<h2><SPAN name="chap24"></SPAN>XXIV</h2>
<p>Amid the oozing fatness and warm ferments of the Froom Vale, at a season when
the rush of juices could almost be heard below the hiss of fertilization, it
was impossible that the most fanciful love should not grow passionate. The
ready bosoms existing there were impregnated by their surroundings.</p>
<p>July passed over their heads, and the Thermidorean weather which came in its
wake seemed an effort on the part of Nature to match the state of hearts at
Talbothays Dairy. The air of the place, so fresh in the spring and early
summer, was stagnant and enervating now. Its heavy scents weighed upon them,
and at mid-day the landscape seemed lying in a swoon. Ethiopic scorchings
browned the upper slopes of the pastures, but there was still bright green
herbage here where the watercourses purled. And as Clare was oppressed by the
outward heats, so was he burdened inwardly by waxing fervour of passion for the
soft and silent Tess.</p>
<p>The rains having passed, the uplands were dry. The wheels of the
dairyman’s spring-cart, as he sped home from market, licked up the
pulverized surface of the highway, and were followed by white ribands of dust,
as if they had set a thin powder-train on fire. The cows jumped wildly over the
five-barred barton-gate, maddened by the gad-fly; Dairyman Crick kept his
shirt-sleeves permanently rolled up from Monday to Saturday; open windows had
no effect in ventilation without open doors, and in the dairy-garden the
blackbirds and thrushes crept about under the currant-bushes, rather in the
manner of quadrupeds than of winged creatures. The flies in the kitchen were
lazy, teasing, and familiar, crawling about in the unwonted places, on the
floors, into drawers, and over the backs of the milkmaids’ hands.
Conversations were concerning sunstroke; while butter-making, and still more
butter-keeping, was a despair.</p>
<p>They milked entirely in the meads for coolness and convenience, without driving
in the cows. During the day the animals obsequiously followed the shadow of the
smallest tree as it moved round the stem with the diurnal roll; and when the
milkers came they could hardly stand still for the flies.</p>
<p>On one of these afternoons four or five unmilked cows chanced to stand apart
from the general herd, behind the corner of a hedge, among them being Dumpling
and Old Pretty, who loved Tess’s hands above those of any other maid.
When she rose from her stool under a finished cow, Angel Clare, who had been
observing her for some time, asked her if she would take the aforesaid
creatures next. She silently assented, and with her stool at arm’s
length, and the pail against her knee, went round to where they stood. Soon the
sound of Old Pretty’s milk fizzing into the pail came through the hedge,
and then Angel felt inclined to go round the corner also, to finish off a
hard-yielding milcher who had strayed there, he being now as capable of this as
the dairyman himself.</p>
<p>All the men, and some of the women, when milking, dug their foreheads into the
cows and gazed into the pail. But a few—mainly the younger
ones—rested their heads sideways. This was Tess Durbeyfield’s
habit, her temple pressing the milcher’s flank, her eyes fixed on the far
end of the meadow with the quiet of one lost in meditation. She was milking Old
Pretty thus, and the sun chancing to be on the milking-side, it shone flat upon
her pink-gowned form and her white curtain-bonnet, and upon her profile,
rendering it keen as a cameo cut from the dun background of the cow.</p>
<p>She did not know that Clare had followed her round, and that he sat under his
cow watching her. The stillness of her head and features was remarkable: she
might have been in a trance, her eyes open, yet unseeing. Nothing in the
picture moved but Old Pretty’s tail and Tess’s pink hands, the
latter so gently as to be a rhythmic pulsation only, as if they were obeying a
reflex stimulus, like a beating heart.</p>
<p>How very lovable her face was to him. Yet there was nothing ethereal about it;
all was real vitality, real warmth, real incarnation. And it was in her mouth
that this culminated. Eyes almost as deep and speaking he had seen before, and
cheeks perhaps as fair; brows as arched, a chin and throat almost as shapely;
her mouth he had seen nothing to equal on the face of the earth. To a young man
with the least fire in him that little upward lift in the middle of her red top
lip was distracting, infatuating, maddening. He had never before seen a
woman’s lips and teeth which forced upon his mind with such persistent
iteration the old Elizabethan simile of roses filled with snow. Perfect, he, as
a lover, might have called them off-hand. But no—they were not perfect.
