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Chapter XIII The event of Tess Durbeyfield's return from
the manor of her bogus kinsfolk was rumoured abroad, if rumour be not too large a word
for a space of a square mile. In the afternoon several young girls of Marlott,
former schoolfellows and acquaintances of Tess, called to see her, arriving dressed
in their best starched and ironed, as became visitors to a person who had made a transcendent
conquest (as they supposed), and sat round the room looking at her with great curiosity.
For the fact that it was this said thirty-first cousin, Mr d'Urberville, who had fallen in
love with her, a gentleman not altogether local, whose reputation as a reckless gallant
and heartbreaker was beginning to spread beyond the immediate boundaries of Trantridge, lent
Tess's supposed position, by its fearsomeness, a far higher fascination that it would have
exercised if unhazardous. Their interest was so deep that the younger
ones whispered when her back was turned— "How pretty she is; and how that best frock
do set her off! I believe it cost an immense deal, and that
it was a gift from him." Tess, who was reaching up to get the tea-things
from the corner-cupboard, did not hear these commentaries.
If she had heard them, she might soon have set her friends right on the matter.
But her mother heard, and Joan's simple vanity, having been denied the hope of a dashing marriage,
fed itself as well as it could upon the sensation of a dashing flirtation.
Upon the whole she felt gratified, even though such a limited and evanescent triumph should
involve her daughter's reputation; it might end in marriage yet, and in the warmth of
her responsiveness to their admiration she invited her visitors to stay to tea.
Their chatter, their laughter, their good-humoured innuendoes, above all, their flashes and flickerings
of envy, revived Tess's spirits also; and, as the evening wore on, she caught the infection
of their excitement, and grew almost gay. The marble hardness left her face, she moved
with something of her old bounding step, and flushed in all her young beauty.
At moments, in spite of thought, she would reply to their inquiries with a manner of
superiority, as if recognizing that her experiences in the field of courtship had, indeed, been
slightly enviable. But so far was she from being, in the words
of Robert South, "in love with her own ruin," that the illusion was transient as lightning;
cold reason came back to mock her spasmodic weakness; the ghastliness of her momentary
pride would convict her, and recall her to reserved listlessness again.
And the despondency of the next morning's dawn, when it was no longer Sunday, but Monday;
and no best clothes; and the laughing visitors were gone, and she awoke alone in her old
bed, the innocent younger children breathing softly around her.
In place of the excitement of her return, and the interest it had inspired, she saw
before her a long and stony highway which she had to tread, without aid, and with little
sympathy. Her depression was then terrible, and she
could have hidden herself in a tomb. In the course of a few weeks Tess revived
sufficiently to show herself so far as was necessary to get to church one Sunday morning.
She liked to hear the chanting—such as it was—and the old Psalms, and to join in the
Morning Hymn. That innate love of melody, which she had
inherited from her ballad-singing mother, gave the simplest music a power over her which
could well-nigh drag her heart out of her *** at times.
To be as much out of observation as possible for reasons of her own, and to escape the
gallantries of the young men, she set out before the chiming began, and took a back
seat under the gallery, close to the lumber, where only old men and women came, and where
the bier stood on end among the churchyard tools.
Parishioners dropped in by twos and threes, deposited themselves in rows before her, rested
three-quarters of a minute on their foreheads as if they were praying, though they were
not; then sat up, and looked around. When the chants came on, one of her favourites
happened to be chosen among the rest—the old double chant "Langdon"—but she did not
know what it was called, though she would much have liked to know.
She thought, without exactly wording the thought, how strange and god-like was a composer's
power, who from the grave could lead through sequences of emotion, which he alone had felt
at first, a girl like her who had never heard of his name, and never would have a clue to
his personality. The people who had turned their heads turned
them again as the service proceeded; and at last observing her, they whispered to each
other. She knew what their whispers were about, grew
sick at heart, and felt that she could come to church no more.
The bedroom which she shared with some of the children formed her retreat more continually
than ever. Here, under her few square yards of thatch,
she watched winds, and snows, and rains, gorgeous sunsets, and successive moons at their full.
So close kept she that at length almost everybody thought she had gone away.
The only exercise that Tess took at this time was after dark; and it was then, when out
in the woods, that she seemed least solitary. She knew how to hit to a hair's-breadth that
moment of evening when the light and the darkness are so evenly balanced that the constraint
of day and the suspense of night neutralize each other, leaving absolute mental liberty.
It is then that the plight of being alive becomes attenuated to its least possible dimensions.
She had no fear of the shadows; her sole idea seemed to be to shun mankind—or rather that
cold accretion called the world, which, so terrible in the mass, is so unformidable,
even pitiable, in its units. On these lonely hills and dales her quiescent
glide was of a piece with the element she moved in.
Her flexuous and stealthy figure became an integral part of the scene.
At times her whimsical fancy would intensify natural processes around her till they seemed
a part of her own story. Rather they became a part of it; for the world
is only a psychological phenomenon, and what they seemed they were.
The midnight airs and gusts, moaning amongst the tightly-wrapped buds and bark of the winter
twigs, were formulae of bitter reproach. A wet day was the expression of irremediable
grief at her weakness in the mind of some vague ethical being whom she could not class
definitely as the God of her childhood, and could not comprehend as any other.
But this encompassment of her own characterization, based on shreds of convention, peopled by
phantoms and voices antipathetic to her, was a sorry and mistaken creation of Tess's fancy—a
cloud of moral hobgoblins by which she was terrified without reason.
It was they that were out of harmony with the actual world, not she.
Walking among the sleeping birds in the hedges, watching the skipping rabbits on a moonlit
warren, or standing under a pheasant-laden bough, she looked upon herself as a figure
of Guilt intruding into the haunts of Innocence. But all the while she was making a distinction
where there was no difference. Feeling herself in antagonism, she was quite
in accord. She had been made to break an accepted social
law, but no law known to the environment in which she fancied herself such an anomaly.
XIV It was a hazy sunrise in August.
The denser nocturnal vapours, attacked by the warm beams, were dividing and shrinking
into isolated fleeces within hollows and coverts, where they waited till they should be dried
away to nothing. The sun, on account of the mist, had a curious
sentient, personal look, demanding the masculine pronoun for its adequate expression. His present
aspect, coupled with the lack of all human forms in the scene, explained the old-time
heliolatries in a moment. One could feel that a saner religion had never
prevailed under the sky. The luminary was a golden-haired, beaming,
mild-eyed, God-like creature, gazing down in the vigour and intentness of youth upon
an earth that was brimming with interest for him.
His light, a little later, broke though chinks of cottage shutters, throwing stripes like
red-hot pokers upon cupboards, chests of drawers, and other furniture within; and awakening
harvesters who were not already astir. But of all ruddy things that morning the brightest
were two broad arms of painted wood, which rose from the margin of yellow cornfield hard
by Marlott village. They, with two others below, formed the revolving
Maltese cross of the reaping-machine, which had been brought to the field on the previous
evening to be ready for operations this day. The paint with which they were smeared, intensified
in hue by the sunlight, imparted to them a look of having been dipped in liquid fire.
The field had already been "opened"; that is to say, a lane a few feet wide had been
hand-cut through the wheat along the whole circumference of the field for the first passage
of the horses and machine. Two groups, one of men and lads, the other
of women, had come down the lane just at the hour when the shadows of the eastern hedge-top
struck the west hedge midway, so that the heads of the groups were enjoying sunrise
while their feet were still in the dawn. They disappeared from the lane between the
two stone posts which flanked the nearest field-gate.
