TESS
OF THE D’URBERVILLES
PART
19
XLIII
There was
no exaggeration in Marian's definition of Flintcomb-Ash farm as a starve-acre
place. The single fat thing on the soil was Marian herself; and she was an
importation. Of the three classes of village, the village cared for by its
lord, the village cared for by itself, and the village uncared for either by
itself or by its lord (in other words, the village of a resident squires's
tenantry, the village of free- or copy-holders, and the absentee-owner's
village, farmed with the land) this place, Flintcomb-Ash, was the third.
But Tess
set to work. Patience, that blending of moral courage with physical timidity,
was now no longer a minor feature in Mrs Angel Clare; and it sustained her.
The
swede-field in which she and her companion were set hacking was a stretch of a
hundred odd acres in one patch, on the highest ground of the farm, rising above
stony lanchets or lynchets—the outcrop of siliceous veins in the chalk
formation, composed of myriads of loose white flints in bulbous, cusped, and
phallic shapes. The upper half of each turnip had been eaten off by the
live-stock, and it was the business of the two women to grub up the lower or
earthy half of the root with a hooked fork called a hacker, that it might be
eaten also. Every leaf of the vegetable having already been consumed, the whole
field was in colour a desolate drab; it was a complexion without features, as
if a face, from chin to brow, should be only an expanse of skin. The sky wore,
in another colour, the same likeness; a white vacuity of countenance with the
lineaments gone. So these two upper and nether visages confronted each other
all day long, the white face looking down on the brown face, and the brown face
looking up at the white face, without anything standing between them but the two
girls crawling over the surface of the former like flies.
Nobody
came near them, and their movements showed a mechanical regularity; their forms
standing enshrouded in Hessian "wroppers"—sleeved brown pinafores,
tied behind to the bottom, to keep their gowns from blowing about—scant skirts
revealing boots that reached high up the ankles, and yellow sheepskin gloves
with gauntlets. The pensive character which the curtained hood lent to their
bent heads would have reminded the observer of some early Italian conception of
the two Marys.
They
worked on hour after hour, unconscious of the forlorn aspect they bore in the
landscape, not thinking of the justice or injustice of their lot. Even in such
a position as theirs it was possible to exist in a dream. In the afternoon the
rain came on again, and Marian said that they need not work any more. But if
they did not work they would not be paid; so they worked on. It was so high a
situation, this field, that the rain had no occasion to fall, but raced along
horizontally upon the yelling wind, sticking into them like glass splinters
till they were wet through. Tess had not known till now what was really meant
by that. There are degrees of dampness, and a very little is called being wet
through in common talk. But to stand working slowly in a field, and feel the
creep of rain-water, first in legs and shoulders, then on hips and head, then
at back, front, and sides, and yet to work on till the leaden light diminishes
and marks that the sun is down, demands a distinct modicum of stoicism, even of
valour.
Yet they
did not feel the wetness so much as might be supposed. They were both young,
and they were talking of the time when they lived and loved together at
Talbothays Dairy, that happy green tract of land where summer had been liberal
in her gifts; in substance to all, emotionally to these. Tess would fain not
have conversed with Marian of the man who was legally, if not actually, her
husband; but the irresistible fascination of the subject betrayed her into
reciprocating Marian's remarks. And thus, as has been said, though the damp
curtains of their bonnets flapped smartly into their faces, and their wrappers
clung about them to wearisomeness, they lived all this afternoon in memories of
green, sunny, romantic Talbothays.
"You
can see a gleam of a hill within a few miles o' Froom Valley from here when
'tis fine," said Marian.
"Ah!
Can you?" said Tess, awake to the new value of this locality.
So the two
forces were at work here as everywhere, the inherent will to enjoy, and the
circumstantial will against enjoyment. Marian's will had a method of assisting
itself by taking from her pocket as the afternoon wore on a pint bottle corked
with white rag, from which she invited Tess to drink. Tess's unassisted power
of dreaming, however, being enough for her sublimation at present, she declined
except the merest sip, and then Marian took a pull from the spirits.
"I've
got used to it," she said, "and can't leave it off now. 'Tis my only
comfort—You see I lost him: you didn't; and you can do without it
perhaps."
Tess
thought her loss as great as Marian's, but upheld by the dignity of being
Angel's wife, in the letter at least, she accepted Marian's differentiation.
Amid this
scene Tess slaved in the morning frosts and in the afternoon rains. When it was
not swede-grubbing it was swede-trimming, in which process they sliced off the
earth and the fibres with a bill-hook before storing the roots for future use.
