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<h3>CHAPTER XXXIII. John Crumb</h3>
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<br/>Sir Felix Carbury made an appointment for meeting Ruby Ruggles a
second time at the bottom of the kitchen-garden belonging to Sheep's
Acre farm, which appointment he neglected, and had, indeed, made
without any intention of keeping it. But Ruby was there, and
remained hanging about among the cabbages till her grandfather
returned from Harlestone market. An early hour had been named;
but hours may be mistaken, and Ruby had thought that a fine
gentleman, such as was her lover, used to live among fine people up
in London, might well mistake the afternoon for the morning. If
he would come at all she could easily forgive such a mistake.
But he did not come, and late in the afternoon she was obliged to
obey her grandfather's summons as he called her into the house.
<br/>After that for three weeks she heard nothing of her London lover,
but she was always thinking of him;—and though she could not
altogether avoid her country lover, she was in his company as little
as possible. One afternoon her grandfather returned from Bungay
and told her that her country lover was coming to see her.
"John Crumb be a coming over by-and-by," said the old man. "See
and have a bit o' supper ready for him."
<br/>"John Crumb coming here, grandfather? He's welcome to stay
away then, for me."
<br/>"That be dommed." The old man thrust his old hat on to his
head and seated himself in a wooden arm-chair that stood by the
kitchen-fire. Whenever he was angry he put on his hat, and the
custom was well understood by Ruby. "Why not welcome, and he
all one as your husband? Look ye here, Ruby, I'm going to have
an eend o' this. John Crumb is to marry you next month, and the
banns is to be said."
<br/>"The parson may say what he pleases, grandfather. I can't
stop his saying of 'em. It isn't likely I shall try,
neither. But no parson among 'em all can marry me without I'm
willing."
<br/>"And why should you no be willing, you contrairy young jade, you?"
<br/>"You've been a'drinking, grandfather."
<br/>He turned round at her sharp, and threw his old hat at her
head;—nothing to Ruby's consternation, as it was a practice to which
she was well accustomed. She picked it up, and returned it to
him with a cool indifference which was intended to exasperate
him. "Look ye here, Ruby," he said, "out o' this place you
go. If you go as John Crumb's wife you'll go with five hun'erd
pound, and we'll have a dinner here, and a dance, and all Bungay."
<br/>"Who cares for all Bungay,—a set of beery chaps as knows nothing
but swilling and smoking;—and John Crumb the main of 'em all?
There never was a chap for beer like John Crumb."
<br/>"Never saw him the worse o' liquor in all my life." And the
old farmer, as he gave this grand assurance, rattled his fist down
upon the table.
<br/>"It ony just makes him stoopider and stoopider the more he
swills. You can't tell me, grandfather, about John Crumb, I
knows him."
<br/>"Didn't ye say as how ye'd have him? Didn't ye give him a
promise?"
<br/>"If I did, I ain't the first girl as has gone back of her
word,—and I shan't be the last."
<br/>"You means you won't have him?"
<br/>"That's about it, grandfather."
<br/>"Then you'll have to have somebody to fend for ye, and that pretty
sharp,—for you won't have me."
<br/>"There ain't no difficulty about that, grandfather."
<br/>"Very well. He's a coming here to-night, and you may settle
it along wi' him. Out o' this ye shall go. I know of your
doings."
<br/>"What doings! You don't know of no doings. There ain't
no doings. You don't know nothing ag'in me."
<br/>"He's a coming here to-night, and if you can make it up wi' him,
well and good. There's five hun'erd pound, and ye shall have
the dinner and dance and all Bungay. He ain't a going to be put
off no longer;—he ain't."
<br/>"Whoever wanted him to be put on? Let him go his own gait."
<br/>"If you can't make it up wi' him—"
<br/>"Well, grandfather, I shan't anyways."
