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<h2> BOOK SIX — AFTERCOURSES </h2>
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<h2> 1—The Inevitable Movement Onward </h2>
<p>The story of the deaths of Eustacia and Wildeve was told throughout Egdon,
and far beyond, for many weeks and months. All the known incidents of
their love were enlarged, distorted, touched up, and modified, till the
original reality bore but a slight resemblance to the counterfeit
presentation by surrounding tongues. Yet, upon the whole, neither the man
nor the woman lost dignity by sudden death. Misfortune had struck them
gracefully, cutting off their erratic histories with a catastrophic dash,
instead of, as with many, attenuating each life to an uninteresting
meagreness, through long years of wrinkles, neglect, and decay.</p>
<p>On those most nearly concerned the effect was somewhat different.
Strangers who had heard of many such cases now merely heard of one more;
but immediately where a blow falls no previous imaginings amount to
appreciable preparation for it. The very suddenness of her bereavement
dulled, to some extent, Thomasin's feelings; yet irrationally enough, a
consciousness that the husband she had lost ought to have been a better
man did not lessen her mourning at all. On the contrary, this fact seemed
at first to set off the dead husband in his young wife's eyes, and to be
the necessary cloud to the rainbow.</p>
<p>But the horrors of the unknown had passed. Vague misgivings about her
future as a deserted wife were at an end. The worst had once been matter
of trembling conjecture; it was now matter of reason only, a limited
badness. Her chief interest, the little Eustacia, still remained. There
was humility in her grief, no defiance in her attitude; and when this is
the case a shaken spirit is apt to be stilled.</p>
<p>Could Thomasin's mournfulness now and Eustacia's serenity during life have
been reduced to common measure, they would have touched the same mark
nearly. But Thomasin's former brightness made shadow of that which in a
sombre atmosphere was light itself.</p>
<p>The spring came and calmed her; the summer came and soothed her; the
autumn arrived, and she began to be comforted, for her little girl was
strong and happy, growing in size and knowledge every day. Outward events
flattered Thomasin not a little. Wildeve had died intestate, and she and
the child were his only relatives. When administration had been granted,
all the debts paid, and the residue of her husband's uncle's property had
come into her hands, it was found that the sum waiting to be invested for
her own and the child's benefit was little less than ten thousand pounds.</p>
<p>Where should she live? The obvious place was Blooms-End. The old rooms, it
is true, were not much higher than the between-decks of a frigate,
necessitating a sinking in the floor under the new clock-case she brought
from the inn, and the removal of the handsome brass knobs on its head,
before there was height for it to stand; but, such as the rooms were,
there were plenty of them, and the place was endeared to her by every
early recollection. Clym very gladly admitted her as a tenant, confining
his own existence to two rooms at the top of the back staircase, where he
lived on quietly, shut off from Thomasin and the three servants she had
thought fit to indulge in now that she was a mistress of money, going his
own ways, and thinking his own thoughts.</p>
<p>His sorrows had made some change in his outward appearance; and yet the
alteration was chiefly within. It might have been said that he had a
wrinkled mind. He had no enemies, and he could get nobody to reproach him,
which was why he so bitterly reproached himself.</p>
<p>He did sometimes think he had been ill-used by fortune, so far as to say
that to be born is a palpable dilemma, and that instead of men aiming to
advance in life with glory they should calculate how to retreat out of it
without shame. But that he and his had been sarcastically and pitilessly
handled in having such irons thrust into their souls he did not maintain
long. It is usually so, except with the sternest of men. Human beings, in
their generous endeavour to construct a hypothesis that shall not degrade
a First Cause, have always hesitated to conceive a dominant power of lower
moral quality than their own; and, even while they sit down and weep by
the waters of Babylon, invent excuses for the oppression which prompts
their tears.</p>
<p>Thus, though words of solace were vainly uttered in his presence, he found
relief in a direction of his own choosing when left to himself. For a man
of his habits the house and the hundred and twenty pounds a year which he
had inherited from his mother were enough to supply all worldly needs.
