UNDER THE GREENWOOD TREE
or
THE MELLSTOCK QUIRE
A RURAL PAINTING OF THE DUTCH SCHOOL
by Thomas Hardy
PREFACE
This story of the Mellstock Quire and its old established west-gallery
musicians, with some supplementary descriptions of similar officials
in
Two on a Tower, A Few Crusted Characters, and other places,
is intended to be a fairly true picture, at first hand, of the personages,
ways, and customs which were common among such orchestral bodies in
the villages of fifty or sixty years ago.
One is inclined to regret the displacement of these ecclesiastical
bandsmen by an isolated organist (often at first a barrel-organist)
or harmonium player; and despite certain advantages in point of control
and accomplishment which were, no doubt, secured by installing the single
artist, the change has tended to stultify the professed aims of the
clergy, its direct result being to curtail and extinguish the interest
of parishioners in church doings. Under the old plan, from half
a dozen to ten full-grown players, in addition to the numerous more
or less grown-up singers, were officially occupied with the Sunday routine,
and concerned in trying their best to make it an artistic outcome of
the combined musical taste of the congregation. With a musical
executive limited, as it mostly is limited now, to the parson’s
wife or daughter and the school-children, or to the school-teacher and
the children, an important union of interests has disappeared.
The zest of these bygone instrumentalists must have been keen and
staying to take them, as it did, on foot every Sunday after a toilsome
week, through all weathers, to the church, which often lay at a distance
from their homes. They usually received so little in payment for
their performances that their efforts were really a labour of love.
In the parish I had in my mind when writing the present tale, the gratuities
received yearly by the musicians at Christmas were somewhat as follows:
From the manor-house ten shillings and a supper; from the vicar ten
shillings; from the farmers five shillings each; from each cottage-household
one shilling; amounting altogether to not more than ten shillings a
head annually—just enough, as an old executant told me, to pay
for their fiddle-strings, repairs, rosin, and music-paper (which they
mostly ruled themselves). Their music in those days was all in
their own manuscript, copied in the evenings after work, and their music-books
were home-bound.
It was customary to inscribe a few jigs, reels, horn-pipes, and ballads
in the same book, by beginning it at the other end, the insertions being
continued from front and back till sacred and secular met together in
the middle, often with bizarre effect, the words of some of the songs
exhibiting that ancient and broad humour which our grandfathers, and
possibly grandmothers, took delight in, and is in these days unquotable.
The aforesaid fiddle-strings, rosin, and music-paper were supplied
by a pedlar, who travelled exclusively in such wares from parish to
parish, coming to each village about every six months. Tales are
told of the consternation once caused among the church fiddlers when,
on the occasion of their producing a new Christmas anthem, he did not
come to time, owing to being snowed up on the downs, and the straits
they were in through having to make shift with whipcord and twine for
strings. He was generally a musician himself, and sometimes a
composer in a small way, bringing his own new tunes, and tempting each
choir to adopt them for a consideration. Some of these compositions
which now lie before me, with their repetitions of lines, half-lines,
and half-words, their fugues and their intermediate symphonies, are
good singing still, though they would hardly be admitted into such hymn-books
as are popular in the churches of fashionable society at the present
time.
August 1896.
Under the Greenwood Tree was first brought out in the summer
of 1872 in two volumes. The name of the story was originally intended
to be, more appropriately,
The Mellstock Quire, and this has
been appended as a sub-title since the early editions, it having been
thought unadvisable to displace for it the title by which the book first
became known.
In rereading the narrative after a long interval there occurs the
inevitable reflection that the realities out of which it was spun were
material for another kind of study of this little group of church musicians
than is found in the chapters here penned so lightly, even so farcically
and flippantly at times. But circumstances would have rendered
any aim at a deeper, more essential, more transcendent handling unadvisable
at the date of writing; and the exhibition of the Mellstock Quire in
the following pages must remain the only extant one, except for the
few glimpses of that perished band which I have given in verse elsewhere.
T. H.
April 1912.
PART THE FIRST—WINTER
CHAPTER I: MELLSTOCK-LANE
To dwellers in a wood almost every species of tree has its voice
as well as its feature. At the passing of the breeze the fir-trees
sob and moan no less distinctly than they rock; the holly whistles as
it battles with itself; the ash hisses amid its quiverings; the beech
rustles while its flat boughs rise and fall. And winter, which
modifies the note of such trees as shed their leaves, does not destroy
its individuality.
On a cold and starry Christmas-eve within living memory a man was
passing up a lane towards Mellstock Cross in the darkness of a plantation
that whispered thus distinctively to his intelligence. All the
evidences of his nature were those afforded by the spirit of his footsteps,
which succeeded each other lightly and quickly, and by the liveliness
of his voice as he sang in a rural cadence:
“With the rose and the lily
And the daffodowndilly,
The lads and the lasses a-sheep-shearing go.”
The lonely lane he was following connected one of the hamlets of
Mellstock parish with Upper Mellstock and Lewgate, and to his eyes,
casually glancing upward, the silver and black-stemmed birches with
their characteristic tufts, the pale grey boughs of beech, the dark-creviced
elm, all appeared now as black and flat outlines upon the sky, wherein
the white stars twinkled so vehemently that their flickering seemed
like the flapping of wings. Within the woody pass, at a level
anything lower than the horizon, all was dark as the grave. The
copse-wood forming the sides of the bower interlaced its branches so
densely, even at this season of the year, that the draught from the
north-east flew along the channel with scarcely an interruption from
lateral breezes.
After passing the plantation and reaching Mellstock Cross the white
surface of the lane revealed itself between the dark hedgerows like
a ribbon jagged at the edges; the irregularity being caused by temporary
accumulations of leaves extending from the ditch on either side.
The song (many times interrupted by flitting thoughts which took
the place of several bars, and resumed at a point it would have reached
had its continuity been unbroken) now received a more palpable check,
in the shape of “Ho-i-i-i-i-i!” from the crossing lane to
Lower Mellstock, on the right of the singer who had just emerged from
the trees.
“Ho-i-i-i-i-i!” he answered, stopping and looking round,
though with no idea of seeing anything more than imagination pictured.
“Is that thee, young Dick Dewy?” came from the darkness.
“Ay, sure, Michael Mail.”
“Then why not stop for fellow-craters—going to thy own
father’s house too, as we be, and knowen us so well?”
Dick Dewy faced about and continued his tune in an under-whistle,
implying that the business of his mouth could not be checked at a moment’s
notice by the placid emotion of friendship.
Having come more into the open he could now be seen rising against
the sky, his profile appearing on the light background like the portrait
of a gentleman in black cardboard. It assumed the form of a low-crowned
hat, an ordinary-shaped nose, an ordinary chin, an ordinary neck, and
ordinary shoulders. What he consisted of further down was invisible
from lack of sky low enough to picture him on.
Shuffling, halting, irregular footsteps of various kinds were now
heard coming up the hill, and presently there emerged from the shade
severally five men of different ages and gaits, all of them working
villagers of the parish of Mellstock. They, too, had lost their
rotundity with the daylight, and advanced against the sky in flat outlines,
which suggested some processional design on Greek or Etruscan pottery.
They represented the chief portion of Mellstock parish choir.
The first was a bowed and bent man, who carried a fiddle under his
arm, and walked as if engaged in studying some subject connected with
the surface of the road. He was Michael Mail, the man who had
hallooed to Dick.
The next was Mr. Robert Penny, boot- and shoemaker; a little man,
who, though rather round-shouldered, walked as if that fact had not
come to his own knowledge, moving on with his back very hollow and his
face fixed on the north-east quarter of the heavens before him, so that
his lower waist-coat-buttons came first, and then the remainder of his
figure. His features were invisible; yet when he occasionally
looked round, two faint moons of light gleamed for an instant from the
precincts of his eyes, denoting that he wore spectacles of a circular
form.
The third was Elias Spinks, who walked perpendicularly and dramatically.
The fourth outline was Joseph Bowman’s, who had now no distinctive
appearance beyond that of a human being. Finally came a weak lath-like
form, trotting and stumbling along with one shoulder forward and his
head inclined to the left, his arms dangling nervelessly in the wind
as if they were empty sleeves. This was Thomas Leaf.
“Where be the boys?” said Dick to this somewhat indifferently-matched
assembly.
The eldest of the group, Michael Mail, cleared his throat from a
great depth.
“We told them to keep back at home for a time, thinken they
wouldn’t be wanted yet awhile; and we could choose the tuens,
and so on.”
“Father and grandfather William have expected ye a little sooner.
I have just been for a run round by Ewelease Stile and Hollow Hill to
warm my feet.”
“To be sure father did! To be sure ’a did expect
us—to taste the little barrel beyond compare that he’s going
to tap.”
“’Od rabbit it all! Never heard a word of it!”
said Mr. Penny, gleams of delight appearing upon his spectacle-glasses,
Dick meanwhile singing parenthetically—
“The lads and the lasses a-sheep-shearing go.”
“Neighbours, there’s time enough to drink a sight of
drink now afore bedtime?” said Mail.
“True, true—time enough to get as drunk as lords!”
replied Bowman cheerfully.
This opinion being taken as convincing they all advanced between
the varying hedges and the trees dotting them here and there, kicking
their toes occasionally among the crumpled leaves. Soon appeared
glimmering indications of the few cottages forming the small hamlet
of Upper Mellstock for which they were bound, whilst the faint sound
of church-bells ringing a Christmas peal could be heard floating over
upon the breeze from the direction of Longpuddle and Weatherbury parishes
on the other side of the hills. A little wicket admitted them
to the garden, and they proceeded up the path to Dick’s house.
CHAPTER II: THE TRANTER’S
It was a long low cottage with a hipped roof of thatch, having dormer
windows breaking up into the eaves, a chimney standing in the middle
of the ridge and another at each end. The window-shutters were
not yet closed, and the fire- and candle-light within radiated forth
upon the thick bushes of box and laurestinus growing in clumps outside,
and upon the bare boughs of several codlin-trees hanging about in various
distorted shapes, the result of early training as espaliers combined
with careless climbing into their boughs in later years. The walls
of the dwelling were for the most part covered with creepers, though
these were rather beaten back from the doorway—a feature which
was worn and scratched by much passing in and out, giving it by day
the appearance of an old keyhole. Light streamed through the cracks
and joints of outbuildings a little way from the cottage, a sight which
nourished a fancy that the purpose of the erection must be rather to
veil bright attractions than to shelter unsightly necessaries.
The noise of a beetle and wedges and the splintering of wood was periodically
heard from this direction; and at some little distance further a steady
regular munching and the occasional scurr of a rope betokened a stable,
and horses feeding within it.
The choir stamped severally on the door-stone to shake from their
boots any fragment of earth or leaf adhering thereto, then entered the
house and looked around to survey the condition of things. Through
the open doorway of a small inner room on the right hand, of a character
between pantry and cellar, was Dick Dewy’s father Reuben, by vocation
a “tranter,” or irregular carrier. He was a stout
florid man about forty years of age, who surveyed people up and down
when first making their acquaintance, and generally smiled at the horizon
or other distant object during conversations with friends, walking about
with a steady sway, and turning out his toes very considerably.
Being now occupied in bending over a hogshead, that stood in the pantry
ready horsed for the process of broaching, he did not take the trouble
to turn or raise his eyes at the entry of his visitors, well knowing
by their footsteps that they were the expected old comrades.
The main room, on the left, was decked with bunches of holly and
other evergreens, and from the middle of the beam bisecting the ceiling
hung the mistletoe, of a size out of all proportion to the room, and
extending so low that it became necessary for a full-grown person to
walk round it in passing, or run the risk of entangling his hair.
This apartment contained Mrs. Dewy the tranter’s wife, and the
four remaining children, Susan, Jim, Bessy, and Charley, graduating
uniformly though at wide stages from the age of sixteen to that of four
years—the eldest of the series being separated from Dick the firstborn
by a nearly equal interval.
Some circumstance had apparently caused much grief to Charley just
previous to the entry of the choir, and he had absently taken down a
small looking-glass, holding it before his face to learn how the human
countenance appeared when engaged in crying, which survey led him to
pause at the various points in each wail that were more than ordinarily
striking, for a thorough appreciation of the general effect. Bessy
was leaning against a chair, and glancing under the plaits about the
waist of the plaid frock she wore, to notice the original unfaded pattern
of the material as there preserved, her face bearing an expression of
regret that the brightness had passed away from the visible portions.
Mrs. Dewy sat in a brown settle by the side of the glowing wood fire—so
glowing that with a heedful compression of the lips she would now and
then rise and put her hand upon the hams and flitches of bacon lining
the chimney, to reassure herself that they were not being broiled instead
of smoked—a misfortune that had been known to happen now and then
at Christmas-time.
“Hullo, my sonnies, here you be, then!” said Reuben Dewy
at length, standing up and blowing forth a vehement gust of breath.
“How the blood do puff up in anybody’s head, to be sure,
a-stooping like that! I was just going out to gate to hark for
ye.” He then carefully began to wind a strip of brown paper
round a brass tap he held in his hand. “This in the cask
here is a drop o’ the right sort” (tapping the cask); “’tis
a real drop o’ cordial from the best picked apples—Sansoms,
Stubbards, Five-corners, and such-like—you d’mind the sort,
Michael?” (Michael nodded.) “And there’s
a sprinkling of they that grow down by the orchard-rails—streaked
ones—rail apples we d’call ’em, as ’tis by the
rails they grow, and not knowing the right name. The water-cider
from ’em is as good as most people’s best cider is.”
“Ay, and of the same make too,” said Bowman. “‘It
rained when we wrung it out, and the water got into it,’ folk
will say. But ’tis on’y an excuse. Watered cider
is too common among us.”
“Yes, yes; too common it is!” said Spinks with an inward
sigh, whilst his eyes seemed to be looking at the case in an abstract
form rather than at the scene before him. “Such poor liquor
do make a man’s throat feel very melancholy—and is a disgrace
to the name of stimmilent.”
“Come in, come in, and draw up to the fire; never mind your
shoes,” said Mrs. Dewy, seeing that all except Dick had paused
to wipe them upon the door-mat. “I am glad that you’ve
stepped up-along at last; and, Susan, you run down to Grammer Kaytes’s
and see if you can borrow some larger candles than these fourteens.
Tommy Leaf, don’t ye be afeard! Come and sit here in the
settle.”
This was addressed to the young man before mentioned, consisting
chiefly of a human skeleton and a smock-frock, who was very awkward
in his movements, apparently on account of having grown so very fast
that before he had had time to get used to his height he was higher.
“Hee—hee—ay!” replied Leaf, letting his mouth
continue to smile for some time after his mind had done smiling, so
that his teeth remained in view as the most conspicuous members of his
body.
“Here, Mr. Penny,” resumed Mrs. Dewy, “you sit
in this chair. And how’s your daughter, Mrs. Brownjohn?”
“Well, I suppose I must say pretty fair.” He adjusted
his spectacles a quarter of an inch to the right. “But she’ll
be worse before she’s better, ’a b’lieve.”
“Indeed—poor soul! And how many will that make
in all, four or five?”
“Five; they’ve buried three. Yes, five; and she
not much more than a maid yet. She do know the multiplication
table onmistakable well. However, ’twas to be, and none
can gainsay it.”
Mrs. Dewy resigned Mr. Penny. “Wonder where your grandfather
James is?” she inquired of one of the children. “He
said he’d drop in to-night.”
“Out in fuel-house with grandfather William,” said Jimmy.
“Now let’s see what we can do,” was heard spoken
about this time by the tranter in a private voice to the barrel, beside
which he had again established himself, and was stooping to cut away
the cork.
“Reuben, don’t make such a mess o’ tapping that
barrel as is mostly made in this house,” Mrs. Dewy cried from
the fireplace. “I’d tap a hundred without wasting
more than you do in one. Such a squizzling and squirting job as
’tis in your hands! There, he always was such a clumsy man
indoors.”
“Ay, ay; I know you’d tap a hundred beautiful, Ann—I
know you would; two hundred, perhaps. But I can’t promise.
This is a’ old cask, and the wood’s rotted away about the
tap-hole. The husbird of a feller Sam Lawson—that ever I
should call’n such, now he’s dead and gone, poor heart!—took
me in completely upon the feat of buying this cask. ‘Reub,’
says he—’a always used to call me plain Reub, poor old heart!—‘Reub,’
he said, says he, ‘that there cask, Reub, is as good as new; yes,
good as new. ’Tis a wine-hogshead; the best port-wine in
the commonwealth have been in that there cask; and you shall have en
for ten shillens, Reub,’—’a said, says he—‘he’s
worth twenty, ay, five-and-twenty, if he’s worth one; and an iron
hoop or two put round en among the wood ones will make en worth thirty
shillens of any man’s money, if—’”
“I think I should have used the eyes that Providence gave me
to use afore I paid any ten shillens for a jimcrack wine-barrel; a saint
is sinner enough not to be cheated. But ’tis like all your
family was, so easy to be deceived.”
“That’s as true as gospel of this member,” said
Reuben.
Mrs. Dewy began a smile at the answer, then altering her lips and
refolding them so that it was not a smile, commenced smoothing little
Bessy’s hair; the tranter having meanwhile suddenly become oblivious
to conversation, occupying himself in a deliberate cutting and arrangement
of some more brown paper for the broaching operation.
“Ah, who can believe sellers!” said old Michael Mail
in a carefully-cautious voice, by way of tiding-over this critical point
of affairs.
“No one at all,” said Joseph Bowman, in the tone of a
man fully agreeing with everybody.
“Ay,” said Mail, in the tone of a man who did not agree
with everybody as a rule, though he did now; “I knowed a’
auctioneering feller once—a very friendly feller ’a was
too. And so one hot day as I was walking down the front street
o’ Casterbridge, jist below the King’s Arms, I passed a’
open winder and see him inside, stuck upon his perch, a-selling off.
I jist nodded to en in a friendly way as I passed, and went my way,
and thought no more about it. Well, next day, as I was oilen my
boots by fuel-house door, if a letter didn’t come wi’ a
bill charging me with a feather-bed, bolster, and pillers, that I had
bid for at Mr. Taylor’s sale. The slim-faced martel had
knocked ’em down to me because I nodded to en in my friendly way;
and I had to pay for ’em too. Now, I hold that that was
coming it very close, Reuben?”
“’Twas close, there’s no denying,” said the
general voice.
“Too close, ’twas,” said Reuben, in the rear of
the rest. “And as to Sam Lawson—poor heart! now he’s
dead and gone too!—I’ll warrant, that if so be I’ve
spent one hour in making hoops for that barrel, I’ve spent fifty,
first and last. That’s one of my hoops”—touching
it with his elbow—“that’s one of mine, and that, and
that, and all these.”
“Ah, Sam was a man,” said Mr. Penny, contemplatively.
“Sam was!” said Bowman.
“Especially for a drap o’ drink,” said the tranter.
“Good, but not religious-good,” suggested Mr. Penny.
The tranter nodded. Having at last made the tap and hole quite
ready, “Now then, Suze, bring a mug,” he said. “Here’s
luck to us, my sonnies!”
The tap went in, and the cider immediately squirted out in a horizontal
shower over Reuben’s hands, knees, and leggings, and into the
eyes and neck of Charley, who, having temporarily put off his grief
under pressure of more interesting proceedings, was squatting down and
blinking near his father.
“There ’tis again!” said Mrs. Dewy.
“Devil take the hole, the cask, and Sam Lawson too, that good
cider should be wasted like this!” exclaimed the tranter.
“Your thumb! Lend me your thumb, Michael! Ram it in
here, Michael! I must get a bigger tap, my sonnies.”
“Idd it cold inthide te hole?” inquired Charley of Michael,
as he continued in a stooping posture with his thumb in the cork-hole.
“What wonderful odds and ends that chiel has in his head to
be sure!” Mrs. Dewy admiringly exclaimed from the distance.
“I lay a wager that he thinks more about how ’tis inside
that barrel than in all the other parts of the world put together.”
All persons present put on a speaking countenance of admiration for
the cleverness alluded to, in the midst of which Reuben returned.
The operation was then satisfactorily performed; when Michael arose
and stretched his head to the extremest fraction of height that his
body would allow of, to re-straighten his back and shoulders—thrusting
out his arms and twisting his features to a mass of wrinkles to emphasize
the relief aquired. A quart or two of the beverage was then brought
to table, at which all the new arrivals reseated themselves with wide-spread
knees, their eyes meditatively seeking out any speck or knot in the
board upon which the gaze might precipitate itself.
“Whatever is father a-biding out in fuel-house so long for?”
said the tranter. “Never such a man as father for two things—cleaving
up old dead apple-tree wood and playing the bass-viol. ’A’d
pass his life between the two, that ’a would.” He
stepped to the door and opened it.
“Father!”
“Ay!” rang thinly from round the corner.
“Here’s the barrel tapped, and we all a-waiting!”
A series of dull thuds, that had been heard without for some time
past, now ceased; and after the light of a lantern had passed the window
and made wheeling rays upon the ceiling inside the eldest of the Dewy
family appeared.
CHAPTER III: THE ASSEMBLED QUIRE
William Dewy—otherwise grandfather William—was now about
seventy; yet an ardent vitality still preserved a warm and roughened
bloom upon his face, which reminded gardeners of the sunny side of a
ripe ribstone-pippin; though a narrow strip of forehead, that was protected
from the weather by lying above the line of his hat-brim, seemed to
belong to some town man, so gentlemanly was its whiteness. His
was a humorous and kindly nature, not unmixed with a frequent melancholy;
and he had a firm religious faith. But to his neighbours he had
no character in particular. If they saw him pass by their windows
when they had been bottling off old mead, or when they had just been
called long-headed men who might do anything in the world if they chose,
they thought concerning him, “Ah, there’s that good-hearted
man—open as a child!” If they saw him just after losing
a shilling or half-a-crown, or accidentally letting fall a piece of
crockery, they thought, “There’s that poor weak-minded man
Dewy again! Ah, he’s never done much in the world either!”
If he passed when fortune neither smiled nor frowned on them, they merely
thought him old William Dewy.
“Ah, so’s—here you be!—Ah, Michael and Joseph
and John—and you too, Leaf! a merry Christmas all! We shall
have a rare log-wood fire directly, Reub, to reckon by the toughness
of the job I had in cleaving ’em.” As he spoke he
threw down an armful of logs which fell in the chimney-corner with a
rumble, and looked at them with something of the admiring enmity he
would have bestowed on living people who had been very obstinate in
holding their own. “Come in, grandfather James.”
Old James (grandfather on the maternal side) had simply called as
a visitor. He lived in a cottage by himself, and many people considered
him a miser; some, rather slovenly in his habits. He now came
forward from behind grandfather William, and his stooping figure formed
a well-illuminated picture as he passed towards the fire-place.
Being by trade a mason, he wore a long linen apron reaching almost to
his toes, corduroy breeches and gaiters, which, together with his boots,
graduated in tints of whitish-brown by constant friction against lime
and stone. He also wore a very stiff fustian coat, having folds
at the elbows and shoulders as unvarying in their arrangement as those
in a pair of bellows: the ridges and the projecting parts of the coat
collectively exhibiting a shade different from that of the hollows,
which were lined with small ditch-like accumulations of stone and mortar-dust.
The extremely large side-pockets, sheltered beneath wide flaps, bulged
out convexly whether empty or full; and as he was often engaged to work
at buildings far away—his breakfasts and dinners being eaten in
a strange chimney-corner, by a garden wall, on a heap of stones, or
walking along the road—he carried in these pockets a small tin
canister of butter, a small canister of sugar, a small canister of tea,
a paper of salt, and a paper of pepper; the bread, cheese, and meat,
forming the substance of his meals, hanging up behind him in his basket
among the hammers and chisels. If a passer-by looked hard at him
when he was drawing forth any of these, “My buttery,” he
said, with a pinched smile.
“Better try over number seventy-eight before we start, I suppose?”
said William, pointing to a heap of old Christmas-carol books on a side
table.
“Wi’ all my heart,” said the choir generally.
“Number seventy-eight was always a teaser—always.
I can mind him ever since I was growing up a hard boy-chap.”
“But he’s a good tune, and worth a mint o’ practice,”
said Michael.
“He is; though I’ve been mad enough wi’ that tune
at times to seize en and tear en all to linnit. Ay, he’s
a splendid carrel—there’s no denying that.”
“The first line is well enough,” said Mr. Spinks; “but
when you come to ‘O, thou man,’ you make a mess o’t.”
“We’ll have another go into en, and see what we can make
of the martel. Half-an-hour’s hammering at en will conquer
the toughness of en; I’ll warn it.”
“’Od rabbit it all!” said Mr. Penny, interrupting
with a flash of his spectacles, and at the same time clawing at something
in the depths of a large side-pocket. “If so be I hadn’t
been as scatter-brained and thirtingill as a chiel, I should have called
at the schoolhouse wi’ a boot as I cam up along. Whatever
is coming to me I really can’t estimate at all!”
“The brain has its weaknesses,” murmured Mr. Spinks,
waving his head ominously. Mr. Spinks was considered to be a scholar,
having once kept a night-school, and always spoke up to that level.
“Well, I must call with en the first thing to-morrow.
And I’ll empt my pocket o’ this last too, if you don’t
mind, Mrs. Dewy.” He drew forth a last, and placed it on
a table at his elbow. The eyes of three or four followed it.
“Well,” said the shoemaker, seeming to perceive that
the interest the object had excited was greater than he had anticipated,
and warranted the last’s being taken up again and exhibited; “now,
whose foot do ye suppose this last was made for? It was made for
Geoffrey Day’s father, over at Yalbury Wood. Ah, many’s
the pair o’ boots he’ve had off the last! Well, when
’a died, I used the last for Geoffrey, and have ever since, though
a little doctoring was wanted to make it do. Yes, a very queer
natured last it is now, ’a b’lieve,” he continued,
turning it over caressingly. “Now, you notice that there”
(pointing to a lump of leather bradded to the toe), “that’s
a very bad bunion that he’ve had ever since ’a was a boy.
Now, this remarkable large piece” (pointing to a patch nailed
to the side), “shows a’ accident he received by the tread
of a horse, that squashed his foot a’most to a pomace. The
horseshoe cam full-butt on this point, you see. And so I’ve
just been over to Geoffrey’s, to know if he wanted his bunion
altered or made bigger in the new pair I’m making.”
During the latter part of this speech, Mr. Penny’s left hand
wandered towards the cider-cup, as if the hand had no connection with
the person speaking; and bringing his sentence to an abrupt close, all
but the extreme margin of the bootmaker’s face was eclipsed by
the circular brim of the vessel.
“However, I was going to say,” continued Penny, putting
down the cup, “I ought to have called at the school”—here
he went groping again in the depths of his pocket—“to leave
this without fail, though I suppose the first thing to-morrow will do.”
He now drew forth and placed upon the table a boot—small, light,
and prettily shaped—upon the heel of which he had been operating.
“The new schoolmistress’s!”
“Ay, no less, Miss Fancy Day; as neat a little figure of fun
as ever I see, and just husband-high.”
“Never Geoffrey’s daughter Fancy?” said Bowman,
as all glances present converged like wheel-spokes upon the boot in
the centre of them.
“Yes, sure,” resumed Mr. Penny, regarding the boot as
if that alone were his auditor; “’tis she that’s come
here schoolmistress. You knowed his daughter was in training?”
“Strange, isn’t it, for her to be here Christmas night,
Master Penny?”
“Yes; but here she is, ’a b’lieve.”
“I know how she comes here—so I do!” chirruped
one of the children.
“Why?” Dick inquired, with subtle interest.
“Pa’son Maybold was afraid he couldn’t manage us
all to-morrow at the dinner, and he talked o’ getting her jist
to come over and help him hand about the plates, and see we didn’t
make pigs of ourselves; and that’s what she’s come for!”
“And that’s the boot, then,” continued its mender
imaginatively, “that she’ll walk to church in to-morrow
morning. I don’t care to mend boots I don’t make;
but there’s no knowing what it may lead to, and her father always
comes to me.”
There, between the cider-mug and the candle, stood this interesting
receptacle of the little unknown’s foot; and a very pretty boot
it was. A character, in fact—the flexible bend at the instep,
the rounded localities of the small nestling toes, scratches from careless
scampers now forgotten—all, as repeated in the tell-tale leather,
evidencing a nature and a bias. Dick surveyed it with a delicate
feeling that he had no right to do so without having first asked the
owner of the foot’s permission.
“Now, neighbours, though no common eye can see it,” the
shoemaker went on, “a man in the trade can see the likeness between
this boot and that last, although that is so deformed as hardly to recall
one of God’s creatures, and this is one of as pretty a pair as
you’d get for ten-and-sixpence in Casterbridge. To you,
nothing; but ’tis father’s voot and daughter’s voot
to me, as plain as houses.”
“I don’t doubt there’s a likeness, Master Penny—a
mild likeness—a fantastical likeness,” said Spinks.
“But
I han’t got imagination enough to see it, perhaps.”
Mr. Penny adjusted his spectacles.
“Now, I’ll tell ye what happened to me once on this very
point. You used to know Johnson the dairyman, William?”
“Ay, sure; I did.”
“Well, ’twasn’t opposite his house, but a little
lower down—by his paddock, in front o’ Parkmaze Pool.
I was a-bearing across towards Bloom’s End, and lo and behold,
there was a man just brought out o’ the Pool, dead; he had un’rayed
for a dip, but not being able to pitch it just there had gone in flop
over his head. Men looked at en; women looked at en; children
looked at en; nobody knowed en. He was covered wi’ a sheet;
but I catched sight of his voot, just showing out as they carried en
along. ‘I don’t care what name that man went by,’
I said, in my way, ‘but he’s John Woodward’s brother;
I can swear to the family voot.’ At that very moment up
comes John Woodward, weeping and teaving, ‘I’ve lost my
brother! I’ve lost my brother!’”
“Only to think of that!” said Mrs. Dewy.
“’Tis well enough to know this foot and that foot,”
said Mr. Spinks. “’Tis long-headed, in fact, as far
as feet do go. I know little, ’tis true—I say no more;
but show
me a man’s foot, and I’ll tell you that
man’s heart.”
“You must be a cleverer feller, then, than mankind in jineral,”
said the tranter.
“Well, that’s nothing for me to speak of,” returned
Mr. Spinks. “A man lives and learns. Maybe I’ve
read a leaf or two in my time. I don’t wish to say anything
large, mind you; but nevertheless, maybe I have.”
“Yes, I know,” said Michael soothingly, “and all
the parish knows, that ye’ve read sommat of everything a’most,
and have been a great filler of young folks’ brains. Learning’s
a worthy thing, and ye’ve got it, Master Spinks.”
“I make no boast, though I may have read and thought a little;
and I know—it may be from much perusing, but I make no boast—that
by the time a man’s head is finished, ’tis almost time for
him to creep underground. I am over forty-five.”
Mr. Spinks emitted a look to signify that if his head was not finished,
nobody’s head ever could be.
“Talk of knowing people by their feet!” said Reuben.
“Rot me, my sonnies, then, if I can tell what a man is from all
his members put together, oftentimes.”
“But still, look is a good deal,” observed grandfather
William absently, moving and balancing his head till the tip of grandfather
James’s nose was exactly in a right line with William’s
eye and the mouth of a miniature cavern he was discerning in the fire.
“By the way,” he continued in a fresher voice, and looking
up, “that young crater, the schoolmis’ess, must be sung
to to-night wi’ the rest? If her ear is as fine as her face,
we shall have enough to do to be up-sides with her.”
“What about her face?” said young Dewy.
“Well, as to that,” Mr. Spinks replied, “’tis
a face you can hardly gainsay. A very good pink face, as far as
that do go. Still, only a face, when all is said and done.”
“Come, come, Elias Spinks, say she’s a pretty maid, and
have done wi’ her,” said the tranter, again preparing to
visit the cider-barrel.
CHAPTER IV: GOING THE ROUNDS
Shortly after ten o’clock the singing-boys arrived at the tranter’s
house, which was invariably the place of meeting, and preparations were
made for the start. The older men and musicians wore thick coats,
with stiff perpendicular collars, and coloured handkerchiefs wound round
and round the neck till the end came to hand, over all which they just
showed their ears and noses, like people looking over a wall.
The remainder, stalwart ruddy men and boys, were dressed mainly in snow-white
smock-frocks, embroidered upon the shoulders and breasts, in ornamental
forms of hearts, diamonds, and zigzags. The cider-mug was emptied
for the ninth time, the music-books were arranged, and the pieces finally
decided upon. The boys in the meantime put the old horn-lanterns
in order, cut candles into short lengths to fit the lanterns; and, a
thin fleece of snow having fallen since the early part of the evening,
those who had no leggings went to the stable and wound wisps of hay
round their ankles to keep the insidious flakes from the interior of
their boots.
Mellstock was a parish of considerable acreage, the hamlets composing
it lying at a much greater distance from each other than is ordinarily
the case. Hence several hours were consumed in playing and singing
within hearing of every family, even if but a single air were bestowed
on each. There was Lower Mellstock, the main village; half a mile
from this were the church and vicarage, and a few other houses, the
spot being rather lonely now, though in past centuries it had been the
most thickly-populated quarter of the parish. A mile north-east
lay the hamlet of Upper Mellstock, where the tranter lived; and at other
points knots of cottages, besides solitary farmsteads and dairies.
Old William Dewy, with the violoncello, played the bass; his grandson
Dick the treble violin; and Reuben and Michael Mail the tenor and second
violins respectively. The singers consisted of four men and seven
boys, upon whom devolved the task of carrying and attending to the lanterns,
and holding the books open for the players. Directly music was
the theme, old William ever and instinctively came to the front.
“Now mind, neighbours,” he said, as they all went out
one by one at the door, he himself holding it ajar and regarding them
with a critical face as they passed, like a shepherd counting out his
sheep. “You two counter-boys, keep your ears open to Michael’s
fingering, and don’t ye go straying into the treble part along
o’ Dick and his set, as ye did last year; and mind this especially
when we be in ‘Arise, and hail.’ Billy Chimlen, don’t
you sing quite so raving mad as you fain would; and, all o’ ye,
whatever ye do, keep from making a great scuffle on the ground when
we go in at people’s gates; but go quietly, so as to strike up
all of a sudden, like spirits.”
“Farmer Ledlow’s first?”
“Farmer Ledlow’s first; the rest as usual.”
“And, Voss,” said the tranter terminatively, “you
keep house here till about half-past two; then heat the metheglin and
cider in the warmer you’ll find turned up upon the copper; and
bring it wi’ the victuals to church-hatch, as th’st know.”
* * * * *
Just before the clock struck twelve they lighted the lanterns and
started. The moon, in her third quarter, had risen since the snowstorm;
but the dense accumulation of snow-cloud weakened her power to a faint
twilight, which was rather pervasive of the landscape than traceable
to the sky. The breeze had gone down, and the rustle of their
feet and tones of their speech echoed with an alert rebound from every
post, boundary-stone, and ancient wall they passed, even where the distance
of the echo’s origin was less than a few yards. Beyond their
own slight noises nothing was to be heard, save the occasional bark
of foxes in the direction of Yalbury Wood, or the brush of a rabbit
among the grass now and then, as it scampered out of their way.
Most of the outlying homesteads and hamlets had been visited by about
two o’clock; they then passed across the outskirts of a wooded
park toward the main village, nobody being at home at the Manor.
Pursuing no recognized track, great care was necessary in walking lest
their faces should come in contact with the low-hanging boughs of the
old lime-trees, which in many spots formed dense over-growths of interlaced
branches.
“Times have changed from the times they used to be,”
said Mail, regarding nobody can tell what interesting old panoramas
with an inward eye, and letting his outward glance rest on the ground,
because it was as convenient a position as any. “People
don’t care much about us now! I’ve been thinking we
must be almost the last left in the county of the old string players?
Barrel-organs, and the things next door to ’em that you blow wi’
your foot, have come in terribly of late years.”
