<h2><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>XIX</h2>
<p>In general the cows were milked as they presented themselves, without fancy or
choice. But certain cows will show a fondness for a particular pair of hands,
sometimes carrying this predilection so far as to refuse to stand at all except
to their favourite, the pail of a stranger being unceremoniously kicked over.</p>
<p>It was Dairyman Crick’s rule to insist on breaking down these
partialities and aversions by constant interchange, since otherwise, in the
event of a milkman or maid going away from the dairy, he was placed in a
difficulty. The maids’ private aims, however, were the reverse of the
dairyman’s rule, the daily selection by each damsel of the eight or ten
cows to which she had grown accustomed rendering the operation on their willing
udders surprisingly easy and effortless.</p>
<p>Tess, like her compeers, soon discovered which of the cows had a preference for
her style of manipulation, and her fingers having become delicate from the long
domiciliary imprisonments to which she had subjected herself at intervals
during the last two or three years, she would have been glad to meet the
milchers’ views in this respect. Out of the whole ninety-five there were
eight in particular—Dumpling, Fancy, Lofty, Mist, Old Pretty, Young
Pretty, Tidy, and Loud—who, though the teats of one or two were as hard
as carrots, gave down to her with a readiness that made her work on them a mere
touch of the fingers. Knowing, however, the dairyman’s wish, she
endeavoured conscientiously to take the animals just as they came, excepting
the very hard yielders which she could not yet manage.</p>
<p>But she soon found a curious correspondence between the ostensibly chance
position of the cows and her wishes in this matter, till she felt that their
order could not be the result of accident. The dairyman’s pupil had lent
a hand in getting the cows together of late, and at the fifth or sixth time she
turned her eyes, as she rested against the cow, full of sly inquiry upon him.</p>
<p>“Mr Clare, you have ranged the cows!” she said, blushing; and in
making the accusation, symptoms of a smile gently lifted her upper lip in spite
of her, so as to show the tips of her teeth, the lower lip remaining severely
still.</p>
<p>“Well, it makes no difference,” said he. “You will always be
here to milk them.”</p>
<p>“Do you think so? I <i>hope</i> I shall! But I don’t
<i>know</i>.”</p>
<p>She was angry with herself afterwards, thinking that he, unaware of her grave
reasons for liking this seclusion, might have mistaken her meaning. She had
spoken so earnestly to him, as if his presence were somehow a factor in her
wish. Her misgiving was such that at dusk, when the milking was over, she
walked in the garden alone, to continue her regrets that she had disclosed to
him her discovery of his considerateness.</p>
<p>It was a typical summer evening in June, the atmosphere being in such delicate
equilibrium and so transmissive that inanimate objects seemed endowed with two
or three senses, if not five. There was no distinction between the near and the
far, and an auditor felt close to everything within the horizon. The
soundlessness impressed her as a positive entity rather than as the mere
negation of noise. It was broken by the strumming of strings.</p>
<p>Tess had heard those notes in the attic above her head. Dim, flattened,
constrained by their confinement, they had never appealed to her as now, when
they wandered in the still air with a stark quality like that of nudity. To
speak absolutely, both instrument and execution were poor; but the relative is
all, and as she listened Tess, like a fascinated bird, could not leave the
spot. Far from leaving she drew up towards the performer, keeping behind the
hedge that he might not guess her presence.</p>
<p>The outskirt of the garden in which Tess found herself had been left
uncultivated for some years, and was now damp and rank with juicy grass which
sent up mists of pollen at a touch; and with tall blooming weeds emitting
offensive smells—weeds whose red and yellow and purple hues formed a
polychrome as dazzling as that of cultivated flowers. She went stealthily as a
cat through this profusion of growth, gathering cuckoo-spittle on her skirts,
cracking snails that were underfoot, staining her hands with thistle-milk and
slug-slime, and rubbing off upon her naked arms sticky blights which, though
snow-white on the apple-tree trunks, made madder stains on her skin; thus she
drew quite near to Clare, still unobserved of him.</p>
<p>Tess was conscious of neither time nor space. The exaltation which she had
described as being producible at will by gazing at a star came now without any
determination of hers; she undulated upon the thin notes of the second-hand
harp, and their harmonies passed like breezes through her, bringing tears into
her eyes. The floating pollen seemed to be his notes made visible, and the
dampness of the garden the weeping of the garden’s sensibility. Though
near nightfall, the rank-smelling weed-flowers glowed as if they would not
close for intentness, and the waves of colour mixed with the waves of sound.</p>
<p>The light which still shone was derived mainly from a large hole in the western
bank of cloud; it was like a piece of day left behind by accident, dusk having
closed in elsewhere. He concluded his plaintive melody, a very simple
