CHAPTER I - A LORN MILKMAID
It was an eighty-cow dairy, and the
troop of milkers, regular and supernumerary, were
all at work; for, though the time of year was as yet
but early April, the feed lay entirely in water-meadows,
and the cows were ‘in full pail.’
The hour was about six in the evening, and three-fourths
of the large, red, rectangular animals having been
finished off, there was opportunity for a little conversation.
’He do bring home his bride
to-morrow, I hear. They’ve come as far
as Anglebury to-day.’
The voice seemed to proceed from the
belly of the cow called Cherry, but the speaker was
a milking-woman, whose face was buried in the flank
of that motionless beast.
‘Hav’ anybody seen her?’ said another.
There was a negative response from
the first. ’Though they say she’s
a rosy-cheeked, tisty-tosty little body enough,’
she added; and as the milkmaid spoke she turned her
face so that she could glance past her cow’s
tail to the other side of the barton, where a thin,
fading woman of thirty milked somewhat apart from
the rest.
‘Years younger than he, they
say,’ continued the second, with also a glance
of reflectiveness in the same direction.
‘How old do you call him, then?’
‘Thirty or so.’
‘More like forty,’ broke
in an old milkman near, in a long white pinafore or
‘wropper,’ and with the brim of his hat
tied down, so that he looked like a woman. ’’A
was born before our Great Weir was builded, and I
hadn’t man’s wages when I laved water there.’
The discussion waxed so warm that
the purr of the milk-streams became jerky, till a
voice from another cow’s belly cried with authority,
’Now then, what the Turk do it matter to us
about Farmer Lodge’s age, or Farmer Lodge’s
new mis’ess? I shall have to pay him nine
pound a year for the rent of every one of these milchers,
whatever his age or hers. Get on with your work,
or ’twill be dark afore we have done. The
evening is pinking in a’ready.’
This speaker was the dairyman himself; by whom the
milkmaids and men were employed.
Nothing more was said publicly about
Farmer Lodge’s wedding, but the first woman
murmured under her cow to her next neighbour, ’’Tis
hard for she,’ signifying the thin worn milkmaid
aforesaid.
‘O no,’ said the second.
‘He ha’n’t spoke to Rhoda Brook
for years.’
When the milking was done they washed
their pails and hung them on a many-forked stand
made of the peeled limb of an oak-tree, set upright
in the earth, and resembling a colossal antlered horn.
The majority then dispersed in various directions
homeward. The thin woman who had not spoken
was joined by a boy of twelve or thereabout, and the
twain went away up the field also.
Their course lay apart from that of
the others, to a lonely spot high above the water-meads,
and not far from the border of Egdon Heath, whose
dark countenance was visible in the distance as they
drew nigh to their home.
’They’ve just been saying
down in barton that your father brings his young wife
home from Anglebury to-morrow,’ the woman observed.
’I shall want to send you for a few things
to market, and you’ll be pretty sure to meet
’em.’
‘Yes, mother,’ said the boy. ‘Is
father married then?’
’Yes . . . You can give
her a look, and tell me what’s she’s like,
if you do see her.’
‘Yes, mother.’
’If she’s dark or fair,
and if she’s tall as tall as I. And
if she seems like a woman who has ever worked for
a living, or one that has been always well off, and
has never done anything, and shows marks of the lady
on her, as I expect she do.’
‘Yes.’
They crept up the hill in the twilight,
and entered the cottage. It was built of mud-walls,
the surface of which had been washed by many rains
into channels and depressions that left none of the
original flat face visible; while here and there in
the thatch above a rafter showed like a bone protruding
through the skin.
She was kneeling down in the chimney-corner,
before two pieces of turf laid together with the heather
inwards, blowing at the red-hot ashes with her breath
till the turves flamed. The radiance lit her
pale cheek, and made her dark eyes, that had once
been handsome, seem handsome anew. ‘Yes,’
she resumed, ’see if she is dark or fair, and
if you can, notice if her hands be white; if not,
see if they look as though she had ever done housework,
or are milker’s hands like mine.’
The boy again promised, inattentively
this time, his mother not observing that he was cutting
a notch with his pocket-knife in the beech-backed
chair.
CHAPTER II - THE YOUNG WIFE
The road from Anglebury to Holmstoke
is in general level; but there is one place where
a sharp ascent breaks its monotony. Farmers homeward-bound
from the former market-town, who trot all the rest
of the way, walk their horses up this short incline.
The next evening, while the sun was
yet bright, a handsome new gig, with a lemon-coloured
body and red wheels, was spinning westward along the
level highway at the heels of a powerful mare.
The driver was a yeoman in the prime of life, cleanly
shaven like an actor, his face being toned to that
bluish-vermilion hue which so often graces a thriving
farmer’s features when returning home after
successful dealings in the town. Beside him sat
a woman, many years his junior almost, indeed,
a girl. Her face too was fresh in colour, but
it was of a totally different quality soft
and evanescent, like the light under a heap of rose-petals.
Few people travelled this way, for
it was not a main road; and the long white riband
of gravel that stretched before them was empty, save
of one small scarce-moving speck, which presently
resolved itself into the figure of boy, who was creeping
on at a snail’s pace, and continually looking
behind him the heavy bundle he carried being
some excuse for, if not the reason of, his dilatoriness.
When the bouncing gig-party slowed at the bottom
of the incline above mentioned, the pedestrian was
only a few yards in front. Supporting the large
bundle by putting one hand on his hip, he turned and
looked straight at the farmer’s wife as though
he would read her through and through, pacing along
abreast of the horse.
The low sun was full in her face,
rendering every feature, shade, and contour distinct,
from the curve of her little nostril to the colour
of her eyes. The farmer, though he seemed annoyed
at the boy’s persistent presence, did not order
him to get out of the way; and thus the lad preceded
them, his hard gaze never leaving her, till they reached
the top of the ascent, when the farmer trotted on
with relief in his linéaments having
taken no outward notice of the boy whatever.
‘How that poor lad stared at me!’ said
the young wife.
‘Yes, dear; I saw that he did.’
‘He is one of the village, I suppose?’
’One of the neighbourhood.
I think he lives with his mother a mile or two off.’
‘He knows who we are, no doubt?’
’O yes. You must expect
to be stared at just at first, my pretty Gertrude.’
’I do, though I think
the poor boy may have looked at us in the hope we
might relieve him of his heavy load, rather than from
curiosity.’
‘O no,’ said her husband
off-handedly. ’These country lads will
carry a hundredweight once they get it on their backs;
besides his pack had more size than weight in it.
