<h2><SPAN name="chap41"></SPAN>XLI</h2>
<p>From the foregoing events of the winter-time let us press on to an October day,
more than eight months subsequent to the parting of Clare and Tess. We discover
the latter in changed conditions; instead of a bride with boxes and trunks
which others bore, we see her a lonely woman with a basket and a bundle in her
own porterage, as at an earlier time when she was no bride; instead of the
ample means that were projected by her husband for her comfort through this
probationary period, she can produce only a flattened purse.</p>
<p>After again leaving Marlott, her home, she had got through the spring and
summer without any great stress upon her physical powers, the time being mainly
spent in rendering light irregular service at dairy-work near Port-Bredy to the
west of the Blackmoor Valley, equally remote from her native place and from
Talbothays. She preferred this to living on his allowance. Mentally she
remained in utter stagnation, a condition which the mechanical occupation
rather fostered than checked. Her consciousness was at that other dairy, at
that other season, in the presence of the tender lover who had confronted her
there—he who, the moment she had grasped him to keep for her own, had
disappeared like a shape in a vision.</p>
<p>The dairy-work lasted only till the milk began to lessen, for she had not met
with a second regular engagement as at Talbothays, but had done duty as a
supernumerary only. However, as harvest was now beginning, she had simply to
remove from the pasture to the stubble to find plenty of further occupation,
and this continued till harvest was done.</p>
<p>Of the five-and-twenty pounds which had remained to her of Clare’s
allowance, after deducting the other half of the fifty as a contribution to her
parents for the trouble and expense to which she had put them, she had as yet
spent but little. But there now followed an unfortunate interval of wet
weather, during which she was obliged to fall back upon her sovereigns.</p>
<p>She could not bear to let them go. Angel had put them into her hand, had
obtained them bright and new from his bank for her; his touch had consecrated
them to souvenirs of himself—they appeared to have had as yet no other
history than such as was created by his and her own experiences—and to
disperse them was like giving away relics. But she had to do it, and one by one
they left her hands.</p>
<p>She had been compelled to send her mother her address from time to time, but
she concealed her circumstances. When her money had almost gone a letter from
her mother reached her. Joan stated that they were in dreadful difficulty; the
autumn rains had gone through the thatch of the house, which required entire
renewal; but this could not be done because the previous thatching had never
been paid for. New rafters and a new ceiling upstairs also were required,
which, with the previous bill, would amount to a sum of twenty pounds. As her
husband was a man of means, and had doubtless returned by this time, could she
not send them the money?</p>
<p>Tess had thirty pounds coming to her almost immediately from Angel’s
bankers, and, the case being so deplorable, as soon as the sum was received she
sent the twenty as requested. Part of the remainder she was obliged to expend
in winter clothing, leaving only a nominal sum for the whole inclement season
at hand. When the last pound had gone, a remark of Angel’s that whenever
she required further resources she was to apply to his father, remained to be
considered.</p>
<p>But the more Tess thought of the step, the more reluctant was she to take it.
The same delicacy, pride, false shame, whatever it may be called, on
Clare’s account, which had led her to hide from her own parents the
prolongation of the estrangement, hindered her owning to his that she was in
want after the fair allowance he had left her. They probably despised her
already; how much more they would despise her in the character of a mendicant!
The consequence was that by no effort could the parson’s daughter-in-law
bring herself to let him know her state.</p>
<p>Her reluctance to communicate with her husband’s parents might, she
thought, lessen with the lapse of time; but with her own the reverse obtained.