At this occupation they could shelter themselves by a thatched hurdle if it
rained; but if it was frosty even their thick leather gloves could not prevent
the frozen masses they handled from biting their fingers. Still Tess hoped. She
had a conviction that sooner or later the magnanimity which she persisted in
reckoning as a chief ingredient of Clare's character would lead him to rejoin
her.
Marian,
primed to a humorous mood, would discover the queer-shaped flints aforesaid,
and shriek with laughter, Tess remaining severely obtuse. They often looked
across the country to where the Var or Froom was know to stretch, even though
they might not be able to see it; and, fixing their eyes on the cloaking gray
mist, imagined the old times they had spent out there.
"Ah,"
said Marian, "how I should like another or two of our old set to come
here! Then we could bring up Talbothays every day here afield, and talk of he,
and of what nice times we had there, and o' the old things we used to know, and
make it all come back a'most, in seeming!" Marian's eyes softened, and her
voice grew vague as the visions returned. "I'll write to Izz Huett,"
she said. "She's biding at home doing nothing now, I know, and I'll tell
her we be here, and ask her to come; and perhaps Retty is well enough
now."
Tess had
nothing to say against the proposal, and the next she heard of this plan for
importing old Talbothays' joys was two or three days later, when Marian
informed her that Izz had replied to her inquiry, and had promised to come if
she could.
There had
not been such a winter for years. It came on in stealthy and measured glides,
like the moves of a chess-player. One morning the few lonely trees and the
thorns of the hedgerows appeared as if they had put off a vegetable for an
animal integument. Every twig was covered with a white nap as of fur grown from
the rind during the night, giving it four times its usual stoutness; the whole
bush or tree forming a staring sketch in white lines on the mournful gray of
the sky and horizon. Cobwebs revealed their presence on sheds and walls where
none had ever been observed till brought out into visibility by the
crystallizing atmosphere, hanging like loops of white worsted from salient
points of the out-houses, posts, and gates.
After this
season of congealed dampness came a spell of dry frost, when strange birds from
behind the North Pole began to arrive silently on the upland of Flintcomb-Ash;
gaunt spectral creatures with tragical eyes—eyes which had witnessed scenes of
cataclysmal horror in inaccessible polar regions of a magnitude such as no
human being had ever conceived, in curdling temperatures that no man could
endure; which had beheld the crash of icebergs and the slide of snow-hills by
the shooting light of the Aurora; been half blinded by the whirl of colossal
storms and terraqueous distortions; and retained the expression of feature that
such scenes had engendered. These nameless birds came quite near to Tess and
Marian, but of all they had seen which humanity would never see, they brought no
account. The traveller's ambition to tell was not theirs, and, with dumb
impassivity, they dismissed experiences which they did not value for the
immediate incidents of this homely upland—the trivial movements of the two
girls in disturbing the clods with their hackers so as to uncover something or
other that these visitants relished as food.
Then one
day a peculiar quality invaded the air of this open country. There came a
moisture which was not of rain, and a cold which was not of frost. It chilled the
eyeballs of the twain, made their brows ache, penetrated to their skeletons,
affecting the surface of the body less than its core. They knew that it meant
snow, and in the night the snow came. Tess, who continued to live at the
cottage with the warm gable that cheered any lonely pedestrian who paused
beside it, awoke in the night, and heard above the thatch noises which seemed
to signify that the roof had turned itself into a gymnasium of all the winds.
When she lit her lamp to get up in the morning she found that the snow had
blown through a chink in the casement, forming a white cone of the finest
powder against the inside, and had also come down the chimney, so that it lay
sole-deep upon the floor, on which her shoes left tracks when she moved about.
Without, the storm drove so fast as to create a snow-mist in the kitchen; but
as yet it was too dark out-of-doors to see anything.
Tess knew
that it was impossible to go on with the swedes; and by the time she had
finished breakfast beside the solitary little lamp, Marian arrived to tell her
that they were to join the rest of the women at reed-drawing in the barn till
the weather changed. As soon, therefore, as the uniform cloak of darkness
without began to turn to a disordered medley of grays, they blew out the lamp,
wrapped themselves up in their thickest pinners, tied their woollen cravats
round their necks and across their chests, and started for the barn. The snow
had followed the birds from the polar basin as a white pillar of a cloud, and
individual flakes could not be seen. The blast smelt of icebergs, arctic seas,
whales, and white bears, carrying the snow so that it licked the land but did
not deepen on it. They trudged onwards with slanted bodies through the flossy
fields, keeping as well as they could in the shelter of hedges, which, however,
acted as strainers rather than screens. The air, afflicted to pallor with the
hoary multitudes that infested it, twisted and spun them eccentrically,
suggesting an achromatic chaos of things. But both the young women were fairly
cheerful; such weather on a dry upland is not in itself dispiriting.
