1-Tidings of the Comer
On the fine days at this time of the
year, and earlier, certain ephemeral operations were
apt to disturb, in their trifling way, the majestic
calm of Egdon Heath. They were activities which,
beside those of a town, a village, or even a farm,
would have appeared as the ferment of stagnation merely,
a creeping of the flesh of somnolence. But here,
away from comparisons, shut in by the stable hills,
among which mere walking had the novelty of pageantry,
and where any man could imagine himself to be Adam
without the least difficulty, they attracted the attention
of every bird within eyeshot, every reptile not yet
asleep, and set the surrounding rabbits curiously
watching from hillocks at a safe distance.
The performance was that of bringing
together and building into a stack the furze faggots
which Humphrey had been cutting for the captain’s
use during the foregoing fine days. The stack
was at the end of the dwelling, and the men engaged
in building it were Humphrey and Sam, the old man
looking on.
It was a fine and quiet afternoon,
about three o’clock; but the winter solstice
having stealthily come on, the lowness of the sun caused
the hour to seem later than it actually was, there
being little here to remind an inhabitant that he
must unlearn his summer experience of the sky as a
dial. In the course of many days and weeks sunrise
had advanced its quarters from northeast to southeast,
sunset had receded from northwest to southwest; but
Egdon had hardly heeded the change.
Eustacia was indoors in the dining-room,
which was really more like a kitchen, having a stone
floor and a gaping chimney-corner. The air was
still, and while she lingered a moment here alone sounds
of voices in conversation came to her ears directly
down the chimney. She entered the recess, and,
listening, looked up the old irregular shaft, with
its cavernous hollows, where the smoke blundered about
on its way to the square bit of sky at the top, from
which the daylight struck down with a pallid glare
upon the tatters of soot draping the flue as seaweed
drapes a rocky fissure.
She remembered: the furze-stack
was not far from the chimney, and the voices were
those of the workers.
Her grandfather joined in the conversation.
“That lad ought never to have left home.
His father’s occupation would have suited him
best, and the boy should have followed on. I
don’t believe in these new moves in families.
My father was a sailor, so was I, and so should my
son have been if I had had one.”
“The place he’s been living
at is Paris,” said Humphrey, “and they
tell me ’tis where the king’s head was
cut off years ago. My poor mother used to tell
me about that business. ‘Hummy,’ she
used to say, ’I was a young maid then, and as
I was at home ironing Mother’s caps one afternoon
the parson came in and said, “They’ve
cut the king’s head off, Jane; and what ’twill
be next God knows."’”
“A good many of us knew as well
as He before long,” said the captain, chuckling.
“I lived seven years under water on account of
it in my boyhood-in that damned surgery
of the Triumph, seeing men brought down to the cockpit
with their legs and arms blown to Jericho....And so
the young man has settled in Paris. Manager to
a diamond merchant, or some such thing, is he not?”
“Yes, sir, that’s it.
’Tis a blazing great business that he belongs
to, so I’ve heard his mother say-like
a king’s palace, as far as diments go.”
“I can well mind when he left home,” said
Sam.
“’Tis a good thing for
the feller,” said Humphrey. “A sight
of times better to be selling diments than nobbling
about here.”
“It must cost a good few shillings
to deal at such a place.”
“A good few indeed, my man,”
replied the captain. “Yes, you may make
away with a deal of money and be neither drunkard nor
glutton.”
“They say, too, that Clym Yeobright
is become a real perusing man, with the strangest
notions about things. There, that’s because
he went to school early, such as the school was.”
“Strange notions, has he?”
said the old man. “Ah, there’s too
much of that sending to school in these days!
It only does harm. Every gatepost and barn’s
door you come to is sure to have some bad word or other
chalked upon it by the young rascals-a woman
can hardly pass for shame sometimes. If they’d
never been taught how to write they wouldn’t
have been able to scribble such villainy. Their
fathers couldn’t do it, and the country was
all the better for it.”
“Now, I should think, Cap’n,
that Miss Eustacia had about as much in her head that
comes from books as anybody about here?”
“Perhaps if Miss Eustacia, too,
had less romantic nonsense in her head it would be
better for her,” said the captain shortly; after
which he walked away.
“I say, Sam,” observed
Humphrey when the old man was gone, “she and
Clym Yeobright would make a very pretty pigeon-pair-hey?
If they wouldn’t I’ll be dazed! Both
of one mind about niceties for certain, and learned
in print, and always thinking about high doctrine-there
couldn’t be a better couple if they were made
o’ purpose. Clym’s family is as good
as hers. His father was a farmer, that’s
true; but his mother was a sort of lady, as we know.
Nothing would please me better than to see them two
man and wife.”
“They’d look very natty,
arm-in-crook together, and their best clothes on,
whether or no, if he’s at all the well-favoured
fellow he used to be.”
“They would, Humphrey.
Well, I should like to see the chap terrible much
after so many years. If I knew for certain when
he was coming I’d stroll out three or four miles
to meet him and help carry anything for’n; though
I suppose he’s altered from the boy he was.
They say he can talk French as fast as a maid can
eat blackberries; and if so, depend upon it we who
have stayed at home shall seem no more than scroff
in his eyes.”
“Coming across the water to
Budmouth by steamer, isn’t he?”
“Yes; but how he’s coming from Budmouth
I don’t know.”
“That’s a bad trouble
about his cousin Thomasin. I wonder such a nice-notioned
fellow as Clym likes to come home into it. What
a nunnywatch we were in, to be sure, when we heard
they weren’t married at all, after singing to
’em as man and wife that night! Be dazed
if I should like a relation of mine to have been made
such a fool of by a man. It makes the family
look small.”
“Yes. Poor maid, her heart
has ached enough about it. Her health is suffering
from it, I hear, for she will bide entirely indoors.
We never see her out now, scampering over the furze
with a face as red as a rose, as she used to do.”
“I’ve heard she wouldn’t
have Wildeve now if he asked her.”
“You have? ’Tis news to me.”
While the furze-gatherers had desultorily
conversed thus Eustacia’s face gradually bent
to the hearth in a profound reverie, her toe unconsciously
tapping the dry turf which lay burning at her feet.
The subject of their discourse had
been keenly interesting to her. A young and clever
man was coming into that lonely heath from, of all
contrasting places in the world, Paris. It was
like a man coming from heaven. More singular
still, the heathmen had instinctively coupled her
and this man together in their minds as a pair born
for each other.
That five minutes of overhearing furnished
Eustacia with visions enough to fill the whole blank
afternoon. Such sudden alternations from mental
vacuity do sometimes occur thus quietly. She could
never have believed in the morning that her colourless
inner world would before night become as animated
as water under a microscope, and that without the arrival
of a single visitor. The words of Sam and Humphrey
on the harmony between the unknown and herself had
on her mind the effect of the invading Bard’s
prelude in the Castle of Indolence, at which myriads
of imprisoned shapes arose where had previously appeared
the stillness of a void.
Involved in these imaginings she knew
nothing of time. When she became conscious of
externals it was dusk. The furze-rick was finished;
the men had gone home. Eustacia went upstairs,
thinking that she would take a walk at this her usual
time; and she determined that her walk should be in
the direction of Blooms-End, the birthplace of young
Yeobright and the present home of his mother.
She had no reason for walking elsewhere, and why should
she not go that way? The scene of the daydream
is sufficient for a pilgrimage at nineteen. To
look at the palings before the Yeobrights’ house
had the dignity of a necessary performance. Strange
that such a piece of idling should have seemed an important
errand.
She put on her bonnet, and, leaving
the house, descended the hill on the side towards
Blooms-End, where she walked slowly along the valley
for a distance of a mile and a half. This brought
her to a spot in which the green bottom of the dale
began to widen, the furze bushes to recede yet further
from the path on each side, till they were diminished
to an isolated one here and there by the increasing
fertility of the soil. Beyond the irregular carpet
of grass was a row of white palings, which marked
the verge of the heath in this latitude. They
showed upon the dusky scene that they bordered as
distinctly as white lace on velvet. Behind the
white palings was a little garden; behind the garden
an old, irregular, thatched house, facing the heath,
and commanding a full view of the valley. This
was the obscure, removed spot to which was about to
return a man whose latter life had been passed in the
French capital-the centre and vortex of
the fashionable world.
2-The People at Blooms-End Make Ready
All that afternoon the expected arrival
of the subject of Eustacia’s ruminations
created a bustle of preparation at Blooms-End.
Thomasin had been persuaded by her aunt, and by an
instinctive impulse of loyalty towards her cousin
Clym, to bestir herself on his account with an alacrity
unusual in her during these most sorrowful days of
her life. At the time that Eustacia was listening
to the rick-makers’ conversation on Clym’s
return, Thomasin was climbing into a loft over her
aunt’s fuelhouse, where the store-apples were
kept, to search out the best and largest of them for
the coming holiday-time.
The loft was lighted by a semicircular
hole, through which the pigeons crept to their lodgings
in the same high quarters of the premises; and from
this hole the sun shone in a bright yellow patch upon
the figure of the maiden as she knelt and plunged
her naked arms into the soft brown fern, which, from
its abundance, was used on Egdon in packing away stores
of all kinds. The pigeons were flying about her
head with the greatest unconcern, and the face of
her aunt was just visible above the floor of the loft,
lit by a few stray motes of light, as she stood
halfway up the ladder, looking at a spot into which
she was not climber enough to venture.
“Now a few russets, Tamsin.
He used to like them almost as well as ribstones.”
Thomasin turned and rolled aside the
fern from another nook, where more mellow fruit greeted
her with its ripe smell. Before picking them out
she stopped a moment.
“Dear Clym, I wonder how your
face looks now?” she said, gazing abstractedly
at the pigeon-hole, which admitted the sunlight so
directly upon her brown hair and transparent tissues
that it almost seemed to shine through her.
“If he could have been dear
to you in another way,” said Mrs. Yeobright
from the ladder, “this might have been a happy
meeting.”
“Is there any use in saying what can do no good,
Aunt?”
“Yes,” said her aunt,
with some warmth. “To thoroughly fill the
air with the past misfortune, so that other girls
may take warning and keep clear of it.”
Thomasin lowered her face to the apples
again. “I am a warning to others, just
as thieves and drunkards and gamblers are,” she
said in a low voice. “What a class to belong
to! Do I really belong to them? ’Tis
absurd! Yet why, Aunt, does everybody keep on
making me think that I do, by the way they behave
towards me? Why don’t people judge me by
my acts? Now, look at me as I kneel here, picking
up these apples-do I look like a lost woman?...
I wish all good women were as good as I!” she
added vehemently.
“Strangers don’t see you
as I do,” said Mrs. Yeobright; “they judge
from false report. Well, it is a silly job, and
I am partly to blame.”
“How quickly a rash thing can
be done!” replied the girl. Her lips were
quivering, and tears so crowded themselves into her
eyes that she could hardly distinguish apples from
fern as she continued industriously searching to hide
her weakness.
“As soon as you have finished
getting the apples,” her aunt said, descending
the ladder, “come down, and we’ll go for
the holly. There is nobody on the heath this
afternoon, and you need not fear being stared at.
We must get some berries, or Clym will never believe
in our preparations.”
Thomasin came down when the apples
were collected, and together they went through the
white palings to the heath beyond. The open hills
were airy and clear, and the remote atmosphere appeared,
as it often appears on a fine winter day, in distinct
planes of illumination independently toned, the rays
which lit the nearer tracts of landscape streaming
visibly across those further off; a stratum of ensaffroned
light was imposed on a stratum of deep blue, and behind
these lay still remoter scenes wrapped in frigid grey.
They reached the place where the hollies
grew, which was in a conical pit, so that the tops
of the trees were not much above the general level
of the ground. Thomasin stepped up into a fork
of one of the bushes, as she had done under happier
circumstances on many similar occasions, and with
a small chopper that they had brought she began to
lop off the heavily berried boughs.
“Don’t scratch your face,”
said her aunt, who stood at the edge of the pit, regarding
the girl as she held on amid the glistening green and
scarlet masses of the tree. “Will you walk
with me to meet him this evening?”
“I should like to. Else
it would seem as if I had forgotten him,” said
Thomasin, tossing out a bough. “Not that
that would matter much; I belong to one man; nothing
can alter that. And that man I must marry, for
my pride’s sake.”
“I am afraid-” began Mrs. Yeobright.
“Ah, you think, ’That
weak girl-how is she going to get a man
to marry her when she chooses?’ But let me tell
you one thing, Aunt: Mr. Wildeve is not a profligate
man, any more than I am an improper woman. He
has an unfortunate manner, and doesn’t try to
make people like him if they don’t wish to do
it of their own accord.”
“Thomasin,” said Mrs.
Yeobright quietly, fixing her eye upon her niece,
“do you think you deceive me in your defence
of Mr. Wildeve?”
“How do you mean?”