Resources do not depend upon gross amounts, but upon the proportion of
spendings to takings.</p>
<p>He frequently walked the heath alone, when the past seized upon him with
its shadowy hand, and held him there to listen to its tale. His
imagination would then people the spot with its ancient inhabitants—forgotten
Celtic tribes trod their tracks about him, and he could almost live among
them, look in their faces, and see them standing beside the barrows which
swelled around, untouched and perfect as at the time of their erection.
Those of the dyed barbarians who had chosen the cultivable tracts were, in
comparison with those who had left their marks here, as writers on paper
beside writers on parchment. Their records had perished long ago by the
plough, while the works of these remained. Yet they all had lived and died
unconscious of the different fates awaiting their relics. It reminded him
that unforeseen factors operate in the evolution of immortality.</p>
<p>Winter again came round, with its winds, frosts, tame robins, and
sparkling starlight. The year previous Thomasin had hardly been conscious
of the season's advance; this year she laid her heart open to external
influences of every kind. The life of this sweet cousin, her baby, and her
servants, came to Clym's senses only in the form of sounds through a wood
partition as he sat over books of exceptionally large type; but his ear
became at last so accustomed to these slight noises from the other part of
the house that he almost could witness the scenes they signified. A faint
beat of half-seconds conjured up Thomasin rocking the cradle, a wavering
hum meant that she was singing the baby to sleep, a crunching of sand as
between millstones raised the picture of Humphrey's, Fairway's, or Sam's
heavy feet crossing the stone floor of the kitchen; a light boyish step,
and a gay tune in a high key, betokened a visit from Grandfer Cantle; a
sudden break-off in the Grandfer's utterances implied the application to
his lips of a mug of small beer, a bustling and slamming of doors meant
starting to go to market; for Thomasin, in spite of her added scope of
gentility, led a ludicrously narrow life, to the end that she might save
every possible pound for her little daughter.</p>
<p>One summer day Clym was in the garden, immediately outside the parlour
window, which was as usual open. He was looking at the pot-flowers on the
sill; they had been revived and restored by Thomasin to the state in which
his mother had left them. He heard a slight scream from Thomasin, who was
sitting inside the room.</p>
<p>"O, how you frightened me!" she said to someone who had entered. "I
thought you were the ghost of yourself."</p>
<p>Clym was curious enough to advance a little further and look in at the
window. To his astonishment there stood within the room Diggory Venn, no
longer a reddleman, but exhibiting the strangely altered hues of an
ordinary Christian countenance, white shirt-front, light flowered
waistcoat, blue-spotted neckerchief, and bottle-green coat. Nothing in
this appearance was at all singular but the fact of its great difference
from what he had formerly been. Red, and all approach to red, was
carefully excluded from every article of clothes upon him; for what is
there that persons just out of harness dread so much as reminders of the
trade which has enriched them?</p>
<p>Yeobright went round to the door and entered.</p>
<p>"I was so alarmed!" said Thomasin, smiling from one to the other. "I
couldn't believe that he had got white of his own accord! It seemed
supernatural."</p>
<p>"I gave up dealing in reddle last Christmas," said Venn. "It was a
profitable trade, and I found that by that time I had made enough to take
the dairy of fifty cows that my father had in his lifetime. I always
thought of getting to that place again if I changed at all, and now I am
there."</p>
<p>"How did you manage to become white, Diggory?" Thomasin asked.</p>
<p>"I turned so by degrees, ma'am."</p>
<p>"You look much better than ever you did before."</p>
<p>Venn appeared confused; and Thomasin, seeing how inadvertently she had
spoken to a man who might possibly have tender feelings for her still,
blushed a little. Clym saw nothing of this, and added good-humouredly—</p>
<p>"What shall we have to frighten Thomasin's baby with, now you have become
a human being again?"</p>
<p>"Sit down, Diggory," said Thomasin, "and stay to tea."</p>
<p>Venn moved as if he would retire to the kitchen, when Thomasin said with
pleasant pertness as she went on with some sewing, "Of course you must sit
down here. And where does your fifty-cow dairy lie, Mr. Venn?"</p>
