<h2><SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN>XV</h2>
<p>“By experience,” says Roger Ascham, “we find out a short way
by a long wandering.” Not seldom that long wandering unfits us for
further travel, and of what use is our experience to us then? Tess
Durbeyfield’s experience was of this incapacitating kind. At last she had
learned what to do; but who would now accept her doing?</p>
<p>If before going to the d’Urbervilles’ she had vigorously moved
under the guidance of sundry gnomic texts and phrases known to her and to the
world in general, no doubt she would never have been imposed on. But it had not
been in Tess’s power—nor is it in anybody’s power—to
feel the whole truth of golden opinions while it is possible to profit by them.
She—and how many more—might have ironically said to God with Saint
Augustine: “Thou hast counselled a better course than Thou hast
permitted.”</p>
<p>She remained at her father’s house during the winter months, plucking
fowls, or cramming turkeys and geese, or making clothes for her sisters and
brothers out of some finery which d’Urberville had given her, and she had
put by with contempt. Apply to him she would not. But she would often clasp her
hands behind her head and muse when she was supposed to be working hard.</p>
<p>She philosophically noted dates as they came past in the revolution of the
year; the disastrous night of her undoing at Trantridge with its dark
background of The Chase; also the dates of the baby’s birth and death;
also her own birthday; and every other day individualized by incidents in which
she had taken some share. She suddenly thought one afternoon, when looking in
the glass at her fairness, that there was yet another date, of greater
importance to her than those; that of her own death, when all these charms
would have disappeared; a day which lay sly and unseen among all the other days
of the year, giving no sign or sound when she annually passed over it; but not
the less surely there. When was it? Why did she not feel the chill of each
yearly encounter with such a cold relation? She had Jeremy Taylor’s
thought that some time in the future those who had known her would say:
“It is the ——th, the day that poor Tess Durbeyfield
died”; and there would be nothing singular to their minds in the
statement. Of that day, doomed to be her terminus in time through all the ages,
she did not know the place in month, week, season or year.</p>
<p>Almost at a leap Tess thus changed from simple girl to complex woman. Symbols
of reflectiveness passed into her face, and a note of tragedy at times into her
voice. Her eyes grew larger and more eloquent. She became what would have been
called a fine creature; her aspect was fair and arresting; her soul that of a
woman whom the turbulent experiences of the last year or two had quite failed
to demoralize. But for the world’s opinion those experiences would have
been simply a liberal education.</p>
<p>She had held so aloof of late that her trouble, never generally known, was
nearly forgotten in Marlott. But it became evident to her that she could never
be really comfortable again in a place which had seen the collapse of her
family’s attempt to “claim kin”—and, through her, even
closer union—with the rich d’Urbervilles. At least she could not be
comfortable there till long years should have obliterated her keen
consciousness of it. Yet even now Tess felt the pulse of hopeful life still
warm within her; she might be happy in some nook which had no memories. To
escape the past and all that appertained thereto was to annihilate it, and to
do that she would have to get away.</p>
<p>Was once lost always lost really true of chastity? she would ask herself. She
might prove it false if she could veil bygones. The recuperative power which
pervaded organic nature was surely not denied to maidenhood alone.</p>
<p>She waited a long time without finding opportunity for a new departure. A
particularly fine spring came round, and the stir of germination was almost
audible in the buds; it moved her, as it moved the wild animals, and made her
passionate to go. At last, one day in early May, a letter reached her from a
former friend of her mother’s, to whom she had addressed inquiries long
before—a person whom she had never seen—that a skilful milkmaid was
required at a dairy-house many miles to the southward, and that the dairyman
would be glad to have her for the summer months.</p>
<p>It was not quite so far off as could have been wished; but it was probably far
enough, her radius of movement and repute having been so small. To persons of
limited spheres, miles are as geographical degrees, parishes as counties,
counties as provinces and kingdoms.</p>
<p>On one point she was resolved: there should be no more d’Urberville
air-castles in the dreams and deeds of her new life. She would be the dairymaid
Tess, and nothing more. Her mother knew Tess’s feeling on this point so
well, though no words had passed between them on the subject, that she never
alluded to the knightly ancestry now.</p>
<p>Yet such is human inconsistency that one of the interests of the new place to
her was the accidental virtues of its lying near her forefathers’ country
(for they were not Blakemore men, though her mother was Blakemore to the bone).
The dairy called Talbothays, for which she was bound, stood not remotely from
some of the former estates of the d’Urbervilles, near the great family
vaults of her granddames and their powerful husbands. She would be able to look
at them, and think not only that d’Urberville, like Babylon, had fallen,
but that the individual innocence of a humble descendant could lapse as
silently. All the while she wondered if any strange good thing might come of
her being in her ancestral land; and some spirit within her rose automatically
as the sap in the twigs. It was unexpected youth, surging up anew after its
temporary check, and bringing with it hope, and the invincible instinct towards
self-delight.</p>
<h4>End of Phase the Second</h4>
<h2><SPAN name="part03"></SPAN>Phase the Third:<br/> The Rally</h2>
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