“I have long had a suspicion
that your love for him has changed its colour since
you have found him not to be the saint you thought
him, and that you act a part to me.”
“He wished to marry me, and I wish to marry
him.”
“Now, I put it to you:
would you at this present moment agree to be his wife
if that had not happened to entangle you with him?”
Thomasin looked into the tree and
appeared much disturbed. “Aunt,”
she said presently, “I have, I think, a right
to refuse to answer that question.”
“Yes, you have.”
“You may think what you choose.
I have never implied to you by word or deed that I
have grown to think otherwise of him, and I never will.
And I shall marry him.”
“Well, wait till he repeats
his offer. I think he may do it, now that he
knows-something I told him. I don’t
for a moment dispute that it is the most proper thing
for you to marry him. Much as I have objected
to him in bygone days, I agree with you now, you may
be sure. It is the only way out of a false position,
and a very galling one.”
“What did you tell him?”
“That he was standing in the way of another
lover of yours.”
“Aunt,” said Thomasin, with round eyes,
“what do you mean?”
“Don’t be alarmed; it
was my duty. I can say no more about it now, but
when it is over I will tell you exactly what I said,
and why I said it.”
Thomasin was perforce content.
“And you will keep the secret
of my would-be marriage from Clym for the present?”
she next asked.
“I have given my word to.
But what is the use of it? He must soon know
what has happened. A mere look at your face will
show him that something is wrong.”
Thomasin turned and regarded her aunt
from the tree. “Now, hearken to me,”
she said, her delicate voice expanding into firmness
by a force which was other than physical. “Tell
him nothing. If he finds out that I am not worthy
to be his cousin, let him. But, since he loved
me once, we will not pain him by telling him my trouble
too soon. The air is full of the story, I know;
but gossips will not dare to speak of it to him for
the first few days. His closeness to me is the
very thing that will hinder the tale from reaching
him early. If I am not made safe from sneers
in a week or two I will tell him myself.”
The earnestness with which Thomasin
spoke prevented further objections. Her aunt
simply said, “Very well. He should by rights
have been told at the time that the wedding was going
to be. He will never forgive you for your secrecy.”
“Yes, he will, when he knows
it was because I wished to spare him, and that I did
not expect him home so soon. And you must not
let me stand in the way of your Christmas party.
Putting it off would only make matters worse.”
“Of course I shall not.
I do not wish to show myself beaten before all Egdon,
and the sport of a man like Wildeve. We have enough
berries now, I think, and we had better take them
home. By the time we have decked the house with
this and hung up the mistletoe, we must think of starting
to meet him.”
Thomasin came out of the tree, shook
from her hair and dress the loose berries which had
fallen thereon, and went down the hill with her aunt,
each woman bearing half the gathered boughs. It
was now nearly four o’clock, and the sunlight
was leaving the vales. When the west grew red
the two relatives came again from the house and plunged
into the heath in a different direction from the first,
towards a point in the distant highway along which
the expected man was to return.
3-How a Little Sound Produced a Great Dream
Eustacia stood just within the heath,
straining her eyes in the direction of Mrs. Yeobright’s
house and premises. No light, sound, or movement
was perceptible there. The evening was chilly;
the spot was dark and lonely. She inferred that
the guest had not yet come; and after lingering ten
or fifteen minutes she turned again towards home.
She had not far retraced her steps
when sounds in front of her betokened the approach
of persons in conversation along the same path.
Soon their heads became visible against the sky.
They were walking slowly; and though it was too dark
for much discovery of character from aspect, the gait
of them showed that they were not workers on the heath.
Eustacia stepped a little out of the foot-track to
let them pass. They were two women and a man;
and the voices of the women were those of Mrs. Yeobright
and Thomasin.
They went by her, and at the moment
of passing appeared to discern her dusky form.
There came to her ears in a masculine voice, “Good
night!”
She murmured a reply, glided by them,
and turned round. She could not, for a moment,
believe that chance, unrequested, had brought into
her presence the soul of the house she had gone to
inspect, the man without whom her inspection would
not have been thought of.
She strained her eyes to see them,
but was unable. Such was her intentness, however,
that it seemed as if her ears were performing the
functions of seeing as well as hearing. This extension
of power can almost be believed in at such moments.
The deaf Dr. Kitto was probably under the influence
of a parallel fancy when he described his body as
having become, by long endeavour, so sensitive to vibrations
that he had gained the power of perceiving by it as
by ears.
She could follow every word that the
ramblers uttered. They were talking no secrets.
They were merely indulging in the ordinary vivacious
chat of relatives who have long been parted in person
though not in soul. But it was not to the words
that Eustacia listened; she could not even have recalled,
a few minutes later, what the words were. It was
to the alternating voice that gave out about one-tenth
of them-the voice that had wished her good
night. Sometimes this throat uttered Yes, sometimes
it uttered No; sometimes it made inquiries about a
time worn denizen of the place. Once it surprised
her notions by remarking upon the friendliness and
geniality written in the faces of the hills around.
The three voices passed on, and decayed
and died out upon her ear. Thus much had been
granted her; and all besides withheld. No event
could have been more exciting. During the greater
part of the afternoon she had been entrancing herself
by imagining the fascination which must attend a man
come direct from beautiful Paris-laden with
its atmosphere, familiar with its charms. And
this man had greeted her.
With the departure of the figures
the profuse articulations of the women wasted away
from her memory; but the accents of the other stayed
on. Was there anything in the voice of Mrs. Yeobright’s
son-for Clym it was-startling
as a sound? No; it was simply comprehensive.
All emotional things were possible to the speaker
of that “good night.” Eustacia’s
imagination supplied the rest-except the
solution to one riddle. What could the tastes
of that man be who saw friendliness and geniality
in these shaggy hills?
On such occasions as this a thousand
ideas pass through a highly charged woman’s
head; and they indicate themselves on her face; but
the changes, though actual, are minute. Eustacia’s
features went through a rhythmical succession of them.
She glowed; remembering the mendacity of the imagination,
she flagged; then she freshened; then she fired; then
she cooled again. It was a cycle of aspects,
produced by a cycle of visions.
Eustacia entered her own house; she
was excited. Her grandfather was enjoying himself
over the fire, raking about the ashes and exposing
the red-hot surface of the turves, so that their lurid
glare irradiated the chimney-corner with the hues
of a furnace.
“Why is it that we are never
friendly with the Yeobrights?” she said, coming
forward and stretching her soft hands over the warmth.
“I wish we were. They seem to be very nice
people.”
“Be hanged if I know why,”
said the captain. “I liked the old man well
enough, though he was as rough as a hedge. But
you would never have cared to go there, even if you
might have, I am well sure.”
“Why shouldn’t I?”
“Your town tastes would find
them far too countrified. They sit in the kitchen,
drink mead and elder-wine, and sand the floor to keep
it clean. A sensible way of life; but how would
you like it?”
“I thought Mrs. Yeobright was
a ladylike woman? A curate’s daughter, was
she not?”
“Yes; but she was obliged to
live as her husband did; and I suppose she has taken
kindly to it by this time. Ah, I recollect that
I once accidentally offended her, and I have never
seen her since.”
That night was an eventful one to
Eustacia’s brain, and one which she hardly ever
forgot. She dreamt a dream; and few human beings,
from Nebuchadnezzar to the Swaffham tinker, ever dreamt
a more remarkable one. Such an elaborately developed,
perplexing, exciting dream was certainly never dreamed
by a girl in Eustacia’s situation before.
It had as many ramifications as the Cretan labyrinth,
as many fluctuations as the northern lights, as much
colour as a parterre in June, and was as crowded with
figures as a coronation. To Queen Scheherazade
the dream might have seemed not far removed from commonplace;
and to a girl just returned from all the courts of
Europe it might have seemed not more than interesting.
But amid the circumstances of Eustacia’s life
it was as wonderful as a dream could be.
There was, however, gradually evolved
from its transformation scenes a less extravagant
episode, in which the heath dimly appeared behind the
general brilliancy of the action. She was dancing
to wondrous music, and her partner was the man in
silver armour who had accompanied her through the
previous fantastic changes, the visor of his helmet
being closed. The mazes of the dance were ecstatic.
Soft whispering came into her ear from under the radiant
helmet, and she felt like a woman in Paradise.
Suddenly these two wheeled out from the mass of dancers,
dived into one of the pools of the heath, and came
out somewhere into an iridescent hollow, arched with
rainbows. “It must be here,” said
the voice by her side, and blushingly looking up she
saw him removing his casque to kiss her. At that
moment there was a cracking noise, and his figure fell
into fragments like a pack of cards.
She cried aloud. “O that I had seen his
face!”
Eustacia awoke. The cracking
had been that of the window shutter downstairs, which
the maid-servant was opening to let in the day, now
slowly increasing to Nature’s meagre allowance
at this sickly time of the year. “O that
I had seen his face!” she said again. “’Twas
meant for Mr. Yeobright!”
When she became cooler she perceived
that many of the phases of the dream had naturally
arisen out of the images and fancies of the day before.
But this detracted little from its interest, which
lay in the excellent fuel it provided for newly kindled
fervour. She was at the modulating point between
indifference and love, at the stage called “having
a fancy for.” It occurs once in the history
of the most gigantic passions, and it is a period
when they are in the hands of the weakest will.
The perfervid woman was by this time
half in love with a vision. The fantastic nature
of her passion, which lowered her as an intellect,
raised her as a soul. If she had had a little
more self-control she would have attenuated the emotion
to nothing by sheer reasoning, and so have killed
it off. If she had had a little less pride she
might have gone and circumambulated the Yeobrights’
premises at Blooms-End at any maidenly sacrifice until
she had seen him. But Eustacia did neither of
these things. She acted as the most exemplary
might have acted, being so influenced; she took an
airing twice or thrice a day upon the Egdon hills,
and kept her eyes employed.
The first occasion passed, and he did not come that
way.
She promenaded a second time, and was again the sole
wanderer there.
The third time there was a dense fog;
she looked around, but without much hope. Even
if he had been walking within twenty yards of her she
could not have seen him.
At the fourth attempt to encounter
him it began to rain in torrents, and she turned back.
The fifth sally was in the afternoon;
it was fine, and she remained out long, walking to
the very top of the valley in which Blooms-End lay.
She saw the white paling about half a mile off; but
he did not appear. It was almost with heart-sickness
that she came home and with a sense of shame at her
weakness. She resolved to look for the man from
Paris no more.
But Providence is nothing if not coquettish;
and no sooner had Eustacia formed this resolve than
the opportunity came which, while sought, had been
entirely withholden.
4-Eustacia Is Led on to an Adventure
In the evening of this last day of
expectation, which was the twenty-third of December,
Eustacia was at home alone. She had passed the
recent hour in lamenting over a rumour newly come to
her ears-that Yeobright’s visit to
his mother was to be of short duration, and would
end some time the next week. “Naturally,”
she said to herself. A man in the full swing
of his activities in a gay city could not afford to
linger long on Egdon Heath. That she would behold
face to face the owner of the awakening voice within
the limits of such a holiday was most unlikely, unless
she were to haunt the environs of his mother’s
house like a robin, to do which was difficult and
unseemly.
The customary expedient of provincial
girls and men in such circumstances is churchgoing.
In an ordinary village or country town one can safely
calculate that, either on Christmas day or the Sunday
contiguous, any native home for the holidays, who has
not through age or ennui lost the appetite for seeing
and being seen, will turn up in some pew or other,
shining with hope, self-consciousness, and new clothes.
Thus the congregation on Christmas morning is mostly
a Tussaud collection of celebrities who have been
born in the neighbourhood. Hither the mistress,
left neglected at home all the year, can steal and
observe the development of the returned lover who has
forgotten her, and think as she watches him over her
prayer book that he may throb with a renewed fidelity
when novelties have lost their charm. And hither
a comparatively recent settler like Eustacia may betake
herself to scrutinize the person of a native son who
left home before her advent upon the scene, and consider
if the friendship of his parents be worth cultivating
during his next absence in order to secure a knowledge
of him on his next return.
But these tender schemes were not
feasible among the scattered inhabitants of Egdon
Heath. In name they were parishioners, but virtually
they belonged to no parish at all. People who
came to these few isolated houses to keep Christmas
with their friends remained in their friends’
chimney-corners drinking mead and other comforting
liquors till they left again for good and all.
Rain, snow, ice, mud everywhere around, they did not
care to trudge two or three miles to sit wet-footed
and splashed to the nape of their necks among those
who, though in some measure neighbours, lived close
to the church, and entered it clean and dry.
Eustacia knew it was ten to one that Clym Yeobright
would go to no church at all during his few days of
leave, and that it would be a waste of labour for
her to go driving the pony and gig over a bad road
in hope to see him there.
It was dusk, and she was sitting by
the fire in the dining-room or hall, which they occupied
at this time of the year in preference to the parlour,
because of its large hearth, constructed for turf-fires,
a fuel the captain was partial to in the winter season.