<br/>"Let me have my say, will ye, yer jade, you? There's five
hun'erd pound! and there ain't ere a farmer in Suffolk or Norfolk
paying rent for a bit of land like this can do as well for his darter
as that,—let alone only a granddarter. You never thinks o'
that;—you don't. If you don't like to take it,—leave
it. But you'll leave Sheep's Acre too."
<br/>"Bother Sheep's Acre. Who wants to stop at Sheep's
Acre? It's the stoopidest place in all England."
<br/>"Then find another. Then find another. That's all
aboot it. John Crumb's a coming up for a bit o' supper.
You tell him your own mind. I'm dommed if I trouble aboot
it. On'y you don't stay here. Sheep's Acre ain't good
enough for you, and you'd best find another home. Stoopid, is
it? You'll have to put up wi' places stoopider nor Sheep's
Acre, afore you've done."
<br/>In regard to the hospitality promised to Mr Crumb, Miss Ruggles
went about her work with sufficient alacrity. She was quite
willing that the young man should have a supper, and she did
understand that, so far as the preparation of the supper went, she
owed her service to her grandfather. She therefore went to work
herself, and gave directions to the servant girl who assisted her in
keeping her grandfather's house. But as she did this, she
determined that she would make John Crumb understand that she would
never be his wife. Upon that she was now fully resolved.
As she went about the kitchen, taking down the ham and cutting the
slices that were to be broiled, and as she trussed the fowl that was
to be boiled for John Crumb, she made mental comparisons between him
and Sir Felix Carbury. She could see, as though present to her
at the moment, the mealy, floury head of the one, with hair stiff
with perennial dust from his sacks, and the sweet glossy dark
well-combed locks of the other, so bright, so seductive, that she was
ever longing to twine her fingers among them. And she
remembered the heavy, flat, broad honest face of the mealman, with
his mouth slow in motion, and his broad nose looking like a huge
white promontory, and his great staring eyes, from the corners of
which he was always extracting meal and grit;—and then also she
remembered the white teeth, the beautiful soft lips, the perfect
eyebrows, and the rich complexion of her London lover. Surely a
lease of Paradise with the one, though but for one short year, would
be well purchased at the price of a life with the other! "It's
no good going against love," she said to herself, "and I won't
try. He shall have his supper, and be told all about it, and
then go home. He cares more for his supper than he do for
me." And then, with this final resolution firmly made, she
popped the fowl into the pot. Her grandfather wanted her to
leave Sheep's Acre. Very well. She had a little money of
her own, and would take herself off to London. She knew what
people would say, but she cared nothing for old women's tales.
She would know how to take care of herself, and could always say in
her own defence that her grandfather had turned her out of Sheep's
Acre.
<br/>Seven had been the hour named, and punctually at that hour John
Crumb knocked at the back door of Sheep's Acre farm-house. Nor
did he come alone. He was accompanied by his friend Joe Mixet,
the baker of Bungay, who, as all Bungay knew, was to be his best man
at his marriage. John Crumb's character was not without any
fine attributes. He could earn money,—and having earned it
could spend and keep it in fair proportion. He was afraid of no
work, and,—to give him his due,—was afraid of no man. He was
honest, and ashamed of nothing that he did. And after his
fashion he had chivalrous ideas about women. He was willing to
thrash any man that ill-used a woman, and would certainly be a most
dangerous antagonist to any man who would misuse a woman belonging to
him. But Ruby had told the truth of him in saying that he was
slow of speech, and what the world calls stupid in regard to all
forms of expression. He knew good meal from bad as well as any
man, and the price at which he could buy it so as to leave himself a
fair profit at the selling. He knew the value of a clear
conscience, and without much argument had discovered for himself that
honesty is in truth the best policy. Joe Mixet, who was dapper
of person and glib of tongue, had often declared that any one buying
John Crumb for a fool would lose his money. Joe Mixet was
probably right; but there had been a want of prudence, a lack of
worldly sagacity, in the way in which Crumb had allowed his proposed
marriage with Ruby Ruggles to become a source of gossip to all
Bungay. His love was now an old affair; and, though he never
talked much, whenever he did talk, he talked about that. He was
proud of Ruby's beauty, and of her fortune, and of his own status as
her acknowledged lover,—and he did not hide his light under a
bushel. Perhaps the publicity so produced had some effect in
prejudicing Ruby against the man whose offer she had certainly once
accepted. Now when he came to settle the day,—having heard
more than once or twice that there was a difficulty with Ruby,—he
brought his friend Mixet with him as though to be present at his
triumph. "If here isn't Joe Mixet," said Ruby to herself.
