<h2><SPAN name="chap25"></SPAN>XXV</h2>
<p>Clare, restless, went out into the dusk when evening drew on, she who had won
him having retired to her chamber.</p>
<p>The night was as sultry as the day. There was no coolness after dark unless on
the grass. Roads, garden-paths, the house-fronts, the barton-walls were warm as
hearths, and reflected the noontime temperature into the noctambulist’s
face.</p>
<p>He sat on the east gate of the dairy-yard, and knew not what to think of
himself. Feeling had indeed smothered judgement that day.</p>
<p>Since the sudden embrace, three hours before, the twain had kept apart. She
seemed stilled, almost alarmed, at what had occurred, while the novelty,
unpremeditation, mastery of circumstance disquieted him—palpitating,
contemplative being that he was. He could hardly realize their true relations
to each other as yet, and what their mutual bearing should be before third
parties thenceforward.</p>
<p>Angel had come as pupil to this dairy in the idea that his temporary existence
here was to be the merest episode in his life, soon passed through and early
forgotten; he had come as to a place from which as from a screened alcove he
could calmly view the absorbing world without, and, apostrophizing it with Walt
Whitman—</p>
<p class="poem">
Crowds of men and women attired in the usual costumes,<br/>
How curious you are to me!—</p>
<p>resolve upon a plan for plunging into that world anew. But behold, the
absorbing scene had been imported hither. What had been the engrossing world
had dissolved into an uninteresting outer dumb-show; while here, in this
apparently dim and unimpassioned place, novelty had volcanically started up, as
it had never, for him, started up elsewhere.</p>
<p>Every window of the house being open, Clare could hear across the yard each
trivial sound of the retiring household. The dairy-house, so humble, so
insignificant, so purely to him a place of constrained sojourn that he had
never hitherto deemed it of sufficient importance to be reconnoitred as an
object of any quality whatever in the landscape; what was it now? The aged and
lichened brick gables breathed forth “Stay!” The windows smiled,
the door coaxed and beckoned, the creeper blushed confederacy. A personality
within it was so far-reaching in her influence as to spread into and make the
bricks, mortar, and whole overhanging sky throb with a burning sensibility.
Whose was this mighty personality? A milkmaid’s.</p>
<p>It was amazing, indeed, to find how great a matter the life of the obscure
dairy had become to him. And though new love was to be held partly responsible
for this, it was not solely so. Many besides Angel have learnt that the
magnitude of lives is not as to their external displacements, but as to their
subjective experiences. The impressionable peasant leads a larger, fuller, more
dramatic life than the pachydermatous king. Looking at it thus, he found that
life was to be seen of the same magnitude here as elsewhere.</p>
<p>Despite his heterodoxy, faults, and weaknesses, Clare was a man with a
conscience. Tess was no insignificant creature to toy with and dismiss; but a
woman living her precious life—a life which, to herself who endured or
enjoyed it, possessed as great a dimension as the life of the mightiest to
himself. Upon her sensations the whole world depended to Tess; through her
existence all her fellow-creatures existed, to her. The universe itself only
came into being for Tess on the particular day in the particular year in which
she was born.</p>
<p>This consciousness upon which he had intruded was the single opportunity of
existence ever vouchsafed to Tess by an unsympathetic First Cause—her
all; her every and only chance. How then should he look upon her as of less
consequence than himself; as a pretty trifle to caress and grow weary of; and
not deal in the greatest seriousness with the affection which he knew that he
had awakened in her—so fervid and so impressionable as she was under her
reserve—in order that it might not agonize and wreck her?</p>
<p>To encounter her daily in the accustomed manner would be to develop what had
begun. Living in such close relations, to meet meant to fall into endearment;
flesh and blood could not resist it; and, having arrived at no conclusion as to
the issue of such a tendency, he decided to hold aloof for the present from
occupations in which they would be mutually engaged. As yet the harm done was
small.</p>
<p>But it was not easy to carry out the resolution never to approach her. He was
driven towards her by every heave of his pulse.</p>
<p>He thought he would go and see his friends. It might be possible to sound them
upon this. In less than five months his term here would have ended, and after a
few additional months spent upon other farms he would be fully equipped in
agricultural knowledge and in a position to start on his own account. Would not
a farmer want a wife, and should a farmer’s wife be a drawing-room
wax-figure, or a woman who understood farming? Notwithstanding the pleasing
answer returned to him by the silence, he resolved to go his journey.</p>
<p>One morning when they sat down to breakfast at Talbothays Dairy some maid
observed that she had not seen anything of Mr Clare that day.</p>
<p>“O no,” said Dairyman Crick. “Mr Clare has gone hwome to
Emminster to spend a few days wi’ his kinsfolk.”</p>
<p>For four impassioned ones around that table the sunshine of the morning went
out at a stroke, and the birds muffled their song. But neither girl by word or
gesture revealed her blankness. “He’s getting on towards the end of
his time wi’ me,” added the dairyman, with a phlegm which
unconsciously was brutal; “and so I suppose he is beginning to see about
his plans elsewhere.”</p>
<p>“How much longer is he to bide here?” asked Izz Huett, the only one
of the gloom-stricken bevy who could trust her voice with the question.</p>
<p>The others waited for the dairyman’s answer as if their lives hung upon
it; Retty, with parted lips, gazing on the tablecloth, Marian with heat added
to her redness, Tess throbbing and looking out at the meads.</p>
<p>“Well, I can’t mind the exact day without looking at my
memorandum-book,” replied Crick, with the same intolerable unconcern.