“Ay!” said Bowman, shaking his head; and old William,
on seeing him, did the same thing.
“More’s the pity,” replied another. “Time
was—long and merry ago now!—when not one of the varmits
was to be heard of; but it served some of the quires right. They
should have stuck to strings as we did, and kept out clarinets, and
done away with serpents. If you’d thrive in musical religion,
stick to strings, says I.”
“Strings be safe soul-lifters, as far as that do go,”
said Mr. Spinks.
“Yet there’s worse things than serpents,” said
Mr. Penny. “Old things pass away, ’tis true; but a
serpent was a good old note: a deep rich note was the serpent.”
“Clar’nets, however, be bad at all times,” said
Michael Mail. “One Christmas—years agone now, years—I
went the rounds wi’ the Weatherbury quire. ’Twas a
hard frosty night, and the keys of all the clar’nets froze—ah,
they did freeze!—so that ’twas like drawing a cork every
time a key was opened; and the players o’ ’em had to go
into a hedger-and-ditcher’s chimley-corner, and thaw their clar’nets
every now and then. An icicle o’ spet hung down from the
end of every man’s clar’net a span long; and as to fingers—well,
there, if ye’ll believe me, we had no fingers at all, to our knowing.”
“I can well bring back to my mind,” said Mr. Penny, “what
I said to poor Joseph Ryme (who took the treble part in Chalk-Newton
Church for two-and-forty year) when they thought of having clar’nets
there. ‘Joseph,’ I said, says I, ‘depend upon’t,
if so be you have them tooting clar’nets you’ll spoil the
whole set-out. Clar’nets were not made for the service of
the Lard; you can see it by looking at ’em,’ I said.
And what came o’t? Why, souls, the parson set up a barrel-organ
on his own account within two years o’ the time I spoke, and the
old quire went to nothing.”
“As far as look is concerned,” said the tranter, “I
don’t for my part see that a fiddle is much nearer heaven than
a clar’net. ’Tis further off. There’s
always a rakish, scampish twist about a fiddle’s looks that seems
to say the Wicked One had a hand in making o’en; while angels
be supposed to play clar’nets in heaven, or som’at like
’em, if ye may believe picters.”
“Robert Penny, you was in the right,” broke in the eldest
Dewy. “They should ha’ stuck to strings. Your
brass-man is a rafting dog—well and good; your reed-man is a dab
at stirring ye—well and good; your drum-man is a rare bowel-shaker—good
again. But I don’t care who hears me say it, nothing will
spak to your heart wi’ the sweetness o’ the man of strings!”
“Strings for ever!” said little Jimmy.
“Strings alone would have held their ground against all the
new comers in creation.” (“True, true!” said
Bowman.) “But clarinets was death.” (“Death
they was!” said Mr. Penny.) “And harmonions,”
William continued in a louder voice, and getting excited by these signs
of approval, “harmonions and barrel-organs” (“Ah!”
and groans from Spinks) “be miserable—what shall I call
’em?—miserable—”
“Sinners,” suggested Jimmy, who made large strides like
the men, and did not lag behind like the other little boys.
“Miserable dumbledores!”
“Right, William, and so they be—miserable dumbledores!”
said the choir with unanimity.
By this time they were crossing to a gate in the direction of the
school, which, standing on a slight eminence at the junction of three
ways, now rose in unvarying and dark flatness against the sky.
The instruments were retuned, and all the band entered the school enclosure,
enjoined by old William to keep upon the grass.
“Number seventy-eight,” he softly gave out as they formed
round in a semicircle, the boys opening the lanterns to get a clearer
light, and directing their rays on the books.
Then passed forth into the quiet night an ancient and time-worn hymn,
embodying a quaint Christianity in words orally transmitted from father
to son through several generations down to the present characters, who
sang them out right earnestly:
“Remember Adam’s fall,
O thou Man:
Remember Adam’s fall
From Heaven to Hell.
Remember Adam’s fall;
How he hath condemn’d all
In Hell perpetual
There for to dwell.
Remember God’s goodnesse,
O thou Man:
Remember God’s goodnesse,
His promise made.
Remember God’s goodnesse;
He sent His Son sinlesse
Our ails for to redress;
Be not afraid!
In Bethlehem He was born,
O thou Man:
In Bethlehem He was born,
For mankind’s sake.
In Bethlehem He was born,
Christmas-day i’ the morn:
Our Saviour thought no scorn
Our faults to take.
Give thanks to God alway,
O thou Man:
Give thanks to God alway
With heart-most joy.
Give thanks to God alway
On this our joyful day:
Let all men sing and say,
Holy, Holy!”
Having concluded the last note, they listened for a minute or two,
but found that no sound issued from the schoolhouse.
“Four breaths, and then, ‘O, what unbounded goodness!’
number fifty-nine,” said William.
This was duly gone through, and no notice whatever seemed to be taken
of the performance.
“Good guide us, surely ’tisn’t a’ empty house,
as befell us in the year thirty-nine and forty-three!” said old
Dewy.
“Perhaps she’s jist come from some musical city, and
sneers at our doings?” the tranter whispered.
“’Od rabbit her!” said Mr. Penny, with an annihilating
look at a corner of the school chimney, “I don’t quite stomach
her, if this is it. Your plain music well done is as worthy as
your other sort done bad, a’ b’lieve, souls; so say I.”
“Four breaths, and then the last,” said the leader authoritatively.
“‘Rejoice, ye Tenants of the Earth,’ number sixty-four.”
At the close, waiting yet another minute, he said in a clear loud
voice, as he had said in the village at that hour and season for the
previous forty years—“A merry Christmas to ye!”
CHAPTER V: THE LISTENERS
When the expectant stillness consequent upon the exclamation had
nearly died out of them all, an increasing light made itself visible
in one of the windows of the upper floor. It came so close to
the blind that the exact position of the flame could be perceived from
the outside. Remaining steady for an instant, the blind went upward
from before it, revealing to thirty concentrated eyes a young girl,
framed as a picture by the window architrave, and unconsciously illuminating
her countenance to a vivid brightness by a candle she held in her left
hand, close to her face, her right hand being extended to the side of
the window. She was wrapped in a white robe of some kind, whilst
down her shoulders fell a twining profusion of marvellously rich hair,
in a wild disorder which proclaimed it to be only during the invisible
hours of the night that such a condition was discoverable. Her
bright eyes were looking into the grey world outside with an uncertain
expression, oscillating between courage and shyness, which, as she recognized
the semicircular group of dark forms gathered before her, transformed
itself into pleasant resolution.
Opening the window, she said lightly and warmly—“Thank
you, singers, thank you!”
Together went the window quickly and quietly, and the blind started
downward on its return to its place. Her fair forehead and eyes
vanished; her little mouth; her neck and shoulders; all of her.
Then the spot of candlelight shone nebulously as before; then it moved
away.
“How pretty!” exclaimed Dick Dewy.
“If she’d been rale wexwork she couldn’t ha’
been comelier,” said Michael Mail.
“As near a thing to a spiritual vision as ever
I wish
to see!” said tranter Dewy.
“O, sich I never, never see!” said Leaf fervently.
All the rest, after clearing their throats and adjusting their hats,
agreed that such a sight was worth singing for.
“Now to Farmer Shiner’s, and then replenish our insides,
father?” said the tranter.
“Wi’ all my heart,” said old William, shouldering
his bass-viol.
Farmer Shiner’s was a queer lump of a house, standing at the
corner of a lane that ran into the principal thoroughfare. The
upper windows were much wider than they were high, and this feature,
together with a broad bay-window where the door might have been expected,
gave it by day the aspect of a human countenance turned askance, and
wearing a sly and wicked leer. To-night nothing was visible but
the outline of the roof upon the sky.
The front of this building was reached, and the preliminaries arranged
as usual.
“Four breaths, and number thirty-two, ‘Behold the Morning
Star,’” said old William.
They had reached the end of the second verse, and the fiddlers were
doing the up bow-stroke previously to pouring forth the opening chord
of the third verse, when, without a light appearing or any signal being
given, a roaring voice exclaimed—
“Shut up, woll ’ee! Don’t make your blaring
row here! A feller wi’ a headache enough to split his skull
likes a quiet night!”
Slam went the window.
“Hullo, that’s a’ ugly blow for we!” said
the tranter, in a keenly appreciative voice, and turning to his companions.
“Finish the carrel, all who be friends of harmony!” commanded
old William; and they continued to the end.
“Four breaths, and number nineteen!” said William firmly.
“Give it him well; the quire can’t be insulted in this manner!”
A light now flashed into existence, the window opened, and the farmer
stood revealed as one in a terrific passion.
“Drown en!—drown en!” the tranter cried, fiddling
frantically. “Play fortissimy, and drown his spaking!”
“Fortissimy!” said Michael Mail, and the music and singing
waxed so loud that it was impossible to know what Mr. Shiner had said,
was saying, or was about to say; but wildly flinging his arms and body
about in the forms of capital Xs and Ys, he appeared to utter enough
invectives to consign the whole parish to perdition.
“Very onseemly—very!” said old William, as they
retired. “Never such a dreadful scene in the whole round
o’ my carrel practice—never! And he a churchwarden!”
“Only a drap o’ drink got into his head,” said
the tranter. “Man’s well enough when he’s in
his religious frame. He’s in his worldly frame now.
Must ask en to our bit of a party to-morrow night, I suppose, and so
put en in humour again. We bear no mortal man ill-will.”
They now crossed Mellstock Bridge, and went along an embowered path
beside the Froom towards the church and vicarage, meeting Voss with
the hot mead and bread-and-cheese as they were approaching the churchyard.
This determined them to eat and drink before proceeding further, and
they entered the church and ascended to the gallery. The lanterns
were opened, and the whole body sat round against the walls on benches
and whatever else was available, and made a hearty meal. In the
pauses of conversation there could be heard through the floor overhead
a little world of undertones and creaks from the halting clockwork,
which never spread further than the tower they were born in, and raised
in the more meditative minds a fancy that here lay the direct pathway
of Time.
Having done eating and drinking, they again tuned the instruments,
and once more the party emerged into the night air.
“Where’s Dick?” said old Dewy.
Every man looked round upon every other man, as if Dick might have
been transmuted into one or the other; and then they said they didn’t
know.
“Well now, that’s what I call very nasty of Master Dicky,
that I do,” said Michael Mail.
“He’ve clinked off home-along, depend upon’t,”
another suggested, though not quite believing that he had.
“Dick!” exclaimed the tranter, and his voice rolled sonorously
forth among the yews.
He suspended his muscles rigid as stone whilst listening for an answer,
and finding he listened in vain, turned to the assemblage.
“The treble man too! Now if he’d been a tenor or
counter chap, we might ha’ contrived the rest o’t without
en, you see. But for a quire to lose the treble, why, my sonnies,
you may so well lose your . . . ” The tranter paused, unable
to mention an image vast enough for the occasion.
“Your head at once,” suggested Mr. Penny.
The tranter moved a pace, as if it were puerile of people to complete
sentences when there were more pressing things to be done.
“Was ever heard such a thing as a young man leaving his work
half done and turning tail like this!”
“Never,” replied Bowman, in a tone signifying that he
was the last man in the world to wish to withhold the formal finish
required of him.
“I hope no fatal tragedy has overtook the lad!” said
his grandfather.
“O no,” replied tranter Dewy placidly. “Wonder
where he’s put that there fiddle of his. Why that fiddle
cost thirty shillings, and good words besides. Somewhere in the
damp, without doubt; that instrument will be unglued and spoilt in ten
minutes—ten! ay, two.”
“What in the name o’ righteousness can have happened?”
said old William, more uneasily. “Perhaps he’s drownded!”
Leaving their lanterns and instruments in the belfry they retraced
their steps along the waterside track. “A strapping lad
like Dick d’know better than let anything happen onawares,”
Reuben remarked. “There’s sure to be some poor little
scram reason for’t staring us in the face all the while.”
He lowered his voice to a mysterious tone: “Neighbours, have ye
noticed any sign of a scornful woman in his head, or suchlike?”
“Not a glimmer of such a body. He’s as clear as
water yet.”
“And Dicky said he should never marry,” cried Jimmy,
“but live at home always along wi’ mother and we!”
“Ay, ay, my sonny; every lad has said that in his time.”
They had now again reached the precincts of Mr. Shiner’s, but
hearing nobody in that direction, one or two went across to the schoolhouse.
A light was still burning in the bedroom, and though the blind was down,
the window had been slightly opened, as if to admit the distant notes
of the carollers to the ears of the occupant of the room.
Opposite the window, leaning motionless against a beech tree, was
the lost man, his arms folded, his head thrown back, his eyes fixed
upon the illuminated lattice.
“Why, Dick, is that thee? What b’st doing here?”
Dick’s body instantly flew into a more rational attitude, and
his head was seen to turn east and west in the gloom, as if endeavouring
to discern some proper answer to that question; and at last he said
in rather feeble accents—“Nothing, father.”
“Th’st take long enough time about it then, upon my body,”
said the tranter, as they all turned anew towards the vicarage.
“I thought you hadn’t done having snap in the gallery,”
said Dick.
“Why, we’ve been traypsing and rambling about, looking
everywhere, and thinking you’d done fifty deathly things, and
here have you been at nothing at all!”
“The stupidness lies in that point of it being nothing at all,”
murmured Mr. Spinks.
The vicarage front was their next field of operation, and Mr. Maybold,
the lately-arrived incumbent, duly received his share of the night’s
harmonies. It was hoped that by reason of his profession he would
have been led to open the window, and an extra carol in quick time was
added to draw him forth. But Mr. Maybold made no stir.
“A bad sign!” said old William, shaking his head.
However, at that same instant a musical voice was heard exclaiming
from inner depths of bedclothes—“Thanks, villagers!”
“What did he say?” asked Bowman, who was rather dull
of hearing. Bowman’s voice, being therefore loud, had been
heard by the vicar within.
“I said, ‘Thanks, villagers!’” cried the
vicar again.
“Oh, we didn’t hear ’ee the first time!”
cried Bowman.
“Now don’t for heaven’s sake spoil the young man’s
temper by answering like that!” said the tranter.
“You won’t do that, my friends!” the vicar shouted.
“Well to be sure, what ears!” said Mr. Penny in a whisper.
“Beats any horse or dog in the parish, and depend upon’t,
that’s a sign he’s a proper clever chap.”
“We shall see that in time,” said the tranter.
Old William, in his gratitude for such thanks from a comparatively
new inhabitant, was anxious to play all the tunes over again; but renounced
his desire on being reminded by Reuben that it would be best to leave
well alone.
“Now putting two and two together,” the tranter continued,
as they went their way over the hill, and across to the last remaining
houses; “that is, in the form of that young female vision we zeed
just now, and this young tenor-voiced parson, my belief is she’ll
wind en round her finger, and twist the pore young feller about like
the figure of 8—that she will so, my sonnies.”
CHAPTER VI: CHRISTMAS MORNING
The choir at last reached their beds, and slept like the rest of
the parish. Dick’s slumbers, through the three or four hours
remaining for rest, were disturbed and slight; an exhaustive variation
upon the incidents that had passed that night in connection with the
school-window going on in his brain every moment of the time.
In the morning, do what he would—go upstairs, downstairs, out
of doors, speak of the wind and weather, or what not—he could
not refrain from an unceasing renewal, in imagination, of that interesting
enactment. Tilted on the edge of one foot he stood beside the
fireplace, watching his mother grilling rashers; but there was nothing
in grilling, he thought, unless the Vision grilled. The limp rasher
hung down between the bars of the gridiron like a cat in a child’s
arms; but there was nothing in similes, unless She uttered them.
He looked at the daylight shadows of a yellow hue, dancing with the
firelight shadows in blue on the whitewashed chimney corner, but there
was nothing in shadows. “Perhaps the new young wom—sch—Miss
Fancy Day will sing in church with us this morning,” he said.
The tranter looked a long time before he replied, “I fancy
she will; and yet I fancy she won’t.”
Dick implied that such a remark was rather to be tolerated than admired;
though deliberateness in speech was known to have, as a rule, more to
do with the machinery of the tranter’s throat than with the matter
enunciated.
They made preparations for going to church as usual; Dick with extreme
alacrity, though he would not definitely consider why he was so religious.
His wonderful nicety in brushing and cleaning his best light boots had
features which elevated it to the rank of an art. Every particle
and speck of last week’s mud was scraped and brushed from toe
and heel; new blacking from the packet was carefully mixed and made
use of, regardless of expense. A coat was laid on and polished;
then another coat for increased blackness; and lastly a third, to give
the perfect and mirror-like jet which the hoped-for rencounter demanded.
It being Christmas-day, the tranter prepared himself with Sunday
particularity. Loud sousing and snorting noises were heard to
proceed from a tub in the back quarters of the dwelling, proclaiming
that he was there performing his great Sunday wash, lasting half-an-hour,
to which his washings on working-day mornings were mere flashes in the
pan. Vanishing into the outhouse with a large brown towel, and
the above-named bubblings and snortings being carried on for about twenty
minutes, the tranter would appear round the edge of the door, smelling
like a summer fog, and looking as if he had just narrowly escaped a
watery grave with the loss of much of his clothes, having since been
weeping bitterly till his eyes were red; a crystal drop of water hanging
ornamentally at the bottom of each ear, one at the tip of his nose,
and others in the form of spangles about his hair.
After a great deal of crunching upon the sanded stone floor by the
feet of father, son, and grandson as they moved to and fro in these
preparations, the bass-viol and fiddles were taken from their nook,
and the strings examined and screwed a little above concert-pitch, that
they might keep their tone when the service began, to obviate the awkward
contingency of having to retune them at the back of the gallery during
a cough, sneeze, or amen—an inconvenience which had been known
to arise in damp wintry weather.
The three left the door and paced down Mellstock-lane and across
the ewe-lease, bearing under their arms the instruments in faded green-baize
bags, and old brown music-books in their hands; Dick continually finding
himself in advance of the other two, and the tranter moving on with
toes turned outwards to an enormous angle.
At the foot of an incline the church became visible through the north
gate, or ‘church hatch,’ as it was called here. Seven
agile figures in a clump were observable beyond, which proved to be
the choristers waiting; sitting on an altar-tomb to pass the time, and
letting their heels dangle against it. The musicians being now
in sight, the youthful party scampered off and rattled up the old wooden
stairs of the gallery like a regiment of cavalry; the other boys of
the parish waiting outside and observing birds, cats, and other creatures
till the vicar entered, when they suddenly subsided into sober church-goers,
and passed down the aisle with echoing heels.
The gallery of Mellstock Church had a status and sentiment of its
own. A stranger there was regarded with a feeling altogether differing
from that of the congregation below towards him. Banished from
the nave as an intruder whom no originality could make interesting,
he was received above as a curiosity that no unfitness could render
dull. The gallery, too, looked down upon and knew the habits of
the nave to its remotest peculiarity, and had an extensive stock of
exclusive information about it; whilst the nave knew nothing of the
gallery folk, as gallery folk, beyond their loud-sounding minims and
chest notes. Such topics as that the clerk was always chewing
tobacco except at the moment of crying amen; that he had a dust-hole
in his pew; that during the sermon certain young daughters of the village
had left off caring to read anything so mild as the marriage service
for some years, and now regularly studied the one which chronologically
follows it; that a pair of lovers touched fingers through a knot-hole
between their pews in the manner ordained by their great exemplars,
Pyramus and Thisbe; that Mrs. Ledlow, the farmer’s wife, counted
her money and reckoned her week’s marketing expenses during the
first lesson—all news to those below—were stale subjects
here.
Old William sat in the centre of the front row, his violoncello between
his knees and two singers on each hand. Behind him, on the left,
came the treble singers and Dick; and on the right the tranter and the
tenors. Farther back was old Mail with the altos and supernumeraries.
But before they had taken their places, and whilst they were standing
in a circle at the back of the gallery practising a psalm or two, Dick
cast his eyes over his grandfather’s shoulder, and saw the vision
of the past night enter the porch-door as methodically as if she had
never been a vision at all. A new atmosphere seemed suddenly to
be puffed into the ancient edifice by her movement, which made Dick’s
body and soul tingle with novel sensations. Directed by Shiner,
the churchwarden, she proceeded to the small aisle on the north side
of the chancel, a spot now allotted to a throng of Sunday-school girls,
and distinctly visible from the gallery-front by looking under the curve
of the furthermost arch on that side.
Before this moment the church had seemed comparatively empty—now
it was thronged; and as Miss Fancy rose from her knees and looked around
her for a permanent place in which to deposit herself—finally
choosing the remotest corner—Dick began to breathe more freely
the warm new air she had brought with her; to feel rushings of blood,
and to have impressions that there was a tie between her and himself
visible to all the congregation.
Ever afterwards the young man could recollect individually each part
of the service of that bright Christmas morning, and the trifling occurrences
which took place as its minutes slowly drew along; the duties of that
day dividing themselves by a complete line from the services of other
times. The tunes they that morning essayed remained with him for
years, apart from all others; also the text; also the appearance of
the layer of dust upon the capitals of the piers; that the holly-bough
in the chancel archway was hung a little out of the centre—all
the ideas, in short, that creep into the mind when reason is only exercising
its lowest activity through the eye.
By chance or by fate, another young man who attended Mellstock Church
on that Christmas morning had towards the end of the service the same
instinctive perception of an interesting presence, in the shape of the
same bright maiden, though his emotion reached a far less developed
stage. And there was this difference, too, that the person in
question was surprised at his condition, and sedulously endeavoured
to reduce himself to his normal state of mind. He was the young
vicar, Mr. Maybold.
The music on Christmas mornings was frequently below the standard
of church-performances at other times. The boys were sleepy from
the heavy exertions of the night; the men were slightly wearied; and
now, in addition to these constant reasons, there was a dampness in
the atmosphere that still further aggravated the evil. Their strings,
from the recent long exposure to the night air, rose whole semitones,
and snapped with a loud twang at the most silent moment; which necessitated
more retiring than ever to the back of the gallery, and made the gallery
throats quite husky with the quantity of coughing and hemming required
for tuning in. The vicar looked cross.
When the singing was in progress there was suddenly discovered to
be a strong and shrill reinforcement from some point, ultimately found
to be the school-girls’ aisle. At every attempt it grew
bolder and more distinct. At the third time of singing, these
intrusive feminine voices were as mighty as those of the regular singers;
in fact, the flood of sound from this quarter assumed such an individuality,
that it had a time, a key, almost a tune of its own, surging upwards
when the gallery plunged downwards, and the reverse.
Now this had never happened before within the memory of man.
The girls, like the rest of the congregation, had always been humble
and respectful followers of the gallery; singing at sixes and sevens
if without gallery leaders; never interfering with the ordinances of
these practised artists—having no will, union, power, or proclivity
except it was given them from the established choir enthroned above
them.
A good deal of desperation became noticeable in the gallery throats
and strings, which continued throughout the musical portion of the service.
Directly the fiddles were laid down, Mr. Penny’s spectacles put
in their sheath, and the text had been given out, an indignant whispering
began.
“Did ye hear that, souls?” Mr. Penny said, in a groaning
breath.
“Brazen-faced hussies!” said Bowman.
“True; why, they were every note as loud as we, fiddles and
all, if not louder!”
“Fiddles and all!” echoed Bowman bitterly.
“Shall anything saucier be found than united ’ooman?”
Mr. Spinks murmured.
“What I want to know is,” said the tranter (as if he
knew already, but that civilization required the form of words), “what
business people have to tell maidens to sing like that when they don’t
sit in a gallery, and never have entered one in their lives? That’s
the question, my sonnies.”
“’Tis the gallery have got to sing, all the world knows,”
said Mr. Penny. “Why, souls, what’s the use o’
the ancients spending scores of pounds to build galleries if people
down in the lowest depths of the church sing like that at a moment’s
notice?”
“Really, I think we useless ones had better march out of church,
fiddles and all!” said Mr. Spinks, with a laugh which, to a stranger,
would have sounded mild and real. Only the initiated body of men
he addressed could understand the horrible bitterness of irony that
lurked under the quiet words ‘useless ones,’ and the ghastliness
of the laughter apparently so natural.
“Never mind! Let ’em sing too—’twill
make it all the louder—hee, hee!” said Leaf.
“Thomas Leaf, Thomas Leaf! Where have you lived all your
life?” said grandfather William sternly.
The quailing Leaf tried to look as if he had lived nowhere at all.
“When all’s said and done, my sonnies,” Reuben
said, “there’d have been no real harm in their singing if
they had let nobody hear ’em, and only jined in now and then.”
“None at all,” said Mr. Penny. “But though
I don’t wish to accuse people wrongfully, I’d say before
my lord judge that I could hear every note o’ that last psalm
come from ’em as much as from us—every note as if ’twas
their own.”
“Know it! ah, I should think I did know it!” Mr. Spinks
was heard to observe at this moment, without reference to his fellow
players—shaking his head at some idea he seemed to see floating
before him, and smiling as if he were attending a funeral at the time.
“Ah, do I or don’t I know it!”
No one said “Know what?” because all were aware from
experience that what he knew would declare itself in process of time.
“I could fancy last night that we should have some trouble
wi’ that young man,” said the tranter, pending the continuance
of Spinks’s speech, and looking towards the unconscious Mr. Maybold
in the pulpit.
“
I fancy,” said old William, rather severely,
“I fancy there’s too much whispering going on to be of any
spiritual use to gentle or simple.” Then folding his lips
and concentrating his glance on the vicar, he implied that none but
the ignorant would speak again; and accordingly there was silence in
the gallery, Mr. Spinks’s telling speech remaining for ever unspoken.
Dick had said nothing, and the tranter little, on this episode of
the morning; for Mrs. Dewy at breakfast expressed it as her intention
to invite the youthful leader of the culprits to the small party it
was customary with them to have on Christmas night—a piece of
knowledge which had given a particular brightness to Dick’s reflections
since he had received it. And in the tranter’s slightly-cynical
nature, party feeling was weaker than in the other members of the choir,
though friendliness and faithful partnership still sustained in him
a hearty earnestness on their account.
CHAPTER VII: THE TRANTER’S PARTY
During the afternoon unusual activity was seen to prevail about the
precincts of tranter Dewy’s house. The flagstone floor was
swept of dust, and a sprinkling of the finest yellow sand from the innermost
stratum of the adjoining sand-pit lightly scattered thereupon.
Then were produced large knives and forks, which had been shrouded in
darkness and grease since the last occasion of the kind, and bearing
upon their sides, “Shear-steel, warranted,” in such emphatic
letters of assurance, that the warranter’s name was not required
as further proof, and not given. The key was left in the tap of
the cider-barrel, instead of being carried in a pocket. And finally
the tranter had to stand up in the room and let his wife wheel him round
like a turnstile, to see if anything discreditable was visible in his
appearance.
“Stand still till I’ve been for the scissors,”
said Mrs. Dewy.
The tranter stood as still as a sentinel at the challenge.
The only repairs necessary were a trimming of one or two whiskers
that had extended beyond the general contour of the mass; a like trimming
of a slightly-frayed edge visible on his shirt-collar; and a final tug
at a grey hair—to all of which operations he submitted in resigned
silence, except the last, which produced a mild “Come, come, Ann,”
by way of expostulation.
“Really, Reuben, ’tis quite a disgrace to see such a
man,” said Mrs. Dewy, with the severity justifiable in a long-tried
companion, giving him another turn round, and picking several of Smiler’s
hairs from the shoulder of his coat. Reuben’s thoughts seemed
engaged elsewhere, and he yawned. “And the collar of your
coat is a shame to behold—so plastered with dirt, or dust, or
grease, or something. Why, wherever could you have got it?”
“’Tis my warm nater in summer-time, I suppose.
I always did get in such a heat when I bustle about.”
“Ay, the Dewys always were such a coarse-skinned family.
There’s your brother Bob just as bad—as fat as a porpoise—wi’
his low, mean, ‘How’st do, Ann?’ whenever he meets
me. I’d ‘How’st do’ him indeed!
If the sun only shines out a minute, there be you all streaming in the
face—I never see!”
“If I be hot week-days, I must be hot Sundays.”
“If any of the girls should turn after their father ’twill
be a bad look-out for ’em, poor things! None of my family
were sich vulgar sweaters, not one of ’em. But, Lord-a-mercy,
the Dewys! I don’t know how ever I cam’ into such
a family!”
“Your woman’s weakness when I asked ye to jine
us. That’s how it was I suppose.” But the tranter
appeared to have heard some such words from his wife before, and hence
his answer had not the energy it might have shown if the inquiry had
possessed the charm of novelty.
“You never did look so well in a pair o’ trousers as
in them,” she continued in the same unimpassioned voice, so that
the unfriendly criticism of the Dewy family seemed to have been more
normal than spontaneous. “Such a cheap pair as ’twas
too. As big as any man could wish to have, and lined inside, and
double-lined in the lower parts, and an extra piece of stiffening at
the bottom. And ’tis a nice high cut that comes up right
under your armpits, and there’s enough turned down inside the
seams to make half a pair more, besides a piece of cloth left that will
make an honest waistcoat—all by my contriving in buying the stuff
at a bargain, and having it made up under my eye. It only shows
what may be done by taking a little trouble, and not going straight
to the rascally tailors.”
The discourse was cut short by the sudden appearance of Charley on
the scene, with a face and hands of hideous blackness, and a nose like
a guttering candle. Why, on that particularly cleanly afternoon,
he should have discovered that the chimney-crook and chain from which
the hams were suspended should have possessed more merits and general
interest as playthings than any other articles in the house, is a question
for nursing mothers to decide. However, the humour seemed to lie
in the result being, as has been seen, that any given player with these
articles was in the long-run daubed with soot. The last that was
seen of Charley by daylight after this piece of ingenuity was when in
the act of vanishing from his father’s presence round the corner
of the house—looking back over his shoulder with an expression
of great sin on his face, like Cain as the Outcast in Bible pictures.
* * * * *
The guests had all assembled, and the tranter’s party had reached
that degree of development which accords with ten o’clock P.M.
in rural assemblies. At that hour the sound of a fiddle in process
of tuning was heard from the inner pantry.
“That’s Dick,” said the tranter. “That
lad’s crazy for a jig.”
“Dick! Now I cannot—really, I cannot have any dancing
at all till Christmas-day is out,” said old William emphatically.
“When the clock ha’ done striking twelve, dance as much
as ye like.”
“Well, I must say there’s reason in that, William,”
said Mrs. Penny. “If you do have a party on Christmas-night,
’tis only fair and honourable to the sky-folk to have it a sit-still
party. Jigging parties be all very well on the Devil’s holidays;
but a jigging party looks suspicious now. O yes; stop till the
clock strikes, young folk—so say I.”
It happened that some warm mead accidentally got into Mr. Spinks’s
head about this time.
“Dancing,” he said, “is a most strengthening, livening,
and courting movement, ’specially with a little beverage added!
And dancing is good. But why disturb what is ordained, Richard
and Reuben, and the company zhinerally? Why, I ask, as far as
that do go?”
“Then nothing till after twelve,” said William.
Though Reuben and his wife ruled on social points, religious questions
were mostly disposed of by the old man, whose firmness on this head
quite counterbalanced a certain weakness in his handling of domestic
matters. The hopes of the younger members of the household were
therefore relegated to a distance of one hour and three-quarters—a
result that took visible shape in them by a remote and listless look
about the eyes—the singing of songs being permitted in the interim.
At five minutes to twelve the soft tuning was again heard in the
back quarters; and when at length the clock had whizzed forth the last
stroke, Dick appeared ready primed, and the instruments were boldly
handled; old William very readily taking the bass-viol from its accustomed
nail, and touching the strings as irreligiously as could be desired.
The country-dance called the ‘Triumph, or Follow my Lover,’
was the figure with which they opened. The tranter took for his
partner Mrs. Penny, and Mrs. Dewy was chosen by Mr. Penny, who made
so much of his limited height by a judicious carriage of the head, straightening
of the back, and important flashes of his spectacle-glasses, that he
seemed almost as tall as the tranter. Mr. Shiner, age about thirty-five,
farmer and church-warden, a character principally composed of a crimson
stare, vigorous breath, and a watch-chain, with a mouth hanging on a
dark smile but never smiling, had come quite willingly to the party,
and showed a wondrous obliviousness of all his antics on the previous
night. But the comely, slender, prettily-dressed prize Fancy Day
fell to Dick’s lot, in spite of some private machinations of the
farmer, for the reason that Mr. Shiner, as a richer man, had shown too
much assurance in asking the favour, whilst Dick had been duly courteous.
We gain a good view of our heroine as she advances to her place in
the ladies’ line. She belonged to the taller division of
middle height. Flexibility was her first characteristic, by which
she appeared to enjoy the most easeful rest when she was in gliding
motion. Her dark eyes—arched by brows of so keen, slender,
and soft a curve, that they resembled nothing so much as two slurs in
music—showed primarily a bright sparkle each. This was softened
by a frequent thoughtfulness, yet not so frequent as to do away, for
more than a few minutes at a time, with a certain coquettishness; which
in its turn was never so decided as to banish honesty. Her lips
imitated her brows in their clearly-cut outline and softness of bend;
and her nose was well shaped—which is saying a great deal, when
it is remembered that there are a hundred pretty mouths and eyes for
one pretty nose. Add to this, plentiful knots of dark-brown hair,
a gauzy dress of white, with blue facings; and the slightest idea may
be gained of the young maiden who showed, amidst the rest of the dancing-ladies,
like a flower among vegetables. And so the dance proceeded.
Mr. Shiner, according to the interesting rule laid down, deserted his
own partner, and made off down the middle with this fair one of Dick’s—the
pair appearing from the top of the room like two persons tripping down
a lane to be married. Dick trotted behind with what was intended
to be a look of composure, but which was, in fact, a rather silly expression
of feature—implying, with too much earnestness, that such an elopement
could not be tolerated. Then they turned and came back, when Dick
grew more rigid around his mouth, and blushed with ingenuous ardour
as he joined hands with the rival and formed the arch over his lady’s
head; which presumably gave the figure its name; relinquishing her again
at setting to partners, when Mr. Shiner’s new chain quivered in
every link, and all the loose flesh upon the tranter—who here
came into action again—shook like jelly. Mrs. Penny, being
always rather concerned for her personal safety when she danced with
the tranter, fixed her face to a chronic smile of timidity the whole
time it lasted—a peculiarity which filled her features with wrinkles,
and reduced her eyes to little straight lines like hyphens, as she jigged
up and down opposite him; repeating in her own person not only his proper
movements, but also the minor flourishes which the richness of the tranter’s
imagination led him to introduce from time to time—an imitation
which had about it something of slavish obedience, not unmixed with
fear.
The ear-rings of the ladies now flung themselves wildly about, turning
violent summersaults, banging this way and that, and then swinging quietly
against the ears sustaining them. Mrs. Crumpler—a heavy
woman, who, for some reason which nobody ever thought worth inquiry,
danced in a clean apron—moved so smoothly through the figure that
her feet were never seen; conveying to imaginative minds the idea that
she rolled on castors.
Minute after minute glided by, and the party reached the period when
ladies’ back-hair begins to look forgotten and dissipated; when
a perceptible dampness makes itself apparent upon the faces even of
delicate girls—a ghastly dew having for some time rained from
the features of their masculine partners; when skirts begin to be torn
out of their gathers; when elderly people, who have stood up to please
their juniors, begin to feel sundry small tremblings in the region of
the knees, and to wish the interminable dance was at Jericho; when (at
country parties of the thorough sort) waistcoats begin to be unbuttoned,
and when the fiddlers’ chairs have been wriggled, by the frantic
bowing of their occupiers, to a distance of about two feet from where
they originally stood.
Fancy was dancing with Mr. Shiner. Dick knew that Fancy, by
the law of good manners, was bound to dance as pleasantly with one partner
as with another; yet he could not help suggesting to himself that she
need not have put
quite so much spirit into her steps, nor smiled
quite so frequently whilst in the farmer’s hands.