"Was there ever such a stoopid as John Crumb? There's no end to
his being stoopid."
<br/>The old man had slept off his anger and his beer while Ruby had
been preparing the feast, and now roused himself to entertain his
guests. "What, Joe Mixet; is that thou? Thou'rt
welcome. Come in, man. Well, John, how is it wi'
you? Ruby's stewing o' something for us to eat a bit.
Don't e' smell it?"—John Crumb lifted up his great nose, sniffed
and grinned.
<br/>"John didn't like going home in the dark like," said the baker,
with his little joke. "So I just come along to drive away the
bogies."
<br/>"The more the merrier;—the more the merrier. Ruby'll have
enough for the two o' you, I'll go bail. So John Crumb's afraid
of bogies;—is he? The more need he to have some 'un in his
house to scart 'em away."
<br/>The lover had seated himself without speaking a word; but now he
was instigated to ask a question. "Where be she, Muster
Ruggles?" They were seated in the outside or front kitchen, in
which the old man and his granddaughter always lived; while Ruby was
at work in the back kitchen. As John Crumb asked this question
she could be heard distinctly among the pots and the plates.
She now came out, and wiping her hands on her apron, shook hands with
the two young men. She had enveloped herself in a big household
apron when the cooking was in hand, and had not cared to take it off
for the greeting of this lover. "Grandfather said as how you
was a coming out for your supper, so I've been a seeing to it.
You'll excuse the apron, Mr Mixet."
<br/>"You couldn't look nicer, miss, if you was to try ever so.
My mother says as it's housifery as recommends a girl to the young
men. What do you say, John?"
<br/>"I loiks to see her loik o' that," said John rubbing his hands
down the back of his trowsers, and stooping till he had brought his
eyes down to a level with those of his sweetheart.
<br/>"It looks homely; don't it John?" said Mixet.
<br/>"Bother!" said Ruby, turning round sharp, and going back to the
other kitchen. John Crumb turned round also, and grinned at his
friend, and then grinned at the old man.
<br/>"You've got it all afore you," said the farmer,—leaving the lover
to draw what lesson he might from this oracular proposition.
<br/>"And I don't care how soon I ha'e it in hond;—that I don't," said
John.
<br/>"That's the chat," said Joe Mixet. "There ain't nothing
wanting in his house;—is there, John? It's all there,—cradle,
caudle-cup, and the rest of it. A young woman going to John
knows what she'll have to eat when she gets up, and what she'll lie
down upon when she goes to bed." This he declared in a loud
voice for the benefit of Ruby in the back kitchen.
<br/>"That she do," said John, grinning again. "There's a hun'erd
and fifty poond o' things in my house forbye what mother left behind
her."
<br/>After this there was no more conversation till Ruby reappeared
with the boiled fowl, and without her apron. She was followed
by the girl with a dish of broiled ham and an enormous pyramid of
cabbage. Then the old man got up slowly and opening some
private little door of which he kept the key in his breeches pocket,
drew a jug of ale and placed it on the table. And from a
cupboard of which he also kept the key, he brought out a bottle of
gin. Everything being thus prepared, the three men sat round
the table, John Crumb looking at his chair again and again before he
ventured to occupy it. "If you'll sit yourself down, I'll give
you a bit of something to eat," said Ruby at last. Then he sank
at once into has chair. Ruby cut up the fowl standing, and
dispensed the other good things, not even placing a chair for herself
at the table,—and apparently not expected to do so, for no one
invited her. "Is it to be spirits or ale, Mr Crumb?" she said,
when the other two men had helped themselves. He turned round
and gave her a look of love that might have softened the heart of an
Amazon; but instead of speaking he held up his tumbler, and bobbed
his head at the beer jug. Then she filled it to the brim,
frothing it in the manner in which he loved to have it frothed.