<p>"At Stickleford—about two miles to the right of Alderworth, ma'am,
where the meads begin. I have thought that if Mr. Yeobright would like to
pay me a visit sometimes he shouldn't stay away for want of asking. I'll
not bide to tea this afternoon, thank'ee, for I've got something on hand
that must be settled. 'Tis Maypole-day tomorrow, and the Shadwater folk
have clubbed with a few of your neighbours here to have a pole just
outside your palings in the heath, as it is a nice green place." Venn
waved his elbow towards the patch in front of the house. "I have been
talking to Fairway about it," he continued, "and I said to him that before
we put up the pole it would be as well to ask Mrs. Wildeve."</p>
<p>"I can say nothing against it," she answered. "Our property does not reach
an inch further than the white palings."</p>
<p>"But you might not like to see a lot of folk going crazy round a stick,
under your very nose?"</p>
<p>"I shall have no objection at all."</p>
<p>Venn soon after went away, and in the evening Yeobright strolled as far as
Fairway's cottage. It was a lovely May sunset, and the birch trees which
grew on this margin of the vast Egdon wilderness had put on their new
leaves, delicate as butterflies' wings, and diaphanous as amber. Beside
Fairway's dwelling was an open space recessed from the road, and here were
now collected all the young people from within a radius of a couple of
miles. The pole lay with one end supported on a trestle, and women were
engaged in wreathing it from the top downwards with wild-flowers. The
instincts of merry England lingered on here with exceptional vitality, and
the symbolic customs which tradition has attached to each season of the
year were yet a reality on Egdon. Indeed, the impulses of all such
outlandish hamlets are pagan still—in these spots homage to nature,
self-adoration, frantic gaieties, fragments of Teutonic rites to
divinities whose names are forgotten, seem in some way or other to have
survived mediaeval doctrine.</p>
<p>Yeobright did not interrupt the preparations, and went home again. The
next morning, when Thomasin withdrew the curtains of her bedroom window,
there stood the Maypole in the middle of the green, its top cutting into
the sky. It had sprung up in the night, or rather early morning, like
Jack's bean-stalk. She opened the casement to get a better view of the
garlands and posies that adorned it. The sweet perfume of the flowers had
already spread into the surrounding air, which, being free from every
taint, conducted to her lips a full measure of the fragrance received from
the spire of blossom in its midst. At the top of the pole were crossed
hoops decked with small flowers; beneath these came a milk-white zone of
Maybloom; then a zone of bluebells, then of cowslips, then of lilacs, then
of ragged-robins, daffodils, and so on, till the lowest stage was reached.
Thomasin noticed all these, and was delighted that the May revel was to be
so near.</p>
<p>When afternoon came people began to gather on the green, and Yeobright was
interested enough to look out upon them from the open window of his room.
Soon after this Thomasin walked out from the door immediately below and
turned her eyes up to her cousin's face. She was dressed more gaily than
Yeobright had ever seen her dressed since the time of Wildeve's death,
eighteen months before; since the day of her marriage even she had not
exhibited herself to such advantage.</p>
<p>"How pretty you look today, Thomasin!" he said. "Is it because of the
Maypole?"</p>
<p>"Not altogether." And then she blushed and dropped her eyes, which he did
not specially observe, though her manner seemed to him to be rather
peculiar, considering that she was only addressing himself. Could it be
possible that she had put on her summer clothes to please him?</p>
<p>He recalled her conduct towards him throughout the last few weeks, when
they had often been working together in the garden, just as they had
formerly done when they were boy and girl under his mother's eye. What if
her interest in him were not so entirely that of a relative as it had
formerly been? To Yeobright any possibility of this sort was a serious
matter; and he almost felt troubled at the thought of it. Every pulse of
loverlike feeling which had not been stilled during Eustacia's lifetime
had gone into the grave with her. His passion for her had occurred too far
on in his manhood to leave fuel enough on hand for another fire of that
sort, as may happen with more boyish loves. Even supposing him capable of
loving again, that love would be a plant of slow and laboured growth, and