Presently there arose from within a ticking like the love-making of the grasshopper.
The machine had begun, and a moving concatenation of three horses and the aforesaid long rickety
machine was visible over the gate, a driver sitting
upon one of the hauling horses, and an attendant on the seat of the implement.
Along one side of the field the whole wain went, the arms of the mechanical reaper revolving
slowly, till it passed down the hill quite out of sight. In a minute it came up on the
other side of the field at the same equable pace; the glistening brass star in the forehead
of the fore horse first catching the eye as it rose into view over the stubble, then the
bright arms, and then the whole machine. The narrow lane of stubble encompassing the
field grew wider with each circuit, and the standing corn was reduced to a smaller area
as the morning wore on. Rabbits, hares, snakes, rats, mice, retreated
inwards as into a fastness, unaware of the ephemeral nature of their refuge, and of the
doom that awaited them later in the day when, their covert shrinking to a more and more
horrible narrowness, they were huddled together, friends and foes, till the last few yards
of upright wheat fell also under the teeth of the unerring reaper, and they were every
one put to death by the sticks and stones of the harvesters.
The reaping-machine left the fallen corn behind it in little heaps, each heap being of the
quantity for a sheaf; and upon these the active binders in the rear laid their hands—mainly
women, but some of them men in print shirts, and trousers supported round their waists
by leather straps, rendering useless the two buttons behind, which twinkled and bristled
with sunbeams at every movement of each wearer, as if they were a pair of eyes in the small
of his back. But those of the other sex were the most interesting
of this company of binders, by reason of the charm which is acquired by woman when she
becomes part and parcel of outdoor nature, and is not merely an object set down therein
as at ordinary times. A field-man is a personality afield; a field-woman
is a portion of the field; she had somehow lost her own margin, imbibed the essence of
her surrounding, and assimilated herself with it.
The women—or rather girls, for they were mostly young—wore drawn cotton bonnets with
great flapping curtains to keep off the sun, and gloves to prevent their hands being wounded
by the stubble. There was one wearing a pale pink jacket,
another in a cream-coloured tight-sleeved gown, another in a petticoat as red as the
arms of the reaping-machine; and others, older, in the brown-rough "wropper" or over-all—the
old-established and most appropriate dress of the field-woman, which the young ones were
abandoning. This morning the eye returns involuntarily
to the girl in the pink cotton jacket, she being the most flexuous and finely-drawn figure
of them all. But her bonnet is pulled so far over her brow
that none of her face is disclosed while she binds, though her complexion may be guessed
from a stray twine or two of dark brown hair which extends below the curtain of her bonnet.
Perhaps one reason why she seduces casual attention is that she never courts it, though
the other women often gaze around them. Her binding proceeds with clock-like monotony.
From the sheaf last finished she draws a handful of ears, patting their tips with her left
palm to bring them even. Then, stooping low, she moves forward, gathering
the corn with both hands against her knees, and pushing her left gloved hand under the
bundle to meet the right on the other side, holding the corn in an embrace like that of
a lover. She brings the ends of the bond together,
and kneels on the sheaf while she ties it, beating back her skirts now and then when
lifted by the breeze. A bit of her naked arm is visible between
the buff leather of the gauntlet and the sleeve of her gown; and as the day wears on its feminine
smoothness becomes scarified by the stubble and bleeds.
At intervals she stands up to rest, and to retie her disarranged apron, or to pull her
bonnet straight. Then one can see the oval face of a handsome
young woman with deep dark eyes and long heavy clinging tresses, which seem to clasp in a
beseeching way anything they fall against. The cheeks are paler, the teeth more regular,
the red lips thinner than is usual in a country-bred girl.
It is Tess Durbeyfield, otherwise d'Urberville, somewhat changed—the same, but not the same;
at the present stage of her existence living as a stranger and an alien here, though it
was no strange land that she was in. After a long seclusion she had come to a resolve
to undertake outdoor work in her native village, the busiest season of the year in the agricultural
world having arrived, and nothing that she could do within the house being so remunerative
for the time as harvesting in the fields. The movements of the other women were more
or less similar to Tess's, the whole bevy of them drawing together like dancers in a
quadrille at the completion of a sheaf by each, every one placing her sheaf on end against
those of the rest, till a shock, or "stitch" as it was here called, of ten or a dozen was
formed. They went to breakfast, and came again, and
the work proceeded as before. As the hour of eleven drew near a person watching
her might have noticed that every now and then Tess's glance flitted wistfully to the
brow of the hill, though she did not pause in her sheafing. On the verge of the hour
the heads of a group of children, of ages ranging from six to fourteen, rose over the
stubbly convexity of the hill. The face of Tess flushed slightly, but still
she did not pause. The eldest of the comers, a girl who wore
a triangular shawl, its corner draggling on the stubble, carried in her arms what at first
sight seemed to be a doll, but proved to be an infant in long clothes.
Another brought some lunch. The harvesters ceased working, took their
provisions, and sat down against one of the shocks.
Here they fell to, the men plying a stone jar freely, and passing round a cup.
Tess Durbeyfield had been one of the last to suspend her labours. She sat down at the
end of the shock, her face turned somewhat away from her companions.
When she had deposited herself a man in a rabbit-skin cap, and with a red handkerchief
tucked into his belt, held the cup of ale over the top of the shock for her to drink.
But she did not accept his offer. As soon as her lunch was spread she called
up the big girl, her sister, and took the baby of her, who, glad to be relieved of the
burden, went away to the next shock and joined the other children playing there.
Tess, with a curiously stealthy yet courageous movement, and with a still rising colour,
unfastened her frock and began suckling the child.
The men who sat nearest considerately turned their faces towards the other end of the field,
some of them beginning to smoke; one, with absent-minded fondness, regretfully stroking
the jar that would no longer yield a stream. All the women but Tess fell into animated
talk, and adjusted the disarranged knots of their hair.
When the infant had taken its fill, the young mother sat it upright in her lap, and looking
into the far distance, dandled it with a gloomy indifference that was almost dislike; then
all of a sudden she fell to violently kissing it some dozens of times, as if she could never
leave off, the child crying at the vehemence of an onset which strangely combined passionateness
with contempt. "She's fond of that there child, though she
mid pretend to hate en, and say she wishes the baby and her too were in the churchyard,"
observed the woman in the red petticoat. "She'll soon leave off saying that," replied
the one in buff. "Lord, 'tis wonderful what a body can get used to o' that sort in time!"
"A little more than persuading had to do wi' the coming o't, I reckon.
There were they that heard a sobbing one night last year in The Chase; and it mid ha' gone
hard wi' a certain party if folks had come along."
"Well, a little more, or a little less, 'twas a thousand pities that it should have happened
to she, of all others. But 'tis always the comeliest!
The plain ones be as safe as churches—hey, Jenny?"
The speaker turned to one of the group who certainly was not ill-defined as plain.
It was a thousand pities, indeed; it was impossible for even an enemy to feel otherwise on looking
at Tess as she sat there, with her flower-like mouth and large tender eyes, neither black
nor blue nor grey nor violet; rather all those shades together, and a hundred others, which
could be seen if one looked into their irises—shade behind shade—tint beyond tint—around pupils
that had no bottom; an almost standard woman, but for the slight incautiousness of character
inherited from her race. A resolution which had surprised herself had
brought her into the fields this week for the first time during many months.
After wearing and wasting her palpitating heart with every engine of regret that lonely
inexperience could devise, common sense had illuminated her.
