<p><SPAN name="linkA2H_4_0034" id="A2H_4_0034"></SPAN></p>
<h2> 34. </h2>
<p>Next morning, accordingly, she rose at five o'clock and went into the
street. It was not yet light; a dense fog prevailed, and the town was as
silent as it was dark, except that from the rectangular avenues which
framed in the borough there came a chorus of tiny rappings, caused by the
fall of water-drops condensed on the boughs; now it was wafted from the
West Walk, now from the South Walk; and then from both quarters
simultaneously. She moved on to the bottom of Corn Street, and, knowing
his time well, waited only a few minutes before she heard the familiar
bang of his door, and then his quick walk towards her. She met him at the
point where the last tree of the engirding avenue flanked the last house
in the street.</p>
<p>He could hardly discern her till, glancing inquiringly, he said, "What—Miss
Henchard—and are ye up so airly?"</p>
<p>She asked him to pardon her for waylaying him at such an unseemly time.
"But I am anxious to mention something," she said. "And I wished not to
alarm Mrs. Farfrae by calling."</p>
<p>"Yes?" said he, with the cheeriness of a superior. "And what may it be?
It's very kind of ye, I'm sure."</p>
<p>She now felt the difficulty of conveying to his mind the exact aspect of
possibilities in her own. But she somehow began, and introduced Henchard's
name. "I sometimes fear," she said with an effort, "that he may be
betrayed into some attempt to—insult you, sir.</p>
<p>"But we are the best of friends?"</p>
<p>"Or to play some practical joke upon you, sir. Remember that he has been
hardly used."</p>
<p>"But we are quite friendly?"</p>
<p>"Or to do something—that would injure you—hurt you—wound
you." Every word cost her twice its length of pain. And she could see that
Farfrae was still incredulous. Henchard, a poor man in his employ, was not
to Farfrae's view the Henchard who had ruled him. Yet he was not only the
same man, but that man with his sinister qualities, formerly latent,
quickened into life by his buffetings.</p>
<p>Farfrae, happy, and thinking no evil, persisted in making light of her
fears. Thus they parted, and she went homeward, journeymen now being in
the street, waggoners going to the harness-makers for articles left to be
repaired, farm-horses going to the shoeing-smiths, and the sons of labour
showing themselves generally on the move. Elizabeth entered her lodging
unhappily, thinking she had done no good, and only made herself appear
foolish by her weak note of warning.</p>
<p>But Donald Farfrae was one of those men upon whom an incident is never
absolutely lost. He revised impressions from a subsequent point of view,
and the impulsive judgment of the moment was not always his permanent one.
The vision of Elizabeth's earnest face in the rimy dawn came back to him
several times during the day. Knowing the solidity of her character he did
not treat her hints altogether as idle sounds.</p>
<p>But he did not desist from a kindly scheme on Henchard's account that
engaged him just then; and when he met Lawyer Joyce, the town-clerk, later
in the day, he spoke of it as if nothing had occurred to damp it.</p>
<p>"About that little seedsman's shop," he said, "the shop overlooking the
churchyard, which is to let. It is not for myself I want it, but for our
unlucky fellow-townsman Henchard. It would be a new beginning for him, if
a small one; and I have told the Council that I would head a private
subscription among them to set him up in it—that I would be fifty
pounds, if they would make up the other fifty among them."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes; so I've heard; and there's nothing to say against it for that
matter," the town-clerk replied, in his plain, frank way. "But, Farfrae,
others see what you don't. Henchard hates 'ee—ay, hates 'ee; and
'tis right that you should know it. To my knowledge he was at the Three