"Ha-ha!
the cunning northern birds knew this was coming," said Marian.
"Depend upon't, they keep just in front o't all the way from the North
Star. Your husband, my dear, is, I make no doubt, having scorching weather all
this time. Lord, if he could only see his pretty wife now! Not that this
weather hurts your beauty at all—in fact, it rather does it good."
"You
mustn't talk about him to me, Marian," said Tess severely.
"Well,
but—surely you care for'n! Do you?"
Instead of
answering, Tess, with tears in her eyes, impulsively faced in the direction in
which she imagined South America to lie, and, putting up her lips, blew out a
passionate kiss upon the snowy wind.
"Well,
well, I know you do. But 'pon my body, it is a rum life for a married couple!
There—I won't say another word! Well, as for the weather, it won't hurt us in
the wheat-barn; but reed-drawing is fearful hard work—worse than swede-hacking.
I can stand it because I'm stout; but you be slimmer than I. I can't think why
maister should have set 'ee at it."
They
reached the wheat-barn and entered it. One end of the long structure was full
of corn; the middle was where the reed-drawing was carried on, and there had
already been placed in the reed-press the evening before as many sheaves of
wheat as would be sufficient for the women to draw from during the day.
"Why,
here's Izz!" said Marian.
Izz it
was, and she came forward. She had walked all the way from her mother's home on
the previous afternoon, and, not deeming the distance so great, had been
belated, arriving, however, just before the snow began, and sleeping at the
alehouse. The farmer had agreed with her mother at market to take her on if she
came to-day, and she had been afraid to disappoint him by delay.
In
addition to Tess, Marian, and Izz, there were two women from a neighbouring
village; two Amazonian sisters, whom Tess with a start remembered as Dark Car,
the Queen of Spades, and her junior, the Queen of Diamonds—those who had tried
to fight with her in the midnight quarrel at Trantridge. They showed no
recognition of her, and possibly had none, for they had been under the
influence of liquor on that occasion, and were only temporary sojourners there
as here. They did all kinds of men's work by preference, including
well-sinking, hedging, ditching, and excavating, without any sense of fatigue.
Noted reed-drawers were they too, and looked round upon the other three with
some superciliousness.
Putting on
their gloves, all set to work in a row in front of the press, an erection
formed of two posts connected by a cross-beam, under which the sheaves to be
drawn from were laid ears outward, the beam being pegged down by pins in the
uprights, and lowered as the sheaves diminished.
The day
hardened in colour, the light coming in at the barndoors upwards from the snow
instead of downwards from the sky. The girls pulled handful after handful from
the press; but by reason of the presence of the strange women, who were
recounting scandals, Marian and Izz could not at first talk of old times as
they wished to do. Presently they heard the muffled tread of a horse, and the
farmer rode up to the barndoor. When he had dismounted he came close to Tess,
and remained looking musingly at the side of her face. She had not turned at
first, but his fixed attitude led her to look round, when she perceived that
her employer was the native of Trantridge from whom she had taken flight on the
high-road because of his allusion to her history.
He waited
till she had carried the drawn bundles to the pile outside, when he said,
"So you be the young woman who took my civility in such ill part? Be
drowned if I didn't think you might be as soon as I heard of your being hired!
Well, you thought you had got the better of me the first time at the inn with
your fancy-man, and the second time on the road, when you bolted; but now I
think I've got the better you." He concluded with a hard laugh.
Tess,
between the Amazons and the farmer, like a bird caught in a clap-net, returned
no answer, continuing to pull the straw. She could read character sufficiently
well to know by this time that she had nothing to fear from her employer's
gallantry; it was rather the tyranny induced by his mortification at Clare's
treatment of him. Upon the whole she preferred that sentiment in man and felt
brave enough to endure it.
"You
thought I was in love with 'ee I suppose? Some women are such fools, to take
every look as serious earnest. But there's nothing like a winter afield for
taking that nonsense out o' young wenches' heads; and you've signed and agreed
till Lady-Day. Now, are you going to beg my pardon?"
"I
think you ought to beg mine."
"Very
well—as you like. But we'll see which is master here. Be they all the sheaves
you've done to-day?"
"Yes,
sir."
"'Tis
a very poor show. Just see what they've done over there" (pointing to the
two stalwart women). "The rest, too, have done better than you."
