLES
PART
8
XVIII
Angel
Clare rises out of the past not altogether as a distinct figure, but as an
appreciative voice, a long regard of fixed, abstracted eyes, and a mobility of
mouth somewhat too small and delicately lined for a man's, though with an
unexpectedly firm close of the lower lip now and then; enough to do away with
any inference of indecision. Nevertheless, something nebulous, preoccupied,
vague, in his bearing and regard, marked him as one who probably had no very
definite aim or concern about his material future. Yet as a lad people had said
of him that he was one who might do anything if he tried.
He was the
youngest son of his father, a poor parson at the other end of the county, and
had arrived at Talbothays Dairy as a six months' pupil, after going the round
of some other farms, his object being to acquire a practical skill in the
various processes of farming, with a view either to the Colonies or the tenure
of a home-farm, as circumstances might decide.
His entry
into the ranks of the agriculturists and breeders was a step in the young man's
career which had been anticipated neither by himself nor by others.
Mr Clare
the elder, whose first wife had died and left him a daughter, married a second
late in life. This lady had somewhat unexpectedly brought him three sons, so
that between Angel, the youngest, and his father the Vicar there seemed to be
almost a missing generation. Of these boys the aforesaid Angel, the child of
his old age, was the only son who had not taken a University degree, though he
was the single one of them whose early promise might have done full justice to
an academical training.
Some two
or three years before Angel's appearance at the Marlott dance, on a day when he
had left school and was pursuing his studies at home, a parcel came to the
Vicarage from the local bookseller's, directed to the Reverend James Clare. The
Vicar having opened it and found it to contain a book, read a few pages;
whereupon he jumped up from his seat and went straight to the shop with the
book under his arm.
"Why
has this been sent to my house?" he asked peremptorily, holding up the
volume.
"It
was ordered, sir."
"Not
by me, or any one belonging to me, I am happy to say."
The
shopkeeper looked into his order-book.
"Oh,
it has been misdirected, sir," he said. "It was ordered by Mr Angel
Clare, and should have been sent to him."
Mr Clare
winced as if he had been struck. He went home pale and dejected, and called
Angel into his study.
"Look
into this book, my boy," he said. "What do you know about it?"
"I ordered
it," said Angel simply.
"What
for?"
"To
read."
"How
can you think of reading it?"
"How
can I? Why—it is a system of philosophy. There is no more moral, or even
religious, work published."
"Yes—moral
enough; I don't deny that. But religious!—and for you, who intend to be
a minister of the Gospel!"
"Since
you have alluded to the matter, father," said the son, with anxious
thought upon his face, "I should like to say, once for all, that I should
prefer not to take Orders. I fear I could not conscientiously do so. I love the
Church as one loves a parent. I shall always have the warmest affection for
her. There is no institution for whose history I have a deeper admiration; but
I cannot honestly be ordained her minister, as my brothers are, while she
refuses to liberate her mind from an untenable redemptive theolatry."
It had never occurred to the straightforward and
simple-minded Vicar that one of his own flesh and blood could come to this! He
was stultified, shocked, paralysed. And if Angel were not going to enter the
Church, what was the use of sending him to Cambridge? The University as a step
to anything but ordination seemed, to this man of fixed ideas, a preface
without a volume. He was a man not merely religious, but devout; a firm
believer—not as the phrase is now elusively construed by theological
thimble-riggers in the Church and out of it, but in the old and ardent sense of
the Evangelical school: one who could
Indeed opine
That the Eternal and Divine
Did, eighteen centuries ago
In very truth…
That the Eternal and Divine
Did, eighteen centuries ago
In very truth…
Angel's
father tried argument, persuasion, entreaty.
"No,
father; I cannot underwrite Article Four (leave alone the rest), taking it 'in
the literal and grammatical sense' as required by the Declaration; and,
therefore, I can't be a parson in the present state of affairs," said
Angel. "My whole instinct in matters of religion is towards
reconstruction; to quote your favorite Epistle to the Hebrews, 'the removing of
those things that are shaken, as of things that are made, that those things
which cannot be shaken may remain.'"
His father
grieved so deeply that it made Angel quite ill to see him.
"What
is the good of your mother and me economizing and stinting ourselves to give
you a University education, if it is not to be used for the honour and glory of
God?" his father repeated.
"Why,
that it may be used for the honour and glory of man, father."