Now, then, another mile and I shall be able to show
you our house in the distance if it is not
too dark before we get there.’ The wheels
spun round, and particles flew from their periphery
as before, till a white house of ample dimensions revealed
itself, with farm-buildings and ricks at the back.
Meanwhile the boy had quickened his
pace, and turning up a by-lane some mile and half
short of the white farmstead, ascended towards the
leaner pastures, and so on to the cottage of his mother.
She had reached home after her day’s
milking at the outlying dairy, and was washing cabbage
at the doorway in the declining light. ’Hold
up the net a moment,’ she said, without preface,
as the boy came up.
He flung down his bundle, held the
edge of the cabbage-net, and as she filled its meshes
with the dripping leaves she went on, ’Well,
did you see her?’
‘Yes; quite plain.’
‘Is she ladylike?’
‘Yes; and more. A lady complete.’
‘Is she young?’
‘Well, she’s growed up, and her ways be
quite a woman’s.’
‘Of course. What colour is her hair and
face?’
‘Her hair is lightish, and her face as comely
as a live doll’s.’
‘Her eyes, then, are not dark like mine?’
’No of a bluish turn,
and her mouth is very nice and red; and when she smiles,
her teeth show white.’
‘Is she tall?’ said the woman sharply.
‘I couldn’t see. She was sitting
down.’
’Then do you go to Holmstoke
church to-morrow morning: she’s sure to
be there. Go early and notice her walking in,
and come home and tell me if she’s taller than
I.’
‘Very well, mother. But why don’t
you go and see for yourself?’
’I go to see her! I wouldn’t
look up at her if she were to pass my window this
instant. She was with Mr. Lodge, of course.
What did he say or do?’
‘Just the same as usual.’
‘Took no notice of you?’
‘None.’
Next day the mother put a clean shirt
on the boy, and started him off for Holmstoke church.
He reached the ancient little pile when the door was
just being opened, and he was the first to enter.
Taking his seat by the font, he watched all the parishioners
file in. The well-to-do Farmer Lodge came nearly
last; and his young wife, who accompanied him, walked
up the aisle with the shyness natural to a modest woman
who had appeared thus for the first time. As
all other eyes were fixed upon her, the youth’s
stare was not noticed now.
When he reached home his mother said,
‘Well?’ before he had entered the room.
‘She is not tall. She is rather short,’
he replied.
‘Ah!’ said his mother, with satisfaction.
‘But she’s very pretty very.
In fact, she’s lovely.’
The youthful freshness of the yeoman’s
wife had evidently made an impression even on the
somewhat hard nature of the boy.
‘That’s all I want to
hear,’ said his mother quickly. ’Now,
spread the table-cloth. The hare you caught
is very tender; but mind that nobody catches you. You’ve
never told me what sort of hands she had.’
’I have never seen ’em. She never
took off her gloves.’
‘What did she wear this morning?’
’A white bonnet and a silver-coloured
gownd. It whewed and whistled so loud when it
rubbed against the pews that the lady coloured up more
than ever for very shame at the noise, and pulled
it in to keep it from touching; but when she pushed
into her seat, it whewed more than ever. Mr.
Lodge, he seemed pleased, and his waistcoat stuck out,
and his great golden seals hung like a lord’s;
but she seemed to wish her noisy gownd anywhere but
on her.’
‘Not she! However, that will do now.’
These descriptions of the newly-married
couple were continued from time to time by the boy
at his mother’s request, after any chance encounter
he had had with them. But Rhoda Brook, though
she might easily have seen young Mrs. Lodge for herself
by walking a couple of miles, would never attempt
an excursion towards the quarter where the farmhouse
lay. Neither did she, at the daily milking in
the dairyman’s yard on Lodge’s outlying
second farm, ever speak on the subject of the recent
marriage. The dairyman, who rented the cows
of Lodge, and knew perfectly the tall milkmaid’s
history, with manly kindliness always kept the gossip
in the cow-barton from annoying Rhoda. But the
atmosphere thereabout was full of the subject during
the first days of Mrs. Lodge’s arrival; and from
her boy’s description and the casual words of
the other milkers, Rhoda Brook could raise a mental
image of the unconscious Mrs Lodge that was realistic
as a photograph.
CHAPTER III - A VISION
One night, two or three weeks after
the bridal return, when the boy was gone to bed, Rhoda
sat a long time over the turf ashes that she had raked
out in front of her to extinguish them. She contemplated
so intently the new wife, as presented to her in her
mind’s eye over the embers, that she forgot
the lapse of time. At last, wearied with her
day’s work, she too retired.
But the figure which had occupied
her so much during this and the previous days was
not to be banished at night. For the first time
Gertrude Lodge visited the supplanted woman in her
dreams. Rhoda Brook dreamed since
her assertion that she really saw, before falling asleep,
was not to be believed that the young wife,
in the pale silk dress and white bonnet, but with
features shockingly distorted, and wrinkled as by
age, was sitting upon her chest as she lay. The
pressure of Mrs. Lodge’s person grew heavier;
the blue eyes peered cruelly into her face; and then
the figure thrust forward its left hand mockingly,
so as to make the wedding-ring it wore glitter in
Rhoda’s eyes. Maddened mentally, and nearly
suffocated by pressure, the sleeper struggled; the
incubus, still regarding her, withdrew to the foot
of the bed, only, however, to come forward by degrees,
resume her seat, and flash her left hand as before.
Gasping for breath, Rhoda, in a last
desperate effort, swung out her right hand, seized
the confronting spectre by its obtrusive left arm,
and whirled it backward to the floor, starting up
herself as she did so with a low cry.
‘O, merciful heaven!’
she cried, sitting on the edge of the bed in a cold
sweat; ‘that was not a dream she was
here!’
She could feel her antagonist’s
arm within her grasp even now the very
flesh and bone of it, as it seemed. She looked
on the floor whither she had whirled the spectre,
but there was nothing to be seen.
Rhoda Brook slept no more that night,
and when she went milking at the next dawn they noticed
how pale and haggard she looked. The milk that
she drew quivered into the pail; her hand had not calmed
even yet, and still retained the feel of the arm.
She came home to breakfast as wearily as if it had
been suppertime.
‘What was that noise in your
chimmer, mother, last night?’ said her son.
‘You fell off the bed, surely?’
‘Did you hear anything fall? At what time?’
‘Just when the clock struck two.’
She could not explain, and when the
meal was done went silently about her household work,
the boy assisting her, for he hated going afield on
the farms, and she indulged his reluctance.
Between eleven and twelve the garden-gate clicked,
and she lifted her eyes to the window. At the
bottom of the garden, within the gate, stood the woman
of her vision. Rhoda seemed transfixed.
