<h2><SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN>XIV</h2>
<p>It was a hazy sunrise in August. The denser nocturnal vapours, attacked by the
warm beams, were dividing and shrinking into isolated fleeces within hollows
and coverts, where they waited till they should be dried away to nothing.</p>
<p>The sun, on account of the mist, had a curious sentient, personal look,
demanding the masculine pronoun for its adequate expression. His present
aspect, coupled with the lack of all human forms in the scene, explained the
old-time heliolatries in a moment. One could feel that a saner religion had
never prevailed under the sky. The luminary was a golden-haired, beaming,
mild-eyed, God-like creature, gazing down in the vigour and intentness of youth
upon an earth that was brimming with interest for him.</p>
<p>His light, a little later, broke though chinks of cottage shutters, throwing
stripes like red-hot pokers upon cupboards, chests of drawers, and other
furniture within; and awakening harvesters who were not already astir.</p>
<p>But of all ruddy things that morning the brightest were two broad arms of
painted wood, which rose from the margin of yellow cornfield hard by Marlott
village. They, with two others below, formed the revolving Maltese cross of the
reaping-machine, which had been brought to the field on the previous evening to
be ready for operations this day. The paint with which they were smeared,
intensified in hue by the sunlight, imparted to them a look of having been
dipped in liquid fire.</p>
<p>The field had already been “opened”; that is to say, a lane a few
feet wide had been hand-cut through the wheat along the whole circumference of
the field for the first passage of the horses and machine.</p>
<p>Two groups, one of men and lads, the other of women, had come down the lane
just at the hour when the shadows of the eastern hedge-top struck the west
hedge midway, so that the heads of the groups were enjoying sunrise while their
feet were still in the dawn. They disappeared from the lane between the two
stone posts which flanked the nearest field-gate.</p>
<p>Presently there arose from within a ticking like the love-making of the
grasshopper. The machine had begun, and a moving concatenation of three horses
and the aforesaid long rickety machine was visible over the gate, a driver
sitting upon one of the hauling horses, and an attendant on the seat of the
implement. Along one side of the field the whole wain went, the arms of the
mechanical reaper revolving slowly, till it passed down the hill quite out of
sight. In a minute it came up on the other side of the field at the same
equable pace; the glistening brass star in the forehead of the fore horse first
catching the eye as it rose into view over the stubble, then the bright arms,
and then the whole machine.</p>
<p>The narrow lane of stubble encompassing the field grew wider with each circuit,
and the standing corn was reduced to a smaller area as the morning wore on.
Rabbits, hares, snakes, rats, mice, retreated inwards as into a fastness,
unaware of the ephemeral nature of their refuge, and of the doom that awaited
them later in the day when, their covert shrinking to a more and more horrible
narrowness, they were huddled together, friends and foes, till the last few
yards of upright wheat fell also under the teeth of the unerring reaper, and
they were every one put to death by the sticks and stones of the harvesters.</p>
<p>The reaping-machine left the fallen corn behind it in little heaps, each heap
being of the quantity for a sheaf; and upon these the active binders in the
rear laid their hands—mainly women, but some of them men in print shirts,
and trousers supported round their waists by leather straps, rendering useless
the two buttons behind, which twinkled and bristled with sunbeams at every
movement of each wearer, as if they were a pair of eyes in the small of his
back.</p>
<p>But those of the other sex were the most interesting of this company of
binders, by reason of the charm which is acquired by woman when she becomes
part and parcel of outdoor nature, and is not merely an object set down therein
as at ordinary times. A field-man is a personality afield; a field-woman is a
portion of the field; she had somehow lost her own margin, imbibed the essence
of her surrounding, and assimilated herself with it.</p>
<p>The women—or rather girls, for they were mostly young—wore drawn
cotton bonnets with great flapping curtains to keep off the sun, and gloves to
prevent their hands being wounded by the stubble. There was one wearing a pale
pink jacket, another in a cream-coloured tight-sleeved gown, another in a
petticoat as red as the arms of the reaping-machine; and others, older, in the
brown-rough “wropper” or over-all—the old-established and
most appropriate dress of the field-woman, which the young ones were
abandoning. This morning the eye returns involuntarily to the girl in the pink
cotton jacket, she being the most flexuous and finely-drawn figure of them all.
But her bonnet is pulled so far over her brow that none of her face is
disclosed while she binds, though her complexion may be guessed from a stray
twine or two of dark brown hair which extends below the curtain of her bonnet.