Perhaps if
Angel had persevered he might have gone to Cambridge like his brothers. But the
Vicar's view of that seat of learning as a stepping-stone to Orders alone was
quite a family tradition; and so rooted was the idea in his mind that
perseverance began to appear to the sensitive son akin to an intent to
misappropriate a trust, and wrong the pious heads of the household, who had
been and were, as his father had hinted, compelled to exercise much thrift to
carry out this uniform plan of education for the three young men.
"I
will do without Cambridge," said Angel at last. "I feel that I have
no right to go there in the circumstances."
The
effects of this decisive debate were not long in showing themselves. He spent
years and years in desultory studies, undertakings, and meditations; he began
to evince considerable indifference to social forms and observances. The
material distinctions of rank and wealth he increasingly despised. Even the
"good old family" (to use a favourite phrase of a late local worthy)
had no aroma for him unless there were good new resolutions in its
representatives. As a balance to these austerities, when he went to live in
London to see what the world was like, and with a view to practising a
profession or business there, he was carried off his head, and nearly entrapped
by a woman much older than himself, though luckily he escaped not greatly the
worse for the experience.
Early
association with country solitudes had bred in him an unconquerable, and almost
unreasonable, aversion to modern town life, and shut him out from such success
as he might have aspired to by following a mundane calling in the
impracticability of the spiritual one. But something had to be done; he had
wasted many valuable years; and having an acquaintance who was starting on a
thriving life as a Colonial farmer, it occurred to Angel that this might be a
lead in the right direction. Farming, either in the Colonies, America, or at
home—farming, at any rate, after becoming well qualified for the business by a
careful apprenticeship—that was a vocation which would probably afford an
independence without the sacrifice of what he valued even more than a
competency—intellectual liberty.
So we find
Angel Clare at six-and-twenty here at Talbothays as a student of kine, and, as
there were no houses near at hand in which he could get a comfortable lodging,
a boarder at the dairyman's.
His room
was an immense attic which ran the whole length of the dairy-house. It could
only be reached by a ladder from the cheese-loft, and had been closed up for a
long time till he arrived and selected it as his retreat. Here Clare had plenty
of space, and could often be heard by the dairy-folk pacing up and down when
the household had gone to rest. A portion was divided off at one end by a
curtain, behind which was his bed, the outer part being furnished as a homely
sitting-room.
At first
he lived up above entirely, reading a good deal, and strumming upon an old harp
which he had bought at a sale, saying when in a bitter humour that he might
have to get his living by it in the streets some day. But he soon preferred to
read human nature by taking his meals downstairs in the general dining-kitchen,
with the dairyman and his wife, and the maids and men, who all together formed
a lively assembly; for though but few milking hands slept in the house, several
joined the family at meals. The longer Clare resided here the less objection
had he to his company, and the more did he like to share quarters with them in
common.
Much to
his surprise he took, indeed, a real delight in their companionship. The
conventional farm-folk of his imagination—personified in the newspaper-press by
the pitiable dummy known as Hodge—were obliterated after a few days' residence.
At close quarters no Hodge was to be seen. At first, it is true, when Clare's
intelligence was fresh from a contrasting society, these friends with whom he
now hobnobbed seemed a little strange. Sitting down as a level member of the
dairyman's household seemed at the outset an undignified proceeding. The ideas,
the modes, the surroundings, appeared retrogressive and unmeaning. But with
living on there, day after day, the acute sojourner became conscious of a new
aspect in the spectacle. Without any objective change whatever, variety had
taken the place of monotonousness. His host and his host's household, his men
and his maids, as they became intimately known to Clare, began to differentiate
themselves as in a chemical process. The thought of Pascal's was brought home
to him: "A mesure qu'on a plus d'esprit, on trouve qu'il y a plus
d'hommes originaux. Les gens du commun ne trouvent pas de différence entre les
hommes." The typical and unvarying Hodge ceased to exist. He had been
disintegrated into a number of varied fellow-creatures—beings of many minds,
beings infinite in difference; some happy, many serene, a few depressed, one
here and there bright even to genius, some stupid, others wanton, others
austere; some mutely Miltonic, some potentially Cromwellian—into men who had
private views of each other, as he had of his friends; who could applaud or
condemn each other, amuse or sadden themselves by the contemplation of each
other's foibles or vices; men every one of whom walked in his own individual
way the road to dusty death.