‘Ah, she said she would come!’ exclaimed
the boy, also observing her.
‘Said so when? How does she
know us?’
‘I have seen and spoken to her. I talked
to her yesterday.’
‘I told you,’ said the
mother, flushing indignantly, ’never to speak
to anybody in that house, or go near the place.’
’I did not speak to her till
she spoke to me. And I did not go near the place.
I met her in the road.’
‘What did you tell her?’
’Nothing. She said, “Are
you the poor boy who had to bring the heavy load from
market?” And she looked at my boots, and said
they would not keep my feet dry if it came on wet,
because they were so cracked. I told her I lived
with my mother, and we had enough to do to keep ourselves,
and that’s how it was; and she said then, “I’ll
come and bring you some better boots, and see your
mother.” She gives away things to other
folks in the meads besides us.’
Mrs. Lodge was by this time close
to the door not in her silk, as Rhoda had
seen her in the bed-chamber, but in a morning hat,
and gown of common light material, which became her
better than silk. On her arm she carried a basket.
The impression remaining from the
night’s experience was still strong. Brook
had almost expected to see the wrinkles, the scorn,
and the cruelty on her visitor’s face.
She would have escaped an interview,
had escape been possible. There was, however,
no backdoor to the cottage, and in an instant the boy
had lifted the latch to Mrs. Lodge’s gentle
knock.
‘I see I have come to the right
house,’ said she, glancing at the lad, and smiling.
‘But I was not sure till you opened the door.’
The figure and action were those of
the phantom; but her voice was so indescribably sweet,
her glance so winning, her smile so tender, so unlike
that of Rhoda’s midnight visitant, that the latter
could hardly believe the evidence of her senses.
She was truly glad that she had not hidden away in
sheer aversion, as she had been inclined to do.
In her basket Mrs. Lodge brought the pair of boots
that she had promised to the boy, and other useful
articles.
At these proofs of a kindly feeling
towards her and hers Rhoda’s heart reproached
her bitterly. This innocent young thing should
have her blessing and not her curse. When she
left them a light seemed gone from the dwelling.
Two days later she came again to know if the boots
fitted; and less than a fortnight after that paid
Rhoda another call. On this occasion the boy
was absent.
‘I walk a good deal,’
said Mrs. Lodge, ’and your house is the nearest
outside our own parish. I hope you are well.
You don’t look quite well.’
Rhoda said she was well enough; and,
indeed, though the paler of the two, there was more
of the strength that endures in her well-defined features
and large frame, than in the soft-cheeked young woman
before her. The conversation became quite confidential
as regarded their powers and weaknesses; and when
Mrs. Lodge was leaving, Rhoda said, ’I hope you
will find this air agree with you, ma’am, and
not suffer from the damp of the water-meads.’
The younger one replied that there
was not much doubt of it, her general health being
usually good. ‘Though, now you remind me,’
she added, ’I have one little ailment which
puzzles me. It is nothing serious, but I cannot
make it out.’
She uncovered her left hand and arm;
and their outline confronted Rhoda’s gaze as
the exact original of the limb she had beheld and seized
in her dream. Upon the pink round surface of
the arm were faint marks of an unhealthy colour, as
if produced by a rough grasp. Rhoda’s eyes
became riveted on the discolorations; she fancied
that she discerned in them the shape of her own four
fingers.
‘How did it happen?’ she said mechanically.
‘I cannot tell,’ replied
Mrs. Lodge, shaking her head. ’One night
when I was sound asleep, dreaming I was away in some
strange place, a pain suddenly shot into my arm there,
and was so keen as to awaken me. I must have
struck it in the daytime, I suppose, though I don’t
remember doing so.’ She added, laughing,
’I tell my dear husband that it looks just as
if he had flown into a rage and struck me there.
O, I daresay it will soon disappear.’
‘Ha, ha! Yes . . . On what night
did it come?’
Mrs. Lodge considered, and said it
would be a fortnight ago on the morrow. ‘When
I awoke I could not remember where I was,’ she
added, ‘till the clock striking two reminded
me.’
She had named the night and the hour
of Rhoda’s spectral encounter, and Brook felt
like a guilty thing. The artless disclosure startled
her; she did not reason on the freaks of coincidence;
and all the scenery of that ghastly night returned
with double vividness to her mind.
‘O, can it be,’ she said
to herself, when her visitor had departed, ’that
I exercise a malignant power over people against my
own will?’ She knew that she had been slily
called a witch since her fall; but never having understood
why that particular stigma had been attached to her,
it had passed disregarded. Could this be the
explanation, and had such things as this ever happened
before?
CHAPTER IV - A SUGGESTION
The summer drew on, and Rhoda Brook
almost dreaded to meet Mrs. Lodge again, notwithstanding
that her feeling for the young wife amounted well-nigh
to affection. Something in her own individuality
seemed to convict Rhoda of crime. Yet a fatality
sometimes would direct the steps of the latter to
the outskirts of Holmstoke whenever she left her house
for any other purpose than her daily work; and hence
it happened that their next encounter was out of doors.
Rhoda could not avoid the subject which had so mystified
her, and after the first few words she stammered, ’I
hope your arm is well again, ma’am?’
She had perceived with consternation that Gertrude
Lodge carried her left arm stiffly.
’No; it is not quite well.
Indeed it is no better at all; it is rather worse.
It pains me dreadfully sometimes.’
‘Perhaps you had better go to a doctor, ma’am.’
She replied that she had already seen
a doctor. Her husband had insisted upon her
going to one. But the surgeon had not seemed
to understand the afflicted limb at all; he had told
her to bathe it in hot water, and she had bathed it,
but the treatment had done no good.
‘Will you let me see it?’ said the milkwoman.
Mrs. Lodge pushed up her sleeve and
disclosed the place, which was a few inches above
the wrist. As soon as Rhoda Brook saw it, she
could hardly preserve her composure. There was
nothing of the nature of a wound, but the arm at that
point had a shrivelled look, and the outline of the
four fingers appeared more distinct than at the former
time. Moreover, she fancied that they were imprinted
in precisely the relative position of her clutch upon
the arm in the trance; the first finger towards Gertrude’s
wrist, and the fourth towards her elbow.
What the impress resembled seemed
to have struck Gertrude herself since their last meeting.
‘It looks almost like finger-marks,’ she
said; adding with a faint laugh, ’my husband
says it is as if some witch, or the devil himself,
had taken hold of me there, and blasted the flesh.’
Rhoda shivered. ‘That’s
fancy,’ she said hurriedly. ’I wouldn’t
mind it, if I were you.’