"They've
all practised it before, and I have not. And I thought it made no difference to
you as it is task work, and we are only paid for what we do."
"Oh,
but it does. I want the barn cleared."
"I am
going to work all the afternoon instead of leaving at two as the others will
do."
He looked
sullenly at her and went away. Tess felt that she could not have come to a much
worse place; but anything was better than gallantry. When two o'clock arrived
the professional reed-drawers tossed off the last half-pint in their flagon,
put down their hooks, tied their last sheaves, and went away. Marian and Izz
would have done likewise, but on hearing that Tess meant to stay, to make up by
longer hours for her lack of skill, they would not leave her. Looking out at
the snow, which still fell, Marian exclaimed, "Now, we've got it all to
ourselves." And so at last the conversation turned to their old
experiences at the dairy; and, of course, the incidents of their affection for
Angel Clare.
"Izz
and Marian," said Mrs Angel Clare, with a dignity which was extremely
touching, seeing how very little of a wife she was: "I can't join in talk
with you now, as I used to do, about Mr Clare; you will see that I cannot;
because, although he is gone away from me for the present, he is my
husband."
Izz was by
nature the sauciest and most caustic of all the four girls who had loved Clare.
"He was a very splendid lover, no doubt," she said; "but I don't
think he is a too fond husband to go away from you so soon."
"He
had to go—he was obliged to go, to see about the land over there!" pleaded
Tess.
"He
might have tided 'ee over the winter."
"Ah—that's
owing to an accident—a misunderstanding; and we won't argue it," Tess
answered, with tearfulness in her words. "Perhaps there's a good deal to
be said for him! He did not go away, like some husbands, without telling me;
and I can always find out where he is."
After this
they continued for some long time in a reverie, as they went on seizing the
ears of corn, drawing out the straw, gathering it under their arms, and cutting
off the ears with their bill-hooks, nothing sounding in the barn but the swish
of the straw and the crunch of the hook. Then Tess suddenly flagged, and sank
down upon the heap of wheat-ears at her feet.
"I
knew you wouldn't be able to stand it!" cried Marian. "It wants
harder flesh than yours for this work."
Just then
the farmer entered. "Oh, that's how you get on when I am away," he
said to her.
"But
it is my own loss," she pleaded. "Not yours."
"I
want it finished," he said doggedly, as he crossed the barn and went out
at the other door.
"Don't
'ee mind him, there's a dear," said Marian. "I've worked here before.
Now you go and lie down there, and Izz and I will make up your number."
"I
don't like to let you do that. I'm taller than you, too."
However,
she was so overcome that she consented to lie down awhile, and reclined on a
heap of pull-tails—the refuse after the straight straw had been drawn—thrown up
at the further side of the barn. Her succumbing had been as largely owning to
agitation at the re-opening the subject of her separation from her husband as
to the hard work. She lay in a state of percipience without volition, and the
rustle of the straw and the cutting of the ears by the others had the weight of
bodily touches.
She could
hear from her corner, in addition to these noises, the murmur of their voices.
She felt certain that they were continuing the subject already broached, but
their voices were so low that she could not catch the words. At last Tess grew
more and more anxious to know what they were saying, and, persuading herself
that she felt better, she got up and resumed work.
Then Izz
Huett broke down. She had walked more than a dozen miles the previous evening, had
gone to bed at midnight, and had risen again at five o'clock. Marian alone,
thanks to her bottle of liquor and her stoutness of build, stood the strain
upon back and arms without suffering. Tess urged Izz to leave off, agreeing, as
she felt better, to finish the day without her, and make equal division of the
number of sheaves.
Izz
accepted the offer gratefully, and disappeared through the great door into the
snowy track to her lodging. Marian, as was the case every afternoon at this
time on account of the bottle, began to feel in a romantic vein.
"I
should not have thought it of him—never!" she said in a dreamy tone.
"And I loved him so! I didn't mind his having you. But this about
Izz is too bad!"
Tess, in
her start at the words, narrowly missed cutting off a finger with the
bill-hook.
"Is
it about my husband?" she stammered.
"Well,
yes. Izz said, 'Don't 'ee tell her'; but I am sure I can't help it! It was what
he wanted Izz to do. He wanted her to go off to Brazil with him."
Tess's
face faded as white as the scene without, and its curves straightened.
"And did Izz refuse to go?" she asked.
"I
don't know. Anyhow he changed his mind."
"Pooh—then
he didn't mean it! 'Twas just a man's jest!"
"Yes
he did; for he drove her a good-ways towards the station."
"He
didn't take her!"