The only visible articles in the room were those on
the window-sill, which showed their shapes against
the low sky, the middle article being the old hourglass,
and the other two a pair of ancient British urns which
had been dug from a barrow near, and were used as
flowerpots for two razor-leaved cactuses. Somebody
knocked at the door. The servant was out; so was
her grandfather. The person, after waiting a
minute, came in and tapped at the door of the room.
“Who’s there?” said Eustacia.
“Please, Cap’n Vye, will you let us -”
Eustacia arose and went to the door.
“I cannot allow you to come in so boldly.
You should have waited.”
“The cap’n said I might
come in without any fuss,” was answered in a
lad’s pleasant voice.
“Oh, did he?” said Eustacia
more gently. “What do you want, Charley?”
“Please will your grandfather
lend us his fuelhouse to try over our parts in, tonight
at seven o’clock?”
“What, are you one of the Egdon mummers for
this year?”
“Yes, miss. The cap’n used to let
the old mummers practise here.”
“I know it. Yes, you may
use the fuelhouse if you like,” said Eustacia
languidly.
The choice of Captain Vye’s
fuelhouse as the scene of rehearsal was dictated by
the fact that his dwelling was nearly in the centre
of the heath. The fuelhouse was as roomy as a
barn, and was a most desirable place for such a purpose.
The lads who formed the company of players lived at
different scattered points around, and by meeting in
this spot the distances to be traversed by all the
comers would be about equally proportioned.
For mummers and mumming Eustacia had
the greatest contempt. The mummers themselves
were not afflicted with any such feeling for their
art, though at the same time they were not enthusiastic.
A traditional pastime is to be distinguished from
a mere revival in no more striking feature than in
this, that while in the revival all is excitement and
fervour, the survival is carried on with a stolidity
and absence of stir which sets one wondering why a
thing that is done so perfunctorily should be kept
up at all. Like Balaam and other unwilling prophets,
the agents seem moved by an inner compulsion to say
and do their allotted parts whether they will or no.
This unweeting manner of performance is the true ring
by which, in this refurbishing age, a fossilized survival
may be known from a spurious reproduction.
The piece was the well-known play
of Saint George, and all who were behind the scenes
assisted in the preparations, including the women of
each household. Without the co-operation of sisters
and sweethearts the dresses were likely to be a failure;
but on the other hand, this class of assistance was
not without its drawbacks. The girls could never
be brought to respect tradition in designing and decorating
the armour; they insisted on attaching loops and bows
of silk and velvet in any situation pleasing to their
taste. Gorget, gusset, basinet, cuirass, gauntlet,
sleeve, all alike in the view of these feminine eyes
were practicable spaces whereon to sew scraps of fluttering
colour.
It might be that Joe, who fought on
the side of Christendom, had a sweetheart, and that
Jim, who fought on the side of the Moslem, had one
likewise. During the making of the costumes it
would come to the knowledge of Joe’s sweetheart
that Jim’s was putting brilliant silk scallops
at the bottom of her lover’s surcoat, in addition
to the ribbons of the visor, the bars of which, being
invariably formed of coloured strips about half an
inch wide hanging before the face, were mostly of
that material. Joe’s sweetheart straight-way
placed brilliant silk on the scallops of the hem in
question, and, going a little further, added ribbon
tufts to the shoulder pieces. Jim’s, not
to be outdone, would affix bows and rosettes everywhere.
The result was that in the end the
Valiant Soldier, of the Christian army, was distinguished
by no peculiarity of accoutrement from the Turkish
Knight; and what was worse, on a casual view Saint
George himself might be mistaken for his deadly enemy,
the Saracen. The guisers themselves, though inwardly
regretting this confusion of persons, could not afford
to offend those by whose assistance they so largely
profited, and the innovations were allowed to stand.
There was, it is true, a limit to
this tendency to uniformity. The Leech or Doctor
preserved his character intact-his darker
habiliments, peculiar hat, and the bottle of physic
slung under his arm, could never be mistaken.
And the same might be said of the conventional figure
of Father Christmas, with his gigantic club, an older
man, who accompanied the band as general protector
in long night journeys from parish to parish, and
was bearer of the purse.
Seven o’clock, the hour of the
rehearsal, came round, and in a short time Eustacia
could hear voices in the fuelhouse. To dissipate
in some trifling measure her abiding sense of the
murkiness of human life she went to the “linhay”
or lean-to shed, which formed the root-store of their
dwelling and abutted on the fuelhouse. Here was
a small rough hole in the mud wall, originally made
for pigeons, through which the interior of the next
shed could be viewed. A light came from it now;
and Eustacia stepped upon a stool to look in upon
the scene.
On a ledge in the fuelhouse stood
three tall rushlights and by the light of them seven
or eight lads were marching about, haranguing, and
confusing each other, in endeavours to perfect themselves
in the play. Humphrey and Sam, the furze-and
turf-cutters, were there looking on, so also was Timothy
Fairway, who leant against the wall and prompted the
boys from memory, interspersing among the set words
remarks and anecdotes of the superior days when he
and others were the Egdon mummers-elect that these
lads were now.
“Well, ye be as well up to it
as ever ye will be,” he said. “Not
that such mumming would have passed in our time.
Harry as the Saracen should strut a bit more, and
John needn’t holler his inside out. Beyond
that perhaps you’ll do. Have you got all
your clothes ready?”
“We shall by Monday.”
“Your first outing will be Monday night, I suppose?”
“Yes. At Mrs. Yeobright’s.”
“Oh, Mrs. Yeobright’s.
What makes her want to see ye? I should think
a middle-aged woman was tired of mumming.”
“She’s got up a bit of
a party, because ’tis the first Christmas that
her son Clym has been home for a long time.”
“To be sure, to be sure-her
party! I am going myself. I almost forgot
it, upon my life.”
Eustacia’s face flagged.
There was to be a party at the Yeobrights’;
she, naturally, had nothing to do with it. She
was a stranger to all such local gatherings, and had
always held them as scarcely appertaining to her sphere.
But had she been going, what an opportunity would have
been afforded her of seeing the man whose influence
was penetrating her like summer sun! To increase
that influence was coveted excitement; to cast it
off might be to regain serenity; to leave it as it
stood was tantalizing.
The lads and men prepared to leave
the premises, and Eustacia returned to her fireside.
She was immersed in thought, but not for long.
In a few minutes the lad Charley, who had come to
ask permission to use the place, returned with the
key to the kitchen. Eustacia heard him, and opening
the door into the passage said, “Charley, come
here.”
The lad was surprised. He entered
the front room not without blushing; for he, like
many, had felt the power of this girl’s face
and form.
She pointed to a seat by the fire,
and entered the other side of the chimney-corner herself.
It could be seen in her face that whatever motive
she might have had in asking the youth indoors would
soon appear.
“Which part do you play, Charley-the
Turkish Knight, do you not?” inquired the beauty,
looking across the smoke of the fire to him on the
other side.
“Yes, miss, the Turkish Knight,” he replied
diffidently.
“Is yours a long part?”
“Nine speeches, about.”
“Can you repeat them to me? If so I should
like to hear them.”
The lad smiled into the glowing turf and began-
“Here come I,
a Turkish Knight,
Who learnt in Turkish
land to fight,”
continuing the discourse throughout
the scenes to the concluding catastrophe of his fall
by the hand of Saint George.
Eustacia had occasionally heard the
part recited before. When the lad ended she began,
precisely in the same words, and ranted on without
hitch or divergence till she too reached the end.
It was the same thing, yet how different. Like
in form, it had the added softness and finish of a
Raffaelle after Perugino, which, while faithfully reproducing
the original subject, entirely distances the original
art.
Charley’s eyes rounded with
surprise. “Well, you be a clever lady!”
he said, in admiration. “I’ve been
three weeks learning mine.”
“I have heard it before,”
she quietly observed. “Now, would you do
anything to please me, Charley?”
“I’d do a good deal, miss.”
“Would you let me play your part for one night?”
“Oh, miss! But your woman’s gown-you
couldn’t.”
“I can get boy’s clothes-at
least all that would be wanted besides the mumming
dress. What should I have to give you to lend
me your things, to let me take your place for an hour
or two on Monday night, and on no account to say a
word about who or what I am? You would, of course,
have to excuse yourself from playing that night, and
to say that somebody-a cousin of Miss Vye’s-would
act for you. The other mummers have never spoken
to me in their lives so that it would be safe enough;
and if it were not, I should not mind. Now, what
must I give you to agree to this? Half a crown?”
The youth shook his head
“Five shillings?”
He shook his head again. “Money
won’t do it,” he said, brushing the iron
head of the firedog with the hollow of his hand.
“What will, then, Charley?” said Eustacia
in a disappointed tone.
“You know what you forbade me
at the Maypoling, miss,” murmured the lad, without
looking at her, and still stroking the firedog’s
head.
“Yes,” said Eustacia,
with a little more hauteur. “You wanted
to join hands with me in the ring, if I recollect?”
“Half an hour of that, and I’ll agree,
miss.”
Eustacia regarded the youth steadfastly.
He was three years younger than herself, but apparently
not backward for his age. “Half an hour
of what?” she said, though she guessed what.
“Holding your hand in mine.”
She was silent. “Make it a quarter of an
hour,” she said
“Yes, Miss Eustacia-I
will, if I may kiss it too. A quarter of an hour.
And I’ll swear to do the best I can to let you
take my place without anybody knowing. Don’t
you think somebody might know your tongue, miss?”
“It is possible. But I
will put a pebble in my mouth to make is less likely.
Very well; you shall be allowed to have my hand as
soon as you bring the dress and your sword and staff.
I don’t want you any longer now.”
Charley departed, and Eustacia felt
more and more interest in life. Here was something
to do: here was some one to see, and a charmingly
adventurous way to see him. “Ah,”
she said to herself, “want of an object to live
for-that’s all is the matter with
me!”
Eustacia’s manner was as a rule
of a slumberous sort, her passions being of the massive
rather than the vivacious kind. But when aroused
she would make a dash which, just for the time, was
not unlike the move of a naturally lively person.
On the question of recognition she
was somewhat indifferent. By the acting lads
themselves she was not likely to be known. With
the guests who might be assembled she was hardly so
secure. Yet detection, after all, would be no
such dreadful thing. The fact only could be detected,
her true motive never. It would be instantly set
down as the passing freak of a girl whose ways were
already considered singular. That she was doing
for an earnest reason what would most naturally be
done in jest was at any rate a safe secret.
The next evening Eustacia stood punctually
at the fuelhouse door, waiting for the dusk which
was to bring Charley with the trappings. Her
grandfather was at home tonight, and she would be unable
to ask her confederate indoors.
He appeared on the dark ridge of heathland,
like a fly on a Negro, bearing the articles with him,
and came up breathless with his walk.
“Here are the things,”
he whispered, placing them upon the threshold.
“And now, Miss Eustacia-”
“The payment. It is quite
ready. I am as good as my word.”
She leant against the door-post, and
gave him her hand. Charley took it in both his
own with a tenderness beyond description, unless it
was like that of a child holding a captured sparrow.
“Why, there’s a glove
on it!” he said in a deprecating way.
“I have been walking,” she observed.
“But, miss!”
“Well-it is hardly
fair.” She pulled off the glove, and gave
him her bare hand.
They stood together minute after minute,
without further speech, each looking at the blackening
scene, and each thinking his and her own thoughts.
“I think I won’t use it
all up tonight,” said Charley devotedly, when
six or eight minutes had been passed by him caressing
her hand. “May I have the other few minutes
another time?”
“As you like,” said she
without the least emotion. “But it must
be over in a week. Now, there is only one thing
I want you to do-to wait while I put on
the dress, and then to see if I do my part properly.
But let me look first indoors.”
She vanished for a minute or two,
and went in. Her grandfather was safely asleep
in his chair. “Now, then,” she said,
on returning, “walk down the garden a little
way, and when I am ready I’ll call you.”
Charley walked and waited, and presently
heard a soft whistle. He returned to the fuelhouse
door.
“Did you whistle, Miss Vye?”
“Yes; come in,” reached
him in Eustacia’s voice from a back quarter.
“I must not strike a light till the door is shut,
or it may be seen shining. Push your hat into
the hole through to the wash-house, if you can feel
your way across.”
Charley did as commanded, and she
struck the light revealing herself to be changed in
sex, brilliant in colours, and armed from top to toe.
Perhaps she quailed a little under Charley’s
vigorous gaze, but whether any shyness at her male
attire appeared upon her countenance could not be
seen by reason of the strips of ribbon which used to
cover the face in mumming costumes, representing the
barred visor of the mediaeval helmet.
“It fits pretty well,”
she said, looking down at the white overalls, “except
that the tunic, or whatever you call it, is long in
the sleeve. The bottom of the overalls I can
turn up inside. Now pay attention.”