She felt that she would do well to be useful again—to taste anew sweet independence at
any price. The past was past; whatever it had been, it
was no more at hand. Whatever its consequences, time would close
over them; they would all in a few years be as if they had never been, and she herself
grassed down and forgotten. Meanwhile the trees were just as green as before; the birds
sang and the sun shone as clearly now as ever. The familiar surroundings had not darkened
because of her grief, nor sickened because of her pain.
She might have seen that what had bowed her head so profoundly—the thought of the world's
concern at her situation—was founded on an illusion.
She was not an existence, an experience, a passion, a structure of sensations, to anybody
but herself. To all humankind besides, Tess was only a
passing thought. Even to friends she was no more than a frequently
passing thought. If she made herself miserable the livelong
night and day it was only this much to them—"Ah, she makes herself unhappy."
If she tried to be cheerful, to dismiss all care, to take pleasure in the daylight, the
flowers, the baby, she could only be this idea to them—"Ah, she bears it very well."
Moreover, alone in a desert island would she have been wretched at what had happened to
her? Not greatly.
If she could have been but just created, to discover herself as a spouseless mother, with
no experience of life except as the parent of a nameless child, would the position have
caused her to despair? No, she would have taken it calmly, and found
pleasure therein. Most of the misery had been generated by her conventional aspect, and
not by her innate sensations. Whatever Tess's reasoning, some spirit had
induced her to dress herself up neatly as she had formerly done, and come out into the
fields, harvest-hands being greatly in demand just then.
This was why she had borne herself with dignity, and had looked people calmly in the face at
times, even when holding the baby in her arms. The harvest-men rose from the shock of corn,
and stretched their limbs, and extinguished their pipes.
The horses, which had been unharnessed and fed, were again attached to the scarlet machine.
Tess, having quickly eaten her own meal, beckoned to her eldest sister to come and take away
the baby, fastened her dress, put on the buff gloves again, and stooped anew to draw a bond
from the last completed sheaf for the tying of the next.
In the afternoon and evening the proceedings of the morning were continued, Tess staying
on till dusk with the body of harvesters. Then they all rode home in one of the largest
wagons, in the company of a broad tarnished moon that had risen from the ground to the
eastwards, its face resembling the outworn gold-leaf halo of some worm-eaten Tuscan saint.
Tess's female companions sang songs, and showed themselves very sympathetic and glad at her
reappearance out of doors, though they could not refrain from mischievously throwing in
a few verses of the ballad about the maid who went to the merry green wood and came
back a changed state. There are counterpoises and compensations
in life; and the event which had made of her a social warning had also for the moment made
her the most interesting personage in the village to many.
Their friendliness won her still farther away from herself, their lively spirits were contagious,
and she became almost gay. But now that her moral sorrows were passing
away a fresh one arose on the natural side of her which knew no social law.
When she reached home it was to learn to her grief that the baby had been suddenly taken
ill since the afternoon. Some such collapse had been probable, so tender
and puny was its frame; but the event came as a shock nevertheless.
The baby's offence against society in coming into the world was forgotten by the girl-mother;
her soul's desire was to continue that offence by preserving the life of the child.
However, it soon grew clear that the hour of emancipation for that little prisoner of
the flesh was to arrive earlier than her worst misgiving had conjectured. And when she had
discovered this she was plunged into a misery which transcended that of the child's simple
loss. Her baby had not been baptized.
Tess had drifted into a frame of mind which accepted passively the consideration that
if she should have to burn for what she had done, burn she must, and there was an end
of it. Like all village girls, she was well grounded
in the Holy Scriptures, and had dutifully studied the histories of Aholah and Aholibah,
and knew the inferences to be drawn therefrom. But when the same question arose with regard
to the baby, it had a very different colour. Her darling was about to die, and no salvation.
It was nearly bedtime, but she rushed downstairs and asked if she might send for the parson.
The moment happened to be one at which her father's sense of the antique nobility of
his family was highest, and his sensitiveness to the smudge which Tess had set upon that
nobility most pronounced, for he had just returned from his weekly *** at Rolliver's
Inn. No parson should come inside his door, he
declared, prying into his affairs, just then, when, by her shame, it had become more necessary
than ever to hide them. He locked the door and put the key in his
pocket. The household went to bed, and, distressed
beyond measure, Tess retired also. She was continually waking as she lay, and
in the middle of the night found that the baby was still worse.
It was obviously dying—quietly and painlessly, but none the less surely.
In her misery she rocked herself upon the bed.
The clock struck the solemn hour of one, that hour when fancy stalks outside reason, and
malignant possibilities stand rock-firm as facts.
She thought of the child consigned to the nethermost corner of hell, as its double doom
for lack of baptism and lack of legitimacy; saw the arch-fiend tossing it with his three-pronged
fork, like the one they used for heating the oven on baking days; to which picture she
added many other quaint and curious details of torment sometimes taught the young in this
Christian country. The lurid presentment so powerfully affected
her imagination in the silence of the sleeping house that her nightgown became damp with
perspiration, and the bedstead shook with each throb of her heart.
The infant's breathing grew more difficult, and the mother's mental tension increased.
It was useless to devour the little thing with kisses; she could stay in bed no longer,
and walked feverishly about the room. "O merciful God, have pity; have pity upon
my poor baby!" she cried. "Heap as much anger as you want to upon me, and welcome; but pity
the child!" She leant against the chest of drawers, and
murmured incoherent supplications for a long while, till she suddenly started up.
"Ah! perhaps baby can be saved! Perhaps it will be just the same!"
She spoke so brightly that it seemed as though her face might have shone in the gloom surrounding
her. She lit a candle, and went to a second and
a third bed under the wall, where she awoke her young sisters and brothers, all of whom
occupied the same room. Pulling out the washing-stand so that she
could get behind it, she poured some water from a jug, and made them kneel around, putting
their hands together with fingers exactly vertical.
While the children, scarcely awake, awe-stricken at her manner, their eyes growing larger and
larger, remained in this position, she took the baby from her bed—a child's child—so
immature as scarce to seem a sufficient personality to endow its producer with the maternal title.
Tess then stood erect with the infant on her arm beside the basin; the next sister held
the Prayer-Book open before her, as the clerk at church held it before the parson; and thus
the girl set about baptizing her child. Her figure looked singularly tall and imposing
as she stood in her long white nightgown, a thick cable of twisted dark hair hanging
straight down her back to her waist. The kindly dimness of the weak candle abstracted
from her form and features the little blemishes which sunlight might have revealed—the stubble
scratches upon her wrists, and the weariness of her eyes—her high enthusiasm having a
transfiguring effect upon the face which had been her undoing, showing it as a thing of
immaculate beauty, with a touch of dignity which was almost regal.
The little ones kneeling round, their sleepy eyes blinking and red, awaited her preparations
full of a suspended wonder which their physical heaviness at that hour would not allow to
become active. The most impressed of them said:
"Be you really going to christen him, Tess?" The girl-mother replied in a grave affirmative.
"What's his name going to be?" She had not thought of that, but a name suggested
by a phrase in the book of Genesis came into her head as she proceeded with the baptismal
service, and now she pronounced it: "SORROW, I baptize thee in the name of the
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." She sprinkled the water, and there was silence.
"Say 'Amen,' children." The tiny voices piped in obedient response,
"Amen!" Tess went on:
"We receive this child"—and so forth—"and do sign him with the sign of the Cross."
Here she dipped her hand into the basin, and fervently drew an immense cross upon the baby
with her forefinger, continuing with the customary sentences as to his manfully fighting against
sin, the world, and the devil, and being a faithful soldier and servant unto his life's
end. She duly went on with the Lord's Prayer, the
children lisping it after her in a thin gnat-like wail, till, at the conclusion, raising their
voices to clerk's pitch, they again piped into silence, "Amen!"