in the end only small and sickly, like an autumn-hatched bird.</p>
<p>He was so distressed by this new complexity that when the enthusiastic
brass band arrived and struck up, which it did about five o'clock, with
apparently wind enough among its members to blow down his house, he
withdrew from his rooms by the back door, went down the garden, through
the gate in the hedge, and away out of sight. He could not bear to remain
in the presence of enjoyment today, though he had tried hard.</p>
<p>Nothing was seen of him for four hours. When he came back by the same path
it was dusk, and the dews were coating every green thing. The boisterous
music had ceased; but, entering the premises as he did from behind, he
could not see if the May party had all gone till he had passed through
Thomasin's division of the house to the front door. Thomasin was standing
within the porch alone.</p>
<p>She looked at him reproachfully. "You went away just when it began, Clym,"
she said.</p>
<p>"Yes. I felt I could not join in. You went out with them, of course?"</p>
<p>"No, I did not."</p>
<p>"You appeared to be dressed on purpose."</p>
<p>"Yes, but I could not go out alone; so many people were there. One is
there now."</p>
<p>Yeobright strained his eyes across the dark-green patch beyond the paling,
and near the black form of the Maypole he discerned a shadowy figure,
sauntering idly up and down. "Who is it?" he said.</p>
<p>"Mr. Venn," said Thomasin.</p>
<p>"You might have asked him to come in, I think, Tamsie. He has been very
kind to you first and last."</p>
<p>"I will now," she said; and, acting on the impulse, went through the
wicket to where Venn stood under the Maypole.</p>
<p>"It is Mr. Venn, I think?" she inquired.</p>
<p>Venn started as if he had not seen her—artful man that he was—and
said, "Yes."</p>
<p>"Will you come in?"</p>
<p>"I am afraid that I—"</p>
<p>"I have seen you dancing this evening, and you had the very best of the
girls for your partners. Is it that you won't come in because you wish to
stand here, and think over the past hours of enjoyment?"</p>
<p>"Well, that's partly it," said Mr. Venn, with ostentatious sentiment. "But
the main reason why I am biding here like this is that I want to wait till
the moon rises."</p>
<p>"To see how pretty the Maypole looks in the moonlight?"</p>
<p>"No. To look for a glove that was dropped by one of the maidens."</p>
<p>Thomasin was speechless with surprise. That a man who had to walk some
four or five miles to his home should wait here for such a reason pointed
to only one conclusion—the man must be amazingly interested in that
glove's owner.</p>
<p>"Were you dancing with her, Diggory?" she asked, in a voice which revealed
that he had made himself considerably more interesting to her by this
disclosure.</p>
<p>"No," he sighed.</p>
<p>"And you will not come in, then?"</p>
<p>"Not tonight, thank you, ma'am."</p>
<p>"Shall I lend you a lantern to look for the young person's glove, Mr.
Venn?"</p>
<p>"O no; it is not necessary, Mrs. Wildeve, thank you. The moon will rise in
a few minutes."</p>
<p>Thomasin went back to the porch. "Is he coming in?" said Clym, who had
been waiting where she had left him.</p>
<p>"He would rather not tonight," she said, and then passed by him into the
house; whereupon Clym too retired to his own rooms.</p>
<p>When Clym was gone Thomasin crept upstairs in the dark, and, just
listening by the cot, to assure herself that the child was asleep, she
went to the window, gently lifted the corner of the white curtain, and
looked out. Venn was still there. She watched the growth of the faint
radiance appearing in the sky by the eastern hill, till presently the edge
of the moon burst upwards and flooded the valley with light. Diggory's
form was now distinct on the green; he was moving about in a bowed
attitude, evidently scanning the grass for the precious missing article,
walking in zigzags right and left till he should have passed over every
foot of the ground.</p>
<p>"How very ridiculous!" Thomasin murmured to herself, in a tone which was
intended to be satirical. "To think that a man should be so silly as to go
mooning about like that for a girl's glove! A respectable dairyman, too,
and a man of money as he is now. What a pity!"</p>
<p>At last Venn appeared to find it; whereupon he stood up and raised it to
his lips. Then placing it in his breastpocket—the nearest receptacle
to a man's heart permitted by modern raiment—he ascended the valley
in a mathematically direct line towards his distant home in the meadows.</p>
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