Mariners last night, saying in public that about you which a man ought not
to say about another."</p>
<p>"Is that so—ah, is that so?" said Farfrae, looking down. "Why should
he do it?" added the young man bitterly; "what harm have I done him that
he should try to wrong me?"</p>
<p>"God only knows," said Joyce, lifting his eyebrows. "It shows much
long-suffering in you to put up with him, and keep him in your employ."</p>
<p>"But I cannet discharge a man who was once a good friend to me. How can I
forget that when I came here 'twas he enabled me to make a footing for
mysel'? No, no. As long as I've a day's work to offer he shall do it if he
chooses. 'Tis not I who will deny him such a little as that. But I'll drop
the idea of establishing him in a shop till I can think more about it."</p>
<p>It grieved Farfrae much to give up this scheme. But a damp having been
thrown over it by these and other voices in the air, he went and
countermanded his orders. The then occupier of the shop was in it when
Farfrae spoke to him and feeling it necessary to give some explanation of
his withdrawal from the negotiation Donald mentioned Henchard's name, and
stated that the intentions of the Council had been changed.</p>
<p>The occupier was much disappointed, and straight-way informed Henchard, as
soon as he saw him, that a scheme of the Council for setting him up in a
shop had been knocked on the head by Farfrae. And thus out of error enmity
grew.</p>
<p>When Farfrae got indoors that evening the tea-kettle was singing on the
high hob of the semi-egg-shaped grate. Lucetta, light as a sylph, ran
forward and seized his hands, whereupon Farfrae duly kissed her.</p>
<p>"Oh!" she cried playfully, turning to the window. "See—the blinds
are not drawn down, and the people can look in—what a scandal!"</p>
<p>When the candles were lighted, the curtains drawn, and the twain sat at
tea, she noticed that he looked serious. Without directly inquiring why
she let her eyes linger solicitously on his face.</p>
<p>"Who has called?" he absently asked. "Any folk for me?"</p>
<p>"No," said Lucetta. "What's the matter, Donald?"</p>
<p>"Well—nothing worth talking of," he responded sadly.</p>
<p>"Then, never mind it. You will get through it, Scotchmen are always
lucky."</p>
<p>"No—not always!" he said, shaking his head gloomily as he
contemplated a crumb on the table. "I know many who have not been so!
There was Sandy Macfarlane, who started to America to try his fortune, and
he was drowned; and Archibald Leith, he was murdered! And poor Willie
Dunbleeze and Maitland Macfreeze—they fell into bad courses, and
went the way of all such!"</p>
<p>"Why—you old goosey—I was only speaking in a general sense, of
course! You are always so literal. Now when we have finished tea, sing me
that funny song about high-heeled shoon and siller tags, and the
one-and-forty wooers."</p>
<p>"No, no. I couldna sing to-night! It's Henchard—he hates me; so that
I may not be his friend if I would. I would understand why there should be
a wee bit of envy; but I cannet see a reason for the whole intensity of
what he feels. Now, can you, Lucetta? It is more like old-fashioned
rivalry in love than just a bit of rivalry in trade."</p>
<p>Lucetta had grown somewhat wan. "No," she replied.</p>
<p>"I give him employment—I cannet refuse it. But neither can I blind
myself to the fact that with a man of passions such as his, there is no
safeguard for conduct!"</p>
<p>"What have you heard—O Donald, dearest?" said Lucetta in alarm. The
words on her lips were "anything about me?"—but she did not utter
them. She could not, however, suppress her agitation, and her eyes filled
with tears.</p>
<p>"No, no—it is not so serious as ye fancy," declared Farfrae
soothingly; though he did not know its seriousness so well as she.</p>
<p>"I wish you would do what we have talked of," mournfully remarked Lucetta.
