<h2><SPAN name="chap27"></SPAN>XXVII</h2>
<p>An up-hill and down-hill ride of twenty-odd miles through a garish mid-day
atmosphere brought him in the afternoon to a detached knoll a mile or two west
of Talbothays, whence he again looked into that green trough of sappiness and
humidity, the valley of the Var or Froom. Immediately he began to descend from
the upland to the fat alluvial soil below, the atmosphere grew heavier; the
languid perfume of the summer fruits, the mists, the hay, the flowers, formed
therein a vast pool of odour which at this hour seemed to make the animals, the
very bees and butterflies drowsy. Clare was now so familiar with the spot that
he knew the individual cows by their names when, a long distance off, he saw
them dotted about the meads. It was with a sense of luxury that he recognized
his power of viewing life here from its inner side, in a way that had been
quite foreign to him in his student-days; and, much as he loved his parents, he
could not help being aware that to come here, as now, after an experience of
home-life, affected him like throwing off splints and bandages; even the one
customary curb on the humours of English rural societies being absent in this
place, Talbothays having no resident landlord.</p>
<p>Not a human being was out of doors at the dairy. The denizens were all enjoying
the usual afternoon nap of an hour or so which the exceedingly early hours kept
in summer-time rendered a necessity. At the door the wood-hooped pails, sodden
and bleached by infinite scrubbings, hung like hats on a stand upon the forked
and peeled limb of an oak fixed there for that purpose; all of them ready and
dry for the evening milking. Angel entered, and went through the silent
passages of the house to the back quarters, where he listened for a moment.
Sustained snores came from the cart-house, where some of the men were lying
down; the grunt and squeal of sweltering pigs arose from the still further
distance. The large-leaved rhubarb and cabbage plants slept too, their broad
limp surfaces hanging in the sun like half-closed umbrellas.</p>
<p>He unbridled and fed his horse, and as he re-entered the house the clock struck
three. Three was the afternoon skimming-hour; and, with the stroke, Clare heard
the creaking of the floor-boards above, and then the touch of a descending foot
on the stairs. It was Tess’s, who in another moment came down before his
eyes.</p>
<p>She had not heard him enter, and hardly realized his presence there. She was
yawning, and he saw the red interior of her mouth as if it had been a
snake’s. She had stretched one arm so high above her coiled-up cable of
hair that he could see its satin delicacy above the sunburn; her face was
flushed with sleep, and her eyelids hung heavy over their pupils. The
brim-fulness of her nature breathed from her. It was a moment when a
woman’s soul is more incarnate than at any other time; when the most
spiritual beauty bespeaks itself flesh; and sex takes the outside place in the
presentation.</p>
<p>Then those eyes flashed brightly through their filmy heaviness, before the
remainder of her face was well awake. With an oddly compounded look of
gladness, shyness, and surprise, she exclaimed—“O Mr Clare! How you
frightened me—I—”</p>
<p>There had not at first been time for her to think of the changed relations
which his declaration had introduced; but the full sense of the matter rose up
in her face when she encountered Clare’s tender look as he stepped
forward to the bottom stair.</p>
<p>“Dear, darling Tessy!” he whispered, putting his arm round her, and
his face to her flushed cheek. “Don’t, for Heaven’s sake,
Mister me any more. I have hastened back so soon because of you!”</p>
<p>Tess’s excitable heart beat against his by way of reply; and there they
stood upon the red-brick floor of the entry, the sun slanting in by the window
upon his back, as he held her tightly to his breast; upon her inclining face,
upon the blue veins of her temple, upon her naked arm, and her neck, and into
the depths of her hair. Having been lying down in her clothes she was warm as a
sunned cat. At first she would not look straight up at him, but her eyes soon
lifted, and his plumbed the deepness of the ever-varying pupils, with their
radiating fibrils of blue, and black, and gray, and violet, while she regarded
him as Eve at her second waking might have regarded Adam.</p>
<p>“I’ve got to go a-skimming,” she pleaded, “and I have
on’y old Deb to help me to-day. Mrs Crick is gone to market with Mr
Crick, and Retty is not well, and the others are gone out somewhere, and
won’t be home till milking.”</p>
<p>As they retreated to the milk-house Deborah Fyander appeared on the stairs.</p>
<p>“I have come back, Deborah,” said Mr Clare, upwards. “So I
can help Tess with the skimming; and, as you are very tired, I am sure, you
needn’t come down till milking-time.”</p>
<p>Possibly the Talbothays milk was not very thoroughly skimmed that afternoon.