‘I shouldn’t so much mind
it,’ said the younger, with hesitation, ’if if
I hadn’t a notion that it makes my husband dislike
me no, love me less. Men think so
much of personal appearance.’
‘Some do he for one.’
‘Yes; and he was very proud of mine, at first.’
‘Keep your arm covered from his sight.’
‘Ah he knows the
disfigurement is there!’ She tried to hide the
tears that filled her eyes.
‘Well, ma’am, I earnestly hope it will
go away soon.’
And so the milkwoman’s mind
was chained anew to the subject by a horrid sort of
spell as she returned home. The sense of having
been guilty of an act of malignity increased, affect
as she might to ridicule her superstition. In
her secret heart Rhoda did not altogether object to
a slight diminution of her successor’s beauty,
by whatever means it had come about; but she did not
wish to inflict upon her physical pain. For
though this pretty young woman had rendered impossible
any reparation which Lodge might have made Rhoda for
his past conduct, everything like resentment at the
unconscious usurpation had quite passed away from the
elder’s mind.
If the sweet and kindly Gertrude Lodge
only knew of the scene in the bed-chamber, what would
she think? Not to inform her of it seemed treachery
in the presence of her friendliness; but tell she could
not of her own accord neither could she
devise a remedy.
She mused upon the matter the greater
part of the night; and the next day, after the morning
milking, set out to obtain another glimpse of Gertrude
Lodge if she could, being held to her by a gruesome
fascination. By watching the house from a distance
the milkmaid was presently able to discern the farmer’s
wife in a ride she was taking alone probably
to join her husband in some distant field. Mrs.
Lodge perceived her, and cantered in her direction.
‘Good morning, Rhoda!’
Gertrude said, when she had come up. ’I
was going to call.’
Rhoda noticed that Mrs. Lodge held
the reins with some difficulty.
‘I hope the bad arm,’ said
Rhoda.
’They tell me there is possibly
one way by which I might be able to find out the cause,
and so perhaps the cure, of it,’ replied the
other anxiously. ’It is by going to some
clever man over in Egdon Heath. They did not
know if he was still alive and I cannot
remember his name at this moment; but they said that
you knew more of his movements than anybody else hereabout,
and could tell me if he were still to be consulted.
Dear me what was his name? But you
know.’
‘Not Conjuror Trendle?’
said her thin companion, turning pale.
‘Trendle yes. Is he alive?’
‘I believe so,’ said Rhoda, with reluctance.
‘Why do you call him conjuror?’
’Well they say they
used to say he was a he had powers other
folks have not.’
’O, how could my people be so
superstitious as to recommend a man of that sort!
I thought they meant some medical man. I shall
think no more of him.’
Rhoda looked relieved, and Mrs. Lodge
rode on. The milkwoman had inwardly seen, from
the moment she heard of her having been mentioned as
a reference for this man, that there must exist a sarcastic
feeling among the work-folk that a sorceress would
know the whereabouts of the exorcist. They suspected
her, then. A short time ago this would have
given no concern to a woman of her common-sense.
But she had a haunting reason to be superstitious
now; and she had been seized with sudden dread that
this Conjuror Trendle might name her as the malignant
influence which was blasting the fair person of Gertrude,
and so lead her friend to hate her for ever, and to
treat her as some fiend in human shape.
But all was not over. Two days
after, a shadow intruded into the window-pattern
thrown on Rhoda Brook’s floor by the afternoon
sun. The woman opened the door at once, almost
breathlessly.
‘Are you alone?’ said
Gertrude. She seemed to be no less harassed and
anxious than Brook herself.
‘Yes,’ said Rhoda.
‘The place on my arm seems worse,
and troubles me!’ the young farmer’s wife
went on. ’It is so mysterious! I
do hope it will not be an incurable wound. I
have again been thinking of what they said about Conjuror
Trendle. I don’t really believe in such
men, but I should not mind just visiting him, from
curiosity though on no account must my
husband know. Is it far to where he lives?’
‘Yes five miles,’
said Rhoda backwardly. ‘In the heart of
Egdon.’
’Well, I should have to walk.
Could not you go with me to show me the way say
to-morrow afternoon?’
‘O, not I that is,’
the milkwoman murmured, with a start of dismay.
Again the dread seized her that something to do with
her fierce act in the dream might be revealed, and
her character in the eyes of the most useful friend
she had ever had be ruined irretrievably.
Mrs. Lodge urged, and Rhoda finally
assented, though with much misgiving. Sad as
the journey would be to her, she could not conscientiously
stand in the way of a possible remedy for her patron’s
strange affliction. It was agreed that, to escape
suspicion of their mystic intent, they should meet
at the edge of the heath at the corner of a plantation
which was visible from the spot where they now stood.
CHAPTER V - CONJUROR TRENDLE
By the next afternoon Rhoda would
have done anything to escape this inquiry. But
she had promised to go. Moreover, there was a
horrid fascination at times in becoming instrumental
in throwing such possible light on her own character
as would reveal her to be something greater in the
occult world than she had ever herself suspected.
She started just before the time of
day mentioned between them, and half-an-hour’s
brisk walking brought her to the south-eastern extension
of the Egdon tract of country, where the fir plantation
was. A slight figure, cloaked and veiled, was
already there. Rhoda recognized, almost with
a shudder, that Mrs. Lodge bore her left arm in a
sling.
They hardly spoke to each other, and
immediately set out on their climb into the interior
of this solemn country, which stood high above the
rich alluvial soil they had left half-an-hour before.
It was a long walk; thick clouds made the atmosphere
dark, though it was as yet only early afternoon; and
the wind howled dismally over the hills of the heath not
improbably the same heath which had witnessed the agony
of the Wessex King Ina, presented to after-ages as
Lear. Gertrude Lodge talked most, Rhoda replying
with monosyllabic preoccupation. She had a strange
dislike to walking on the side of her companion where
hung the afflicted arm, moving round to the other
when inadvertently near it. Much heather had
been brushed by their feet when they descended upon
a cart-track, beside which stood the house of the
man they sought.
He did not profess his remedial practices
openly, or care anything about their continuance,
his direct interests being those of a dealer in furze,
turf, ‘sharp sand,’ and other local products.
Indeed, he affected not to believe largely in his
own powers, and when warts that had been shown him
for cure miraculously disappeared which
it must be owned they infallibly did he
would say lightly, ’O, I only drink a glass of
grog upon ‘em perhaps it’s
all chance,’ and immediately turn the subject.
He was at home when they arrived,
having in fact seen them descending into his valley.
