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<h2> 26. </h2>
<p>It chanced that on a fine spring morning Henchard and Farfrae met in the
chestnut-walk which ran along the south wall of the town. Each had just
come out from his early breakfast, and there was not another soul near.
Henchard was reading a letter from Lucetta, sent in answer to a note from
him, in which she made some excuse for not immediately granting him a
second interview that he had desired.</p>
<p>Donald had no wish to enter into conversation with his former friend on
their present constrained terms; neither would he pass him in scowling
silence. He nodded, and Henchard did the same. They receded from each
other several paces when a voice cried "Farfrae!" It was Henchard's, who
stood regarding him.</p>
<p>"Do you remember," said Henchard, as if it were the presence of the
thought and not of the man which made him speak, "do you remember my story
of that second woman—who suffered for her thoughtless intimacy with
me?"</p>
<p>"I do," said Farfrae.</p>
<p>"Do you remember my telling 'ee how it all began and how it ended?</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Well, I have offered to marry her now that I can; but she won't marry me.
Now what would you think of her—I put it to you?"</p>
<p>"Well, ye owe her nothing more now," said Farfrae heartily.</p>
<p>"It is true," said Henchard, and went on.</p>
<p>That he had looked up from a letter to ask his questions completely shut
out from Farfrae's mind all vision of Lucetta as the culprit. Indeed, her
present position was so different from that of the young woman of
Henchard's story as of itself to be sufficient to blind him absolutely to
her identity. As for Henchard, he was reassured by Farfrae's words and
manner against a suspicion which had crossed his mind. They were not those
of a conscious rival.</p>
<p>Yet that there was rivalry by some one he was firmly persuaded. He could
feel it in the air around Lucetta, see it in the turn of her pen. There
was an antagonistic force in exercise, so that when he had tried to hang
near her he seemed standing in a refluent current. That it was not innate
caprice he was more and more certain. Her windows gleamed as if they did
not want him; her curtains seem to hang slily, as if they screened an
ousting presence. To discover whose presence that was—whether really
Farfrae's after all, or another's—he exerted himself to the utmost
to see her again; and at length succeeded.</p>
<p>At the interview, when she offered him tea, he made it a point to launch a
cautious inquiry if she knew Mr. Farfrae.</p>
<p>O yes, she knew him, she declared; she could not help knowing almost
everybody in Casterbridge, living in such a gazebo over the centre and
arena of the town.</p>
<p>"Pleasant young fellow," said Henchard.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Lucetta.</p>
<p>"We both know him," said kind Elizabeth-Jane, to relieve her companion's
divined embarrassment.</p>
<p>There was a knock at the door; literally, three full knocks and a little
one at the end.</p>
<p>"That kind of knock means half-and-half—somebody between gentle and
simple," said the corn-merchant to himself. "I shouldn't wonder therefore
if it is he." In a few seconds surely enough Donald walked in.</p>
<p>Lucetta was full of little fidgets and flutters, which increased
Henchard's suspicions without affording any special proof of their
correctness. He was well-nigh ferocious at the sense of the queer
situation in which he stood towards this woman. One who had reproached him
for deserting her when calumniated, who had urged claims upon his
consideration on that account, who had lived waiting for him, who at the
first decent opportunity had come to ask him to rectify, by making her
his, the false position into which she had placed herself for his sake;
such she had been. And now he sat at her tea-table eager to gain her
attention, and in his amatory rage feeling the other man present to be a
villain, just as any young fool of a lover might feel.</p>
<p>They sat stiffly side by side at the darkening table, like some Tuscan
painting of the two disciples supping at Emmaus. Lucetta, forming the
third and haloed figure, was opposite them; Elizabeth-Jane, being out of
the game, and out of the group, could observe all from afar, like the
evangelist who had to write it down: that there were long spaces of
taciturnity, when all exterior circumstances were subdued to the touch of
spoons and china, the click of a heel on the pavement under the window,
the passing of a wheelbarrow or cart, the whistling of the carter, the
gush of water into householders' buckets at the town-pump opposite, the
exchange of greetings among their neighbours, and the rattle of the yokes
by which they carried off their evening supply.</p>
<p>"More bread-and-butter?" said Lucetta to Henchard and Farfrae equally,
holding out between them a plateful of long slices. Henchard took a slice
by one end and Donald by the other; each feeling certain he was the man
meant; neither let go, and the slice came in two.</p>
<p>"Oh—I am so sorry!" cried Lucetta, with a nervous titter. Farfrae
tried to laugh; but he was too much in love to see the incident in any but
a tragic light.</p>
<p>"How ridiculous of all three of them!" said Elizabeth to herself.</p>
<p>Henchard left the house with a ton of conjecture, though without a grain