Tess was in a dream wherein familiar objects appeared as having light and shade
and position, but no particular outline. Every time she held the skimmer under
the pump to cool it for the work her hand trembled, the ardour of his affection
being so palpable that she seemed to flinch under it like a plant in too
burning a sun.</p>
<p>Then he pressed her again to his side, and when she had done running her
forefinger round the leads to cut off the cream-edge, he cleaned it in
nature’s way; for the unconstrained manners of Talbothays dairy came
convenient now.</p>
<p>“I may as well say it now as later, dearest,” he resumed gently.
“I wish to ask you something of a very practical nature, which I have
been thinking of ever since that day last week in the meads. I shall soon want
to marry, and, being a farmer, you see I shall require for my wife a woman who
knows all about the management of farms. Will you be that woman, Tessy?”</p>
<p>He put it that way that she might not think he had yielded to an impulse of
which his head would disapprove.</p>
<p>She turned quite careworn. She had bowed to the inevitable result of proximity,
the necessity of loving him; but she had not calculated upon this sudden
corollary, which, indeed, Clare had put before her without quite meaning
himself to do it so soon. With pain that was like the bitterness of dissolution
she murmured the words of her indispensable and sworn answer as an honourable
woman.</p>
<p>“O Mr Clare—I cannot be your wife—I cannot be!”</p>
<p>The sound of her own decision seemed to break Tess’s very heart, and she
bowed her face in her grief.</p>
<p>“But, Tess!” he said, amazed at her reply, and holding her still
more greedily close. “Do you say no? Surely you love me?”</p>
<p>“O yes, yes! And I would rather be yours than anybody’s in the
world,” returned the sweet and honest voice of the distressed girl.
“But I <i>cannot</i> marry you!”</p>
<p>“Tess,” he said, holding her at arm’s length, “you are
engaged to marry some one else!”</p>
<p>“No, no!”</p>
<p>“Then why do you refuse me?”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to marry! I have not thought of doing it. I cannot! I
only want to love you.”</p>
<p>“But why?”</p>
<p>Driven to subterfuge, she stammered—</p>
<p>“Your father is a parson, and your mother wouldn’ like you to marry
such as me. She will want you to marry a lady.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense—I have spoken to them both. That was partly why I went
home.”</p>
<p>“I feel I cannot—never, never!” she echoed.</p>
<p>“Is it too sudden to be asked thus, my Pretty?”</p>
<p>“Yes—I did not expect it.”</p>
<p>“If you will let it pass, please, Tessy, I will give you time,” he
said. “It was very abrupt to come home and speak to you all at once.