Then their sister, with much augmented confidence in the efficacy of the sacrament, poured forth
from the bottom of her heart the thanksgiving that follows, uttering it boldly and triumphantly
in the stopt-diapason note which her voice acquired when her heart was in her speech,
and which will never be forgotten by those who knew her. The ecstasy of faith almost
apotheosized her; it set upon her face a glowing irradiation, and brought a red spot into the
middle of each cheek; while the miniature candle-flame inverted in her eye-pupils shone
like a diamond. The children gazed up at her with more and
more reverence, and no longer had a will for questioning.
She did not look like Sissy to them now, but as a being large, towering, and awful—a
divine personage with whom they had nothing in common.
Poor Sorrow's campaign against sin, the world, and the devil was doomed to be of limited
brilliancy—luckily perhaps for himself, considering his beginnings.
In the blue of the morning that fragile soldier and servant breathed his last, and when the
other children awoke they cried bitterly, and begged Sissy to have another pretty baby.
The calmness which had possessed Tess since the christening remained with her in the infant's
loss. In the daylight, indeed, she felt her terrors
about his soul to have been somewhat exaggerated; whether well founded or not, she had no uneasiness
now, reasoning that if Providence would not ratify such an act of approximation she, for
one, did not value the kind of heaven lost by the irregularity—either for herself or
for her child. So passed away Sorrow the Undesired—that
intrusive creature, that *** gift of shameless Nature, who respects not the social law; a
waif to whom eternal Time had been a matter of days merely, who knew not that such things
as years and centuries ever were; to whom the cottage interior was the universe, the
week's weather climate, new-born babyhood human existence, and the instinct to suck
human knowledge. Tess, who mused on the christening a good
deal, wondered if it were doctrinally sufficient to secure a Christian burial for the child.
Nobody could tell this but the parson of the parish, and he was a new-comer, and did not
know her. She went to his house after dusk, and stood
by the gate, but could not summon courage to go in.
The enterprise would have been abandoned if she had not by accident met him coming homeward
as she turned away. In the gloom she did not mind speaking freely.
"I should like to ask you something, sir." He expressed his willingness to listen, and
she told the story of the baby's illness and the extemporized ordinance.
"And now, sir," she added earnestly, "can you tell me this—will it be just the same
for him as if you had baptized him?" Having the natural feelings of a tradesman
at finding that a job he should have been called in for had been unskilfully botched
by his customers among themselves, he was disposed to say no.
Yet the dignity of the girl, the strange tenderness in her voice, combined to affect his nobler
impulses—or rather those that he had left in him after ten years of endeavour to graft
technical belief on actual scepticism. The man and the ecclesiastic fought within
him, and the victory fell to the man. "My dear girl," he said, "it will be just
the same." "Then will you give him a Christian burial?"
she asked quickly. The Vicar felt himself cornered. Hearing of
the baby's illness, he had conscientiously gone to the house after nightfall to perform
the rite, and, unaware that the refusal to admit him had come from Tess's father and
not from Tess, he could not allow the plea of necessity for its irregular administration.
"Ah—that's another matter," he said. "Another matter—why?" asked Tess, rather
warmly. "Well—I would willingly do so if only we
two were concerned. But I must not—for certain reasons."
"Just for once, sir!" "Really I must not."
"O sir!" She seized his hand as she spoke.
He withdrew it, shaking his head. "Then I don't like you!" she burst out, "and
I'll never come to your church no more!" "Don't talk so rashly."
"Perhaps it will be just the same to him if you don't? ...
Will it be just the same? Don't for God's sake speak as saint to sinner,
but as you yourself to me myself—poor me!" How the Vicar reconciled his answer with the
strict notions he supposed himself to hold on these subjects it is beyond a layman's
power to tell, though not to excuse. Somewhat moved, he said in this case also—
"It will be just the same." So the baby was carried in a small deal box,
under an ancient woman's shawl, to the churchyard that night, and buried by lantern-light, at
the cost of a shilling and a pint of beer to the sexton, in that shabby corner of God's
allotment where He lets the nettles grow, and where all unbaptized infants, notorious
drunkards, suicides, and others of the conjecturally damned are laid.
In spite of the untoward surroundings, however, Tess bravely made a little cross of two laths
and a piece of string, and having bound it with flowers, she stuck it up at the head
of the grave one evening when she could enter the churchyard without being seen, putting
at the foot also a bunch of the same flowers in a little jar of water to keep them alive.
What matter was it that on the outside of the jar the eye of mere observation noted
the words "Keelwell's Marmalade"? The eye of maternal affection did not see
them in its vision of higher things.
XV "By experience," says Roger Ascham, "we find
out a short way by a long wandering." Not seldom that long wandering unfits us for
further travel, and of what use is our experience to us then?
Tess Durbeyfield's experience was of this incapacitating kind.
At last she had learned what to do; but who would now accept her doing?
If before going to the d'Urbervilles' she had vigorously moved under the guidance of
sundry gnomic texts and phrases known to her and to the world in general, no doubt she
would never have been imposed on. But it had not been in Tess's power—nor is it in anybody's
power—to feel the whole truth of golden opinions while it is possible to profit by
them. She—and how many more—might have ironically
said to God with Saint Augustine: "Thou hast counselled a better course than Thou hast
permitted." She remained at her father's house during
the winter months, plucking fowls, or cramming turkeys and geese, or making clothes for her
sisters and brothers out of some finery which d'Urberville had given her, and she had put
by with contempt. Apply to him she would not. But she would
often clasp her hands behind her head and muse when she was supposed to be working hard.
She philosophically noted dates as they came past in the revolution of the year; the disastrous
night of her undoing at Trantridge with its dark background of The Chase; also the dates
of the baby's birth and death; also her own birthday; and every other day individualized
by incidents in which she had taken some share. She suddenly thought one afternoon, when looking
in the glass at her fairness, that there was yet another date, of greater importance to
her than those; that of her own death, when all these charms would have disappeared; a
day which lay sly and unseen among all the other days of the year, giving no sign or
sound when she annually passed over it; but not the less surely there.
When was it? Why did she not feel the chill of each yearly
encounter with such a cold relation? She had Jeremy Taylor's thought that some
time in the future those who had known her would say: "It is the ——th, the day that
poor Tess Durbeyfield died"; and there would be nothing singular to their minds in the
statement. Of that day, doomed to be her terminus in
time through all the ages, she did not know the place in month, week, season or year.
Almost at a leap Tess thus changed from simple girl to complex woman. Symbols of reflectiveness
passed into her face, and a note of tragedy at times into her voice.
Her eyes grew larger and more eloquent. She became what would have been called a fine
creature; her aspect was fair and arresting; her soul that of a woman whom the turbulent
experiences of the last year or two had quite failed to demoralize. But for the world's
opinion those experiences would have been simply a liberal education.
She had held so aloof of late that her trouble, never generally known, was nearly forgotten
in Marlott. But it became evident to her that she could
never be really comfortable again in a place which had seen the collapse of her family's
attempt to "claim kin"—and, through her, even closer union—with the rich d'Urbervilles.
At least she could not be comfortable there till long years should have obliterated her
keen consciousness of it. Yet even now Tess felt the pulse of hopeful
life still warm within her; she might be happy in some nook which had no memories.