He raised it to his mouth slowly, and poured the liquor in as though
to a vat. Then she filled it again. He had been her
lover, and she would be as kind to him as she knew how,—short of
love.
<br/>There was a good deal of eating done, for more ham came in, and
another mountain of cabbage; but very little or nothing was
said. John Crumb ate whatever was given to him of the fowl,
sedulously picking the bones, and almost swallowing them; and then
finished the second dish of ham, and after that the second instalment
of cabbage. He did not ask for more beer, but took it as often
as Ruby replenished his glass. When the eating was done, Ruby
retired into the back kitchen, and there regaled herself with some
bone or merry-thought of the fowl, which she had with prudence
reserved, sharing her spoils however with the other maiden.
This she did standing, and then went to work, cleaning the
dishes. The men lit their pipes and smoked in silence, while
Ruby went through her domestic duties. So matters went on for
half an hour; during which Ruby escaped by the back door, went round
into the house, got into her own room, and formed the grand
resolution of going to bed. She began her operations in fear
and trembling, not being sure that her grandfather would bring the
man upstairs to her. As she thought of this she stayed her
hand, and looked to the door. She knew well that there was no
bolt there. It would be terrible to her to be invaded by John
Crumb after his fifth or sixth glass of beer. And, she declared
to herself, that should he come he would be sure to bring Joe Mixet
with him to speak his mind for him. So she paused and listened.
<br/>When they had smoked for some half hour the old man called for his
granddaughter, but called of course in vain. "Where the
mischief is the jade gone?" he said, slowly making his way into the
back kitchen. The maid, as soon as she heard her master moving,
escaped into the yard and made no response, while the old man stood
bawling at the back door. "The devil's in them. They're
off some gates," he said aloud. "She'll make the place hot for
her, if she goes on this way." Then he returned to the two
young men. "She's playing off her games somewheres," he
said. "Take a glass of sperrits and water, Mr Crumb, and I'll
see after her."
<br/>"I'll just take a drop of y'ell," said John Crumb, apparently
quite unmoved by the absence of his sweetheart.
<br/>It was sad work for the old man. He went down the yard and
into the garden, hobbling among the cabbages, not daring to call very
loud, as he did not wish to have it supposed that the girl was lost;
but still anxious, and sore at heart as to the ingratitude shown to
him. He was not bound to give the girl a home at all. She
was not his own child. And he had offered her £500! "Domm
her," he said aloud as he made his way back to the house. After
much search and considerable loss of time he returned to the kitchen
in which the two men were sitting, leading Ruby in his hand.
She was not smart in her apparel, for she had half undressed herself,
and been then compelled by her grandfather to make herself fit to
appear in public. She had acknowledged to herself that she had
better go down and tell John Crumb the truth. For she was still
determined that she would never be John Crumb's wife. "You can
answer him as well as I, grandfather," she had said. Then the
farmer had cuffed her, and told her that she was an idiot. "Oh,
if it comes to that," said Ruby, "I'm not afraid of John Crumb, nor
yet of nobody else. Only I didn't think you'd go to strike me,
grandfather." "I'll knock the life out of thee, if thou goest
on this gate," he had said. But she had consented to come down,
and they entered the room together.
<br/>"We're a disturbing you a'most too late, miss," said Mr Mixet.
<br/>"It ain't that at all, Mr Mixet. If grandfather chooses to
have a few friends, I ain't nothing against it. I wish he'd
have a few friends a deal oftener than he do. I likes nothing
better than to do for 'em;—only when I've done for 'em and they're
smoking their pipes and that like, I don't see why I ain't to leave
'em to 'emselves."
<br/>"But we've come here on a hauspicious occasion, Miss Ruby."