I’ll not allude to it again for a while.”</p>
<p>She again took up the shining skimmer, held it beneath the pump, and began
anew. But she could not, as at other times, hit the exact under-surface of the
cream with the delicate dexterity required, try as she might; sometimes she was
cutting down into the milk, sometimes in the air. She could hardly see, her
eyes having filled with two blurring tears drawn forth by a grief which, to
this her best friend and dear advocate, she could never explain.</p>
<p>“I can’t skim—I can’t!” she said, turning away
from him.</p>
<p>Not to agitate and hinder her longer, the considerate Clare began talking in a
more general way:</p>
<p>“You quite misapprehend my parents. They are the most simple-mannered
people alive, and quite unambitious. They are two of the few remaining
Evangelical school. Tessy, are you an Evangelical?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“You go to church very regularly, and our parson here is not very High,
they tell me.”</p>
<p>Tess’s ideas on the views of the parish clergyman, whom she heard every
week, seemed to be rather more vague than Clare’s, who had never heard
him at all.</p>
<p>“I wish I could fix my mind on what I hear there more firmly than I
do,” she remarked as a safe generality. “It is often a great sorrow
to me.”</p>
<p>She spoke so unaffectedly that Angel was sure in his heart that his father
could not object to her on religious grounds, even though she did not know
whether her principles were High, Low or Broad. He himself knew that, in
reality, the confused beliefs which she held, apparently imbibed in childhood,
were, if anything, Tractarian as to phraseology, and Pantheistic as to essence.
Confused or otherwise, to disturb them was his last desire:</p>
<p class="poem">
Leave thou thy sister, when she prays,<br/>
Her early Heaven, her happy views;<br/>
Nor thou with shadow’d hint confuse<br/>
A life that leads melodious days.</p>
<p>He had occasionally thought the counsel less honest than musical; but he gladly
conformed to it now.</p>
<p>He spoke further of the incidents of his visit, of his father’s mode of
life, of his zeal for his principles; she grew serener, and the undulations
disappeared from her skimming; as she finished one lead after another he
followed her, and drew the plugs for letting down the milk.</p>
<p>“I fancied you looked a little downcast when you came in,” she
ventured to observe, anxious to keep away from the subject of herself.</p>
<p>“Yes—well, my father had been talking a good deal to me of his
troubles and difficulties, and the subject always tends to depress me. He is so
zealous that he gets many snubs and buffetings from people of a different way
of thinking from himself, and I don’t like to hear of such humiliations
to a man of his age, the more particularly as I don’t think earnestness
does any good when carried so far. He has been telling me of a very unpleasant
scene in which he took part quite recently. He went as the deputy of some
missionary society to preach in the neighbourhood of Trantridge, a place forty
miles from here, and made it his business to expostulate with a lax young cynic
he met with somewhere about there—son of some landowner up that
way—and who has a mother afflicted with blindness. My father addressed
himself to the gentleman point-blank, and there was quite a disturbance. It was
very foolish of my father, I must say, to intrude his conversation upon a
stranger when the probabilities were so obvious that it would be useless. But
whatever he thinks to be his duty, that he’ll do, in season or out of
season; and, of course, he makes many enemies, not only among the absolutely
vicious, but among the easy-going, who hate being bothered. He says he glories
in what happened, and that good may be done indirectly; but I wish he would not
wear himself out now he is getting old, and would leave such pigs to their
wallowing.”</p>
<p>Tess’s look had grown hard and worn, and her ripe mouth tragical; but she
no longer showed any tremulousness. Clare’s revived thoughts of his
father prevented his noticing her particularly; and so they went on down the
white row of liquid rectangles till they had finished and drained them off,
when the other maids returned, and took their pails, and Deb came to scald out
the leads for the new milk. As Tess withdrew to go afield to the cows he said
to her softly—</p>
<p>“And my question, Tessy?”</p>
<p>“O no—no!” replied she with grave hopelessness, as one who
had heard anew the turmoil of her own past in the allusion to Alec
d’Urberville. “It <i>can’t</i> be!”</p>
<p>She went out towards the mead, joining the other milkmaids with a bound, as if
trying to make the open air drive away her sad constraint. All the girls drew
onward to the spot where the cows were grazing in the farther mead, the bevy
advancing with the bold grace of wild animals—the reckless, unchastened
motion of women accustomed to unlimited space—in which they abandoned
themselves to the air as a swimmer to the wave. It seemed natural enough to him
now that Tess was again in sight to choose a mate from unconstrained Nature,
and not from the abodes of Art.</p>
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