of proof, that the counterattraction was Farfrae; and therefore he would
not make up his mind. Yet to Elizabeth-Jane it was plain as the town-pump
that Donald and Lucetta were incipient lovers. More than once, in spite of
her care, Lucetta had been unable to restrain her glance from flitting
across into Farfrae's eyes like a bird to its nest. But Henchard was
constructed upon too large a scale to discern such minutiae as these by an
evening light, which to him were as the notes of an insect that lie above
the compass of the human ear.</p>
<p>But he was disturbed. And the sense of occult rivalry in suitorship was so
much superadded to the palpable rivalry of their business lives. To the
coarse materiality of that rivalry it added an inflaming soul.</p>
<p>The thus vitalized antagonism took the form of action by Henchard sending
for Jopp, the manager originally displaced by Farfrae's arrival. Henchard
had frequently met this man about the streets, observed that his clothing
spoke of neediness, heard that he lived in Mixen Lane—a back slum of
the town, the pis aller of Casterbridge domiciliation—itself almost
a proof that a man had reached a stage when he would not stick at trifles.</p>
<p>Jopp came after dark, by the gates of the storeyard, and felt his way
through the hay and straw to the office where Henchard sat in solitude
awaiting him.</p>
<p>"I am again out of a foreman," said the corn-factor. "Are you in a place?"</p>
<p>"Not so much as a beggar's, sir."</p>
<p>"How much do you ask?"</p>
<p>Jopp named his price, which was very moderate.</p>
<p>"When can you come?"</p>
<p>"At this hour and moment, sir," said Jopp, who, standing hands-pocketed at
the street corner till the sun had faded the shoulders of his coat to
scarecrow green, had regularly watched Henchard in the market-place,
measured him, and learnt him, by virtue of the power which the still man
has in his stillness of knowing the busy one better than he knows himself.
Jopp too, had had a convenient experience; he was the only one in
Casterbridge besides Henchard and the close-lipped Elizabeth who knew that
Lucetta came truly from Jersey, and but proximately from Bath. "I know
Jersey too, sir," he said. "Was living there when you used to do business
that way. O yes—have often seen ye there."</p>
<p>"Indeed! Very good. Then the thing is settled. The testimonials you showed
me when you first tried for't are sufficient."</p>
<p>That characters deteriorated in time of need possibly did not occur to
Henchard. Jopp said, "Thank you," and stood more firmly, in the
consciousness that at last he officially belonged to that spot.</p>
<p>"Now," said Henchard, digging his strong eyes into Jopp's face, "one thing
is necessary to me, as the biggest corn-and-hay dealer in these parts. The
Scotchman, who's taking the town trade so bold into his hands, must be cut
out. D'ye hear? We two can't live side by side—that's clear and
certain."</p>
<p>"I've seen it all," said Jopp.</p>
<p>"By fair competition I mean, of course," Henchard continued. "But as hard,
keen, and unflinching as fair—rather more so. By such a desperate
bid against him for the farmers' custom as will grind him into the ground—starve
him out. I've capital, mind ye, and I can do it."</p>
<p>"I'm all that way of thinking," said the new foreman. Jopp's dislike of
Farfrae as the man who had once ursurped his place, while it made him a
willing tool, made him, at the same time, commercially as unsafe a
colleague as Henchard could have chosen.</p>
<p>"I sometimes think," he added, "that he must have some glass that he sees
next year in. He has such a knack of making everything bring him fortune."</p>
<p>"He's deep beyond all honest men's discerning, but we must make him
shallower. We'll undersell him, and over-buy him, and so snuff him out."</p>
<p>They then entered into specific details of the process by which this would
be accomplished, and parted at a late hour.</p>
<p>Elizabeth-Jane heard by accident that Jopp had been engaged by her
stepfather. She was so fully convinced that he was not the right man for
the place that, at the risk of making Henchard angry, she expressed her
apprehension to him when they met. But it was done to no purpose. Henchard
shut up her argument with a sharp rebuff.</p>
<p>The season's weather seemed to favour their scheme. The time was in the
years immediately before foreign competition had revolutionized the trade
in grain; when still, as from the earliest ages, the wheat quotations from
month to month depended entirely upon the home harvest. A bad harvest, or
the prospect of one, would double the price of corn in a few weeks; and
the promise of a good yield would lower it as rapidly. Prices were like
the roads of the period, steep in gradient, reflecting in their phases the
local conditions, without engineering, levellings, or averages.</p>
<p>The farmer's income was ruled by the wheat-crop within his own horizon,
and the wheat-crop by the weather. Thus in person, he became a sort of
flesh-barometer, with feelers always directed to the sky and wind around
him. The local atmosphere was everything to him; the atmospheres of other
countries a matter of indifference. The people, too, who were not farmers,
the rural multitude, saw in the god of the weather a more important
personage than they do now. Indeed, the feeling of the peasantry in this
matter was so intense as to be almost unrealizable in these equable days.