"Give up business, and go away from here. We have plenty of money, and why
should we stay?"</p>
<p>Farfrae seemed seriously disposed to discuss this move, and they talked
thereon till a visitor was announced. Their neighbour Alderman Vatt came
in.</p>
<p>"You've heard, I suppose of poor Doctor Chalkfield's death? Yes—died
this afternoon at five," said Mr. Vatt. Chalkfield was the Councilman who
had succeeded to the Mayoralty in the preceding November.</p>
<p>Farfrae was sorry at the intelligence, and Mr. Vatt continued: "Well, we
know he's been going some days, and as his family is well provided for we
must take it all as it is. Now I have called to ask 'ee this—quite
privately. If I should nominate 'ee to succeed him, and there should be no
particular opposition, will 'ee accept the chair?"</p>
<p>"But there are folk whose turn is before mine; and I'm over young, and may
be thought pushing!" said Farfrae after a pause.</p>
<p>"Not at all. I don't speak for myself only, several have named it. You
won't refuse?"</p>
<p>"We thought of going away," interposed Lucetta, looking at Farfrae
anxiously.</p>
<p>"It was only a fancy," Farfrae murmured. "I wouldna refuse if it is the
wish of a respectable majority in the Council."</p>
<p>"Very well, then, look upon yourself as elected. We have had older men
long enough."</p>
<p>When he was gone Farfrae said musingly, "See now how it's ourselves that
are ruled by the Powers above us! We plan this, but we do that. If they
want to make me Mayor I will stay, and Henchard must rave as he will."</p>
<p>From this evening onward Lucetta was very uneasy. If she had not been
imprudence incarnate she would not have acted as she did when she met
Henchard by accident a day or two later. It was in the bustle of the
market, when no one could readily notice their discourse.</p>
<p>"Michael," said she, "I must again ask you what I asked you months ago—to
return me any letters or papers of mine that you may have—unless you
have destroyed them? You must see how desirable it is that the time at
Jersey should be blotted out, for the good of all parties."</p>
<p>"Why, bless the woman!—I packed up every scrap of your handwriting
to give you in the coach—but you never appeared."</p>
<p>She explained how the death of her aunt had prevented her taking the
journey on that day. "And what became of the parcel then?" she asked.</p>
<p>He could not say—he would consider. When she was gone he recollected
that he had left a heap of useless papers in his former dining-room safe—built
up in the wall of his old house—now occupied by Farfrae. The letters
might have been amongst them.</p>
<p>A grotesque grin shaped itself on Henchard's face. Had that safe been
opened?</p>
<p>On the very evening which followed this there was a great ringing of bells
in Casterbridge, and the combined brass, wood, catgut, and leather bands
played round the town with more prodigality of percussion-notes than ever.
Farfrae was Mayor—the two-hundredth odd of a series forming an
elective dynasty dating back to the days of Charles I—and the fair
Lucetta was the courted of the town....But, Ah! the worm i' the bud—Henchard;
what he could tell!</p>
<p>He, in the meantime, festering with indignation at some erroneous
intelligence of Farfrae's opposition to the scheme for installing him in
the little seed-shop, was greeted with the news of the municipal election
(which, by reason of Farfrae's comparative youth and his Scottish nativity—a
thing unprecedented in the case—had an interest far beyond the
ordinary). The bell-ringing and the band-playing, loud as Tamerlane's
trumpet, goaded the downfallen Henchard indescribably: the ousting now
seemed to him to be complete.</p>
<p>The next morning he went to the corn-yard as usual, and about eleven
o'clock Donald entered through the green door, with no trace of the
worshipful about him. The yet more emphatic change of places between him
and Henchard which this election had established renewed a slight
embarrassment in the manner of the modest young man; but Henchard showed
the front of one who had overlooked all this; and Farfrae met his
amenities half-way at once.</p>
<p>"I was going to ask you," said Henchard, "about a packet that I may
possibly have left in my old safe in the dining-room." He added
particulars.</p>
<p>"If so, it is there now," said Farfrae. "I have never opened the safe at
all as yet; for I keep ma papers at the bank, to sleep easy o' nights."</p>
<p>"It was not of much consequence—to me," said Henchard. "But I'll
call for it this evening, if you don't mind?"</p>
<p>It was quite late when he fulfilled his promise. He had primed himself