Eustacia then proceeded in her delivery,
striking the sword against the staff or lance at the
minatory phrases, in the orthodox mumming manner,
and strutting up and down. Charley seasoned his
admiration with criticism of the gentlest kind, for
the touch of Eustacia’s hand yet remained with
him.
“And now for your excuse to
the others,” she said. “Where do you
meet before you go to Mrs. Yeobright’s?”
“We thought of meeting here,
miss, if you have nothing to say against it.
At eight o’clock, so as to get there by nine.”
“Yes. Well, you of course
must not appear. I will march in about five minutes
late, ready-dressed, and tell them that you can’t
come. I have decided that the best plan will
be for you to be sent somewhere by me, to make a real
thing of the excuse. Our two heath-croppers are
in the habit of straying into the meads, and tomorrow
evening you can go and see if they are gone there.
I’ll manage the rest. Now you may leave
me.”
“Yes, miss. But I think
I’ll have one minute more of what I am owed,
if you don’t mind.”
Eustacia gave him her hand as before.
“One minute,” she said,
and counted on till she reached seven or eight minutes.
Hand and person she then withdrew to a distance of
several feet, and recovered some of her old dignity.
The contract completed, she raised between them a
barrier impenetrable as a wall.
“There, ’tis all gone;
and I didn’t mean quite all,” he said,
with a sigh.
“You had good measure,” said she, turning
away.
“Yes, miss. Well, ’tis over, and
now I’ll get home-along.”
5-Through the Moonlight
The next evening the mummers were
assembled in the same spot, awaiting the entrance
of the Turkish Knight.
“Twenty minutes after eight by the Quiet Woman,
and Charley not come.”
“Ten minutes past by Blooms-End.”
“It wants ten minutes to, by Grandfer Cantle’s
watch.”
“And ’tis five minutes past by the captain’s
clock.”
On Egdon there was no absolute hour
of the day. The time at any moment was a number
of varying doctrines professed by the different hamlets,
some of them having originally grown up from a common
root, and then become divided by secession, some having
been alien from the beginning. West Egdon believed
in Blooms-End time, East Egdon in the time of the
Quiet Woman Inn. Grandfer Cantle’s watch
had numbered many followers in years gone by, but
since he had grown older faiths were shaken. Thus,
the mummers having gathered hither from scattered points
each came with his own tenets on early and late; and
they waited a little longer as a compromise.
Eustacia had watched the assemblage
through the hole; and seeing that now was the proper
moment to enter, she went from the “linhay”
and boldly pulled the bobbin of the fuelhouse door.
Her grandfather was safe at the Quiet Woman.
“Here’s Charley at last! How late
you be, Charley.”
“’Tis not Charley,”
said the Turkish Knight from within his visor. “’Tis
a cousin of Miss Vye’s, come to take Charley’s
place from curiosity. He was obliged to go and
look for the heath-croppers that have got into the
meads, and I agreed to take his place, as he knew he
couldn’t come back here again tonight.
I know the part as well as he.”
Her graceful gait, elegant figure,
and dignified manner in general won the mummers to
the opinion that they had gained by the exchange, if
the newcomer were perfect in his part.
“It don’t matter-if
you be not too young,” said Saint George.
Eustacia’s voice had sounded somewhat more juvenile
and fluty than Charley’s.
“I know every word of it, I
tell you,” said Eustacia decisively. Dash
being all that was required to carry her triumphantly
through, she adopted as much as was necessary.
“Go ahead, lads, with the try-over. I’ll
challenge any of you to find a mistake in me.”
The play was hastily rehearsed, whereupon
the other mummers were delighted with the new knight.
They extinguished the candles at half-past eight,
and set out upon the heath in the direction of Mrs.
Yeobright’s house at Bloom’s-End.
There was a slight hoarfrost that
night, and the moon, though not more than half full,
threw a spirited and enticing brightness upon the
fantastic figures of the mumming band, whose plumes
and ribbons rustled in their walk like autumn leaves.
Their path was not over Rainbarrow now, but down a
valley which left that ancient elevation a little to
the east. The bottom of the vale was green to
a width of ten yards or thereabouts, and the shining
facets of frost upon the blades of grass seemed to
move on with the shadows of those they surrounded.
The masses of furze and heath to the right and left
were dark as ever; a mere half-moon was powerless
to silver such sable features as theirs.
Half-an-hour of walking and talking
brought them to the spot in the valley where the grass
riband widened and led down to the front of the house.
At sight of the place Eustacia who had felt a few passing
doubts during her walk with the youths, again was
glad that the adventure had been undertaken.
She had come out to see a man who might possibly have
the power to deliver her soul from a most deadly oppression.
What was Wildeve? Interesting, but inadequate.
Perhaps she would see a sufficient hero tonight.
As they drew nearer to the front of
the house the mummers became aware that music and
dancing were briskly flourishing within. Every
now and then a long low note from the serpent, which
was the chief wind instrument played at these times,
advanced further into the heath than the thin treble
part, and reached their ears alone; and next a more
than usual loud tread from a dancer would come the
same way. With nearer approach these fragmentary
sounds became pieced together, and were found to be
the salient points of the tune called “Nancy’s
Fancy.”
He was there, of course. Who
was she that he danced with? Perhaps some unknown
woman, far beneath herself in culture, was by the most
subtle of lures sealing his fate this very instant.
To dance with a man is to concentrate a twelvemonth’s
regulation fire upon him in the fragment of an hour.
To pass to courtship without acquaintance, to pass
to marriage without courtship, is a skipping of terms
reserved for those alone who tread this royal road.
She would see how his heart lay by keen observation
of them all.
The enterprising lady followed the
mumming company through the gate in the white paling,
and stood before the open porch. The house was
encrusted with heavy thatchings, which dropped between
the upper windows; the front, upon which the moonbeams
directly played, had originally been white; but a
huge pyracanth now darkened the greater portion.
It became at once evident that the
dance was proceeding immediately within the surface
of the door, no apartment intervening. The brushing
of skirts and elbows, sometimes the bumping of shoulders,
could be heard against the very panels. Eustacia,
though living within two miles of the place, had never
seen the interior of this quaint old habitation.
Between Captain Vye and the Yeobrights there had never
existed much acquaintance, the former having come
as a stranger and purchased the long-empty house at
Mistover Knap not long before the death of Mrs. Yeobright’s
husband; and with that event and the departure of her
son such friendship as had grown up became quite broken
off.
“Is there no passage inside
the door, then?” asked Eustacia as they stood
within the porch.
“No,” said the lad who
played the Saracen. “The door opens right
upon the front sitting-room, where the spree’s
going on.”
“So that we cannot open the
door without stopping the dance.”
“That’s it. Here
we must bide till they have done, for they always bolt
the back door after dark.”
“They won’t be much longer,” said
Father Christmas.
This assertion, however, was hardly
borne out by the event. Again the instruments
ended the tune; again they recommenced with as much
fire and pathos as if it were the first strain.
The air was now that one without any particular beginning,
middle, or end, which perhaps, among all the dances
which throng an inspired fiddler’s fancy, best
conveys the idea of the interminable-the
celebrated “Devil’s Dream.”
The fury of personal movement that was kindled by
the fury of the notes could be approximately imagined
by these outsiders under the moon, from the occasional
kicks of toes and heels against the door, whenever
the whirl round had been of more than customary velocity.
The first five minutes of listening
was interesting enough to the mummers. The five
minutes extended to ten minutes, and these to a quarter
of an hour; but no signs of ceasing were audible in
the lively “Dream.” The bumping against
the door, the laughter, the stamping, were all as
vigorous as ever, and the pleasure in being outside
lessened considerably.
“Why does Mrs. Yeobright give
parties of this sort?” Eustacia asked, a little
surprised to hear merriment so pronounced.
“It is not one of her bettermost
parlour-parties. She’s asked the plain
neighbours and workpeople without drawing any lines,
just to give ’em a good supper and such like.
Her son and she wait upon the folks.”
“I see,” said Eustacia.
“’Tis the last strain,
I think,” said Saint George, with his ear to
the panel. “A young man and woman have
just swung into this corner, and he’s saying
to her, ’Ah, the pity; ‘tis over for us
this time, my own.’”
“Thank God,” said the
Turkish Knight, stamping, and taking from the wall
the conventional lance that each of the mummers carried.
Her boots being thinner than those of the young men,
the hoar had damped her feet and made them cold.
“Upon my song ’tis another
ten minutes for us,” said the Valiant Soldier,
looking through the keyhole as the tune modulated into
another without stopping. “Grandfer Cantle
is standing in this corner, waiting his turn.”
“’Twon’t be long;
’tis a six-handed reel,” said the Doctor.
“Why not go in, dancing or no?
They sent for us,” said the Saracen.
“Certainly not,” said
Eustacia authoritatively, as she paced smartly up
and down from door to gate to warm herself. “We
should burst into the middle of them and stop the
dance, and that would be unmannerly.”
“He thinks himself somebody
because he has had a bit more schooling than we,”
said the Doctor.
“You may go to the deuce!” said Eustacia.
There was a whispered conversation
between three or four of them, and one turned to her.
“Will you tell us one thing?”
he said, not without gentleness. “Be you
Miss Vye? We think you must be.”
“You may think what you like,”
said Eustacia slowly. “But honourable lads
will not tell tales upon a lady.”
“We’ll say nothing, miss. That’s
upon our honour.”
“Thank you,” she replied.
At this moment the fiddles finished
off with a screech, and the serpent emitted a last
note that nearly lifted the roof. When, from the
comparative quiet within, the mummers judged that the
dancers had taken their seats, Father Christmas advanced,
lifted the latch, and put his head inside the door.
“Ah, the mummers, the mummers!”
cried several guests at once. “Clear a
space for the mummers.”
Humpbacked Father Christmas then made
a complete entry, swinging his huge club, and in a
general way clearing the stage for the actors proper,
while he informed the company in smart verse that he
was come, welcome or welcome not; concluding his speech
with
“Make room, make room,
my gallant boys,
And give us space to rhyme;
We’ve come to show Saint George’s
play,
Upon this Christmas time.”
The guests were now arranging themselves
at one end of the room, the fiddler was mending a
string, the serpent-player was emptying his mouthpiece,
and the play began. First of those outside the
Valiant Soldier entered, in the interest of Saint
George-
“Here come I, the Valiant
Soldier;
Slasher is my name”;
and so on. This speech concluded
with a challenge to the infidel, at the end of which
it was Eustacia’s duty to enter as the Turkish
Knight. She, with the rest who were not yet on,
had hitherto remained in the moonlight which streamed
under the porch. With no apparent effort or backwardness
she came in, beginning-
“Here come I, a Turkish Knight,
Who learnt in Turkish land to fight;
I’ll fight this man with courage bold:
If his blood’s hot I’ll make it cold!”
During her declamation Eustacia held
her head erect, and spoke as roughly as she could,
feeling pretty secure from observation. But the
concentration upon her part necessary to prevent discovery,
the newness of the scene, the shine of the candles,
and the confusing effect upon her vision of the ribboned
visor which hid her features, left her absolutely
unable to perceive who were present as spectators.
On the further side of a table bearing candles she
could faintly discern faces, and that was all.
Meanwhile Jim Starks as the Valiant
Soldier had come forward, and, with a glare upon the
Turk, replied-
“If, then, thou
art that Turkish Knight,
Draw out thy sword,
and let us fight!”
And fight they did; the issue of the
combat being that the Valiant Soldier was slain by
a preternaturally inadequate thrust from Eustacia,
Jim, in his ardour for genuine histrionic art, coming
down like a log upon the stone floor with force enough
to dislocate his shoulder. Then, after more words
from the Turkish Knight, rather too faintly delivered,
and statements that he’d fight Saint George and
all his crew, Saint George himself magnificently entered
with the well-known flourish-
“Here come I, Saint
George, the valiant man,
With naked sword and spear in hand,
Who fought the dragon and brought him to the
slaughter,
And by this won fair Sabra, the King of Egypt’s
daughter;
What mortal man would dare to stand
Before me with my sword in hand?”
This was the lad who had first recognized
Eustacia; and when she now, as the Turk, replied with
suitable defiance, and at once began the combat, the
young fellow took especial care to use his sword as
gently as possible. Being wounded, the Knight
fell upon one knee, according to the direction.
The Doctor now entered, restored the Knight by giving
him a draught from the bottle which he carried, and
the fight was again resumed, the Turk sinking by degrees
until quite overcome-dying as hard in this
venerable drama as he is said to do at the present
day.
This gradual sinking to the earth
was, in fact, one reason why Eustacia had thought
that the part of the Turkish Knight, though not the
shortest, would suit her best. A direct fall from
upright to horizontal, which was the end of the other
fighting characters, was not an elegant or decorous
part for a girl. But it was easy to die like a
Turk, by a dogged decline.
Eustacia was now among the number
of the slain, though not on the floor, for she had
managed to sink into a sloping position against the
clock-case, so that her head was well elevated.