Perhaps one reason why she seduces casual attention is that she never courts
it, though the other women often gaze around them.</p>
<p>Her binding proceeds with clock-like monotony. From the sheaf last finished she
draws a handful of ears, patting their tips with her left palm to bring them
even. Then, stooping low, she moves forward, gathering the corn with both hands
against her knees, and pushing her left gloved hand under the bundle to meet
the right on the other side, holding the corn in an embrace like that of a
lover. She brings the ends of the bond together, and kneels on the sheaf while
she ties it, beating back her skirts now and then when lifted by the breeze. A
bit of her naked arm is visible between the buff leather of the gauntlet and
the sleeve of her gown; and as the day wears on its feminine smoothness becomes
scarified by the stubble and bleeds.</p>
<p>At intervals she stands up to rest, and to retie her disarranged apron, or to
pull her bonnet straight. Then one can see the oval face of a handsome young
woman with deep dark eyes and long heavy clinging tresses, which seem to clasp
in a beseeching way anything they fall against. The cheeks are paler, the teeth
more regular, the red lips thinner than is usual in a country-bred girl.</p>
<p>It is Tess Durbeyfield, otherwise d’Urberville, somewhat
changed—the same, but not the same; at the present stage of her existence
living as a stranger and an alien here, though it was no strange land that she
was in. After a long seclusion she had come to a resolve to undertake outdoor
work in her native village, the busiest season of the year in the agricultural
world having arrived, and nothing that she could do within the house being so
remunerative for the time as harvesting in the fields.</p>
<p>The movements of the other women were more or less similar to Tess’s, the
whole bevy of them drawing together like dancers in a quadrille at the
completion of a sheaf by each, every one placing her sheaf on end against those
of the rest, till a shock, or “stitch” as it was here called, of
ten or a dozen was formed.</p>
<p>They went to breakfast, and came again, and the work proceeded as before. As
the hour of eleven drew near a person watching her might have noticed that
every now and then Tess’s glance flitted wistfully to the brow of the
hill, though she did not pause in her sheafing. On the verge of the hour the
heads of a group of children, of ages ranging from six to fourteen, rose over
the stubbly convexity of the hill.</p>
<p>The face of Tess flushed slightly, but still she did not pause.</p>
<p>The eldest of the comers, a girl who wore a triangular shawl, its corner
draggling on the stubble, carried in her arms what at first sight seemed to be
a doll, but proved to be an infant in long clothes. Another brought some lunch.
The harvesters ceased working, took their provisions, and sat down against one
of the shocks. Here they fell to, the men plying a stone jar freely, and
passing round a cup.</p>
<p>Tess Durbeyfield had been one of the last to suspend her labours. She sat down
at the end of the shock, her face turned somewhat away from her companions.
When she had deposited herself a man in a rabbit-skin cap, and with a red
handkerchief tucked into his belt, held the cup of ale over the top of the
shock for her to drink. But she did not accept his offer. As soon as her lunch
was spread she called up the big girl, her sister, and took the baby of her,
who, glad to be relieved of the burden, went away to the next shock and joined
the other children playing there. Tess, with a curiously stealthy yet
courageous movement, and with a still rising colour, unfastened her frock and
began suckling the child.</p>
<p>The men who sat nearest considerately turned their faces towards the other end
of the field, some of them beginning to smoke; one, with absent-minded
fondness, regretfully stroking the jar that would no longer yield a stream. All
the women but Tess fell into animated talk, and adjusted the disarranged knots
of their hair.</p>
<p>When the infant had taken its fill, the young mother sat it upright in her lap,
and looking into the far distance, dandled it with a gloomy indifference that
was almost dislike; then all of a sudden she fell to violently kissing it some
dozens of times, as if she could never leave off, the child crying at the
vehemence of an onset which strangely combined passionateness with contempt.</p>
<p>“She’s fond of that there child, though she mid pretend to hate en,
and say she wishes the baby and her too were in the churchyard,” observed
the woman in the red petticoat.</p>
<p>“She’ll soon leave off saying that,” replied the one in buff.