He was a gray-bearded man, with a reddish face, and
he looked singularly at Rhoda the first moment he
beheld her. Mrs. Lodge told him her errand;
and then with words of self-disparagement he examined
her arm.
‘Medicine can’t cure it,’
he said promptly. ‘’Tis the work of an
enemy.’
Rhoda shrank into herself, and drew back.
‘An enemy? What enemy?’ asked Mrs.
Lodge.
He shook his head. ‘That’s
best known to yourself,’ he said. ’If
you like, I can show the person to you, though I shall
not myself know who it is. I can do no more;
and don’t wish to do that.’
She pressed him; on which he told
Rhoda to wait outside where she stood, and took Mrs.
Lodge into the room. It opened immediately from
the door; and, as the latter remained ajar, Rhoda
Brook could see the proceedings without taking part
in them. He brought a tumbler from the dresser,
nearly filled it with water, and fetching an egg, prepared
it in some private way; after which he broke it on
the edge of the glass, so that the white went in and
the yolk remained. As it was getting gloomy,
he took the glass and its contents to the window,
and told Gertrude to watch them closely. They
leant over the table together, and the milkwoman could
see the opaline hue of the egg-fluid changing form
as it sank in the water, but she was not near enough
to define the shape that it assumed.
‘Do you catch the likeness of
any face or figure as you look?’ demanded the
conjuror of the young woman.
She murmured a reply, in tones so
low as to be inaudible to Rhoda, and continued to
gaze intently into the glass. Rhoda turned, and
walked a few steps away.
When Mrs. Lodge came out, and her
face was met by the light, it appeared exceedingly
pale as pale as Rhoda’s against
the sad dun shades of the upland’s garniture.
Trendle shut the door behind her, and they at once
started homeward together. But Rhoda perceived
that her companion had quite changed.
‘Did he charge much?’ she asked tentatively.
‘O no nothing. He would not
take a farthing,’ said Gertrude.
‘And what did you see?’ inquired Rhoda.
‘Nothing I care to
speak of.’ The constraint in her manner
was remarkable; her face was so rigid as to wear an
oldened aspect, faintly suggestive of the face in
Rhoda’s bed-chamber.
‘Was it you who first proposed
coming here?’ Mrs. Lodge suddenly inquired,
after a long pause. ‘How very odd, if you
did!’
‘No. But I am not sorry
we have come, all things considered,’ she replied.
For the first time a sense of triumph possessed her,
and she did not altogether deplore that the young
thing at her side should learn that their lives had
been antagonized by other influences than their own.
The subject was no more alluded to
during the long and dreary walk home. But in
some way or other a story was whispered about the many-dairied
lowland that winter that Mrs. Lodge’s gradual
loss of the use of her left arm was owing to her being
‘overlooked’ by Rhoda Brook. The
latter kept her own counsel about the incubus, but
her face grew sadder and thinner; and in the spring
she and her boy disappeared from the neighbourhood
of Holmstoke.
CHAPTER VI - A SECOND ATTEMPT
Half-a-dozen years passed away, and
Mr. and Mrs. Lodge’s married experience sank
into prosiness, and worse. The farmer was usually
gloomy and silent: the woman whom he had wooed
for her grace and beauty was contorted and disfigured
in the left limb; moreover, she had brought him no
child, which rendered it likely that he would be the
last of a family who had occupied that valley for
some two hundred years. He thought of Rhoda
Brook and her son; and feared this might be a judgment
from heaven upon him.
The once blithe-hearted and enlightened
Gertrude was changing into an irritable, superstitious
woman, whose whole time was given to experimenting
upon her ailment with every quack remedy she came across.
She was honestly attached to her husband, and was ever
secretly hoping against hope to win back his heart
again by regaining some at least of her personal beauty.
Hence it arose that her closet was lined with bottles,
packets, and ointment-pots of every description nay,
bunches of mystic herbs, charms, and books of necromancy,
which in her schoolgirl time she would have ridiculed
as folly.
’Damned if you won’t poison
yourself with these apothecary messes and witch mixtures
some time or other,’ said her husband, when his
eye chanced to fall upon the multitudinous array.
She did not reply, but turned her
sad, soft glance upon him in such heart-swollen reproach
that he looked sorry for his words, and added, ’I
only meant it for your good, you know, Gertrude.’
‘I’ll clear out the whole
lot, and destroy them,’ said she huskily, ’and
try such remedies no more!’
‘You want somebody to cheer
you,’ he observed. ’I once thought
of adopting a boy; but he is too old now. And
he is gone away I don’t know where.’
She guessed to whom he alluded; for
Rhoda Brook’s story had in the course of years
become known to her; though not a word had ever passed
between her husband and herself on the subject.
Neither had she ever spoken to him of her visit to
Conjuror Trendle, and of what was revealed to her,
or she thought was revealed to her, by that solitary
heath-man.
She was now five-and-twenty; but she seemed older.
‘Six years of marriage, and
only a few months of love,’ she sometimes whispered
to herself. And then she thought of the apparent
cause, and said, with a tragic glance at her withering
limb, ’If I could only again be as I was when
he first saw me!’
She obediently destroyed her nostrums
and charms; but there remained a hankering wish to
try something else some other sort of cure
altogether. She had never revisited Trendle since
she had been conducted to the house of the solitary
by Rhoda against her will; but it now suddenly occurred
to Gertrude that she would, in a last desperate effort
at deliverance from this seeming curse, again seek
out the man, if he yet lived. He was entitled
to a certain credence, for the indistinct form he had
raised in the glass had undoubtedly resembled the
only woman in the world who as she now
knew, though not then could have a reason
for bearing her ill-will. The visit should
be paid.
This time she went alone, though she
nearly got lost on the heath, and roamed a considerable
distance out of her way. Trendle’s house
was reached at last, however: he was not indoors,
and instead of waiting at the cottage, she went to
where his bent figure was pointed out to her at work
a long way off. Trendle remembered her, and laying
down the handful of furze-roots which he was gathering
and throwing into a heap, he offered to accompany
her in her homeward direction, as the distance was
considerable and the days were short. So they
walked together, his head bowed nearly to the earth,
and his form of a colour with it.
‘You can send away warts and
other excrescences I know,’ she said; ’why
can’t you send away this?’ And the arm
was uncovered.
‘You think too much of my powers!’
said Trendle; ’and I am old and weak now, too.
No, no; it is too much for me to attempt in my own
person. What have ye tried?’
She named to him some of the hundred
medicaments and counterspells which she had adopted
from time to time. He shook his head.
‘Some were good enough,’
he said approvingly; ’but not many of them for
such as this. This is of the nature of a blight,
not of the nature of a wound; and if you ever do throw
it off; it will be all at once.’