To escape the past and all that appertained thereto was to annihilate it, and to do that
she would have to get away. Was once lost always lost really true of chastity?
she would ask herself. She might prove it false if she could veil
bygones. The recuperative power which pervaded organic
nature was surely not denied to maidenhood alone.
She waited a long time without finding opportunity for a new departure.
A particularly fine spring came round, and the stir of germination was almost audible
in the buds; it moved her, as it moved the wild animals, and made her passionate to go.
At last, one day in early May, a letter reached her from a former friend of her mother's,
to whom she had addressed inquiries long before—a person whom she had never seen—that a skilful
milkmaid was required at a dairy-house many miles to the southward, and that the dairyman
would be glad to have her for the summer months. It was not quite so far off as could have
been wished; but it was probably far enough, her radius of movement and repute having been
so small. To persons of limited spheres, miles are as
geographical degrees, parishes as counties, counties as provinces and kingdoms.
On one point she was resolved: there should be no more d'Urberville air-castles in the
dreams and deeds of her new life. She would be the dairymaid Tess, and nothing
more. Her mother knew Tess's feeling on this point
so well, though no words had passed between them on the subject, that she never alluded
to the knightly ancestry now. Yet such is human inconsistency that one of
the interests of the new place to her was the accidental virtues of its lying near her
forefathers' country (for they were not Blakemore men, though her mother was Blakemore to the
bone). The dairy called Talbothays, for which she
was bound, stood not remotely from some of the former estates of the d'Urbervilles, near
the great family vaults of her granddames and their powerful husbands.
She would be able to look at them, and think not only that d'Urberville, like Babylon,
had fallen, but that the individual innocence of a humble descendant could lapse as silently.
All the while she wondered if any strange good thing might come of her being in her
ancestral land; and some spirit within her rose
automatically as the sap in the twigs. It was unexpected youth, surging up anew after
its temporary check, and bringing with it hope, and the invincible instinct towards
self-delight. END OF PHASE THE SECOND
Phase the Third: The Rally
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 for ever!" 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 ***
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. ... 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 *** 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.
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... 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, expecting 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.
XX The season developed and matured.
Another year's instalment of flowers, leaves, nightingales, thrushes, finches, and such
ephemeral creatures, took up their positions where only a year ago others had stood in
their place when these were nothing more than germs and inorganic particles.
Rays from the sunrise drew forth the buds and stretched them into long stalks, lifted
up sap in noiseless streams, opened petals, and sucked out scents in invisible jets and
breathings. Dairyman Crick's household of maids and men
lived on comfortably, placidly, even merrily. Their position was perhaps the happiest of
all positions in the social scale, being above the line at which neediness ends, and below
the line at which the _convenances_ begin to cramp natural feelings, and the stress
of threadbare modishness makes too little of enough.
Thus passed the leafy time when arborescence seems to be the one thing aimed at out of
doors. Tess and Clare unconsciously studied each
other, ever balanced on the edge of a passion, yet apparently keeping out of it.
All the while they were converging, under an irresistible law, as surely as two streams
in one vale. Tess had never in her recent life been so
happy as she was now, possibly never would be so happy again.
She was, for one thing, physically and mentally suited among these new surroundings.
The sapling which had rooted down to a poisonous stratum on the spot of its sowing had been
transplanted to a deeper soil. Moreover she, and Clare also, stood as yet
on the debatable land between predilection and love; where no profundities have been
reached; no reflections have set in, awkwardly inquiring, "Whither does this new current
tend to carry me? What does it mean to my future?
How does it stand towards my past?" Tess was the merest stray phenomenon to Angel
Clare as yet—a rosy, warming apparition which had only just acquired the attribute
of persistence in his consciousness. So he allowed his mind to be occupied with
her, deeming his preoccupation to be no more than a philosopher's regard of an exceedingly
novel, fresh, and interesting specimen of womankind.
They met continually; they could not help it.
They met daily in that strange and solemn interval, the twilight of the morning, in
the violet or pink dawn; for it was necessary to rise early, so very early, here.
Milking was done betimes; and before the milking came the skimming, which began at a little
past three. It usually fell to the lot of some one or
other of them to wake the rest, the first being aroused by an alarm-clock; and, as Tess
was the latest arrival, and they soon discovered that she could be depended upon not to sleep
though the alarm as others did, this task was thrust most frequently upon her.
No sooner had the hour of three struck and whizzed, than she left her room and ran to
the dairyman's door; then up the ladder to Angel's, calling him in a loud whisper; then
woke her fellow-milkmaids. By the time that Tess was dressed Clare was
downstairs and out in the humid air. The remaining maids and the dairyman usually
gave themselves another turn on the pillow, and did not appear till a quarter of an hour
later. The gray half-tones of daybreak are not the
gray half-tones of the day's close, though the degree of their shade may be the same.
In the twilight of the morning, light seems active, darkness passive; in the twilight
of evening it is the darkness which is active and crescent, and the light which is the drowsy
reverse. Being so often—possibly not always by chance—the
first two persons to get up at the dairy-house, they seemed to themselves the first persons
up of all the world. In these early days of her residence here
Tess did not skim, but went out of doors at once after rising, where he was generally
awaiting her. The spectral, half-compounded, aqueous light
which pervaded the open mead impressed them with a feeling of isolation, as if they were
Adam and Eve. At this dim inceptive stage of the day Tess
seemed to Clare to exhibit a dignified largeness both of disposition and physique, an almost
regnant power, possibly because he knew that at that preternatural time hardly any woman
so well endowed in person as she was likely to be walking in the open air within the boundaries
of his horizon; very few in all England. Fair women are usually asleep at mid-summer
dawns. She was close at hand, and the rest were nowhere.
The mixed, singular, luminous gloom in which they walked along together to the spot where
the cows lay often made him think of the Resurrection hour.
He little thought that the Magdalen might be at his side.
Whilst all the landscape was in neutral shade his companion's face, which was the focus
of his eyes, rising above the mist stratum, seemed to have a sort of phosphorescence upon
it. She looked ghostly, as if she were merely
a soul at large. In reality her face, without appearing to
do so, had caught the cold gleam of day from the north-east; his own face, though he did
not think of it, wore the same aspect to her. It was then, as has been said, that she impressed
him most deeply. She was no longer the milkmaid, but a visionary essence of woman—a whole
sex condensed into one typical form. He called her Artemis, Demeter, and other
fanciful names half teasingly, which she did not like because she did not understand them.
"Call me Tess," she would say askance; and he did.
Then it would grow lighter, and her features would become simply feminine; they had changed
from those of a divinity who could confer bliss to those of a being who craved it.
At these non-human hours they could get quite close to the waterfowl. Herons came, with
a great bold noise as of opening doors and shutters, out of the boughs of a plantation
which they frequented at the side of the mead; or, if already on the spot, hardily maintained
their standing in the water as the pair walked by, watching them by moving their heads round
in a slow, horizontal, passionless wheel, like the turn of puppets by clockwork.
They could then see the faint summer fogs in layers, woolly, level, and apparently no
thicker than counterpanes, spread about the meadows in detached remnants of small extent.
On the gray moisture of the grass were marks where the cows had lain through the night—dark-green
islands of dry herbage the size of their carcasses, in the general sea of dew. From each island
proceeded a serpentine trail, by which the cow had rambled away to feed after getting
up, at the end of which trail they found her; the snoring puff from her nostrils, when she
recognized them, making an intenser little fog of her own amid the prevailing one.