“I’m afraid you didn’t cast off,” said Dick
mildly to Mr. Shiner, before the latter man’s watch-chain had
done vibrating from a recent whirl.
Fancy made a motion of accepting the correction; but her partner
took no notice, and proceeded with the next movement, with an affectionate
bend towards her.
“That Shiner’s too fond of her,” the young man
said to himself as he watched them. They came to the top again,
Fancy smiling warmly towards her partner, and went to their places.
“Mr. Shiner, you didn’t cast off,” said Dick, for
want of something else to demolish him with; casting off himself, and
being put out at the farmer’s irregularity.
“Perhaps I sha’n’t cast off for any man,”
said Mr. Shiner.
“I think you ought to, sir.”
Dick’s partner, a young lady of the name of Lizzy—called
Lizz for short—tried to mollify.
“I can’t say that I myself have much feeling for casting
off,” she said.
“Nor I,” said Mrs. Penny, following up the argument,
“especially if a friend and neighbour is set against it.
Not but that ’tis a terrible tasty thing in good hands and well
done; yes, indeed, so say I.”
“All I meant was,” said Dick, rather sorry that he had
spoken correctingly to a guest, “that ’tis in the dance;
and a man has hardly any right to hack and mangle what was ordained
by the regular dance-maker, who, I daresay, got his living by making
’em, and thought of nothing else all his life.”
“I don’t like casting off: then very well; I cast off
for no dance-maker that ever lived.”
Dick now appeared to be doing mental arithmetic, the act being really
an effort to present to himself, in an abstract form, how far an argument
with a formidable rival ought to be carried, when that rival was his
mother’s guest. The dead-lock was put an end to by the stamping
arrival up the middle of the tranter, who, despising minutiæ on
principle, started a theme of his own.
“I assure you, neighbours,” he said, “the heat
of my frame no tongue can tell!” He looked around and endeavoured
to give, by a forcible gaze of self-sympathy, some faint idea of the
truth.
Mrs. Dewy formed one of the next couple.
“Yes,” she said, in an auxiliary tone, “Reuben
always was such a hot man.”
Mrs. Penny implied the species of sympathy that such a class of affliction
required, by trying to smile and to look grieved at the same time.
“If he only walk round the garden of a Sunday morning, his
shirt-collar is as limp as no starch at all,” continued Mrs. Dewy,
her countenance lapsing parenthetically into a housewifely expression
of concern at the reminiscence.
“Come, come, you women-folk; ’tis hands across—come,
come!” said the tranter; and the conversation ceased for the present.
CHAPTER VIII: THEY DANCE MORE WILDLY
Dick had at length secured Fancy for that most delightful of country-dances,
opening with six-hands-round.
“Before we begin,” said the tranter, “my proposal
is, that ’twould be a right and proper plan for every mortal man
in the dance to pull off his jacket, considering the heat.”
“Such low notions as you have, Reuben! Nothing but strip
will go down with you when you are a-dancing. Such a hot man as
he is!”
“Well, now, look here, my sonnies,” he argued to his
wife, whom he often addressed in the plural masculine for economy of
epithet merely; “I don’t see that. You dance and get
hot as fire; therefore you lighten your clothes. Isn’t that
nature and reason for gentle and simple? If I strip by myself
and not necessary, ’tis rather pot-housey I own; but if we stout
chaps strip one and all, why, ’tis the native manners of the country,
which no man can gainsay? Hey—what did you say, my sonnies?”
“Strip we will!” said the three other heavy men who were
in the dance; and their coats were accordingly taken off and hung in
the passage, whence the four sufferers from heat soon reappeared, marching
in close column, with flapping shirt-sleeves, and having, as common
to them all, a general glance of being now a match for any man or dancer
in England or Ireland. Dick, fearing to lose ground in Fancy’s
good opinion, retained his coat like the rest of the thinner men; and
Mr. Shiner did the same from superior knowledge.
And now a further phase of revelry had disclosed itself. It
was the time of night when a guest may write his name in the dust upon
the tables and chairs, and a bluish mist pervades the atmosphere, becoming
a distinct halo round the candles; when people’s nostrils, wrinkles,
and crevices in general, seem to be getting gradually plastered up;
when the very fiddlers as well as the dancers get red in the face, the
dancers having advanced further still towards incandescence, and entered
the cadaverous phase; the fiddlers no longer sit down, but kick back
their chairs and saw madly at the strings, with legs firmly spread and
eyes closed, regardless of the visible world. Again and again
did Dick share his Love’s hand with another man, and wheel round;
then, more delightfully, promenade in a circle with her all to himself,
his arm holding her waist more firmly each time, and his elbow getting
further and further behind her back, till the distance reached was rather
noticeable; and, most blissful, swinging to places shoulder to shoulder,
her breath curling round his neck like a summer zephyr that had strayed
from its proper date. Threading the couples one by one they reached
the bottom, when there arose in Dick’s mind a minor misery lest
the tune should end before they could work their way to the top again,
and have anew the same exciting run down through. Dick’s
feelings on actually reaching the top in spite of his doubts were supplemented
by a mortal fear that the fiddling might even stop at this supreme moment;
which prompted him to convey a stealthy whisper to the far-gone musicians,
to the effect that they were not to leave off till he and his partner
had reached the bottom of the dance once more, which remark was replied
to by the nearest of those convulsed and quivering men by a private
nod to the anxious young man between two semiquavers of the tune, and
a simultaneous “All right, ay, ay,” without opening the
eyes. Fancy was now held so closely that Dick and she were practically
one person. The room became to Dick like a picture in a dream;
all that he could remember of it afterwards being the look of the fiddlers
going to sleep, as humming-tops sleep, by increasing their motion and
hum, together with the figures of grandfather James and old Simon Crumpler
sitting by the chimney-corner, talking and nodding in dumb-show, and
beating the air to their emphatic sentences like people near a threshing
machine.
The dance ended. “Piph-h-h-h!” said tranter Dewy,
blowing out his breath in the very finest stream of vapour that a man’s
lips could form. “A regular tightener, that one, sonnies!”
He wiped his forehead, and went to the cider and ale mugs on the table.
“Well!” said Mrs. Penny, flopping into a chair, “my
heart haven’t been in such a thumping state of uproar since I
used to sit up on old Midsummer-eves to see who my husband was going
to be.”
“And that’s getting on for a good few years ago now,
from what I’ve heard you tell,” said the tranter, without
lifting his eyes from the cup he was filling. Being now engaged
in the business of handing round refreshments, he was warranted in keeping
his coat off still, though the other heavy men had resumed theirs.
“And a thing I never expected would come to pass, if you’ll
believe me, came to pass then,” continued Mrs. Penny. “Ah,
the first spirit ever I see on a Midsummer-eve was a puzzle to me when
he appeared, a hard puzzle, so say I!”
“So I should have fancied,” said Elias Spinks.
“Yes,” said Mrs. Penny, throwing her glance into past
times, and talking on in a running tone of complacent abstraction, as
if a listener were not a necessity. “Yes; never was I in
such a taking as on that Midsummer-eve! I sat up, quite determined
to see if John Wildway was going to marry me or no. I put the
bread-and-cheese and beer quite ready, as the witch’s book ordered,
and I opened the door, and I waited till the clock struck twelve, my
nerves all alive and so strained that I could feel every one of ’em
twitching like bell-wires. Yes, sure! and when the clock had struck,
lo and behold, I could see through the door a
little small man
in the lane wi’ a shoemaker’s apron on.”
Here Mr. Penny stealthily enlarged himself half an inch.
“Now, John Wildway,” Mrs. Penny continued, “who
courted me at that time, was a shoemaker, you see, but he was a very
fair-sized man, and I couldn’t believe that any such a little
small man had anything to do wi’ me, as anybody might. But
on he came, and crossed the threshold—not John, but actually the
same little small man in the shoemaker’s apron—”
“You needn’t be so mighty particular about little and
small!” said her husband.
“In he walks, and down he sits, and O my goodness me, didn’t
I flee upstairs, body and soul hardly hanging together! Well,
to cut a long story short, by-long and by-late, John Wildway and I had
a miff and parted; and lo and behold, the coming man came! Penny
asked me if I’d go snacks with him, and afore I knew what I was
about a’most, the thing was done.”
“I’ve fancied you never knew better in your life; but
I mid be mistaken,” said Mr. Penny in a murmur.
After Mrs. Penny had spoken, there being no new occupation for her
eyes, she still let them stay idling on the past scenes just related,
which were apparently visible to her in the centre of the room.
Mr. Penny’s remark received no reply.
During this discourse the tranter and his wife might have been observed
standing in an unobtrusive corner, in mysterious closeness to each other,
a just perceptible current of intelligence passing from each to each,
which had apparently no relation whatever to the conversation of their
guests, but much to their sustenance. A conclusion of some kind
having at length been drawn, the palpable confederacy of man and wife
was once more obliterated, the tranter marching off into the pantry,
humming a tune that he couldn’t quite recollect, and then breaking
into the words of a song of which he could remember about one line and
a quarter. Mrs. Dewy spoke a few words about preparations for
a bit of supper.
That elder portion of the company which loved eating and drinking
put on a look to signify that till this moment they had quite forgotten
that it was customary to expect suppers on these occasions; going even
further than this politeness of feature, and starting irrelevant subjects,
the exceeding flatness and forced tone of which rather betrayed their
object. The younger members said they were quite hungry, and that
supper would be delightful though it was so late.
Good luck attended Dick’s love-passes during the meal.
He sat next Fancy, and had the thrilling pleasure of using permanently
a glass which had been taken by Fancy in mistake; of letting the outer
edge of the sole of his boot touch the lower verge of her skirt; and
to add to these delights the cat, which had lain unobserved in her lap
for several minutes, crept across into his own, touching him with fur
that had touched her hand a moment before. There were, besides,
some little pleasures in the shape of helping her to vegetable she didn’t
want, and when it had nearly alighted on her plate taking it across
for his own use, on the plea of waste not, want not. He also,
from time to time, sipped sweet sly glances at her profile; noticing
the set of her head, the curve of her throat, and other artistic properties
of the lively goddess, who the while kept up a rather free, not to say
too free, conversation with Mr. Shiner sitting opposite; which, after
some uneasy criticism, and much shifting of argument backwards and forwards
in Dick’s mind, he decided not to consider of alarming significance.
“A new music greets our ears now,” said Miss Fancy, alluding,
with the sharpness that her position as village sharpener demanded,
to the contrast between the rattle of knives and forks and the late
notes of the fiddlers.
“Ay; and I don’t know but what ’tis sweeter in
tone when you get above forty,” said the tranter; “except,
in faith, as regards father there. Never such a mortal man as
he for tunes. They do move his soul; don’t ’em, father?”
The eldest Dewy smiled across from his distant chair an assent to
Reuben’s remark.
“Spaking of being moved in soul,” said Mr. Penny, “I
shall never forget the first time I heard the ‘Dead March.’
’Twas at poor Corp’l Nineman’s funeral at Casterbridge.
It fairly made my hair creep and fidget about like a vlock of sheep—ah,
it did, souls! And when they had done, and the last trump had
sounded, and the guns was fired over the dead hero’s grave, a’
icy-cold drop o’ moist sweat hung upon my forehead, and another
upon my jawbone. Ah, ’tis a very solemn thing!”
“Well, as to father in the corner there,” the tranter
said, pointing to old William, who was in the act of filling his mouth;
“he’d starve to death for music’s sake now, as much
as when he was a boy-chap of fifteen.”
“Truly, now,” said Michael Mail, clearing the corner
of his throat in the manner of a man who meant to be convincing; “there’s
a friendly tie of some sort between music and eating.” He
lifted the cup to his mouth, and drank himself gradually backwards from
a perpendicular position to a slanting one, during which time his looks
performed a circuit from the wall opposite him to the ceiling overhead.
Then clearing the other corner of his throat: “Once I was a-setting
in the little kitchen of the Dree Mariners at Casterbridge, having a
bit of dinner, and a brass band struck up in the street. Such
a beautiful band as that were! I was setting eating fried liver
and lights, I well can mind—ah, I was! and to save my life, I
couldn’t help chawing to the tune. Band played six-eight
time; six-eight chaws I, willynilly. Band plays common; common
time went my teeth among the liver and lights as true as a hair.
Beautiful ’twere! Ah, I shall never forget that there band!”
“That’s as tuneful a thing as ever I heard of,”
said grandfather James, with the absent gaze which accompanies profound
criticism.
“I don’t like Michael’s tuneful stories then,”
said Mrs. Dewy. “They are quite coarse to a person o’
decent taste.”
Old Michael’s mouth twitched here and there, as if he wanted
to smile but didn’t know where to begin, which gradually settled
to an expression that it was not displeasing for a nice woman like the
tranter’s wife to correct him.
“Well, now,” said Reuben, with decisive earnestness,
“that sort o’ coarse touch that’s so upsetting to
Ann’s feelings is to my mind a recommendation; for it do always
prove a story to be true. And for the same reason, I like a story
with a bad moral. My sonnies, all true stories have a coarse touch
or a bad moral, depend upon’t. If the story-tellers could
ha’ got decency and good morals from true stories, who’d
ha’ troubled to invent parables?” Saying this the
tranter arose to fetch a new stock of cider, ale, mead, and home-made
wines.
Mrs. Dewy sighed, and appended a remark (ostensibly behind her husband’s
back, though that the words should reach his ears distinctly was understood
by both): “Such a man as Dewy is! Nobody do know the trouble
I have to keep that man barely respectable. And did you ever hear
too—just now at supper-time—talking about ‘taties’
with Michael in such a work-folk way. Well, ’tis what I
was never brought up to! With our family ’twas never less
than ‘taters,’ and very often ‘pertatoes’ outright;
mother was so particular and nice with us girls there was no family
in the parish that kept them selves up more than we.”
The hour of parting came. Fancy could not remain for the night,
because she had engaged a woman to wait up for her. She disappeared
temporarily from the flagging party of dancers, and then came downstairs
wrapped up and looking altogether a different person from whom she had
been hitherto, in fact (to Dick’s sadness and disappointment),
a woman somewhat reserved and of a phlegmatic temperament—nothing
left in her of the romping girl that she had seemed but a short quarter-hour
before, who had not minded the weight of Dick’s hand upon her
waist, nor shirked the purlieus of the mistletoe.
“What a difference!” thought the young man—hoary
cynic
pro tem. “What a miserable deceiving difference
between the manners of a maid’s life at dancing times and at others!
Look at this lovely Fancy! Through the whole past evening touchable,
squeezeable—even kissable! For whole half-hours I held her
so chose to me that not a sheet of paper could have been shipped between
us; and I could feel her heart only just outside my own, her life beating
on so close to mine, that I was aware of every breath in it. A
flit is made upstairs—a hat and a cloak put on—and I no
more dare to touch her than—” Thought failed him,
and he returned to realities.
But this was an endurable misery in comparison with what followed.
Mr. Shiner and his watch-chain, taking the intrusive advantage that
ardent bachelors who are going homeward along the same road as a pretty
young woman always do take of that circumstance, came forward to assure
Fancy—with a total disregard of Dick’s emotions, and in
tones which were certainly not frigid—that he (Shiner) was not
the man to go to bed before seeing his Lady Fair safe within her own
door—not he, nobody should say he was that;—and that he
would not leave her side an inch till the thing was done—drown
him if he would. The proposal was assented to by Miss Day, in
Dick’s foreboding judgment, with one degree—or at any rate,
an appreciable fraction of a degree—of warmth beyond that required
by a disinterested desire for protection from the dangers of the night.
All was over; and Dick surveyed the chair she had last occupied,
looking now like a setting from which the gem has been torn. There
stood her glass, and the romantic teaspoonful of elder wine at the bottom
that she couldn’t drink by trying ever so hard, in obedience to
the mighty arguments of the tranter (his hand coming down upon her shoulder
the while, like a Nasmyth hammer); but the drinker was there no longer.
There were the nine or ten pretty little crumbs she had left on her
plate; but the eater was no more seen.
There seemed a disagreeable closeness of relationship between himself
and the members of his family, now that they were left alone again face
to face. His father seemed quite offensive for appearing to be
in just as high spirits as when the guests were there; and as for grandfather
James (who had not yet left), he was quite fiendish in being rather
glad they were gone.
“Really,” said the tranter, in a tone of placid satisfaction,
“I’ve had so little time to attend to myself all the evenen,
that I mean to enjoy a quiet meal now! A slice of this here ham—neither
too fat nor too lean—so; and then a drop of this vinegar and pickles—there,
that’s it—and I shall be as fresh as a lark again!
And to tell the truth, my sonny, my inside has been as dry as a lime-basket
all night.”
“I like a party very well once in a while,” said Mrs.
Dewy, leaving off the adorned tones she had been bound to use throughout
the evening, and returning to the natural marriage voice; “but,
Lord, ’tis such a sight of heavy work next day! What with
the dirty plates, and knives and forks, and dust and smother, and bits
kicked off your furniture, and I don’t know what all, why a body
could a’most wish there were no such things as Christmases . .
. Ah-h dear!” she yawned, till the clock in the corner had ticked
several beats. She cast her eyes round upon the displaced, dust-laden
furniture, and sank down overpowered at the sight.
“Well, I be getting all right by degrees, thank the Lord for’t!”
said the tranter cheerfully through a mangled mass of ham and bread,
without lifting his eyes from his plate, and chopping away with his
knife and fork as if he were felling trees. “Ann, you may
as well go on to bed at once, and not bide there making such sleepy
faces; you look as long-favoured as a fiddle, upon my life, Ann.
There, you must be wearied out, ’tis true. I’ll do
the doors and draw up the clock; and you go on, or you’ll be as
white as a sheet to-morrow.”
“Ay; I don’t know whether I shan’t or no.”
The matron passed her hand across her eyes to brush away the film of
sleep till she got upstairs.
Dick wondered how it was that when people were married they could
be so blind to romance; and was quite certain that if he ever took to
wife that dear impossible Fancy, he and she would never be so dreadfully
practical and undemonstrative of the Passion as his father and mother
were. The most extraordinary thing was, that all the fathers and
mothers he knew were just as undemonstrative as his own.
CHAPTER IX: DICK CALLS AT THE SCHOOL
The early days of the year drew on, and Fancy, having spent the holiday
weeks at home, returned again to Mellstock.
Every spare minute of the week following her return was used by Dick
in accidentally passing the schoolhouse in his journeys about the neighbourhood;
but not once did she make herself visible. A handkerchief belonging
to her had been providentially found by his mother in clearing the rooms
the day after that of the dance; and by much contrivance Dick got it
handed over to him, to leave with her at any time he should be near
the school after her return. But he delayed taking the extreme
measure of calling with it lest, had she really no sentiment of interest
in him, it might be regarded as a slightly absurd errand, the reason
guessed; and the sense of the ludicrous, which was rather keen in her,
do his dignity considerable injury in her eyes; and what she thought
of him, even apart from the question of her loving, was all the world
to him now.
But the hour came when the patience of love at twenty-one could endure
no longer. One Saturday he approached the school with a mild air
of indifference, and had the satisfaction of seeing the object of his
quest at the further end of her garden, trying, by the aid of a spade
and gloves, to root a bramble that had intruded itself there.
He disguised his feelings from some suspicious-looking cottage-windows
opposite by endeavouring to appear like a man in a great hurry of business,
who wished to leave the handkerchief and have done with such trifling
errands.
This endeavour signally failed; for on approaching the gate he found
it locked to keep the children, who were playing ‘cross-dadder’
in the front, from running into her private grounds.
She did not see him; and he could only think of one thing to be done,
which was to shout her name.
“Miss Day!”
The words were uttered with a jerk and a look meant to imply to the
cottages opposite that he was now simply one who liked shouting as a
pleasant way of passing his time, without any reference to persons in
gardens. The name died away, and the unconscious Miss Day continued
digging and pulling as before.
He screwed himself up to enduring the cottage-windows yet more stoically,
and shouted again. Fancy took no notice whatever.
He shouted the third time, with desperate vehemence, turning suddenly
about and retiring a little distance, as if it were by no means for
his own pleasure that he had come.
This time she heard him, came down the garden, and entered the school
at the back. Footsteps echoed across the interior, the door opened,
and three-quarters of the blooming young schoolmistress’s face
and figure stood revealed before him; a slice on her left-hand side
being cut off by the edge of the door. Having surveyed and recognized
him, she came to the gate.
At sight of him had the pink of her cheeks increased, lessened, or
did it continue to cover its normal area of ground? It was a question
meditated several hundreds of times by her visitor in after-hours—the
meditation, after wearying involutions, always ending in one way, that
it was impossible to say.
“Your handkerchief: Miss Day: I called with.” He
held it out spasmodically and awkwardly. “Mother found it:
under a chair.”
“O, thank you very much for bringing it, Mr. Dewy. I
couldn’t think where I had dropped it.”
Now Dick, not being an experienced lover—indeed, never before
having been engaged in the practice of love-making at all, except in
a small schoolboy way—could not take advantage of the situation;
and out came the blunder, which afterwards cost him so many bitter moments
and a sleepless night:-
“Good morning, Miss Day.”
“Good morning, Mr. Dewy.”
The gate was closed; she was gone; and Dick was standing outside,
unchanged in his condition from what he had been before he called.
Of course the Angel was not to blame—a young woman living alone
in a house could not ask him indoors unless she had known him better—he
should have kept her outside before floundering into that fatal farewell.
He wished that before he called he had realized more fully than he did
the pleasure of being about to call; and turned away.
PART THE SECOND—SPRING
CHAPTER I: PASSING BY THE SCHOOL
It followed that, as the spring advanced, Dick walked abroad much
more frequently than had hitherto been usual with him, and was continually
finding that his nearest way to or from home lay by the road which skirted
the garden of the school. The first-fruits of his perseverance
were that, on turning the angle on the nineteenth journey by that track,
he saw Miss Fancy’s figure, clothed in a dark-gray dress, looking
from a high open window upon the crown of his hat. The friendly
greeting resulting from this rencounter was considered so valuable an
elixir that Dick passed still oftener; and by the time he had almost
trodden a little path under the fence where never a path was before,
he was rewarded with an actual meeting face to face on the open road
before her gate. This brought another meeting, and another, Fancy
faintly showing by her bearing that it was a pleasure to her of some
kind to see him there; but the sort of pleasure she derived, whether
exultation at the hope her exceeding fairness inspired, or the true
feeling which was alone Dick’s concern, he could not anyhow decide,
although he meditated on her every little movement for hours after it
was made.
CHAPTER II: A MEETING OF THE QUIRE
It was the evening of a fine spring day. The descending sun
appeared as a nebulous blaze of amber light, its outline being lost
in cloudy masses hanging round it, like wild locks of hair.
The chief members of Mellstock parish choir were standing in a group
in front of Mr. Penny’s workshop in the lower village. They
were all brightly illuminated, and each was backed up by a shadow as
long as a steeple; the lowness of the source of light rendering the
brims of their hats of no use at all as a protection to the eyes.
Mr. Penny’s was the last house in that part of the parish,
and stood in a hollow by the roadside so that cart-wheels and horses’
legs were about level with the sill of his shop-window. This was
low and wide, and was open from morning till evening, Mr. Penny himself
being invariably seen working inside, like a framed portrait of a shoemaker
by some modern Moroni. He sat facing the road, with a boot on
his knees and the awl in his hand, only looking up for a moment as he
stretched out his arms and bent forward at the pull, when his spectacles
flashed in the passer’s face with a shine of flat whiteness, and
then returned again to the boot as usual. Rows of lasts, small
and large, stout and slender, covered the wall which formed the background,
in the extreme shadow of which a kind of dummy was seen sitting, in
the shape of an apprentice with a string tied round his hair (probably
to keep it out of his eyes). He smiled at remarks that floated
in from without, but was never known to answer them in Mr. Penny’s
presence. Outside the window the upper-leather of a Wellington-boot
was usually hung, pegged to a board as if to dry. No sign was
over his door; in fact—as with old banks and mercantile houses—advertising
in any shape was scorned, and it would have been felt as beneath his
dignity to paint up, for the benefit of strangers, the name of an establishment
whose trade came solely by connection based on personal respect.
His visitors now came and stood on the outside of his window, sometimes
leaning against the sill, sometimes moving a pace or two backwards and
forwards in front of it. They talked with deliberate gesticulations
to Mr. Penny, enthroned in the shadow of the interior.
“I do like a man to stick to men who be in the same line o’
life—o’ Sundays, anyway—that I do so.”
“’Tis like all the doings of folk who don’t know
what a day’s work is, that’s what I say.”
“My belief is the man’s not to blame; ’tis
she—she’s
the bitter weed!”
“No, not altogether. He’s a poor gawk-hammer.
Look at his sermon yesterday.”
“His sermon was well enough, a very good guessable sermon,
only he couldn’t put it into words and speak it. That’s
all was the matter wi’ the sermon. He hadn’t been
able to get it past his pen.”
“Well—ay, the sermon might have been good; for, ’tis
true, the sermon of Old Eccl’iastes himself lay in Eccl’iastes’s
ink-bottle afore he got it out.”
Mr. Penny, being in the act of drawing the last stitch tight, could
afford time to look up and throw in a word at this point.
“He’s no spouter—that must be said, ’a b’lieve.”
“’Tis a terrible muddle sometimes with the man, as far
as spout do go,” said Spinks.
“Well, we’ll say nothing about that,” the tranter
answered; “for I don’t believe ’twill make a penneth
o’ difference to we poor martels here or hereafter whether his
sermons be good or bad, my sonnies.”
Mr. Penny made another hole with his awl, pushed in the thread, and
looked up and spoke again at the extension of arms.
“’Tis his goings-on, souls, that’s what it is.”
He clenched his features for an Herculean addition to the ordinary pull,
and continued, “The first thing he done when he came here was
to be hot and strong about church business.”
“True,” said Spinks; “that was the very first thing
he done.”
Mr. Penny, having now been offered the ear of the assembly, accepted
it, ceased stitching, swallowed an unimportant quantity of air as if
it were a pill, and continued:
“The next thing he do do is to think about altering the church,
until he found ’twould be a matter o’ cost and what not,
and then not to think no more about it.”
“True: that was the next thing he done.”
“And the next thing was to tell the young chaps that they were
not on no account to put their hats in the christening font during service.”
“True.”
“And then ’twas this, and then ’twas that, and
now ’tis—”
Words were not forcible enough to conclude the sentence, and Mr.
Penny gave a huge pull to signify the concluding word.
“Now ’tis to turn us out of the quire neck and crop,”
said the tranter after an interval of half a minute, not by way of explaining
the pause and pull, which had been quite understood, but as a means
of keeping the subject well before the meeting.
Mrs. Penny came to the door at this point in the discussion.
Like all good wives, however much she was inclined to play the Tory
to her husband’s Whiggism, and
vice versâ, in times
of peace, she coalesced with him heartily enough in time of war.
“It must be owned he’s not all there,” she replied
in a general way to the fragments of talk she had heard from indoors.
“Far below poor Mr. Grinham” (the late vicar).
“Ay, there was this to be said for he, that you were quite
sure he’d never come mumbudgeting to see ye, just as you were
in the middle of your work, and put you out with his fuss and trouble
about ye.”
“Never. But as for this new Mr. Maybold, though he mid
be a very well-intending party in that respect, he’s unbearable;
for as to sifting your cinders, scrubbing your floors, or emptying your
slops, why, you can’t do it. I assure you I’ve not
been able to empt them for several days, unless I throw ’em up
the chimley or out of winder; for as sure as the sun you meet him at
the door, coming to ask how you are, and ’tis such a confusing
thing to meet a gentleman at the door when ye are in the mess o’
washing.”
“’Tis only for want of knowing better, poor gentleman,”
said the tranter. “His meaning’s good enough.
Ay, your pa’son comes by fate: ’tis heads or tails, like
pitch-halfpenny, and no choosing; so we must take en as he is, my sonnies,
and thank God he’s no worse, I suppose.”
“I fancy I’ve seen him look across at Miss Day in a warmer
way than Christianity asked for,” said Mrs. Penny musingly; “but
I don’t quite like to say it.”
“O no; there’s nothing in that,” said grandfather
William.
“If there’s nothing, we shall see nothing,” Mrs.
Penny replied, in the tone of a woman who might possibly have private
opinions still.
“Ah, Mr. Grinham was the man!” said Bowman. “Why,
he never troubled us wi’ a visit from year’s end to year’s
end. You might go anywhere, do anything: you’d be sure never
to see him.”
“Yes, he was a right sensible pa’son,” said Michael.
“He never entered our door but once in his life, and that was
to tell my poor wife—ay, poor soul, dead and gone now, as we all
shall!—that as she was such a’ old aged person, and lived
so far from the church, he didn’t at all expect her to come any
more to the service.”
“And ’a was a very jinerous gentleman about choosing
the psalms and hymns o’ Sundays. ‘Confound ye,’
says he, ‘blare and scrape what ye will, but don’t bother
me!’”
“And he was a very honourable man in not wanting any of us
to come and hear him if we were all on-end for a jaunt or spree, or
to bring the babies to be christened if they were inclined to squalling.
There’s good in a man’s not putting a parish to unnecessary
trouble.”
“And there’s this here man never letting us have a bit
o’ peace; but keeping on about being good and upright till ’tis
carried to such a pitch as I never see the like afore nor since!”
“No sooner had he got here than he found the font wouldn’t
hold water, as it hadn’t for years off and on; and when I told
him that Mr. Grinham never minded it, but used to spet upon his vinger
and christen ’em just as well, ’a said, ‘Good Heavens!
Send for a workman immediate. What place have I come to!’
Which was no compliment to us, come to that.”
“Still, for my part,” said old William, “though
he’s arrayed against us, I like the hearty borussnorus ways of
the new pa’son.”
“You, ready to die for the quire,” said Bowman reproachfully,
“to stick up for the quire’s enemy, William!”
“Nobody will feel the loss of our church-work so much as I,”
said the old man firmly; “that you d’all know. I’ve
a-been in the quire man and boy ever since I was a chiel of eleven.
But for all that ’tisn’t in me to call the man a bad man,
because I truly and sincerely believe en to be a good young feller.”
Some of the youthful sparkle that used to reside there animated William’s
eye as he uttered the words, and a certain nobility of aspect was also
imparted to him by the setting sun, which gave him a Titanic shadow
at least thirty feet in length, stretching away to the east in outlines
of imposing magnitude, his head finally terminating upon the trunk of
a grand old oak-tree.
“Mayble’s a hearty feller enough,” the tranter
replied, “and will spak to you be you dirty or be you clane.
The first time I met en was in a drong, and though ’a didn’t
know me no more than the dead, ’a passed the time of day.
‘D’ye do?’ he said, says he, nodding his head.
‘A fine day.’ Then the second time I met en was full-buff
in town street, when my breeches were tore into a long strent by getting
through a copse of thorns and brimbles for a short cut home-along; and
not wanting to disgrace the man by spaking in that state, I fixed my
eye on the weathercock to let en pass me as a stranger. But no:
‘How d’ye do, Reuben?’ says he, right hearty, and
shook my hand. If I’d been dressed in silver spangles from
top to toe, the man couldn’t have been civiller.”
At this moment Dick was seen coming up the village-street, and they
turned and watched him.
CHAPTER III: A TURN IN THE DISCUSSION
“I’m afraid Dick’s a lost man,” said the
tranter.
“What?—no!” said Mail, implying by his manner that
it was a far commoner thing for his ears to report what was not said
than that his judgment should be at fault.
“Ay,” said the tranter, still gazing at Dick’s
unconscious advance. “I don’t at all like what I see!
There’s too many o’ them looks out of the winder without
noticing anything; too much shining of boots; too much peeping round
corners; too much looking at the clock; telling about clever things
she did till you be sick of it; and then upon a hint to that
effect a horrible silence about her. I’ve walked the path
once in my life and know the country, neighbours; and Dick’s a
lost man!” The tranter turned a quarter round and smiled
a smile of miserable satire at the setting new moon, which happened
to catch his eye.
The others became far too serious at this announcement to allow them
to speak; and they still regarded Dick in the distance.
“’Twas his mother’s fault,” the tranter continued,
“in asking the young woman to our party last Christmas.
When I eyed the blue frock and light heels o’ the maid, I had
my thoughts directly. ‘God bless thee, Dicky my sonny,’
I said to myself; ‘there’s a delusion for thee!’”
“They seemed to be rather distant in manner last Sunday, I
thought?” Mail tentatively observed, as became one who was not
a member of the family.
“Ay, that’s a part of the zickness. Distance belongs
to it, slyness belongs to it, queerest things on earth belongs to it!
There, ’tmay as well come early as late s’far as I know.
The sooner begun, the sooner over; for come it will.”
“The question I ask is,” said Mr. Spinks, connecting
into one thread the two subjects of discourse, as became a man learned
in rhetoric, and beating with his hand in a way which signified that
the manner rather than the matter of his speech was to be observed,
“how did Mr. Maybold know she could play the organ? You
know we had it from her own lips, as far as lips go, that she has never,
first or last, breathed such a thing to him; much less that she ever
would play.”
In the midst of this puzzle Dick joined the party, and the news which
had caused such a convulsion among the ancient musicians was unfolded
to him. “Well,” he said, blushing at the allusion
to Miss Day, “I know by some words of hers that she has a particular
wish not to play, because she is a friend of ours; and how the alteration
comes, I don’t know.”
“Now, this is my plan,” said the tranter, reviving the
spirit of the discussion by the infusion of new ideas, as was his custom—“this
is my plan; if you don’t like it, no harm’s done.
We all know one another very well, don’t we, neighbours?”
That they knew one another very well was received as a statement
which, though familiar, should not be omitted in introductory speeches.
“Then I say this”—and the tranter in his emphasis
slapped down his hand on Mr. Spinks’s shoulder with a momentum
of several pounds, upon which Mr. Spinks tried to look not in the least
startled—“I say that we all move down-along straight as
a line to Pa’son Mayble’s when the clock has gone six to-morrow
night. There we one and all stand in the passage, then one or
two of us go in and spak to en, man and man; and say, ‘Pa’son
Mayble, every tradesman d’like to have his own way in his workshop,
and Mellstock Church is yours. Instead of turning us out neck
and crop, let us stay on till Christmas, and we’ll gie way to
the young woman, Mr. Mayble, and make no more ado about it. And
we shall always be quite willing to touch our hats when we meet ye,
Mr. Mayble, just as before.’ That sounds very well?
Hey?”
“Proper well, in faith, Reuben Dewy.”
“And we won’t sit down in his house; ’twould be
looking too familiar when only just reconciled?”
“No need at all to sit down. Just do our duty man and
man, turn round, and march out—he’ll think all the more
of us for it.”
“I hardly think Leaf had better go wi’ us?” said
Michael, turning to Leaf and taking his measure from top to bottom by
the eye. “He’s so terrible silly that he might ruin
the concern.”
“He don’t want to go much; do ye, Thomas Leaf?”
said William.
“Hee-hee! no; I don’t want to. Only a teeny bit!”
“I be mortal afeard, Leaf, that you’ll never be able
to tell how many cuts d’take to sharpen a spar,” said Mail.
“I never had no head, never! that’s how it happened to
happen, hee-hee!”
They all assented to this, not with any sense of humiliating Leaf
by disparaging him after an open confession, but because it was an accepted
thing that Leaf didn’t in the least mind having no head, that
deficiency of his being an unimpassioned matter of parish history.
“But I can sing my treble!” continued Thomas Leaf, quite
delighted at being called a fool in such a friendly way; “I can
sing my treble as well as any maid, or married woman either, and better!
And if Jim had lived, I should have had a clever brother! To-morrow
is poor Jim’s birthday. He’d ha’ been twenty-six
if he’d lived till to-morrow.”
“You always seem very sorry for Jim,” said old William
musingly.
“Ah! I do. Such a stay to mother as he’d
always ha’ been! She’d never have had to work in her
old age if he had continued strong, poor Jim!”
“What was his age when ’a died?”