“And even that may be altered a bit. He’ll bide to get a little
practice in the calving out at the straw-yard, for certain. He’ll hang on
till the end of the year I should say.”</p>
<p>Four months or so of torturing ecstasy in his society—of “pleasure
girdled about with pain”. After that the blackness of unutterable night.</p>
<p class="p2">
At this moment of the morning Angel Clare was riding along a narrow lane ten
miles distant from the breakfasters, in the direction of his father’s
Vicarage at Emminster, carrying, as well as he could, a little basket which
contained some black-puddings and a bottle of mead, sent by Mrs Crick, with her
kind respects, to his parents. The white lane stretched before him, and his
eyes were upon it; but they were staring into next year, and not at the lane.
He loved her; ought he to marry her? Dared he to marry her? What would his
mother and his brothers say? What would he himself say a couple of years after
the event? That would depend upon whether the germs of staunch comradeship
underlay the temporary emotion, or whether it were a sensuous joy in her form
only, with no substratum of everlastingness.</p>
<p>His father’s hill-surrounded little town, the Tudor church-tower of red
stone, the clump of trees near the Vicarage, came at last into view beneath
him, and he rode down towards the well-known gate. Casting a glance in the
direction of the church before entering his home, he beheld standing by the
vestry-door a group of girls, of ages between twelve and sixteen, apparently
awaiting the arrival of some other one, who in a moment became visible; a
figure somewhat older than the school-girls, wearing a broad-brimmed hat and
highly-starched cambric morning-gown, with a couple of books in her hand.</p>
<p>Clare knew her well. He could not be sure that she observed him; he hoped she
did not, so as to render it unnecessary that he should go and speak to her,
blameless creature that she was. An overpowering reluctance to greet her made
him decide that she had not seen him. The young lady was Miss Mercy Chant, the
only daughter of his father’s neighbour and friend, whom it was his
parents’ quiet hope that he might wed some day. She was great at
Antinomianism and Bible-classes, and was plainly going to hold a class now.