Their impulse was well-nigh to prostrate themselves in lamentation before
untimely rains and tempests, which came as the Alastor of those households
whose crime it was to be poor.</p>
<p>After midsummer they watched the weather-cocks as men waiting in
antechambers watch the lackey. Sun elated them; quiet rain sobered them;
weeks of watery tempest stupefied them. That aspect of the sky which they
now regard as disagreeable they then beheld as maleficent.</p>
<p>It was June, and the weather was very unfavourable. Casterbridge, being as
it were the bell-board on which all the adjacent hamlets and villages
sounded their notes, was decidedly dull. Instead of new articles in the
shop-windows those that had been rejected in the foregoing summer were
brought out again; superseded reap-hooks, badly-shaped rakes, shop-worn
leggings, and time-stiffened water-tights reappeared, furbished up as near
to new as possible.</p>
<p>Henchard, backed by Jopp, read a disastrous garnering, and resolved to
base his strategy against Farfrae upon that reading. But before acting he
wished—what so many have wished—that he could know for certain
what was at present only strong probability. He was superstitious—as
such head-strong natures often are—and he nourished in his mind an
idea bearing on the matter; an idea he shrank from disclosing even to
Jopp.</p>
<p>In a lonely hamlet a few miles from the town—so lonely that what are
called lonely villages were teeming by comparison—there lived a man
of curious repute as a forecaster or weather-prophet. The way to his house
was crooked and miry—even difficult in the present unpropitious
season. One evening when it was raining so heavily that ivy and laurel
resounded like distant musketry, and an out-door man could be excused for
shrouding himself to his ears and eyes, such a shrouded figure on foot
might have been perceived travelling in the direction of the hazel-copse
which dripped over the prophet's cot. The turnpike-road became a lane, the
lane a cart-track, the cart-track a bridle-path, the bridle-path a
foot-way, the foot-way overgrown. The solitary walker slipped here and
there, and stumbled over the natural springes formed by the brambles, till
at length he reached the house, which, with its garden, was surrounded
with a high, dense hedge. The cottage, comparatively a large one, had been
built of mud by the occupier's own hands, and thatched also by himself.
Here he had always lived, and here it was assumed he would die.</p>
<p>He existed on unseen supplies; for it was an anomalous thing that while
there was hardly a soul in the neighbourhood but affected to laugh at this
man's assertions, uttering the formula, "There's nothing in 'em," with
full assurance on the surface of their faces, very few of them were
unbelievers in their secret hearts. Whenever they consulted him they did
it "for a fancy." When they paid him they said, "Just a trifle for
Christmas," or "Candlemas," as the case might be.</p>
<p>He would have preferred more honesty in his clients, and less sham
ridicule; but fundamental belief consoled him for superficial irony. As
stated, he was enabled to live; people supported him with their backs
turned. He was sometimes astonished that men could profess so little and
believe so much at his house, when at church they professed so much and
believed so little.</p>
<p>Behind his back he was called "Wide-oh," on account of his reputation; to
his face "Mr." Fall.</p>
<p>The hedge of his garden formed an arch over the entrance, and a door was
inserted as in a wall. Outside the door the tall traveller stopped,
bandaged his face with a handkerchief as if he were suffering from
toothache, and went up the path. The window shutters were not closed, and
he could see the prophet within, preparing his supper.</p>
<p>In answer to the knock Fall came to the door, candle in hand. The visitor
stepped back a little from the light, and said, "Can I speak to 'ee?" in
significant tones. The other's invitation to come in was responded to by
the country formula, "This will do, thank 'ee," after which the
householder had no alternative but to come out. He placed the candle on
the corner of the dresser, took his hat from a nail, and joined the
stranger in the porch, shutting the door behind him.</p>
<p>"I've long heard that you can—do things of a sort?" began the other,
repressing his individuality as much as he could.</p>
<p>"Maybe so, Mr. Henchard," said the weather-caster.</p>
<p>"Ah—why do you call me that?" asked the visitor with a start.</p>
<p>"Because it's your name. Feeling you'd come I've waited for 'ee; and
thinking you might be leery from your walk I laid two supper plates—look
ye here." He threw open the door and disclosed the supper-table, at which
appeared a second chair, knife and fork, plate and mug, as he had
declared.</p>
<p>Henchard felt like Saul at his reception by Samuel; he remained in silence
for a few moments, then throwing off the disguise of frigidity which he
had hitherto preserved he said, "Then I have not come in vain....Now, for
instance, can ye charm away warts?"</p>
<p>"Without trouble."</p>
<p>"Cure the evil?"</p>
<p>"That I've done—with consideration—if they will wear the
toad-bag by night as well as by day."</p>
<p>"Forecast the weather?"</p>
<p>"With labour and time."</p>