“Lord, ’tis wonderful what a body can get used to o’ that
sort in time!”</p>
<p>“A little more than persuading had to do wi’ the coming o’t,
I reckon. There were they that heard a sobbing one night last year in The
Chase; and it mid ha’ gone hard wi’ a certain party if folks had
come along.”</p>
<p>“Well, a little more, or a little less, ’twas a thousand pities
that it should have happened to she, of all others. But ’tis always the
comeliest! The plain ones be as safe as churches—hey, Jenny?” The
speaker turned to one of the group who certainly was not ill-defined as plain.</p>
<p>It was a thousand pities, indeed; it was impossible for even an enemy to feel
otherwise on looking at Tess as she sat there, with her flower-like mouth and
large tender eyes, neither black nor blue nor grey nor violet; rather all those
shades together, and a hundred others, which could be seen if one looked into
their irises—shade behind shade—tint beyond tint—around
pupils that had no bottom; an almost standard woman, but for the slight
incautiousness of character inherited from her race.</p>
<p>A resolution which had surprised herself had brought her into the fields this
week for the first time during many months. After wearing and wasting her
palpitating heart with every engine of regret that lonely inexperience could
devise, common sense had illuminated her. She felt that she would do well to be
useful again—to taste anew sweet independence at any price. The past was
past; whatever it had been, it was no more at hand. Whatever its consequences,
time would close over them; they would all in a few years be as if they had
never been, and she herself grassed down and forgotten. Meanwhile the trees
were just as green as before; the birds sang and the sun shone as clearly now
as ever. The familiar surroundings had not darkened because of her grief, nor
sickened because of her pain.</p>
<p>She might have seen that what had bowed her head so profoundly—the
thought of the world’s concern at her situation—was founded on an
illusion. She was not an existence, an experience, a passion, a structure of
sensations, to anybody but herself. To all humankind besides, Tess was only a
passing thought. Even to friends she was no more than a frequently passing
thought. If she made herself miserable the livelong night and day it was only
this much to them—“Ah, she makes herself unhappy.” If she
tried to be cheerful, to dismiss all care, to take pleasure in the daylight,
the flowers, the baby, she could only be this idea to them—“Ah, she
bears it very well.” Moreover, alone in a desert island would she have
been wretched at what had happened to her? Not greatly. If she could have been
but just created, to discover herself as a spouseless mother, with no
experience of life except as the parent of a nameless child, would the position
have caused her to despair? No, she would have taken it calmly, and found
pleasure therein. Most of the misery had been generated by her conventional
aspect, and not by her innate sensations.</p>
<p>Whatever Tess’s reasoning, some spirit had induced her to dress herself
up neatly as she had formerly done, and come out into the fields, harvest-hands
being greatly in demand just then. This was why she had borne herself with
dignity, and had looked people calmly in the face at times, even when holding
the baby in her arms.</p>
<p>The harvest-men rose from the shock of corn, and stretched their limbs, and
extinguished their pipes. The horses, which had been unharnessed and fed, were
again attached to the scarlet machine. Tess, having quickly eaten her own meal,
beckoned to her eldest sister to come and take away the baby, fastened her
dress, put on the buff gloves again, and stooped anew to draw a bond from the
last completed sheaf for the tying of the next.</p>
<p>In the afternoon and evening the proceedings of the morning were continued,
Tess staying on till dusk with the body of harvesters. Then they all rode home
in one of the largest wagons, in the company of a broad tarnished moon that had
risen from the ground to the eastwards, its face resembling the outworn
gold-leaf halo of some worm-eaten Tuscan saint. Tess’s female companions
sang songs, and showed themselves very sympathetic and glad at her reappearance
out of doors, though they could not refrain from mischievously throwing in a
few verses of the ballad about the maid who went to the merry green wood and
came back a changed state. There are counterpoises and compensations in life;
and the event which had made of her a social warning had also for the moment
made her the most interesting personage in the village to many. Their
friendliness won her still farther away from herself, their lively spirits were
contagious, and she became almost gay.</p>
<p>But now that her moral sorrows were passing away a fresh one arose on the
natural side of her which knew no social law. When she reached home it was to
learn to her grief that the baby had been suddenly taken ill since the
afternoon. Some such collapse had been probable, so tender and puny was its
frame; but the event came as a shock nevertheless.</p>
<p>The baby’s offence against society in coming into the world was forgotten
by the girl-mother; her soul’s desire was to continue that offence by
preserving the life of the child. However, it soon grew clear that the hour of
emancipation for that little prisoner of the flesh was to arrive earlier than
her worst misgiving had conjectured. And when she had discovered this she was
plunged into a misery which transcended that of the child’s simple loss.
Her baby had not been baptized.</p>
<p>Tess had drifted into a frame of mind which accepted passively the
consideration that if she should have to burn for what she had done, burn she
must, and there was an end of it. Like all village girls, she was well grounded
in the Holy Scriptures, and had dutifully studied the histories of Aholah and
Aholibah, and knew the inferences to be drawn therefrom. But when the same
question arose with regard to the baby, it had a very different colour. Her
darling was about to die, and no salvation.</p>
<p>It was nearly bedtime, but she rushed downstairs and asked if she might send
for the parson. The moment happened to be one at which her father’s sense
of the antique nobility of his family was highest, and his sensitiveness to the
smudge which Tess had set upon that nobility most pronounced, for he had just
returned from his weekly booze at Rolliver’s Inn. No parson should come
inside his door, he declared, prying into his affairs, just then, when, by her
shame, it had become more necessary than ever to hide them. He locked the door
and put the key in his pocket.</p>
<p>The household went to bed, and, distressed beyond measure, Tess retired also.