“Four hours and twenty minutes, poor Jim. ’A was
born as might be at night; and ’a didn’t last as might be
till the morning. No, ’a didn’t last. Mother
called en Jim on the day that would ha’ been his christening day
if he had lived; and she’s always thinking about en. You
see he died so very young.”
“Well, ’twas rather youthful,” said Michael.
“Now to my mind that woman is very romantical on the matter
o’ children?” said the tranter, his eye sweeping his audience.
“Ah, well she mid be,” said Leaf. “She had
twelve regular one after another, and they all, except myself, died
very young; either before they was born or just afterwards.”
“Pore feller, too. I suppose th’st want to come
wi’ us?” the tranter murmured.
“Well, Leaf, you shall come wi’ us as yours is such a
melancholy family,” said old William rather sadly.
“I never see such a melancholy family as that afore in my life,”
said Reuben. “There’s Leaf’s mother, poor woman!
Every morning I see her eyes mooning out through the panes of glass
like a pot-sick winder-flower; and as Leaf sings a very high treble,
and we don’t know what we should do without en for upper G, we’ll
let en come as a trate, poor feller.”
“Ay, we’ll let en come, ’a b’lieve,”
said Mr. Penny, looking up, as the pull happened to be at that moment.
“Now,” continued the tranter, dispersing by a new tone
of voice these digressions about Leaf; “as to going to see the
pa’son, one of us might call and ask en his meaning, and ’twould
be just as well done; but it will add a bit of flourish to the cause
if the quire waits on him as a body. Then the great thing to mind
is, not for any of our fellers to be nervous; so before starting we’ll
one and all come to my house and have a rasher of bacon; then every
man-jack het a pint of cider into his inside; then we’ll warm
up an extra drop wi’ some mead and a bit of ginger; every one
take a thimbleful—just a glimmer of a drop, mind ye, no more,
to finish off his inner man—and march off to Pa’son Mayble.
Why, sonnies, a man’s not himself till he is fortified wi’
a bit and a drop? We shall be able to look any gentleman in the
face then without shrink or shame.”
Mail recovered from a deep meditation and downward glance into the
earth in time to give a cordial approval to this line of action, and
the meeting adjourned.
CHAPTER IV: THE INTERVIEW WITH THE VICAR
At six o’clock the next day, the whole body of men in the choir
emerged from the tranter’s door, and advanced with a firm step
down the lane. This dignity of march gradually became obliterated
as they went on, and by the time they reached the hill behind the vicarage
a faint resemblance to a flock of sheep might have been discerned in
the venerable party. A word from the tranter, however, set them
right again; and as they descended the hill, the regular tramp, tramp,
tramp of the united feet was clearly audible from the vicarage garden.
At the opening of the gate there was another short interval of irregular
shuffling, caused by a rather peculiar habit the gate had, when swung
open quickly, of striking against the bank and slamming back into the
opener’s face.
“Now keep step again, will ye?” said the tranter.
“It looks better, and more becomes the high class of arrant which
has brought us here.” Thus they advanced to the door.
At Reuben’s ring the more modest of the group turned aside,
adjusted their hats, and looked critically at any shrub that happened
to lie in the line of vision; endeavouring thus to give a person who
chanced to look out of the windows the impression that their request,
whatever it was going to be, was rather a casual thought occurring whilst
they were inspecting the vicar’s shrubbery and grass-plot than
a predetermined thing. The tranter, who, coming frequently to
the vicarage with luggage, coals, firewood, etc., had none of the awe
for its precincts that filled the breasts of most of the others, fixed
his eyes firmly on the knocker during this interval of waiting.
The knocker having no characteristic worthy of notice, he relinquished
it for a knot in one of the door-panels, and studied the winding lines
of the grain.
“O, sir, please, here’s Tranter Dewy, and old William
Dewy, and young Richard Dewy, O, and all the quire too, sir, except
the boys, a-come to see you!” said Mr. Maybold’s maid-servant
to Mr. Maybold, the pupils of her eyes dilating like circles in a pond.
“All the choir?” said the astonished vicar (who may be
shortly described as a good-looking young man with courageous eyes,
timid mouth, and neutral nose), abandoning his writing and looking at
his parlour-maid after speaking, like a man who fancied he had seen
her face before but couldn’t recollect where.
“And they looks very firm, and Tranter Dewy do turn neither
to the right hand nor to the left, but stares quite straight and solemn
with his mind made up!”
“O, all the choir,” repeated the vicar to himself, trying
by that simple device to trot out his thoughts on what the choir could
come for.
“Yes; every man-jack of ’em, as I be alive!”
(The parlour-maid was rather local in manner, having in fact been raised
in the same village.) “Really, sir, ’tis thoughted
by many in town and country that—”
“Town and country!—Heavens, I had no idea that I was
public property in this way!” said the vicar, his face acquiring
a hue somewhere between that of the rose and the peony. “Well,
‘It is thought in town and country that—’”
“It is thought that you be going to get it hot and strong!—excusen
my incivility, sir.”
The vicar suddenly recalled to his recollection that he had long
ago settled it to be decidedly a mistake to encourage his servant Jane
in giving personal opinions. The servant Jane saw by the vicar’s
face that he recalled this fact to his mind; and removing her forehead
from the edge of the door, and rubbing away the indent that edge had
made, vanished into the passage as Mr. Maybold remarked, “Show
them in, Jane.”
A few minutes later a shuffling and jostling (reduced to as refined
a form as was compatible with the nature of shuffles and jostles) was
heard in the passage; then an earnest and prolonged wiping of shoes,
conveying the notion that volumes of mud had to be removed; but the
roads being so clean that not a particle of dirt appeared on the choir’s
boots (those of all the elder members being newly oiled, and Dick’s
brightly polished), this wiping might have been set down simply as a
desire to show that respectable men had no wish to take a mean advantage
of clean roads for curtailing proper ceremonies. Next there came
a powerful whisper from the same quarter:-
“Now stand stock-still there, my sonnies, one and all!
And don’t make no noise; and keep your backs close to the wall,
that company may pass in and out easy if they want to without squeezing
through ye: and we two are enough to go in.” . . . The voice was
the tranter’s.
“I wish I could go in too and see the sight!” said a
reedy voice—that of Leaf.
“’Tis a pity Leaf is so terrible silly, or else he might,”
said another.
“I never in my life seed a quire go into a study to have it
out about the playing and singing,” pleaded Leaf; “and I
should like to see it just once!”
“Very well; we’ll let en come in,” said the tranter.
“You’ll be like chips in porridge,
{1}
Leaf—neither good nor hurt. All right, my sonny, come along;”
and immediately himself, old William, and Leaf appeared in the room.
“We took the liberty to come and see ’ee, sir,”
said Reuben, letting his hat hang in his left hand, and touching with
his right the brim of an imaginary one on his head. “We’ve
come to see ’ee, sir, man and man, and no offence, I hope?”
“None at all,” said Mr. Maybold.
“This old aged man standing by my side is father; William Dewy
by name, sir.”
“Yes; I see it is,” said the vicar, nodding aside to
old William, who smiled.
“I thought you mightn’t know en without his bass-viol,”
the tranter apologized. “You see, he always wears his best
clothes and his bass-viol a-Sundays, and it do make such a difference
in a’ old man’s look.”
“And who’s that young man?” the vicar said.
“Tell the pa’son yer name,” said the tranter, turning
to Leaf, who stood with his elbows nailed back to a bookcase.
“Please, Thomas Leaf, your holiness!” said Leaf, trembling.
“I hope you’ll excuse his looks being so very thin,”
continued the tranter deprecatingly, turning to the vicar again.
“But ’tisn’t his fault, poor feller. He’s
rather silly by nature, and could never get fat; though he’s a’
excellent treble, and so we keep him on.”
“I never had no head, sir,” said Leaf, eagerly grasping
at this opportunity for being forgiven his existence.
“Ah, poor young man!” said Mr. Maybold.
“Bless you, he don’t mind it a bit, if you don’t,
sir,” said the tranter assuringly. “Do ye, Leaf?”
“Not I—not a morsel—hee, hee! I was afeard
it mightn’t please your holiness, sir, that’s all.”
The tranter, finding Leaf get on so very well through his negative
qualities, was tempted in a fit of generosity to advance him still higher,
by giving him credit for positive ones. “He’s very
clever for a silly chap, good-now, sir. You never knowed a young
feller keep his smock-frocks so clane; very honest too. His ghastly
looks is all there is against en, poor feller; but we can’t help
our looks, you know, sir.”
“True: we cannot. You live with your mother, I think,
Leaf?”
The tranter looked at Leaf to express that the most friendly assistant
to his tongue could do no more for him now, and that he must be left
to his own resources.
“Yes, sir: a widder, sir. Ah, if brother Jim had lived
she’d have had a clever son to keep her without work!”
“Indeed! poor woman. Give her this half-crown.
I’ll call and see your mother.”
“Say, ‘Thank you, sir,’” the tranter whispered
imperatively towards Leaf.
“Thank you, sir!” said Leaf.
“That’s it, then; sit down, Leaf,” said Mr. Maybold.
“Y-yes, sir!”
The tranter cleared his throat after this accidental parenthesis
about Leaf, rectified his bodily position, and began his speech.
“Mr. Mayble,” he said, “I hope you’ll excuse
my common way, but I always like to look things in the face.”
Reuben made a point of fixing this sentence in the vicar’s
mind by gazing hard at him at the conclusion of it, and then out of
the window.
Mr. Maybold and old William looked in the same direction, apparently
under the impression that the things’ faces alluded to were there
visible.
“What I have been thinking”—the tranter implied
by this use of the past tense that he was hardly so discourteous as
to be positively thinking it then—“is that the quire ought
to be gie’d a little time, and not done away wi’ till Christmas,
as a fair thing between man and man. And, Mr. Mayble, I hope you’ll
excuse my common way?”
“I will, I will. Till Christmas,” the vicar murmured,
stretching the two words to a great length, as if the distance to Christmas
might be measured in that way. “Well, I want you all to
understand that I have no personal fault to find, and that I don’t
wish to change the church music by forcible means, or in a way which
should hurt the feelings of any parishioners. Why I have at last
spoken definitely on the subject is that a player has been brought under—I
may say pressed upon—my notice several times by one of the churchwardens.
And as the organ I brought with me is here waiting” (pointing
to a cabinet-organ standing in the study), “there is no reason
for longer delay.”
“We made a mistake I suppose then, sir? But we understood
the young woman didn’t want to play particularly?”
The tranter arranged his countenance to signify that he did not want
to be inquisitive in the least.
“No, nor did she. Nor did I definitely wish her to just
yet; for your playing is very good. But, as I said, one of the
churchwardens has been so anxious for a change, that, as matters stand,
I couldn’t consistently refuse my consent.”
Now for some reason or other, the vicar at this point seemed to have
an idea that he had prevaricated; and as an honest vicar, it was a thing
he determined not to do. He corrected himself, blushing as he
did so, though why he should blush was not known to Reuben.
“Understand me rightly,” he said: “the church-warden
proposed it to me, but I had thought myself of getting—Miss Day
to play.”
“Which churchwarden might that be who proposed her, sir?—excusing
my common way.” The tranter intimated by his tone that,
so far from being inquisitive, he did not even wish to ask a single
question.
“Mr. Shiner, I believe.”
“Clk, my sonny!—beg your pardon, sir, that’s only
a form of words of mine, and slipped out accidental—he nourishes
enmity against us for some reason or another; perhaps because we played
rather hard upon en Christmas night. Anyhow ’tis certain
sure that Mr. Shiner’s real love for music of a particular kind
isn’t his reason. He’ve no more ear than that chair.
But let that be.”
“I don’t think you should conclude that, because Mr.
Shiner wants a different music, he has any ill-feeling for you.
I myself, I must own, prefer organ-music to any other. I consider
it most proper, and feel justified in endeavouring to introduce it;
but then, although other music is better, I don’t say yours is
not good.”
“Well then, Mr. Mayble, since death’s to be, we’ll
die like men any day you name (excusing my common way).”
Mr. Maybold bowed his head.
“All we thought was, that for us old ancient singers to be
choked off quiet at no time in particular, as now, in the Sundays after
Easter, would seem rather mean in the eyes of other parishes, sir.
But if we fell glorious with a bit of a flourish at Christmas, we should
have a respectable end, and not dwindle away at some nameless paltry
second-Sunday-after or Sunday-next-before something, that’s got
no name of his own.”
“Yes, yes, that’s reasonable; I own it’s reasonable.”
“You see, Mr. Mayble, we’ve got—do I keep you inconvenient
long, sir?”
“No, no.”
“We’ve got our feelings—father there especially.”
The tranter, in his earnestness, had advanced his person to within
six inches of the vicar’s.
“Certainly, certainly!” said Mr. Maybold, retreating
a little for convenience of seeing. “You are all enthusiastic
on the subject, and I am all the more gratified to find you so.
A Laodicean lukewarmness is worse than wrongheadedness itself.”
“Exactly, sir. In fact now, Mr. Mayble,” Reuben
continued, more impressively, and advancing a little closer still to
the vicar, “father there is a perfect figure o’ wonder,
in the way of being fond of music!”
The vicar drew back a little further, the tranter suddenly also standing
back a foot or two, to throw open the view of his father, and pointing
to him at the same time.
Old William moved uneasily in the large chair, and with a minute
smile on the mere edge of his lips, for good-manners, said he was indeed
very fond of tunes.
“Now, you see exactly how it is,” Reuben continued, appealing
to Mr. Maybold’s sense of justice by looking sideways into his
eyes. The vicar seemed to see how it was so well that the gratified
tranter walked up to him again with even vehement eagerness, so that
his waistcoat-buttons almost rubbed against the vicar’s as he
continued: “As to father, if you or I, or any man or woman of
the present generation, at the time music is a-playing, was to shake
your fist in father’s face, as may be this way, and say, ‘Don’t
you be delighted with that music!’”—the tranter went
back to where Leaf was sitting, and held his fist so close to Leaf’s
face that the latter pressed his head back against the wall: “All
right, Leaf, my sonny, I won’t hurt you; ’tis just to show
my meaning to Mr. Mayble.—As I was saying, if you or I, or any
man, was to shake your fist in father’s face this way, and say,
‘William, your life or your music!’ he’d say, ‘My
life!’ Now that’s father’s nature all over;
and you see, sir, it must hurt the feelings of a man of that kind for
him and his bass-viol to be done away wi’ neck and crop.”
The tranter went back to the vicar’s front and again looked
earnestly at his face.
“True, true, Dewy,” Mr. Maybold answered, trying to withdraw
his head and shoulders without moving his feet; but finding this impracticable,
edging back another inch. These frequent retreats had at last
jammed Mr. Maybold between his easy-chair and the edge of the table.
And at the moment of the announcement of the choir, Mr. Maybold had
just re-dipped the pen he was using; at their entry, instead of wiping
it, he had laid it on the table with the nib overhanging. At the
last retreat his coat-tails came in contact with the pen, and down it
rolled, first against the back of the chair, thence turning a summersault
into the seat, thence falling to the floor with a rattle.
The vicar stooped for his pen, and the tranter, wishing to show that,
however great their ecclesiastical differences, his mind was not so
small as to let this affect his social feelings, stooped also.
“And have you anything else you want to explain to me, Dewy?”
said Mr. Maybold from under the table.
“Nothing, sir. And, Mr. Mayble, you be not offended?
I hope you see our desire is reason?” said the tranter from under
the chair.
“Quite, quite; and I shouldn’t think of refusing to listen
to such a reasonable request,” the vicar replied. Seeing
that Reuben had secured the pen, he resumed his vertical position, and
added, “You know, Dewy, it is often said how difficult a matter
it is to act up to our convictions and please all parties. It
may be said with equal truth, that it is difficult for a man of any
appreciativeness to have convictions at all. Now in my case, I
see right in you, and right in Shiner. I see that violins are
good, and that an organ is good; and when we introduce the organ, it
will not be that fiddles were bad, but that an organ was better.
That you’ll clearly understand, Dewy?”
“I will; and thank you very much for such feelings, sir.
Piph-h-h-h! How the blood do get into my head, to be sure, whenever
I quat down like that!” said Reuben, who having also risen to
his feet stuck the pen vertically in the inkstand and almost through
the bottom, that it might not roll down again under any circumstances
whatever.
Now the ancient body of minstrels in the passage felt their curiosity
surging higher and higher as the minutes passed. Dick, not having
much affection for this errand, soon grew tired, and went away in the
direction of the school. Yet their sense of propriety would probably
have restrained them from any attempt to discover what was going on
in the study had not the vicar’s pen fallen to the floor.
The conviction that the movement of chairs, etc., necessitated by the
search, could only have been caused by the catastrophe of a bloody fight
beginning, overpowered all other considerations; and they advanced to
the door, which had only just fallen to. Thus, when Mr. Maybold
raised his eyes after the stooping he beheld glaring through the door
Mr. Penny in full-length portraiture, Mail’s face and shoulders
above Mr. Penny’s head, Spinks’s forehead and eyes over
Mail’s crown, and a fractional part of Bowman’s countenance
under Spinks’s arm—crescent-shaped portions of other heads
and faces being visible behind these—the whole dozen and odd eyes
bristling with eager inquiry.
Mr. Penny, as is the case with excitable boot-makers and men, seeing
the vicar look at him and hearing no word spoken, thought it incumbent
upon himself to say something of any kind. Nothing suggested itself
till he had looked for about half a minute at the vicar.
“You’ll excuse my naming of it, sir,” he said,
regarding with much commiseration the mere surface of the vicar’s
face; “but perhaps you don’t know that your chin have bust
out a-bleeding where you cut yourself a-shaving this morning, sir.”
“Now, that was the stooping, depend upon’t,” the
tranter suggested, also looking with much interest at the vicar’s
chin. “Blood always will bust out again if you hang down
the member that’s been bleeding.”
Old William raised his eyes and watched the vicar’s bleeding
chin likewise; and Leaf advanced two or three paces from the bookcase,
absorbed in the contemplation of the same phenomenon, with parted lips
and delighted eyes.
“Dear me, dear me!” said Mr. Maybold hastily, looking
very red, and brushing his chin with his hand, then taking out his handkerchief
and wiping the place.
“That’s it, sir; all right again now, ’a b’lieve—a
mere nothing,” said Mr. Penny. “A little bit of fur
off your hat will stop it in a minute if it should bust out again.”
“I’ll let ’ee have a bit off mine,” said
Reuben, to show his good feeling; “my hat isn’t so new as
yours, sir, and ’twon’t hurt mine a bit.”
“No, no; thank you, thank you,” Mr. Maybold again nervously
replied.
“’Twas rather a deep cut seemingly?” said Reuben,
feeling these to be the kindest and best remarks he could make.
“O, no; not particularly.”
“Well, sir, your hand will shake sometimes a-shaving, and just
when it comes into your head that you may cut yourself, there’s
the blood.”
“I have been revolving in my mind that question of the time
at which we make the change,” said Mr. Maybold, “and I know
you’ll meet me half-way. I think Christmas-day as much too
late for me as the present time is too early for you. I suggest
Michaelmas or thereabout as a convenient time for both parties; for
I think your objection to a Sunday which has no name is not one of any
real weight.”
“Very good, sir. I suppose mortal men mustn’t expect
their own way entirely; and I express in all our names that we’ll
make shift and be satisfied with what you say.” The tranter
touched the brim of his imaginary hat again, and all the choir did the
same. “About Michaelmas, then, as far as you are concerned,
sir, and then we make room for the next generation.”
“About Michaelmas,” said the vicar.
CHAPTER V: RETURNING HOME WARD
“‘A took it very well, then?” said Mail, as they
all walked up the hill.
“He behaved like a man, ’a did so,” said the tranter.
“And I’m glad we’ve let en know our minds. And
though, beyond that, we ha’n’t got much by going, ’twas
worth while. He won’t forget it. Yes, he took it very
well. Supposing this tree here was Pa’son Mayble, and I
standing here, and thik gr’t stone is father sitting in the easy-chair.
‘Dewy,’ says he, ‘I don’t wish to change the
church music in a forcible way.’”
“That was very nice o’ the man, even though words be
wind.”
“Proper nice—out and out nice. The fact is,”
said Reuben confidentially, “’tis how you take a man.
Everybody must be managed. Queens must be managed: kings must
be managed; for men want managing almost as much as women, and that’s
saying a good deal.”
“’Tis truly!” murmured the husbands.
“Pa’son Mayble and I were as good friends all through
it as if we’d been sworn brothers. Ay, the man’s well
enough; ’tis what’s put in his head that spoils him, and
that’s why we’ve got to go.”
“There’s really no believing half you hear about people
nowadays.”
“Bless ye, my sonnies! ’tisn’t the pa’son’s
move at all. That gentleman over there” (the tranter nodded
in the direction of Shiner’s farm) “is at the root of the
mischty.”
“What! Shiner?”
“Ay; and I see what the pa’son don’t see.
Why, Shiner is for putting forward that young woman that only last night
I was saying was our Dick’s sweet-heart, but I suppose can’t
be, and making much of her in the sight of the congregation, and thinking
he’ll win her by showing her off. Well, perhaps ’a
woll.”
“Then the music is second to the woman, the other churchwarden
is second to Shiner, the pa’son is second to the churchwardens,
and God A’mighty is nowhere at all.”
“That’s true; and you see,” continued Reuben, “at
the very beginning it put me in a stud as to how to quarrel wi’
en. In short, to save my soul, I couldn’t quarrel wi’
such a civil man without belying my conscience. Says he to father
there, in a voice as quiet as a lamb’s, ‘William, you are
a’ old aged man, as all shall be, so sit down in my easy-chair,
and rest yourself.’ And down father zot. I could fain
ha’ laughed at thee, father; for thou’st take it so unconcerned
at first, and then looked so frightened when the chair-bottom sunk in.”
“You see,” said old William, hastening to explain, “I
was scared to find the bottom gie way—what should I know o’
spring bottoms?—and thought I had broke it down: and of course
as to breaking down a man’s chair, I didn’t wish any such
thing.”
“And, neighbours, when a feller, ever so much up for a miff,
d’see his own father sitting in his enemy’s easy-chair,
and a poor chap like Leaf made the best of, as if he almost had brains—why,
it knocks all the wind out of his sail at once: it did out of mine.”
“If that young figure of fun—Fance Day, I mean,”
said Bowman, “hadn’t been so mighty forward wi’ showing
herself off to Shiner and Dick and the rest, ’tis my belief we
should never ha’ left the gallery.”
“’Tis my belief that though Shiner fired the bullets,
the parson made ’em,” said Mr. Penny. “My wife
sticks to it that he’s in love wi’ her.”
“That’s a thing we shall never know. I can’t
onriddle her, nohow.”
“Thou’st ought to be able to onriddle such a little chiel
as she,” the tranter observed.
“The littler the maid, the bigger the riddle, to my mind.
And coming of such a stock, too, she may well be a twister.”
“Yes; Geoffrey Day is a clever man if ever there was one.
Never says anything: not he.”
“Never.”
“You might live wi’ that man, my sonnies, a hundred years,
and never know there was anything in him.”
“Ay; one o’ these up-country London ink-bottle chaps
would call Geoffrey a fool.”
“Ye never find out what’s in that man: never,”
said Spinks. “Close? ah, he is close! He can hold
his tongue well. That man’s dumbness is wonderful to listen
to.”
“There’s so much sense in it. Every moment of it
is brimmen over wi’ sound understanding.”
“’A can hold his tongue very clever—very clever
truly,” echoed Leaf. “’A do look at me as if
’a could see my thoughts running round like the works of a clock.”
“Well, all will agree that the man can halt well in his talk,
be it a long time or be it a short time. And though we can’t
expect his daughter to inherit his closeness, she may have a few dribblets
from his sense.”
“And his pocket, perhaps.”
“Yes; the nine hundred pound that everybody says he’s
worth; but I call it four hundred and fifty; for I never believe more
than half I hear.”
“Well, he’ve made a pound or two, and I suppose the maid
will have it, since there’s nobody else. But ’tis
rather sharp upon her, if she’s been born to fortune, to bring
her up as if not born for it, and letting her work so hard.”
“’Tis all upon his principle. A long-headed feller!”
“Ah,” murmured Spinks, “’twould be sharper
upon her if she were born for fortune, and not to it! I suffer
from that affliction.”
CHAPTER VI: YALBURY WOOD AND THE KEEPER’S HOUSE
A mood of blitheness rarely experienced even by young men was Dick’s
on the following Monday morning. It was the week after the Easter
holidays, and he was journeying along with Smart the mare and the light
spring-cart, watching the damp slopes of the hill-sides as they streamed
in the warmth of the sun, which at this unsettled season shone on the
grass with the freshness of an occasional inspector rather than as an
accustomed proprietor. His errand was to fetch Fancy, and some
additional household goods, from her father’s house in the neighbouring
parish to her dwelling at Mellstock. The distant view was darkly
shaded with clouds; but the nearer parts of the landscape were whitely
illumined by the visible rays of the sun streaming down across the heavy
gray shade behind.
The tranter had not yet told his son of the state of Shiner’s
heart that had been suggested to him by Shiner’s movements.
He preferred to let such delicate affairs right themselves; experience
having taught him that the uncertain phenomenon of love, as it existed
in other people, was not a groundwork upon which a single action of
his own life could be founded.
Geoffrey Day lived in the depths of Yalbury Wood, which formed portion
of one of the outlying estates of the Earl of Wessex, to whom Day was
head game-keeper, timber-steward, and general overlooker for this district.
The wood was intersected by the highway from Casterbridge to London
at a place not far from the house, and some trees had of late years
been felled between its windows and the ascent of Yalbury Hill, to give
the solitary cottager a glimpse of the passers-by.
It was a satisfaction to walk into the keeper’s house, even
as a stranger, on a fine spring morning like the present. A curl
of wood-smoke came from the chimney, and drooped over the roof like
a blue feather in a lady’s hat; and the sun shone obliquely upon
the patch of grass in front, which reflected its brightness through
the open doorway and up the staircase opposite, lighting up each riser
with a shiny green radiance, and leaving the top of each step in shade.
The window-sill of the front room was between four and five feet
from the floor, dropping inwardly to a broad low bench, over which,
as well as over the whole surface of the wall beneath, there always
hung a deep shade, which was considered objectionable on every ground
save one, namely, that the perpetual sprinkling of seeds and water by
the caged canary above was not noticed as an eyesore by visitors.
The window was set with thickly-leaded diamond glazing, formed, especially
in the lower panes, of knotty glass of various shades of green.
Nothing was better known to Fancy than the extravagant manner in which
these circular knots or eyes distorted everything seen through them
from the outside—lifting hats from heads, shoulders from bodies;
scattering the spokes of cart-wheels, and bending the straight fir-trunks
into semicircles. The ceiling was carried by a beam traversing
its midst, from the side of which projected a large nail, used solely
and constantly as a peg for Geoffrey’s hat; the nail was arched
by a rainbow-shaped stain, imprinted by the brim of the said hat when
it was hung there dripping wet.
The most striking point about the room was the furniture. This
was a repetition upon inanimate objects of the old principle introduced
by Noah, consisting for the most part of two articles of every sort.
The duplicate system of furnishing owed its existence to the forethought
of Fancy’s mother, exercised from the date of Fancy’s birthday
onwards. The arrangement spoke for itself: nobody who knew the
tone of the household could look at the goods without being aware that
the second set was a provision for Fancy, when she should marry and
have a house of her own. The most noticeable instance was a pair
of green-faced eight-day clocks, ticking alternately, which were severally
two and half minutes and three minutes striking the hour of twelve,
one proclaiming, in Italian flourishes, Thomas Wood as the name of its
maker, and the other—arched at the top, and altogether of more
cynical appearance—that of Ezekiel Saunders. They were two
departed clockmakers of Casterbridge, whose desperate rivalry throughout
their lives was nowhere more emphatically perpetuated than here at Geoffrey’s.
These chief specimens of the marriage provision were supported on the
right by a couple of kitchen dressers, each fitted complete with their
cups, dishes, and plates, in their turn followed by two dumb-waiters,
two family Bibles, two warming-pans, and two intermixed sets of chairs.
But the position last reached—the chimney-corner—was,
after all, the most attractive side of the parallelogram. It was
large enough to admit, in addition to Geoffrey himself, Geoffrey’s
wife, her chair, and her work-table, entirely within the line of the
mantel, without danger or even inconvenience from the heat of the fire;
and was spacious enough overhead to allow of the insertion of wood poles
for the hanging of bacon, which were cloaked with long shreds of soot,
floating on the draught like the tattered banners on the walls of ancient
aisles.
These points were common to most chimney corners of the neighbourhood;
but one feature there was which made Geoffrey’s fireside not only
an object of interest to casual aristocratic visitors—to whom
every cottage fireside was more or less a curiosity—but the admiration
of friends who were accustomed to fireplaces of the ordinary hamlet
model. This peculiarity was a little window in the chimney-back,
almost over the fire, around which the smoke crept caressingly when
it left the perpendicular course. The window-board was curiously
stamped with black circles, burnt thereon by the heated bottoms of drinking-cups,
which had rested there after previously standing on the hot ashes of
the hearth for the purpose of warming their contents, the result giving
to the ledge the look of an envelope which has passed through innumerable
post-offices.
Fancy was gliding about the room preparing dinner, her head inclining
now to the right, now to the left, and singing the tips and ends of
tunes that sprang up in her mind like mushrooms. The footsteps
of Mrs. Day could be heard in the room overhead. Fancy went finally
to the door.
“Father! Dinner.”
A tall spare figure was seen advancing by the window with periodical
steps, and the keeper entered from the garden. He appeared to
be a man who was always looking down, as if trying to recollect something
he said yesterday. The surface of his face was fissured rather
than wrinkled, and over and under his eyes were folds which seemed as
a kind of exterior eyelids. His nose had been thrown backwards
by a blow in a poaching fray, so that when the sun was low and shining
in his face, people could see far into his head. There was in
him a quiet grimness, which would in his moments of displeasure have
become surliness, had it not been tempered by honesty of soul, and which
was often wrongheadedness because not allied with subtlety.
Although not an extraordinarily taciturn man among friends slightly
richer than himself, he never wasted words upon outsiders, and to his
trapper Enoch his ideas were seldom conveyed by any other means than
nods and shakes of the head. Their long acquaintance with each
other’s ways, and the nature of their labours, rendered words
between them almost superfluous as vehicles of thought, whilst the coincidence
of their horizons, and the astonishing equality of their social views,
by startling the keeper from time to time as very damaging to the theory
of master and man, strictly forbade any indulgence in words as courtesies.
Behind the keeper came Enoch (who had been assisting in the garden)
at the well-considered chronological distance of three minutes—an
interval of non-appearance on the trapper’s part not arrived at
without some reflection. Four minutes had been found to express
indifference to indoor arrangements, and simultaneousness had implied
too great an anxiety about meals.
“A little earlier than usual, Fancy,” the keeper said,
as he sat down and looked at the clocks. “That Ezekiel Saunders
o’ thine is tearing on afore Thomas Wood again.”
“I kept in the middle between them,” said Fancy, also
looking at the two clocks.
“Better stick to Thomas,” said her father. “There’s
a healthy beat in Thomas that would lead a man to swear by en offhand.
He is as true as the town time. How is it your stap-mother isn’t
here?”
As Fancy was about to reply, the rattle of wheels was heard, and
“Weh-hey, Smart!” in Mr. Richard Dewy’s voice rolled
into the cottage from round the corner of the house.
“Hullo! there’s Dewy’s cart come for thee, Fancy—Dick
driving—afore time, too. Well, ask the lad to have pot-luck
with us.”
Dick on entering made a point of implying by his general bearing
that he took an interest in Fancy simply as in one of the same race
and country as himself; and they all sat down. Dick could have
wished her manner had not been so entirely free from all apparent consciousness
of those accidental meetings of theirs: but he let the thought pass.
Enoch sat diagonally at a table afar off, under the corner cupboard,
and drank his cider from a long perpendicular pint cup, having tall
fir-trees done in brown on its sides. He threw occasional remarks
into the general tide of conversation, and with this advantage to himself,
that he participated in the pleasures of a talk (slight as it was) at
meal-times, without saddling himself with the responsibility of sustaining
it.
“Why don’t your stap-mother come down, Fancy?”
said Geoffrey. “You’ll excuse her, Mister Dick, she’s
a little queer sometimes.”
“O yes,—quite,” said Richard, as if he were in
the habit of excusing people every day.
“She d’belong to that class of womankind that become
second wives: a rum class rather.”
“Indeed,” said Dick, with sympathy for an indefinite
something.
“Yes; and ’tis trying to a female, especially if you’ve
been a first wife, as she hev.”
“Very trying it must be.”
“Yes: you see her first husband was a young man, who let her
go too far; in fact, she used to kick up Bob’s-a-dying at the
least thing in the world. And when I’d married her and found
it out, I thought, thinks I, ‘’Tis too late now to begin
to cure ’e;’ and so I let her bide. But she’s
queer,—very queer, at times!”
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
“Yes: there; wives be such a provoking class o’ society,
because though they be never right, they be never more than half wrong.”
Fancy seemed uneasy under the infliction of this household moralizing,
which might tend to damage the airy-fairy nature that Dick, as maiden
shrewdness told her, had accredited her with. Her dead silence
impressed Geoffrey with the notion that something in his words did not
agree with her educated ideas, and he changed the conversation.
“Did Fred Shiner send the cask o’ drink, Fancy?”
“I think he did: O yes, he did.”
“Nice solid feller, Fred Shiner!” said Geoffrey to Dick
as he helped himself to gravy, bringing the spoon round to his plate
by way of the potato-dish, to obviate a stain on the cloth in the event
of a spill.
Now Geoffrey’s eyes had been fixed upon his plate for the previous
four or five minutes, and in removing them he had only carried them
to the spoon, which, from its fulness and the distance of its transit,
necessitated a steady watching through the whole of the route.
Just as intently as the keeper’s eyes had been fixed on the spoon,
Fancy’s had been fixed on her father’s, without premeditation
or the slightest phase of furtiveness; but there they were fastened.
This was the reason why:
Dick was sitting next to her on the right side, and on the side of
the table opposite to her father. Fancy had laid her right hand
lightly down upon the table-cloth for an instant, and to her alarm Dick,
after dropping his fork and brushing his forehead as a reason, flung
down his own left hand, overlapping a third of Fancy’s with it,
and keeping it there. So the innocent Fancy, instead of pulling
her hand from the trap, settled her eyes on her father’s, to guard
against his discovery of this perilous game of Dick’s. Dick
finished his mouthful; Fancy finished her crumb, and nothing was done
beyond watching Geoffrey’s eyes. Then the hands slid apart;
Fancy’s going over six inches of cloth, Dick’s over one.
Geoffrey’s eye had risen.
“I said Fred Shiner is a nice solid feller,” he repeated,
more emphatically.
“He is; yes, he is,” stammered Dick; “but to me
he is little more than a stranger.”
“O, sure. Now I know en as well as any man can be known.
And you know en very well too, don’t ye, Fancy?”
Geoffrey put on a tone expressing that these words signified at present
about one hundred times the amount of meaning they conveyed literally.
Dick looked anxious.
“Will you pass me some bread?” said Fancy in a flurry,
the red of her face becoming slightly disordered, and looking as solicitous
as a human being could look about a piece of bread.
“Ay, that I will,” replied the unconscious Geoffrey.
“Ay,” he continued, returning to the displaced idea, “we
are likely to remain friendly wi’ Mr. Shiner if the wheels d’run
smooth.”
“An excellent thing—a very capital thing, as I should
say,” the youth answered with exceeding relevance, considering
that his thoughts, instead of following Geoffrey’s remark, were
nestling at a distance of about two feet on his left the whole time.
“A young woman’s face will turn the north wind, Master
Richard: my heart if ’twon’t.” Dick looked more
anxious and was attentive in earnest at these words. “Yes;
turn the north wind,” added Geoffrey after an impressive pause.