They
pulled on in silence till Tess, without any premonitory symptoms, burst out
crying.
"There!"
said Marian. "Now I wish I hadn't told 'ee!"
"No.
It is a very good thing that you have done! I have been living on in a
thirtover, lackaday way, and have not seen what it may lead to! I ought to have
sent him a letter oftener. He said I could not go to him, but he didn't say I
was not to write as often as I liked. I won't dally like this any longer! I
have been very wrong and neglectful in leaving everything to be done by
him!"
The dim light in the barn grew dimmer, and they could
see to work no longer. When Tess had reached home that evening, and had entered
into the privacy of her little white-washed chamber, she began impetuously
writing a letter to Clare. But falling into doubt, she could not finish it.
Afterwards she took the ring from the ribbon on which she wore it next her
heart, and retained it on her finger all night, as if to fortify herself in the
sensation that she was really the wife of this elusive lover of hers, who could
propose that Izz should go with him abroad, so shortly after he had left her.
Knowing that, how could she write entreaties to him, or show that she cared for
him any more?
XLIV
By the
disclosure in the barn her thoughts were led anew in the direction which they
had taken more than once of late—to the distant Emminster Vicarage. It was
through her husband's parents that she had been charged to send a letter to
Clare if she desired; and to write to them direct if in difficulty. But that
sense of her having morally no claim upon him had always led Tess to suspend
her impulse to send these notes; and to the family at the Vicarage, therefore,
as to her own parents since her marriage, she was virtually non-existent. This
self-effacement in both directions had been quite in consonance with her
independent character of desiring nothing by way of favour or pity to which she
was not entitled on a fair consideration of her deserts. She had set herself to
stand or fall by her qualities, and to waive such merely technical claims upon
a strange family as had been established for her by the flimsy fact of a member
of that family, in a season of impulse, writing his name in a church-book
beside hers.
But now
that she was stung to a fever by Izz's tale, there was a limit to her powers of
renunciation. Why had her husband not written to her? He had distinctly implied
that he would at least let her know of the locality to which he had journeyed;
but he had not sent a line to notify his address. Was he really indifferent?
But was he ill? Was it for her to make some advance? Surely she might summon
the courage of solicitude, call at the Vicarage for intelligence, and express
her grief at his silence. If Angel's father were the good man she had heard him
represented to be, he would be able to enter into her heart-starved situation.
Her social hardships she could conceal.
To leave
the farm on a week-day was not in her power; Sunday was the only possible opportunity.
Flintcomb-Ash being in the middle of the cretaceous tableland over which no
railway had climbed as yet, it would be necessary to walk. And the distance
being fifteen miles each way she would have to allow herself a long day for the
undertaking by rising early.
A
fortnight later, when the snow had gone, and had been followed by a hard black
frost, she took advantage of the state of the roads to try the experiment. At
four o'clock that Sunday morning she came downstairs and stepped out into the
starlight. The weather was still favourable, the ground ringing under her feet
like an anvil.
Marian and
Izz were much interested in her excursion, knowing that the journey concerned
her husband. Their lodgings were in a cottage a little further along the lane,
but they came and assisted Tess in her departure, and argued that she should
dress up in her very prettiest guise to captivate the hearts of her
parents-in-law; though she, knowing of the austere and Calvinistic tenets of
old Mr Clare, was indifferent, and even doubtful. A year had now elapsed since
her sad marriage, but she had preserved sufficient draperies from the wreck of
her then full wardrobe to clothe her very charmingly as a simple country girl
with no pretensions to recent fashion; a soft gray woollen gown, with white
crape quilling against the pink skin of her face and neck, and a black velvet
jacket and hat.
"'Tis
a thousand pities your husband can't see 'ee now—you do look a real
beauty!" said Izz Huett, regarding Tess as she stood on the threshold
between the steely starlight without and the yellow candlelight within. Izz
spoke with a magnanimous abandonment of herself to the situation; she could not
be—no woman with a heart bigger than a hazel-nut could be—antagonistic to Tess
in her presence, the influence which she exercised over those of her own sex
being of a warmth and strength quite unusual, curiously overpowering the less
worthy feminine feelings of spite and rivalry.
With a
final tug and touch here, and a slight brush there, they let her go; and she
was absorbed into the pearly air of the fore-dawn. They heard her footsteps tap
along the hard road as she stepped out to her full pace. Even Izz hoped she
would win, and, though without any particular respect for her own virtue, felt
glad that she had been prevented wronging her friend when momentarily tempted
by Clare.