performance, demanding no great skill; and she waited, thinking another might
be begun. But, tired of playing, he had desultorily come round the fence, and
was rambling up behind her. Tess, her cheeks on fire, moved away furtively, as
if hardly moving at all.</p>
<p>Angel, however, saw her light summer gown, and he spoke; his low tones reaching
her, though he was some distance off.</p>
<p>“What makes you draw off in that way, Tess?” said he. “Are
you afraid?”</p>
<p>“Oh no, sir—not of outdoor things; especially just now when the
apple-blooth is falling, and everything is so green.”</p>
<p>“But you have your indoor fears—eh?”</p>
<p>“Well—yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“What of?”</p>
<p>“I couldn’t quite say.”</p>
<p>“The milk turning sour?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Life in general?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Ah—so have I, very often. This hobble of being alive is rather
serious, don’t you think so?”</p>
<p>“It is—now you put it that way.”</p>
<p>“All the same, I shouldn’t have expected a young girl like you to
see it so just yet. How is it you do?”</p>
<p>She maintained a hesitating silence.</p>
<p>“Come, Tess, tell me in confidence.”</p>
<p>She thought that he meant what were the aspects of things to her, and replied
shyly—</p>
<p>“The trees have inquisitive eyes, haven’t they?—that is, seem
as if they had. And the river says,—‘Why do ye trouble me with your
looks?’ And you seem to see numbers of to-morrows just all in a line, the
first of them the biggest and clearest, the others getting smaller and smaller
as they stand farther away; but they all seem very fierce and cruel and as if
they said, ‘I’m coming! Beware of me! Beware of me!’ ...
But <i>you</i>, sir, can raise up dreams with your music, and drive all such
horrid fancies away!”</p>
<p>He was surprised to find this young woman—who though but a milkmaid had
just that touch of rarity about her which might make her the envied of her
housemates—shaping such sad imaginings. She was expressing in her own
native phrases—assisted a little by her Sixth Standard
training—feelings which might almost have been called those of the
age—the ache of modernism. The perception arrested him less when he
reflected that what are called advanced ideas are really in great part but the
latest fashion in definition—a more accurate expression, by words in
<i>logy</i> and <i>ism</i>, of sensations which men and women have vaguely
grasped for centuries.</p>
<p>Still, it was strange that they should have come to her while yet so young;
more than strange; it was impressive, interesting, pathetic. Not guessing the
cause, there was nothing to remind him that experience is as to intensity, and
not as to duration. Tess’s passing corporeal blight had been her mental
harvest.</p>
<p>Tess, on her part, could not understand why a man of clerical family and good
education, and above physical want, should look upon it as a mishap to be
alive. For the unhappy pilgrim herself there was very good reason. But how
could this admirable and poetic man ever have descended into the Valley of
Humiliation, have felt with the man of Uz—as she herself had felt two or
three years ago—“My soul chooseth strangling and death rather than
my life. I loathe it; I would not live alway.”</p>
<p>It was true that he was at present out of his class. But she knew that was only
because, like Peter the Great in a shipwright’s yard, he was studying
what he wanted to know. He did not milk cows because he was obliged to milk
cows, but because he was learning to be a rich and prosperous dairyman,
landowner, agriculturist, and breeder of cattle. He would become an American or
Australian Abraham, commanding like a monarch his flocks and his herds, his
spotted and his ring-straked, his men-servants and his maids. At times,
nevertheless, it did seem unaccountable to her that a decidedly bookish,
musical, thinking young man should have chosen deliberately to be a farmer, and
not a clergyman, like his father and brothers.</p>
<p>Thus, neither having the clue to the other’s secret, they were
respectively puzzled at what each revealed, and awaited new knowledge of each
other’s character and mood without attempting to pry into each
other’s history.</p>
<p class="p2">
Every day, every hour, brought to him one more little stroke of her nature, and
to her one more of his. Tess was trying to lead a repressed life, but she
little divined the strength of her own vitality.</p>
<p>At first Tess seemed to regard Angel Clare as an intelligence rather than as a
man. As such she compared him with herself; and at every discovery of the
abundance of his illuminations, of the distance between her own modest mental
standpoint and the unmeasurable, Andean altitude of his, she became quite
dejected, disheartened from all further effort on her own part whatever.</p>
<p>He observed her dejection one day, when he had casually mentioned something to
her about pastoral life in ancient Greece. She was gathering the buds called
“lords and ladies” from the bank while he spoke.</p>
<p>“Why do you look so woebegone all of a sudden?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Oh, ’tis only—about my own self,” she said, with a
frail laugh of sadness, fitfully beginning to peel “a lady”
meanwhile. “Just a sense of what might have been with me! My life looks
as if it had been wasted for want of chances! When I see what you know, what