“And though she’s one of my own flesh and blood . . . ”
“Will you fetch down a bit of raw-mil’ cheese from pantry-shelf?”
Fancy interrupted, as if she were famishing.
“Ay, that I will, chiel; chiel, says I, and Mr. Shiner only
asking last Saturday night . . . cheese you said, Fancy?”
Dick controlled his emotion at these mysterious allusions to Mr.
Shiner,—the better enabled to do so by perceiving that Fancy’s
heart went not with her father’s—and spoke like a stranger
to the affairs of the neighbourhood. “Yes, there’s
a great deal to be said upon the power of maiden faces in settling your
courses,” he ventured, as the keeper retreated for the cheese.
“The conversation is taking a very strange turn: nothing that
I have ever done warrants such things being said!” murmured
Fancy with emphasis, just loud enough to reach Dick’s ears.
“You think to yourself, ’twas to be,” cried Enoch
from his distant corner, by way of filling up the vacancy caused by
Geoffrey’s momentary absence. “And so you marry her,
Master Dewy, and there’s an end o’t.”
“Pray don’t say such things, Enoch,” came from
Fancy severely, upon which Enoch relapsed into servitude.
“If we be doomed to marry, we marry; if we be doomed to remain
single, we do,” replied Dick.
Geoffrey had by this time sat down again, and he now made his lips
thin by severely straining them across his gums, and looked out of the
window along the vista to the distant highway up Yalbury Hill.
“That’s not the case with some folk,” he said at length,
as if he read the words on a board at the further end of the vista.
Fancy looked interested, and Dick said, “No?”
“There’s that wife o’ mine. It was her doom
to be nobody’s wife at all in the wide universe. But she
made up her mind that she would, and did it twice over. Doom?
Doom is nothing beside a elderly woman—quite a chiel in her hands!”
A movement was now heard along the upstairs passage, and footsteps
descending. The door at the foot of the stairs opened, and the
second Mrs. Day appeared in view, looking fixedly at the table as she
advanced towards it, with apparent obliviousness of the presence of
any other human being than herself. In short, if the table had
been the personages, and the persons the table, her glance would have
been the most natural imaginable.
She showed herself to possess an ordinary woman’s face, iron-grey
hair, hardly any hips, and a great deal of cleanliness in a broad white
apron-string, as it appeared upon the waist of her dark stuff dress.
“People will run away with a story now, I suppose,” she
began saying, “that Jane Day’s tablecloths are as poor and
ragged as any union beggar’s!”
Dick now perceived that the tablecloth was a little the worse for
wear, and reflecting for a moment, concluded that ‘people’
in step-mother language probably meant himself. On lifting his
eyes he found that Mrs. Day had vanished again upstairs, and presently
returned with an armful of new damask-linen tablecloths, folded square
and hard as boards by long compression. These she flounced down
into a chair; then took one, shook it out from its folds, and spread
it on the table by instalments, transferring the plates and dishes one
by one from the old to the new cloth.
“And I suppose they’ll say, too, that she ha’n’t
a decent knife and fork in her house!”
“I shouldn’t say any such ill-natured thing, I am sure—”
began Dick. But Mrs. Day had vanished into the next room.
Fancy appeared distressed.
“Very strange woman, isn’t she?” said Geoffrey,
quietly going on with his dinner. “But ’tis too late
to attempt curing. My heart! ’tis so growed into her that
’twould kill her to take it out. Ay, she’s very queer:
you’d be amazed to see what valuable goods we’ve got stowed
away upstairs.”
Back again came Mrs. Day with a box of bright steel horn-handled
knives, silver-plated forks, carver, and all complete. These were
wiped of the preservative oil which coated them, and then a knife and
fork were laid down to each individual with a bang, the carving knife
and fork thrust into the meat dish, and the old ones they had hitherto
used tossed away.
Geoffrey placidly cut a slice with the new knife and fork, and asked
Dick if he wanted any more.
The table had been spread for the mixed midday meal of dinner and
tea, which was common among frugal countryfolk. “The parishioners
about here,” continued Mrs. Day, not looking at any living being,
but snatching up the brown delf tea-things, “are the laziest,
gossipest, poachest, jailest set of any ever I came among. And
they’ll talk about my teapot and tea-things next, I suppose!”
She vanished with the teapot, cups, and saucers, and reappeared with
a tea-service in white china, and a packet wrapped in brown paper.
This was removed, together with folds of tissue-paper underneath; and
a brilliant silver teapot appeared.
“I’ll help to put the things right,” said Fancy
soothingly, and rising from her seat. “I ought to have laid
out better things, I suppose. But” (here she enlarged her
looks so as to include Dick) “I have been away from home a good
deal, and I make shocking blunders in my housekeeping.”
Smiles and suavity were then dispensed all around by this bright little
bird.
After a little more preparation and modification, Mrs. Day took her
seat at the head of the table, and during the latter or tea division
of the meal, presided with much composure. It may cause some surprise
to learn that, now her vagary was over, she showed herself to be an
excellent person with much common sense, and even a religious seriousness
of tone on matters pertaining to her afflictions.
CHAPTER VII: DICK MAKES HIMSELF USEFUL
The effect of Geoffrey’s incidental allusions to Mr. Shiner
was to restrain a considerable flow of spontaneous chat that would otherwise
have burst from young Dewy along the drive homeward. And a certain
remark he had hazarded to her, in rather too blunt and eager a manner,
kept the young lady herself even more silent than Dick. On both
sides there was an unwillingness to talk on any but the most trivial
subjects, and their sentences rarely took a larger form than could be
expressed in two or three words.
Owing to Fancy being later in the day than she had promised, the
charwoman had given up expecting her; whereupon Dick could do no less
than stay and see her comfortably tided over the disagreeable time of
entering and establishing herself in an empty house after an absence
of a week. The additional furniture and utensils that had been
brought (a canary and cage among the rest) were taken out of the vehicle,
and the horse was unharnessed and put in the plot opposite, where there
was some tender grass. Dick lighted the fire already laid; and
activity began to loosen their tongues a little.
“There!” said Fancy, “we forgot to bring the fire-irons!”
She had originally found in her sitting-room, to bear out the expression
‘nearly furnished’ which the school-manager had used in
his letter to her, a table, three chairs, a fender, and a piece of carpet.
This ‘nearly’ had been supplemented hitherto by a kind friend,
who had lent her fire-irons and crockery until she should fetch some
from home.
Dick attended to the young lady’s fire, using his whip-handle
for a poker till it was spoilt, and then flourishing a hurdle stick
for the remainder of the time.
“The kettle boils; now you shall have a cup of tea,”
said Fancy, diving into the hamper she had brought.
“Thank you,” said Dick, whose drive had made him ready
for some, especially in her company.
“Well, here’s only one cup-and-saucer, as I breathe!
Whatever could mother be thinking about? Do you mind making shift,
Mr. Dewy?”
“Not at all, Miss Day,” said that civil person.
“—And only having a cup by itself? or a saucer by itself?”
“Don’t mind in the least.”
“Which do you mean by that?”
“I mean the cup, if you like the saucer.”
“And the saucer, if I like the cup?”
“Exactly, Miss Day.”
“Thank you, Mr. Dewy, for I like the cup decidedly. Stop
a minute; there are no spoons now!” She dived into the hamper
again, and at the end of two or three minutes looked up and said, “I
suppose you don’t mind if I can’t find a spoon?”
“Not at all,” said the agreeable Richard.
“The fact is, the spoons have slipped down somewhere; right
under the other things. O yes, here’s one, and only one.
You would rather have one than not, I suppose, Mr. Dewy?”
“Rather not. I never did care much about spoons.”
“Then I’ll have it. I do care about them.
You must stir up your tea with a knife. Would you mind lifting
the kettle off, that it may not boil dry?”
Dick leapt to the fireplace, and earnestly removed the kettle.
“There! you did it so wildly that you have made your hand black.
We always use kettle-holders; didn’t you learn housewifery as
far as that, Mr. Dewy? Well, never mind the soot on your hand.
Come here. I am going to rinse mine, too.”
They went to a basin she had placed in the back room. “This
is the only basin I have,” she said. “Turn up your
sleeves, and by that time my hands will be washed, and you can come.”
Her hands were in the water now. “O, how vexing!”
she exclaimed. “There’s not a drop of water left for
you, unless you draw it, and the well is I don’t know how many
furlongs deep; all that was in the pitcher I used for the kettle and
this basin. Do you mind dipping the tips of your fingers in the
same?”
“Not at all. And to save time I won’t wait till
you have done, if you have no objection?”
Thereupon he plunged in his hands, and they paddled together.
It being the first time in his life that he had touched female fingers
under water, Dick duly registered the sensation as rather a nice one.
“Really, I hardly know which are my own hands and which are
yours, they have got so mixed up together,” she said, withdrawing
her own very suddenly.
“It doesn’t matter at all,” said Dick, “at
least as far as I am concerned.”
“There! no towel! Whoever thinks of a towel till the
hands are wet?”
“Nobody.”
“‘Nobody.’ How very dull it is when people
are so friendly! Come here, Mr. Dewy. Now do you think you
could lift the lid of that box with your elbow, and then, with something
or other, take out a towel you will find under the clean clothes?
Be
sure don’t touch any of them with your wet hands, for
the things at the top are all Starched and Ironed.”
Dick managed, by the aid of a knife and fork, to extract a towel
from under a muslin dress without wetting the latter; and for a moment
he ventured to assume a tone of criticism.
“I fear for that dress,” he said, as they wiped their
hands together.
“What?” said Miss Day, looking into the box at the dress
alluded to. “O, I know what you mean—that the vicar
will never let me wear muslin?”
“Yes.”
“Well, I know it is condemned by all orders in the church as
flaunting, and unfit for common wear for girls who’ve their living
to get; but we’ll see.”
“In the interest of the church, I hope you don’t speak
seriously.”
“Yes, I do; but we’ll see.” There was a comely
determination on her lip, very pleasant to a beholder who was neither
bishop, priest, nor deacon. “I think I can manage any vicar’s
views about me if he’s under forty.”
Dick rather wished she had never thought of managing vicars.
“I certainly shall be glad to get some of your delicious tea,”
he said in rather a free way, yet modestly, as became one in a position
between that of visitor and inmate, and looking wistfully at his lonely
saucer.
“So shall I. Now is there anything else we want, Mr Dewy?”
“I really think there’s nothing else, Miss Day.”
She prepared to sit down, looking musingly out of the window at Smart’s
enjoyment of the rich grass. “Nobody seems to care about
me,” she murmured, with large lost eyes fixed upon the sky beyond
Smart.
“Perhaps Mr. Shiner does,” said Dick, in the tone of
a slightly injured man.
“Yes, I forgot—he does, I know.” Dick precipitately
regretted that he had suggested Shiner, since it had produced such a
miserable result as this.
“I’ll warrant you’ll care for somebody very much
indeed another day, won’t you, Mr. Dewy?” she continued,
looking very feelingly into the mathematical centre of his eyes.
“Ah, I’ll warrant I shall,” said Dick, feelingly
too, and looking back into her dark pupils, whereupon they were turned
aside.
“I meant,” she went on, preventing him from speaking
just as he was going to narrate a forcible story about his feelings;
“I meant that nobody comes to see if I have returned—not
even the vicar.”
“If you want to see him, I’ll call at the vicarage directly
we have had some tea.”
“No, no! Don’t let him come down here, whatever
you do, whilst I am in such a state of disarrangement. Parsons
look so miserable and awkward when one’s house is in a muddle;
walking about, and making impossible suggestions in quaint academic
phrases till your flesh creeps and you wish them dead. Do you
take sugar?”
Mr. Maybold was at this instant seen coming up the path.
“There! That’s he coming! How I wish you
were not here!—that is, how awkward—dear, dear!” she
exclaimed, with a quick ascent of blood to her face, and irritated with
Dick rather than the vicar, as it seemed.
“Pray don’t be alarmed on my account, Miss Day—good-afternoon!”
said Dick in a huff, putting on his hat, and leaving the room hastily
by the back-door.
The horse was caught and put in, and on mounting the shafts to start
he saw through the window the vicar, standing upon some books piled
in a chair, and driving a nail into the wall; Fancy, with a demure glance,
holding the canary-cage up to him, as if she had never in her life thought
of anything but vicars and canaries.
CHAPTER VIII: DICK MEETS HIS FATHER
For several minutes Dick drove along homeward, with the inner eye
of reflection so anxiously set on his passages at arms with Fancy, that
the road and scenery were as a thin mist over the real pictures of his
mind. Was she a coquette? The balance between the evidence
that she did love him and that she did not was so nicely struck, that
his opinion had no stability. She had let him put his hand upon
hers; she had allowed her gaze to drop plumb into the depths of his—his
into hers—three or four times; her manner had been very free with
regard to the basin and towel; she had appeared vexed at the mention
of Shiner. On the other hand, she had driven him about the house
like a quiet dog or cat, said Shiner cared for her, and seemed anxious
that Mr. Maybold should do the same.
Thinking thus as he neared the handpost at Mellstock Cross, sitting
on the front board of the spring cart—his legs on the outside,
and his whole frame jigging up and down like a candle-flame to the time
of Smart’s trotting—who should he see coming down the hill
but his father in the light wagon, quivering up and down on a smaller
scale of shakes, those merely caused by the stones in the road.
They were soon crossing each other’s front.
“Weh-hey!” said the tranter to Smiler.
“Weh-hey!” said Dick to Smart, in an echo of the same
voice.
“Th’st hauled her back, I suppose?” Reuben inquired
peaceably.
“Yes,” said Dick, with such a clinching period at the
end that it seemed he was never going to add another word. Smiler,
thinking this the close of the conversation, prepared to move on.
“Weh-hey!” said the tranter. “I tell thee
what it is, Dick. That there maid is taking up thy thoughts more
than’s good for thee, my sonny. Thou’rt never happy
now unless th’rt making thyself miserable about her in one way
or another.”
“I don’t know about that, father,” said Dick rather
stupidly.
“But I do—Wey, Smiler!—’Od rot the women,
’tis nothing else wi’ ’em nowadays but getting young
men and leading ’em astray.”
“Pooh, father! you just repeat what all the common world says;
that’s all you do.”
“The world’s a very sensible feller on things in jineral,
Dick; very sensible indeed.”
Dick looked into the distance at a vast expanse of mortgaged estate.
“I wish I was as rich as a squire when he’s as poor as a
crow,” he murmured; “I’d soon ask Fancy something.”
“I wish so too, wi’ all my heart, sonny; that I do.
Well, mind what beest about, that’s all.”
Smart moved on a step or two. “Supposing now, father,—We-hey,
Smart!—I did think a little about her, and I had a chance, which
I ha’n’t; don’t you think she’s a very good
sort of—of—one?”
“Ay, good; she’s good enough. When you’ve
made up your mind to marry, take the first respectable body that comes
to hand—she’s as good as any other; they be all alike in
the groundwork; ’tis only in the flourishes there’s a difference.
She’s good enough; but I can’t see what the nation a young
feller like you—wi’ a comfortable house and home, and father
and mother to take care o’ thee, and who sent ’ee to a school
so good that ’twas hardly fair to the other children—should
want to go hollering after a young woman for, when she’s quietly
making a husband in her pocket, and not troubled by chick nor chiel,
to make a poverty-stric’ wife and family of her, and neither hat,
cap, wig, nor waistcoat to set ’em up with: be drowned if I can
see it, and that’s the long and the short o’t, my sonny.”
Dick looked at Smart’s ears, then up the hill; but no reason
was suggested by any object that met his gaze.
“For about the same reason that you did, father, I suppose.”
“Dang it, my sonny, thou’st got me there!”
And the tranter gave vent to a grim admiration, with the mien of a man
who was too magnanimous not to appreciate artistically a slight rap
on the knuckles, even if they were his own.
“Whether or no,” said Dick, “I asked her a thing
going along the road.”
“Come to that, is it? Turk! won’t thy mother be
in a taking! Well, she’s ready, I don’t doubt?”
“I didn’t ask her anything about having me; and if you’ll
let me speak, I’ll tell ’ee what I want to know. I
just said, Did she care about me?”
“Piph-ph-ph!”
“And then she said nothing for a quarter of a mile, and then
she said she didn’t know. Now, what I want to know is, what
was the meaning of that speech?” The latter words were spoken
resolutely, as if he didn’t care for the ridicule of all the fathers
in creation.
“The meaning of that speech is,” the tranter replied
deliberately, “that the meaning is meant to be rather hid at present.
Well, Dick, as an honest father to thee, I don’t pretend to deny
what you d’know well enough; that is, that her father being rather
better in the pocket than we, I should welcome her ready enough if it
must be somebody.”
“But what d’ye think she really did mean?” said
the unsatisfied Dick.
“I’m afeard I am not o’ much account in guessing,
especially as I was not there when she said it, and seeing that your
mother was the only ’ooman I ever cam’ into such close quarters
as that with.”
“And what did mother say to you when you asked her?”
said Dick musingly.
“I don’t see that that will help ’ee.”
“The principle is the same.”
“Well—ay: what did she say? Let’s see.
I was oiling my working-day boots without taking ’em off, and
wi’ my head hanging down, when she just brushed on by the garden
hatch like a flittering leaf. ‘Ann,’ I said, says
I, and then,—but, Dick I’m afeard ’twill be no help
to thee; for we were such a rum couple, your mother and I, leastways
one half was, that is myself—and your mother’s charms was
more in the manner than the material.”
“Never mind! ‘Ann,’ said you.”
“‘Ann,’ said I, as I was saying . . . ‘Ann,’
I said to her when I was oiling my working-day boots wi’ my head
hanging down, ‘Woot hae me?’ . . . What came next I can’t
quite call up at this distance o’ time. Perhaps your mother
would know,—she’s got a better memory for her little triumphs
than I. However, the long and the short o’ the story is
that we were married somehow, as I found afterwards. ’Twas
on White Tuesday,—Mellstock Club walked the same day, every man
two and two, and a fine day ’twas,—hot as fire,—how
the sun did strike down upon my back going to church! I well can
mind what a bath o’ sweating I was in, body and soul! But
Fance will ha’ thee, Dick—she won’t walk with another
chap—no such good luck.”
“I don’t know about that,” said Dick, whipping
at Smart’s flank in a fanciful way, which, as Smart knew, meant
nothing in connection with going on. “There’s Pa’son
Maybold, too—that’s all against me.”
“What about he? She’s never been stuffing into
thy innocent heart that he’s in hove with her? Lord, the
vanity o’ maidens!”
“No, no. But he called, and she looked at him in such
a way, and at me in such a way—quite different the ways were,—and
as I was coming off, there was he hanging up her birdcage.”
“Well, why shouldn’t the man hang up her bird-cage?
Turk seize it all, what’s that got to do wi’ it? Dick,
that thou beest a white-lyvered chap I don’t say, but if thou
beestn’t as mad as a cappel-faced bull, let me smile no more.”
“O, ay.”
“And what’s think now, Dick?”
“I don’t know.”
“Here’s another pretty kettle o’ fish for thee.
Who d’ye think’s the bitter weed in our being turned out?
Did our party tell ’ee?”
“No. Why, Pa’son Maybold, I suppose.”
“Shiner,—because he’s in love with thy young woman,
and d’want to see her young figure sitting up at that queer instrument,
and her young fingers rum-strumming upon the keys.”
A sharp ado of sweet and bitter was going on in Dick during this
communication from his father. “Shiner’s a fool!—no,
that’s not it; I don’t believe any such thing, father.
Why, Shiner would never take a bold step like that, unless she’d
been a little made up to, and had taken it kindly. Pooh!”
“Who’s to say she didn’t?”
“I do.”
“The more fool you.”
“Why, father of me?”
“Has she ever done more to thee?”
“No.”
“Then she has done as much to he—rot ’em!
Now, Dick, this is how a maid is. She’ll swear she’s
dying for thee, and she is dying for thee, and she will die for thee;
but she’ll fling a look over t’other shoulder at another
young feller, though never leaving off dying for thee just the same.”
“She’s not dying for me, and so she didn’t fling
a look at him.”
“But she may be dying for him, for she looked at thee.”
“I don’t know what to make of it at all,” said
Dick gloomily.
“All I can make of it is,” the tranter said, raising
his whip, arranging his different joints and muscles, and motioning
to the horse to move on, “that if you can’t read a maid’s
mind by her motions, nature d’seem to say thou’st ought
to be a bachelor. Clk, clk! Smiler!” And the
tranter moved on.
Dick held Smart’s rein firmly, and the whole concern of horse,
cart, and man remained rooted in the lane. How long this condition
would have lasted is unknown, had not Dick’s thoughts, after adding
up numerous items of misery, gradually wandered round to the fact that
as something must be done, it could not be done by staying there all
night.
Reaching home he went up to his bedroom, shut the door as if he were
going to be seen no more in this life, and taking a sheet of paper and
uncorking the ink-bottle, he began a letter. The dignity of the
writer’s mind was so powerfully apparent in every line of this
effusion that it obscured the logical sequence of facts and intentions
to an appreciable degree; and it was not at all clear to a reader whether
he there and then left off loving Miss Fancy Day; whether he had never
loved her seriously, and never meant to; whether he had been dying up
to the present moment, and now intended to get well again; or whether
he had hitherto been in good health, and intended to die for her forthwith.
He put this letter in an envelope, sealed it up, directed it in a
stern handwriting of straight dashes—easy flourishes being rigorously
excluded. He walked with it in his pocket down the lane in strides
not an inch less than three feet long. Reaching her gate he put
on a resolute expression—then put it off again, turned back homeward,
tore up his letter, and sat down.
That letter was altogether in a wrong tone—that he must own.
A heartless man-of-the-world tone was what the juncture required.
That he rather wanted her, and rather did not want her—the latter
for choice; but that as a member of society he didn’t mind making
a query in jaunty terms, which could only be answered in the same way:
did she mean anything by her bearing towards him, or did she not?
This letter was considered so satisfactory in every way that, being
put into the hands of a little boy, and the order given that he was
to run with it to the school, he was told in addition not to look behind
him if Dick called after him to bring it back, but to run along with
it just the same. Having taken this precaution against vacillation,
Dick watched his messenger down the road, and turned into the house
whistling an air in such ghastly jerks and starts, that whistling seemed
to be the act the very furthest removed from that which was instinctive
in such a youth.
The letter was left as ordered: the next morning came and passed—and
no answer. The next. The next. Friday night came.
Dick resolved that if no answer or sign were given by her the next day,
on Sunday he would meet her face to face, and have it all out by word
of mouth.
“Dick,” said his father, coming in from the garden at
that moment—in each hand a hive of bees tied in a cloth to prevent
their egress—“I think you’d better take these two
swarms of bees to Mrs. Maybold’s to-morrow, instead o’ me,
and I’ll go wi’ Smiler and the wagon.”
It was a relief; for Mrs. Maybold, the vicar’s mother, who
had just taken into her head a fancy for keeping bees (pleasantly disguised
under the pretence of its being an economical wish to produce her own
honey), lived near the watering-place of Budmouth-Regis, ten miles off,
and the business of transporting the hives thither would occupy the
whole day, and to some extent annihilate the vacant time between this
evening and the coming Sunday. The best spring-cart was washed
throughout, the axles oiled, and the bees placed therein for the journey.
PART THE THIRD—SUMMER
CHAPTER I: DRIVING OUT OF BUDMOUTH
An easy bend of neck and graceful set of head; full and wavy bundles
of dark-brown hair; light fall of little feet; pretty devices on the
skirt of the dress; clear deep eyes; in short, a bunch of sweets: it
was Fancy! Dick’s heart went round to her with a rush.
The scene was the corner of Mary Street in Budmouth-Regis, near the
King’s statue, at which point the white angle of the last house
in the row cut perpendicularly an embayed and nearly motionless expanse
of salt water projected from the outer ocean—to-day lit in bright
tones of green and opal. Dick and Smart had just emerged from
the street, and there on the right, against the brilliant sheet of liquid
colour, stood Fancy Day; and she turned and recognized him.
Dick suspended his thoughts of the letter and wonder at how she came
there by driving close to the chains of the Esplanade—incontinently
displacing two chairmen, who had just come to life for the summer in
new clean shirts and revivified clothes, and being almost displaced
in turn by a rigid boy rattling along with a baker’s cart, and
looking neither to the right nor the left. He asked if she were
going to Mellstock that night.
“Yes, I’m waiting for the carrier,” she replied,
seeming, too, to suspend thoughts of the letter.
“Now I can drive you home nicely, and you save half an hour.
Will ye come with me?”
As Fancy’s power to will anything seemed to have departed in
some mysterious manner at that moment, Dick settled the matter by getting
out and assisting her into the vehicle without another word.
The temporary flush upon her cheek changed to a lesser hue, which
was permanent, and at length their eyes met; there was present between
them a certain feeling of embarrassment, which arises at such moments
when all the instinctive acts dictated by the position have been performed.
Dick, being engaged with the reins, thought less of this awkwardness
than did Fancy, who had nothing to do but to feel his presence, and
to be more and more conscious of the fact, that by accepting a seat
beside him in this way she succumbed to the tone of his note.
Smart jogged along, and Dick jogged, and the helpless Fancy necessarily
jogged, too; and she felt that she was in a measure captured and made
a prisoner.
“I am so much obliged to you for your company, Miss Day,”
he observed, as they drove past the two semicircular bays of the Old
Royal Hotel, where His Majesty King George the Third had many a time
attended the balls of the burgesses.
To Miss Day, crediting him with the same consciousness of mastery—a
consciousness of which he was perfectly innocent—this remark sounded
like a magnanimous intention to soothe her, the captive.
“I didn’t come for the pleasure of obliging you with
my company,” she said.
The answer had an unexpected manner of incivility in it that must
have been rather surprising to young Dewy. At the same time it
may be observed, that when a young woman returns a rude answer to a
young man’s civil remark, her heart is in a state which argues
rather hopefully for his case than otherwise.
There was silence between them till they had left the sea-front and
passed about twenty of the trees that ornamented the road leading up
out of the town towards Casterbridge and Mellstock.
“Though I didn’t come for that purpose either, I would
have done it,” said Dick at the twenty-first tree.
“Now, Mr. Dewy, no flirtation, because it’s wrong, and
I don’t wish it.”
Dick seated himself afresh just as he had been sitting before, arranged
his looks very emphatically, and cleared his throat.
“Really, anybody would think you had met me on business and
were just going to commence,” said the lady intractably.
“Yes, they would.”
“Why, you never have, to be sure!”
This was a shaky beginning. He chopped round, and said cheerily,
as a man who had resolved never to spoil his jollity by loving one of
womankind—
“Well, how are you getting on, Miss Day, at the present time?
Gaily, I don’t doubt for a moment.”
“I am not gay, Dick; you know that.”
“Gaily doesn’t mean decked in gay dresses.”
“I didn’t suppose gaily was gaily dressed. Mighty
me, what a scholar you’ve grown!”
“Lots of things have happened to you this spring, I see.”
“What have you seen?”
“O, nothing; I’ve heard, I mean!”
“What have you heard?”
“The name of a pretty man, with brass studs and a copper ring
and a tin watch-chain, a little mixed up with your own. That’s
all.”
“That’s a very unkind picture of Mr. Shiner, for that’s
who you mean! The studs are gold, as you know, and it’s
a real silver chain; the ring I can’t conscientiously defend,
and he only wore it once.”
“He might have worn it a hundred times without showing it half
so much.”
“Well, he’s nothing to me,” she serenely observed.
“Not any more than I am?”
“Now, Mr. Dewy,” said Fancy severely, “certainly
he isn’t any more to me than you are!”
“Not so much?”
She looked aside to consider the precise compass of that question.
“That I can’t exactly answer,” she replied with soft
archness.
As they were going rather slowly, another spring-cart, containing
a farmer, farmer’s wife, and farmer’s man, jogged past them;
and the farmer’s wife and farmer’s man eyed the couple very
curiously. The farmer never looked up from the horse’s tail.
“Why can’t you exactly answer?” said Dick, quickening
Smart a little, and jogging on just behind the farmer and farmer’s
wife and man.
As no answer came, and as their eyes had nothing else to do, they
both contemplated the picture presented in front, and noticed how the
farmer’s wife sat flattened between the two men, who bulged over
each end of the seat to give her room, till they almost sat upon their
respective wheels; and they looked too at the farmer’s wife’s
silk mantle, inflating itself between her shoulders like a balloon and
sinking flat again, at each jog of the horse. The farmer’s
wife, feeling their eyes sticking into her back, looked over her shoulder.
Dick dropped ten yards further behind.
“Fancy, why can’t you answer?” he repeated.
“Because how much you are to me depends upon how much I am
to you,” said she in low tones.
“Everything,” said Dick, putting his hand towards hers,
and casting emphatic eyes upon the upper curve of her cheek.
“Now, Richard Dewy, no touching me! I didn’t say
in what way your thinking of me affected the question—perhaps
inversely, don’t you see? No touching, sir! Look;
goodness me, don’t, Dick!”
The cause of her sudden start was the unpleasant appearance over
Dick’s right shoulder of an empty timber-wagon and four journeymen-carpenters
reclining in lazy postures inside it, their eyes directed upwards at
various oblique angles into the surrounding world, the chief object
of their existence being apparently to criticize to the very backbone
and marrow every animate object that came within the compass of their
vision. This difficulty of Dick’s was overcome by trotting
on till the wagon and carpenters were beginning to look rather misty
by reason of a film of dust that accompanied their wagon-wheels, and
rose around their heads like a fog.
“Say you love me, Fancy.”
“No, Dick, certainly not; ’tisn’t time to do that
yet.”
“Why, Fancy?”
“‘Miss Day’ is better at present—don’t
mind my saying so; and I ought not to have called you Dick.”
“Nonsense! when you know that I would do anything on earth
for your love. Why, you make any one think that loving is a thing
that can be done and undone, and put on and put off at a mere whim.”
“No, no, I don’t,” she said gently; “but
there are things which tell me I ought not to give way to much thinking
about you, even if—”
“But you want to, don’t you? Yes, say you do; it
is best to be truthful. Whatever they may say about a woman’s
right to conceal where her love lies, and pretend it doesn’t exist,
and things like that, it is not best; I do know it, Fancy. And
an honest woman in that, as well as in all her daily concerns, shines
most brightly, and is thought most of in the long-run.”
“Well then, perhaps, Dick, I do love you a little,” she
whispered tenderly; “but I wish you wouldn’t say any more
now.”
“I won’t say any more now, then, if you don’t like
it, dear. But you do love me a little, don’t you?”
“Now you ought not to want me to keep saying things twice;
I can’t say any more now, and you must be content with what you
have.”
“I may at any rate call you Fancy? There’s no harm
in that.”
“Yes, you may.”
“And you’ll not call me Mr. Dewy any more?”
“Very well.”
CHAPTER II: FURTHER ALONG THE ROAD
Dick’s spirits having risen in the course of these admissions
of his sweetheart, he now touched Smart with the whip; and on Smart’s
neck, not far behind his ears. Smart, who had been lost in thought
for some time, never dreaming that Dick could reach so far with a whip
which, on this particular journey, had never been extended further than
his flank, tossed his head, and scampered along with exceeding briskness,
which was very pleasant to the young couple behind him till, turning
a bend in the road, they came instantly upon the farmer, farmer’s
man, and farmer’s wife with the flapping mantle, all jogging on
just the same as ever.
“Bother those people! Here we are upon them again.”
“Well, of course. They have as much right to the road
as we.”
“Yes, but it is provoking to be overlooked so. I like
a road all to myself. Look what a lumbering affair theirs is!”
The wheels of the farmer’s cart, just at that moment, jogged into
a depression running across the road, giving the cart a twist, whereupon
all three nodded to the left, and on coming out of it all three nodded
to the right, and went on jerking their backs in and out as usual.
“We’ll pass them when the road gets wider.”
When an opportunity seemed to offer itself for carrying this intention
into effect, they heard light flying wheels behind, and on their quartering
there whizzed along past them a brand-new gig, so brightly polished
that the spokes of the wheels sent forth a continual quivering light
at one point in their circle, and all the panels glared like mirrors
in Dick and Fancy’s eyes. The driver, and owner as it appeared,
was really a handsome man; his companion was Shiner. Both turned
round as they passed Dick and Fancy, and stared with bold admiration
in her face till they were obliged to attend to the operation of passing
the farmer. Dick glanced for an instant at Fancy while she was
undergoing their scrutiny; then returned to his driving with rather
a sad countenance.
“Why are you so silent?” she said, after a while, with
real concern.
“Nothing.”
“Yes, it is, Dick. I couldn’t help those people
passing.”
“I know that.”
“You look offended with me. What have I done?”
“I can’t tell without offending you.”
“Better out.”
“Well,” said Dick, who seemed longing to tell, even at
the risk of offending her, “I was thinking how different you in
love are from me in love. Whilst those men were staring, you dismissed
me from your thoughts altogether, and—”
“You can’t offend me further now; tell all!”
“And showed upon your face a pleased sense of being attractive
to ’em.”
“Don’t be silly, Dick! You know very well I didn’t.”
Dick shook his head sceptically, and smiled.
“Dick, I always believe flattery
if possible—and
it was possible then. Now there’s an open confession of
weakness. But I showed no consciousness of it.”
Dick, perceiving by her look that she would adhere to her statement,
charitably forbore saying anything that could make her prevaricate.
The sight of Shiner, too, had recalled another branch of the subject
to his mind; that which had been his greatest trouble till her company
and words had obscured its probability.
“By the way, Fancy, do you know why our quire is to be dismissed?”
“No: except that it is Mr. Maybold’s wish for me to play
the organ.”
“Do you know how it came to be his wish?”
“That I don’t.”
“Mr. Shiner, being churchwarden, has persuaded the vicar; who,
however, was willing enough before. Shiner, I know, is crazy to
see you playing every Sunday; I suppose he’ll turn over your music,
for the organ will be close to his pew. But—I know you have
never encouraged him?”
“Never once!” said Fancy emphatically, and with eyes
full of earnest truth. “I don’t like him indeed, and
I never heard of his doing this before! I have always felt that
I should like to play in a church, but I never wished to turn you and
your choir out; and I never even said that I could play till I was asked.
You don’t think for a moment that I did, surely, do you?”
“I know you didn’t, dear.”
“Or that I care the least morsel of a bit for him?”
“I know you don’t.”
The distance between Budmouth and Mellstock was ten or eleven miles,
and there being a good inn, ‘The Ship,’ four miles out of
Budmouth, with a mast and cross-trees in front, Dick’s custom
in driving thither was to divide the journey into three stages by resting
at this inn going and coming, and not troubling the Budmouth stables
at all, whenever his visit to the town was a mere call and deposit,
as to-day.
Fancy was ushered into a little tea-room, and Dick went to the stables
to see to the feeding of Smart. In face of the significant twitches
of feature that were visible in the ostler and labouring men idling
around, Dick endeavoured to look unconscious of the fact that there
was any sentiment between him and Fancy beyond a tranter’s desire
to carry a passenger home. He presently entered the inn and opened
the door of Fancy’s room.
“Dick, do you know, it has struck me that it is rather awkward,
my being here alone with you like this. I don’t think you
had better come in with me.”
“That’s rather unpleasant, dear.”
“Yes, it is, and I wanted you to have some tea as well as myself
too, because you must be tired.”
“Well, let me have some with you, then. I was denied
once before, if you recollect, Fancy.”
“Yes, yes, never mind! And it seems unfriendly of me
now, but I don’t know what to do.”
“It shall be as you say, then.” Dick began to retreat
with a dissatisfied wrinkling of face, and a farewell glance at the
cosy tea-tray.
“But you don’t see how it is, Dick, when you speak like
that,” she said, with more earnestness than she had ever shown
before. “You do know, that even if I care very much for
you, I must remember that I have a difficult position to maintain.
The vicar would not like me, as his schoolmistress, to indulge in a
tête-à-tête anywhere with anybody.”