It was a
year ago, all but a day, that Clare had married Tess, and only a few days less
than a year that he had been absent from her. Still, to start on a brisk walk,
and on such an errand as hers, on a dry clear wintry morning, through the
rarefied air of these chalky hogs'-backs, was not depressing; and there is no
doubt that her dream at starting was to win the heart of her mother-in-law,
tell her whole history to that lady, enlist her on her side, and so gain back
the truant.
In time
she reached the edge of the vast escarpment below which stretched the loamy
Vale of Blackmoor, now lying misty and still in the dawn. Instead of the
colourless air of the uplands, the atmosphere down there was a deep blue.
Instead of the great enclosures of a hundred acres in which she was now
accustomed to toil, there were little fields below her of less than
half-a-dozen acres, so numerous that they looked from this height like the
meshes of a net. Here the landscape was whitey-brown; down there, as in Froom
Valley, it was always green. Yet it was in that vale that her sorrow had taken
shape, and she did not love it as formerly. Beauty to her, as to all who have
felt, lay not in the thing, but in what the thing symbolized.
Keeping
the Vale on her right, she steered steadily westward; passing above the
Hintocks, crossing at right-angles the high-road from Sherton-Abbas to
Casterbridge, and skirting Dogbury Hill and High-Stoy, with the dell between
them called "The Devil's Kitchen". Still following the elevated way
she reached Cross-in-Hand, where the stone pillar stands desolate and silent,
to mark the site of a miracle, or murder, or both. Three miles further she cut
across the straight and deserted Roman road called Long-Ash Lane; leaving which
as soon as she reached it she dipped down a hill by a transverse lane into the
small town or village of Evershead, being now about halfway over the distance.
She made a halt here, and breakfasted a second time, heartily enough—not at the
Sow-and-Acorn, for she avoided inns, but at a cottage by the church.
The second
half of her journey was through a more gentle country, by way of Benvill Lane.
But as the mileage lessened between her and the spot of her pilgrimage, so did
Tess's confidence decrease, and her enterprise loom out more formidably. She
saw her purpose in such staring lines, and the landscape so faintly, that she
was sometimes in danger of losing her way. However, about noon she paused by a
gate on the edge of the basin in which Emminster and its Vicarage lay.
The square
tower, beneath which she knew that at that moment the Vicar and his
congregation were gathered, had a severe look in her eyes. She wished that she
had somehow contrived to come on a week-day. Such a good man might be
prejudiced against a woman who had chosen Sunday, never realizing the
necessities of her case. But it was incumbent upon her to go on now. She took
off the thick boots in which she had walked thus far, put on her pretty thin
ones of patent leather, and, stuffing the former into the hedge by the gatepost
where she might readily find them again, descended the hill; the freshness of
colour she had derived from the keen air thinning away in spite of her as she
drew near the parsonage.
Tess hoped
for some accident that might favour her, but nothing favoured her. The shrubs
on the Vicarage lawn rustled uncomfortably in the frosty breeze; she could not
feel by any stretch of imagination, dressed to her highest as she was, that the
house was the residence of near relations; and yet nothing essential, in nature
or emotion, divided her from them: in pains, pleasures, thoughts, birth, death,
and after-death, they were the same.
She nerved
herself by an effort, entered the swing-gate, and rang the door-bell. The thing
was done; there could be no retreat. No; the thing was not done. Nobody
answered to her ringing. The effort had to be risen to and made again. She rang
a second time, and the agitation of the act, coupled with her weariness after
the fifteen miles' walk, led her to support herself while she waited by resting
her hand on her hip and her elbow against the wall of the porch. The wind was
so nipping that the ivy-leaves had become wizened and gray, each tapping
incessantly upon its neighbour with a disquieting stir of her nerves. A piece
of blood-stained paper, caught up from some meat-buyer's dust-heap, beat up and
down the road without the gate; too flimsy to rest, too heavy to fly away; and
a few straws kept it company.
The second
peal had been louder, and still nobody came. Then she walked out of the porch,
opened the gate, and passed through. And though she looked dubiously at the
house-front as if inclined to return, it was with a breath of relied that she
closed the gate. A feeling haunted her that she might have been recognized
(though how she could not tell), and orders been given not to admit her.
Tess went
as far as the corner. She had done all she could do; but determined not to
escape present trepidation at the expense of future distress, she walked back
again quite past the house, looking up at all the windows.
Ah—the
explanation was that they were all at church, every one. She remembered her
husband saying that his father always insisted upon the household, servants
included, going to morning-service, and, as a consequence, eating cold food
when they came home. It was, therefore, only necessary to wait till the service
was over. She would not make herself conspicuous by waiting on the spot, and
she started to get past the church into the lane. But as she reached the
churchyard-gate the people began pouring out, and Tess found herself in the
midst of them.