you have read, and seen, and thought, I feel what a nothing I am! I’m
like the poor Queen of Sheba who lived in the Bible. There is no more spirit in
me.”</p>
<p>“Bless my soul, don’t go troubling about that! Why,” he said
with some enthusiasm, “I should be only too glad, my dear Tess, to help
you to anything in the way of history, or any line of reading you would like to
take up—”</p>
<p>“It is a lady again,” interrupted she, holding out the bud she had
peeled.</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“I meant that there are always more ladies than lords when you come to
peel them.”</p>
<p>“Never mind about the lords and ladies. Would you like to take up any
course of study—history, for example?”</p>
<p>“Sometimes I feel I don’t want to know anything more about it than
I know already.”</p>
<p>“Why not?”</p>
<p>“Because what’s the use of learning that I am one of a long row
only—finding out that there is set down in some old book somebody just
like me, and to know that I shall only act her part; making me sad,
that’s all. The best is not to remember that your nature and your past
doings have been just like thousands’ and thousands’, and that your
coming life and doings ’ll be like thousands’ and
thousands’.”</p>
<p>“What, really, then, you don’t want to learn anything?”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t mind learning why—why the sun do shine on the
just and the unjust alike,” she answered, with a slight quaver in her
voice. “But that’s what books will not tell me.”</p>
<p>“Tess, fie for such bitterness!” Of course he spoke with a
conventional sense of duty only, for that sort of wondering had not been
unknown to himself in bygone days. And as he looked at the unpracticed mouth
and lips, he thought that such a daughter of the soil could only have caught up
the sentiment by rote. She went on peeling the lords and ladies till Clare,
regarding for a moment the wave-like curl of her lashes as they dropped with
her bent gaze on her soft cheek, lingeringly went away. When he was gone she
stood awhile, thoughtfully peeling the last bud; and then, awakening from her
reverie, flung it and all the crowd of floral nobility impatiently on the
ground, in an ebullition of displeasure with herself for her <i>niaiseries</i>,
and with a quickening warmth in her heart of hearts.</p>
<p>How stupid he must think her! In an access of hunger for his good opinion she
bethought herself of what she had latterly endeavoured to forget, so unpleasant
had been its issues—the identity of her family with that of the knightly
d’Urbervilles. Barren attribute as it was, disastrous as its discovery
had been in many ways to her, perhaps Mr Clare, as a gentleman and a student of
history, would respect her sufficiently to forget her childish conduct with the
lords and ladies if he knew that those Purbeck-marble and alabaster people in
Kingsbere Church really represented her own lineal forefathers; that she was no
spurious d’Urberville, compounded of money and ambition like those at
Trantridge, but true d’Urberville to the bone.</p>
<p>But, before venturing to make the revelation, dubious Tess indirectly sounded
the dairyman as to its possible effect upon Mr Clare, by asking the former if
Mr Clare had any great respect for old county families when they had lost all
their money and land.</p>
<p>“Mr Clare,” said the dairyman emphatically, “is one of the
most rebellest rozums you ever knowed—not a bit like the rest of his
family; and if there’s one thing that he do hate more than another
’tis the notion of what’s called a’ old family. He says that
it stands to reason that old families have done their spurt of work in past
days, and can’t have anything left in ’em now. There’s the
Billets and the Drenkhards and the Greys and the St Quintins and the Hardys and
the Goulds, who used to own the lands for miles down this valley; you could buy
’em all up now for an old song a’most. Why, our little Retty
Priddle here, you know, is one of the Paridelles—the old family that used
to own lots o’ the lands out by King’s Hintock, now owned by the
Earl o’ Wessex, afore even he or his was heard of. Well, Mr Clare found
this out, and spoke quite scornful to the poor girl for days. ‘Ah!’
he says to her, ‘you’ll never make a good dairymaid! All your skill
was used up ages ago in Palestine, and you must lie fallow for a thousand years
to git strength for more deeds!’ A boy came here t’other day asking
for a job, and said his name was Matt, and when we asked him his surname he
said he’d never heard that ’a had any surname, and when we asked
why, he said he supposed his folks hadn’t been ’stablished long
enough. ‘Ah! you’re the very boy I want!’ says Mr Clare,
jumping up and shaking hands wi’en; ‘I’ve great hopes of
you;’ and gave him half-a-crown. O no! he can’t stomach old
families!”</p>
<p>After hearing this caricature of Clare’s opinion poor Tess was glad that
she had not said a word in a weak moment about her family—even though it
was so unusually old almost to have gone round the circle and become a new one.
Besides, another diary-girl was as good as she, it seemed, in that respect. She
held her tongue about the d’Urberville vault and the Knight of the
Conqueror whose name she bore. The insight afforded into Clare’s
character suggested to her that it was largely owing to her supposed
untraditional newness that she had won interest in his eyes.</p>
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