On her leaving their house after the short visit subsequent to her marriage
they were under the impression that she was ultimately going to join her
husband; and from that time to the present she had done nothing to disturb
their belief that she was awaiting his return in comfort, hoping against hope
that his journey to Brazil would result in a short stay only, after which he
would come to fetch her, or that he would write for her to join him; in any
case that they would soon present a united front to their families and the
world. This hope she still fostered. To let her parents know that she was a
deserted wife, dependent, now that she had relieved their necessities, on her
own hands for a living, after the <i>éclat</i> of a marriage which was to
nullify the collapse of the first attempt, would be too much indeed.</p>
<p>The set of brilliants returned to her mind. Where Clare had deposited them she
did not know, and it mattered little, if it were true that she could only use
and not sell them. Even were they absolutely hers it would be passing mean to
enrich herself by a legal title to them which was not essentially hers at all.</p>
<p>Meanwhile her husband’s days had been by no means free from trial. At
this moment he was lying ill of fever in the clay lands near Curitiba in
Brazil, having been drenched with thunder-storms and persecuted by other
hardships, in common with all the English farmers and farm-labourers who, just
at this time, were deluded into going thither by the promises of the Brazilian
Government, and by the baseless assumption that those frames which, ploughing
and sowing on English uplands, had resisted all the weathers to whose moods
they had been born, could resist equally well all the weathers by which they
were surprised on Brazilian plains.</p>
<p>To return. Thus it happened that when the last of Tess’s sovereigns had
been spent she was unprovided with others to take their place, while on account
of the season she found it increasingly difficult to get employment. Not being
aware of the rarity of intelligence, energy, health, and willingness in any
sphere of life, she refrained from seeking an indoor occupation; fearing towns,
large houses, people of means and social sophistication, and of manners other
than rural. From that direction of gentility Black Care had come. Society might
be better than she supposed from her slight experience of it. But she had no
proof of this, and her instinct in the circumstances was to avoid its purlieus.</p>
<p>The small dairies to the west, beyond Port-Bredy, in which she had served as
supernumerary milkmaid during the spring and summer required no further aid.
Room would probably have been made for her at Talbothays, if only out of sheer
compassion; but comfortable as her life had been there, she could not go back.
The anti-climax would be too intolerable; and her return might bring reproach
upon her idolized husband. She could not have borne their pity, and their
whispered remarks to one another upon her strange situation; though she would
almost have faced a knowledge of her circumstances by every individual there,
so long as her story had remained isolated in the mind of each. It was the
interchange of ideas about her that made her sensitiveness wince. Tess could
not account for this distinction; she simply knew that she felt it.</p>
<p>She was now on her way to an upland farm in the centre of the county, to which
she had been recommended by a wandering letter which had reached her from
Marian. Marian had somehow heard that Tess was separated from her
husband—probably through Izz Huett—and the good-natured and now
tippling girl, deeming Tess in trouble, had hastened to notify to her former
friend that she herself had gone to this upland spot after leaving the dairy,
and would like to see her there, where there was room for other hands, if it
was really true that she worked again as of old.</p>
<p>With the shortening of the days all hope of obtaining her husband’s
forgiveness began to leave her; and there was something of the habitude of the
wild animal in the unreflecting instinct with which she rambled
on—disconnecting herself by littles from her eventful past at every step,
obliterating her identity, giving no thought to accidents or contingencies
which might make a quick discovery of her whereabouts by others of importance
to her own happiness, if not to theirs.</p>
<p>Among the difficulties of her lonely position not the least was the attention
she excited by her appearance, a certain bearing of distinction, which she had
caught from Clare, being superadded to her natural attractiveness. Whilst the
clothes lasted which had been prepared for her marriage, these casual glances
of interest caused her no inconvenience, but as soon as she was compelled to
don the wrapper of a fieldwoman, rude words were addressed to her more than
once; but nothing occurred to cause her bodily fear till a particular November
afternoon.</p>
<p>She had preferred the country west of the River Brit to the upland farm for
which she was now bound, because, for one thing, it was nearer to the home of
her husband’s father; and to hover about that region unrecognized, with
the notion that she might decide to call at the Vicarage some day, gave her
pleasure. But having once decided to try the higher and drier levels, she
pressed back eastward, marching afoot towards the village of Chalk-Newton,
where she meant to pass the night.</p>
<p>The lane was long and unvaried, and, owing to the rapid shortening of the days,
dusk came upon her before she was aware. She had reached the top of a hill down
which the lane stretched its serpentine length in glimpses, when she heard
footsteps behind her back, and in a few moments she was overtaken by a man. He
stepped up alongside Tess and said—</p>
<p>“Good night, my pretty maid”: to which she civilly replied.</p>
<p>The light still remaining in the sky lit up her face, though the landscape was