‘If I only could!’
’There is only one chance of
doing it known to me. It has never failed in
kindred afflictions, that I can declare.
But it is hard to carry out, and especially for a
woman.’
‘Tell me!’ said she.
‘You must touch with the limb the neck of a
man who’s been hanged.’
She started a little at the image he had raised.
‘Before he’s cold just
after he’s cut down,’ continued the conjuror
impassively.
‘How can that do good?’
’It will turn the blood and
change the constitution. But, as I say, to do
it is hard. You must get into jail, and wait
for him when he’s brought off the gallows.
Lots have done it, though perhaps not such pretty
women as you. I used to send dozens for skin
complaints. But that was in former times.
The last I sent was in ’13 near twenty
years ago.’
He had no more to tell her; and, when
he had put her into a straight track homeward, turned
and left her, refusing all money as at first.
CHAPTER VII - A RIDE
The communication sank deep into Gertrude’s
mind. Her nature was rather a timid one; and
probably of all remedies that the white wizard could
have suggested there was not one which would have filled
her with so much aversion as this, not to speak of
the immense obstacles in the way of its adoption.
Casterbridge, the county-town, was
a dozen or fifteen miles off; and though in those
days, when men were executed for horse-stealing, arson,
and burglary, an assize seldom passed without a hanging,
it was not likely that she could get access to the
body of the criminal unaided. And the fear of
her husband’s anger made her reluctant to breathe
a word of Trendle’s suggestion to him or to
anybody about him.
She did nothing for months, and patiently
bore her disfigurement as before. But her woman’s
nature, craving for renewed love, through the medium
of renewed beauty (she was but twenty-five), was ever
stimulating her to try what, at any rate, could hardly
do her any harm. ’What came by a spell
will go by a spell surely,’ she would say.
Whenever her imagination pictured the act she shrank
in terror from the possibility of it: then the
words of the conjuror, ‘It will turn your blood,’
were seen to be capable of a scientific no less than
a ghastly interpretation; the mastering desire returned,
and urged her on again.
There was at this time but one county
paper, and that her husband only occasionally borrowed.
But old-fashioned days had old-fashioned means, and
news was extensively conveyed by word of mouth from
market to market, or from fair to fair, so that, whenever
such an event as an execution was about to take place,
few within a radius of twenty miles were ignorant of
the coming sight; and, so far as Holmstoke was concerned,
some enthusiasts had been known to walk all the way
to Casterbridge and back in one day, solely to witness
the spectacle. The next assizes were in March;
and when Gertrude Lodge heard that they had been held,
she inquired stealthily at the inn as to the result,
as soon as she could find opportunity.
She was, however, too late.
The time at which the sentences were to be carried
out had arrived, and to make the journey and obtain
admission at such short notice required at least her
husband’s assistance. She dared not tell
him, for she had found by delicate experiment that
these smouldering village beliefs made him furious
if mentioned, partly because he half entertained them
himself. It was therefore necessary to wait for
another opportunity.
Her determination received a fillip
from learning that two epileptic children had attended
from this very village of Holmstoke many years before
with beneficial results, though the experiment had
been strongly condemned by the neighbouring clergy.
April, May, June, passed; and it is no overstatement
to say that by the end of the last-named month Gertrude
well-nigh longed for the death of a fellow-creature.
Instead of her formal prayers each night, her unconscious
prayer was, ’O Lord, hang some guilty or innocent
person soon!’
This time she made earlier inquiries,
and was altogether more systematic in her proceedings.
Moreover, the season was summer, between the haymaking
and the harvest, and in the leisure thus afforded him
her husband had been holiday-taking away from home.
The assizes were in July, and she
went to the inn as before. There was to be one
execution only one for arson.
Her greatest problem was not how to
get to Casterbridge, but what means she should adopt
for obtaining admission to the jail. Though access
for such purposes had formerly never been denied,
the custom had fallen into desuetude; and in contemplating
her possible difficulties, she was again almost driven
to fall back upon her husband. But, on sounding
him about the assizes, he was so uncommunicative,
so more than usually cold, that she did not proceed,
and decided that whatever she did she would do alone.
Fortune, obdurate hitherto, showed
her unexpected favour. On the Thursday before
the Saturday fixed for the execution, Lodge remarked
to her that he was going away from home for another
day or two on business at a fair, and that he was
sorry he could not take her with him.
She exhibited on this occasion so
much readiness to stay at home that he looked at her
in surprise. Time had been when she would have
shown deep disappointment at the loss of such a jaunt.
However, he lapsed into his usual taciturnity, and
on the day named left Holmstoke.
It was now her turn. She at
first had thought of driving, but on reflection held
that driving would not do, since it would necessitate
her keeping to the turnpike-road, and so increase
by tenfold the risk of her ghastly errand being found
out. She decided to ride, and avoid the beaten
track, notwithstanding that in her husband’s
stables there was no animal just at present which
by any stretch of imagination could be considered
a lady’s mount, in spite of his promise before
marriage to always keep a mare for her. He had,
however, many cart-horses, fine ones of their kind;
and among the rest was a serviceable creature, an equine
Amazon, with a back as broad as a sofa, on which Gertrude
had occasionally taken an airing when unwell.
This horse she chose.
On Friday afternoon one of the men
brought it round. She was dressed, and before
going down looked at her shrivelled arm. ‘Ah!’
she said to it, ’if it had not been for you
this terrible ordeal would have been saved me!’
When strapping up the bundle in which
she carried a few articles of clothing, she took occasion
to say to the servant, ’I take these in case
I should not get back to-night from the person I am
going to visit. Don’t be alarmed if I
am not in by ten, and close up the house as usual.
I shall be at home to-morrow for certain.’
She meant then to privately tell her husband:
the deed accomplished was not like the deed projected.
He would almost certainly forgive her.
And then the pretty palpitating Gertrude
Lodge went from her husband’s homestead; but
though her goal was Casterbridge she did not take the
direct route thither through Stickleford. Her
cunning course at first was in precisely the opposite
direction. As soon as she was out of sight,
however, she turned to the left, by a road which led
into Egdon, and on entering the heath wheeled round,
and set out in the true course, due westerly.
A more private way down the county could not be imagined;
and as to direction, she had merely to keep her horse’s
head to a point a little to the right of the sun.
She knew that she would light upon a furze-cutter
or cottager of some sort from time to time, from whom
she might correct her bearing.