Clare’s mind flew to the impassioned, summer-steeped heathens in the Var
Vale, their rosy faces court-patched with cow-droppings; and to one the most
impassioned of them all.</p>
<p>It was on the impulse of the moment that he had resolved to trot over to
Emminster, and hence had not written to apprise his mother and father, aiming,
however, to arrive about the breakfast hour, before they should have gone out
to their parish duties. He was a little late, and they had already sat down to
the morning meal. The group at the table jumped up to welcome him as soon as he
entered. They were his father and mother, his brother the Reverend
Felix—curate at a town in the adjoining county, home for the inside of a
fortnight—and his other brother, the Reverend Cuthbert, the classical
scholar, and Fellow and Dean of his College, down from Cambridge for the long
vacation. His mother appeared in a cap and silver spectacles, and his father
looked what in fact he was—an earnest, God-fearing man, somewhat gaunt,
in years about sixty-five, his pale face lined with thought and purpose. Over
their heads hung the picture of Angel’s sister, the eldest of the family,
sixteen years his senior, who had married a missionary and gone out to Africa.</p>
<p>Old Mr Clare was a clergyman of a type which, within the last twenty years, has
well nigh dropped out of contemporary life. A spiritual descendant in the
direct line from Wycliff, Huss, Luther, Calvin; an Evangelical of the
Evangelicals, a Conversionist, a man of Apostolic simplicity in life and
thought, he had in his raw youth made up his mind once for all in the deeper
questions of existence, and admitted no further reasoning on them
thenceforward. He was regarded even by those of his own date and school of
thinking as extreme; while, on the other hand, those totally opposed to him
were unwillingly won to admiration for his thoroughness, and for the remarkable
power he showed in dismissing all question as to principles in his energy for
applying them. He loved Paul of Tarsus, liked St John, hated St James as much
as he dared, and regarded with mixed feelings Timothy, Titus, and Philemon. The
New Testament was less a Christiad then a Pauliad to his
intelligence—less an argument than an intoxication. His creed of
determinism was such that it almost amounted to a vice, and quite amounted, on
its negative side, to a renunciative philosophy which had cousinship with that
of Schopenhauer and Leopardi. He despised the Canons and Rubric, swore by the
Articles, and deemed himself consistent through the whole category—which
in a way he might have been. One thing he certainly was—sincere.</p>
<p>To the aesthetic, sensuous, pagan pleasure in natural life and lush womanhood
which his son Angel had lately been experiencing in Var Vale, his temper would
have been antipathetic in a high degree, had he either by inquiry or
imagination been able to apprehend it. Once upon a time Angel had been so
unlucky as to say to his father, in a moment of irritation, that it might have
resulted far better for mankind if Greece had been the source of the religion
of modern civilization, and not Palestine; and his father’s grief was of
that blank description which could not realize that there might lurk a
thousandth part of a truth, much less a half truth or a whole truth, in such a
proposition. He had simply preached austerely at Angel for some time after. But
the kindness of his heart was such that he never resented anything for long,
and welcomed his son to-day with a smile which was as candidly sweet as a
child’s.</p>
<p>Angel sat down, and the place felt like home; yet he did not so much as
formerly feel himself one of the family gathered there. Every time that he
returned hither he was conscious of this divergence, and since he had last
shared in the Vicarage life it had grown even more distinctly foreign to his
own than usual. Its transcendental aspirations—still unconsciously based
on the geocentric view of things, a zenithal paradise, a nadiral
hell—were as foreign to his own as if they had been the dreams of people
on another planet. Latterly he had seen only Life, felt only the great
passionate pulse of existence, unwarped, uncontorted, untrammelled by those
creeds which futilely attempt to check what wisdom would be content to
regulate.</p>
<p>On their part they saw a great difference in him, a growing divergence from the
Angel Clare of former times. It was chiefly a difference in his manner that
they noticed just now, particularly his brothers. He was getting to behave like
a farmer; he flung his legs about; the muscles of his face had grown more
expressive; his eyes looked as much information as his tongue spoke, and more.
The manner of the scholar had nearly disappeared; still more the manner of the
drawing-room young man. A prig would have said that he had lost culture, and a
prude that he had become coarse. Such was the contagion of domiciliary
fellowship with the Talbothays nymphs and swains.</p>
<p>After breakfast he walked with his two brothers, non-evangelical,
well-educated, hall-marked young men, correct to their remotest fibre, such
unimpeachable models as are turned out yearly by the lathe of a systematic
tuition. They were both somewhat short-sighted, and when it was the custom to
wear a single eyeglass and string they wore a single eyeglass and string; when
it was the custom to wear a double glass they wore a double glass; when it was
the custom to wear spectacles they wore spectacles straightway, all without
reference to the particular variety of defect in their own vision. When
Wordsworth was enthroned they carried pocket copies; and when Shelley was
belittled they allowed him to grow dusty on their shelves. When
Correggio’s Holy Families were admired, they admired Correggio’s