<p>"Then take this," said Henchard. "'Tis a crownpiece. Now, what is the
harvest fortnight to be? When can I know?'</p>
<p>"I've worked it out already, and you can know at once." (The fact was that
five farmers had already been there on the same errand from different
parts of the country.) "By the sun, moon, and stars, by the clouds, the
winds, the trees, and grass, the candle-flame and swallows, the smell of
the herbs; likewise by the cats' eyes, the ravens, the leeches, the
spiders, and the dungmixen, the last fortnight in August will be—rain
and tempest."</p>
<p>"You are not certain, of course?"</p>
<p>"As one can be in a world where all's unsure. 'Twill be more like living
in Revelations this autumn than in England. Shall I sketch it out for 'ee
in a scheme?"</p>
<p>"O no, no," said Henchard. "I don't altogether believe in forecasts, come
to second thoughts on such. But I—"</p>
<p>"You don't—you don't—'tis quite understood," said Wide-oh,
without a sound of scorn. "You have given me a crown because you've one
too many. But won't you join me at supper, now 'tis waiting and all?"</p>
<p>Henchard would gladly have joined; for the savour of the stew had floated
from the cottage into the porch with such appetizing distinctness that the
meat, the onions, the pepper, and the herbs could be severally recognized
by his nose. But as sitting down to hob-and-nob there would have seemed to
mark him too implicitly as the weather-caster's apostle, he declined, and
went his way.</p>
<p>The next Saturday Henchard bought grain to such an enormous extent that
there was quite a talk about his purchases among his neighbours the
lawyer, the wine merchant, and the doctor; also on the next, and on all
available days. When his granaries were full to choking all the
weather-cocks of Casterbridge creaked and set their faces in another
direction, as if tired of the south-west. The weather changed; the
sunlight, which had been like tin for weeks, assumed the hues of topaz.
The temperament of the welkin passed from the phlegmatic to the sanguine;
an excellent harvest was almost a certainty; and as a consequence prices
rushed down.</p>
<p>All these transformations, lovely to the outsider, to the wrong-headed
corn-dealer were terrible. He was reminded of what he had well known
before, that a man might gamble upon the square green areas of fields as
readily as upon those of a card-room.</p>
<p>Henchard had backed bad weather, and apparently lost. He had mistaken the
turn of the flood for the turn of the ebb. His dealings had been so
extensive that settlement could not long be postponed, and to settle he
was obliged to sell off corn that he had bought only a few weeks before at
figures higher by many shillings a quarter. Much of the corn he had never
seen; it had not even been moved from the ricks in which it lay stacked
miles away. Thus he lost heavily.</p>
<p>In the blaze of an early August day he met Farfrae in the market-place.
Farfrae knew of his dealings (though he did not guess their intended
bearing on himself) and commiserated him; for since their exchange of
words in the South Walk they had been on stiffly speaking terms. Henchard
for the moment appeared to resent the sympathy; but he suddenly took a
careless turn.</p>
<p>"Ho, no, no!—nothing serious, man!" he cried with fierce gaiety.
"These things always happen, don't they? I know it has been said that
figures have touched me tight lately; but is that anything rare? The case
is not so bad as folk make out perhaps. And dammy, a man must be a fool to
mind the common hazards of trade!"</p>
<p>But he had to enter the Casterbridge Bank that day for reasons which had
never before sent him there—and to sit a long time in the partners'
room with a constrained bearing. It was rumoured soon after that much real
property as well as vast stores of produce, which had stood in Henchard's
name in the town and neighbourhood, was actually the possession of his
bankers.</p>
<p>Coming down the steps of the bank he encountered Jopp. The gloomy
transactions just completed within had added fever to the original sting
of Farfrae's sympathy that morning, which Henchard fancied might be a
satire disguised so that Jopp met with anything but a bland reception. The
latter was in the act of taking off his hat to wipe his forehead, and
saying, "A fine hot day," to an acquaintance.</p>
<p>"You can wipe and wipe, and say, 'A fine hot day,' can ye!" cried Henchard
in a savage undertone, imprisoning Jopp between himself and the bank wall.
"If it hadn't been for your blasted advice it might have been a fine day
enough! Why did ye let me go on, hey?—when a word of doubt from you
or anybody would have made me think twice! For you can never be sure of
weather till 'tis past."</p>
<p>"My advice, sir, was to do what you thought best."</p>
<p>"A useful fellow! And the sooner you help somebody else in that way the
better!" Henchard continued his address to Jopp in similar terms till it
ended in Jopp's dismissal there and then, Henchard turning upon his heel
and leaving him.</p>
<p>"You shall be sorry for this, sir; sorry as a man can be!" said Jopp,
standing pale, and looking after the corn-merchant as he disappeared in
the crowd of market-men hard by.</p>
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