Though the date was comparatively
recent, Egdon was much less fragmentary in character
than now. The attempts successful
and otherwise at cultivation on the lower
slopes, which intrude and break up the original heath
into small detached heaths, had not been carried far;
Enclosure Acts had not taken effect, and the banks
and fences which now exclude the cattle of those villagers
who formerly enjoyed rights of commonage thereon,
and the carts of those who had turbary privileges which
kept them in firing all the year round, were not erected.
Gertrude, therefore, rode along with no other obstacles
than the prickly furze bushes, the mats of heather,
the white water-courses, and the natural steeps and
declivities of the ground.
Her horse was sure, if heavy-footed
and slow, and though a draught animal, was easy-paced;
had it been otherwise, she was not a woman who could
have ventured to ride over such a bit of country with
a half-dead arm. It was therefore nearly eight
o’clock when she drew rein to breathe the mare
on the last outlying high point of heath-land towards
Casterbridge, previous to leaving Egdon for the cultivated
valleys.
She halted before a pool called Rushy-pond,
flanked by the ends of two hedges; a railing ran through
the centre of the pond, dividing it in half.
Over the railing she saw the low green country; over
the green trees the roofs of the town; over the roofs
a white flat façade, denoting the entrance to the
county jail. On the roof of this front specks
were moving about; they seemed to be workmen erecting
something. Her flesh crept. She descended
slowly, and was soon amid corn-fields and pastures.
In another half-hour, when it was almost dusk, Gertrude
reached the White Hart, the first inn of the town
on that side.
Little surprise was excited by her
arrival; farmers’ wives rode on horseback then
more than they do now; though, for that matter, Mrs.
Lodge was not imagined to be a wife at all; the innkeeper
supposed her some harum-skarum young woman who
had come to attend ‘hang-fair’ next day.
Neither her husband nor herself ever dealt in Casterbridge
market, so that she was unknown. While dismounting
she beheld a crowd of boys standing at the door of
a harness-maker’s shop just above the inn, looking
inside it with deep interest.
‘What is going on there?’ she asked of
the ostler.
‘Making the rope for to-morrow.’
She throbbed responsively, and contracted her arm.
‘’Tis sold by the inch
afterwards,’ the man continued. ’I
could get you a bit, miss, for nothing, if you’d
like?’
She hastily repudiated any such wish,
all the more from a curious creeping feeling that
the condemned wretch’s destiny was becoming
interwoven with her own; and having engaged a room
for the night, sat down to think.
Up to this time she had formed but
the vaguest notions about her means of obtaining access
to the prison. The words of the cunning-man returned
to her mind. He had implied that she should
use her beauty, impaired though it was, as a pass-key.
In her inexperience she knew little about jail functionaries;
she had heard of a high-sheriff and an under-sheriff;
but dimly only. She knew, however, that there
must be a hangman, and to the hangman she determined
to apply.
CHAPTER VIII - A WATER-SIDE HERMIT
At this date, and for several years
after, there was a hangman to almost every jail.
Gertrude found, on inquiry, that the Casterbridge
official dwelt in a lonely cottage by a deep slow
river flowing under the cliff on which the prison
buildings were situate the stream being
the self-same one, though she did not know it, which
watered the Stickleford and Holmstoke meads lower
down in its course.
Having changed her dress, and before
she had eaten or drunk for she could not
take her ease till she had ascertained some particulars Gertrude
pursued her way by a path along the water-side to
the cottage indicated. Passing thus the outskirts
of the jail, she discerned on the level roof over
the gateway three rectangular lines against the sky,
where the specks had been moving in her distant view;
she recognized what the erection was, and passed quickly
on. Another hundred yards brought her to the
executioner’s house, which a boy pointed out
It stood close to the same stream, and was hard by
a weir, the waters of which emitted a steady roar.
While she stood hesitating the door
opened, and an old man came forth shading a candle
with one hand. Locking the door on the outside,
he turned to a flight of wooden steps fixed against
the end of the cottage, and began to ascend them,
this being evidently the staircase to his bedroom.
Gertrude hastened forward, but by the time she reached
the foot of the ladder he was at the top. She
called to him loudly enough to be heard above the
roar of the weir; he looked down and said, ’What
d’ye want here?’
‘To speak to you a minute.’
The candle-light, such as it was,
fell upon her imploring, pale, upturned face, and
Davies (as the hangman was called) backed down the
ladder. ’I was just going to bed,’
he said; ’"Early to bed and early to rise,”
but I don’t mind stopping a minute for such
a one as you. Come into house.’ He
reopened the door, and preceded her to the room within.
The implements of his daily work,
which was that of a jobbing gardener, stood in a corner,
and seeing probably that she looked rural, he said,
’If you want me to undertake country work I can’t
come, for I never leave Casterbridge for gentle nor
simple not I. My real calling is officer
of justice,’ he added formally.
‘Yes, yes! That’s it. To-morrow!’
’Ah! I thought so.
Well, what’s the matter about that? ’Tis
no use to come here about the knot folks
do come continually, but I tell ’em one knot
is as merciful as another if ye keep it under the ear.
Is the unfortunate man a relation; or, I should say,
perhaps’ (looking at her dress) ‘a person
who’s been in your employ?’
‘No. What time is the execution?’
’The same as usual twelve
o’clock, or as soon after as the London mail-coach
gets in. We always wait for that, in case of
a reprieve.’
‘O a reprieve I hope not!’
she said involuntarily,
’Well, hee, hee! as
a matter of business, so do I! But still, if
ever a young fellow deserved to be let off, this one
does; only just turned eighteen, and only present
by chance when the rick was fired. Howsomever,
there’s not much risk of it, as they are obliged
to make an example of him, there having been so much
destruction of property that way lately.’
‘I mean,’ she explained,
’that I want to touch him for a charm, a cure
of an affliction, by the advice of a man who has proved
the virtue of the remedy.’
’O yes, miss! Now I understand.
I’ve had such people come in past years.
But it didn’t strike me that you looked of a
sort to require blood-turning. What’s
the complaint? The wrong kind for this, I’ll
be bound.’
‘My arm.’ She reluctantly showed
the withered skin.
‘Ah ’tis all a-scram!’
said the hangman, examining it.
‘Yes,’ said she.
‘Well,’ he continued,
with interest, ‘that is the class o’ subject,
I’m bound to admit! I like the look of
the place; it is truly as suitable for the cure as
any I ever saw. ’Twas a knowing-man that
sent ’ee, whoever he was.’
‘You can contrive for me all that’s necessary?’
she said breathlessly.
’You should really have gone
to the governor of the jail, and your doctor with
’ee, and given your name and address that’s
how it used to be done, if I recollect. Still,
perhaps, I can manage it for a trifling fee.’
’O, thank you! I would
rather do it this way, as I should like it kept private.’