The play proceeded between Saint George, the Saracen,
the Doctor, and Father Christmas; and Eustacia, having
no more to do, for the first time found leisure to
observe the scene round, and to search for the form
that had drawn her hither.
6-The Two Stand Face to Face
The room had been arranged with a
view to the dancing, the large oak table having been
moved back till it stood as a breastwork to the fireplace.
At each end, behind, and in the chimney-corner were
grouped the guests, many of them being warm-faced
and panting, among whom Eustacia cursorily recognized
some well-to-do persons from beyond the heath.
Thomasin, as she had expected, was not visible, and
Eustacia recollected that a light had shone from an
upper window when they were outside-the
window, probably, of Thomasin’s room. A
nose, chin, hands, knees, and toes projected from
the seat within the chimney opening, which members
she found to unite in the person of Grandfer Cantle,
Mrs. Yeobright’s occasional assistant in the
garden, and therefore one of the invited. The
smoke went up from an Etna of peat in front of him,
played round the notches of the chimney-crook, struck
against the salt-box, and got lost among the flitches.
Another part of the room soon riveted
her gaze. At the other side of the chimney stood
the settle, which is the necessary supplement to a
fire so open that nothing less than a strong breeze
will carry up the smoke. It is, to the hearths
of old-fashioned cavernous fireplaces, what the east
belt of trees is to the exposed country estate, or
the north wall to the garden. Outside the settle
candles gutter, locks of hair wave, young women shiver,
and old men sneeze. Inside is Paradise. Not
a symptom of a draught disturbs the air; the sitters’
backs are as warm as their faces, and songs and old
tales are drawn from the occupants by the comfortable
heat, like fruit from melon plants in a frame.
It was, however, not with those who
sat in the settle that Eustacia was concerned.
A face showed itself with marked distinctness against
the dark-tanned wood of the upper part. The owner,
who was leaning against the settle’s outer end,
was Clement Yeobright, or Clym, as he was called here;
she knew it could be nobody else. The spectacle
constituted an area of two feet in Rembrandt’s
intensest manner. A strange power in the lounger’s
appearance lay in the fact that, though his whole figure
was visible, the observer’s eye was only
aware of his face.
To one of middle age the countenance
was that of a young man, though a youth might hardly
have seen any necessity for the term of immaturity.
But it was really one of those faces which convey less
the idea of so many years as its age than of so much
experience as its store. The number of their
years may have adequately summed up Jared, Mahalaleel,
and the rest of the antediluvians, but the age of a
modern man is to be measured by the intensity of his
history.
The face was well shaped, even excellently.
But the mind within was beginning to use it as a mere
waste tablet whereon to trace its idiosyncrasies as
they developed themselves. The beauty here visible
would in no long time be ruthlessly over-run by its
parasite, thought, which might just as well have fed
upon a plainer exterior where there was nothing it
could harm. Had Heaven preserved Yeobright from
a wearing habit of meditation, people would have said,
“A handsome man.” Had his brain unfolded
under sharper contours they would have said, “A
thoughtful man.” But an inner strenuousness
was preying upon an outer symmetry, and they rated
his look as singular.
Hence people who began by beholding
him ended by perusing him. His countenance was
overlaid with legible meanings. Without being
thought-worn he yet had certain marks derived from
a perception of his surroundings, such as are not
unfrequently found on men at the end of the four or
five years of endeavour which follow the close of placid
pupilage. He already showed that thought is a
disease of flesh, and indirectly bore evidence that
ideal physical beauty is incompatible with emotional
development and a full recognition of the coil of things.
Mental luminousness must be fed with the oil of life,
even though there is already a physical need for it;
and the pitiful sight of two demands on one supply
was just showing itself here.
When standing before certain men the
philosopher regrets that thinkers are but perishable
tissue, the artist that perishable tissue has to think.
Thus to deplore, each from his point of view, the mutually
destructive interdependence of spirit and flesh would
have been instinctive with these in critically observing
Yeobright.
As for his look, it was a natural
cheerfulness striving against depression from without,
and not quite succeeding. The look suggested
isolation, but it revealed something more. As
is usual with bright natures, the deity that lies
ignominiously chained within an ephemeral human carcase
shone out of him like a ray.
The effect upon Eustacia was palpable.
The extraordinary pitch of excitement that she had
reached beforehand would, indeed, have caused her
to be influenced by the most commonplace man.
She was troubled at Yeobright’s presence.
The remainder of the play ended-the
Saracen’s head was cut off, and Saint George
stood as victor. Nobody commented, any more than
they would have commented on the fact of mushrooms
coming in autumn or snowdrops in spring. They
took the piece as phlegmatically as did the actors
themselves. It was a phase of cheerfulness which
was, as a matter of course, to be passed through every
Christmas; and there was no more to be said.
They sang the plaintive chant which
follows the play, during which all the dead men rise
to their feet in a silent and awful manner, like the
ghosts of Napoleon’s soldiers in the Midnight
Review. Afterwards the door opened, and Fairway
appeared on the threshold, accompanied by Christian
and another. They had been waiting outside for
the conclusion of the play, as the players had waited
for the conclusion of the dance.
“Come in, come in,” said
Mrs. Yeobright; and Clym went forward to welcome them.
“How is it you are so late? Grandfer Cantle
has been here ever so long, and we thought you’d
have come with him, as you live so near one another.”
“Well, I should have come earlier,”
Mr. Fairway said and paused to look along the beam
of the ceiling for a nail to hang his hat on; but,
finding his accustomed one to be occupied by the mistletoe,
and all the nails in the walls to be burdened with
bunches of holly, he at last relieved himself of the
hat by ticklishly balancing it between the candle-box
and the head of the clock-case. “I should
have come earlier, ma’am,” he resumed,
with a more composed air, “but I know what parties
be, and how there’s none too much room in folks’
houses at such times, so I thought I wouldn’t
come till you’d got settled a bit.”
“And I thought so too, Mrs.
Yeobright,” said Christian earnestly, “but
Father there was so eager that he had no manners at
all, and left home almost afore ’twas dark.
I told him ‘twas barely decent in a’ old
man to come so oversoon; but words be wind.”
“Klk! I wasn’t going
to bide waiting about, till half the game was over!
I’m as light as a kite when anything’s
going on!” crowed Grandfer Cantle from the chimneyseat.
Fairway had meanwhile concluded a
critical gaze at Yeobright. “Now, you may
not believe it,” he said to the rest of the room,
“but I should never have knowed this gentleman
if I had met him anywhere off his own he’th-he’s
altered so much.”
“You too have altered, and for
the better, I think Timothy,” said Yeobright,
surveying the firm figure of Fairway.
“Master Yeobright, look me over
too. I have altered for the better, haven’t
I, hey?” said Grandfer Cantle, rising and placing
himself something above half a foot from Clym’s
eye, to induce the most searching criticism.
“To be sure we will,”
said Fairway, taking the candle and moving it over
the surface of the Grandfer’s countenance, the
subject of his scrutiny irradiating himself with light
and pleasant smiles, and giving himself jerks of juvenility.
“You haven’t changed much,” said
Yeobright.
“If there’s any difference,
Grandfer is younger,” appended Fairway decisively.
“And yet not my own doing, and
I feel no pride in it,” said the pleased ancient.
“But I can’t be cured of my vagaries; them
I plead guilty to. Yes, Master Cantle always
was that, as we know. But I am nothing by the
side of you, Mister Clym.”
“Nor any o’ us,”
said Humphrey, in a low rich tone of admiration, not
intended to reach anybody’s ears.
“Really, there would have been
nobody here who could have stood as decent second
to him, or even third, if I hadn’t been a soldier
in the Bang-up Locals (as we was called for our smartness),”
said Grandfer Cantle. “And even as ’tis
we all look a little scammish beside him. But
in the year four ’twas said there wasn’t
a finer figure in the whole South Wessex than I, as
I looked when dashing past the shop-winders with the
rest of our company on the day we ran out o’
Budmouth because it was thoughted that Boney had landed
round the point. There was I, straight as a young
poplar, wi’ my firelock, and my bagnet, and my
spatterdashes, and my stock sawing my jaws off, and
my accoutrements sheening like the seven stars!
Yes, neighbours, I was a pretty sight in my soldiering
days. You ought to have seen me in four!”
“’Tis his mother’s
side where Master Clym’s figure comes from, bless
ye,” said Timothy. “I know’d
her brothers well. Longer coffins were never
made in the whole country of South Wessex, and ’tis
said that poor George’s knees were crumpled
up a little e’en as ’twas.”
“Coffins, where?” inquired
Christian, drawing nearer. “Have the ghost
of one appeared to anybody, Master Fairway?”
“No, no. Don’t let
your mind so mislead your ears, Christian; and be a
man,” said Timothy reproachfully.
“I will.” said Christian.
“But now I think o’t my shadder last night
seemed just the shape of a coffin. What is it
a sign of when your shade’s like a coffin, neighbours?
It can’t be nothing to be afeared of, I suppose?”
“Afeared, no!” said the
Grandfer. “Faith, I was never afeard of
nothing except Boney, or I shouldn’t ha’
been the soldier I was. Yes, ’tis a thousand
pities you didn’t see me in four!”
By this time the mummers were preparing
to leave; but Mrs. Yeobright stopped them by asking
them to sit down and have a little supper. To
this invitation Father Christmas, in the name of them
all, readily agreed.
Eustacia was happy in the opportunity
of staying a little longer. The cold and frosty
night without was doubly frigid to her. But the
lingering was not without its difficulties. Mrs.
Yeobright, for want of room in the larger apartment,
placed a bench for the mummers halfway through the
pantry door, which opened from the sitting-room.
Here they seated themselves in a row, the door being
left open-thus they were still virtually
in the same apartment. Mrs. Yeobright now murmured
a few words to her son, who crossed the room to the
pantry door, striking his head against the mistletoe
as he passed, and brought the mummers beef and bread,
cake pastry, mead, and elder-wine, the waiting being
done by him and his mother, that the little maid-servant
might sit as guest. The mummers doffed their
helmets, and began to eat and drink.
“But you will surely have some?”
said Clym to the Turkish Knight, as he stood before
that warrior, tray in hand. She had refused, and
still sat covered, only the sparkle of her eyes being
visible between the ribbons which covered her face.
“None, thank you,” replied Eustacia.
“He’s quite a youngster,”
said the Saracen apologetically, “and you must
excuse him. He’s not one of the old set,
but have jined us because t’other couldn’t
come.”
“But he will take something?”
persisted Yeobright. “Try a glass of mead
or elder-wine.”
“Yes, you had better try that,”
said the Saracen. “It will keep the cold
out going home-along.”
Though Eustacia could not eat without
uncovering her face she could drink easily enough
beneath her disguise. The elder-wine was accordingly
accepted, and the glass vanished inside the ribbons.
At moments during this performance
Eustacia was half in doubt about the security of her
position; yet it had a fearful joy. A series of
attentions paid to her, and yet not to her but to some
imaginary person, by the first man she had ever been
inclined to adore, complicated her emotions indescribably.
She had loved him partly because he was exceptional
in this scene, partly because she had determined to
love him, chiefly because she was in desperate need
of loving somebody after wearying of Wildeve.
Believing that she must love him in spite of herself,
she had been influenced after the fashion of the second
Lord Lyttleton and other persons, who have dreamed
that they were to die on a certain day, and by stress
of a morbid imagination have actually brought about
that event. Once let a maiden admit the possibility
of her being stricken with love for someone at a certain
hour and place, and the thing is as good as done.
Did anything at this moment suggest
to Yeobright the sex of the creature whom that fantastic
guise inclosed, how extended was her scope both in
feeling and in making others feel, and how far her
compass transcended that of her companions in the
band? When the disguised Queen of Love appeared
before Aeneas a preternatural perfume accompanied her
presence and betrayed her quality. If such a
mysterious emanation ever was projected by the emotions
of an earthly woman upon their object, it must have
signified Eustacia’s presence to Yeobright now.
He looked at her wistfully, then seemed to fall into
a reverie, as if he were forgetting what he observed.
The momentary situation ended, he passed on, and Eustacia
sipped her wine without knowing what she drank.
The man for whom she had pre-determined to nourish
a passion went into the small room, and across it
to the further extremity.
The mummers, as has been stated, were
seated on a bench, one end of which extended into
the small apartment, or pantry, for want of space
in the outer room. Eustacia, partly from shyness,
had chosen the midmost seat, which thus commanded
a view of the interior of the pantry as well as the
room containing the guests. When Clym passed down
the pantry her eyes followed him in the gloom which
prevailed there. At the remote end was a door
which, just as he was about to open it for himself,
was opened by somebody within; and light streamed
forth.
The person was Thomasin, with a candle,
looking anxious, pale, and interesting. Yeobright
appeared glad to see her, and pressed her hand.