The
Emminster congregation looked at her as only a congregation of small
country-townsfolk walking home at its leisure can look at a woman out of the
common whom it perceives to be a stranger. She quickened her pace, and ascended
the road by which she had come, to find a retreat between its hedges till the
Vicar's family should have lunched, and it might be convenient for them to
receive her. She soon distanced the churchgoers, except two youngish men, who,
linked arm-in-arm, were beating up behind her at a quick step.
As they
drew nearer she could hear their voices engaged in earnest discourse, and, with
the natural quickness of a woman in her situation, did not fail to recognize in
those noises the quality of her husband's tones. The pedestrians were his two
brothers. Forgetting all her plans, Tess's one dread was lest they should
overtake her now, in her disorganized condition, before she was prepared to
confront them; for though she felt that they could not identify her, she
instinctively dreaded their scrutiny. The more briskly they walked, the more
briskly walked she. They were plainly bent upon taking a short quick stroll
before going indoors to lunch or dinner, to restore warmth to limbs chilled
with sitting through a long service.
Only one
person had preceded Tess up the hill—a ladylike young woman, somewhat
interesting, though, perhaps, a trifle guindée and prudish. Tess had
nearly overtaken her when the speed of her brothers-in-law brought them so
nearly behind her back that she could hear every word of their conversation.
They said nothing, however, which particularly interested her till, observing
the young lady still further in front, one of them remarked, "There is
Mercy Chant. Let us overtake her."
Tess knew
the name. It was the woman who had been destined for Angel's life-companion by
his and her parents, and whom he probably would have married but for her
intrusive self. She would have known as much without previous information if
she had waited a moment, for one of the brothers proceeded to say: "Ah!
poor Angel, poor Angel! I never see that nice girl without more and more
regretting his precipitancy in throwing himself away upon a dairymaid, or
whatever she may be. It is a queer business, apparently. Whether she has joined
him yet or not I don't know; but she had not done so some months ago when I
heard from him."
"I
can't say. He never tells me anything nowadays. His ill-considered marriage
seems to have completed that estrangement from me which was begun by his
extraordinary opinions."
Tess beat
up the long hill still faster; but she could not outwalk them without exciting
notice. At last they outsped her altogether, and passed her by. The young lady
still further ahead heard their footsteps and turned. Then there was a greeting
and a shaking of hands, and the three went on together.
They soon
reached the summit of the hill, and, evidently intending this point to be the
limit of their promenade, slackened pace and turned all three aside to the gate
whereat Tess had paused an hour before that time to reconnoitre the town before
descending into it. During their discourse one of the clerical brothers probed
the hedge carefully with his umbrella, and dragged something to light.
"Here's
a pair of old boots," he said. "Thrown away, I suppose, by some tramp
or other."
"Some
imposter who wished to come into the town barefoot, perhaps, and so excite our
sympathies," said Miss Chant. "Yes, it must have been, for they are
excellent walking-boots—by no means worn out. What a wicked thing to do! I'll
carry them home for some poor person."
Cuthbert
Clare, who had been the one to find them, picked them up for her with the crook
of his stick; and Tess's boots were appropriated.
She, who
had heard this, walked past under the screen of her woollen veil till,
presently looking back, she perceived that the church party had left the gate
with her boots and retreated down the hill.
Thereupon
our heroine resumed her walk. Tears, blinding tears, were running down her
face. She knew that it was all sentiment, all baseless impressibility, which
had caused her to read the scene as her own condemnation; nevertheless she
could not get over it; she could not contravene in her own defenceless person
all those untoward omens. It was impossible to think of returning to the
Vicarage. Angel's wife felt almost as if she had been hounded up that hill like
a scorned thing by those—to her—superfine clerics. Innocently as the slight had
been inflicted, it was somewhat unfortunate that she had encountered the sons
and not the father, who, despite his narrowness, was far less starched and
ironed than they, and had to the full the gift of charity. As she again thought
of her dusty boots she almost pitied those habiliments for the quizzing to
which they had been subjected, and felt how hopeless life was for their owner.
"Ah!"
she said, still sighing in pity of herself, "They didn't know that
I wore those over the roughest part of the road to save these pretty ones he
bought for me—no—they did not know it! And they didn't think that he
chose the colour o' my pretty frock—no—how could they? If they had known
perhaps they would not have cared, for they don't care much for him, poor
thing!"