Then they drove the animals back to the barton, or sat down to milk them on the spot, as the
case might require. Or perhaps the summer fog was more general,
and the meadows lay like a white sea, out of which the scattered trees rose like dangerous
rocks. Birds would soar through it into the upper
radiance, and hang on the wing sunning themselves, or alight on the wet rails subdividing the
mead, which now shone like glass rods. Minute diamonds of moisture from the mist
hung, too, upon Tess's eyelashes, and drops upon her hair, like seed pearls.
When the day grew quite strong and commonplace these dried off her; moreover, Tess then lost
her strange and ethereal beauty; her teeth, lips, and eyes scintillated in the sunbeams
and she was again the dazzlingly fair dairymaid only, who had to hold her own against the
other women of the world. About this time they would hear Dairyman Crick's
voice, lecturing the non-resident milkers for arriving late, and speaking sharply to
old Deborah Fyander for not washing her hands. "For Heaven's sake, pop thy hands under the
pump, Deb! Upon my soul, if the London folk only knowed
of thee and thy slovenly ways, they'd swaller their milk and butter more mincing than they
do a'ready; and that's saying a good deal." The milking progressed, till towards the end
Tess and Clare, in common with the rest, could hear the heavy breakfast table dragged out
from the wall in the kitchen by Mrs Crick, this being the invariable preliminary to each
meal; the same horrible scrape accompanying its return journey when the table had been
cleared.
XXI There was a great stir in the milk-house just
after breakfast. The churn revolved as usual, but the butter
would not come. Whenever this happened the dairy was paralyzed.
Squish, squash echoed the milk in the great cylinder, but never arose the sound they waited
for. Dairyman Crick and his wife, the milkmaids
Tess, Marian, Retty Priddle, Izz Huett, and the married ones from the cottages; also Mr
Clare, Jonathan Kail, old Deborah, and the rest, stood gazing hopelessly at the churn;
and the boy who kept the horse going outside put on moon-like eyes to show his sense of
the situation. Even the melancholy horse himself seemed to
look in at the window in inquiring despair at each walk round.
"'Tis years since I went to Conjuror Trendle's son in Egdon—years!" said the dairyman bitterly.
"And he was nothing to what his father had been.
I have said fifty times, if I have said once, that I DON'T believe in en; though 'a do cast
folks' waters very true. But I shall have to go to 'n if he's alive.
O yes, I shall have to go to 'n, if this sort of thing continnys!"
Even Mr Clare began to feel tragical at the dairyman's desperation.
"Conjuror Fall, t'other side of Casterbridge, that they used to call 'Wide-O', was a very
good man when I was a boy," said Jonathan Kail. "But he's rotten as touchwood by now."
"My grandfather used to go to Conjuror Mynterne, out at Owlscombe, and a clever man a' were,
so I've heard grandf'er say," continued Mr Crick.
"But there's no such genuine folk about nowadays!" Mrs Crick's mind kept nearer to the matter
in hand. "Perhaps somebody in the house is in love,"
she said tentatively. "I've heard tell in my younger days that that will cause it.
Why, Crick—that maid we had years ago, do ye mind, and how the butter didn't come then—"
"Ah yes, yes!—but that isn't the rights o't.
It had nothing to do with the love-making. I can mind all about it—'twas the damage
to the churn." He turned to Clare.
"Jack Dollop, a '***'s-bird of a fellow we had here as milker at one time, sir, courted
a young woman over at Mellstock, and deceived her as he had deceived many afore.
But he had another sort o' woman to reckon wi' this time, and it was not the girl herself.
One Holy Thursday of all days in the almanack, we was here as we mid be now, only there was
no churning in hand, when we zid the girl's mother coming up to the door, wi' a great
brass-mounted umbrella in her hand that would ha' felled an ox, and saying 'Do Jack Dollop
work here?—because I want him! I have a big bone to pick with he, I can assure
'n!' And some way behind her mother walked Jack's
young woman, crying bitterly into her handkercher. 'O Lard, here's a time!' said Jack, looking
out o' winder at 'em. 'She'll *** me! Where shall I get—where
shall I—? Don't tell her where I be!' And with that
he scrambled into the churn through the trap-door, and shut himself inside, just as the young
woman's mother busted into the milk-house. 'The villain—where is he?' says she.
'I'll claw his face for'n, let me only catch him!'
Well, she hunted about everywhere, ballyragging Jack by side and by seam, Jack lying a'most
stifled inside the churn, and the poor maid—or young woman rather—standing at the door
crying her eyes out. I shall never forget it, never! 'Twould have
melted a marble stone! But she couldn't find him nowhere at all."
The dairyman paused, and one or two words of comment came from the listeners.
Dairyman Crick's stories often seemed to be ended when they were not really so, and strangers
were betrayed into premature interjections of finality; though old friends knew better.
The narrator went on— "Well, how the old woman should have had the
wit to guess it I could never tell, but she found out that he was inside that there churn.
Without saying a word she took hold of the winch (it was turned by handpower then), and
round she swung him, and Jack began to flop about inside.
'O Lard! stop the churn! let me out!' says he, popping out his head.
'I shall be churned into a pummy!' (He was a cowardly chap in his heart, as such
men mostly be). 'Not till ye make amends for ravaging her
*** innocence!' says the old woman. 'Stop the churn you old witch!' screams he.
'You call me old witch, do ye, you deceiver!' says she, 'when ye ought to ha' been calling
me mother-law these last five months!' And on went the churn, and Jack's bones rattled
round again. Well, none of us ventured to interfere; and
at last 'a promised to make it right wi' her. 'Yes—I'll be as good as my word!' he said.
And so it ended that day." While the listeners were smiling their comments
there was a quick movement behind their backs, and they looked round.
Tess, pale-faced, had gone to the door. "How warm 'tis to-day!" she said, almost inaudibly.
It was warm, and none of them connected her withdrawal with the reminiscences of the dairyman.
He went forward and opened the door for her, saying with tender raillery—
"Why, maidy" (he frequently, with unconscious irony, gave her this pet name), "the prettiest
milker I've got in my dairy; you mustn't get so *** as this at the first breath of summer
weather, or we shall be finely put to for want of 'ee by dog-days, shan't we, Mr Clare?"
"I was faint—and—I think I am better out o' doors," she said mechanically; and disappeared
outside. Fortunately for her the milk in the revolving
churn at that moment changed its squashing for a decided flick-flack.
"'Tis coming!" cried Mrs Crick, and the attention of all was called off from Tess.
That fair sufferer soon recovered herself externally; but she remained much depressed
all the afternoon. When the evening milking was done she did not care to be with the rest
of them, and went out of doors, wandering along she knew not whither.
She was wretched—O so wretched—at the perception that to her companions the dairyman's
story had been rather a humorous narration than otherwise; none of them but herself seemed
to see the sorrow of it; to a certainty, not one knew how cruelly it touched the tender
place in her experience. The evening sun was now ugly to her, like a great inflamed wound
in the sky. Only a solitary cracked-voice reed-sparrow
greeted her from the bushes by the river, in a sad, machine-made tone, resembling that
of a past friend whose friendship she had outworn.
In these long June days the milkmaids, and, indeed, most of the household, went to bed
at sunset or sooner, the morning work before milking being so early and heavy at a time
of full pails. Tess usually accompanied her fellows upstairs.
To-night, however, she was the first to go to their common chamber; and she had dozed
when the other girls came in. She saw them undressing in the orange light
of the vanished sun, which flushed their forms with its colour; she dozed again, but she
was reawakened by their voices, and quietly turned her eyes towards them.
Neither of her three chamber-companions had got into bed.
They were standing in a group, in their nightgowns, barefooted, at the window, the last red rays
of the west still warming their faces and necks and the walls around them.