nearly dark. The man turned and stared hard at her.</p>
<p>“Why, surely, it is the young wench who was at Trantridge
awhile—young Squire d’Urberville’s friend? I was there at
that time, though I don’t live there now.”</p>
<p>She recognized in him the well-to-do boor whom Angel had knocked down at the
inn for addressing her coarsely. A spasm of anguish shot through her, and she
returned him no answer.</p>
<p>“Be honest enough to own it, and that what I said in the town was true,
though your fancy-man was so up about it—hey, my sly one? You ought to
beg my pardon for that blow of his, considering.”</p>
<p>Still no answer came from Tess. There seemed only one escape for her hunted
soul. She suddenly took to her heels with the speed of the wind, and, without
looking behind her, ran along the road till she came to a gate which opened
directly into a plantation. Into this she plunged, and did not pause till she
was deep enough in its shade to be safe against any possibility of discovery.</p>
<p>Under foot the leaves were dry, and the foliage of some holly bushes which grew
among the deciduous trees was dense enough to keep off draughts. She scraped
together the dead leaves till she had formed them into a large heap, making a
sort of nest in the middle. Into this Tess crept.</p>
<p>Such sleep as she got was naturally fitful; she fancied she heard strange
noises, but persuaded herself that they were caused by the breeze. She thought
of her husband in some vague warm clime on the other side of the globe, while
she was here in the cold. Was there another such a wretched being as she in the
world? Tess asked herself; and, thinking of her wasted life, said, “All
is vanity.” She repeated the words mechanically, till she reflected that
this was a most inadequate thought for modern days. Solomon had thought as far
as that more than two thousand years ago; she herself, though not in the van of
thinkers, had got much further. If all were only vanity, who would mind it? All
was, alas, worse than vanity—injustice, punishment, exaction, death. The
wife of Angel Clare put her hand to her brow, and felt its curve, and the edges
of her eye-sockets perceptible under the soft skin, and thought as she did so
that a time would come when that bone would be bare. “I wish it were
now,” she said.</p>
<p>In the midst of these whimsical fancies she heard a new strange sound among the
leaves. It might be the wind; yet there was scarcely any wind. Sometimes it was
a palpitation, sometimes a flutter; sometimes it was a sort of gasp or gurgle.
Soon she was certain that the noises came from wild creatures of some kind, the
more so when, originating in the boughs overhead, they were followed by the
fall of a heavy body upon the ground. Had she been ensconced here under other
and more pleasant conditions she would have become alarmed; but, outside
humanity, she had at present no fear.</p>
<p>Day at length broke in the sky. When it had been day aloft for some little
while it became day in the wood.</p>
<p>Directly the assuring and prosaic light of the world’s active hours had
grown strong, she crept from under her hillock of leaves, and looked around
boldly. Then she perceived what had been going on to disturb her. The
plantation wherein she had taken shelter ran down at this spot into a peak,
which ended it hitherward, outside the hedge being arable ground. Under the
trees several pheasants lay about, their rich plumage dabbled with blood; some
were dead, some feebly twitching a wing, some staring up at the sky, some
pulsating quickly, some contorted, some stretched out—all of them
writhing in agony, except the fortunate ones whose tortures had ended during
the night by the inability of nature to bear more.</p>
<p>Tess guessed at once the meaning of this. The birds had been driven down into
this corner the day before by some shooting-party; and while those that had
dropped dead under the shot, or had died before nightfall, had been searched
for and carried off, many badly wounded birds had escaped and hidden themselves
away, or risen among the thick boughs, where they had maintained their position
till they grew weaker with loss of blood in the night-time, when they had
fallen one by one as she had heard them.</p>
<p>She had occasionally caught glimpses of these men in girlhood, looking over
hedges, or peeping through bushes, and pointing their guns, strangely
accoutred, a bloodthirsty light in their eyes. She had been told that, rough
and brutal as they seemed just then, they were not like this all the year
round, but were, in fact, quite civil persons save during certain weeks of
autumn and winter, when, like the inhabitants of the Malay Peninsula, they ran
amuck, and made it their purpose to destroy life—in this case harmless
feathered creatures, brought into being by artificial means solely to gratify
these propensities—at once so unmannerly and so unchivalrous towards
their weaker fellows in Nature’s teeming family.</p>
<p>With the impulse of a soul who could feel for kindred sufferers as much as for
herself, Tess’s first thought was to put the still living birds out of
their torture, and to this end with her own hands she broke the necks of as
many as she could find, leaving them to lie where she had found them till the
game-keepers should come—as they probably would come—to look for
them a second time.</p>
<p>“Poor darlings—to suppose myself the most miserable being on earth
in the sight o’ such misery as yours!” she exclaimed, her tears
running down as she killed the birds tenderly. “And not a twinge of
bodily pain about me! I be not mangled, and I be not bleeding, and I have two
hands to feed and clothe me.” She was ashamed of herself for her gloom of
the night, based on nothing more tangible than a sense of condemnation under an
arbitrary law of society which had no foundation in Nature.</p>
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