Unexpectedly
he began to like the outdoor life for its own sake, and for what it brought,
apart from its bearing on his own proposed career. Considering his position he
became wonderfully free from the chronic melancholy which is taking hold of the
civilized races with the decline of belief in a beneficent Power. For the first
time of late years he could read as his musings inclined him, without any eye
to cramming for a profession, since the few farming handbooks which he deemed
it desirable to master occupied him but little time.
He grew away from old associations, and saw something
new in life and humanity. Secondarily, he made close acquaintance with
phenomena which he had before known but darkly—the seasons in their moods,
morning and evening, night and noon, winds in their different tempers, trees,
waters and mists, shades and silences, and the voices of inanimate things.
The early
mornings were still sufficiently cool to render a fire acceptable in the large
room wherein they breakfasted; and, by Mrs Crick's orders, who held that he was
too genteel to mess at their table, it was Angel Clare's custom to sit in the
yawning chimney-corner during the meal, his cup-and-saucer and plate being
placed on a hinged flap at his elbow. The light from the long, wide, mullioned
window opposite shone in upon his nook, and, assisted by a secondary light of
cold blue quality which shone down the chimney, enabled him to read there
easily whenever disposed to do so. Between Clare and the window was the table
at which his companions sat, their munching profiles rising sharp against the
panes; while to the side was the milk-house door, through which were visible
the rectangular leads in rows, full to the brim with the morning's milk. At the
further end the great churn could be seen revolving, and its slip-slopping
heard—the moving power being discernible through the window in the form of a
spiritless horse walking in a circle and driven by a boy.
For
several days after Tess's arrival Clare, sitting abstractedly reading from some
book, periodical, or piece of music just come by post, hardly noticed that she
was present at table. She talked so little, and the other maids talked so much,
that the babble did not strike him as possessing a new note, and he was ever in
the habit of neglecting the particulars of an outward scene for the general
impression. One day, however, when he had been conning one of his music-scores,
and by force of imagination was hearing the tune in his head, he lapsed into
listlessness, and the music-sheet rolled to the hearth. He looked at the fire
of logs, with its one flame pirouetting on the top in a dying dance after the
breakfast-cooking and boiling, and it seemed to jig to his inward tune; also at
the two chimney crooks dangling down from the cotterel, or cross-bar, plumed
with soot, which quivered to the same melody; also at the half-empty kettle
whining an accompaniment. The conversation at the table mixed in with his
phantasmal orchestra till he thought: "What a fluty voice one of those
milkmaids has! I suppose it is the new one."
Clare
looked round upon her, seated with the others.
She was
not looking towards him. Indeed, owing to his long silence, his presence in the
room was almost forgotten.
"I don't
know about ghosts," she was saying; "but I do know that our souls can
be made to go outside our bodies when we are alive."
The
dairyman turned to her with his mouth full, his eyes charged with serious
inquiry, and his great knife and fork (breakfasts were breakfasts here) planted
erect on the table, like the beginning of a gallows.
"What—really
now? And is it so, maidy?" he said.
"A
very easy way to feel 'em go," continued Tess, "is to lie on the
grass at night and look straight up at some big bright star; and, by fixing
your mind upon it, you will soon find that you are hundreds and hundreds o'
miles away from your body, which you don't seem to want at all."
The
dairyman removed his hard gaze from Tess, and fixed it on his wife.
"Now
that's a rum thing, Christianer—hey? To think o' the miles I've vamped o'
starlight nights these last thirty year, courting, or trading, or for doctor,
or for nurse, and yet never had the least notion o' that till now, or feeled my
soul rise so much as an inch above my shirt-collar."
The
general attention being drawn to her, including that of the dairyman's pupil,
Tess flushed, and remarking evasively that it was only a fancy, resumed her
breakfast.
Clare
continued to observe her. She soon finished her eating, and having a
consciousness that Clare was regarding her, began to trace imaginary patterns
on the tablecloth with her forefinger with the constraint of a domestic animal
that perceives itself to be watched.
"What
a fresh and virginal daughter of Nature that milkmaid is!" he said to
himself.
And then he seemed to discern in her something that
was familiar, something which carried him back into a joyous and unforeseeing
past, before the necessity of taking thought had made the heavens gray. He
concluded that he had beheld her before; where he could not tell. A casual
encounter during some country ramble it certainly had been, and he was not
greatly curious about it. But the circumstance was sufficient to lead him to
select Tess in preference to the other pretty milkmaids when he wished to
contemplate contiguous womankind.
