<h2><SPAN name="chap59"></SPAN>LIX</h2>
<p>The city of Wintoncester, that fine old city, aforetime capital of Wessex, lay
amidst its convex and concave downlands in all the brightness and warmth of a
July morning. The gabled brick, tile, and freestone houses had almost dried off
for the season their integument of lichen, the streams in the meadows were low,
and in the sloping High Street, from the West Gateway to the mediæval
cross, and from the mediæval cross to the bridge, that leisurely dusting
and sweeping was in progress which usually ushers in an old-fashioned
market-day.</p>
<p>From the western gate aforesaid the highway, as every Wintoncestrian knows,
ascends a long and regular incline of the exact length of a measured mile,
leaving the houses gradually behind. Up this road from the precincts of the
city two persons were walking rapidly, as if unconscious of the trying
ascent—unconscious through preoccupation and not through buoyancy. They
had emerged upon this road through a narrow, barred wicket in a high wall a
little lower down. They seemed anxious to get out of the sight of the houses
and of their kind, and this road appeared to offer the quickest means of doing
so. Though they were young, they walked with bowed heads, which gait of grief
the sun’s rays smiled on pitilessly.</p>
<p>One of the pair was Angel Clare, the other a tall budding creature—half
girl, half woman—a spiritualized image of Tess, slighter than she, but
with the same beautiful eyes—Clare’s sister-in-law, ’Liza-Lu.
Their pale faces seemed to have shrunk to half their natural size. They moved
on hand in hand, and never spoke a word, the drooping of their heads being that
of Giotto’s “Two Apostles”.</p>
<p>When they had nearly reached the top of the great West Hill the clocks in the
town struck eight. Each gave a start at the notes, and, walking onward yet a
few steps, they reached the first milestone, standing whitely on the green
margin of the grass, and backed by the down, which here was open to the road.
They entered upon the turf, and, impelled by a force that seemed to overrule
their will, suddenly stood still, turned, and waited in paralyzed suspense
beside the stone.</p>
<p>The prospect from this summit was almost unlimited. In the valley beneath lay
the city they had just left, its more prominent buildings showing as in an
isometric drawing—among them the broad cathedral tower, with its Norman
windows and immense length of aisle and nave, the spires of St Thomas’s,
the pinnacled tower of the College, and, more to the right, the tower and
gables of the ancient hospice, where to this day the pilgrim may receive his
dole of bread and ale. Behind the city swept the rotund upland of St
Catherine’s Hill; further off, landscape beyond landscape, till the
horizon was lost in the radiance of the sun hanging above it.</p>
<p>Against these far stretches of country rose, in front of the other city
edifices, a large red-brick building, with level gray roofs, and rows of short
barred windows bespeaking captivity, the whole contrasting greatly by its
formalism with the quaint irregularities of the Gothic erections. It was
somewhat disguised from the road in passing it by yews and evergreen oaks, but
it was visible enough up here. The wicket from which the pair had lately
emerged was in the wall of this structure. From the middle of the building an
ugly flat-topped octagonal tower ascended against the east horizon, and viewed
from this spot, on its shady side and against the light, it seemed the one blot
on the city’s beauty. Yet it was with this blot, and not with the beauty,
that the two gazers were concerned.</p>
<p>Upon the cornice of the tower a tall staff was fixed. Their eyes were riveted
on it. A few minutes after the hour had struck something moved slowly up the
staff, and extended itself upon the breeze. It was a black flag.</p>
<p>“Justice” was done, and the President of the Immortals, in
Æschylean phrase, had ended his sport with Tess. And the d’Urberville
knights and dames slept on in their tombs unknowing. The two speechless gazers
bent themselves down to the earth, as if in prayer, and remained thus a long
time, absolutely motionless: the flag continued to wave silently. As soon as
they had strength, they arose, joined hands again, and went on.</p>
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