<p> <SPAN name="6-8"></SPAN><br/> </p>
<h3>VIII<br/> </h3>
<p>Michaelmas came and passed, and Jude and his wife, who had lived
but a short time in her father's house after their remarriage, were
in lodgings on the top floor of a dwelling nearer to the centre of
the city.</p>
<p>He had done a few days' work during the two or three months since
the event, but his health had been indifferent, and it was now
precarious. He was sitting in an arm-chair before the fire, and
coughed a good deal.</p>
<p>"I've got a bargain for my trouble in marrying thee over
again!" Arabella was saying to him. "I shall have to keep 'ee
entirely—that's what 'twill come to! I shall have to make black-pot
and sausages, and hawk 'em about the street, all to support an
invalid husband I'd no business to be saddled with at all. Why
didn't you keep your health, deceiving one like this? You were well
enough when the wedding was!"</p>
<p>"Ah, yes!" said he, laughing acridly. "I have been thinking of
my foolish feeling about the pig you and I killed during our
first marriage. I feel now that the greatest mercy that could be
vouchsafed to me would be that something should serve me as I served
that animal."</p>
<p>This was the sort of discourse that went on between them every day
now. The landlord of the lodging, who had heard that they were a
queer couple, had doubted if they were married at all, especially
as he had seen Arabella kiss Jude one evening when she had taken a
little cordial; and he was about to give them notice to quit, till by
chance overhearing her one night haranguing Jude in rattling terms,
and ultimately flinging a shoe at his head, he recognized the note of
genuine wedlock; and concluding that they must be respectable, said
no more.</p>
<p>Jude did not get any better, and one day he requested Arabella,
with considerable hesitation, to execute a commission for him. She
asked him indifferently what it was.</p>
<p>"To write to Sue."</p>
<p>"What in the name—do you want me to write to her for?"</p>
<p>"To ask how she is, and if she'll come to see me, because I'm ill,
and should like to see her—once again."</p>
<p>"It is like you to insult a lawful wife by asking such a
thing!"</p>
<p>"It is just in order not to insult you that I ask you to do it.
You know I love Sue. I don't wish to mince the matter—there stands
the fact: I love her. I could find a dozen ways of sending a letter
to her without your knowledge. But I wish to be quite above-board
with you, and with her husband. A message through you asking her to
come is at least free from any odour of intrigue. If she retains any
of her old nature at all, she'll come."</p>
<p>"You've no respect for marriage whatever, or its rights and
duties!"</p>
<p>"What <i>does</i> it matter what my opinions are—a wretch like
me! Can it matter to anybody in the world who comes to see me for
half an hour—here with one foot in the grave! … Come, please
write, Arabella!" he pleaded. "Repay my candour by a little
generosity!"</p>
<p>"I should think <i>not</i>!"</p>
<p>"Not just once?—Oh do!" He felt that his physical weakness had
taken away all his dignity.</p>
<p>"What do you want <i>her</i> to know how you are for? She don't
want to see 'ee. She's the rat that forsook the sinking ship!"</p>
<p>"Don't, don't!"</p>
<p>"And I stuck to un—the more fool I! Have that strumpet in the
house indeed!"</p>
<p>Almost as soon as the words were spoken Jude sprang from the
chair, and before Arabella knew where she was he had her on her back
upon a little couch which stood there, he kneeling above her.</p>
<p>"Say another word of that sort," he whispered, "and I'll kill
you—here and now! I've everything to gain by it—my own death not
being the least part. So don't think there's no meaning in what I
say!"</p>
<p>"What do you want me to do?" gasped Arabella.</p>
<p>"Promise never to speak of her."</p>
<p>"Very well. I do."</p>
<p>"I take your word," he said scornfully as he loosened her. "But
what it is worth I can't say."</p>
<p>"You couldn't kill the pig, but you could kill me!"</p>
<p>"Ah—there you have me! No—I couldn't kill you—even in a
passion. Taunt away!"</p>
<p>He then began coughing very much, and she estimated his life with
an appraiser's eye as he sank back ghastly pale. "I'll send for
her," Arabella murmured, "if you'll agree to my being in the room
with you all the time she's here."</p>
<p>The softer side of his nature, the desire to see Sue, made him
unable to resist the offer even now, provoked as he had been; and he
replied breathlessly: "Yes, I agree. Only send for her!"</p>
<p>In the evening he inquired if she had written.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said; "I wrote a note telling her you were ill, and
asking her to come to-morrow or the day after. I haven't posted it
yet."</p>
<p>The next day Jude wondered if she really did post it, but would
not ask her; and foolish Hope, that lives on a drop and a crumb, made
him restless with expectation. He knew the times of the possible
trains, and listened on each occasion for sounds of her.</p>
<p>She did not come; but Jude would not address Arabella again
thereon. He hoped and expected all the next day; but no Sue
appeared; neither was there any note of reply. Then Jude decided in
the privacy of his mind that Arabella had never posted hers, although
she had written it. There was something in her manner which told it.