“But I am not
any body!” exclaimed Dick.
“No, no, I mean with a young man;” and she added softly,
“unless I were really engaged to be married to him.”
“Is that all? Then, dearest, dearest, why we’ll
be engaged at once, to be sure we will, and down I sit! There
it is, as easy as a glove!”
“Ah! but suppose I won’t! And, goodness me, what
have I done!” she faltered, getting very red. “Positively,
it seems as if I meant you to say that!”
“Let’s do it! I mean get engaged,” said Dick.
“Now, Fancy, will you be my wife?”
“Do you know, Dick, it was rather unkind of you to say what
you did coming along the road,” she remarked, as if she had not
heard the latter part of his speech; though an acute observer might
have noticed about her breast, as the word ‘wife’ fell from
Dick’s lips, a soft silent escape of breaths, with very short
rests between each.
“What did I say?”
“About my trying to look attractive to those men in the gig.”
“You couldn’t help looking so, whether you tried or no.
And, Fancy, you do care for me?”
“Yes.”
“Very much?”
“Yes.”
“And you’ll be my own wife?”
Her heart quickened, adding to and withdrawing from her cheek varying
tones of red to match each varying thought. Dick looked expectantly
at the ripe tint of her delicate mouth, waiting for what was coming
forth.
“Yes—if father will let me.”
Dick drew himself close to her, compressing his lips and pouting
them out, as if he were about to whistle the softest melody known.
“O no!” said Fancy solemnly.
The modest Dick drew back a little.
“Dick, Dick, kiss me and let me go instantly!—here’s
somebody coming!” she whisperingly exclaimed.
* * *
Half an hour afterwards Dick emerged from the inn, and if Fancy’s
lips had been real cherries probably Dick’s would have appeared
deeply stained. The landlord was standing in the yard.
“Heu-heu! hay-hay, Master Dewy! Ho-ho!” he laughed,
letting the laugh slip out gently and by degrees that it might make
little noise in its exit, and smiting Dick under the fifth rib at the
same time. “This will never do, upon my life, Master Dewy!
calling for tay for a feymel passenger, and then going in and sitting
down and having some too, and biding such a fine long time!”
“But surely you know?” said Dick, with great apparent
surprise. “Yes, yes! Ha-ha!” smiting the landlord
under the ribs in return.
“Why, what? Yes, yes; ha-ha!”
“You know, of course!”
“Yes, of course! But—that is—I don’t.”
“Why about—between that young lady and me?” nodding
to the window of the room that Fancy occupied.
“No; not I!” said the innkeeper, bringing his eyes into
circles.
“And you don’t!”
“Not a word, I’ll take my oath!”
“But you laughed when I laughed.”
“Ay, that was me sympathy; so did you when I laughed!”
“Really, you don’t know? Goodness—not knowing
that!”
“I’ll take my oath I don’t!”
“O yes,” said Dick, with frigid rhetoric of pitying astonishment,
“we’re engaged to be married, you see, and I naturally look
after her.”
“Of course, of course! I didn’t know that, and
I hope ye’ll excuse any little freedom of mine, Mr. Dewy.
But it is a very odd thing; I was talking to your father very intimate
about family matters only last Friday in the world, and who should come
in but Keeper Day, and we all then fell a-talking o’ family matters;
but neither one o’ them said a mortal word about it; knowen me
too so many years, and I at your father’s own wedding. ’Tisn’t
what I should have expected from an old neighbour!”
“Well, to say the truth, we hadn’t told father of the
engagement at that time; in fact, ’twasn’t settled.”
“Ah! the business was done Sunday. Yes, yes, Sunday’s
the courting day. Heu-heu!”
“No, ’twasn’t done Sunday in particular.”
“After school-hours this week? Well, a very good time,
a very proper good time.”
“O no, ’twasn’t done then.”
“Coming along the road to-day then, I suppose?”
“Not at all; I wouldn’t think of getting engaged in a
dog-cart.”
“Dammy—might as well have said at once, the
when
be blowed! Anyhow, ’tis a fine day, and I hope next time
you’ll come as one.”
Fancy was duly brought out and assisted into the vehicle, and the
newly affianced youth and maiden passed up the steep hill to the Ridgeway,
and vanished in the direction of Mellstock.
CHAPTER III: A CONFESSION
It was a morning of the latter summer-time; a morning of lingering
dews, when the grass is never dry in the shade. Fuchsias and dahlias
were laden till eleven o’clock with small drops and dashes of
water, changing the colour of their sparkle at every movement of the
air; and elsewhere hanging on twigs like small silver fruit. The
threads of garden spiders appeared thick and polished. In the
dry and sunny places, dozens of long-legged crane-flies whizzed off
the grass at every step the passer took.
Fancy Day and her friend Susan Dewy the tranter’s daughter,
were in such a spot as this, pulling down a bough laden with early apples.
Three months had elapsed since Dick and Fancy had journeyed together
from Budmouth, and the course of their love had run on vigorously during
the whole time. There had been just enough difficulty attending
its development, and just enough finesse required in keeping it private,
to lend the passion an ever-increasing freshness on Fancy’s part,
whilst, whether from these accessories or not, Dick’s heart had
been at all times as fond as could be desired. But there was a
cloud on Fancy’s horizon now.
“She is so well off—better than any of us,” Susan
Dewy was saying. “Her father farms five hundred acres, and
she might marry a doctor or curate or anything of that kind if she contrived
a little.”
“I don’t think Dick ought to have gone to that gipsy-party
at all when he knew I couldn’t go,” replied Fancy uneasily.
“He didn’t know that you would not be there till it was
too late to refuse the invitation,” said Susan.
“And what was she like? Tell me.”
“Well, she was rather pretty, I must own.”
“Tell straight on about her, can’t you! Come, do,
Susan. How many times did you say he danced with her?”
“Once.”
“Twice, I think you said?”
“Indeed I’m sure I didn’t.”
“Well, and he wanted to again, I expect.”
“No; I don’t think he did. She wanted to dance
with him again bad enough, I know. Everybody does with Dick, because
he’s so handsome and such a clever courter.”
“O, I wish!—How did you say she wore her hair?”
“In long curls,—and her hair is light, and it curls without
being put in paper: that’s how it is she’s so attractive.”
“She’s trying to get him away! yes, yes, she is!
And through keeping this miserable school I mustn’t wear my hair
in curls! But I will; I don’t care if I leave the school
and go home, I will wear my curls! Look, Susan, do! is her hair
as soft and long as this?” Fancy pulled from its coil under
her hat a twine of her own hair, and stretched it down her shoulder
to show its length, looking at Susan to catch her opinion from her eyes.
“It is about the same length as that, I think,” said
Miss Dewy.
Fancy paused hopelessly. “I wish mine was lighter, like
hers!” she continued mournfully. “But hers isn’t
so soft, is it? Tell me, now.”
“I don’t know.”
Fancy abstractedly extended her vision to survey a yellow butterfly
and a red-and-black butterfly that were flitting along in company, and
then became aware that Dick was advancing up the garden.
“Susan, here’s Dick coming; I suppose that’s because
we’ve been talking about him.”
“Well, then, I shall go indoors now—you won’t want
me;” and Susan turned practically and walked off.
Enter the single-minded Dick, whose only fault at the gipsying, or
picnic, had been that of loving Fancy too exclusively, and depriving
himself of the innocent pleasure the gathering might have afforded him,
by sighing regretfully at her absence,—who had danced with the
rival in sheer despair of ever being able to get through that stale,
flat, and unprofitable afternoon in any other way; but this she would
not believe.
Fancy had settled her plan of emotion. To reproach Dick?
O no, no. “I am in great trouble,” said she, taking
what was intended to be a hopelessly melancholy survey of a few small
apples lying under the tree; yet a critical ear might have noticed in
her voice a tentative tone as to the effect of the words upon Dick when
she uttered them.
“What are you in trouble about? Tell me of it,”
said Dick earnestly. “Darling, I will share it with ’ee
and help ’ee.”
“No, no: you can’t! Nobody can!”
“Why not? You don’t deserve it, whatever it is.
Tell me, dear.”
“O, it isn’t what you think! It is dreadful: my
own sin!”
“Sin, Fancy! as if you could sin! I know it can’t
be.”
“’Tis, ’tis!” said the young lady, in a pretty
little frenzy of sorrow. “I have done wrong, and I don’t
like to tell it! Nobody will forgive me, nobody! and you above
all will not! . . . I have allowed myself to—to—fl—”
“What,—not flirt!” he said, controlling his emotion
as it were by a sudden pressure inward from his surface. “And
you said only the day before yesterday that you hadn’t flirted
in your life!”
“Yes, I did; and that was a wicked story! I have let
another love me, and—”
“Good G—! Well, I’ll forgive you,—yes,
if you couldn’t help it,—yes, I will!” said the now
dismal Dick. “Did you encourage him?”
“O,—I don’t know,—yes—no. O,
I think so!”
“Who was it?” A pause. “Tell me!”
“Mr. Shiner.”
After a silence that was only disturbed by the fall of an apple,
a long-checked sigh from Dick, and a sob from Fancy, he said with real
austerity—
“Tell it all;—every word!”
“He looked at me, and I looked at him, and he said, ‘Will
you let me show you how to catch bullfinches down here by the stream?’
And I—wanted to know very much—I did so long to have a bullfinch!
I couldn’t help that and I said, ‘Yes!’ and then he
said, ‘Come here.’ And I went with him down to the
lovely river, and then he said to me, ‘Look and see how I do it,
and then you’ll know: I put this birdlime round this twig, and
then I go here,’ he said, ‘and hide away under a bush; and
presently clever Mister Bird comes and perches upon the twig, and flaps
his wings, and you’ve got him before you can say Jack’—something;
O, O, O, I forget what!”
“Jack Sprat,” mournfully suggested Dick through the cloud
of his misery.
“No, not Jack Sprat,” she sobbed.
“Then ’twas Jack Robinson!” he said, with the emphasis
of a man who had resolved to discover every iota of the truth, or die.
“Yes, that was it! And then I put my hand upon the rail
of the bridge to get across, and—That’s all.”
“Well, that isn’t much, either,” said Dick critically,
and more cheerfully. “Not that I see what business Shiner
has to take upon himself to teach you anything. But it seems—it
do seem there must have been more than that to set you up in such a
dreadful taking?”
He looked into Fancy’s eyes. Misery of miseries!—guilt
was written there still.
“Now, Fancy, you’ve not told me all!” said Dick,
rather sternly for a quiet young man.
“O, don’t speak so cruelly! I am afraid to tell
now! If you hadn’t been harsh, I was going on to tell all;
now I can’t!”
“Come, dear Fancy, tell: come. I’ll forgive; I
must,—by heaven and earth, I must, whether I will or no; I love
you so!”
“Well, when I put my hand on the bridge, he touched it—”
“A scamp!” said Dick, grinding an imaginary human frame
to powder.
“And then he looked at me, and at last he said, ‘Are
you in love with Dick Dewy?’ And I said, ‘Perhaps
I am!’ and then he said, ‘I wish you weren’t then,
for I want to marry you, with all my soul.’”
“There’s a villain now! Want to marry you!”
And Dick quivered with the bitterness of satirical laughter. Then
suddenly remembering that he might be reckoning without his host: “Unless,
to be sure, you are willing to have him,—perhaps you are,”
he said, with the wretched indifference of a castaway.
“No, indeed I am not!” she said, her sobs just beginning
to take a favourable turn towards cure.
“Well, then,” said Dick, coming a little to his senses,
“you’ve been stretching it very much in giving such a dreadful
beginning to such a mere nothing. And I know what you’ve
done it for,—just because of that gipsy-party!” He
turned away from her and took five paces decisively, as if he were tired
of an ungrateful country, including herself. “You did it
to make me jealous, and I won’t stand it!” He flung
the words to her over his shoulder and then stalked on, apparently very
anxious to walk to the remotest of the Colonies that very minute.
“O, O, O, Dick—Dick!” she cried, trotting after
him like a pet lamb, and really seriously alarmed at last, “you’ll
kill me! My impulses are bad—miserably wicked,—and
I can’t help it; forgive me, Dick! And I love you always;
and those times when you look silly and don’t seem quite good
enough for me,—just the same, I do, Dick! And there is something
more serious, though not concerning that walk with him.”
“Well, what is it?” said Dick, altering his mind about
walking to the Colonies; in fact, passing to the other extreme, and
standing so rooted to the road that he was apparently not even going
home.
“Why this,” she said, drying the beginning of a new flood
of tears she had been going to shed, “this is the serious part.
Father has told Mr. Shiner that he would like him for a son-in-law,
if he could get me;—that he has his right hearty consent to come
courting me!”
CHAPTER IV: AN ARRANGEMENT
“That
is serious,” said Dick, more intellectually
than he had spoken for a long time.
The truth was that Geoffrey knew nothing about his daughter’s
continued walks and meetings with Dick. When a hint that there
were symptoms of an attachment between them had first reached Geoffrey’s
ears, he stated so emphatically that he must think the matter over before
any such thing could be allowed that, rather unwisely on Dick’s
part, whatever it might have been on the lady’s, the lovers were
careful to be seen together no more in public; and Geoffrey, forgetting
the report, did not think over the matter at all. So Mr. Shiner
resumed his old position in Geoffrey’s brain by mere flux of time.
Even Shiner began to believe that Dick existed for Fancy no more,—though
that remarkably easy-going man had taken no active steps on his own
account as yet.
“And father has not only told Mr. Shiner that,” continued
Fancy, “but he has written me a letter, to say he should wish
me to encourage Mr. Shiner, if ’twas convenient!”
“I must start off and see your father at once!” said
Dick, taking two or three vehement steps to the south, recollecting
that Mr. Day lived to the north, and coming back again.
“I think we had better see him together. Not tell him
what you come for, or anything of the kind, until he likes you, and
so win his brain through his heart, which is always the way to manage
people. I mean in this way: I am going home on Saturday week to
help them in the honey-taking. You might come there to me, have
something to eat and drink, and let him guess what your coming signifies,
without saying it in so many words.”
“We’ll do it, dearest. But I shall ask him for
you, flat and plain; not wait for his guessing.” And the
lover then stepped close to her, and attempted to give her one little
kiss on the cheek, his lips alighting, however, on an outlying tract
of her back hair by reason of an impulse that had caused her to turn
her head with a jerk. “Yes, and I’ll put on my second-best
suit and a clean shirt and collar, and black my boots as if ’twas
a Sunday. ’Twill have a good appearance, you see, and that’s
a great deal to start with.”
“You won’t wear that old waistcoat, will you, Dick?”
“Bless you, no! Why I—”
“I didn’t mean to be personal, dear Dick,” she
said, fearing she had hurt his feelings. “’Tis a very
nice waistcoat, but what I meant was, that though it is an excellent
waistcoat for a settled-down man, it is not quite one for” (she
waited, and a blush expanded over her face, and then she went on again)—“for
going courting in.”
“No, I’ll wear my best winter one, with the leather lining,
that mother made. It is a beautiful, handsome waistcoat inside,
yes, as ever anybody saw. In fact, only the other day, I unbuttoned
it to show a chap that very lining, and he said it was the strongest,
handsomest lining you could wish to see on the king’s waistcoat
himself.”
“
I don’t quite know what to wear,” she said,
as if her habitual indifference alone to dress had kept back so important
a subject till now.
“Why, that blue frock you wore last week.”
“Doesn’t set well round the neck. I couldn’t
wear that.”
“But I shan’t care.”
“No, you won’t mind.”
“Well, then it’s all right. Because you only care
how you look to me, do you, dear? I only dress for you, that’s
certain.”
“Yes, but you see I couldn’t appear in it again very
well.”
“Any strange gentleman you mid meet in your journey might notice
the set of it, I suppose. Fancy, men in love don’t think
so much about how they look to other women.” It is difficult
to say whether a tone of playful banter or of gentle reproach prevailed
in the speech.
“Well then, Dick,” she said, with good-humoured frankness,
“I’ll own it. I shouldn’t like a stranger to
see me dressed badly, even though I am in love. ’Tis our
nature, I suppose.”
“You perfect woman!”
“Yes; if you lay the stress on ‘woman,’”
she murmured, looking at a group of hollyhocks in flower, round which
a crowd of butterflies had gathered like female idlers round a bonnet-shop.
“But about the dress. Why not wear the one you wore at
our party?”
“That sets well, but a girl of the name of Bet Tallor, who
lives near our house, has had one made almost like it (only in pattern,
though of miserably cheap stuff), and I couldn’t wear it on that
account. Dear me, I am afraid I can’t go now.”
“O yes, you must; I know you will!” said Dick, with dismay.
“Why not wear what you’ve got on?”
“What! this old one! After all, I think that by wearing
my gray one Saturday, I can make the blue one do for Sunday. Yes,
I will. A hat or a bonnet, which shall it be? Which do I
look best in?”
“Well, I think the bonnet is nicest, more quiet and matronly.”
“What’s the objection to the hat? Does it make
me look old?”
“O no; the hat is well enough; but it makes you look rather
too—you won’t mind me saying it, dear?”
“Not at all, for I shall wear the bonnet.”
“—Rather too coquettish and flirty for an engaged young
woman.”
She reflected a minute. “Yes; yes. Still, after
all, the hat would do best; hats
are best, you see. Yes,
I must wear the hat, dear Dicky, because I ought to wear a hat, you
know.”
PART THE FOURTH—AUTUMN
CHAPTER I: GOING NUTTING
Dick, dressed in his ‘second-best’ suit, burst into Fancy’s
sitting-room with a glow of pleasure on his face.
It was two o’clock on Friday, the day before her contemplated
visit to her father, and for some reason connected with cleaning the
school the children had been given this Friday afternoon for pastime,
in addition to the usual Saturday.
“Fancy! it happens just right that it is a leisure half day
with you. Smart is lame in his near-foot-afore, and so, as I can’t
do anything, I’ve made a holiday afternoon of it, and am come
for you to go nutting with me!”
She was sitting by the parlour window, with a blue frock lying across
her lap and scissors in her hand.
“Go nutting! Yes. But I’m afraid I can’t
go for an hour or so.”
“Why not? ’Tis the only spare afternoon we may
both have together for weeks.”
“This dress of mine, that I am going to wear on Sunday at Yalbury;—I
find it fits so badly that I must alter it a little, after all.
I told the dressmaker to make it by a pattern I gave her at the time;
instead of that, she did it her own way, and made me look a perfect
fright.”
“How long will you be?” he inquired, looking rather disappointed.
“Not long. Do wait and talk to me; come, do, dear.”
Dick sat down. The talking progressed very favourably, amid
the snipping and sewing, till about half-past two, at which time his
conversation began to be varied by a slight tapping upon his toe with
a walking-stick he had cut from the hedge as he came along. Fancy
talked and answered him, but sometimes the answers were so negligently
given, that it was evident her thoughts lay for the greater part in
her lap with the blue dress.
The clock struck three. Dick arose from his seat, walked round
the room with his hands behind him, examined all the furniture, then
sounded a few notes on the harmonium, then looked inside all the books
he could find, then smoothed Fancy’s head with his hand.
Still the snipping and sewing went on.
The clock struck four. Dick fidgeted about, yawned privately;
counted the knots in the table, yawned publicly; counted the flies on
the ceiling, yawned horribly; went into the kitchen and scullery, and
so thoroughly studied the principle upon which the pump was constructed
that he could have delivered a lecture on the subject. Stepping
back to Fancy, and finding still that she had not done, he went into
her garden and looked at her cabbages and potatoes, and reminded himself
that they seemed to him to wear a decidedly feminine aspect; then pulled
up several weeds, and came in again. The clock struck five, and
still the snipping and sewing went on.
Dick attempted to kill a fly, peeled all the rind off his walking-stick,
then threw the stick into the scullery because it was spoilt, produced
hideous discords from the harmonium, and accidentally overturned a vase
of flowers, the water from which ran in a rill across the table and
dribbled to the floor, where it formed a lake, the shape of which, after
the lapse of a few minutes, he began to modify considerably with his
foot, till it was like a map of England and Wales.
“Well, Dick, you needn’t have made quite such a mess.”
“Well, I needn’t, I suppose.” He walked up
to the blue dress, and looked at it with a rigid gaze. Then an
idea seemed to cross his brain.
“Fancy.”
“Yes.”
“I thought you said you were going to wear your gray gown all
day to-morrow on your trip to Yalbury, and in the evening too, when
I shall be with you, and ask your father for you?”
“So I am.”
“And the blue one only on Sunday?”
“And the blue one Sunday.”
“Well, dear, I sha’n’t be at Yalbury Sunday to
see it.”
“No, but I shall walk to Longpuddle church in the afternoon
with father, and such lots of people will be looking at me there, you
know; and it did set so badly round the neck.”
“I never noticed it, and ’tis like nobody else would.”
“They might.”
“Then why not wear the gray one on Sunday as well? ’Tis
as pretty as the blue one.”
“I might make the gray one do, certainly. But it isn’t
so good; it didn’t cost half so much as this one, and besides,
it would be the same I wore Saturday.”
“Then wear the striped one, dear.”
“I might.”
“Or the dark one.”
“Yes, I might; but I want to wear a fresh one they haven’t
seen.”
“I see, I see,” said Dick, in a voice in which the tones
of love were decidedly inconvenienced by a considerable emphasis, his
thoughts meanwhile running as follows: “I, the man she loves best
in the world, as she says, am to understand that my poor half-holiday
is to be lost, because she wants to wear on Sunday a gown there is not
the slightest necessity for wearing, simply, in fact, to appear more
striking than usual in the eyes of Longpuddle young men; and I not there,
either.”
“Then there are three dresses good enough for my eyes, but
neither is good enough for the youths of Longpuddle,” he said.
“No, not that exactly, Dick. Still, you see, I do want—to
look pretty to them—there, that’s honest! But I sha’n’t
be much longer.”
“How much?”
“A quarter of an hour.”
“Very well; I’ll come in in a quarter of an hour.”
“Why go away?”
“I mid as well.”
He went out, walked down the road, and sat upon a gate. Here
he meditated and meditated, and the more he meditated the more decidedly
did he begin to fume, and the more positive was he that his time had
been scandalously trifled with by Miss Fancy Day—that, so far
from being the simple girl who had never had a sweetheart before, as
she had solemnly assured him time after time, she was, if not a flirt,
a woman who had had no end of admirers; a girl most certainly too anxious
about her frocks; a girl, whose feelings, though warm, were not deep;
a girl who cared a great deal too much how she appeared in the eyes
of other men. “What she loves best in the world,”
he thought, with an incipient spice of his father’s grimness,
“is her hair and complexion. What she loves next best, her
gowns and hats; what she loves next best, myself, perhaps!”
Suffering great anguish at this disloyalty in himself and harshness
to his darling, yet disposed to persevere in it, a horribly cruel thought
crossed his mind. He would not call for her, as he had promised,
at the end of a quarter of an hour! Yes, it would be a punishment
she well deserved. Although the best part of the afternoon had
been wasted he would go nutting as he had intended, and go by himself.
He leaped over the gate, and pushed up the lane for nearly two miles,
till a winding path called Snail-Creep sloped up a hill and entered
a hazel copse by a hole like a rabbit’s burrow. In he plunged,
vanished among the bushes, and in a short time there was no sign of
his existence upon earth, save an occasional rustling of boughs and
snapping of twigs in divers points of Grey’s Wood.
Never man nutted as Dick nutted that afternoon. He worked like
a galley slave. Half-hour after half-hour passed away, and still
he gathered without ceasing. At last, when the sun had set, and
bunches of nuts could not be distinguished from the leaves which nourished
them, he shouldered his bag, containing quite two pecks of the finest
produce of the wood, about as much use to him as two pecks of stones
from the road, strolled down the woodland track, crossed the highway
and entered the homeward lane, whistling as he went.
Probably, Miss Fancy Day never before or after stood so low in Mr.
Dewy’s opinion as on that afternoon. In fact, it is just
possible that a few more blue dresses on the Longpuddle young men’s
account would have clarified Dick’s brain entirely, and made him
once more a free man.
But Venus had planned other developments, at any rate for the present.
Cuckoo-Lane, the way he pursued, passed over a ridge which rose keenly
against the sky about fifty yards in his van. Here, upon the bright
after-glow about the horizon, was now visible an irregular shape, which
at first he conceived to be a bough standing a little beyond the line
of its neighbours. Then it seemed to move, and, as he advanced
still further, there was no doubt that it was a living being sitting
in the bank, head bowed on hand. The grassy margin entirely prevented
his footsteps from being heard, and it was not till he was close that
the figure recognized him. Up it sprang, and he was face to face
with Fancy.
“Dick, Dick! O, is it you, Dick!”
“Yes, Fancy,” said Dick, in a rather repentant tone,
and lowering his nuts.
She ran up to him, flung her parasol on the grass, put her little
head against his breast, and then there began a narrative, disjointed
by such a hysterical weeping as was never surpassed for intensity in
the whole history of love.
“O Dick,” she sobbed out, “where have you been
away from me? O, I have suffered agony, and thought you would
never come any more! ’Tis cruel, Dick; no ’tisn’t,
it is justice! I’ve been walking miles and miles up and
down Grey’s Wood, trying to find you, till I was wearied and worn
out, and I could walk no further, and had come back this far!
O Dick, directly you were gone, I thought I had offended you and I put
down the dress; ’tisn’t finished now, and I never will finish,
it, and I’ll wear an old one Sunday! Yes, Dick, I will,
because I don’t care what I wear when you are not by my side—ha,
you think I do, but I don’t!—and I ran after you, and I
saw you go up Snail-Creep and not look back once, and then you plunged
in, and I after you; but I was too far behind. O, I did wish the
horrid bushes had been cut down, so that I could see your dear shape
again! And then I called out to you, and nobody answered, and
I was afraid to call very loud, lest anybody else should hear me.
Then I kept wandering and wandering about, and it was dreadful misery,
Dick. And then I shut my eyes and fell to picturing you looking
at some other woman, very pretty and nice, but with no affection or
truth in her at all, and then imagined you saying to yourself, ‘Ah,
she’s as good as Fancy, for Fancy told me a story, and was a flirt,
and cared for herself more than me, so now I’ll have this one
for my sweetheart.’ O, you won’t, will you, Dick,
for I do love you so!”
It is scarcely necessary to add that Dick renounced his freedom there
and then, and kissed her ten times over, and promised that no pretty
woman of the kind alluded to should ever engross his thoughts; in short,
that though he had been vexed with her, all such vexation was past,
and that henceforth and for ever it was simply Fancy or death for him.
And then they set about proceeding homewards, very slowly on account
of Fancy’s weariness, she leaning upon his shoulder, and in addition
receiving support from his arm round her waist; though she had sufficiently
recovered from her desperate condition to sing to him, ‘Why are
you wandering here, I pray?’ during the latter part of their walk.
Nor is it necessary to describe in detail how the bag of nuts was quite
forgotten until three days later, when it was found among the brambles
and restored empty to Mrs. Dewy, her initials being marked thereon in
red cotton; and how she puzzled herself till her head ached upon the
question of how on earth her meal-bag could have got into Cuckoo-Lane.
CHAPTER II: HONEY-TAKING, AND AFTERWARDS
Saturday evening saw Dick Dewy journeying on foot to Yalbury Wood,
according to the arrangement with Fancy.
The landscape being concave, at the going down of the sun everything
suddenly assumed a uniform robe of shade. The evening advanced
from sunset to dusk long before Dick’s arrival, and his progress
during the latter portion of his walk through the trees was indicated
by the flutter of terrified birds that had been roosting over the path.
And in crossing the glades, masses of hot dry air, that had been formed
on the hills during the day, greeted his cheeks alternately with clouds
of damp night air from the valleys. He reached the keeper-steward’s
house, where the grass-plot and the garden in front appeared light and
pale against the unbroken darkness of the grove from which he had emerged,
and paused at the garden gate.
He had scarcely been there a minute when he beheld a sort of procession
advancing from the door in his front. It consisted first of Enoch
the trapper, carrying a spade on his shoulder and a lantern dangling
in his hand; then came Mrs. Day, the light of the lantern revealing
that she bore in her arms curious objects about a foot long, in the
form of Latin crosses (made of lath and brown paper dipped in brimstone—called
matches by bee-masters); next came Miss Day, with a shawl thrown over
her head; and behind all, in the gloom, Mr. Frederic Shiner.
Dick, in his consternation at finding Shiner present, was at a loss
how to proceed, and retired under a tree to collect his thoughts.
“Here I be, Enoch,” said a voice; and the procession
advancing farther, the lantern’s rays illuminated the figure of
Geoffrey, awaiting their arrival beside a row of bee-hives, in front
of the path. Taking the spade from Enoch, he proceeded to dig
two holes in the earth beside the hives, the others standing round in
a circle, except Mrs. Day, who deposited her matches in the fork of
an apple-tree and returned to the house. The party remaining were
now lit up in front by the lantern in their midst, their shadows radiating
each way upon the garden-plot like the spokes of a wheel. An apparent
embarrassment of Fancy at the presence of Shiner caused a silence in
the assembly, during which the preliminaries of execution were arranged,
the matches fixed, the stake kindled, the two hives placed over the
two holes, and the earth stopped round the edges. Geoffrey then
stood erect, and rather more, to straighten his backbone after the digging.
“They were a peculiar family,” said Mr. Shiner, regarding
the hives reflectively.
Geoffrey nodded.
“Those holes will be the grave of thousands!” said Fancy.
“I think ’tis rather a cruel thing to do.”
Her father shook his head. “No,” he said, tapping
the hives to shake the dead bees from their cells, “if you suffocate
’em this way, they only die once: if you fumigate ’em in
the new way, they come to life again, and die o’ starvation; so
the pangs o’ death be twice upon ’em.”
“I incline to Fancy’s notion,” said Mr. Shiner,
laughing lightly.
“The proper way to take honey, so that the bees be neither
starved nor murdered, is a puzzling matter,” said the keeper steadily.
“I should like never to take it from them,” said Fancy.
“But ’tis the money,” said Enoch musingly.
“For without money man is a shadder!”
The lantern-light had disturbed many bees that had escaped from hives
destroyed some days earlier, and, demoralized by affliction, were now
getting a living as marauders about the doors of other hives.
Several flew round the head and neck of Geoffrey; then darted upon him
with an irritated bizz.
Enoch threw down the lantern, and ran off and pushed his head into
a currant bush; Fancy scudded up the path; and Mr. Shiner floundered
away helter-skelter among the cabbages. Geoffrey stood his ground,
unmoved and firm as a rock. Fancy was the first to return, followed
by Enoch picking up the lantern. Mr. Shiner still remained invisible.
“Have the craters stung ye?” said Enoch to Geoffrey.
“No, not much—on’y a little here and there,”
he said with leisurely solemnity, shaking one bee out of his shirt sleeve,
pulling another from among his hair, and two or three more from his
neck. The rest looked on during this proceeding with a complacent
sense of being out of it,—much as a European nation in a state
of internal commotion is watched by its neighbours.
“Are those all of them, father?” said Fancy, when Geoffrey
had pulled away five.
“Almost all,—though I feel one or two more sticking into
my shoulder and side. Ah! there’s another just begun again
upon my backbone. You lively young mortals, how did you get inside
there? However, they can’t sting me many times more, poor
things, for they must be getting weak. They mid as well stay in
me till bedtime now, I suppose.”
As he himself was the only person affected by this arrangement, it
seemed satisfactory enough; and after a noise of feet kicking against
cabbages in a blundering progress among them, the voice of Mr. Shiner
was heard from the darkness in that direction.
“Is all quite safe again?”
No answer being returned to this query, he apparently assumed that
he might venture forth, and gradually drew near the lantern again.
The hives were now removed from their position over the holes, one being
handed to Enoch to carry indoors, and one being taken by Geoffrey himself.
“Bring hither the lantern, Fancy: the spade can bide.”
Geoffrey and Enoch then went towards the house, leaving Shiner and
Fancy standing side by side on the garden-plot.
“Allow me,” said Shiner, stooping for the lantern and
seizing it at the same time with Fancy.
“I can carry it,” said Fancy, religiously repressing
all inclination to trifle. She had thoroughly considered that
subject after the tearful explanation of the bird-catching adventure
to Dick, and had decided that it would be dishonest in her, as an engaged
young woman, to trifle with men’s eyes and hands any more.
Finding that Shiner still retained his hold of the lantern, she relinquished
it, and he, having found her retaining it, also let go. The lantern
fell, and was extinguished. Fancy moved on.
“Where is the path?” said Mr. Shiner.
“Here,” said Fancy. “Your eyes will get used
to the dark in a minute or two.”
“Till that time will ye lend me your hand?” Fancy
gave him the extreme tips of her fingers, and they stepped from the
plot into the path.
“You don’t accept attentions very freely.”
“It depends upon who offers them.”
“A fellow like me, for instance.” A dead silence.
“Well, what do you say, Missie?”
“It then depends upon how they are offered.”
“Not wildly, and yet not careless-like; not purposely, and
yet not by chance; not too quick nor yet too slow.”
“How then?” said Fancy.
“Coolly and practically,” he said. “How would
that kind of love be taken?”
“Not anxiously, and yet not indifferently; neither blushing
nor pale; nor religiously nor yet quite wickedly.”
“Well, how?”
“Not at all.”
* * * * *
Geoffrey Day’s storehouse at the back of his dwelling was hung
with bunches of dried horehound, mint, and sage; brown-paper bags of
thyme and lavender; and long ropes of clean onions. On shelves
were spread large red and yellow apples, and choice selections of early
potatoes for seed next year;—vulgar crowds of commoner kind lying
beneath in heaps. A few empty beehives were clustered around a
nail in one corner, under which stood two or three barrels of new cider
of the first crop, each bubbling and squirting forth from the yet open
bunghole.
Fancy was now kneeling beside the two inverted hives, one of which
rested against her lap, for convenience in operating upon the contents.
She thrust her sleeves above her elbows, and inserted her small pink
hand edgewise between each white lobe of honeycomb, performing the act
so adroitly and gently as not to unseal a single cell. Then cracking
the piece off at the crown of the hive by a slight backward and forward
movement, she lifted each portion as it was loosened into a large blue
platter, placed on a bench at her side.
“Bother these little mortals!” said Geoffrey, who was
holding the light to her, and giving his back an uneasy twist.
“I really think I may as well go indoors and take ’em out,
poor things! for they won’t let me alone. There’s
two a stinging wi’ all their might now. I’m sure I
wonder their strength can last so long.”
“All right, friend; I’ll hold the candle whilst you are
gone,” said Mr. Shiner, leisurely taking the light, and allowing
Geoffrey to depart, which he did with his usual long paces.
He could hardly have gone round to the house-door when other footsteps
were heard approaching the outbuilding; the tip of a finger appeared
in the hole through which the wood latch was lifted, and Dick Dewy came
in, having been all this time walking up and down the wood, vainly waiting
for Shiner’s departure.
Fancy looked up and welcomed him rather confusedly. Shiner
grasped the candlestick more firmly, and, lest doing this in silence
should not imply to Dick with sufficient force that he was quite at
home and cool, he sang invincibly—
“‘King Arthur he had three sons.’”
“Father here?” said Dick.
“Indoors, I think,” said Fancy, looking pleasantly at
him.
Dick surveyed the scene, and did not seem inclined to hurry off just
at that moment. Shiner went on singing—
“‘The miller was drown’d in his pond,
The weaver was hung in his yarn,
And the d--- ran away with the little tail-or,
With the broadcloth under his arm.’”
“That’s a terrible crippled rhyme, if that’s your
rhyme!” said Dick, with a grain of superciliousness in his tone.
“It’s no use your complaining to me about the rhyme!”
said Mr. Shiner. “You must go to the man that made it.”
Fancy by this time had acquired confidence.
“Taste a bit, Mr. Dewy,” she said, holding up to him
a small circular piece of honeycomb that had been the last in the row
of layers, remaining still on her knees and flinging back her head to
look in his face; “and then I’ll taste a bit too.”