And it was the touch of the imperfect upon the would-be perfect that gave the
sweetness, because it was that which gave the humanity.</p>
<p>Clare had studied the curves of those lips so many times that he could
reproduce them mentally with ease: and now, as they again confronted him,
clothed with colour and life, they sent an <i>aura</i> over his flesh, a breeze
through his nerves, which well nigh produced a qualm; and actually produced, by
some mysterious physiological process, a prosaic sneeze.</p>
<p>She then became conscious that he was observing her; but she would not show it
by any change of position, though the curious dream-like fixity disappeared,
and a close eye might easily have discerned that the rosiness of her face
deepened, and then faded till only a tinge of it was left.</p>
<p>The influence that had passed into Clare like an excitation from the sky did
not die down. Resolutions, reticences, prudences, fears, fell back like a
defeated battalion. He jumped up from his seat, and, leaving his pail to be
kicked over if the milcher had such a mind, went quickly towards the desire of
his eyes, and, kneeling down beside her, clasped her in his arms.</p>
<p>Tess was taken completely by surprise, and she yielded to his embrace with
unreflecting inevitableness. Having seen that it was really her lover who had
advanced, and no one else, her lips parted, and she sank upon him in her
momentary joy, with something very like an ecstatic cry.</p>
<p>He had been on the point of kissing that too tempting mouth, but he checked
himself, for tender conscience’ sake.</p>
<p>“Forgive me, Tess dear!” he whispered. “I ought to have
asked. I—did not know what I was doing. I do not mean it as a liberty. I
am devoted to you, Tessy, dearest, in all sincerity!”</p>
<p>Old Pretty by this time had looked round, puzzled; and seeing two people
crouching under her where, by immemorial custom, there should have been only
one, lifted her hind leg crossly.</p>
<p>“She is angry—she doesn’t know what we
mean—she’ll kick over the milk!” exclaimed Tess, gently
striving to free herself, her eyes concerned with the quadruped’s
actions, her heart more deeply concerned with herself and Clare.</p>
<p>She slipped up from her seat, and they stood together, his arm still encircling
her. Tess’s eyes, fixed on distance, began to fill.</p>
<p>“Why do you cry, my darling?” he said.</p>
<p>“O—I don’t know!” she murmured.</p>
<p>As she saw and felt more clearly the position she was in she became agitated
and tried to withdraw.</p>
<p>“Well, I have betrayed my feeling, Tess, at last,” said he, with a
curious sigh of desperation, signifying unconsciously that his heart had outrun
his judgement. “That I—love you dearly and truly I need not say.
But I—it shall go no further now—it distresses you—I am as
surprised as you are. You will not think I have presumed upon your
defencelessness—been too quick and unreflecting, will you?”</p>
<p>“N’—I can’t tell.”</p>
<p>He had allowed her to free herself; and in a minute or two the milking of each
was resumed. Nobody had beheld the gravitation of the two into one; and when
the dairyman came round by that screened nook a few minutes later, there was
not a sign to reveal that the markedly sundered pair were more to each other
than mere acquaintance. Yet in the interval since Crick’s last view of
them something had occurred which changed the pivot of the universe for their
two natures; something which, had he known its quality, the dairyman would have
despised, as a practical man; yet which was based upon a more stubborn and
resistless tendency than a whole heap of so-called practicalities. A veil had
been whisked aside; the tract of each one’s outlook was to have a new
horizon thenceforward—for a short time or for a long.</p>
<h4>End of Phase the Third</h4>
<h2><SPAN name="part04"></SPAN>Phase the Fourth:<br/> The Consequence</h2>
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