XIX
In general
the cows were milked as they presented themselves, without fancy or choice. But
certain cows will show a fondness for a particular pair of hands, sometimes
carrying this predilection so far as to refuse to stand at all except to their
favourite, the pail of a stranger being unceremoniously kicked over.
It was
Dairyman Crick's rule to insist on breaking down these partialities and
aversions by constant interchange, since otherwise, in the event of a milkman
or maid going away from the dairy, he was placed in a difficulty. The maids'
private aims, however, were the reverse of the dairyman's rule, the daily
selection by each damsel of the eight or ten cows to which she had grown
accustomed rendering the operation on their willing udders surprisingly easy
and effortless.
Tess, like
her compeers, soon discovered which of the cows had a preference for her style
of manipulation, and her fingers having become delicate from the long
domiciliary imprisonments to which she had subjected herself at intervals
during the last two or three years, she would have been glad to meet the
milchers' views in this respect. Out of the whole ninety-five there were eight
in particular—Dumpling, Fancy, Lofty, Mist, Old Pretty, Young Pretty, Tidy, and
Loud—who, though the teats of one or two were as hard as carrots, gave down to
her with a readiness that made her work on them a mere touch of the fingers.
Knowing, however, the dairyman's wish, she endeavoured conscientiously to take
the animals just as they came, excepting the very hard yielders which she could
not yet manage.
But she
soon found a curious correspondence between the ostensibly chance position of
the cows and her wishes in this matter, till she felt that their order could
not be the result of accident. The dairyman's pupil had lent a hand in getting
the cows together of late, and at the fifth or sixth time she turned her eyes,
as she rested against the cow, full of sly inquiry upon him.
"Mr
Clare, you have ranged the cows!" she said, blushing; and in making the accusation,
symptoms of a smile gently lifted her upper lip in spite of her, so as to show
the tips of her teeth, the lower lip remaining severely still.
"Well,
it makes no difference," said he. "You will always be here to milk
them."
"Do
you think so? I hope I shall! But I don't know."
She was
angry with herself afterwards, thinking that he, unaware of her grave reasons
for liking this seclusion, might have mistaken her meaning. She had spoken so
earnestly to him, as if his presence were somehow a factor in her wish. Her
misgiving was such that at dusk, when the milking was over, she walked in the
garden alone, to continue her regrets that she had disclosed to him her
discovery of his considerateness.
It was a
typical summer evening in June, the atmosphere being in such delicate
equilibrium and so transmissive that inanimate objects seemed endowed with two
or three senses, if not five. There was no distinction between the near and the
far, and an auditor felt close to everything within the horizon. The soundlessness
impressed her as a positive entity rather than as the mere negation of noise.
It was broken by the strumming of strings.
Tess had
heard those notes in the attic above her head. Dim, flattened, constrained by
their confinement, they had never appealed to her as now, when they wandered in
the still air with a stark quality like that of nudity. To speak absolutely,
both instrument and execution were poor; but the relative is all, and as she
listened Tess, like a fascinated bird, could not leave the spot. Far from
leaving she drew up towards the performer, keeping behind the hedge that he
might not guess her presence.
The
outskirt of the garden in which Tess found herself had been left uncultivated
for some years, and was now damp and rank with juicy grass which sent up mists
of pollen at a touch; and with tall blooming weeds emitting offensive
smells—weeds whose red and yellow and purple hues formed a polychrome as
dazzling as that of cultivated flowers. She went stealthily as a cat through
this profusion of growth, gathering cuckoo-spittle on her skirts, cracking
snails that were underfoot, staining her hands with thistle-milk and
slug-slime, and rubbing off upon her naked arms sticky blights which, though
snow-white on the apple-tree trunks, made madder stains on her skin; thus she
drew quite near to Clare, still unobserved of him.
Tess was
conscious of neither time nor space. The exaltation which she had described as
being producible at will by gazing at a star came now without any determination
of hers; she undulated upon the thin notes of the second-hand harp, and their
harmonies passed like breezes through her, bringing tears into her eyes. The
floating pollen seemed to be his notes made visible, and the dampness of the
garden the weeping of the garden's sensibility. Though near nightfall, the
rank-smelling weed-flowers glowed as if they would not close for intentness,
and the waves of colour mixed with the waves of sound.
The light
which still shone was derived mainly from a large hole in the western bank of
cloud; it was like a piece of day left behind by accident, dusk having closed
in elsewhere. He concluded his plaintive melody, a very simple performance,
demanding no great skill; and she waited, thinking another might be begun. But,
tired of playing, he had desultorily come round the fence, and was rambling up
behind her. Tess, her cheeks on fire, moved away furtively, as if hardly moving
at all.