Then she
grieved for the beloved man whose conventional standard of judgement had caused
her all these latter sorrows; and she went her way without knowing that the
greatest misfortune of her life was this feminine loss of courage at the last
and critical moment through her estimating her father-in-law by his sons. Her
present condition was precisely one which would have enlisted the sympathies of
old Mr and Mrs Clare. Their hearts went out of them at a bound towards extreme
cases, when the subtle mental troubles of the less desperate among mankind
failed to win their interest or regard. In jumping at Publicans and Sinners
they would forget that a word might be said for the worries of Scribes and
Pharisees; and this defect or limitation might have recommended their own
daughter-in-law to them at this moment as a fairly choice sort of lost person
for their love.
Thereupon
she began to plod back along the road by which she had come not altogether full
of hope, but full of a conviction that a crisis in her life was approaching. No
crisis, apparently, had supervened; and there was nothing left for her to do
but to continue upon that starve-acre farm till she could again summon courage
to face the Vicarage. She did, indeed, take sufficient interest in herself to
throw up her veil on this return journey, as if to let the world see that she
could at least exhibit a face such as Mercy Chant could not show. But it was
done with a sorry shake of the head. "It is nothing—it is nothing!"
she said. "Nobody loves it; nobody sees it. Who cares about the looks of a
castaway like me!"
Her
journey back was rather a meander than a march. It had no sprightliness, no
purpose; only a tendency. Along the tedious length of Benvill Lane she began to
grow tired, and she leant upon gates and paused by milestones.
She did
not enter any house till, at the seventh or eighth mile, she descended the
steep long hill below which lay the village or townlet of Evershead, where in
the morning she had breakfasted with such contrasting expectations. The cottage
by the church, in which she again sat down, was almost the first at that end of
the village, and while the woman fetched her some milk from the pantry, Tess,
looking down the street, perceived that the place seemed quite deserted.
"The
people are gone to afternoon service, I suppose?" she said.
"No,
my dear," said the old woman. "'Tis too soon for that; the bells
hain't strook out yet. They be all gone to hear the preaching in yonder barn. A
ranter preaches there between the services—an excellent, fiery, Christian man,
they say. But, Lord, I don't go to hear'n! What comes in the regular way over
the pulpit is hot enough for I."
Tess soon
went onward into the village, her footsteps echoing against the houses as
though it were a place of the dead. Nearing the central part, her echoes were
intruded on by other sounds; and seeing the barn not far off the road, she
guessed these to be the utterances of the preacher.
His voice became so distinct in the still clear air
that she could soon catch his sentences, though she was on the closed side of
the barn. The sermon, as might be expected, was of the extremest antinomian
type; on justification by faith, as expounded in the theology of St Paul. This
fixed idea of the rhapsodist was delivered with animated enthusiasm, in a
manner entirely declamatory, for he had plainly no skill as a dialectician.
Although Tess had not heard the beginning of the address, she learnt what the
text had been from its constant iteration—
"O
foolish galatians, who hath bewitched you, that ye should not obey the truth,
before whose eyes Jesus Christ hath been evidently set forth, crucified among
you?"
Tess was
all the more interested, as she stood listening behind, in finding that the
preacher's doctrine was a vehement form of the view of Angel's father, and her
interest intensified when the speaker began to detail his own spiritual
experiences of how he had come by those views. He had, he said, been the
greatest of sinners. He had scoffed; he had wantonly associated with the
reckless and the lewd. But a day of awakening had come, and, in a human sense,
it had been brought about mainly by the influence of a certain clergyman, whom
he had at first grossly insulted; but whose parting words had sunk into his
heart, and had remained there, till by the grace of Heaven they had worked this
change in him, and made him what they saw him.
But more
startling to Tess than the doctrine had been the voice, which, impossible as it
seemed, was precisely that of Alec d'Urberville. Her face fixed in painful
suspense, she came round to the front of the barn, and passed before it. The
low winter sun beamed directly upon the great double-doored entrance on this
side; one of the doors being open, so that the rays stretched far in over the
threshing-floor to the preacher and his audience, all snugly sheltered from the
northern breeze. The listeners were entirely villagers, among them being the
man whom she had seen carrying the red paint-pot on a former memorable
occasion. But her attention was given to the central figure, who stood upon
some sacks of corn, facing the people and the door. The three o'clock sun shone
full upon him, and the strange enervating conviction that her seducer
confronted her, which had been gaining ground in Tess ever since she had heard
his words distinctly, was at last established as a fact indeed.
End of Phase the Fifth
To be continued