Has olim exuvias mihi perfidus ille
reliquit, Pignora cara sui: quae nunc ego limine
in ipso, Terra, tibi mando; debent haec pignora
Daphnin - Ducite ab urbe domum, mea, carmina,
ducite Daphnin.
I knew the superstition lingered along
the country-side: and I was sworn to find it.
But the labourers and their wives smoothed all intelligence
out of their faces as soon as I began to hint at it.
Such is the way of them. They were my good friends,
but had no mind to help me in this. Nobody who
has not lived long with them can divine the number
of small incommunicable mysteries and racial secrets
chambered in their inner hearts and guarded by their
hospitable faces. These alone the Celt withholds
from the Saxon, and when he dies they are buried with
him.
A chance word or two of my old nurse,
by chance caught in some cranny of a child’s
memory and recovered after many days, told me that
the charm was still practised by the woman-folk, or
had been practised not long before her death.
So I began to hunt for it, and, almost as soon, to
believe the search hopeless. The new generation
of girls, with their smart frocks, in fashion not
more than six months behind London, their Board School
notions, and their consuming ambition to “look
like a lady” - were these likely to
cherish a local custom as rude and primitive as the
long-stone circles on the tors above? But they
were Cornish; and of that race it is unwise to judge
rashly. For years I had never a clue: and
then, by Sheba Farm, in a forsaken angle of the coast,
surprised the secret.
Sheba Farm stands high above Ruan
sands, over which its windows flame at sunset.
And I sat in the farm kitchen drinking cider and eating
potato-cake, while the farmer’s wife, Mrs. Bolverson,
obligingly attended to my coat, which had just been
soaked by a thunder-shower. It was August, and
already the sun beat out again, fierce and strong.
The bright drops that gemmed the tamarisk-bushes above
the wall of the town-place were already fading under
its heat; and I heard the voices of the harvesters
up the lane, as they returned to the oat-field whence
the storm had routed them. A bright parallelogram
stretched from the window across the white kitchen-table,
and reached the dim hollow of the open fire-place.
Mrs. Bolverson drew the towel-horse, on which my coat
was stretched, between it and the wood fire, which
(as she held) the sunshine would put out.
“It’s uncommonly kind
of you, Mrs. Bolverson,” said I, as she turned
one sleeve of the coat towards the heat. “To
be sure, if the women in these parts would speak out,
some of them have done more than that for the men
with an old coat.”
She dropped the sleeve, faced round, and eyed me.
“What do you know of that?”
she asked slowly, and as if her chest tightened over
the words. She was a woman of fifty and more,
of fine figure but a worn face. Her chief surviving
beauty was a pile of light golden hair, still lustrous
as a girl’s. But her blue eyes - though
now they narrowed on me suspiciously - must
have looked out magnificently in their day.
“I fancy,” said I, meeting
them frankly enough, “that what you know and
I don’t on that matter would make a good deal.”
She laughed harshly, almost savagely.
“You’d better ask Sarah
Gedye, across the coombe. She buried a man’s
clothes one time, and - it might be worth
your while to ask her what came o’t.”
If you can imagine a glint of moonlight
running up the blade of a rapier, you may know the
chill flame of spite and despite that flickered in
her eyes then as she spoke.
“I take my oath,” I muttered
to myself, “I’ll act on the invitation.”
The woman stood straight upright,
with her hands clasped behind her, before the deal
table. She gazed, under lowered brows, straight
out of window; and following that gaze, I saw across
the coombe a mean mud hut, with a wall around it,
that looked on Sheba Farm with the obtrusive humility
of a poor relation.
“Does she - does Sarah Gedye - live
down yonder?”
What is that to you? she enquired fiercely, and then was
silent for a moment, and added, with another short laugh -
“I reckon I’d like the
question put to her: but I doubt you’ve
got the pluck.”
“You shall see,” said
I; and taking my coat off the towel-horse, I slipped
it on.
She did not turn, did not even move
her head, when I thanked her for the shelter and walked
out of the house.
I could feel those steel-blue eyes
working like gimlets into my back as I strode down
the hill and passed the wooden plank that lay across
the stream at its foot. A climb of less than a
minute brought me to the green gate in the wall of
Sarah Gedye’s garden patch; and here I took
a look backwards and upwards at Sheba. The sun
lay warm on its white walls, and the whole building
shone against the burnt hillside. It was too
far away for me to spy Mrs. Bolverson’s blue
print gown within the kitchen window, but I knew that
she stood there yet.
The sound of a footstep made me turn.
A woman was coming round the corner of the cottage,
with a bundle of mint in her hand.
She looked at me, shook off a bee
that had blundered against her apron, and looked at
me again - a brown woman, lean and strongly
made, with jet-black eyes set deep and glistening
in an ugly face.
“You want to know your way?” she asked.
“No. I came to see you, if your name is
Sarah Gedye.”
“Sarah Ann Gedye is my name. What ’st
want?”
I took a sudden resolution to tell the exact truth.
“Mrs. Gedye, the fact is I am
curious about an old charm that was practised in these
parts, as I know, till recently. The charm is
this - When a woman guesses her lover to be
faithless to her, she buries a suit of his old clothes
to fetch him back to her. Mrs. Bolverson, up
at Sheba yonder -
The old woman had opened her mouth
(as I know now) to curse me. But as Mrs. Bolverson’s
name escaped me, she turned her back, and walked straight
to her door and into the kitchen. Her manner told
me that I was expected to follow.