She was continually waking as she lay, and in the middle of the night found
that the baby was still worse. It was obviously dying—quietly and
painlessly, but none the less surely.</p>
<p>In her misery she rocked herself upon the bed. The clock struck the solemn hour
of one, that hour when fancy stalks outside reason, and malignant possibilities
stand rock-firm as facts. She thought of the child consigned to the nethermost
corner of hell, as its double doom for lack of baptism and lack of legitimacy;
saw the arch-fiend tossing it with his three-pronged fork, like the one they
used for heating the oven on baking days; to which picture she added many other
quaint and curious details of torment sometimes taught the young in this
Christian country. The lurid presentment so powerfully affected her imagination
in the silence of the sleeping house that her nightgown became damp with
perspiration, and the bedstead shook with each throb of her heart.</p>
<p>The infant’s breathing grew more difficult, and the mother’s mental
tension increased. It was useless to devour the little thing with kisses; she
could stay in bed no longer, and walked feverishly about the room.</p>
<p>“O merciful God, have pity; have pity upon my poor baby!” she
cried. “Heap as much anger as you want to upon me, and welcome; but pity
the child!”</p>
<p>She leant against the chest of drawers, and murmured incoherent supplications
for a long while, till she suddenly started up.</p>
<p>“Ah! perhaps baby can be saved! Perhaps it will be just the same!”</p>
<p>She spoke so brightly that it seemed as though her face might have shone in the
gloom surrounding her. She lit a candle, and went to a second and a third bed
under the wall, where she awoke her young sisters and brothers, all of whom
occupied the same room. Pulling out the washing-stand so that she could get
behind it, she poured some water from a jug, and made them kneel around,
putting their hands together with fingers exactly vertical. While the children,
scarcely awake, awe-stricken at her manner, their eyes growing larger and
larger, remained in this position, she took the baby from her bed—a
child’s child—so immature as scarce to seem a sufficient
personality to endow its producer with the maternal title. Tess then stood
erect with the infant on her arm beside the basin; the next sister held the
Prayer-Book open before her, as the clerk at church held it before the parson;
and thus the girl set about baptizing her child.</p>
<p>Her figure looked singularly tall and imposing as she stood in her long white
nightgown, a thick cable of twisted dark hair hanging straight down her back to
her waist. The kindly dimness of the weak candle abstracted from her form and
features the little blemishes which sunlight might have revealed—the
stubble scratches upon her wrists, and the weariness of her eyes—her high
enthusiasm having a transfiguring effect upon the face which had been her
undoing, showing it as a thing of immaculate beauty, with a touch of dignity
which was almost regal. The little ones kneeling round, their sleepy eyes
blinking and red, awaited her preparations full of a suspended wonder which
their physical heaviness at that hour would not allow to become active.</p>
<p>The most impressed of them said:</p>
<p>“Be you really going to christen him, Tess?”</p>
<p>The girl-mother replied in a grave affirmative.</p>
<p>“What’s his name going to be?”</p>
<p>She had not thought of that, but a name suggested by a phrase in the book of
Genesis came into her head as she proceeded with the baptismal service, and now
she pronounced it:</p>
<p>“SORROW, I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Ghost.”</p>
<p>She sprinkled the water, and there was silence.</p>
<p>“Say ‘Amen,’ children.”</p>
<p>The tiny voices piped in obedient response, “Amen!”</p>
<p>Tess went on:</p>
<p>“We receive this child”—and so forth—“and do sign
him with the sign of the Cross.”</p>
<p>Here she dipped her hand into the basin, and fervently drew an immense cross
upon the baby with her forefinger, continuing with the customary sentences as
to his manfully fighting against sin, the world, and the devil, and being a
faithful soldier and servant unto his life’s end. She duly went on with
the Lord’s Prayer, the children lisping it after her in a thin gnat-like
wail, till, at the conclusion, raising their voices to clerk’s pitch,
they again piped into silence, “Amen!”</p>
<p>Then their sister, with much augmented confidence in the efficacy of the
sacrament, poured forth from the bottom of her heart the thanksgiving that
follows, uttering it boldly and triumphantly in the stopt-diapason note which
her voice acquired when her heart was in her speech, and which will never be
forgotten by those who knew her. The ecstasy of faith almost apotheosized her;
it set upon her face a glowing irradiation, and brought a red spot into the
middle of each cheek; while the miniature candle-flame inverted in her
eye-pupils shone like a diamond. The children gazed up at her with more and