Holy Families; when he was decried in favour of Velasquez, they sedulously
followed suit without any personal objection.</p>
<p>If these two noticed Angel’s growing social ineptness, he noticed their
growing mental limitations. Felix seemed to him all Church; Cuthbert all
College. His Diocesan Synod and Visitations were the mainsprings of the world
to the one; Cambridge to the other. Each brother candidly recognized that there
were a few unimportant score of millions of outsiders in civilized society,
persons who were neither University men nor churchmen; but they were to be
tolerated rather than reckoned with and respected.</p>
<p>They were both dutiful and attentive sons, and were regular in their visits to
their parents. Felix, though an offshoot from a far more recent point in the
devolution of theology than his father, was less self-sacrificing and
disinterested. More tolerant than his father of a contradictory opinion, in its
aspect as a danger to its holder, he was less ready than his father to pardon
it as a slight to his own teaching. Cuthbert was, upon the whole, the more
liberal-minded, though, with greater subtlety, he had not so much heart.</p>
<p>As they walked along the hillside Angel’s former feeling revived in
him—that whatever their advantages by comparison with himself, neither
saw or set forth life as it really was lived. Perhaps, as with many men, their
opportunities of observation were not so good as their opportunities of
expression. Neither had an adequate conception of the complicated forces at
work outside the smooth and gentle current in which they and their associates
floated. Neither saw the difference between local truth and universal truth;
that what the inner world said in their clerical and academic hearing was quite
a different thing from what the outer world was thinking.</p>
<p>“I suppose it is farming or nothing for you now, my dear fellow,”
Felix was saying, among other things, to his youngest brother, as he looked
through his spectacles at the distant fields with sad austerity. “And,
therefore, we must make the best of it. But I do entreat you to endeavour to
keep as much as possible in touch with moral ideals. Farming, of course, means
roughing it externally; but high thinking may go with plain living,
nevertheless.”</p>
<p>“Of course it may,” said Angel. “Was it not proved nineteen
hundred years ago—if I may trespass upon your domain a little? Why should
you think, Felix, that I am likely to drop my high thinking and my moral
ideals?”</p>
<p>“Well, I fancied, from the tone of your letters and our
conversation—it may be fancy only—that you were somehow losing
intellectual grasp. Hasn’t it struck you, Cuthbert?”</p>
<p>“Now, Felix,” said Angel drily, “we are very good friends,
you know; each of us treading our allotted circles; but if it comes to
intellectual grasp, I think you, as a contented dogmatist, had better leave
mine alone, and inquire what has become of yours.”</p>
<p>They returned down the hill to dinner, which was fixed at any time at which
their father’s and mother’s morning work in the parish usually
concluded. Convenience as regarded afternoon callers was the last thing to
enter into the consideration of unselfish Mr and Mrs Clare; though the three
sons were sufficiently in unison on this matter to wish that their parents
would conform a little to modern notions.</p>
<p>The walk had made them hungry, Angel in particular, who was now an outdoor man,
accustomed to the profuse <i>dapes inemptae</i> of the dairyman’s
somewhat coarsely-laden table. But neither of the old people had arrived, and
it was not till the sons were almost tired of waiting that their parents
entered. The self-denying pair had been occupied in coaxing the appetites of
some of their sick parishioners, whom they, somewhat inconsistently, tried to
keep imprisoned in the flesh, their own appetites being quite forgotten.</p>
<p>The family sat down to table, and a frugal meal of cold viands was deposited
before them. Angel looked round for Mrs Crick’s black-puddings, which he
had directed to be nicely grilled as they did them at the dairy, and of which
he wished his father and mother to appreciate the marvellous herbal savours as
highly as he did himself.</p>
<p>“Ah! you are looking for the black-puddings, my dear boy,” observed
Clare’s mother. “But I am sure you will not mind doing without them
as I am sure your father and I shall not, when you know the reason. I suggested
to him that we should take Mrs Crick’s kind present to the children of
the man who can earn nothing just now because of his attacks of delirium
tremens; and he agreed that it would be a great pleasure to them; so we
did.”</p>
<p>“Of course,” said Angel cheerfully, looking round for the mead.</p>
<p>“I found the mead so extremely alcoholic,” continued his mother,
“that it was quite unfit for use as a beverage, but as valuable as rum or
brandy in an emergency; so I have put it in my medicine-closet.”</p>
<p>“We never drink spirits at this table, on principle,” added his
father.</p>
<p>“But what shall I tell the dairyman’s wife?” said Angel.</p>
<p>“The truth, of course,” said his father.</p>
<p>“I rather wanted to say we enjoyed the mead and the black-puddings very
much. She is a kind, jolly sort of body, and is sure to ask me directly I
return.”</p>
<p>“You cannot, if we did not,” Mr Clare answered lucidly.</p>
<p>“Ah—no; though that mead was a drop of pretty tipple.”</p>
<p>“A what?” said Cuthbert and Felix both.</p>
<p>“Oh—’tis an expression they use down at Talbothays,”
replied Angel, blushing. He felt that his parents were right in their practice
if wrong in their want of sentiment, and said no more.</p>
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