His physical weakness was such that he shed tears at the
disappointment when she was not there to see. His suspicions were,
in fact, well founded. Arabella, like some other nurses, thought
that your duty towards your invalid was to pacify him by any means
short of really acting upon his fancies.</p>
<p>He never said another word to her about his wish or his
conjecture. A silent, undiscerned resolve grew up in him, which gave
him, if not strength, stability and calm. One midday when, after an
absence of two hours, she came into the room, she beheld the chair
empty.</p>
<p>Down she flopped on the bed, and sitting, meditated. "Now where
the devil is my man gone to!" she said.</p>
<p>A driving rain from the north-east had been falling with more or
less intermission all the morning, and looking from the window at the
dripping spouts it seemed impossible to believe that any sick man
would have ventured out to almost certain death. Yet a conviction
possessed Arabella that he had gone out, and it became a certainty
when she had searched the house. "If he's such a fool, let him be!"
she said. "I can do no more."</p>
<p>Jude was at that moment in a railway train that was drawing near
to Alfredston, oddly swathed, pale as a monumental figure in
alabaster, and much stared at by other passengers. An hour later his
thin form, in the long great-coat and blanket he had come with, but
without an umbrella, could have been seen walking along the five-mile
road to Marygreen. On his face showed the determined purpose that
alone sustained him, but to which has weakness afforded a sorry
foundation. By the up-hill walk he was quite blown, but he pressed
on; and at half-past three o'clock stood by the familiar well at
Marygreen. The rain was keeping everybody indoors; Jude crossed the
green to the church without observation, and found the building open.
Here he stood, looking forth at the school, whence he could hear the
usual sing-song tones of the little voices that had not learnt
Creation's groan.</p>
<p>He waited till a small boy came from the school—one evidently
allowed out before hours for some reason or other. Jude held up his
hand, and the child came.</p>
<p>"Please call at the schoolhouse and ask Mrs. Phillotson if she
will be kind enough to come to the church for a few minutes."</p>
<p>The child departed, and Jude heard him knock at the door of the
dwelling. He himself went further into the church. Everything
was new, except a few pieces of carving preserved from the wrecked
old fabric, now fixed against the new walls. He stood by these:
they seemed akin to the perished people of that place who were his
ancestors and Sue's.</p>
<p>A light footstep, which might have been accounted no more than an
added drip to the rainfall, sounded in the porch, and he looked
round.</p>
<p>"Oh—I didn't think it was you! I didn't—Oh, Jude!" A
hysterical catch in her breath ended in a succession of them. He
advanced, but she quickly recovered and went back.</p>
<p>"Don't go—don't go!" he implored. "This is my last time! I
thought it would be less intrusive than to enter your house. And I
shall never come again. Don't then be unmerciful. Sue, Sue! We are
acting by the letter; and 'the letter killeth'!"</p>
<p>"I'll stay—I won't be unkind!" she said, her mouth quivering and
her tears flowing as she allowed him to come closer. "But why did
you come, and do this wrong thing, after doing such a right thing as
you have done?"</p>
<p>"What right thing?"</p>
<p>"Marrying Arabella again. It was in the Alfredston paper. She
has never been other than yours, Jude—in a proper sense. And
therefore you did so well—Oh so well!—in recognizing it—and taking
her to you again."</p>
<p>"God above—and is that all I've come to hear? If there is
anything more degrading, immoral, unnatural, than another in my life,
it is this meretricious contract with Arabella which has been called
doing the right thing! And you too—you call yourself Phillotson's
wife! <i>His</i> wife! You are mine."</p>
<p>"Don't make me rush away from you—I can't bear much! But on this
point I am decided."</p>
<p>"I cannot understand how you did it—how you think it—I
cannot!"</p>
<p>"Never mind that. He is a kind husband to me—And I—I've
wrestled and struggled, and fasted, and prayed. I have nearly
brought my body into complete subjection. And you mustn't—will
you—wake—"</p>
<p>"Oh you darling little fool; where is your reason? You seem to
have suffered the loss of your faculties! I would argue with you if
I didn't know that a woman in your state of feeling is quite beyond