All were watching somebody in the garden with deep interest, their three faces close together:
a jovial and round one, a pale one with dark hair, and a fair one whose tresses were auburn.
"Don't push! You can see as well as I," said Retty, the
auburn-haired and youngest girl, without removing her eyes from the window.
"'Tis no use for you to be in love with him any more than me, Retty Priddle," said jolly-faced
Marian, the eldest, slily. "His thoughts be of other cheeks than thine!"
Retty Priddle still looked, and the others looked again.
"There he is again!" cried Izz Huett, the pale girl with dark damp hair and keenly cut
lips. "You needn't say anything, Izz," answered
Retty. "For I zid you kissing his shade."
"WHAT did you see her doing?" asked Marian. "Why—he was standing over the whey-tub to
let off the whey, and the shade of his face came upon the wall behind, close to Izz, who
was standing there filling a vat. She put her mouth against the wall and kissed
the shade of his mouth; I zid her, though he didn't."
"O Izz Huett!" said Marian. A rosy spot came into the middle of Izz Huett's
cheek. "Well, there was no harm in it," she declared,
with attempted coolness. "And if I be in love wi'en, so is Retty, too;
and so be you, Marian, come to that." Marian's full face could not blush past its
chronic pinkness. "I!" she said.
"What a tale! Ah, there he is again!
Dear eyes—dear face—dear Mr Clare!" "There—you've owned it!"
"So have you—so have we all," said Marian, with the dry frankness of complete indifference
to opinion. "It is silly to pretend otherwise amongst
ourselves, though we need not own it to other folks.
I would just marry 'n to-morrow!" "So would I—and more," murmured Izz Huett.
"And I too," whispered the more timid Retty. The listener grew warm.
"We can't all marry him," said Izz. "We shan't, either of us; which is worse still,"
said the eldest. "There he is again!" They all three blew him a silent kiss.
"Why?" asked Retty quickly. "Because he likes Tess Durbeyfield best,"
said Marian, lowering her voice. "I have watched him every day, and have found
it out." There was a reflective silence.
"But she don't care anything for 'n?" at length breathed Retty.
"Well—I sometimes think that too." "But how silly all this is!" said Izz Huett
impatiently. "Of course he won't marry any one of us, or
Tess either—a gentleman's son, who's going to be a great landowner and farmer abroad!
More likely to ask us to come wi'en as farm-hands at so much a year!"
One sighed, and another sighed, and Marian's plump figure sighed biggest of all.
Somebody in bed hard by sighed too. Tears came into the eyes of Retty Priddle,
the pretty red-haired youngest—the last bud of the Paridelles, so important in the
county annals. They watched silently a little longer, their
three faces still close together as before, and the triple hues of their hair mingling.
But the unconscious Mr Clare had gone indoors, and they saw him no more; and, the shades
beginning to deepen, they crept into their beds. In a few minutes they heard him ascend
the ladder to his own room. Marian was soon snoring, but Izz did not drop into forgetfulness
for a long time. Retty Priddle cried herself to sleep.
The deeper-passioned Tess was very far from sleeping even then.
This conversation was another of the bitter pills she had been obliged to swallow that
day. Scarce the least feeling of jealousy arose
in her breast. For that matter she knew herself to have the
preference. Being more finely formed, better educated, and, though the youngest except
Retty, more woman than either, she perceived that only the slightest ordinary care was
necessary for holding her own in Angel Clare's heart against these her candid friends.
But the grave question was, ought she to do this?
There was, to be sure, hardly a ghost of a chance for either of them, in a serious sense;
but there was, or had been, a chance of one or the other inspiring him with a passing
fancy for her, and enjoying the pleasure of his attentions while he stayed here.
Such unequal attachments had led to marriage; and she had heard from Mrs Crick that Mr Clare
had one day asked, in a laughing way, what would be the use of his marrying a fine lady,
and all the while ten thousand acres of Colonial pasture to feed, and cattle to rear, and corn
to reap. A farm-woman would be the only sensible kind
of wife for him. But whether Mr Clare had spoken seriously
or not, why should she, who could never conscientiously allow any man to marry her now, and who had
religiously determined that she never would be tempted to do so, draw off Mr Clare's attention
from other women, for the brief happiness of sunning herself in his eyes while he remained
at Talbothays?
XXII They came downstairs yawning next morning;
but skimming and milking were proceeded with as usual, and they went indoors to breakfast.
Dairyman Crick was discovered stamping about the house.
He had received a letter, in which a customer had complained that the butter had a twang.
"And begad, so 't have!" said the dairyman, who held in his left hand a wooden slice on
which a lump of butter was stuck. "Yes—taste for yourself!"
Several of them gathered round him; and Mr Clare tasted, Tess tasted, also the other
indoor milkmaids, one or two of the milking-men, and last of all Mrs Crick, who came out from
the waiting breakfast-table. There certainly was a twang.
The dairyman, who had thrown himself into abstraction to better realize the taste, and
so divine the particular species of noxious weed to which it appertained, suddenly exclaimed—
"'Tis garlic! and I thought there wasn't a blade left in that mead!"
Then all the old hands remembered that a certain dry mead, into which a few of the cows had
been admitted of late, had, in years gone by, spoilt the butter in the same way.
The dairyman had not recognized the taste at that time, and thought the butter bewitched.
"We must overhaul that mead," he resumed; "this mustn't continny!"
All having armed themselves with old pointed knives, they went out together.
As the inimical plant could only be present in very microscopic dimensions to have escaped
ordinary observation, to find it seemed rather a hopeless attempt in the stretch of rich
grass before them. However, they formed themselves into line,
all assisting, owing to the importance of the search; the dairyman at the upper end
with Mr Clare, who had volunteered to help; then Tess, Marian, Izz Huett, and Retty; then
Bill Lewell, Jonathan, and the married dairywomen—Beck Knibbs, with her wooly black hair and rolling
eyes; and flaxen Frances, consumptive from the winter damps of the water-meads—who
lived in their respective cottages. With eyes fixed upon the ground they crept
slowly across a strip of the field, returning a little further down in such a manner that,
when they should have finished, not a single inch of the pasture but would have fallen
under the eye of some one of them. It was a most tedious business, not more than
half a dozen shoots of garlic being discoverable in the whole field; yet such was the herb's
pungency that probably one bite of it by one cow had been sufficient to season the whole
dairy's produce for the day. Differing one from another in natures and
moods so greatly as they did, they yet formed, bending, a curiously uniform row—automatic,
noiseless; and an alien observer passing down the neighbouring lane might well have been
excused for massing them as "Hodge". As they crept along, stooping low to discern
the plant, a soft yellow gleam was reflected from the buttercups into their shaded faces,
giving them an elfish, moonlit aspect, though the sun was pouring upon their backs in all
the strength of noon. Angel Clare, who communistically stuck to
his rule of taking part with the rest in everything, glanced up now and then.
It was not, of course, by accident that he walked next to Tess.
"Well, how are you?" he murmured. "Very well, thank you, sir," she replied demurely.
As they had been discussing a score of personal matters only half-an-hour before, the introductory
style seemed a little superfluous. But they got no further in speech just then.
They crept and crept, the hem of her petticoat just touching his gaiter, and his elbow sometimes
brushing hers. At last the dairyman, who came next, could
stand it no longer. "Upon my soul and body, this here stooping
do fairly make my back open and shut!" he exclaimed, straightening himself slowly with
an excruciated look till quite upright. "And you, maidy Tess, you wasn't well a day
or two ago—this will make your head ache finely! Don't do any more, if you feel fainty;
leave the rest to finish it." Dairyman Crick withdrew, and Tess dropped
behind. Mr Clare also stepped out of line, and began
privateering about for the weed. When she found him near her, her very tension
at what she had heard the night before made her the first to speak.