more reverence, and no longer had a will for questioning. She did not look like
Sissy to them now, but as a being large, towering, and awful—a divine
personage with whom they had nothing in common.</p>
<p>Poor Sorrow’s campaign against sin, the world, and the devil was doomed
to be of limited brilliancy—luckily perhaps for himself, considering his
beginnings. In the blue of the morning that fragile soldier and servant
breathed his last, and when the other children awoke they cried bitterly, and
begged Sissy to have another pretty baby.</p>
<p>The calmness which had possessed Tess since the christening remained with her
in the infant’s loss. In the daylight, indeed, she felt her terrors about
his soul to have been somewhat exaggerated; whether well founded or not, she
had no uneasiness now, reasoning that if Providence would not ratify such an
act of approximation she, for one, did not value the kind of heaven lost by the
irregularity—either for herself or for her child.</p>
<p>So passed away Sorrow the Undesired—that intrusive creature, that bastard
gift of shameless Nature, who respects not the social law; a waif to whom
eternal Time had been a matter of days merely, who knew not that such things as
years and centuries ever were; to whom the cottage interior was the universe,
the week’s weather climate, new-born babyhood human existence, and the
instinct to suck human knowledge.</p>
<p>Tess, who mused on the christening a good deal, wondered if it were doctrinally
sufficient to secure a Christian burial for the child. Nobody could tell this
but the parson of the parish, and he was a new-comer, and did not know her. She
went to his house after dusk, and stood by the gate, but could not summon
courage to go in. The enterprise would have been abandoned if she had not by
accident met him coming homeward as she turned away. In the gloom she did not
mind speaking freely.</p>
<p>“I should like to ask you something, sir.”</p>
<p>He expressed his willingness to listen, and she told the story of the
baby’s illness and the extemporized ordinance. “And now,
sir,” she added earnestly, “can you tell me this—will it be
just the same for him as if you had baptized him?”</p>
<p>Having the natural feelings of a tradesman at finding that a job he should have
been called in for had been unskilfully botched by his customers among
themselves, he was disposed to say no. Yet the dignity of the girl, the strange
tenderness in her voice, combined to affect his nobler impulses—or rather
those that he had left in him after ten years of endeavour to graft technical
belief on actual scepticism. The man and the ecclesiastic fought within him,
and the victory fell to the man.</p>
<p>“My dear girl,” he said, “it will be just the same.”</p>
<p>“Then will you give him a Christian burial?” she asked quickly.</p>
<p>The Vicar felt himself cornered. Hearing of the baby’s illness, he had
conscientiously gone to the house after nightfall to perform the rite, and,
unaware that the refusal to admit him had come from Tess’s father and not
from Tess, he could not allow the plea of necessity for its irregular
administration.</p>
<p>“Ah—that’s another matter,” he said.</p>
<p>“Another matter—why?” asked Tess, rather warmly.</p>
<p>“Well—I would willingly do so if only we two were concerned. But I
must not—for certain reasons.”</p>
<p>“Just for once, sir!”</p>
<p>“Really I must not.”</p>
<p>“O sir!” She seized his hand as she spoke.</p>
<p>He withdrew it, shaking his head.</p>
<p>“Then I don’t like you!” she burst out, “and I’ll
never come to your church no more!”</p>
<p>“Don’t talk so rashly.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps it will be just the same to him if you don’t?... Will
it be just the same? Don’t for God’s sake speak as saint to sinner,
but as you yourself to me myself—poor me!”</p>
<p>How the Vicar reconciled his answer with the strict notions he supposed himself
to hold on these subjects it is beyond a layman’s power to tell, though
not to excuse. Somewhat moved, he said in this case also—</p>
<p>“It will be just the same.”</p>
<p>So the baby was carried in a small deal box, under an ancient woman’s
shawl, to the churchyard that night, and buried by lantern-light, at the cost
of a shilling and a pint of beer to the sexton, in that shabby corner of
God’s allotment where He lets the nettles grow, and where all unbaptized
infants, notorious drunkards, suicides, and others of the conjecturally damned
are laid. In spite of the untoward surroundings, however, Tess bravely made a
little cross of two laths and a piece of string, and having bound it with
flowers, she stuck it up at the head of the grave one evening when she could
enter the churchyard without being seen, putting at the foot also a bunch of
the same flowers in a little jar of water to keep them alive. What matter was
it that on the outside of the jar the eye of mere observation noted the words
“Keelwell’s Marmalade”? The eye of maternal affection did not
see them in its vision of higher things.</p>
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