all appeals to her brains. Or is it that you are humbugging
yourself, as so many women do about these things; and don't actually
believe what you pretend to, and only are indulging in the luxury of
the emotion raised by an affected belief?"</p>
<p>"Luxury! How can you be so cruel!"</p>
<p>"You dear, sad, soft, most melancholy wreck of a promising human
intellect that it has ever been my lot to behold! Where is your
scorn of convention gone? I <i>would</i> have died game!"</p>
<p>"You crush, almost insult me, Jude! Go away from me!" She turned
off quickly.</p>
<p>"I will. I would never come to see you again, even if I had the
strength to come, which I shall not have any more. Sue, Sue, you are
not worth a man's love!"</p>
<p>Her bosom began to go up and down. "I can't endure you to say
that!" she burst out, and her eye resting on him a moment, she turned
back impulsively. "Don't, don't scorn me! Kiss me, oh kiss me lots
of times, and say I am not a coward and a contemptible humbug—I
can't bear it!" She rushed up to him and, with her mouth on his,
continued: "I must tell you—oh I must—my darling Love! It has
been—only a church marriage—an apparent marriage I mean! He
suggested it at the very first!"</p>
<p>"How?"</p>
<p>"I mean it is a nominal marriage only. It hasn't been more than
that at all since I came back to him!"</p>
<p>"Sue!" he said. Pressing her to him in his arms he bruised her
lips with kisses: "If misery can know happiness, I have a moment's
happiness now! Now, in the name of all you hold holy, tell me the
truth, and no lie. You do love me still?"</p>
<p>"I do! You know it too well! … But I <i>mustn't</i> do
this! I mustn't kiss you back as I would!"</p>
<p>"But do!"</p>
<p>"And yet you are so dear!—and you look so ill—"</p>
<p>"And so do you! There's one more, in memory of our dead little
children—yours and mine!"</p>
<p>The words struck her like a blow, and she bent her head. "I
<i>mustn't</i>—I <i>can't</i> go on with this!" she gasped
presently. "But there, there, darling; I give you back your kisses;
I do, I do! ␎ And now I'll <i>hate</i> myself for ever for
my sin!"</p>
<p>"No—let me make my last appeal. Listen to this! We've both
remarried out of our senses. I was made drunk to do it. You were
the same. I was gin-drunk; you were creed-drunk. Either form of
intoxication takes away the nobler vision… Let us then shake
off our mistakes, and run away together!"</p>
<p>"No; again no! … Why do you tempt me so far, Jude! It is
too merciless! … But I've got over myself now. Don't follow
me—don't look at me. Leave me, for pity's sake!"</p>
<p>She ran up the church to the east end, and Jude did as she
requested. He did not turn his head, but took up his blanket, which
she had not seen, and went straight out. As he passed the end of the
church she heard his coughs mingling with the rain on the windows,
and in a last instinct of human affection, even now unsubdued by her
fetters, she sprang up as if to go and succour him. But she knelt
down again, and stopped her ears with her hands till all possible
sound of him had passed away.</p>
<p>He was by this time at the corner of the green, from which the
path ran across the fields in which he had scared rooks as a boy. He
turned and looked back, once, at the building which still contained
Sue; and then went on, knowing that his eyes would light on that
scene no more.</p>
<p>There are cold spots up and down Wessex in autumn and winter
weather; but the coldest of all when a north or east wind is blowing
is the crest of the down by the Brown House, where the road to
Alfredston crosses the old Ridgeway. Here the first winter sleets
and snows fall and lie, and here the spring frost lingers last
unthawed. Here in the teeth of the north-east wind and rain Jude now
pursued his way, wet through, the necessary slowness of his walk from
lack of his former strength being insufficent to maintain his heat.
He came to the milestone, and, raining as it was, spread his blanket
and lay down there to rest. Before moving on he went and felt at the
back of the stone for his own carving. It was still there; but
nearly obliterated by moss. He passed the spot where the gibbet of
his ancestor and Sue's had stood, and descended the hill.</p>
<p>It was dark when he reached Alfredston, where he had a cup of tea,
the deadly chill that began to creep into his bones being too much
for him to endure fasting. To get home he had to travel by a steam
tram-car, and two branches of railway, with much waiting at a
junction. He did not reach Christminster till ten o'clock.</p>
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