with grog, as he did very frequently now, and a curl of sardonic humour
hung on his lip as he approached the house, as though he were
contemplating some terrible form of amusement. Whatever it was, the
incident of his entry did not diminish its force, this being his first
visit to the house since he had lived there as owner. The ring of the bell
spoke to him like the voice of a familiar drudge who had been bribed to
forsake him; the movements of the doors were revivals of dead days.</p>
<p>Farfrae invited him into the dining-room, where he at once unlocked the
iron safe built into the wall, HIS, Henchard's safe, made by an ingenious
locksmith under his direction. Farfrae drew thence the parcel, and other
papers, with apologies for not having returned them.</p>
<p>"Never mind," said Henchard drily. "The fact is they are letters
mostly....Yes," he went on, sitting down and unfolding Lucetta's
passionate bundle, "here they be. That ever I should see 'em again! I hope
Mrs. Farfrae is well after her exertions of yesterday?"</p>
<p>"She has felt a bit weary; and has gone to bed airly on that account."</p>
<p>Henchard returned to the letters, sorting them over with interest, Farfrae
being seated at the other end of the dining-table. "You don't forget, of
course," he resumed, "that curious chapter in the history of my past which
I told you of, and that you gave me some assistance in? These letters are,
in fact, related to that unhappy business. Though, thank God, it is all
over now."</p>
<p>"What became of the poor woman?" asked Farfrae.</p>
<p>"Luckily she married, and married well," said Henchard. "So that these
reproaches she poured out on me do not now cause me any twinges, as they
might otherwise have done....Just listen to what an angry woman will say!"</p>
<p>Farfrae, willing to humour Henchard, though quite uninterested, and
bursting with yawns, gave well-mannered attention.</p>
<p>"'For me,'" Henchard read, "'there is practically no future. A creature
too unconventionally devoted to you—who feels it impossible that she
can be the wife of any other man; and who is yet no more to you than the
first woman you meet in the street—such am I. I quite acquit you of
any intention to wrong me, yet you are the door through which wrong has
come to me. That in the event of your present wife's death you will place
me in her position is a consolation so far as it goes—but how far
does it go? Thus I sit here, forsaken by my few acquaintance, and forsaken
by you!'"</p>
<p>"That's how she went on to me," said Henchard, "acres of words like that,
when what had happened was what I could not cure."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Farfrae absently, "it is the way wi' women." But the fact was
that he knew very little of the sex; yet detecting a sort of resemblance
in style between the effusions of the woman he worshipped and those of the
supposed stranger, he concluded that Aphrodite ever spoke thus,
whosesoever the personality she assumed.</p>
<p>Henchard unfolded another letter, and read it through likewise, stopping
at the subscription as before. "Her name I don't give," he said blandly.
"As I didn't marry her, and another man did, I can scarcely do that in
fairness to her."</p>
<p>"Tr-rue, tr-rue," said Farfrae. "But why didn't you marry her when your
wife Susan died?" Farfrae asked this and the other questions in the
comfortably indifferent tone of one whom the matter very remotely
concerned.</p>
<p>"Ah—well you may ask that!" said Henchard, the new-moon-shaped grin
adumbrating itself again upon his mouth. "In spite of all her
protestations, when I came forward to do so, as in generosity bound, she
was not the woman for me."</p>
<p>"She had already married another—maybe?"</p>
<p>Henchard seemed to think it would be sailing too near the wind to descend
further into particulars, and he answered "Yes."</p>
<p>"The young lady must have had a heart that bore transplanting very
readily!"</p>
<p>"She had, she had," said Henchard emphatically.</p>
<p>He opened a third and fourth letter, and read. This time he approached the
conclusion as if the signature were indeed coming with the rest. But again
he stopped short. The truth was that, as may be divined, he had quite
intended to effect a grand catastrophe at the end of this drama by reading
out the name, he had come to the house with no other thought. But sitting
here in cold blood he could not do it.</p>
<p>Such a wrecking of hearts appalled even him. His quality was such that he
could have annihilated them both in the heat of action; but to accomplish
the deed by oral poison was beyond the nerve of his enmity.</p>
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