"Don't they look pretty?" she said. "Who?"
"Izzy Huett and Retty." Tess had moodily decided that either of these
maidens would make a good farmer's wife, and that she ought to recommend them, and obscure
her own wretched charms. "Pretty?
Well, yes—they are pretty girls—fresh looking.
I have often thought so." "Though, poor dears, prettiness won't last
long!" "O no, unfortunately."
"They are excellent dairywomen." "Yes: though not better than you."
"They skim better than I." "Do they?"
Clare remained observing them—not without their observing him.
"She is colouring up," continued Tess heroically. "Who?"
"Retty Priddle." "Oh!
Why it that?" "Because you are looking at her."
Self-sacrificing as her mood might be, Tess could not well go further and cry, "Marry
one of them, if you really do want a dairywoman and not a lady; and don't think of marrying
me!" She followed Dairyman Crick, and had the mournful
satisfaction of seeing that Clare remained behind.
From this day she forced herself to take pains to avoid him—never allowing herself, as
formerly, to remain long in his company, even if their juxtaposition were purely accidental.
She gave the other three every chance. Tess was woman enough to realize from their
avowals to herself that Angel Clare had the honour of all the dairymaids in his keeping,
and her perception of his care to avoid compromising the happiness of either in the least degree
bred a tender respect in Tess for what she deemed, rightly or wrongly, the self-controlling
sense of duty shown by him, a quality which she had never expected to find in one of the
opposite sex, and in the absence of which more than one of the simple hearts who were
his house-mates might have gone weeping on her pilgrimage.
XXIII The hot weather of July had crept upon them
unawares, and the atmosphere of the flat vale hung heavy as an *** over the dairy-folk,
the cows, and the trees. Hot steaming rains fell frequently, making
the grass where the cows fed yet more rank, and hindering the late hay-making in the other
meads. It was Sunday morning; the milking was done;
the outdoor milkers had gone home. Tess and the other three were dressing themselves
rapidly, the whole bevy having agreed to go together to Mellstock Church, which lay some
three or four miles distant from the dairy-house. She had now been two months at Talbothays,
and this was her first excursion. All the preceding afternoon and night heavy
thunderstorms had hissed down upon the meads, and washed some of the hay into the river;
but this morning the sun shone out all the more brilliantly for the deluge, and the air
was balmy and clear. The crooked lane leading from their own parish
to Mellstock ran along the lowest levels in a portion of its length, and when the girls
reached the most depressed spot they found that the result of the rain had been to flood
the lane over-shoe to a distance of some fifty yards.
This would have been no serious hindrance on a week-day; they would have clicked through
it in their high patterns and boots quite unconcerned; but on this day of vanity, this
Sun's-day, when flesh went forth to coquet with flesh while hypocritically affecting
business with spiritual things; on this occasion for wearing their white stockings and thin
shoes, and their pink, white, and lilac gowns, on which every mud spot would be visible,
the pool was an awkward impediment. They could hear the church-bell calling—as
yet nearly a mile off. "Who would have expected such a rise in the
river in summer-time!" said Marian, from the top of the roadside bank on which they had
climbed, and were maintaining a precarious footing in the hope of creeping along its
slope till they were past the pool. "We can't get there anyhow, without walking
right through it, or else going round the Turnpike way; and that would make us so very
late!" said Retty, pausing hopelessly. "And I do colour up so hot, walking into church
late, and all the people staring round," said Marian, "that I hardly cool down again till
we get into the That-it-may-please-Thees." While they stood clinging to the bank they
heard a splashing round the bend of the road, and presently appeared Angel Clare, advancing
along the lane towards them through the water. Four hearts gave a big throb simultaneously.
His aspect was probably as un-Sabbatarian a one as a dogmatic parson's son often presented;
his attire being his dairy clothes, long wading boots, a cabbage-leaf inside his hat to keep
his head cool, with a thistle-spud to finish him off.
"He's not going to church," said Marian. "No—I wish he was!" murmured Tess.
Angel, in fact, rightly or wrongly (to adopt the safe phrase of evasive controversialists),
preferred sermons in stones to sermons in churches and chapels on fine summer days.
This morning, moreover, he had gone out to see if the damage to the hay by the flood
was considerable or not. On his walk he observed the girls from a long
distance, though they had been so occupied with their difficulties of passage as not
to notice him. He knew that the water had risen at that spot,
and that it would quite check their progress. So he had hastened on, with a dim idea of
how he could help them—one of them in particular. The rosy-cheeked, bright-eyed quartet looked
so charming in their light summer attire, clinging to the roadside bank like pigeons
on a roof-slope, that he stopped a moment to regard them before coming close.
Their gauzy skirts had brushed up from the grass innumerable flies and butterflies which,
unable to escape, remained caged in the transparent tissue as in an aviary.
Angel's eye at last fell upon Tess, the hindmost of the four; she, being full of suppressed
laughter at their dilemma, could not help meeting his glance radiantly.
He came beneath them in the water, which did not rise over his long boots; and stood looking
at the entrapped flies and butterflies. "Are you trying to get to church?" he said
to Marian, who was in front, including the next two in his remark, but avoiding Tess.
"Yes, sir; and 'tis getting late; and my colour do come up so—"
"I'll carry you through the pool—every Jill of you."
The whole four flushed as if one heart beat through them.
"I think you can't, sir," said Marian. "It is the only way for you to get past.
Stand still. Nonsense—you are not too heavy!
I'd carry you all four together. Now, Marian, attend," he continued, "and put
your arms round my shoulders, so. Now! Hold on. That's well done."
Marian had lowered herself upon his arm and shoulder as directed, and Angel strode off
with her, his slim figure, as viewed from behind, looking like the mere stem to the
great nosegay suggested by hers. They disappeared round the curve of the road, and only his
sousing footsteps and the top ribbon of Marian's bonnet told where they were. In a few minutes
he reappeared. Izz Huett was the next in order upon the bank.
"Here he comes," she murmured, and they could hear that her lips were dry with emotion.
"And I have to put my arms round his neck and look into his face as Marian did."
"There's nothing in that," said Tess quickly. "There's a time for everything," continued
Izz, unheeding. "A time to embrace, and a time to refrain
from embracing; the first is now going to be mine."
"Fie—it is Scripture, Izz!" "Yes," said Izz, "I've always a' ear at church
for pretty verses." Angel Clare, to whom three-quarters of this
performance was a commonplace act of kindness, now approached Izz.
She quietly and dreamily lowered herself into his arms, and Angel methodically marched off
with her. When he was heard returning for the third
time Retty's throbbing heart could be almost seen to shake her.
He went up to the red-haired girl, and while he was seizing her he glanced at Tess.
His lips could not have pronounced more plainly, "It will soon be you and I."
Her comprehension appeared in her face; she could not help it.
There was an understanding between them. Poor little Retty, though by far the lightest
weight, was the most troublesome of Clare's burdens.
Marian had been like a sack of meal, a dead weight of plumpness under which he has literally
staggered. Izz had ridden sensibly and calmly. Retty was a bunch of hysterics.
However, he got through with the disquieted creature, deposited her, and returned.
Tess could see over the hedge the distant three in a group, standing as he had placed
them on the next rising ground. It was now her turn.
She was embarrassed to discover that excitement at the proximity of Mr Clare's breath and
and said no more. End of Chapter XXV