But I was not prepared for the face
she turned on me in the shadow of the kitchen.
It was grey as wood-ash, and the black eyes shrank
into it like hot specks of fire.
She - she set
you on to ask me that?” She caught me by the
coat and hissed out: “Come back from the
door - don’t let her see.”
Then she lifted up her fist, with the mint tightly
clutched in it, and shook it at the warm patch of
Sheba buildings across the valley.
“May God burn her bones, as
He has smitten her body barren!”
“What do you know of this?”
she cried, turning upon me again.
“I know nothing. That I
have offered you some insult is clear: but -
“Nay, you don’t know - you
don’t know. No man would be such a hound.
You don’t know; but, by the Lord, you shall hear,
here where you’m standin’, an’ shall
jedge betwix’ me an’ that pale ’ooman
up yonder. Stand there an’ list to me.
“He was my lover more’n
five-an’-thirty years agone. Who? That
’ooman’s wedded man, Seth Bolverson.
We warn’t married” - this with
a short laugh. “Wife or less than wife,
he found me to his mind. She - she that
egged you on to come an’ flout me - was
a pale-haired girl o’ seventeen or so i’
those times - a church-goin’ mincin’
strip of a girl - the sort you men-folk bow
the knee to for saints. Her father owned Sheba
Farm, an’ she look’d across on my man,
an’ had envy on ‘en, an’ set her
eyes to draw ‘en. Oh, a saint she was!
An’ he, the poor shammick, went. ’Twas
a good girl, you understand, that wished for to marry
an’ reform ‘en. She had money, too.
I? I’d ha’ poured out my blood
for ’en: that’s all I cud do.
So he went.
“As the place shines this day,
it shone then. Like a moth it drew ’en.
Late o’ summer evenin’s its windeys shone
when down below here ’twas chill i’ the
hill’s shadow. An’ late at night the
candles burned up there as he courted her. Purity
and cosiness, you understand, an’ down here - he
forgot about down here. Before he’d missed
to speak to me for a month, I’d hear ‘en
whistlin’ up the hill, so merry as a grig.
Well, he married her.
“They was married three months,
an’ ‘twas harvest time come round, an’
I in his vield a-gleanin’. For I was suffered
near to that extent, seem’ that the cottage
here had been my fathers’, an’ was mine,
an’ out o’t they culdn’ turn me.
One o’ the hands, as they was pitchin’,
passes me an empty keg, an’ says, ‘Run
you to the farm-place an’ get it filled.’
So with it I went to th’ kitchen, and while I
waited outside I sees his coat an’ wesket ‘pon
a peg i’ the passage. Well I knew the coat;
an’ a madness takin’ me for all my loss,
I unhitched it an’ flung it behind the door,
an’, the keg bein’ filled, picked it up
agen and ran down home-along.
“No thought had I but to win
Seth back. ’Twas the charm you spoke about:
an’ that same midnight I delved a hole by the
dreshold an’ buried the coat, whisperin’,
‘Man, come back, come back to me!’
as Aun’ Lesnewth had a-taught me, times afore.
“But she, the pale woman, had
a-seen me, dro’ a chink o’ the parlour-door,
as I tuk the coat down. An’ she knowed what
I tuk it for. I’ve a-read it, times and
again, in her wifely eyes; an’ to-day you yoursel’
are witness that she knowed. If Seth knowed -
She clenched and unclenched her fist,
and went on rapidly.
“Early next mornin’, and
a’most afore I was dressed, two constables came
in by the gate, an’ she behind ’em treadin’
delicately, an’ he at her back, wi’
his chin dropped. They charged me wi’ stealin’
that coat - wi’ stealin’ it - that
coat that I’d a-darned an’ patched years
afore ever she cuddled against its sleeve!”
“What happened?” I asked, as her voice
sank and halted.
“What happened? She looked
me i’ the eyes scornfully; an’ her own
were full o’ knowledge. An’ wi’
her eyes she coaxed and dared me to abase mysel’
an’ speak the truth an’ win off jail.
An’ I, that had stole nowt, looked back at her
an’ said, ’It’s true. I stole
the coat. Now cart me off to jail; but handle
me gently for the sake o’ my child unborn.’
When I spoke these last two words an’ saw her
face draw up wi’ the bitterness o’ their
taste, I held out my wrists and clapped the handcuffs
together like cymbals and laughed wi’ a glad
heart.”
She caught my hand suddenly, and drawing
me to the porch, pointed high above Sheba, to the
yellow upland where the harvesters moved.
“Do ’ee see ’en
there? - that tall young man by the hedge - there
where the slope dips? That’s my son, Seth’s
son, the straightest man among all. Neither spot
has he, nor wart, nor blemish ’pon his body;
and when she pays ’en his wages, Saturday evenin’s,
he says ’Thank ’ee, ma’am,’
wi’ a voice that’s the very daps o’
his father’s. An’ she’s childless.
Ah, childless woman! Childless woman! Go
back an’ carry word to her o’ the prayer
I’ve spoken upon her childlessness.”
And “Childless woman!”
“Childless woman!” she called twice again,
shaking her fist at the windows of Sheba Farm-house,
that blazed back angrily against the westering sun.