Angel,
however, saw her light summer gown, and he spoke; his low tones reaching her,
though he was some distance off.
"What
makes you draw off in that way, Tess?" said he. "Are you
afraid?"
"Oh
no, sir—not of outdoor things; especially just now when the apple-blooth is
falling, and everything is so green."
"But
you have your indoor fears—eh?"
"Well—yes,
sir."
"What
of?"
"I
couldn't quite say."
"The
milk turning sour?"
"No."
"Life
in general?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Ah—so
have I, very often. This hobble of being alive is rather serious, don't you
think so?"
"It
is—now you put it that way."
"All
the same, I shouldn't have expected a young girl like you to see it so just
yet. How is it you do?"
She
maintained a hesitating silence.
"Come,
Tess, tell me in confidence."
She
thought that he meant what were the aspects of things to her, and replied
shyly—
"The
trees have inquisitive eyes, haven't they?—that is, seem as if they had. And
the river says,—'Why do ye trouble me with your looks?' And you seem to see
numbers of to-morrows just all in a line, the first of them the biggest and
clearest, the others getting smaller and smaller as they stand farther away;
but they all seem very fierce and cruel and as if they said, 'I'm coming!
Beware of me! Beware of me!' … But you, sir, can raise up dreams with
your music, and drive all such horrid fancies away!"
He was
surprised to find this young woman—who though but a milkmaid had just that
touch of rarity about her which might make her the envied of her
housemates—shaping such sad imaginings. She was expressing in her own native
phrases—assisted a little by her Sixth Standard training—feelings which might
almost have been called those of the age—the ache of modernism. The perception
arrested him less when he reflected that what are called advanced ideas are
really in great part but the latest fashion in definition—a more accurate
expression, by words in logy and ism, of sensations which men and
women have vaguely grasped for centuries.
Still, it
was strange that they should have come to her while yet so young; more than
strange; it was impressive, interesting, pathetic. Not guessing the cause,
there was nothing to remind him that experience is as to intensity, and not as
to duration. Tess's passing corporeal blight had been her mental harvest.
Tess, on
her part, could not understand why a man of clerical family and good education,
and above physical want, should look upon it as a mishap to be alive. For the
unhappy pilgrim herself there was very good reason. But how could this admirable
and poetic man ever have descended into the Valley of Humiliation, have felt
with the man of Uz—as she herself had felt two or three years ago—"My soul
chooseth strangling and death rather than my life. I loathe it; I would not
live alway."
It was true
that he was at present out of his class. But she knew that was only because,
like Peter the Great in a shipwright's yard, he was studying what he wanted to
know. He did not milk cows because he was obliged to milk cows, but because he
was learning to be a rich and prosperous dairyman, landowner, agriculturist,
and breeder of cattle. He would become an American or Australian Abraham,
commanding like a monarch his flocks and his herds, his spotted and his
ring-straked, his men-servants and his maids. At times, nevertheless, it did
seem unaccountable to her that a decidedly bookish, musical, thinking young man
should have chosen deliberately to be a farmer, and not a clergyman, like his
father and brothers.
Thus, neither having the clue to the other's secret,
they were respectively puzzled at what each revealed, and awaited new knowledge
of each other's character and mood without attempting to pry into each other's
history.
Every day,
every hour, brought to him one more little stroke of her nature, and to her one
more of his. Tess was trying to lead a repressed life, but she little divined
the strength of her own vitality.
At first
Tess seemed to regard Angel Clare as an intelligence rather than as a man. As
such she compared him with herself; and at every discovery of the abundance of
his illuminations, of the distance between her own modest mental standpoint and
the unmeasurable, Andean altitude of his, she became quite dejected,
disheartened from all further effort on her own part whatever.
He
observed her dejection one day, when he had casually mentioned something to her
about pastoral life in ancient Greece. She was gathering the buds called
"lords and ladies" from the bank while he spoke.
"Why
do you look so woebegone all of a sudden?" he asked.
"Oh,
'tis only—about my own self," she said, with a frail laugh of sadness,
fitfully beginning to peel "a lady" meanwhile. "Just a sense of
what might have been with me! My life looks as if it had been wasted for want
of chances! When I see what you know, what you have read, and seen, and
thought, I feel what a nothing I am! I'm like the poor Queen of Sheba who lived
in the Bible. There is no more spirit in me."