“And I, if you please,” said Mr. Shiner. Nevertheless
the farmer looked superior, as if he could even now hardly join the
trifling from very importance of station; and after receiving the honeycomb
from Fancy, he turned it over in his hand till the cells began to be
crushed, and the liquid honey ran down from his fingers in a thin string.
Suddenly a faint cry from Fancy caused them to gaze at her.
“What’s the matter, dear?” said Dick.
“It is nothing, but O-o! a bee has stung the inside of my lip!
He was in one of the cells I was eating!”
“We must keep down the swelling, or it may be serious!”
said Shiner, stepping up and kneeling beside her. “Let me
see it.”
“No, no!”
“Just let
me see it,” said Dick, kneeling on the
other side: and after some hesitation she pressed down her lip with
one finger to show the place. “O, I hope ’twill soon
be better! I don’t mind a sting in ordinary places, but
it is so bad upon your lip,” she added with tears in her eyes,
and writhing a little from the pain.
Shiner held the light above his head and pushed his face close to
Fancy’s, as if the lip had been shown exclusively to himself,
upon which Dick pushed closer, as if Shiner were not there at all.
“It is swelling,” said Dick to her right aspect.
“It isn’t swelling,” said Shiner to her left aspect.
“Is it dangerous on the lip?” cried Fancy. “I
know it is dangerous on the tongue.”
“O no, not dangerous!” answered Dick.
“Rather dangerous,” had answered Shiner simultaneously.
“I must try to bear it!” said Fancy, turning again to
the hives.
“Hartshorn-and-oil is a good thing to put to it, Miss Day,”
said Shiner with great concern.
“Sweet-oil-and-hartshorn I’ve found to be a good thing
to cure stings, Miss Day,” said Dick with greater concern.
“We have some mixed indoors; would you kindly run and get it
for me?” she said.
Now, whether by inadvertence, or whether by mischievous intention,
the individuality of the
you was so carelessly denoted that both
Dick and Shiner sprang to their feet like twin acrobats, and marched
abreast to the door; both seized the latch and lifted it, and continued
marching on, shoulder to shoulder, in the same manner to the dwelling-house.
Not only so, but entering the room, they marched as before straight
up to Mrs. Day’s chair, letting the door in the oak partition
slam so forcibly, that the rows of pewter on the dresser rang like a
bell.
“Mrs. Day, Fancy has stung her lip, and wants you to give me
the hartshorn, please,” said Mr. Shiner, very close to Mrs. Day’s
face.
“O, Mrs. Day, Fancy has asked me to bring out the hartshorn,
please, because she has stung her lip!” said Dick, a little closer
to Mrs. Day’s face.
“Well, men alive! that’s no reason why you should eat
me, I suppose!” said Mrs. Day, drawing back.
She searched in the corner-cupboard, produced the bottle, and began
to dust the cork, the rim, and every other part very carefully, Dick’s
hand and Shiner’s hand waiting side by side.
“Which is head man?” said Mrs. Day. “Now,
don’t come mumbudgeting so close again. Which is head man?”
Neither spoke; and the bottle was inclined towards Shiner.
Shiner, as a high-class man, would not look in the least triumphant,
and turned to go off with it as Geoffrey came downstairs after the search
in his linen for concealed bees.
“O—that you, Master Dewy?”
Dick assured the keeper that it was; and the young man then determined
upon a bold stroke for the attainment of his end, forgetting that the
worst of bold strokes is the disastrous consequences they involve if
they fail.
“I’ve come on purpose to speak to you very particular,
Mr. Day,” he said, with a crushing emphasis intended for the ears
of Mr. Shiner, who was vanishing round the door-post at that moment.
“Well, I’ve been forced to go upstairs and unrind myself,
and shake some bees out o’ me” said Geoffrey, walking slowly
towards the open door, and standing on the threshold. “The
young rascals got into my shirt and wouldn’t be quiet nohow.”
Dick followed him to the door.
“I’ve come to speak a word to you,” he repeated,
looking out at the pale mist creeping up from the gloom of the valley.
“You may perhaps guess what it is about.”
The keeper lowered his hands into the depths of his pockets, twirled
his eyes, balanced himself on his toes, looked as perpendicularly downward
as if his glance were a plumb-line, then horizontally, collecting together
the cracks that lay about his face till they were all in the neighbourhood
of his eyes.
“Maybe I don’t know,” he replied.
Dick said nothing; and the stillness was disturbed only by some small
bird that was being killed by an owl in the adjoining wood, whose cry
passed into the silence without mingling with it.
“I’ve left my hat up in chammer,” said Geoffrey;
“wait while I step up and get en.”
“I’ll be in the garden,” said Dick.
He went round by a side wicket into the garden, and Geoffrey went
upstairs. It was the custom in Mellstock and its vicinity to discuss
matters of pleasure and ordinary business inside the house, and to reserve
the garden for very important affairs: a custom which, as is supposed,
originated in the desirability of getting away at such times from the
other members of the family when there was only one room for living
in, though it was now quite as frequently practised by those who suffered
from no such limitation to the size of their domiciles.
The head-keeper’s form appeared in the dusky garden, and Dick
walked towards him. The elder paused and leant over the rail of
a piggery that stood on the left of the path, upon which Dick did the
same; and they both contemplated a whitish shadowy shape that was moving
about and grunting among the straw of the interior.
“I’ve come to ask for Fancy,” said Dick.
“I’d as lief you hadn’t.”
“Why should that be, Mr. Day?”
“Because it makes me say that you’ve come to ask what
ye be’n’t likely to have. Have ye come for anything
else?”
“Nothing.”
“Then I’ll just tell ’ee you’ve come on a
very foolish errand. D’ye know what her mother was?”
“No.”
“A teacher in a landed family’s nursery, who was foolish
enough to marry the keeper of the same establishment; for I was only
a keeper then, though now I’ve a dozen other irons in the fire
as steward here for my lord, what with the timber sales and the yearly
fellings, and the gravel and sand sales and one thing and ’tother.
However, d’ye think Fancy picked up her good manners, the smooth
turn of her tongue, her musical notes, and her knowledge of books, in
a homely hole like this?”
“No.”
“D’ye know where?”
“No.”
“Well, when I went a-wandering after her mother’s death,
she lived with her aunt, who kept a boarding-school, till her aunt married
Lawyer Green—a man as sharp as a needle—and the school was
broke up. Did ye know that then she went to the training-school,
and that her name stood first among the Queen’s scholars of her
year?”
“I’ve heard so.”
“And that when she sat for her certificate as Government teacher,
she had the highest of the first class?”
“Yes.”
“Well, and do ye know what I live in such a miserly way for
when I’ve got enough to do without it, and why I make her work
as a schoolmistress instead of living here?”
“No.”
“That if any gentleman, who sees her to be his equal in polish,
should want to marry her, and she want to marry him, he sha’n’t
be superior to her in pocket. Now do ye think after this that
you be good enough for her?”
“No.”
“Then good-night t’ee, Master Dewy.”
“Good-night, Mr. Day.”
Modest Dick’s reply had faltered upon his tongue, and he turned
away wondering at his presumption in asking for a woman whom he had
seen from the beginning to be so superior to him.
CHAPTER III: FANCY IN THE RAIN
The next scene is a tempestuous afternoon in the following month,
and Fancy Day is discovered walking from her father’s home towards
Mellstock.
A single vast gray cloud covered the country, from which the small
rain and mist had just begun to blow down in wavy sheets, alternately
thick and thin. The trees of the fields and plantations writhed
like miserable men as the air wound its way swiftly among them: the
lowest portions of their trunks, that had hardly ever been known to
move, were visibly rocked by the fiercer gusts, distressing the mind
by its painful unwontedness, as when a strong man is seen to shed tears.
Low-hanging boughs went up and down; high and erect boughs went to and
fro; the blasts being so irregular, and divided into so many cross-currents,
that neighbouring branches of the same tree swept the skies in independent
motions, crossed each other, or became entangled. Across the open
spaces flew flocks of green and yellowish leaves, which, after travelling
a long distance from their parent trees, reached the ground, and lay
there with their under-sides upward.
As the rain and wind increased, and Fancy’s bonnet-ribbons
leapt more and more snappishly against her chin, she paused on entering
Mellstock Lane to consider her latitude, and the distance to a place
of shelter. The nearest house was Elizabeth Endorfield’s,
in Higher Mellstock, whose cottage and garden stood not far from the
junction of that hamlet with the road she followed. Fancy hastened
onward, and in five minutes entered a gate, which shed upon her toes
a flood of water-drops as she opened it.
“Come in, chiel!” a voice exclaimed, before Fancy had
knocked: a promptness that would have surprised her had she not known
that Mrs. Endorfield was an exceedingly and exceptionally sharp woman
in the use of her eyes and ears.
Fancy went in and sat down. Elizabeth was paring potatoes for
her husband’s supper.
Scrape, scrape, scrape; then a toss, and splash went a potato into
a bucket of water.
Now, as Fancy listlessly noted these proceedings of the dame, she
began to reconsider an old subject that lay uppermost in her heart.
Since the interview between her father and Dick, the days had been melancholy
days for her. Geoffrey’s firm opposition to the notion of
Dick as a son-in-law was more than she had expected. She had frequently
seen her lover since that time, it is true, and had loved him more for
the opposition than she would have otherwise dreamt of doing—which
was a happiness of a certain kind. Yet, though love is thus an
end in itself, it must be believed to be the means to another end if
it is to assume the rosy hues of an unalloyed pleasure. And such
a belief Fancy and Dick were emphatically denied just now.
Elizabeth Endorfield had a repute among women which was in its nature
something between distinction and notoriety. It was founded on
the following items of character. She was shrewd and penetrating;
her house stood in a lonely place; she never went to church; she wore
a red cloak; she always retained her bonnet indoors and she had a pointed
chin. Thus far her attributes were distinctly Satanic; and those
who looked no further called her, in plain terms, a witch. But
she was not gaunt, nor ugly in the upper part of her face, nor particularly
strange in manner; so that, when her more intimate acquaintances spoke
of her the term was softened, and she became simply a Deep Body, who
was as long-headed as she was high. It may be stated that Elizabeth
belonged to a class of suspects who were gradually losing their mysterious
characteristics under the administration of the young vicar; though,
during the long reign of Mr. Grinham, the parish of Mellstock had proved
extremely favourable to the growth of witches.
While Fancy was revolving all this in her mind, and putting it to
herself whether it was worth while to tell her troubles to Elizabeth,
and ask her advice in getting out of them, the witch spoke.
“You be down—proper down,” she said suddenly, dropping
another potato into the bucket.
Fancy took no notice.
“About your young man.”
Fancy reddened. Elizabeth seemed to be watching her thoughts.
Really, one would almost think she must have the powers people ascribed
to her.
“Father not in the humour for’t, hey?” Another
potato was finished and flung in. “Ah, I know about it.
Little birds tell me things that people don’t dream of my knowing.”
Fancy was desperate about Dick, and here was a chance—O, such
a wicked chance—of getting help; and what was goodness beside
love!
“I wish you’d tell me how to put him in the humour for
it?” she said.
“That I could soon do,” said the witch quietly.
“Really? O, do; anyhow—I don’t care—so
that it is done! How could I do it, Mrs. Endorfield?”
“Nothing so mighty wonderful in it.”
“Well, but how?”
“By witchery, of course!” said Elizabeth.
“No!” said Fancy.
“’Tis, I assure ye. Didn’t you ever hear
I was a witch?”
“Well,” hesitated Fancy, “I have heard you called
so.”
“And you believed it?”
“I can’t say that I did exactly believe it, for ’tis
very horrible and wicked; but, O, how I do wish it was possible for
you to be one!”
“So I am. And I’ll tell you how to bewitch your
father to let you marry Dick Dewy.”
“Will it hurt him, poor thing?”
“Hurt who?”
“Father.”
“No; the charm is worked by common sense, and the spell can
only be broke by your acting stupidly.”
Fancy looked rather perplexed, and Elizabeth went on:
“This fear of Lizz—whatever ’tis—
By great and small;
She makes pretence to common sense,
And that’s all.
“You must do it like this.” The witch laid down
her knife and potato, and then poured into Fancy’s ear a long
and detailed list of directions, glancing up from the corner of her
eye into Fancy’s face with an expression of sinister humour.
Fancy’s face brightened, clouded, rose and sank, as the narrative
proceeded. “There,” said Elizabeth at length, stooping
for the knife and another potato, “do that, and you’ll have
him by-long and by-late, my dear.”
“And do it I will!” said Fancy.
She then turned her attention to the external world once more.
The rain continued as usual, but the wind had abated considerably during
the discourse. Judging that it was now possible to keep an umbrella
erect, she pulled her hood again over her bonnet, bade the witch good-bye,
and went her way.
CHAPTER IV: THE SPELL
Mrs. Endorfield’s advice was duly followed.
“I be proper sorry that your daughter isn’t so well as
she might be,” said a Mellstock man to Geoffrey one morning.
“But is there anything in it?” said Geoffrey uneasily,
as he shifted his hat to the right. “I can’t understand
the report. She didn’t complain to me a bit when I saw her.”
“No appetite at all, they say.”
Geoffrey crossed to Mellstock and called at the school that afternoon.
Fancy welcomed him as usual, and asked him to stay and take tea with
her.
“I be’n’t much for tea, this time o’ day,”
he said, but stayed.
During the meal he watched her narrowly. And to his great consternation
discovered the following unprecedented change in the healthy girl—that
she cut herself only a diaphanous slice of bread-and-butter, and, laying
it on her plate, passed the meal-time in breaking it into pieces, but
eating no more than about one-tenth of the slice. Geoffrey hoped
she would say something about Dick, and finish up by weeping, as she
had done after the decision against him a few days subsequent to the
interview in the garden. But nothing was said, and in due time
Geoffrey departed again for Yalbury Wood.
“’Tis to be hoped poor Miss Fancy will be able to keep
on her school,” said Geoffrey’s man Enoch to Geoffrey the
following week, as they were shovelling up ant-hills in the wood.
Geoffrey stuck in the shovel, swept seven or eight ants from his
sleeve, and killed another that was prowling round his ear, then looked
perpendicularly into the earth as usual, waiting for Enoch to say more.
“Well, why shouldn’t she?” said the keeper at last.
“The baker told me yesterday,” continued Enoch, shaking
out another emmet that had run merrily up his thigh, “that the
bread he’ve left at that there school-house this last month would
starve any mouse in the three creations; that ’twould so!
And afterwards I had a pint o’ small down at Morrs’s, and
there I heard more.”
“What might that ha’ been?”
“That she used to have a pound o’ the best rolled butter
a week, regular as clockwork, from Dairyman Viney’s for herself,
as well as just so much salted for the helping girl, and the ’ooman
she calls in; but now the same quantity d’last her three weeks,
and then ’tis thoughted she throws it away sour.”
“Finish doing the emmets, and carry the bag home-along.”
The keeper resumed his gun, tucked it under his arm, and went on without
whistling to the dogs, who however followed, with a bearing meant to
imply that they did not expect any such attentions when their master
was reflecting.
On Saturday morning a note came from Fancy. He was not to trouble
about sending her the couple of rabbits, as was intended, because she
feared she should not want them. Later in the day Geoffrey went
to Casterbridge and called upon the butcher who served Fancy with fresh
meat, which was put down to her father’s account.
“I’ve called to pay up our little bill, Neighbour Haylock,
and you can gie me the chiel’s account at the same time.”
Mr. Haylock turned round three quarters of a circle in the midst
of a heap of joints, altered the expression of his face from meat to
money, went into a little office consisting only of a door and a window,
looked very vigorously into a book which possessed length but no breadth;
and then, seizing a piece of paper and scribbling thereupon, handed
the bill.
Probably it was the first time in the history of commercial transactions
that the quality of shortness in a butcher’s bill was a cause
of tribulation to the debtor. “Why, this isn’t all
she’ve had in a whole month!” said Geoffrey.
“Every mossel,” said the butcher—“(now, Dan,
take that leg and shoulder to Mrs. White’s, and this eleven pound
here to Mr. Martin’s)—you’ve been treating her to
smaller joints lately, to my thinking, Mr. Day?”
“Only two or three little scram rabbits this last week, as
I am alive—I wish I had!”
“Well, my wife said to me—(Dan! not too much, not too
much on that tray at a time; better go twice)—my wife said to
me as she posted up the books: she says, ‘Miss Day must have been
affronted this summer during that hot muggy weather that spolit so much
for us; for depend upon’t,’ she says, ‘she’ve
been trying John Grimmett unknown to us: see her account else.’
’Tis little, of course, at the best of times, being only for one,
but now ’tis next kin to nothing.”
“I’ll inquire,” said Geoffrey despondingly.
He returned by way of Mellstock, and called upon Fancy, in fulfilment
of a promise. It being Saturday, the children were enjoying a
holiday, and on entering the residence Fancy was nowhere to be seen.
Nan, the charwoman, was sweeping the kitchen.
“Where’s my da’ter?” said the keeper.
“Well, you see she was tired with the week’s teaching,
and this morning she said, ‘Nan, I sha’n’t get up
till the evening.’ You see, Mr. Day, if people don’t
eat, they can’t work; and as she’ve gie’d up eating,
she must gie up working.”
“Have ye carried up any dinner to her?”
“No; she don’t want any. There, we all know that
such things don’t come without good reason—not that I wish
to say anything about a broken heart, or anything of the kind.”
Geoffrey’s own heart felt inconveniently large just then.
He went to the staircase and ascended to his daughter’s door.
“Fancy!”
“Come in, father.”
To see a person in bed from any cause whatever, on a fine afternoon,
is depressing enough; and here was his only child Fancy, not only in
bed, but looking very pale. Geoffrey was visibly disturbed.
“Fancy, I didn’t expect to see thee here, chiel,”
he said. “What’s the matter?”
“I’m not well, father.”
“How’s that?”
“Because I think of things.”
“What things can you have to think o’ so mortal much?”
“You know, father.”
“You think I’ve been cruel to thee in saying that that
penniless Dick o’ thine sha’n’t marry thee, I suppose?”
No answer.
“Well, you know, Fancy, I do it for the best, and he isn’t
good enough for thee. You know that well enough.”
Here he again looked at her as she lay. “Well, Fancy, I
can’t let my only chiel die; and if you can’t live without
en, you must ha’ en, I suppose.”
“O, I don’t want him like that; all against your will,
and everything so disobedient!” sighed the invalid.
“No, no, ’tisn’t against my will. My wish
is, now I d’see how ’tis hurten thee to live without en,
that he shall marry thee as soon as we’ve considered a little.
That’s my wish flat and plain, Fancy. There, never cry,
my little maid! You ought to ha’ cried afore; no need o’
crying now ’tis all over. Well, howsoever, try to step over
and see me and mother-law to-morrow, and ha’ a bit of dinner wi’
us.”
“And—Dick too?”
“Ay, Dick too, ’far’s I know.”
“And
when do you think you’ll have considered,
father, and he may marry me?” she coaxed.
“Well, there, say next Midsummer; that’s not a day too
long to wait.”
On leaving the school Geoffrey went to the tranter’s.
Old William opened the door.
“Is your grandson Dick in ’ithin, William?”
“No, not just now, Mr. Day. Though he’ve been at
home a good deal lately.”
“O, how’s that?”
“What wi’ one thing, and what wi’ t’other,
he’s all in a mope, as might be said. Don’t seem the
feller he used to. Ay, ’a will sit studding and thinking
as if ’a were going to turn chapel-member, and then do nothing
but traypse and wamble about. Used to be such a chatty boy, too,
Dick did; and now ’a don’t speak at all. But won’t
ye step inside? Reuben will be home soon, ’a b’lieve.”
“No, thank you, I can’t stay now. Will ye just
ask Dick if he’ll do me the kindness to step over to Yalbury to-morrow
with my da’ter Fancy, if she’s well enough? I don’t
like her to come by herself, now she’s not so terrible topping
in health.”
“So I’ve heard. Ay, sure, I’ll tell him without
fail.”
CHAPTER V: AFTER GAINING HER POINT
The visit to Geoffrey passed off as delightfully as a visit might
have been expected to pass off when it was the first day of smooth experience
in a hitherto obstructed love-course. And then came a series of
several happy days, of the same undisturbed serenity. Dick could
court her when he chose; stay away when he chose,—which was never;
walk with her by winding streams and waterfalls and autumn scenery till
dews and twilight sent them home. And thus they drew near the
day of the Harvest Thanksgiving, which was also the time chosen for
opening the organ in Mellstock Church.
It chanced that Dick on that very day was called away from Mellstock.
A young acquaintance had died of consumption at Charmley, a neighbouring
village, on the previous Monday, and Dick, in fulfilment of a long-standing
promise, was to assist in carrying him to the grave. When on Tuesday,
Dick went towards the school to acquaint Fancy with the fact, it is
difficult to say whether his own disappointment at being denied the
sight of her triumphant
début as organist, was greater
than his vexation that his pet should on this great occasion be deprived
of the pleasure of his presence. However, the intelligence was
communicated. She bore it as she best could, not without many
expressions of regret, and convictions that her performance would be
nothing to her now.
Just before eleven o’clock on Sunday he set out upon his sad
errand. The funeral was to be immediately after the morning service,
and as there were four good miles to walk, driving being inconvenient,
it became necessary to start comparatively early. Half an hour
later would certainly have answered his purpose quite as well, yet at
the last moment nothing would content his ardent mind but that he must
go a mile out of his way in the direction of the school, in the hope
of getting a glimpse of his Love as she started for church.
Striking, therefore, into the lane towards the school, instead of
across the ewelease direct to Charmley, he arrived opposite her door
as his goddess emerged.
If ever a woman looked a divinity, Fancy Day appeared one that morning
as she floated down those school steps, in the form of a nebulous collection
of colours inclining to blue. With an audacity unparalleled in
the whole history of village-school-mistresses at this date—partly
owing, no doubt, to papa’s respectable accumulation of cash, which
rendered her profession not altogether one of necessity—she had
actually donned a hat and feather, and lowered her hitherto plainly
looped-up hair, which now fell about her shoulders in a profusion of
curls. Poor Dick was astonished: he had never seen her look so
distractingly beautiful before, save on Christmas-eve, when her hair
was in the same luxuriant condition of freedom. But his first
burst of delighted surprise was followed by less comfortable feelings,
as soon as his brain recovered its power to think.
Fancy had blushed;—was it with confusion? She had also
involuntarily pressed back her curls. She had not expected him.
“Fancy, you didn’t know me for a moment in my funeral
clothes, did you?”
“Good-morning, Dick—no, really, I didn’t know you
for an instant in such a sad suit.”
He looked again at the gay tresses and hat. “You’ve
never dressed so charming before, dearest.”
“I like to hear you praise me in that way, Dick,” she
said, smiling archly. “It is meat and drink to a woman.
Do I look nice really?”
“Fie! you know it. Did you remember,—I mean didn’t
you remember about my going away to-day?”
“Well, yes, I did, Dick; but, you know, I wanted to look well;—forgive
me.”
“Yes, darling; yes, of course,—there’s nothing
to forgive. No, I was only thinking that when we talked on Tuesday
and Wednesday and Thursday and Friday about my absence to-day, and I
was so sorry for it, you said, Fancy, so were you sorry, and almost
cried, and said it would be no pleasure to you to be the attraction
of the church to-day, since I could not be there.”
“My dear one, neither will it be so much pleasure to me . .
. But I do take a little delight in my life, I suppose,” she pouted.
“Apart from mine?”
She looked at him with perplexed eyes. “I know you are
vexed with me, Dick, and it is because the first Sunday I have curls
and a hat and feather since I have been here happens to be the very
day you are away and won’t be with me. Yes, say it is, for
that is it! And you think that all this week I ought to have remembered
you wouldn’t be here to-day, and not have cared to be better dressed
than usual. Yes, you do, Dick, and it is rather unkind!”
“No, no,” said Dick earnestly and simply, “I didn’t
think so badly of you as that. I only thought that—if
you
had been going away, I shouldn’t have tried new attractions for
the eyes of other people. But then of course you and I are different,
naturally.”
“Well, perhaps we are.”
“Whatever will the vicar say, Fancy?”
“I don’t fear what he says in the least!” she answered
proudly. “But he won’t say anything of the sort you
think. No, no.”
“He can hardly have conscience to, indeed.”
“Now come, you say, Dick, that you quite forgive me, for I
must go,” she said with sudden gaiety, and skipped backwards into
the porch. “Come here, sir;—say you forgive me, and
then you shall kiss me;—you never have yet when I have worn curls,
you know. Yes, just where you want to so much,—yes, you
may!”
Dick followed her into the inner corner, where he was probably not
slow in availing himself of the privilege offered.
“Now that’s a treat for you, isn’t it?” she
continued. “Good-bye, or I shall be late. Come and
see me to-morrow: you’ll be tired to-night.”
Thus they parted, and Fancy proceeded to the church. The organ
stood on one side of the chancel, close to and under the immediate eye
of the vicar when he was in the pulpit, and also in full view of the
congregation. Here she sat down, for the first time in such a
conspicuous position, her seat having previously been in a remote spot
in the aisle.
“Good heavens—disgraceful! Curls and a hat and
feather!” said the daughters of the small gentry, who had either
only curly hair without a hat and feather, or a hat and feather without
curly hair. “A bonnet for church always,” said sober
matrons.
That Mr. Maybold was conscious of her presence close beside him during
the sermon; that he was not at all angry at her development of costume;
that he admired her, she perceived. But she did not see that he
loved her during that sermon-time as he had never loved a woman before;
that her proximity was a strange delight to him; and that he gloried
in her musical success that morning in a spirit quite beyond a mere
cleric’s glory at the inauguration of a new order of things.
The old choir, with humbled hearts, no longer took their seats in
the gallery as heretofore (which was now given up to the school-children
who were not singers, and a pupil-teacher), but were scattered about
with their wives in different parts of the church. Having nothing
to do with conducting the service for almost the first time in their
lives, they all felt awkward, out of place, abashed, and inconvenienced
by their hands. The tranter had proposed that they should stay
away to-day and go nutting, but grandfather William would not hear of
such a thing for a moment. “No,” he replied reproachfully,
and quoted a verse: “Though this has come upon us, let not our
hearts be turned back, or our steps go out of the way.”
So they stood and watched the curls of hair trailing down the back
of the successful rival, and the waving of her feather, as she swayed
her head. After a few timid notes and uncertain touches her playing
became markedly correct, and towards the end full and free. But,
whether from prejudice or unbiassed judgment, the venerable body of
musicians could not help thinking that the simpler notes they had been
wont to bring forth were more in keeping with the simplicity of their
old church than the crowded chords and interludes it was her pleasure
to produce.
CHAPTER VI: INTO TEMPTATION
The day was done, and Fancy was again in the school-house.
About five o’clock it began to rain, and in rather a dull frame
of mind she wandered into the schoolroom, for want of something better
to do. She was thinking—of her lover Dick Dewy? Not
precisely. Of how weary she was of living alone: how unbearable
it would be to return to Yalbury under the rule of her strange-tempered
step-mother; that it was far better to be married to anybody than do
that; that eight or nine long months had yet to be lived through ere
the wedding could take place.
At the side of the room were high windows of Ham-hill stone, upon
either sill of which she could sit by first mounting a desk and using
it as a footstool. As the evening advanced here she perched herself,
as was her custom on such wet and gloomy occasions, put on a light shawl
and bonnet, opened the window, and looked out at the rain.
The window overlooked a field called the Grove, and it was the position
from which she used to survey the crown of Dick’s passing hat
in the early days of their acquaintance and meetings. Not a living
soul was now visible anywhere; the rain kept all people indoors who
were not forced abroad by necessity, and necessity was less importunate
on Sundays than during the week.
Sitting here and thinking again—of her lover, or of the sensation
she had created at church that day?—well, it is unknown—thinking
and thinking she saw a dark masculine figure arising into distinctness
at the further end of the Grove—a man without an umbrella.
Nearer and nearer he came, and she perceived that he was in deep mourning,
and then that it was Dick. Yes, in the fondness and foolishness
of his young heart, after walking four miles, in a drizzling rain without
overcoat or umbrella, and in face of a remark from his love that he
was not to come because he would be tired, he had made it his business
to wander this mile out of his way again, from sheer wish of spending
ten minutes in her presence.
“O Dick, how wet you are!” she said, as he drew up under
the window. “Why, your coat shines as if it had been varnished,
and your hat—my goodness, there’s a streaming hat!”
“O, I don’t mind, darling!” said Dick cheerfully.
“Wet never hurts me, though I am rather sorry for my best clothes.
However, it couldn’t be helped; we lent all the umbrellas to the
women. I don’t know when I shall get mine back!”
“And look, there’s a nasty patch of something just on
your shoulder.”
“Ah, that’s japanning; it rubbed off the clamps of poor
Jack’s coffin when we lowered him from our shoulders upon the
bier! I don’t care about that, for ’twas the last
deed I could do for him; and ’tis hard if you can’t afford
a coat for an old friend.”
Fancy put her hand to her mouth for half a minute. Underneath
the palm of that little hand there existed for that half-minute a little
yawn.
“Dick, I don’t like you to stand there in the wet.
And you mustn’t sit down. Go home and change your things.
Don’t stay another minute.”
“One kiss after coming so far,” he pleaded.
“If I can reach, then.”
He looked rather disappointed at not being invited round to the door.
She twisted from her seated position and bent herself downwards, but
not even by standing on the plinth was it possible for Dick to get his
lips into contact with hers as she held them. By great exertion
she might have reached a little lower; but then she would have exposed
her head to the rain.
“Never mind, Dick; kiss my hand,” she said, flinging
it down to him. “Now, good-bye.”
“Good-bye.”
He walked slowly away, turning and turning again to look at her till
he was out of sight. During the retreat she said to herself, almost
involuntarily, and still conscious of that morning’s triumph—“I
like Dick, and I love him; but how plain and sorry a man looks in the
rain, with no umbrella, and wet through!”
As he vanished, she made as if to descend from her seat; but glancing
in the other direction she saw another form coming along the same track.
It was also that of a man. He, too, was in black from top to toe;
but he carried an umbrella.
He drew nearer, and the direction of the rain caused him so to slant
his umbrella that from her height above the ground his head was invisible,
as she was also to him. He passed in due time directly beneath
her, and in looking down upon the exterior of his umbrella her feminine
eyes perceived it to be of superior silk—less common at that date
than since—and of elegant make. He reached the entrance
to the building, and Fancy suddenly lost sight of him. Instead
of pursuing the roadway as Dick had done he had turned sharply round
into her own porch.
She jumped to the floor, hastily flung off her shawl and bonnet,
smoothed and patted her hair till the curls hung in passable condition,
and listened. No knock. Nearly a minute passed, and still
there was no knock. Then there arose a soft series of raps, no
louder than the tapping of a distant woodpecker, and barely distinct
enough to reach her ears. She composed herself and flung open
the door.
In the porch stood Mr. Maybold.
There was a warm flush upon his face, and a bright flash in his eyes,
which made him look handsomer than she had ever seen him before.
“Good-evening, Miss Day.”
“Good-evening, Mr. Maybold,” she said, in a strange state
of mind. She had noticed, beyond the ardent hue of his face, that
his voice had a singular tremor in it, and that his hand shook like
an aspen leaf when he laid his umbrella in the corner of the porch.
Without another word being spoken by either, he came into the schoolroom,
shut the door, and moved close to her. Once inside, the expression
of his face was no more discernible, by reason of the increasing dusk
of evening.
“I want to speak to you,” he then said; “seriously—on
a perhaps unexpected subject, but one which is all the world to me—I
don’t know what it may be to you, Miss Day.”
No reply.
“Fancy, I have come to ask you if you will be my wife?”
As a person who has been idly amusing himself with rolling a snowball
might start at finding he had set in motion an avalanche, so did Fancy
start at these words from the vicar. And in the dead silence which
followed them, the breathings of the man and of the woman could be distinctly
and separately heard; and there was this difference between them—his
respirations gradually grew quieter and less rapid after the enunciation
hers, from having been low and regular, increased in quickness and force,
till she almost panted.
“I cannot, I cannot, Mr. Maybold—I cannot! Don’t
ask me!” she said.
“Don’t answer in a hurry!” he entreated.
“And do listen to me. This is no sudden feeling on my part.
I have loved you for more than six months! Perhaps my late interest
in teaching the children here has not been so single-minded as it seemed.
You will understand my motive—like me better, perhaps, for honestly
telling you that I have struggled against my emotion continually, because
I have thought that it was not well for me to love you! But I
resolved to struggle no longer; I have examined the feeling; and the
love I bear you is as genuine as that I could bear any woman!
I see your great charm; I respect your natural talents, and the refinement
they have brought into your nature—they are quite enough, and
more than enough for me! They are equal to anything ever required
of the mistress of a quiet parsonage-house—the place in which
I shall pass my days, wherever it may be situated. O Fancy, I
have watched you, criticized you even severely, brought my feelings
to the light of judgment, and still have found them rational, and such
as any man might have expected to be inspired with by a woman like you!
So there is nothing hurried, secret, or untoward in my desire to do
this. Fancy, will you marry me?”
No answer was returned.
“Don’t refuse; don’t,” he implored.
“It would be foolish of you—I mean cruel! Of course
we would not live here, Fancy. I have had for a long time the
offer of an exchange of livings with a friend in Yorkshire, but I have
hitherto refused on account of my mother. There we would go.
Your musical powers shall be still further developed; you shall have
whatever pianoforte you like; you shall have anything, Fancy, anything
to make you happy—pony-carriage, flowers, birds, pleasant society;
yes, you have enough in you for any society, after a few months of travel
with me! Will you, Fancy, marry me?”
Another pause ensued, varied only by the surging of the rain against
the window-panes, and then Fancy spoke, in a faint and broken voice.
“Yes, I will,” she said.
“God bless you, my own!” He advanced quickly, and
put his arm out to embrace her. She drew back hastily. “No
no, not now!” she said in an agitated whisper. “There
are things;—but the temptation is, O, too strong, and I can’t
resist it; I can’t tell you now, but I must tell you! Don’t,
please, don’t come near me now! I want to think, I can scarcely
get myself used to the idea of what I have promised yet.”
The next minute she turned to a desk, buried her face in her hands,
and burst into a hysterical fit of weeping. “O, leave me
to myself!” she sobbed; “leave me! O, leave me!”
“Don’t be distressed; don’t, dearest!”
It was with visible difficulty that he restrained himself from approaching
her. “You shall tell me at your leisure what it is that
grieves you so; I am happy—beyond all measure happy!—at
having your simple promise.”
“And do go and leave me now!”
“But I must not, in justice to you, leave for a minute, until
you are yourself again.”
“There then,” she said, controlling her emotion, and
standing up; “I am not disturbed now.”
He reluctantly moved towards the door. “Good-bye!”
he murmured tenderly. “I’ll come to-morrow about this
time.”
CHAPTER VII: SECOND THOUGHTS
The next morning the vicar rose early. The first thing he did
was to write a long and careful letter to his friend in Yorkshire.
Then, eating a little breakfast, he crossed the meadows in the direction
of Casterbridge, bearing his letter in his pocket, that he might post
it at the town office, and obviate the loss of one day in its transmission
that would have resulted had he left it for the foot-post through the
village.
It was a foggy morning, and the trees shed in noisy water-drops the
moisture they had collected from the thick air, an acorn occasionally
falling from its cup to the ground, in company with the drippings.
In the meads, sheets of spiders’-web, almost opaque with wet,
hung in folds over the fences, and the falling leaves appeared in every
variety of brown, green, and yellow hue.
A low and merry whistling was heard on the highway he was approaching,
then the light footsteps of a man going in the same direction as himself.
On reaching the junction of his path with the road, the vicar beheld
Dick Dewy’s open and cheerful face. Dick lifted his hat,
and the vicar came out into the highway that Dick was pursuing.