‘Lover not to know, eh?’
‘No husband.’
‘Aha! Very well. I’ll get
ee’ a touch of the corpse.’
‘Where is it now?’ she said, shuddering.
’It? he, you mean;
he’s living yet. Just inside that little
small winder up there in the glum.’ He
signified the jail on the cliff above.
She thought of her husband and her
friends. ‘Yes, of course,’ she said;
‘and how am I to proceed?’
He took her to the door. ’Now,
do you be waiting at the little wicket in the wall,
that you’ll find up there in the lane, not later
than one o’clock. I will open it from
the inside, as I shan’t come home to dinner
till he’s cut down. Good-night. Be
punctual; and if you don’t want anybody to know
’ee, wear a veil. Ah once I
had such a daughter as you!’
She went away, and climbed the path
above, to assure herself that she would be able to
find the wicket next day. Its outline was soon
visible to her a narrow opening in the
outer wall of the prison precincts. The steep
was so great that, having reached the wicket, she stopped
a moment to breathe; and, looking back upon the water-side
cot, saw the hangman again ascending his outdoor staircase.
He entered the loft or chamber to which it led, and
in a few minutes extinguished his light.
The town clock struck ten, and she
returned to the White Hart as she had come.
CHAPTER IX - A RENCOUNTER
It was one o’clock on Saturday.
Gertrude Lodge, having been admitted to the jail
as above described, was sitting in a waiting-room within
the second gate, which stood under a classic archway
of ashlar, then comparatively modern, and bearing
the inscription, ‘COVNTY jail: 1793.’
This had been the façade she saw from the heath the
day before. Near at hand was a passage to the
roof on which the gallows stood.
The town was thronged, and the market
suspended; but Gertrude had seen scarcely a soul.
Having kept her room till the hour of the appointment,
she had proceeded to the spot by a way which avoided
the open space below the cliff where the spectators
had gathered; but she could, even now, hear the multitudinous
babble of their voices, out of which rose at intervals
the hoarse croak of a single voice uttering the words,
’Last dying speech and confession!’ There
had been no reprieve, and the execution was over;
but the crowd still waited to see the body taken down.
Soon the persistent girl heard a trampling
overhead, then a hand beckoned to her, and, following
directions, she went out and crossed the inner paved
court beyond the gatehouse, her knees trembling so
that she could scarcely walk. One of her arms
was out of its sleeve, and only covered by her shawl.
On the spot at which she had now arrived
were two trestles, and before she could think of their
purpose she heard heavy feet descending stairs somewhere
at her back. Turn her head she would not, or
could not, and, rigid in this position, she was conscious
of a rough coffin passing her shoulder, borne by four
men. It was open, and in it lay the body of a
young man, wearing the smockfrock of a rustic, and
fustian breeches. The corpse had been thrown
into the coffin so hastily that the skirt of the smockfrock
was hanging over. The burden was temporarily
deposited on the trestles.
By this time the young woman’s
state was such that a gray mist seemed to float before
her eyes, on account of which, and the veil she wore,
she could scarcely discern anything: it was as
though she had nearly died, but was held up by a sort
of galvanism.
‘Now!’ said a voice close
at hand, and she was just conscious that the word
had been addressed to her.
By a last strenuous effort she advanced,
at the same time hearing persons approaching behind
her. She bared her poor curst arm; and Davies,
uncovering the face of the corpse, took Gertrude’s
hand, and held it so that her arm lay across the dead
man’s neck, upon a line the colour of an unripe
blackberry, which surrounded it.
Gertrude shrieked: ‘the
turn o’ the blood,’ predicted by the conjuror,
had taken place. But at that moment a second
shriek rent the air of the enclosure: it was
not Gertrude’s, and its effect upon her was to
make her start round.
Immediately behind her stood Rhoda
Brook, her face drawn, and her eyes red with weeping.
Behind Rhoda stood Gertrude’s own husband; his
countenance lined, his eyes dim, but without a tear.
‘D-n you! what are you doing here?’ he
said hoarsely.
‘Hussy to come between
us and our child now!’ cried Rhoda. ’This
is the meaning of what Satan showed me in the vision!
You are like her at last!’ And clutching the
bare arm of the younger woman, she pulled her unresistingly
back against the wall. Immediately Brook had
loosened her hold the fragile young Gertrude slid
down against the feet of her husband. When he
lifted her up she was unconscious.
The mere sight of the twain had been
enough to suggest to her that the dead young man was
Rhoda’s son. At that time the relatives
of an executed convict had the privilege of claiming
the body for burial, if they chose to do so; and it
was for this purpose that Lodge was awaiting the inquest
with Rhoda. He had been summoned by her as soon
as the young man was taken in the crime, and at different
times since; and he had attended in court during the
trial. This was the ‘holiday’ he
had been indulging in of late. The two wretched
parents had wished to avoid exposure; and hence had
come themselves for the body, a waggon and sheet for
its conveyance and covering being in waiting outside.
Gertrude’s case was so serious
that it was deemed advisable to call to her the surgeon
who was at hand. She was taken out of the jail
into the town; but she never reached home alive.
Her delicate vitality, sapped perhaps by the paralyzed
arm, collapsed under the double shock that followed
the severe strain, physical and mental, to which she
had subjected herself during the previous twenty-four
hours. Her blood had been ‘turned’
indeed too far. Her death took place
in the town three days after.
Her husband was never seen in Casterbridge
again; once only in the old market-place at Anglebury,
which he had so much frequented, and very seldom in
public anywhere. Burdened at first with moodiness
and remorse, he eventually changed for the better,
and appeared as a chastened and thoughtful man.
Soon after attending the funeral of his poor young
wife he took steps towards giving up the farms in
Holmstoke and the adjoining parish, and, having sold
every head of his stock, he went away to Port-Bredy,
at the other end of the county, living there in solitary
lodgings till his death two years later of a painless
decline. It was then found that he had bequeathed
the whole of his not inconsiderable property to a
reformatory for boys, subject to the payment of a small
annuity to Rhoda Brook, if she could be found to claim
it.
For some time she could not be found;
but eventually she reappeared in her old parish, absolutely
refusing, however, to have anything to do with the
provision made for her. Her monotonous milking
at the dairy was resumed, and followed for many long
years, till her form became bent, and her once abundant
dark hair white and worn away at the forehead perhaps
by long pressure against the cows. Here, sometimes,
those who knew her experiences would stand and observe
her, and wonder what sombre thoughts were beating
inside that impassive, wrinkled brow, to the rhythm
of the alternating milk-streams.
(’Blackwood’s Magazine,’ January
1888.)