<br/>"I don't know nothing about auspicious, Mr Mixet. If you and
Mr Crumb've come out to Sheep's Acre farm for a bit of supper—"
<br/>"Which we ain't," said John Crumb very loudly;—"nor yet for
beer;—not by no means."
<br/>"We've come for the smiles of beauty," said Joe Mixet. Ruby
chucked up her head. "Mr Mixet, if you'll be so good as to stow
that! There ain't no beauty here as I knows of, and if there
was it isn't nothing to you."
<br/>"Except in the way of friendship," said Mixet.
<br/>"I'm just as sick of all this as a man can be," said Mr Ruggles,
who was sitting low in his chair, with his back bent, and his head
forward. "I won't put up with it no more."
<br/>"Who wants you to put up with it?" said Ruby. "Who wants 'em
to come here with their trash? Who brought 'em to-night? I
don't know what business Mr Mixet has interfering along o' me.
I never interfere along o' him."
<br/>"John Crumb, have you anything to say?" asked the old man.
<br/>Then John Crumb slowly arose from his chair, and stood up at his
full height. "I hove," said he, swinging his head to one side.
<br/>"Then say it."
<br/>"I will," said he. He was still standing bolt upright with
his hands down by his side. Then he stretched out his left to
his glass which was half full of beer, and strengthened himself as
far as that would strengthen him. Having done this he slowly
deposited the pipe which he still held in his right hand.
<br/>"Now speak your mind, like a man," said Mixet.
<br/>"I intends it," said John. But he still stood dumb, looking
down upon old Ruggles, who from his crouched position was looking up
at him. Ruby was standing with both her hands upon the table
and her eyes intent upon the wall over the fire-place.
<br/>"You've asked Miss Ruby to be your wife a dozen times;—haven't
you, John?" suggested Mixet.
<br/>"I hove."
<br/>"And you mean to be as good as your word?"
<br/>"I do."
<br/>"And she has promised to have you?"
<br/>"She hove."
<br/>"More nor once or twice?" To this proposition Crumb found it
only necessary to bob his head. "You're ready?—and willing?"
<br/>"I am."
<br/>"You're wishing to have the banns said without any more delay?"
<br/>"There ain't no delay 'bout me;—never was."
<br/>"Everything is ready in your own house?"
<br/>"They is."
<br/>"And you will expect Miss Ruby to come to the scratch?"
<br/>"I sholl."
<br/>"That's about it, I think," said Joe Mixet, turning to the
grandfather. "I don't think there was ever anything much more
straightforward than that. You know, I know, Miss Ruby knows
all about John Crumb. John Crumb didn't come to Bungay
yesterday nor yet the day before. There's been a talk of five
hundred pounds, Mr Ruggles." Mr Ruggles made a slight gesture
of assent with his head. "Five hundred pounds is very
comfortable; and added to what John has will make things that snug
that things never was snugger. But John Crumb isn't after Miss
Ruby along of her fortune."
<br/>"Nohows," said the lover, shaking his head and still standing
upright with his hands by his side.
<br/>"Not he;—it isn't his ways, and them as knows him'll never say it
of him. John has a heart in his buzsom."
<br/>"I has," said John, raising his hand a little above his stomach.
<br/>"And feelings as a man. It's true love as has brought John
Crumb to Sheep's Acre farm this night;—love of that young lady, if
she'll let me make so free. He's a proposed to her, and she's a
haccepted him, and now it's about time as they was married.
That's what John Crumb has to say."
<br/>"That's what I has to say," repeated John Crumb, "and I means it."
<br/>"And now, miss," continued Mixet, addressing himself to Ruby,
"you've heard what John has to say."
<br/>"I've heard you, Mr Mixet, and I've heard quite enough."
<br/>"You can't have anything to say against it, Miss; can you?
There's your grandfather as is willing, and the-money as one may say
counted out,—and John Crumb is willing, with his house so ready that
there isn't a ha'porth to do. All we want is for you to name
the day."