“Good-morning, Dewy. How well you are looking!”
said Mr. Maybold.
“Yes, sir, I am well—quite well! I am going to
Casterbridge now, to get Smart’s collar; we left it there Saturday
to be repaired.”
“I am going to Casterbridge, so we’ll walk together,”
the vicar said. Dick gave a hop with one foot to put himself in
step with Mr. Maybold, who proceeded: “I fancy I didn’t
see you at church yesterday, Dewy. Or were you behind the pier?”
“No; I went to Charmley. Poor John Dunford chose me to
be one of his bearers a long time before he died, and yesterday was
the funeral. Of course I couldn’t refuse, though I should
have liked particularly to have been at home as ’twas the day
of the new music.”
“Yes, you should have been. The musical portion of the
service was successful—very successful indeed; and what is more
to the purpose, no ill-feeling whatever was evinced by any of the members
of the old choir. They joined in the singing with the greatest
good-will.”
“’Twas natural enough that I should want to be there,
I suppose,” said Dick, smiling a private smile; “considering
who the organ-player was.”
At this the vicar reddened a little, and said, “Yes, yes,”
though not at all comprehending Dick’s true meaning, who, as he
received no further reply, continued hesitatingly, and with another
smile denoting his pride as a lover—
“I suppose you know what I mean, sir? You’ve heard
about me and—Miss Day?”
The red in Maybold’s countenance went away: he turned and looked
Dick in the face.
“No,” he said constrainedly, “I’ve heard
nothing whatever about you and Miss Day.”
“Why, she’s my sweetheart, and we are going to be married
next Midsummer. We are keeping it rather close just at present,
because ’tis a good many months to wait; but it is her father’s
wish that we don’t marry before, and of course we must submit.
But the time ’ill soon slip along.”
“Yes, the time will soon slip along—Time glides away
every day—yes.”
Maybold said these words, but he had no idea of what they were.
He was conscious of a cold and sickly thrill throughout him; and all
he reasoned was this that the young creature whose graces had intoxicated
him into making the most imprudent resolution of his life, was less
an angel than a woman.
“You see, sir,” continued the ingenuous Dick, “’twill
be better in one sense. I shall by that time be the regular manager
of a branch o’ father’s business, which has very much increased
lately, and business, which we think of starting elsewhere. It
has very much increased lately, and we expect next year to keep a’
extra couple of horses. We’ve already our eye on one—brown
as a berry, neck like a rainbow, fifteen hands, and not a gray hair
in her—offered us at twenty-five want a crown. And to kip
pace with the times I have had some cards prented and I beg leave to
hand you one, sir.”
“Certainly,” said the vicar, mechanically taking the
card that Dick offered him.
“I turn in here by Grey’s Bridge,” said Dick.
“I suppose you go straight on and up town?”
“Yes.”
“Good-morning, sir.”
“Good-morning, Dewy.”
Maybold stood still upon the bridge, holding the card as it had been
put into his hand, and Dick’s footsteps died away towards Durnover
Mill. The vicar’s first voluntary action was to read the
card:—
DEWY AND SON,
TRANTERS AND HAULIERS,
MELLSTOCK.
NB.—Furniture, Coals, Potatoes, Live and Dead Stock, removed to
any distance on the shortest notice.
Mr. Maybold leant over the parapet of the bridge and looked into
the river. He saw—without heeding—how the water came
rapidly from beneath the arches, glided down a little steep, then spread
itself over a pool in which dace, trout, and minnows sported at ease
among the long green locks of weed that lay heaving and sinking with
their roots towards the current. At the end of ten minutes spent
leaning thus, he drew from his pocket the letter to his friend, tore
it deliberately into such minute fragments that scarcely two syllables
remained in juxtaposition, and sent the whole handful of shreds fluttering
into the water. Here he watched them eddy, dart, and turn, as
they were carried downwards towards the ocean and gradually disappeared
from his view. Finally he moved off, and pursued his way at a
rapid pace back again to Mellstock Vicarage.
Nerving himself by a long and intense effort, he sat down in his
study and wrote as follows:
“DEAR MISS DAY,—The meaning of your words,
‘the temptation is too strong,’ of your sadness and your
tears, has been brought home to me by an accident. I know to-day
what I did not know yesterday—that you are not a free woman.
“Why did you not tell me—why didn’t you?
Did you suppose I knew? No. Had I known, my conduct in coming
to you as I did would have been reprehensible.
“But I don’t chide you! Perhaps no blame attaches
to you—I can’t tell. Fancy, though my opinion of you
is assailed and disturbed in a way which cannot be expressed, I love
you still, and my word to you holds good yet. But will you, in
justice to an honest man who relies upon your word to him, consider
whether, under the circumstances, you can honourably forsake him?—Yours
ever sincerely,
“ARTHUR MAYBOLD.”
He rang the bell. “Tell Charles to take these copybooks
and this note to the school at once.”
The maid took the parcel and the letter, and in a few minutes a boy
was seen to leave the vicarage gate, with the one under his arm, and
the other in his hand. The vicar sat with his hand to his brow,
watching the lad as he descended Church Lane and entered the waterside
path which intervened between that spot and the school.
Here he was met by another boy, and after a free salutation and pugilistic
frisk had passed between the two, the second boy came on his way to
the vicarage, and the other vanished out of sight.
The boy came to the door, and a note for Mr. Maybold was brought
in.
He knew the writing. Opening the envelope with an unsteady
hand, he read the subjoined words:
“DEAR MR. MAYBOLD,—I have been thinking seriously
and sadly through the whole of the night of the question you put to
me last evening and of my answer. That answer, as an honest woman,
I had no right to give.
“It is my nature—perhaps all women’s—to love
refinement of mind and manners; but even more than this, to be ever
fascinated with the idea of surroundings more elegant and pleasing than
those which have been customary. And you praised me, and praise
is life to me. It was alone my sensations at these things which
prompted my reply. Ambition and vanity they would be called; perhaps
they are so.
“After this explanation I hope you will generously allow me
to withdraw the answer I too hastily gave.
“And one more request. To keep the meeting of last night,
and all that passed between us there, for ever a secret. Were
it to become known, it would utterly blight the happiness of a trusting
and generous man, whom I love still, and shall love always.—Yours
sincerely,
“FANCY DAY.
The last written communication that ever passed from the vicar to
Fancy, was a note containing these words only:
“Tell him everything; it is best. He will
forgive you.”
PART THE FIFTH: CONCLUSION
CHAPTER I: ‘THE KNOT THERE’S NO UNTYING’
The last day of the story is dated just subsequent to that point
in the development of the seasons when country people go to bed among
nearly naked trees, are lulled to sleep by a fall of rain, and awake
next morning among green ones; when the landscape appears embarrassed
with the sudden weight and brilliancy of its leaves; when the night-jar
comes and strikes up for the summer his tune of one note; when the apple-trees
have bloomed, and the roads and orchard-grass become spotted with fallen
petals; when the faces of the delicate flowers are darkened, and their
heads weighed down, by the throng of honey-bees, which increase their
humming till humming is too mild a term for the all-pervading sound;
and when cuckoos, blackbirds, and sparrows, that have hitherto been
merry and respectful neighbours, become noisy and persistent intimates.
The exterior of Geoffrey Day’s house in Yalbury Wood appeared
exactly as was usual at that season, but a frantic barking of the dogs
at the back told of unwonted movements somewhere within. Inside
the door the eyes beheld a gathering, which was a rarity indeed for
the dwelling of the solitary wood-steward and keeper.
About the room were sitting and standing, in various gnarled attitudes,
our old acquaintance, grandfathers James and William, the tranter, Mr.
Penny, two or three children, including Jimmy and Charley, besides three
or four country ladies and gentlemen from a greater distance who do
not require any distinction by name. Geoffrey was seen and heard
stamping about the outhouse and among the bushes of the garden, attending
to details of daily routine before the proper time arrived for their
performance, in order that they might be off his hands for the day.
He appeared with his shirt-sleeves rolled up; his best new nether garments,
in which he had arrayed himself that morning, being temporarily disguised
under a weekday apron whilst these proceedings were in operation.
He occasionally glanced at the hives in passing, to see if his wife’s
bees were swarming, ultimately rolling down his shirt-sleeves and going
indoors, talking to tranter Dewy whilst buttoning the wristbands, to
save time; next going upstairs for his best waistcoat, and coming down
again to make another remark whilst buttoning that, during the time
looking fixedly in the tranter’s face as if he were a looking-glass.
The furniture had undergone attenuation to an alarming extent, every
duplicate piece having been removed, including the clock by Thomas Wood;
Ezekiel Saunders being at last left sole referee in matters of time.
Fancy was stationary upstairs, receiving her layers of clothes and
adornments, and answering by short fragments of laughter which had more
fidgetiness than mirth in them, remarks that were made from time to
time by Mrs. Dewy and Mrs. Penny, who were assisting her at the toilet,
Mrs. Day having pleaded a queerness in her head as a reason for shutting
herself up in an inner bedroom for the whole morning. Mrs. Penny
appeared with nine corkscrew curls on each side of her temples, and
a back comb stuck upon her crown like a castle on a steep.
The conversation just now going on was concerning the banns, the
last publication of which had been on the Sunday previous.
“And how did they sound?” Fancy subtly inquired.
“Very beautiful indeed,” said Mrs. Penny. “I
never heard any sound better.”
“But
how?”
“O,
so natural and elegant, didn’t they,
Reuben!” she cried, through the chinks of the unceiled floor,
to the tranter downstairs.
“What’s that?” said the tranter, looking up inquiringly
at the floor above him for an answer.
“Didn’t Dick and Fancy sound well when they were called
home in church last Sunday?” came downwards again in Mrs. Penny’s
voice.
“Ay, that they did, my sonnies!—especially the first
time. There was a terrible whispering piece of work in the congregation,
wasn’t there, neighbour Penny?” said the tranter, taking
up the thread of conversation on his own account and, in order to be
heard in the room above, speaking very loud to Mr. Penny, who sat at
the distance of three feet from him, or rather less.
“I never can mind seeing such a whispering as there was,”
said Mr. Penny, also loudly, to the room above. “And such
sorrowful envy on the maidens’ faces; really, I never did see
such envy as there was!”
Fancy’s lineaments varied in innumerable little flushes, and
her heart palpitated innumerable little tremors of pleasure. “But
perhaps,” she said, with assumed indifference, “it was only
because no religion was going on just then?”
“O, no; nothing to do with that. ’Twas because
of your high standing in the parish. It was just as if they had
one and all caught Dick kissing and coling ye to death, wasn’t
it, Mrs. Dewy?”
“Ay; that ’twas.”
“How people will talk about one’s doings!” Fancy
exclaimed.
“Well, if you make songs about yourself, my dear, you can’t
blame other people for singing ’em.”
“Mercy me! how shall I go through it?” said the young
lady again, but merely to those in the bedroom, with a breathing of
a kind between a sigh and a pant, round shining eyes, and warm face.
“O, you’ll get through it well enough, child,”
said Mrs. Dewy placidly. “The edge of the performance is
took off at the calling home; and when once you get up to the chancel
end o’ the church, you feel as saucy as you please. I’m
sure I felt as brave as a sodger all through the deed—though of
course I dropped my face and looked modest, as was becoming to a maid.
Mind you do that, Fancy.”
“And I walked into the church as quiet as a lamb, I’m
sure,” subjoined Mrs. Penny. “There, you see Penny
is such a little small man. But certainly, I was flurried in the
inside o’ me. Well, thinks I, ’tis to be, and here
goes! And do you do the same: say, ‘’Tis to be, and
here goes!’”
“Is there such wonderful virtue in ‘’Tis to be,
and here goes!’” inquired Fancy.
“Wonderful! ’Twill carry a body through it all
from wedding to churching, if you only let it out with spirit enough.”
“Very well, then,” said Fancy, blushing. “’Tis
to be, and here goes!”
“That’s a girl for a husband!” said Mrs. Dewy.
“I do hope he’ll come in time!” continued the bride-elect,
inventing a new cause of affright, now that the other was demolished.
“’Twould be a thousand pities if he didn’t come,
now you be so brave,” said Mrs. Penny.
Grandfather James, having overheard some of these remarks, said downstairs
with mischievous loudness—
“I’ve known some would-be weddings when the men didn’t
come.”
“They’ve happened not to come, before now, certainly,”
said Mr. Penny, cleaning one of the glasses of his spectacles.
“O, do hear what they are saying downstairs,” whispered
Fancy. “Hush, hush!”
She listened.
“They have, haven’t they, Geoffrey?” continued
grandfather James, as Geoffrey entered.
“Have what?” said Geoffrey.
“The men have been known not to come.”
“That they have,” said the keeper.
“Ay; I’ve knowed times when the wedding had to be put
off through his not appearing, being tired of the woman. And another
case I knowed was when the man was catched in a man-trap crossing Oaker’s
Wood, and the three months had run out before he got well, and the banns
had to be published over again.”
“How horrible!” said Fancy.
“They only say it on purpose to tease ’ee, my dear,”
said Mrs. Dewy.
“’Tis quite sad to think what wretched shifts poor maids
have been put to,” came again from downstairs. “Ye
should hear Clerk Wilkins, my brother-law, tell his experiences in marrying
couples these last thirty year: sometimes one thing, sometimes another—’tis
quite heart-rending—enough to make your hair stand on end.”
“Those things don’t happen very often, I know,”
said Fancy, with smouldering uneasiness.
“Well, really ’tis time Dick was here,” said the
tranter.
“Don’t keep on at me so, grandfather James and Mr. Dewy,
and all you down there!” Fancy broke out, unable to endure any
longer. “I am sure I shall die, or do something, if you
do!”
“Never you hearken to these old chaps, Miss Day!” cried
Nat Callcome, the best man, who had just entered, and threw his voice
upward through the chinks of the floor as the others had done.
“’Tis all right; Dick’s coming on like a wild feller;
he’ll be here in a minute. The hive o’ bees his mother
gie’d en for his new garden swarmed jist as he was starting, and
he said, ‘I can’t afford to lose a stock o’ bees;
no, that I can’t, though I fain would; and Fancy wouldn’t
wish it on any account.’ So he jist stopped to ting to ’em
and shake ’em.”
“A genuine wise man,” said Geoffrey.
“To be sure, what a day’s work we had yesterday!”
Mr. Callcome continued, lowering his voice as if it were not necessary
any longer to include those in the room above among his audience, and
selecting a remote corner of his best clean handkerchief for wiping
his face. “To be sure!”
“Things so heavy, I suppose,” said Geoffrey, as if reading
through the chimney-window from the far end of the vista.
“Ay,” said Nat, looking round the room at points from
which furniture had been removed. “And so awkward to carry,
too. ’Twas ath’art and across Dick’s garden;
in and out Dick’s door; up and down Dick’s stairs; round
and round Dick’s chammers till legs were worn to stumps: and Dick
is so particular, too. And the stores of victuals and drink that
lad has laid in: why, ’tis enough for Noah’s ark!
I’m sure I never wish to see a choicer half-dozen of hams than
he’s got there in his chimley; and the cider I tasted was a very
pretty drop, indeed;—none could desire a prettier cider.”
“They be for the love and the stalled ox both. Ah, the
greedy martels!” said grandfather James.
“Well, may-be they be. Surely,” says I, “that
couple between ’em have heaped up so much furniture and victuals,
that anybody would think they were going to take hold the big end of
married life first, and begin wi’ a grown-up family. Ah,
what a bath of heat we two chaps were in, to be sure, a-getting that
furniture in order!”
“I do so wish the room below was ceiled,” said Fancy,
as the dressing went on; “we can hear all they say and do down
there.”
“Hark! Who’s that?” exclaimed a small pupil-teacher,
who also assisted this morning, to her great delight. She ran
half-way down the stairs, and peeped round the banister. “O,
you should, you should, you should!” she exclaimed, scrambling
up to the room again.
“What?” said Fancy.
“See the bridesmaids! They’ve just a come!
’Tis wonderful, really! ’tis wonderful how muslin can be
brought to it. There, they don’t look a bit like themselves,
but like some very rich sisters o’ theirs that nobody knew they
had!”
“Make ’em come up to me, make ’em come up!”
cried Fancy ecstatically; and the four damsels appointed, namely, Miss
Susan Dewy, Miss Bessie Dewy, Miss Vashti Sniff, and Miss Mercy Onmey,
surged upstairs, and floated along the passage.
“I wish Dick would come!” was again the burden of Fancy.
The same instant a small twig and flower from the creeper outside
the door flew in at the open window, and a masculine voice said, “Ready,
Fancy dearest?”
“There he is, he is!” cried Fancy, tittering spasmodically,
and breathing as it were for the first time that morning.
The bridesmaids crowded to the window and turned their heads in the
direction pointed out, at which motion eight earrings all swung as one:—not
looking at Dick because they particularly wanted to see him, but with
an important sense of their duty as obedient ministers of the will of
that apotheosised being—the Bride.
“He looks very taking!” said Miss Vashti Sniff, a young
lady who blushed cream-colour and wore yellow bonnet ribbons.
Dick was advancing to the door in a painfully new coat of shining
cloth, primrose-coloured waistcoat, hat of the same painful style of
newness, and with an extra quantity of whiskers shaved off his face,
and hair cut to an unwonted shortness in honour of the occasion.
“Now, I’ll run down,” said Fancy, looking at herself
over her shoulder in the glass, and flitting off.
“O Dick!” she exclaimed, “I am so glad you are
come! I knew you would, of course, but I thought, Oh if you shouldn’t!”
“Not come, Fancy! Het or wet, blow or snow, here come
I to-day! Why, what’s possessing your little soul?
You never used to mind such things a bit.”
“Ah, Mr. Dick, I hadn’t hoisted my colours and committed
myself then!” said Fancy.
“’Tis a pity I can’t marry the whole five of ye!”
said Dick, surveying them all round.
“Heh-heh-heh!” laughed the four bridesmaids, and Fancy
privately touched Dick and smoothed him down behind his shoulder, as
if to assure herself that he was there in flesh and blood as her own
property.
“Well, whoever would have thought such a thing?” said
Dick, taking off his hat, sinking into a chair, and turning to the elder
members of the company.
The latter arranged their eyes and lips to signify that in their
opinion nobody could have thought such a thing, whatever it was.
“That my bees should ha’ swarmed just then, of all times
and seasons!” continued Dick, throwing a comprehensive glance
like a net over the whole auditory. “And ’tis a fine
swarm, too: I haven’t seen such a fine swarm for these ten years.”
“A’ excellent sign,” said Mrs. Penny, from the
depths of experience. “A’ excellent sign.”
“I am glad everything seems so right,” said Fancy with
a breath of relief.
“And so am I,” said the four bridesmaids with much sympathy.
“Well, bees can’t be put off,” observed the inharmonious
grandfather James. “Marrying a woman is a thing you can
do at any moment; but a swarm o’ bees won’t come for the
asking.”
Dick fanned himself with his hat. “I can’t think,”
he said thoughtfully, “whatever ’twas I did to offend Mr.
Maybold, a man I like so much too. He rather took to me when he
came first, and used to say he should like to see me married, and that
he’d marry me, whether the young woman I chose lived in his parish
or no. I just hinted to him of it when I put in the banns, but
he didn’t seem to take kindly to the notion now, and so I said
no more. I wonder how it was.”
“I wonder!” said Fancy, looking into vacancy with those
beautiful eyes of hers—too refined and beautiful for a tranter’s
wife; but, perhaps, not too good.
“Altered his mind, as folks will, I suppose,” said the
tranter. “Well, my sonnies, there’ll be a good strong
party looking at us to-day as we go along.”
“And the body of the church,” said Geoffrey, “will
be lined with females, and a row of young fellers’ heads, as far
down as the eyes, will be noticed just above the sills of the chancel-winders.”
“Ay, you’ve been through it twice,” said Reuben,
“and well mid know.”
“I can put up with it for once,” said Dick, “or
twice either, or a dozen times.”
“O Dick!” said Fancy reproachfully.
“Why, dear, that’s nothing,—only just a bit of
a flourish. You be as nervous as a cat to-day.”
“And then, of course, when ’tis all over,” continued
the tranter, “we shall march two and two round the parish.”
“Yes, sure,” said Mr. Penny: “two and two: every
man hitched up to his woman, ’a b’lieve.”
“I never can make a show of myself in that way!” said
Fancy, looking at Dick to ascertain if he could.
“I’m agreed to anything you and the company like, my
dear!” said Mr. Richard Dewy heartily.
“Why, we did when we were married, didn’t we, Ann?”
said the tranter; “and so do everybody, my sonnies.”
“And so did we,” said Fancy’s father.
“And so did Penny and I,” said Mrs. Penny: “I wore
my best Bath clogs, I remember, and Penny was cross because it made
me look so tall.”
“And so did father and mother,” said Miss Mercy Onmey.
“And I mean to, come next Christmas!” said Nat the groomsman
vigorously, and looking towards the person of Miss Vashti Sniff.
“Respectable people don’t nowadays,” said Fancy.
“Still, since poor mother did, I will.”
“Ay,” resumed the tranter, “’twas on a White
Tuesday when I committed it. Mellstock Club walked the same day,
and we new-married folk went a-gaying round the parish behind ’em.
Everybody used to wear something white at Whitsuntide in them days.
My sonnies, I’ve got the very white trousers that I wore, at home
in box now. Ha’n’t I, Ann?”
“You had till I cut ’em up for Jimmy,” said Mrs.
Dewy.
“And we ought, by rights, after doing this parish, to go round
Higher and Lower Mellstock, and call at Viney’s, and so work our
way hither again across He’th,” said Mr. Penny, recovering
scent of the matter in hand. “Dairyman Viney is a very respectable
man, and so is Farmer Kex, and we ought to show ourselves to them.”
“True,” said the tranter, “we ought to go round
Mellstock to do the thing well. We shall form a very striking
object walking along in rotation, good-now, neighbours?”
“That we shall: a proper pretty sight for the nation,”
said Mrs. Penny.
“Hullo!” said the tranter, suddenly catching sight of
a singular human figure standing in the doorway, and wearing a long
smock-frock of pillow-case cut and of snowy whiteness. “Why,
Leaf! whatever dost thou do here?”
“I’ve come to know if so be I can come to the wedding—hee-hee!”
said Leaf in a voice of timidity.
“Now, Leaf,” said the tranter reproachfully, “you
know we don’t want ’ee here to-day: we’ve got no room
for ye, Leaf.”
“Thomas Leaf, Thomas Leaf, fie upon ye for prying!” said
old William.
“I know I’ve got no head, but I thought, if I washed
and put on a clane shirt and smock-frock, I might just call,”
said Leaf, turning away disappointed and trembling.
“Poor feller!” said the tranter, turning to Geoffrey.
“Suppose we must let en come? His looks are rather against
en, and he is terrible silly; but ’a have never been in jail,
and ’a won’t do no harm.”
Leaf looked with gratitude at the tranter for these praises, and
then anxiously at Geoffrey, to see what effect they would have in helping
his cause.
“Ay, let en come,” said Geoffrey decisively. “Leaf,
th’rt welcome, ’st know;” and Leaf accordingly remained.
They were now all ready for leaving the house, and began to form
a procession in the following order: Fancy and her father, Dick and
Susan Dewy, Nat Callcome and Vashti Sniff, Ted Waywood and Mercy Onmey,
and Jimmy and Bessie Dewy. These formed the executive, and all
appeared in strict wedding attire. Then came the tranter and Mrs.
Dewy, and last of all Mr. and Mrs. Penny;—the tranter conspicuous
by his enormous gloves, size eleven and three-quarters, which appeared
at a distance like boxing gloves bleached, and sat rather awkwardly
upon his brown hands; this hall-mark of respectability having been set
upon himself to-day (by Fancy’s special request) for the first
time in his life.
“The proper way is for the bridesmaids to walk together,”
suggested Fancy.
“What? ’Twas always young man and young woman,
arm in crook, in my time!” said Geoffrey, astounded.
“And in mine!” said the tranter.
“And in ours!” said Mr. and Mrs. Penny.
“Never heard o’ such a thing as woman and woman!”
said old William; who, with grandfather James and Mrs. Day, was to stay
at home.
“Whichever way you and the company like, my dear!” said
Dick, who, being on the point of securing his right to Fancy, seemed
willing to renounce all other rights in the world with the greatest
pleasure. The decision was left to Fancy.
“Well, I think I’d rather have it the way mother had
it,” she said, and the couples moved along under the trees, every
man to his maid.
“Ah!” said grandfather James to grandfather William as
they retired, “I wonder which she thinks most about, Dick or her
wedding raiment!”
“Well, ’tis their nature,” said grandfather William.
“Remember the words of the prophet Jeremiah: ‘Can a maid
forget her ornaments, or a bride her attire?’”
Now among dark perpendicular firs, like the shafted columns of a
cathedral; now through a hazel copse, matted with primroses and wild
hyacinths; now under broad beeches in bright young leaves they threaded
their way into the high road over Yalbury Hill, which dipped at that
point directly into the village of Geoffrey Day’s parish; and
in the space of a quarter of an hour Fancy found herself to be Mrs.
Richard Dewy, though, much to her surprise, feeling no other than Fancy
Day still.
On the circuitous return walk through the lanes and fields, amid
much chattering and laughter, especially when they came to stiles, Dick
discerned a brown spot far up a turnip field.
“Why, ’tis Enoch!” he said to Fancy. “I
thought I missed him at the house this morning. How is it he’s
left you?”
“He drank too much cider, and it got into his head, and they
put him in Weatherbury stocks for it. Father was obliged to get
somebody else for a day or two, and Enoch hasn’t had anything
to do with the woods since.”
“We might ask him to call down to-night. Stocks are nothing
for once, considering ’tis our wedding day.” The bridal
party was ordered to halt.
“Eno-o-o-o-ch!” cried Dick at the top of his voice.
“Y-a-a-a-a-a-as!” said Enoch from the distance.
“D’ye know who I be-e-e-e-e-e?”
“No-o-o-o-o-o-o!”
“Dick Dew-w-w-w-wy!”
“O-h-h-h-h-h!”
“Just a-ma-a-a-a-a-arried!”
“O-h-h-h-h-h!”
“This is my wife, Fa-a-a-a-a-ancy!” (holding her up to
Enoch’s view as if she had been a nosegay.)
“O-h-h-h-h-h!”
“Will ye come across to the party to-ni-i-i-i-i-i-ight!”
“Ca-a-a-a-a-an’t!”
“Why n-o-o-o-o-ot?”
“Don’t work for the family no-o-o-o-ow!”
“Not nice of Master Enoch,” said Dick, as they resumed
their walk.
“You mustn’t blame en,” said Geoffrey; “the
man’s not hisself now; he’s in his morning frame of mind.
When he’s had a gallon o’ cider or ale, or a pint or two
of mead, the man’s well enough, and his manners be as good as
anybody’s in the kingdom.”
CHAPTER II: UNDER THE GREENWOOD TREE
The point in Yalbury Wood which abutted on the end of Geoffrey Day’s
premises was closed with an ancient tree, horizontally of enormous extent,
though having no great pretensions to height. Many hundreds of
birds had been born amidst the boughs of this single tree; tribes of
rabbits and hares had nibbled at its bark from year to year; quaint
tufts of fungi had sprung from the cavities of its forks; and countless
families of moles and earthworms had crept about its roots. Beneath
and beyond its shade spread a carefully-tended grass-plot, its purpose
being to supply a healthy exercise-ground for young chickens and pheasants;
the hens, their mothers, being enclosed in coops placed upon the same
green flooring.
All these encumbrances were now removed, and as the afternoon advanced,
the guests gathered on the spot, where music, dancing, and the singing
of songs went forward with great spirit throughout the evening.
The propriety of every one was intense by reason of the influence of
Fancy, who, as an additional precaution in this direction, had strictly
charged her father and the tranter to carefully avoid saying ‘thee’
and ‘thou’ in their conversation, on the plea that those
ancient words sounded so very humiliating to persons of newer taste;
also that they were never to be seen drawing the back of the hand across
the mouth after drinking—a local English custom of extraordinary
antiquity, but stated by Fancy to be decidedly dying out among the better
classes of society.
In addition to the local musicians present, a man who had a thorough
knowledge of the tambourine was invited from the village of Tantrum
Clangley,—a place long celebrated for the skill of its inhabitants
as performers on instruments of percussion. These important members
of the assembly were relegated to a height of two or three feet from
the ground, upon a temporary erection of planks supported by barrels.
Whilst the dancing progressed the older persons sat in a group under
the trunk of the tree,—the space being allotted to them somewhat
grudgingly by the young ones, who were greedy of pirouetting room,—and
fortified by a table against the heels of the dancers. Here the
gaffers and gammers, whose dancing days were over, told stories of great
impressiveness, and at intervals surveyed the advancing and retiring
couples from the same retreat, as people on shore might be supposed
to survey a naval engagement in the bay beyond; returning again to their
tales when the pause was over. Those of the whirling throng, who,
during the rests between each figure, turned their eyes in the direction
of these seated ones, were only able to discover, on account of the
music and bustle, that a very striking circumstance was in course of
narration—denoted by an emphatic sweep of the hand, snapping of
the fingers, close of the lips, and fixed look into the centre of the
listener’s eye for the space of a quarter of a minute, which raised
in that listener such a reciprocating working of face as to sometimes
make the distant dancers half wish to know what such an interesting
tale could refer to.
Fancy caused her looks to wear as much matronly expression as was
obtainable out of six hours’ experience as a wife, in order that
the contrast between her own state of life and that of the unmarried
young women present might be duly impressed upon the company: occasionally
stealing glances of admiration at her left hand, but this quite privately;
for her ostensible bearing concerning the matter was intended to show
that, though she undoubtedly occupied the most wondrous position in
the eyes of the world that had ever been attained, she was almost unconscious
of the circumstance, and that the somewhat prominent position in which
that wonderfully-emblazoned left hand was continually found to be placed,
when handing cups and saucers, knives, forks, and glasses, was quite
the result of accident. As to wishing to excite envy in the bosoms
of her maiden companions, by the exhibition of the shining ring, every
one was to know it was quite foreign to the dignity of such an experienced
married woman. Dick’s imagination in the meantime was far
less capable of drawing so much wontedness from his new condition.
He had been for two or three hours trying to feel himself merely a newly-married
man, but had been able to get no further in the attempt than to realize
that he was Dick Dewy, the tranter’s son, at a party given by
Lord Wessex’s head man-in-charge, on the outlying Yalbury estate,
dancing and chatting with Fancy Day.
Five country dances, including ‘Haste to the Wedding,’
two reels, and three fragments of horn-pipes, brought them to the time
for supper, which, on account of the dampness of the grass from the
immaturity of the summer season, was spread indoors. At the conclusion
of the meal Dick went out to put the horse in; and Fancy, with the elder
half of the four bridesmaids, retired upstairs to dress for the journey
to Dick’s new cottage near Mellstock.
“How long will you be putting on your bonnet, Fancy?”
Dick inquired at the foot of the staircase. Being now a man of
business and married, he was strong on the importance of time, and doubled
the emphasis of his words in conversing, and added vigour to his nods.
“Only a minute.”
“How long is that?”
“Well, dear, five.”
“Ah, sonnies!” said the tranter, as Dick retired, “’tis
a talent of the female race that low numbers should stand for high,
more especially in matters of waiting, matters of age, and matters of
money.”
“True, true, upon my body,” said Geoffrey.
“Ye spak with feeling, Geoffrey, seemingly.”
“Anybody that d’know my experience might guess that.”
“What’s she doing now, Geoffrey?”
“Claning out all the upstairs drawers and cupboards, and dusting
the second-best chainey—a thing that’s only done once a
year. ‘If there’s work to be done I must do it,’
says she, ‘wedding or no.’”
“’Tis my belief she’s a very good woman at bottom.”
“She’s terrible deep, then.”
Mrs. Penny turned round. “Well, ’tis humps and
hollers with the best of us; but still and for all that, Dick and Fancy
stand as fair a chance of having a bit of sunsheen as any married pair
in the land.”
“Ay, there’s no gainsaying it.”
Mrs. Dewy came up, talking to one person and looking at another.
“Happy, yes,” she said. “’Tis always so
when a couple is so exactly in tune with one another as Dick and she.”
“When they be’n’t too poor to have time to sing,”
said grandfather James.
“I tell ye, neighbours, when the pinch comes,” said the
tranter: “when the oldest daughter’s boots be only a size
less than her mother’s, and the rest o’ the flock close
behind her. A sharp time for a man that, my sonnies; a very sharp
time! Chanticleer’s comb is a-cut then, ’a believe.”
“That’s about the form o’t,” said Mr. Penny.
“That’ll put the stuns upon a man, when you must measure
mother and daughter’s lasts to tell ’em apart.”
“You’ve no cause to complain, Reuben, of such a close-coming
flock,” said Mrs. Dewy; “for ours was a straggling lot enough,
God knows!”
“I d’know it, I d’know it,” said the tranter.
“You be a well-enough woman, Ann.”
Mrs. Dewy put her mouth in the form of a smile, and put it back again
without smiling.
“And if they come together, they go together,” said Mrs.
Penny, whose family had been the reverse of the tranter’s; “and
a little money will make either fate tolerable. And money can
be made by our young couple, I know.”
“Yes, that it can!” said the impulsive voice of Leaf,
who had hitherto humbly admired the proceedings from a corner.
“It can be done—all that’s wanted is a few pounds
to begin with. That’s all! I know a story about it!”
“Let’s hear thy story, Leaf,” said the tranter.
“I never knew you were clever enough to tell a story. Silence,
all of ye! Mr. Leaf will tell a story.”
“Tell your story, Thomas Leaf,” said grandfather William
in the tone of a schoolmaster.
“Once,” said the delighted Leaf, in an uncertain voice,
“there was a man who lived in a house! Well, this man went
thinking and thinking night and day. At last, he said to himself,
as I might, ‘If I had only ten pound, I’d make a fortune.’
At last by hook or by crook, behold he got the ten pounds!”
“Only think of that!” said Nat Callcome satirically.
“Silence!” said the tranter.
“Well, now comes the interesting part of the story! In
a little time he made that ten pounds twenty. Then a little time
after that he doubled it, and made it forty. Well, he went on,
and a good while after that he made it eighty, and on to a hundred.
Well, by-and-by he made it two hundred! Well, you’d never
believe it, but—he went on and made it four hundred! He
went on, and what did he do? Why, he made it eight hundred!
Yes, he did,” continued Leaf, in the highest pitch of excitement,
bringing down his fist upon his knee with such force that he quivered
with the pain; “yes, and he went on and made it A THOUSAND!”
“Hear, hear!” said the tranter. “Better than
the history of England, my sonnies!”
“Thank you for your story, Thomas Leaf,” said grandfather
William; and then Leaf gradually sank into nothingness again.
Amid a medley of laughter, old shoes, and elder-wine, Dick and his
bride took their departure, side by side in the excellent new spring-cart
which the young tranter now possessed. The moon was just over
the full, rendering any light from lamps or their own beauties quite
unnecessary to the pair. They drove slowly along Yalbury Bottom,
where the road passed between two copses. Dick was talking to
his companion.
“Fancy,” he said, “why we are so happy is because
there is such full confidence between us. Ever since that time
you confessed to that little flirtation with Shiner by the river (which
was really no flirtation at all), I have thought how artless and good
you must be to tell me o’ such a trifling thing, and to be so
frightened about it as you were. It has won me to tell you my
every deed and word since then. We’ll have no secrets from
each other, darling, will we ever?—no secret at all.”
“None from to-day,” said Fancy. “Hark! what’s
that?”
From a neighbouring thicket was suddenly heard to issue in a loud,
musical, and liquid voice—
“Tippiwit! swe-e-et! ki-ki-ki! Come hither, come hither,
come hither!”
“O, ’tis the nightingale,” murmured she, and thought
of a secret she would never tell.
Footnotes:
{1} This, a local
expression, must be a corruption of something less questionable.