“That’s right, Tamsie,” he said heartily,
as though recalled to himself by the sight of her,
“you have decided to come down. I am glad
of it.”
“Hush-no, no,”
she said quickly. “I only came to speak
to you.”
“But why not join us?”
“I cannot. At least I would
rather not. I am not well enough, and we shall
have plenty of time together now you are going to be
home a good long holiday.”
“It isn’t nearly so pleasant
without you. Are you really ill?”
“Just a little, my old cousin-here,”
she said, playfully sweeping her hand across her heart.
“Ah, Mother should have asked
somebody else to be present tonight, perhaps?”
“O no, indeed. I merely
stepped down, Clym, to ask you-” Here
he followed her through the doorway into the private
room beyond, and, the door closing, Eustacia and the
mummer who sat next to her, the only other witness
of the performance, saw and heard no more.
The heat flew to Eustacia’s
head and cheeks. She instantly guessed that Clym,
having been home only these two or three days, had
not as yet been made acquainted with Thomasin’s
painful situation with regard to Wildeve; and seeing
her living there just as she had been living before
he left home, he naturally suspected nothing.
Eustacia felt a wild jealousy of Thomasin on the instant.
Though Thomasin might possibly have tender sentiments
towards another man as yet, how long could they be
expected to last when she was shut up here with this
interesting and travelled cousin of hers? There
was no knowing what affection might not soon break
out between the two, so constantly in each other’s
society, and not a distracting object near. Clym’s
boyish love for her might have languished, but it
might easily be revived again.
Eustacia was nettled by her own contrivances.
What a sheer waste of herself to be dressed thus while
another was shining to advantage! Had she known
the full effect of the encounter she would have moved
heaven and earth to get here in a natural manner.
The power of her face all lost, the charm of her emotions
all disguised, the fascinations of her coquetry denied
existence, nothing but a voice left to her; she had
a sense of the doom of Echo. “Nobody here
respects me,” she said. She had overlooked
the fact that, in coming as a boy among other boys,
she would be treated as a boy. The slight, though
of her own causing, and self-explanatory, she was
unable to dismiss as unwittingly shown, so sensitive
had the situation made her.
Women have done much for themselves
in histrionic dress. To look far below those
who, like a certain fair personator of Polly Peachum
early in the last century, and another of Lydia Languish
early in this, (1) have won not only love but ducal
coronets into the bargain, whole shoals of them have
reached to the initial satisfaction of getting love
almost whence they would. But the Turkish Knight
was denied even the chance of achieving this by the
fluttering ribbons which she dared not brush aside.
(1) Written in 1877.
Yeobright returned to the room without
his cousin. When within two or three feet of
Eustacia he stopped, as if again arrested by a thought.
He was gazing at her. She looked another way,
disconcerted, and wondered how long this purgatory
was to last. After lingering a few seconds he
passed on again.
To court their own discomfiture by
love is a common instinct with certain perfervid women.
Conflicting sensations of love, fear, and shame reduced
Eustacia to a state of the utmost uneasiness.
To escape was her great and immediate desire.
The other mummers appeared to be in no hurry to leave;
and murmuring to the lad who sat next to her that she
preferred waiting for them outside the house, she moved
to the door as imperceptibly as possible, opened it,
and slipped out.
The calm, lone scene reassured her.
She went forward to the palings and leant over them,
looking at the moon. She had stood thus but a
little time when the door again opened. Expecting
to see the remainder of the band Eustacia turned;
but no-Clym Yeobright came out as softly
as she had done, and closed the door behind him.
He advanced and stood beside her.
“I have an odd opinion,” he said, “and
should like to ask you a question. Are you a woman-or
am I wrong?”
“I am a woman.”
His eyes lingered on her with great
interest. “Do girls often play as mummers
now? They never used to.”
“They don’t now.”
“Why did you?”
“To get excitement and shake off depression,”
she said in low tones.
“What depressed you?”
“Life.”
“That’s a cause of depression a good many
have to put up with.”
“Yes.”
A long silence. “And do you find excitement?”
asked Clym at last.
“At this moment, perhaps.”
“Then you are vexed at being discovered?”
“Yes; though I thought I might be.”
“I would gladly have asked you
to our party had I known you wished to come.
Have I ever been acquainted with you in my youth?”
“Never.”
“Won’t you come in again, and stay as
long as you like?”
“No. I wish not to be further recognized.”
“Well, you are safe with me.”
After remaining in thought a minute he added gently,
“I will not intrude upon you longer. It
is a strange way of meeting, and I will not ask why
I find a cultivated woman playing such a part as this.”
She did not volunteer the reason which he seemed to
hope for, and he wished her good night, going thence
round to the back of the house, where he walked up
and down by himself for some time before re-entering.
Eustacia, warmed with an inner fire,
could not wait for her companions after this.
She flung back the ribbons from her face, opened the
gate, and at once struck into the heath. She did
not hasten along. Her grandfather was in bed
at this hour, for she so frequently walked upon the
hills on moonlight nights that he took no notice of
her comings and goings, and, enjoying himself in his
own way, left her to do likewise. A more important
subject than that of getting indoors now engrossed
her. Yeobright, if he had the least curiosity,
would infallibly discover her name. What then?
She first felt a sort of exultation at the way in
which the adventure had terminated, even though at
moments between her exultations she was abashed
and blushful. Then this consideration recurred
to chill her: What was the use of her exploit?
She was at present a total stranger to the Yeobright
family. The unreasonable nimbus of romance with
which she had encircled that man might be her misery.
How could she allow herself to become so infatuated
with a stranger? And to fill the cup of her sorrow
there would be Thomasin, living day after day in inflammable
proximity to him; for she had just learnt that, contrary
to her first belief, he was going to stay at home
some considerable time.
She reached the wicket at Mistover
Knap, but before opening it she turned and faced the
heath once more. The form of Rainbarrow stood
above the hills, and the moon stood above Rainbarrow.
The air was charged with silence and frost. The
scene reminded Eustacia of a circumstance which till
that moment she had totally forgotten. She had
promised to meet Wildeve by the Barrow this very night
at eight, to give a final answer to his pleading for
an elopement.
She herself had fixed the evening
and the hour. He had probably come to the spot,
waited there in the cold, and been greatly disappointed.
“Well, so much the better-it
did not hurt him,” she said serenely. Wildeve
had at present the rayless outline of the sun through
smoked glass, and she could say such things as that
with the greatest facility.
She remained deeply pondering; and
Thomasin’s winning manner towards her cousin
arose again upon Eustacia’s mind.
“O that she had been married
to Damon before this!” she said. “And
she would if it hadn’t been for me! If I
had only known-if I had only known!”
Eustacia once more lifted her deep
stormy eyes to the moonlight, and, sighing that tragic
sigh of hers which was so much like a shudder, entered
the shadow of the roof. She threw off her trappings
in the outhouse, rolled them up, and went indoors
to her chamber.
7-A Coalition between Beauty and Oddness
The old captain’s prevailing
indifference to his granddaughter’s movements
left her free as a bird to follow her own courses;
but it so happened that he did take upon himself the
next morning to ask her why she had walked out so
late.
“Only in search of events, Grandfather,”
she said, looking out of the window with that drowsy
latency of manner which discovered so much force behind
it whenever the trigger was pressed.
“Search of events-one
would think you were one of the bucks I knew at one-and-twenty.”
“It is lonely here.”
“So much the better. If
I were living in a town my whole time would be taken
up in looking after you. I fully expected you
would have been home when I returned from the Woman.”
“I won’t conceal what
I did. I wanted an adventure, and I went with
the mummers. I played the part of the Turkish
Knight.”
“No, never? Ha, ha!
Good gad! I didn’t expect it of you, Eustacia.”
“It was my first performance,
and it certainly will be my last. Now I have
told you-and remember it is a secret.”
“Of course. But, Eustacia,
you never did-ha! ha! Dammy, how ’twould
have pleased me forty years ago! But remember,
no more of it, my girl. You may walk on the heath
night or day, as you choose, so that you don’t
bother me; but no figuring in breeches again.”
“You need have no fear for me, Grandpapa.”
Here the conversation ceased, Eustacia’s
moral training never exceeding in severity a dialogue
of this sort, which, if it ever became profitable
to good works, would be a result not dear at the price.
But her thoughts soon strayed far from her own personality;
and, full of a passionate and indescribable solicitude
for one to whom she was not even a name, she went
forth into the amplitude of tanned wild around her,
restless as Ahasuerus the Jew. She was about
half a mile from her residence when she beheld a sinister
redness arising from a ravine a little way in advance-dull
and lurid like a flame in sunlight and she guessed
it to signify Diggory Venn.
When the farmers who had wished to
buy in a new stock of reddle during the last month
had inquired where Venn was to be found, people replied,
“On Egdon Heath.” Day after day the
answer was the same. Now, since Egdon was populated
with heath-croppers and furze-cutters rather than
with sheep and shepherds, and the downs where most
of the latter were to be found lay some to the north,
some to the west of Egdon, his reason for camping
about there like Israel in Zin was not apparent.
The position was central and occasionally desirable.
But the sale of reddle was not Diggory’s primary
object in remaining on the heath, particularly at
so late a period of the year, when most travellers
of his class had gone into winter quarters.
Eustacia looked at the lonely man.
Wildeve had told her at their last meeting that Venn
had been thrust forward by Mrs. Yeobright as one ready
and anxious to take his place as Thomasin’s betrothed.
His figure was perfect, his face young and well outlined,
his eye bright, his intelligence keen, and his position
one which he could readily better if he chose.
But in spite of possibilities it was not likely that
Thomasin would accept this Ishmaelitish creature while
she had a cousin like Yeobright at her elbow, and
Wildeve at the same time not absolutely indifferent.
Eustacia was not long in guessing that poor Mrs. Yeobright,
in her anxiety for her niece’s future, had mentioned
this lover to stimulate the zeal of the other.
Eustacia was on the side of the Yeobrights now, and
entered into the spirit of the aunt’s desire.
“Good morning, miss,”
said the reddleman, taking off his cap of hareskin,
and apparently bearing her no ill-will from recollection
of their last meeting.
“Good morning, reddleman,”
she said, hardly troubling to lift her heavily shaded
eyes to his. “I did not know you were so
near. Is your van here too?”
Venn moved his elbow towards a hollow
in which a dense brake of purple-stemmed brambles
had grown to such vast dimensions as almost to form
a dell. Brambles, though churlish when handled,
are kindly shelter in early winter, being the latest
of the deciduous bushes to lose their leaves.
The roof and chimney of Venn’s
caravan showed behind the tracery and tangles of the
brake.
“You remain near this part?”
she asked with more interest.
“Yes, I have business here.”
“Not altogether the selling of reddle?”
“It has nothing to do with that.”
“It has to do with Miss Yeobright?”
Her face seemed to ask for an armed
peace, and he therefore said frankly, “Yes,
miss; it is on account of her.”
“On account of your approaching marriage with
her?”
Venn flushed through his stain.
“Don’t make sport of me, Miss Vye,”
he said.
“It isn’t true?”
“Certainly not.”
She was thus convinced that the reddleman
was a mere pis aller in Mrs. Yeobright’s
mind; one, moreover, who had not even been informed
of his promotion to that lowly standing. “It
was a mere notion of mine,” she said quietly;
and was about to pass by without further speech, when,
looking round to the right, she saw a painfully well-known
figure serpentining upwards by one of the little paths
which led to the top where she stood. Owing to
the necessary windings of his course his back was
at present towards them. She glanced quickly round;
to escape that man there was only one way. Turning
to Venn, she said, “Would you allow me to rest
a few minutes in your van? The banks are damp
for sitting on.”
“Certainly, miss; I’ll make a place for
you.”
She followed him behind the dell of
brambles to his wheeled dwelling into which Venn mounted,
placing the three-legged stool just within the door.
“That is the best I can do for
you,” he said, stepping down and retiring to
the path, where he resumed the smoking of his pipe
as he walked up and down.
Eustacia bounded into the vehicle
and sat on the stool, ensconced from view on the side
towards the trackway. Soon she heard the brushing
of other feet than the reddleman’s, a not very
friendly “Good day” uttered by two men
in passing each other, and then the dwindling of the
foot-fall of one of them in a direction onwards.
Eustacia stretched her neck forward till she caught
a glimpse of a receding back and shoulders; and she
felt a wretched twinge of misery, she knew not why.
It was the sickening feeling which, if the changed
heart has any generosity at all in its composition,
accompanies the sudden sight of a once-loved one who
is beloved no more.
When Eustacia descended to proceed
on her way the reddleman came near. “That
was Mr. Wildeve who passed, miss,” he said slowly,
and expressed by his face that he expected her to
feel vexed at having been sitting unseen.
“Yes, I saw him coming up the
hill,” replied Eustacia. “Why should
you tell me that?” It was a bold question, considering
the reddleman’s knowledge of her past love;
but her undemonstrative manner had power to repress
the opinions of those she treated as remote from her.