<br/>"Say to-morrow, Ruby, and I'll not be agen it," said John Crumb,
slapping his thigh.
<br/>"I won't say to-morrow, Mr Crumb, nor yet the day after to-morrow,
nor yet no day at all. I'm not going to have you. I've
told you as much before."
<br/>"That was only in fun, loike."
<br/>"Then now I tell you in earnest. There's some folk wants
such a deal of telling."
<br/>"You don't mean,—never?"
<br/>"I do mean never, Mr Crumb."
<br/>"Didn't you say as you would, Ruby? Didn't you say so as
plain as the nose on my face?" John as he asked these questions
could hardly refrain from tears.
<br/>"Young women is allowed to change their minds," said Ruby.
<br/>"Brute!" exclaimed old Ruggles. "Pig! Jade! I'll
tell you what, John. She'll go out o' this into the
streets;—that's what she wull. I won't keep her here, no
longer;—nasty, ungrateful, lying slut."
<br/>"She ain't that;—she ain't that," said John. "She ain't
that at all. She's no slut. I won't hear her called
so;—not by her grandfather. But, oh, she has a mind to put me
so abouts, that I'll have to go home and hang myself"
<br/>"Dash it, Miss Ruby, you ain't a going to serve a young man that
way," said the baker.
<br/>"If you'll jist keep yourself to yourself, I'll be obliged to you,
Mr Mixet," said Ruby. "If you hadn't come here at all things
might have been different."
<br/>"Hark at that now," said John, looking at his friend almost with
indignation.
<br/>Mr Mixet, who was fully aware of his rare eloquence and of the
absolute necessity there had been for its exercise if any arrangement
were to be made at all, could not trust himself to words after
this. He put on his hat and walked out through the back kitchen
into the yard declaring that his friend would find him there, round
by the pigsty wall, whenever he was ready to return to Bungay.
As soon as Mixet was gone John looked at his sweetheart out of the
corners of his eyes and made a slow motion towards her, putting out
his right hand as a feeler. "He's aff now, Ruby," said John.
<br/>"And you'd better be aff after him," said the cruel girl.
<br/>"And when'll I come back again?"
<br/>"Never. It ain't no use. What's the good of more
words, Mr Crumb?"
<br/>"Domm her; domm her," said old Ruggles. "I'll even it to
her. She'll have to be out on the roads this night."
<br/>"She shall have the best bed in my house if she'll come for it,"
said John, "and the old woman to look arter her; and I won't come
nigh her till she sends for me."
<br/>"I can find a place for myself, thank ye, Mr Crumb." Old
Ruggles sat grinding his teeth, and swearing to himself, taking his
hat off and putting it on again, and meditating vengeance.
<br/>"And now if you please, Mr Crumb, I'll go upstairs to my own
room."
<br/>"You don't go up to any room here, you jade you." The old
man as he said this got up from his chair as though to fly at
her. And he would have struck her with his stick but that he
was stopped by John Crumb.
<br/>"Don't hit the girl, no gate, Mr Ruggles."
<br/>"Domm her, John; she breaks my heart." While her lover held
her grandfather Ruby escaped, and seated herself on the bedside,
again afraid to undress, lest she should be disturbed by her
grandfather. "Ain't it more nor a man ought to have to
bear;—ain't it, Mr Crumb?" said the grandfather appealing to the
young man.
<br/>"It's the ways on 'em, Mr Ruggles."
<br/>"Ways on 'em! A whipping at the cart-tail ought to be the
ways on her. She's been and seen some young buck."
<br/>Then John Crumb turned red all over, through the flour, and sparks
of anger flashed from his eyes. "You ain't a meaning of it,
master?"
<br/>"I'm told there's been the squoire's cousin aboot,—him as they
call the baronite."
<br/>"Been along wi' Ruby?" The old man nodded at him. "By
the mortials I'll baronite him;—I wull," said John, seizing his hat
and stalking off through the back kitchen after his friend.
<br/>
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