"Bless
my soul, don't go troubling about that! Why," he said with some
enthusiasm, "I should be only too glad, my dear Tess, to help you to
anything in the way of history, or any line of reading you would like to take
up—"
"It
is a lady again," interrupted she, holding out the bud she had peeled.
"What?"
"I
meant that there are always more ladies than lords when you come to peel
them."
"Never
mind about the lords and ladies. Would you like to take up any course of
study—history, for example?"
"Sometimes
I feel I don't want to know anything more about it than I know already."
"Why
not?"
"Because
what's the use of learning that I am one of a long row only—finding out that
there is set down in some old book somebody just like me, and to know that I
shall only act her part; making me sad, that's all. The best is not to remember
that your nature and your past doings have been just like thousands' and
thousands', and that your coming life and doings 'll be like thousands's and
thousands'."
"What,
really, then, you don't want to learn anything?"
"I
shouldn't mind learning why—why the sun do shine on the just and the unjust
alike," she answered, with a slight quaver in her voice. "But that's
what books will not tell me."
"Tess,
fie for such bitterness!" Of course he spoke with a conventional sense of
duty only, for that sort of wondering had not been unknown to himself in bygone
days. And as he looked at the unpracticed mouth and lips, he thought that such
a daughter of the soil could only have caught up the sentiment by rote. She
went on peeling the lords and ladies till Clare, regarding for a moment the
wave-like curl of her lashes as they dropped with her bent gaze on her soft
cheek, lingeringly went away. When he was gone she stood awhile, thoughtfully
peeling the last bud; and then, awakening from her reverie, flung it and all
the crowd of floral nobility impatiently on the ground, in an ebullition of
displeasure with herself for her niaiserie, and with a quickening warmth
in her heart of hearts.
How stupid
he must think her! In an access of hunger for his good opinion she bethought
herself of what she had latterly endeavoured to forget, so unpleasant had been
its issues—the identity of her family with that of the knightly d'Urbervilles.
Barren attribute as it was, disastrous as its discovery had been in many ways
to her, perhaps Mr Clare, as a gentleman and a student of history, would
respect her sufficiently to forget her childish conduct with the lords and
ladies if he knew that those Purbeck-marble and alabaster people in Kingsbere
Church really represented her own lineal forefathers; that she was no spurious
d'Urberville, compounded of money and ambition like those at Trantridge, but
true d'Urberville to the bone.
But,
before venturing to make the revelation, dubious Tess indirectly sounded the
dairyman as to its possible effect upon Mr Clare, by asking the former if Mr
Clare had any great respect for old county families when they had lost all
their money and land.
"Mr
Clare," said the dairyman emphatically, "is one of the most rebellest
rozums you ever knowed—not a bit like the rest of his family; and if there's
one thing that he do hate more than another 'tis the notion of what's called a'
old family. He says that it stands to reason that old families have done their
spurt of work in past days, and can't have anything left in 'em now. There's the
Billets and the Drenkhards and the Greys and the St Quintins and the Hardys and
the Goulds, who used to own the lands for miles down this valley; you could buy
'em all up now for an old song a'most. Why, our little Retty Priddle here, you
know, is one of the Paridelles—the old family that used to own lots o' the
lands out by King's Hintock, now owned by the Earl o' Wessex, afore even he or
his was heard of. Well, Mr Clare found this out, and spoke quite scornful to
the poor girl for days. 'Ah!' he says to her, 'you'll never make a good
dairymaid! All your skill was used up ages ago in Palestine, and you must lie
fallow for a thousand years to git strength for more deeds!' A boy came here
t'other day asking for a job, and said his name was Matt, and when we asked him
his surname he said he'd never heard that 'a had any surname, and when we asked
why, he said he supposed his folks hadn't been 'stablished long enough. 'Ah!
you're the very boy I want!' says Mr Clare, jumping up and shaking hands wi'en;
'I've great hopes of you;' and gave him half-a-crown. O no! he can't stomach
old families!"
After hearing this caricature of Clare's opinion poor
Tess was glad that she had not said a word in a weak moment about her
family—even though it was so unusually old almost to have gone round the circle
and become a new one. Besides, another diary-girl was as good as she, it
seemed, in that respect. She held her tongue about the d'Urberville vault and
the Knight of the Conqueror whose name she bore. The insight afforded into
Clare's character suggested to her that it was largely owing to her supposed
untraditional newness that she had won interest in his eyes.
To be continued