“I am glad to hear that you
can ask it,” said the reddleman bluntly.
“And, now I think of it, it agrees with what
I saw last night.”
“Ah-what was that?”
Eustacia wished to leave him, but wished to know.
“Mr. Wildeve stayed at Rainbarrow
a long time waiting for a lady who didn’t come.”
“You waited too, it seems?”
“Yes, I always do. I was
glad to see him disappointed. He will be there
again tonight.”
“To be again disappointed.
The truth is, reddleman, that that lady, so far from
wishing to stand in the way of Thomasin’s marriage
with Mr. Wildeve, would be very glad to promote it.”
Venn felt much astonishment at this
avowal, though he did not show it clearly; that exhibition
may greet remarks which are one remove from expectation,
but it is usually withheld in complicated cases of
two removes and upwards. “Indeed, miss,”
he replied.
“How do you know that Mr. Wildeve
will come to Rainbarrow again tonight?” she
asked.
“I heard him say to himself
that he would. He’s in a regular temper.”
Eustacia looked for a moment what
she felt, and she murmured, lifting her deep dark
eyes anxiously to his, “I wish I knew what to
do. I don’t want to be uncivil to him;
but I don’t wish to see him again; and I have
some few little things to return to him.”
“If you choose to send ’em
by me, miss, and a note to tell him that you wish
to say no more to him, I’ll take it for you quite
privately. That would be the most straightforward
way of letting him know your mind.”
“Very well,” said Eustacia.
“Come towards my house, and I will bring it
out to you.”
She went on, and as the path was an
infinitely small parting in the shaggy locks of the
heath, the reddleman followed exactly in her trail.
She saw from a distance that the captain was on the
bank sweeping the horizon with his telescope; and
bidding Venn to wait where he stood she entered the
house alone.
In ten minutes she returned with a
parcel and a note, and said, in placing them in his
hand, “Why are you so ready to take these for
me?”
“Can you ask that?”
“I suppose you think to serve
Thomasin in some way by it. Are you as anxious
as ever to help on her marriage?”
Venn was a little moved. “I
would sooner have married her myself,” he said
in a low voice. “But what I feel is that
if she cannot be happy without him I will do my duty
in helping her to get him, as a man ought.”
Eustacia looked curiously at the singular
man who spoke thus. What a strange sort of love,
to be entirely free from that quality of selfishness
which is frequently the chief constituent of the passion,
and sometimes its only one! The reddleman’s
disinterestedness was so well deserving of respect
that it overshot respect by being barely comprehended;
and she almost thought it absurd.
“Then we are both of one mind at last,”
she said.
“Yes,” replied Venn gloomily.
“But if you would tell me, miss, why you take
such an interest in her, I should be easier. It
is so sudden and strange.”
Eustacia appeared at a loss.
“I cannot tell you that, reddleman,” she
said coldly.
Venn said no more. He pocketed
the letter, and, bowing to Eustacia, went away.
Rainbarrow had again become blended
with night when Wildeve ascended the long acclivity
at its base. On his reaching the top a shape grew
up from the earth immediately behind him. It
was that of Eustacia’s emissary. He slapped
Wildeve on the shoulder. The feverish young inn-keeper
and ex-engineer started like Satan at the touch of
Ithuriel’s spear.
“The meeting is always at eight
o’clock, at this place,” said Venn, “and
here we are-we three.”
“We three?” said Wildeve, looking quickly
round.
“Yes; you, and I, and she.
This is she.” He held up the letter and
parcel.
Wildeve took them wonderingly.
“I don’t quite see what this means,”
he said. “How do you come here? There
must be some mistake.”
“It will be cleared from your
mind when you have read the letter. Lanterns
for one.” The reddleman struck a light,
kindled an inch of tallow-candle which he had brought,
and sheltered it with his cap.
“Who are you?” said Wildeve,
discerning by the candle-light an obscure rubicundity
of person in his companion. “You are the
reddleman I saw on the hill this morning-why,
you are the man who -”
“Please read the letter.”
“If you had come from the other
one I shouldn’t have been surprised,”
murmured Wildeve as he opened the letter and read.
His face grew serious.
TO MR. WILDEVE.
After some thought I have decided
once and for all that we must hold no further communication.
The more I consider the matter the more I am convinced
that there must be an end to our acquaintance.
Had you been uniformly faithful to me throughout these
two years you might now have some ground for accusing
me of heartlessness; but if you calmly consider what
I bore during the period of your desertion, and how
I passively put up with your courtship of another
without once interfering, you will, I think, own that
I have a right to consult my own feelings when you
come back to me again. That these are not what
they were towards you may, perhaps, be a fault in
me, but it is one which you can scarcely reproach
me for when you remember how you left me for Thomasin.
The little articles you gave me in
the early part of our friendship are returned by the
bearer of this letter. They should rightly have
been sent back when I first heard of your engagement
to her.
Eustacia.
By the time that Wildeve reached her
name the blankness with which he had read the first
half of the letter intensified to mortification.
“I am made a great fool of, one way and another,”
he said pettishly. “Do you know what is
in this letter?”
The reddleman hummed a tune.
“Can’t you answer me?” asked Wildeve
warmly.
“Ru-um-tum-tum,” sang the reddleman.
Wildeve stood looking on the ground
beside Venn’s feet, till he allowed his eyes
to travel upwards over Diggory’s form, as illuminated
by the candle, to his head and face. “Ha-ha!
Well, I suppose I deserve it, considering how I have
played with them both,” he said at last, as much
to himself as to Venn. “But of all the odd
things that ever I knew, the oddest is that you should
so run counter to your own interests as to bring this
to me.”
“My interests?”
“Certainly. ’Twas
your interest not to do anything which would send me
courting Thomasin again, now she has accepted you-or
something like it. Mrs. Yeobright says you are
to marry her. ’Tisn’t true, then?”
“Good Lord! I heard of
this before, but didn’t believe it. When
did she say so?”
Wildeve began humming as the reddleman had done.
“I don’t believe it now,” cried
Venn.
“Ru-um-tum-tum,” sang Wildeve.
“O Lord-how we can
imitate!” said Venn contemptuously. “I’ll
have this out. I’ll go straight to her.”
Diggory withdrew with an emphatic
step, Wildeve’s eye passing over his form in
withering derision, as if he were no more than a heath-cropper.
When the reddleman’s figure could no longer be
seen, Wildeve himself descended and plunged into the
rayless hollow of the vale.
To lose the two women-he
who had been the well-beloved of both-was
too ironical an issue to be endured. He could
only decently save himself by Thomasin; and once he
became her husband, Eustacia’s repentance, he
thought, would set in for a long and bitter term.
It was no wonder that Wildeve, ignorant of the new
man at the back of the scene, should have supposed
Eustacia to be playing a part. To believe that
the letter was not the result of some momentary pique,
to infer that she really gave him up to Thomasin,
would have required previous knowledge of her transfiguration
by that man’s influence. Who was to know
that she had grown generous in the greediness of a
new passion, that in coveting one cousin she was dealing
liberally with another, that in her eagerness to appropriate
she gave way?
Full of this resolve to marry in haste,
and wring the heart of the proud girl, Wildeve went
his way.
Meanwhile Diggory Venn had returned
to his van, where he stood looking thoughtfully into
the stove. A new vista was opened up to him.
But, however promising Mrs. Yeobright’s views
of him might be as a candidate for her niece’s
hand, one condition was indispensable to the favour
of Thomasin herself, and that was a renunciation of
his present wild mode of life. In this he saw
little difficulty.
He could not afford to wait till the
next day before seeing Thomasin and detailing his
plan. He speedily plunged himself into toilet
operations, pulled a suit of cloth clothes from a
box, and in about twenty minutes stood before the
van-lantern as a reddleman in nothing but his face,
the vermilion shades of which were not to be removed
in a day. Closing the door and fastening it with
a padlock, Venn set off towards Blooms-End.
He had reached the white palings and
laid his hand upon the gate when the door of the house
opened, and quickly closed again. A female form
had glided in. At the same time a man, who had
seemingly been standing with the woman in the porch,
came forward from the house till he was face to face
with Venn. It was Wildeve again.
“Man alive, you’ve been
quick at it,” said Diggory sarcastically.
“And you slow, as you will find,”
said Wildeve. “And,” lowering his
voice, “you may as well go back again now.
I’ve claimed her, and got her. Good night,
reddleman!” Thereupon Wildeve walked away.
Venn’s heart sank within him,
though it had not risen unduly high. He stood
leaning over the palings in an indecisive mood for
nearly a quarter of an hour. Then he went up
the garden path, knocked, and asked for Mrs. Yeobright.
Instead of requesting him to enter
she came to the porch. A discourse was carried
on between them in low measured tones for the space
of ten minutes or more. At the end of the time
Mrs. Yeobright went in, and Venn sadly retraced his
steps into the heath. When he had again regained
his van he lit the lantern, and with an apathetic
face at once began to pull off his best clothes, till
in the course of a few minutes he reappeared as the
confirmed and irretrievable reddleman that he had seemed
before.
8-Firmness Is Discovered in a Gentle Heart
On that evening the interior of Blooms-End,
though cosy and comfortable, had been rather silent.
Clym Yeobright was not at home. Since the Christmas
party he had gone on a few days’ visit to a friend
about ten miles off.
The shadowy form seen by Venn to part
from Wildeve in the porch, and quickly withdraw into
the house, was Thomasin’s. On entering she
threw down a cloak which had been carelessly wrapped
round her, and came forward to the light, where Mrs.
Yeobright sat at her work-table, drawn up within the
settle, so that part of it projected into the chimney-corner.
“I don’t like your going
out after dark alone, Tamsin,” said her aunt
quietly, without looking up from her work. “I
have only been just outside the door.”
“Well?” inquired Mrs.
Yeobright, struck by a change in the tone of Thomasin’s
voice, and observing her. Thomasin’s cheek
was flushed to a pitch far beyond that which it had
reached before her troubles, and her eyes glittered.
“It was he who knocked,” she said.
“I thought as much.”
“He wishes the marriage to be at once.”
“Indeed! What-is
he anxious?” Mrs. Yeobright directed a searching
look upon her niece. “Why did not Mr. Wildeve
come in?”
“He did not wish to. You
are not friends with him, he says. He would like
the wedding to be the day after tomorrow, quite privately;
at the church of his parish-not at ours.”
“Oh! And what did you say?”
“I agreed to it,” Thomasin
answered firmly. “I am a practical woman
now. I don’t believe in hearts at all.
I would marry him under any circumstances since-since
Clym’s letter.”
A letter was lying on Mrs. Yeobright’s
work-basket, and at Thomasin’s words her aunt
reopened it, and silently read for the tenth time that
day:-
What is the meaning of this silly
story that people are circulating about Thomasin and
Mr. Wildeve? I should call such a scandal humiliating
if there was the least chance of its being true.
How could such a gross falsehood have arisen?
It is said that one should go abroad to hear news
of home, and I appear to have done it. Of course
I contradict the tale everywhere; but it is very vexing,
and I wonder how it could have originated. It
is too ridiculous that such a girl as Thomasin could
so mortify us as to get jilted on the wedding day.
What has she done?
“Yes,” Mrs. Yeobright
said sadly, putting down the letter. “If
you think you can marry him, do so. And since
Mr. Wildeve wishes it to be unceremonious, let it
be that too. I can do nothing. It is all
in your own hands now. My power over your welfare
came to an end when you left this house to go with
him to Anglebury.” She continued, half in
bitterness, “I may almost ask, why do you consult
me in the matter at all? If you had gone and
married him without saying a word to me, I could hardly
have been angry-simply because, poor girl,
you can’t do a better thing.”
“Don’t say that and dishearten me.”
“You are right-I will not.”
“I do not plead for him, Aunt.
Human nature is weak, and I am not a blind woman to
insist that he is perfect. I did think so, but
I don’t now. But I know my course, and
you know that I know it. I hope for the best.”
“And so do I, and we will both
continue to,” said Mrs. Yeobright, rising and
kissing her. “Then the wedding, if it comes
off, will be on the morning of the very day Clym comes
home?”
“Yes. I decided that it
ought to be over before he came. After that you
can look him in the face, and so can I. Our concealments
will matter nothing.”
Mrs. Yeobright moved her head in thoughtful
assent, and presently said, “Do you wish me
to give you away? I am willing to undertake that,
you know, if you wish, as I was last time. After
once forbidding the banns I think I can do no less.”
“I don’t think I will
ask you to come,” said Thomasin reluctantly,
but with decision. “It would be unpleasant,
I am almost sure. Better let there be only strangers
present, and none of my relations at all. I would
rather have it so. I do not wish to do anything
which may touch your credit, and I feel that I should
be uncomfortable if you were there, after what has
passed. I am only your niece, and there is no
necessity why you should concern yourself more about
me.”
“Well, he has beaten us,”
her aunt said. “It really seems as if he
had been playing with you in this way in revenge for
my humbling him as I did by standing up against him
at first.”
“O no, Aunt,” murmured Thomasin.
They said no more on the subject then.
Diggory Venn’s knock came soon after; and Mrs.
Yeobright, on returning from her interview with him
in the porch, carelessly observed, “Another
lover has come to ask for you.”
“No?”
“Yes, that queer young man Venn.”
“Asks to pay his addresses to me?”
“Yes; and I told him he was too late.”
Thomasin looked silently into the
candle-flame. “Poor Diggory!” she
said, and then aroused herself to other things.
The next day was passed in mere mechanical
deeds of preparation, both the women being anxious
to immerse themselves in these to escape the emotional
aspect of the situation. Some wearing apparel
and other articles were collected anew for Thomasin,
and remarks on domestic details were frequently made,
so as to obscure any inner misgivings about her future
as Wildeve’s wife.
The appointed morning came. The
arrangement with Wildeve was that he should meet her
at the church to guard against any unpleasant curiosity
which might have affected them had they been seen walking
off together in the usual country way.
Aunt and niece stood together in the
bedroom where the bride was dressing. The sun,
where it could catch it, made a mirror of Thomasin’s
hair, which she always wore braided. It was braided
according to a calendar system-the more
important the day the more numerous the strands in
the braid. On ordinary working-days she braided
it in threes; on ordinary Sundays in fours; at Maypolings,
gipsyings, and the like, she braided it in fives.
Years ago she had said that when she married she would
braid it in sevens. She had braided it in sevens
today.
“I have been thinking that I
will wear my blue silk after all,” she said.
“It is my wedding day, even though there may
be something sad about the time. I mean,”
she added, anxious to correct any wrong impression,
“not sad in itself, but in its having had great
disappointment and trouble before it.”
Mrs. Yeobright breathed in a way which
might have been called a sigh. “I almost
wish Clym had been at home,” she said. “Of
course you chose the time because of his absence.”
“Partly. I have felt that
I acted unfairly to him in not telling him all; but,
as it was done not to grieve him, I thought I would
carry out the plan to its end, and tell the whole
story when the sky was clear.”
“You are a practical little
woman,” said Mrs. Yeobright, smiling. “I
wish you and he-no, I don’t wish anything.
There, it is nine o’clock,” she interrupted,
hearing a whizz and a dinging downstairs.
“I told Damon I would leave
at nine,” said Thomasin, hastening out of the
room.
Her aunt followed. When Thomasin
was going up the little walk from the door to the
wicket-gate, Mrs. Yeobright looked reluctantly at her,
and said, “It is a shame to let you go alone.”
“It is necessary,” said Thomasin.
“At any rate,” added her
aunt with forced cheerfulness, “I shall call
upon you this afternoon, and bring the cake with me.
If Clym has returned by that time he will perhaps
come too. I wish to show Mr. Wildeve that I bear
him no ill-will. Let the past be forgotten.
Well, God bless you! There, I don’t believe
in old superstitions, but I’ll do it.”
She threw a slipper at the retreating figure of the
girl, who turned, smiled, and went on again.
A few steps further, and she looked
back. “Did you call me, Aunt?” she
tremulously inquired. “Good-bye!”
Moved by an uncontrollable feeling
as she looked upon Mrs. Yeobright’s worn, wet
face, she ran back, when her aunt came forward, and
they met again. “O-Tamsie,”
said the elder, weeping, “I don’t like
to let you go.”
“I-I am-”
Thomasin began, giving way likewise. But, quelling
her grief, she said “Good-bye!” again
and went on.
Then Mrs. Yeobright saw a little figure
wending its way between the scratching furze-bushes,
and diminishing far up the valley-a pale-blue
spot in a vast field of neutral brown, solitary and
undefended except by the power of her own hope.
But the worst feature in the case
was one which did not appear in the landscape; it
was the man.
The hour chosen for the ceremony by
Thomasin and Wildeve had been so timed as to enable
her to escape the awkwardness of meeting her cousin
Clym, who was returning the same morning. To own
to the partial truth of what he had heard would be
distressing as long as the humiliating position resulting
from the event was unimproved. It was only after
a second and successful journey to the altar that
she could lift up her head and prove the failure of
the first attempt a pure accident.
She had not been gone from Blooms-End
more than half an hour when Yeobright came by the
meads from the other direction and entered the house.
“I had an early breakfast,”
he said to his mother after greeting her. “Now
I could eat a little more.”
They sat down to the repeated meal,
and he went on in a low, anxious voice, apparently
imagining that Thomasin had not yet come downstairs,
“What’s this I have heard about Thomasin
and Mr. Wildeve?”
“It is true in many points,”
said Mrs. Yeobright quietly; “but it is all
right now, I hope.” She looked at the clock.
“True?”
“Thomasin is gone to him today.”
Clym pushed away his breakfast.
“Then there is a scandal of some sort, and that’s
what’s the matter with Thomasin. Was it
this that made her ill?”
“Yes. Not a scandal-a
misfortune. I will tell you all about it, Clym.
You must not be angry, but you must listen, and you’ll
find that what we have done has been done for the
best.”
She then told him the circumstances.
All that he had known of the affair before he returned
from Paris was that there had existed an attachment
between Thomasin and Wildeve, which his mother had
at first discountenanced, but had since, owing to
the arguments of Thomasin, looked upon in a little
more favourable light. When she, therefore, proceeded
to explain all he was greatly surprised and troubled.
“And she determined that the
wedding should be over before you came back,”
said Mrs. Yeobright, “that there might be no
chance of her meeting you, and having a very painful
time of it. That’s why she has gone to
him; they have arranged to be married this morning.”
“But I can’t understand
it,” said Yeobright, rising. “’Tis
so unlike her. I can see why you did not write
to me after her unfortunate return home. But
why didn’t you let me know when the wedding was
going to be-the first time?”
“Well, I felt vexed with her
just then. She seemed to me to be obstinate;
and when I found that you were nothing in her mind
I vowed that she should be nothing in yours.
I felt that she was only my niece after all; I told
her she might marry, but that I should take no interest
in it, and should not bother you about it either.”
“It wouldn’t have been
bothering me. Mother, you did wrong.”
“I thought it might disturb
you in your business, and that you might throw up
your situation, or injure your prospects in some way
because of it, so I said nothing. Of course,
if they had married at that time in a proper manner,
I should have told you at once.”
“Tamsin actually being married
while we are sitting here!”
“Yes. Unless some accident
happens again, as it did the first time. It may,
considering he’s the same man.”
“Yes, and I believe it will.
Was it right to let her go? Suppose Wildeve is
really a bad fellow?”
“Then he won’t come, and she’ll
come home again.”
“You should have looked more into it.”
“It is useless to say that,”
his mother answered with an impatient look of sorrow.
“You don’t know how bad it has been here
with us all these weeks, Clym. You don’t
know what a mortification anything of that sort is
to a woman. You don’t know the sleepless
nights we’ve had in this house, and the almost
bitter words that have passed between us since that
Fifth of November. I hope never to pass seven
such weeks again. Tamsin has not gone outside
the door, and I have been ashamed to look anybody
in the face; and now you blame me for letting her do
the only thing that can be done to set that trouble
straight.”
“No,” he said slowly.
“Upon the whole I don’t blame you.
But just consider how sudden it seems to me.
Here was I, knowing nothing; and then I am told all
at once that Tamsie is gone to be married. Well,
I suppose there was nothing better to do. Do you
know, Mother,” he continued after a moment or
two, looking suddenly interested in his own past history,
“I once thought of Tamsin as a sweetheart?
Yes, I did. How odd boys are! And when I
came home and saw her this time she seemed so much
more affectionate than usual, that I was quite reminded
of those days, particularly on the night of the party,
when she was unwell. We had the party just the
same-was not that rather cruel to her?”
“It made no difference.
I had arranged to give one, and it was not worth while
to make more gloom than necessary. To begin by
shutting ourselves up and telling you of Tamsin’s
misfortunes would have been a poor sort of welcome.”
Clym remained thinking. “I
almost wish you had not had that party,” he
said; “and for other reasons. But I will
tell you in a day or two. We must think of Tamsin
now.”
They lapsed into silence. “I’ll
tell you what,” said Yeobright again, in a tone
which showed some slumbering feeling still. “I
don’t think it kind to Tamsin to let her be
married like this, and neither of us there to keep
up her spirits or care a bit about her. She hasn’t
disgraced herself, or done anything to deserve that.
It is bad enough that the wedding should be so hurried
and unceremonious, without our keeping away from it
in addition. Upon my soul, ’tis almost a
shame. I’ll go.”
“It is over by this time,”
said his mother with a sigh; “unless they were
late, or he-”
“Then I shall be soon enough
to see them come out. I don’t quite like
your keeping me in ignorance, Mother, after all.
Really, I half hope he has failed to meet her!”
“And ruined her character?”
“Nonsense-that wouldn’t ruin
Thomasin.”
He took up his hat and hastily left
the house. Mrs. Yeobright looked rather unhappy,
and sat still, deep in thought. But she was not
long left alone. A few minutes later Clym came
back again, and in his company came Diggory Venn.
“I find there isn’t time for me to get
there,” said Clym.
“Is she married?” Mrs.
Yeobright inquired, turning to the reddleman a face
in which a strange strife of wishes, for and against,
was apparent.
Venn bowed. “She is, ma’am.”
“How strange it sounds,” murmured Clym.
“And he didn’t disappoint her this time?”
said Mrs. Yeobright.
“He did not. And there
is now no slight on her name. I was hastening
ath’art to tell you at once, as I saw you were
not there.”
“How came you to be there? How did you
know it?” she asked.
“I have been in that neighbourhood
for some time, and I saw them go in,” said the
reddleman. “Wildeve came up to the door,
punctual as the clock. I didn’t expect
it of him.” He did not add, as he might
have added, that how he came to be in that neighbourhood
was not by accident; that, since Wildeve’s resumption
of his right to Thomasin, Venn, with the thoroughness
which was part of his character, had determined to
see the end of the episode.
“Who was there?” said Mrs. Yeobright.
“Nobody hardly. I stood
right out of the way, and she did not see me.”
The reddleman spoke huskily, and looked into the garden.
“Who gave her away?”
“Miss Vye.”
“How very remarkable! Miss
Vye! It is to be considered an honour, I suppose?”
“Who’s Miss Vye?” said Clym.
“Captain Vye’s granddaughter, of Mistover
Knap.”
“A proud girl from Budmouth,”
said Mrs. Yeobright. “One not much to my
liking. People say she’s a witch, but of
course that’s absurd.”
The reddleman kept to himself his
acquaintance with that fair personage, and also that
Eustacia was there because he went to fetch her, in
accordance with a promise he had given as soon as he
learnt that the marriage was to take place. He
merely said, in continuation of the story -
“I was sitting on the churchyard
wall when they came up, one from one way, the other
from the other; and Miss Vye was walking thereabouts,
looking at the headstones. As soon as they had
gone in I went to the door, feeling I should like
to see it, as I knew her so well. I pulled off
my boots because they were so noisy, and went up into
the gallery. I saw then that the parson and clerk
were already there.”
“How came Miss Vye to have anything
to do with it, if she was only on a walk that way?”
“Because there was nobody else.
She had gone into the church just before me, not into
the gallery. The parson looked round before beginning,
and as she was the only one near he beckoned to her,
and she went up to the rails. After that, when
it came to signing the book, she pushed up her veil
and signed; and Tamsin seemed to thank her for her
kindness.” The reddleman told the tale
thoughtfully for there lingered upon his vision the
changing colour of Wildeve, when Eustacia lifted the
thick veil which had concealed her from recognition
and looked calmly into his face. “And then,”
said Diggory sadly, “I came away, for her history
as Tamsin Yeobright was over.”
“I offered to go,” said
Mrs. Yeobright regretfully. “But she said
it was not necessary.”
“Well, it is no matter,”
said the reddleman. “The thing is done at
last as it was meant to be at first, and God send
her happiness. Now I’ll wish you good morning.”
He placed his cap on his head and went out.
From that instant of leaving Mrs.
Yeobright’s door, the reddleman was seen no
more in or about Egdon Heath for a space of many months.
He vanished entirely. The nook among the brambles
where his van had been standing was as vacant as ever
the next morning, and scarcely a sign remained to
show that he had been there, excepting a few straws,
and a little redness on the turf, which was washed
away by the next storm of rain.
The report that Diggory had brought
of the wedding, correct as far as it went, was deficient
in one significant particular, which had escaped him
through his being at some distance back in the church.
When Thomasin was tremblingly engaged in signing her
name Wildeve had flung towards Eustacia a glance that
said plainly, “I have punished you now.”
She had replied in a low tone-and he little
thought how truly-“You mistake; it
gives me sincerest pleasure to see her your wife today.”